Produced by John Hamm





CHILD CHRISTOPHER AND GOLDILIND THE FAIR

by William Morris

1895




CHAPTER I. OF THE KING OF OAKENREALM, AND HIS WIFE AND HIS CHILD.


Of old there was a land which was so much a woodland, that a minstrel
thereof said it that a squirrel might go from end to end, and all about,
from tree to tree, and never touch the earth: therefore was that land
called Oakenrealm.

The lord and king thereof was a stark man, and so great a warrior that
in his youth he took no delight in aught else save battle and tourneys.
But when he was hard on forty years old, he came across a daughter of
a certain lord, whom he had vanquished, and his eyes bewrayed him
into longing, so that he gave back to the said lord the havings he had
conquered of him that he might lay the maiden in his kingly bed. So he
brought her home with him to Oakenrealm and wedded her.

Tells the tale that he rued not his bargain, but loved her so dearly
that for a year round he wore no armour, save when she bade him play in
the tilt-yard for her desport and pride.

So wore the days till she went with child and was near her time, and
then it betid that three kings who marched on Oakenrealm banded them
together against him, and his lords and thanes cried out on him to lead
them to battle, and it behoved him to do as they would.

So he sent out the tokens and bade an hosting at his chief city, and
when all was ready he said farewell to his wife and her babe unborn, and
went his ways to battle once more: but fierce was his heart against the
foemen, that they had dragged him away from his love and his joy.

Even amidst of his land he joined battle with the host of the ravagers,
and the tale of them is short to tell, for they were as the wheat before
the hook. But as he followed up the chase, a mere thrall of the fleers
turned on him and cast his spear, and it reached him whereas his hawberk
was broken, and stood deep in, so that he fell to earth unmighty: and
when his lords and chieftains drew about him, and cunning men strove to
heal him, it was of no avail, and he knew that his soul was departing.
Then he sent for a priest, and for the Marshal of the host, who was a
great lord, and the son of his father's brother, and in few words bade
him look to the babe whom his wife bore about, and if it were a man, to
cherish him and do him to learn all that a king ought to know; and if it
were a maiden, that he should look to her wedding well and worthily: and
he let swear him on his sword, on the edges and the hilts, that he would
do even so, and be true unto his child if child there were: and he bade
him have rule, if so be the lords would, and all the people, till the
child were of age to be king: and the Marshal swore, and all the lords
who stood around bare witness to his swearing. Thereafter the priest
houselled the King, and he received his Creator, and a little while
after his soul departed.

But the Marshal followed up the fleeing foe, and two battles more he
fought before he beat them flat to earth; and then they craved for
peace, and he went back to the city in mickle honour.

But in the King's city of Oakenham he found but little joy; for both
the King was bemoaned, whereas he had been no hard man to his folk; and
also, when the tidings and the King's corpse came back to Oakenrealm,
his Lady and Queen took sick for sorrow and fear, and fell into labour
of her child, and in childing of a man-bairn she died, but the lad
lived, and was like to do well.

So there was one funeral for the slain King and for her whom his slaying
had slain: and when that was done, the little king was borne to the
font, and at his christening he gat to name Christopher.

Thereafter the Marshal summoned all them that were due thereto to come
and give homage to the new king, and even so did they, though he were
but a babe, yea, and who had but just now been a king lying in his
mother's womb. But when the homage was done, then the Marshal called
together the wise men, and told them how the King that was had given him
in charge his son as then unborn, and the ruling of the realm till the
said son were come to man's estate: but he bade them seek one worthier
if they had heart to gainsay the word of their dying lord. Then all they
said that he was worthy and mighty and the choice of their dear lord,
and that they would have none but he.

So then was the great folk-mote called, and the same matter was laid
before all the people, and none said aught against it, whereas no man
was ready to name another to that charge and rule, even had it been his
own self.

Now then by law was the Marshal, who hight Rolf, lord and earl of the
land of Oakenrealm. He ruled well and strongly, and was a fell warrior:
he was well befriended by many of the great; and the rest of them feared
him and his friends: as for the commonalty, they saw that he held the
realm in peace; and for the rest, they knew little and saw less of him,
and they paid to his bailiffs and sheriffs as little as they could, and
more than they would. But whereas that left them somewhat to grind their
teeth on, and they were not harried, they were not so ill content. So
the Marshal throve, and lacked nothing of a king's place save the bare
name.




CHAPTER II. OF THE KING'S SON.


As for the King's son, to whom the folk had of late done homage as king,
he was at first seen about a corner of the High House with his nurses;
and then in a while it was said, and the tale noted, but not much, that
he must needs go for his health's sake, and because he was puny, to some
stead amongst the fields, and folk heard say that he was gone to the
strong house of a knight somewhat stricken in years, who was called Lord
Richard the Lean. The said house was some twelve miles from Oakenham,
not far from the northern edge of the wild-wood. But in a while, scarce
more than a year, Lord Richard brake up house at the said castle, and
went southward through the forest. Of this departure was little said,
for he was not a man amongst the foremost. As for the King's little son,
if any remembered that he was in the hands of the said Lord Richard,
none said aught about it; for if any thought of the little babe at all,
they said to themselves, Never will he come to be king.

Now as for Lord Richard the Lean, he went far through the wood, and
until he was come to another house of his, that stood in a clearing
somewhat near to where Oakenrealm marched on another country, which
hight Meadham; though the said wild-wood ended not where Oakenrealm
ended, but stretched a good way into Meadham; and betwixt one and the
other much rough country there was.

It is to be said that amongst those who went to this stronghold of the
woods was the little King Christopher, no longer puny, but a stout
babe enough: so he was borne amongst the serving men and thralls to
the castle of the Outer March; and he was in no wise treated as a great
man's son; but there was more than one woman who was kind to him, and
as he waxed in strength and beauty month by month, both carle and
quean fell to noting him, and, for as little as he was, he began to be
well-beloved.

As to the stead where he was nourished, though it were far away amongst
the woods, it was no such lonely or savage place: besides the castle and
the houses of it, there was a merry thorpe in the clearing, the houses
whereof were set down by the side of a clear and pleasant little stream.
Moreover the goodmen and swains of the said township were no ill folk,
but bold of heart, free of speech, and goodly of favour; and the women
of them fair, kind, and trusty. Whiles came folk journeying in to
Oakenrealm or out to Meadham, and of these some were minstrels, who had
with them tidings of what was astir whereas folk were thicker in the
world, and some chapmen, who chaffered with the thorpe-dwellers, and
took of them the woodland spoil for such outland goods as those woodmen
needed.

So wore the years, and in Oakenham King Christopher was well nigh
forgotten, and in the wild-wood had never been known clearly for King's
son. At first, by command of Rolf the Marshal, a messenger came
every year from Lord Richard with a letter that told of how the lad
Christopher did. But when five years were worn, the Marshal bade send
him tidings thereof every three years; and by then it was come to the
twelfth year, and still the tidings were that the lad throve ever, and
meanwhile the Marshal sat fast in his seat with none to gainsay, the
word went to Lord Richard that he should send no more, for that he, the
Marshal, had heard enough of the boy; and if he throve it were well, and
if not, it was no worse. So wore the days and the years.




CHAPTER III. OF THE KING OF MEADHAM AND HIS DAUGHTER.


Tells the tale that in the country which lay south of Oakenrealm, and
was called Meadham, there was in these days a king whose wife was dead,
but had left him a fair daughter, who was born some four years after
King Christopher. A good man was this King Roland, mild, bounteous, and
no regarder of persons in his justice; and well-beloved he was of his
folk: yet could not their love keep him alive; for, whenas his daughter
was of the age of twelve years, he sickened unto death; and so, when he
knew that his end drew near, he sent for the wisest of his wise men,
and they came unto him sorrowing in the High House of his chiefest city,
which hight Meadhamstead. So he bade them sit down nigh unto his bed,
and took up the word and spake:

"Masters, and my good lords, ye may see clearly that a sundering is at
hand, and that I must needs make a long journey, whence I shall come
back never; now I would, and am verily of duty bound thereto, that I
leave behind me some good order in the land. Furthermore, I would that
my daughter, when she is of age thereto, should be Queen in Meadham, and
rule the land; neither will it be many years before she shall be of ripe
age for ruling, if ever she may be; and I deem not that there shall be
any lack in her, whereas her mother could all courtesy, and was as wise
as a woman may be. But how say ye, my masters?"

So they all with one consent said Yea, and they would ask for no better
king than their lady his daughter. Then said the King:

"Hearken carefully, for my time is short: Yet is she young and a maiden,
though she be wise. Now therefore do I need some man well looked to of
the folk, who shall rule the land in her name till she be of eighteen
winters, and who shall be her good friend and counsellor into all wisdom
thereafter. Which of you, my masters, is meet for this matter?"

Then they all looked one on the other, and spake not. And the King said:
"Speak, some one of you, without fear; this is no time for tarrying."

Thereon spake an elder, the oldest of them, and said: "Lord, this is
the very truth, that none of us here present are meet for this office:
whereas, among other matters, we be all unmeet for battle; some of us
have never been warriors, and other some are past the age for leading an
host. To say the sooth, King, there is but one man in Meadham who may do
what thou wilt, and not fail; both for his wisdom, and his might afield,
and the account which is had of him amongst the people; and that man is
Earl Geoffrey, of the Southern Marches."

"Ye say sooth," quoth the King; "but is he down in the South, or nigher
to hand?"

Said the elder: "He is as now in Meadhamstead, and may be in this
chamber in scant half an hour." So the King bade send for him, and there
was silence in the chamber till he came in, clad in a scarlet kirtle and
a white cloak, and with his sword by his side. He was a tall man,
bigly made; somewhat pale of face, black and curly of hair; blue-eyed,
thin-lipped, and hook-nosed as an eagle; a man warrior-like, and
somewhat fierce of aspect. He knelt down by the King's bedside, and
asked him in a sorrowful voice what he would, and the King said: "I ask
a great matter of thee, and all these my wise men, and I myself,
withal, deem that thou canst do it, and thou alone--nay, hearken: I am
departing, and I would have thee hold my place, and do unto my people
even what I would do if I myself were living; and to my daughter as
nigh to that as may be. I say all this thou mayst do, if thou wilt be as
trusty and leal to me after I am dead, as thou hast seemed to all men's
eyes to have been while I was living. What sayest thou?"

The Earl had hidden his face in the coverlet of the bed while the King
was speaking; but now he lifted up his face, weeping, and said: "Kinsman
and friend and King; this is nought hard to do; but if it were, yet
would I do it."

"It is well," said the King: "my heart fails me and my voice; so give
heed, and set thine ear close to my mouth: hearken, belike my daughter
Goldilind shall be one of the fairest of women; I bid thee wed her to
the fairest of men and the strongest, and to none other."

Thereat his voice failed him indeed, and he lay still; but he died not,
till presently the priest came to him, and, as he might, houselled him:
then he departed.

As for Earl Geoffrey, when the King was buried, and the homages done to
the maiden Goldilind, he did no worse than those wise men deemed of him,
but bestirred him, and looked full sagely into all the matters of the
kingdom, and did so well therein that all men praised his rule perforce,
whether they loved him or not; and sooth to say he was not much beloved.




CHAPTER IV. OF THE MAIDEN GOLDILIND.


AMIDST of all his other business Earl Geoffrey bethought him in a while
of the dead King's daughter, and he gave her in charge to a gentlewoman,
somewhat stricken in years, a widow of high lineage, but not over
wealthy. She dwelt in her own house in a fair valley some twenty miles
from Meadhamstead: thereabode Goldilind till a year and a half was worn,
and had due observance, but little love, and not much kindness from
the said gentlewoman, who hight Dame Elinor Leashowe. Howbeit, time
and again came knights and ladies and lords to see the little lady, and
kissed her hand and did obeisance to her; yet more came to her in the
first three months of her sojourn at Leashowe than the second, and more
in the second than the third.

At last, on a day when the said year and a half was fully worn, thither
came Earl Geoffrey with a company of knights and men-at-arms, and he did
obeisance, as due was, to his master's daughter, and then spake awhile
privily with Dame Elinor; and thereafter they went into the hall, he,
and she, and Goldilind, and there before all men he spake aloud and
said:

"My Lady Goldilind, meseemeth ye dwell here all too straitly; for
neither is this house of Leashowe great enough for thy state, and the
entertainment of the knights and lords who shall have will to seek to
thee hither; nor is the wealth of thy liege dame and governante as great
as it should be, and as thou, meseemeth, wouldst have it. Wherefore I
have been considering thy desires herein, and if thou deem it meet to
give a gift to Dame Elinor, and live queenlier thyself than now thou
dost, then mayst thou give unto her the Castle of Greenharbour, and the
six manors appertaining thereto, and withal the rights of wild-wood and
fen and fell that lie thereabout. Also, if thou wilt, thou mayst honour
the said castle with abiding there awhile at thy pleasure; and I shall
see to it that thou have due meney to go with thee thither. How sayest
thou, my lady?"

Amongst that company there were two or three who looked at each other
and half smiled; and two or three looked on the maiden, who was
goodly as of her years, as if with compassion; but the more part kept
countenance in full courtly wise.

Then spake Goldilind in a quavering voice (for she was afraid and wise),
and she said: "Cousin and Earl, we will that all this be done; and it
likes me well to eke the wealth of this lady and my good friend Dame
Elinor."

Quoth Earl Geoffrey: "Kneel before thy lady, Dame, and put thine hands
between hers and thank her for the gift." So Dame Elinor knelt down, and
did homage and obeisance for her new land; and Goldilind raised her
up and kissed her, and bade her sit down beside her, and spake to her
kindly; and all men praised the maiden for her gentle and courteous
ways; and Dame Elinor smiled upon her and them, what she could.

She was small of body and sleek; but her cheeks somewhat flagging; brown
eyes she had, long, half opened; thin lips, and chin somewhat falling
away from her mouth; hard on fifty winters had she seen; yet there have
been those who were older and goodlier both.




CHAPTER V. GOLDILIND COMES TO GREENHARBOUR.


But a little while tarried the Earl Geoffrey at Leashowe, but departed
next morning and came to Meadhamstead. A month thereafter came folk from
him to Leashowe, to wit, the new meney for the new abode of Goldilind;
amongst whom was a goodly band of men-at-arms, led by an old lord
pinched and peevish of face, who kneeled to Goldilind as the new
burgreve of Greenharbour; and a chaplain, a black canon, young,
broad-cheeked and fresh-looking, but hard-faced and unlovely; three
new damsels withal were come for the young Queen, not young maids, but
stalworth women, well-grown, and two of them hard-featured; the third,
tall, black-haired, and a goodly-fashioned body.

Now when these were come, who were all under the rule of Dame Elinor,
there was no gainsaying the departure to the new home; and in two days'
time they went their ways from Leashowe. But though Goldilind was young,
she was wise, and her heart misgave her, when she was amidst this new
meney, that she was not riding toward glory and honour, and a world of
worship and friends beloved. Howbeit, whatso might lie before her, she
put a good face upon it, and did to those about her queenly and with all
courtesy.

Five days they rode from Leashowe north away, by thorpe and town and
mead and river, till the land became little peopled, and the sixth day
they rode the wild-wood ways, where was no folk, save now and again the
little cot of some forester or collier; but the seventh day, about
noon, they came into a clearing of the wood, a rugged little plain of
lea-land, mingled with marish, with a little deal of acre-land in barley
and rye, round about a score of poor frame-houses set down scattermeal
about the lea. But on a long ridge, at the northern end of the said
plain, was a grey castle, strong, and with big and high towers, yet
not so much greater than was Leashowe, deemed Goldilind, as for a
dwelling-house.

Howbeit, they entered the said castle, and within, as without, it was
somewhat grim, though nought was lacking of plenishing due for folk
knightly. Long it were to tell of its walls and baileys and chambers;
but let this suffice, that on the north side, toward the thick forest,
was a garden of green-sward and flowers and potherbs; and a garth-wall
of grey stone, not very high, was the only defence thereof toward the
wood, but it was overlooked by a tall tower of the great wall, which
hight the Foresters' Tower. In the said outer garth-wall also was a
postern, whereby there was not seldom coming in and going out.

Now when Goldilind had been in her chamber for a few days, she found out
for certain, what she had before misdoubted, that she had been brought
from Leashowe and the peopled parts near to Meadhamstead unto the
uttermost parts of the realm to be kept in prison there.

Howbeit, it was in a way prison courteous; she was still served with
observance, and bowed before, and called my lady and queen, and so
forth: also she might go from chamber to hall and chapel, to and fro,
yet scarce alone; and into the garden she might go, yet not for the more
part unaccompanied; and even at whiles she went out a-gates, but then
ever with folk on the right hand and the left. Forsooth, whiles and
again, within the next two years of her abode at Greenharbour, out of
gates she went and alone; but that was as the prisoner who strives to be
free (although she had, forsooth, no thought or hope of escape), and as
the prisoner brought back was she chastised when she came within gates
again.

Everywhere, to be short, within and about the Castle of Greenharbour,
did Goldilind meet the will and the tyranny of the little sleek widow,
Dame Elinor, to whom both carle and quean in that corner of the world
were but as servants and slaves to do her will; and the said Elinor, who
at first was but spiteful in word and look toward her lady, waxed worse
as time wore and as the blossom of the King's daughter's womanhood began
to unfold, till at last the she-jailer had scarce feasted any day
when she had not in some wise grieved and tormented her prisoner; and
whatever she did, none had might to say her nay.

But Goldilind took all with a high heart, and her courage grew with
her years, nor would she bow the head before any grief, but took to her
whatsoever solace might come to her; as the pleasure of the sun and the
wind, and the beholding of the greenery of the wood, and the fowl and
the beasts playing, which oft she saw afar, and whiles anear, though
whiles, forsooth, she saw nought of it all, whereas she was shut up
betwixt four walls, and that not of her chamber, but of some bare and
foul prison of the Castle, which, with other griefs, must she needs
thole under the name and guise of penance.

However, she waxed so exceeding fair and sweet and lovely, that the
loveliness of her pierced to the hearts of many of her jailers, so that
some of them, and specially of the squires and men-at-arms, would do her
some easement which they might do unrebuked, or not sorely rebuked;
as bringing her flowers in the spring, or whiles a singing-bird or a
squirrel; and an old man there was of the men-at-arms, who would ask
leave, and get it at whiles, to come to her in her chamber, or the
garden? and tell her minstrel tales and the like for her joyance. Sooth
to say, even the pinched heart of the old Burgreve was somewhat touched
by her; and he alone had any might to stand between her and Dame Elinor;
so that but for him it had gone much harder with her than it did.

For the rest, none entered the Castle from the world without, nay not so
much as a travelling monk, or a friar on his wanderings, save and except
some messenger of Earl Geoffrey who had errand with Dame Elinor or the
Burgreve.

So wore the days and the seasons, till it was now more than four years
since she had left Leashowe, and her eighteenth summer was beginning.

But now the tale leaves telling of Goldilind, and goes back to
the matters of Oakenrealm, and therein to what has to do with King
Christopher and Rolf the Marshal.




CHAPTER VI. HOW ROLF THE MARSHAL DREAMS A DREAM AND COMES TO THE CASTLE
OF THE UTTERMOST MARCH.


Now this same summer, when King Christopher was of twenty years and
two, Rolf the Marshal, sleeping one noontide in the King's garden at
Oakenham, dreamed a dream. For himseemed that there came through the
garth-gate a woman fair and tall, and clad in nought but oaken-leaves,
who led by the hand an exceeding goodly young man of twenty summers, and
his visage like to the last battle-dead King of Oakenrealm when he was a
young man. And the said woman led the swain up to the Marshal, who asked
in his mind what these two were: and the woman answered his thought and
said: "I am the Woman of the Woods, and the Landwight of Oakenrealm; and
this lovely lad whose hand I hold is my King and thy King and the King
of Oakenrealm. Wake, fool--wake! and look to it what thou wilt do!"

And therewith he woke up crying out, and drew forth his sword. But when
he was fully awakened, he was ashamed, and went into the hall, and sat
in his high-seat, and strove to think out of his troubled mind; but for
all he might do, he fell asleep again; and again in the hall he dreamed
as he had dreamed in the garden: and when he awoke from his dream he had
no thought in his head but how he might the speediest come to the house
of Lord Richard the Lean, and look to the matter of his lord's son and
see him with his eyes, and, if it might be, take some measure with the
threat which lay in the lad's life. Nought he tarried, but set off in an
hour's time with no more company than four men-at-arms and an old squire
of his, who was wont to do his bidding without question, whether it were
good or evil.

So they went by frith and fell, by wood and fair ways, till in two days'
time they were come by undern within sight of the Castle of the Outer
March, and entered into the street of the thorpe aforesaid; and they saw
that there were no folk therein and at the house-doors save old carles
and carlines scarce wayworthy, and little children who might not go
afoot. But from the field anigh the thorpe came the sound of shouting
and glad voices, and through the lanes of the houses they saw on the
field many people in gay raiment going to and fro, as though there were
games and sports toward.

Thereof Lord Rolf heeded nought, but went his ways straight to the
Castle, and was brought with all honour into the hall, and thither came
Lord Richard the Lean, hastening and half afeard, and did obeisance to
him; and there were but a few in the hall, and they stood out of earshot
of the two lords.

The Marshal spoke graciously to Lord Richard, and made him sit beside
him, and said in a soft voice: "We have come to see thee, Lord, and how
the folk do in the Uttermost Marches. Also we would wot how it goes with
a lad whom we sent to thee when he was yet a babe, whereas he was some
byblow of the late King, our lord and master, and we deemed thee
both rich enough and kind enough to breed him into thriving without
increasing pride upon him: and, firstly, is the lad yet alive?"

He knitted his brow as he spake, for carefulness of soul; but Lord
Richard smiled upon him, though as one somewhat troubled, and answered:
"Lord Marshal, I thank thee for visiting this poor house; and I shall
tell thee first that the lad lives, and hath thriven marvellously,
though he be somewhat unruly, and will abide no correction now these
last six years. Sooth to say, there is now no story of his being anywise
akin to our late Lord King; though true it is that the folk in this
faraway corner of the land call him King Christopher, but only in a
manner of jesting. But it is no jest wherein they say that they will
gainsay him nought, and that especially the young women. Yet I will say
of him that he is wise, and asketh not overmuch; the more is the sorrow
of many of the maidens. A fell woodsman he is, and exceeding stark, and
as yet heedeth more of valiance than of the love of woman."

The Marshal looked no less troubled than before at these words; he said:
"I would see this young man speedily."

"So shall it be, Lord," said Lord Richard. Therewith he called to him
a squire, and said: "Go thou down into the thorpe, and bring hither
Christopher, for that a great lord is here who would set him to do a
deed of woodcraft, such as is more than the wont of men."

So the squire went his ways, and was gone a little while, and meantime
drew nigh to the hall a sound of triumphing songs and shouts, and right
up to the hall doors; then entered the squire, and by his side came a
tall young man, clad but in a white linen shirt and deerskin brogues,
his head crowned with a garland of flowers: him the squire brought up to
the lords on the dais, and louted to them, and said: "My lords, I bring
you Christopher, and he not overwilling, for now hath he been but just
crowned king of the games down yonder; but when the carles and queans
there said that they would come with him and bear him company to the
hall doors, then, forsooth, he yea-said the coming. It were not unmeet
that some shame were done him."

"Peace, man!" said Lord Richard, "what hath this to do with thee? Seest
thou not the Lord Marshal here?" The Lord Rolf sat and gazed on the lad,
and scowled on him; but Christopher saw therein nought but the face of
a great lord burdened with many cares; so when he had made his obeisance
he stood up fearlessly and merrily before them.

Sooth to say, he was full fair to look on: for all his strength, which,
as ye shall hear, was mighty, all the fashion of his limbs and his body
was light and clean done, and beauteous; and though his skin, where it
showed naked, was all tanned with the summer, it was fine and sleek and
kindly, every deal thereof: bright-eyed and round-cheeked he was, with
full lips and carven chin, and his hair golden brown of hue, and curling
crisp about the blossoms of his garland.

So must we say that he was such an youngling as most might have been in
the world, had not man's malice been, and the mischief of grudging and
the marring of grasping.

But now spake Lord Rolf: "Sir varlet, they tell me that thou art a
mighty hunter, and of mickle guile in woodcraft; wilt thou then hunt
somewhat for me, and bring me home a catch seldom seen?"

"Yea, Lord King," said Christopher, "I will at least do my best, if thou
but tell me where to seek the quarry and when."

"It is well," said the Marshal, "and to-morrow my squire, whom thou
seest yonder, and who hight Simon, shall tell thee where the hunt is up,
and thou shalt go with him. But hearken! thou shalt not call me king;
for to-day there is no king in Oakenrealm, and I am but Marshal, and
Earl of the king that shall be."

The lad fell a-musing for a minute, and then he said: "Yea, Lord
Marshal, I shall do thy will: but meseemeth I have heard some tale of
one who was but of late king in Oakenrealm: is it not so, Lord?"

"Stint thy talk, young man," cried the Marshal in a harsh voice, "and
abide to-morrow; who knoweth who shall be king, and whether thou or I
shall live to see him."

But as he spake the words they seemed to his heart like a foretelling
of evil, and he turned pale and trembled, and said to Christopher: "Come
hither, lad; I will give thee a gift, and then shalt thou depart till
to-morrow." So Christopher drew near to him, and the Marshal pulled off
a ring from his finger and set it on the lad's, and said to him: "Now
depart in peace;" and Christopher bent the knee to him and thanked him
for the gracious gift of the ruler of Oakenrealm, and then went his ways
out of the hall, and the folk without gave a glad cry as he came amongst
them.

But by then he was come to the door, Lord Rolf looked on his hand, and
saw that, instead of giving the youngling a finger-ring which he had
bought of a merchant for a price of five bezants, as he had meant to
do, he had given him a ring which the old King had had, whereon was the
first letter of his name (Christopher to wit), and a device of a crowned
rose, for this ring was a signet of his. Wherefore was the Marshal once
more sore troubled, and he arose, and was half minded to run down the
hall after Christopher; but he refrained him, and presently smiled
to himself, and then fell a-talking to Lord Richard, sweetly and
pleasantly.

SO wore the day to evening; but, ere he went to bed, the Lord Rolf had
a privy talk, first with Lord Richard, and after with his squire Simon.
What followed of that talk ye may hear after.




CHAPTER VII. HOW CHRISTOPHER WENT A JOURNEY INTO THE WILD-WOOD.


Next morning Christopher, who slept in the little hall of the inner
court of the Castle, arose betimes, and came to the great gate; but, for
as early as he was, there he saw the squire Simon abiding him, standing
between two strong horses; to him he gave the sele of the day, and the
squire greeted him, but in somewhat surly wise. Then he said to him:
"Well, King Christopher, art thou ready for the road?"

"Yea, as thou seest," said the youngling smiling. For, indeed, he had
breeches now beneath his shirt, and a surcoat of green woollen over it;
boots of deerskin had he withal, and spurs thereon: he was girt with a
short sword, and had a quiver of arrows at his back, and bare a great
bow in his hand.

"Yea," quoth Simon, "thou deemest thee a gay swain belike; but thou
lookest likelier for a deerstealer than a rider, thou, hung up to thy
shooting-gear. Deemest thou we go a-hunting of the hind?"

Quoth Christopher: "I wot not, squire; but the great lord who lieth
sleeping yonder, hath told me that thou shouldest give me his errand;
and of some hunting or feat of wood-craft he spake. Moreover, this
crooked stick can drive a shaft through matters harder than a hind's
side."

Simon looked confused, and he reddened and stammered somewhat as he
answered: "Ah, yea: so it was; I mind me; I will tell thee anon."

Said Christopher: "Withal, squire, if we are wending into the wood, as
needs we must, unless we ride round about this dale in a ring all day,
dost thou deem we shall go at a gallop many a mile? Nay, fair sir; the
horses shall wend a foot's pace oftenest, and we shall go a-foot not
unseldom through the thickets."

Now was Simon come to himself again, and that self was surly, so he
said: "Ay, ay, little King, thou deemest thee exceeding wise in these
woods, dost thou not? and forsooth, thou mayst be. Yet have I tidings
for thee."

"Yea, and what be they?" said Christopher.

Simon grinned: "Even these," said he, "that Dr. Knowall was no man's
cousin while he lived, and that he died last week."

Therewith he swung himself into his saddle, and Christopher laughed
merrily at his poor gibe and mounted in like wise.

Wherewithal they rode their ways through the thorpe, and at the southern
end thereof Simon drew rein, and looked on Christopher as if he would
ask him something, but asked not. Then said Christopher: "Whither go we
now?"

Said Simon: "It is partly for thee to say: hearken, I am bidden first to
ride the Redwater Wood with thee: knowest thou that?"

"Yea," said the lad, "full well: but which way shall we ride it? Wilt
thou come out of it at Redwater Head, or Herne Moss, or the Long Pools?"

Said Simon: "We shall make for the Long Pools, if thou canst bring me
there."

Christopher laughed: "Aha!" said he, "then am I some faraway cousin
of Dr. Knowall when the whole tale is told: forsooth I can lead thee
thither; but tell me, what shall I do of valiant deeds at the Long
Pools? for there is no fire-drake nor effit, nay, nor no giant, nor
guileful dwarf, nought save mallard and coot, heron and bittern; yea,
and ague-shivers to boot."

Simon looked sourly on him and said: "Thou are bidden to go with me,
young man, or gainsay the Marshal. Art thou mighty enough thereto? For
the rest, fear not but that the deed shall come to thee one day."

"Nay," said Christopher, "it is all one to me, for I am at home in these
woods and wastes, I and my shafts. Tell me of the deeds when thou
wilt." But indeed he longed to know the deed, and fretted him because of
Simon's surliness and closeness. Then he said: "Well, Squire Simon, let
us to the road; for thou shalt know that to-night we must needs house us
under the naked heaven; in nowise can we come to the Long Pools before
to-morrow morning."

"Yea, and why not?" said the squire; "I have lain in worse places."

"Wilt thou tell me thereof?" said Christopher.

"Mayhappen," said Simon, "if to-morrow comes and goes for both of us
twain."

So they rode their ways through the wood, and baited at midday with what
Simon bare in his saddle-bags, and then went on till night fell on them;
then asked Simon how long they were from the Long Pools, and Christopher
told him that they were yet short of them some fifteen miles, and those
long ones, because of the marish grounds. So they tethered their horses
there and ate their supper; and lay down to sleep in the house of the
woods, by a fire-side which they lighted.

But in the midnight Christopher, who was exceeding fine-eared, had an
inkling of someone moving afoot anigh him, and he awoke therewith, and
sprang up, his drawn short-sword in his hand, and found himself face to
face with Simon, and he also with his sword drawn. Simon sprang aback,
but held up his sword-point, and Christopher, not yet fully awake, cried
out: "What wouldst thou? What is it?"

Simon answered, stammering and all abashed: "Didst thou not hear then?
it wakened me."

"I heard nought," said Christopher; "what was it?"

"Horses going in the wood," said Simon

"Ah, yea," said Christopher, "it will have been the wild colts and the
mares; they harbour about these marsh-land parts. Go to sleep again,
neighbour, the night is not yet half worn; but I will watch a while."

Then Simon sheathed his sword, and turned about and stood uneasily a
little while, and then cast him down as one who would sleep hastily;
but slept not forsooth, though he presently made semblance of it: as for
Christopher, he drew together the brands of the fire, and sat beside it
with his blade over his knees, until the first beginning of the summer
dawn was in the sky; then he began to nod, and presently lay aback and
slept soundly. Simon slept not, but durst not move. So they lay till it
was broad day, and the sunbeams came thrusting through the boughs of the
thicket.




CHAPTER VIII. CHRISTOPHER COMES TO THE TOFTS.


When they arose in the sunshine, Simon went straightway to see to the
horses, while Christopher stayed by the fire to dight their victuals;
he was merry enough, and sang to himself the while; but when Simon came
back again, Christopher looked on him sharply, but for a while Simon
would not meet his eye, though he asked divers questions of him
concerning little matters, as though he were fain to hear Christopher's
voice; at last he raised his eyes, and looked on him steadily, and then
Christopher said: "Well, wayfarer mine, and whither away this morning?"

Said Simon: "As thou wottest, to the Long Pools."

Said the lad: "Well, thou keepest thy tidings so close, that I will ask
thee no more till we come to the Long Pools; since there, forsooth,
thou must needs tell me; unless we sunder company there, whereof I were
nought grieving."

"Mayhappen thou shalt fare a long way to-day," muttered Simon.

But the lad cried out aloud, while his eye glittered and his cheek
flushed: "Belike thou hadst well-nigh opened the door thereto last
night!" And therewith he leapt to his feet and drew his short-sword, and
with three deft strokes sheared asunder an overhanging beech-bough as
thick as a man's wrist, that it fell crashing down, and caught Simon
amongst the fall of its leafy twigs, while Christopher stood laughing
on him, but with a dangerous lofty look in his eyes: then he turned away
quietly toward the horses and mounted his nag, and Simon followed and
did the like, silently; crestfallen he looked, with brooding fierceness
in his face.

So they rode their ways, and spake but little each to each till they
came to where the trees of the wood thinned speedily, and gave out at
last at the foot of a low stony slope but little grassed; and when they
had ridden up to the brow and could see below, Christopher stretched
out his hand, and said: "Lo thou the Long Pools, fellow wayfarer! and lo
some of the tramping; horses that woke thee and not me last night."

Forsooth there lay below them a great stretch of grass, which whiles
ran into mere quagmire, and whiles was sound and better grassed; and
the said plain was seamed by three long shallow pools, with, as it were,
grassy causeways between them, grown over here and there with ancient
alder trees; but the stony slope whereon they had reined up bent round
the plain mostly to the east, as though it were the shore of a great
water; and far away to the south the hills of the forest rose up blue,
and not so low at the most, but that they were somewhat higher than
the crest of the White Horse as ye may see it from the little Berkshire
hills above the Thames. Down on the firm greensward there was indeed a
herd of wild horses feeding; mallard and coot swam about the waters; the
whimbrel laughed from the bent-sides, and three herons stood on the side
of the causeway seeking a good fishing-stead.

Simon sat a-horseback looking askance from the marish to Christopher,
and said nothing a while; then he spake in a low croaking voice, and
said: "So, little King, we have come to the Long Pools; now I will ask
thee, hast thou been further southward than this marish land?"

"That have I," said the lad, "a day's journey further; but according to
the tales of men it was at the peril of my life."

Simon seemed as if he had not noted his last word; he said: "Well then,
since thou knowest the wild and the wood, knowest thou amidst of the
thickets there, two lumps of bare hills, like bowls turned bottom up,
that rise above the trees, and on each a tower, and betwixt them a long
house."

"Save us, Allhallows!" quoth Christopher, "but thou wilt mean the Tofts!
Is it so, sir squire?"

"Even so," said Simon.

"And thou knowest what dwellest there, and wouldst have me lead thee
thither?" said the lad.

"I am so bidden," said Simon; "if thou wilt not do my bidding, seek thou
some place to hide thee in from the hand of the Earl Marshal."

Said the youngling: "Knowest thou not Jack of the Tofts and his seven
sons, and what he is, and that he dwelleth there?"

Said Simon: "I know of him; yea, and himself I know, and that he
dwelleth there; and I wot that men call him an outlaw, and that many
rich men shall lack ere he lacks. What then?"

"This," said Christopher, "that, as all tales tell, he will take my life
if I ride thither. And," said he, turning to Simon, "this is belike what
thou wouldest with me?" And therewith he drew out his sword, for his bow
was unstrung.

But Simon sat still and let his sword abide, and said, sourly enough:
"Thou art a fool to think I am training thee to thy death by him; for I
have no will to die, and why shall he not slay me also? Now again I say
unto thee, thou hast the choice, either to lead me to the Tofts, where
shall be the deed for thee to do, or to hide thee in some hole, as I
said afore, from the vengeance of the Lord of Oakenrealm. But as for thy
sword, thou mayst put it up, for I will not fight with thee, but rather
let thee go with a string to thy leg, if thou wilt not be wise and do as
thy lords ordain for thee."

Christopher sheathed his sword, and a smile came into his face, as if
some new thought were stirring in him, and he said: "Well, since thou
wilt not fight with me, and I but a lad, I will e'en do thy will and
thine errand to Jack of the Tofts. Maybe he is not so black as he is
painted, and not all tales told of him are true. But some of them I will
tell thee as we ride along."

"And some thereof I know already, O woodland knight," said Simon,
as they rode down the bent, and Christopher led on toward the green
causeway betwixt the waters. "Tell me," quoth he, when they had ridden
awhile, "is this one of thy tales, how Jack of the Tofts went to the
Yule feast of a great baron in the guise of a minstrel, and, even as
they bore in the boar's head, smote the said baron on the neck, so that
his head lay by the head of the swine on the Christmas board?"

"Yea," said Christopher, "and how Jack cried out: 'Two heads of swine,
one good to eat, one good to burn.' But, my master, thou shalt know that
this manslaying was not for nought: whereas the Baron of Greenlake had
erewhile slain Jack's father in felon wise, where he could strike no
stroke for life; and two of his brethren also had he slain, and made the
said Jack an outlaw, and he all sackless. In the Uttermost March we deem
that he had a case against the baron."

"Hah!" said Simon. "Is this next tale true, that this Jack o' the Tofts
slew a good knight before the altar, so that the priest's mass-hackle
was all wet with his blood, whereas the said priest was in the act of
putting the holy body into the open mouth of the said knight?"

Christopher said eagerly: "True was it, by the Rood! and well was it
done, for that same Sir Raoul was an ugly traitor, who had knelt down
where he died to wed the Body of the Lord to a foul lie in his mouth;
whereas the man who knelt beside him he had trained to his destruction,
and was even then doing the first deal of his treason by forswearing him
there."

"And that man who knelt with him there," said Simon, "what betid to
him?"

Said Christopher: "He went out of the church with Jack of the Tofts that
minute of the stroke; and to the Tofts he went with him, and abode with
him freely: and a valiant man he was...and is."

"Hah!" said Simon again. "And then there is this: that the seven sons
of Jack of the Tofts bore off perforce four fair maidens of gentle blood
from the castle wherein they dwelt, serving a high dame in all honour;
and that moreover, they hanged the said dame over the battlements of her
own castle. Is this true, fair sir?"

"True is it as the gospel," said Christopher: "yet many say that the
hanged dame had somewhat less than her deserts; for a foul & cruel whore
had she been; and had done many to be done to death, and stood by while
they were pined. And the like had she done with those four damsels, had
there not been the stout sons of Jack of the Tofts; so that the dear
maidens were somewhat more than willing to be borne away."

Simon grinned: "Well, lad," said he, "I see that thou knowest Jack of
the Tofts even better than I do; so why in the devil's name thou art
loth to lead me to him, I wot not."

Christopher reddened, and held his peace awhile; then he said: "Well
fellow-farer, at least I shall know something of him ere next midnight."

"Yea," said Simon, "and shall we not come to the Tofts before
nightfall?"

"Let us essay it," said Christopher, "and do our best, it yet lacketh
three hours of noon." Therewith he spurred on, for the greensward was
hard under the hooves, and they had yet some way to go before they
should come amongst the trees and thickets.

Into the said wood they came, and rode all day diligently, but night
fell on them before they saw either house or man or devil; then said
Simon: "Why should we go any further before dawn? Will it not be best to
come to this perilous house by daylight?"

Said Christopher: "There be perils in the wood as well as in the house.
If we lie down here, maybe Jack's folk may come upon us sleeping, and
some mischance may befall us. Withal, hereabout be no wild horses to
wake thee and warn thee of thy foeman anigh. Let us press on; there is
a moon, though she be somewhat hidden by clouds, and meseemeth the way
lieth clear before me; neither are we a great way from the Tofts."

Then Simon rode close up to Christopher, and took his rein and stayed
him, and said to him, as one who prayeth: "Young man, willest thou my
death?"

"That is as it may be," said Christopher; "willest thou mine?"

Simon held his peace awhile, and Christopher might not see what was in
his face amidst the gathering dusk; but he twitched his rein out of the
squire's hand, as if he would hasten onward; then the squire said: "Nay,
I pray thee abide and hear a word of me."

"Speak then," said Christopher, "but hasten, for I hunger, and I would
we were in the hall." And therewith he laughed.

Said Simon: "Thus it is: if I go back to my lord and bear no token of
having done his errand to Jack of the Tofts, then am I in evil case; and
if I come to the Tofts, I wot well that Jack is a man fierce of heart,
and ready of hand: now, therefore, I pray thee give me thy word to be my
warrant, so far as thou mayst be, with this woodman and his sons."

At that word Christopher brake out a-laughing loudly, till all the dusk
wood rang with the merry sound of his fresh voice; at last he said:
"Well, well, thou art but a craven to be a secret murderer: the Lord God
would have had an easy bargain of Cain, had he been such as thou. Come
on, and do thine errand to Jack of the Tofts, and I will hold thee
harmless, so far as I may. Though, sooth to say, I guessed what thine
errand was, after the horses waked thee and put a naked sword in thine
hand last night. Marry! I had no inkling of it when we left the Castle
yesterday morning, but deemed thy lord needed me to do him some service.
Come on then! or rather go thou on before me a pace; there, where thou
seest the glimmer betwixt the beech-trees yonder; if thou goest astray,
I am anigh thee for a guide. And I say that we shall not go far without
tidings."

Simon went on perforce, as he was bidden, and they rode thus a while
slowly, Christopher now and then crying, as they went: "To the right,
squire! To the left! Straight on now!" and so on. But suddenly they
heard voices, and it was as if the wood had all burst out into fire, so
bright a light shone out. Christopher shouted, and hastened on to pass
Simon, going quite close to his right side thereby, and as he did so, he
saw steel flashing in his hand, and turned sidling to guard him, but
ere he could do aught Simon drave a broad dagger into his side, and then
turned about and fled the way they had come, so far as he knew how.

Christopher fell from his horse at once as the stroke came home, but
straightway therewith were there men with torches round about him, a
dozen of them; men tall and wild-looking in the firelight; and one
of them, a slim young man with long red hair falling all about his
shoulders, knelt down by him, while the others held his horse and gat
his feet out of the stirrups.

The red-head laid his hand on his breast, and raised his head up till
the light of a torch fell on it, and then he cried out: "Masters, here
hath been a felon; the man hath been sticked, and the deed hath to do
with us; for lo you, this is none other than little Christopher of the
Uttermost March, who stumbled on the Tofts last Yule, and with whom we
were so merry together. Here, thou Robert of Maisey, do thy leechdom on
him if he be yet living; but if he be dead, or dieth of his hurt, then
do I take the feud on me, to follow it to the utmost against the slayer;
even I, David the Red, though I be the youngest of the sons of Jack of
the Tofts. For this man I meant should be my fellow in field and fell,
ganging and galloping, in hall and high-place, in cot and in choir,
before woman and warrior, and priest and proud-prince. Now thou Robert,
how does he?"

Said the man who had looked to Christopher's wound, and had put aside
his coat and shirt: "He is sore hurt, but meseemeth not deadly. Nay,
belike he may live as long as thou, or longer, whereas thou wilt ever be
shoving thy red head and lank body wheresoever knocks are going."

David rose with a sigh of one who is lightened of a load, and said:
"Well Robert, when thou hast bound his wound let us have him into the
house: Ho lads! there is light enough to cut some boughs and make a
litter for him. But, ho again! has no one gone after the felon to take
him?"

Robert grinned up from his job with the hurt man: "Nay, King David,"
said he, "it is mostly thy business; mayhappen thou wilt lay thy heels
on thy neck and after him."

The red-head stamped on the ground, and half drew his sax, and shoved
it back again unto the sheath, and then said angrily: "I marvel at thee,
Robert, that thou didst not send a man or two at once after the felon:
how may I leave my comrade and sweet board-fellow lying hurt in the
wild-wood? Art thou growing over old for our woodland ways, wherein
loitering bringeth louting?"

Robert chuckled and said: "I thought thou wouldst take the fly in thy
mouth, foster-son: if the felon escape Ralph Longshanks and Anthony
Green, then hath he the devil's luck; and they be after him."

"That is well," said the young man, "though I would I were with them."
And therewith he walked up and down impatiently, while the others were
getting ready the litter of boughs.

At last it was done, and Christopher laid thereon, and they all went
on together through the woodland path, the torches still flaring about
them. Presently they came out into a clearing of the wood, and lo,
looming great and black before them against the sky, where the moon had
now broken out of the clouds somewhat, the masses of the tofts, and at
the top of the northernmost of them a light in the upper window of a
tall square tower. Withal the yellow-litten windows of a long house
showed on the plain below the tofts; but little else of the house might
be seen, save that, as they drew near, the walls brake out in doubtful
light here and there as the torches smote them.

So came they to a deep porch, where they quenched all the torches save
one, and entered a great hall through it, David and two other tall young
men going first, and Robert Maisey going beside the bier. The said hall
was lighted with candles, but not very brightly, save at the upper end;
but amidmost a flickering heap of logs sent a thin line of blue smoke up
to the luffer. There were some sixty folk in the hall, scattered about
the end-long tables, a good few of whom were women, well grown and
comely enough, so far as could be seen under the scanty candle-light.
At the high-table, withal, were sitting both men and women, and as they
drew near to the greater light of it, there could be seen in the chief
seat a man, past middle age, tall, wide-shouldered and thin-flanked,
with a short peaked beard and close-cut grizzled hair; he was high of
cheekbones, thin-faced, with grey eyes, both big and gentle-looking; he
was clad in a green coat welted with gold. Beside him sat a woman, tall
and big-made, but very fair of face, though she were little younger,
belike, than the man. Out from these two sat four men and four women,
man by man and woman by woman, on either side of the high-seat. Of the
said men, one was of long red hair as David, and like to him in
all wise, but older; the others were of like fashion to him in the
high-seat. Shortly to say it, his sons they were, as David and the two
young men with him. The four women who sat with these men were all fair
and young, and one of them, she who drank out of the red-head's cup, so
fair, and with such a pleasant slim grace, that her like were not easy
to be found.

Again, to shorten the tale, there in the hall before Christopher, who
lay unwotting, were Jack of the Tofts and his seven sons, and the four
wives of four of the same, whom they had won from the Wailful Castle,
when they, with their father, put an end to the evil woman, and the
great she-tyrant of the Land betwixt the Wood and the River.

Now when David and his were come up to the dais, they stayed them,
and their father spake from his high-seat and said: "What is to do, ye
three? and what catch have ye?"

Said David: "I would fain hope 'tis the catch of a life that or I love;
for here is come thy guest of last Yule, even little Christopher, who
wrestled with thee and threw thee after thou hadst thrown all of us, and
he lying along and hurt, smitten down by a felon hard on our very doors.
What will ye do with him?"

"What," said Jack of the Tofts, "but tend him and heal him and cherish
him. And when he is well, then we shall see. But where is the felon who
smote him?"

Said David: "He fled away a-horseback ere we came to the field of deed,
and Anthony Green and Ralph Longshanks are gone after him, and belike,
will take him."

"Mayhappen not," said the master. "Now, forsooth, I have an inkling of
what this may mean; whereas there can be but one man whose business
may be the taking of our little guest's life. But let all be till he
be healed and may tell us his tale; and, if he telleth it as I deem
he will, then shall we seek further tidings. Meanwhile, if ye take the
felon, keep him heedfully till I may see him; for then may I have a true
tale out of him, even before Christopher is hale again."

So therewith David and Robert, with two or three others, brought
Christopher to a chamber, and did what leechdoms to him they might;
but Jack of the Tofts, and his sons and their fair wives, and his other
folk, made merry in the hall of the Tofts.




CHAPTER IX. SQUIRE SIMON COMES BACK TO OAKENHAM. THE EARL MARSHAL TAKEN
TO KING IN OAKENREALM.


Now as to Squire Simon, whether the devil helped him, or his luck, or
were it his own cunning and his, horse's stoutness, we wot not; but in
any case he fell not in with Ralph Longshanks and Anthony Green, but
rode as far and as fast as his horse would go, and then lay down in the
wild-wood; and on the morrow arose and went his ways, and came in the
even to the Castle of the Uttermost March, and went on thence the morrow
after on a fresh horse to Oakenham. There he made no delay but went
straight to the High House, and had privy speech of the Earl Marshal;
and him he told how he had smitten Christopher, and, as he deemed, slain
him. The Earl Marshal looked on him grimly and said: "Where is the ring
then?"

"I have it not," said Simon. "How might I light down to take it, when
the seven sons were hard on us?" And therewith he told him all the tale,
and how he had risen to slay Christopher the even before; and how he had
found out after that the youngling had become guest and fosterling of
the folk of the Tofts; and how warily Christopher had ridden, so that
he, Simon, had had to do his best at the last moment. "And now, Lord,"
quoth he, "I see that it will be my luck to have grudging of thee, or
even worse it may be; yea, or thou wilt be presently telling me that
I am a liar and never struck the stroke: but I warrant me that by
this time Jack of the Tofts knoweth better, for I left my knife in the
youngling's breast, and belike he wotteth of my weapons. Well, then, if
thou wilt be quit of me, thou hast but to forbear upholding me against
the Toft folk, and then am I gone without any to-do of thee."

Earl Rolf spake quietly in answer, though his face was somewhat
troubled: "Nay, Simon, I doubt thee not, not one word; for why shouldest
thou lie to me? nor do I deem thou wouldest, for thou art trusty and
worthy. Yet sore I doubt if the child be dead. Well, even so let it be,
for I am alive; and full surely I am mightier than Jack of the Tofts,
both to uphold thee against him (wherein I shall not fail), and
otherwise. But may God make me even as that young man if I be not
mightier yet in a few days. But now do thou go and eat and drink and
take thy disport; for thou hast served me well; and in a little while I
shall make thee knight and lord, and do all I can to pleasure thee."

So then Simon knelt to the Earl and made obeisance to him, and arose and
went his ways, light-hearted and merry.

But within the month it so befel that some of the lords and dukes came
to the Earl Marshal, and prayed him to call together a great Folk-mote
of all Oakenrealm; and he answered them graciously, and behight them to
do as they would; and even so did he.

And that Mote was very great, and whenas it was hallowed, there arose
a great lord, grey and ancient, and bewailed him before the folk, that
they had no king over Oakenrealm to uphold the laws & ward the land; and
"Will ye live bare and kingless for ever?" said he at last. "Will ye
not choose you a king, and crown him, before I die, and we others of the
realm who are old and worn?" Then he sat down, and another arose, and in
plain terms he bade them take the Earl Marshal to king. And then arose
one after other, and each sang the same song, till the hearts of the
people grew warm with the big words, and at first many, and then more
cried out: "A King, a King! The Earl Marshal for King! Earl Rolf for
King!" So that at last the voices rose into a great roar, and sword
clashed on shield, and they who were about the Earl turned to him and
upraised him on a great war-shield, and he stood thereon above the folk
with a naked sword in his hand, and all the folk shouted about him.

Thereafter the chiefs and all the mightiest came and did homage to him
for King of Oakenrealm as he sat on the Hill of the Folk-mote: and that
night there was once more a King of Oakenrealm, and Earl Rolf was no
more, but King Rolf ruled the people.

But now the tale leaves telling of him, and turns again to Christopher
the woodman, who lay sick of his hurt in the House of the Tofts.




CHAPTER X. OF CHRISTOPHER AT THE TOFTS.


Christopher was six weeks ere he could come and go as he was wont; but
it was but a few days ere he was well enough to tell his tale to Jack of
the Tofts and his seven bold sons; and they cherished him and made
much of him, and so especially did David, the youngest son, to his
board-fellow and troth-brother.

On a day when he was well-nigh whole, as he sat under an oak-tree nigh
the house, in the cool of the evening, Jack of the Tofts came to him and
sat beside him, and made him tell his tale to him once more, and when he
was done he said to him: "Foster-son, for so I would have thee deem of
thyself, what is the thing that thou rememberest earliest in thy days?"

Said Christopher: "A cot without the Castle walls at the Uttermost
Marches, and a kind woman therein, big, sandy-haired, and freckled, and
a lad that was white-haired and sturdy, somewhat bigger than I. And
I mind me standing up against the door-post of the cot and seeing
men-at-arms riding by in white armour, and one of them throwing an apple
to me, and I raised my arm to throw it back at him, but my nurse (for
somehow I knew she was not my mother) caught my hand and drew me back
indoors, and I heard the men laughing behind me. And then a little after
my nurse took me into the Castle court, and there was again the man who
had thrown me the apple, sitting on a bench therein, clad in a scarlet
gown furred with brown fur; and she led me up to him, and he stooped
down and chucked me under the chin and put his hand on my head, and
looked at my nurse and said: 'Yea, he is a big lad, and groweth apace,
whereas he is but of six winters.' 'Nay, Lord,' said my nurse, 'he is
but scantly five.' He knit his brows and said: 'Nay, I tell thee he is
six.' She shook her head, but said nought, and the great man scowled on
her and said: 'Mistress, wilt thou set thy word against mine? Know now
that this child is of six years. Now then, how old is he?' She said
faintly: 'Six years.' Said he: 'Look to it that thy head and thy mouth
forget it not, else shall we make thy back remember it.' Then he put his
hand on my head again, and said: 'Well, I say thou art a big lad for six
years;' and therewith he gave me a silver penny; and even as he spake,
came up a grey-clad squire to him and looked on me curiously. Then I
went away with my nurse, and wondered why she was grown so pale, whereas
she was mostly red-cheeked and jolly. But when she had brought me into
the cot again, she kissed me and clipped me, weeping sorely the while;
wherefore I wept, though I knew not why. Sithence, I soon came to know
that the man was the lord and governor of the Castle, as ye may well
wot; but to this hour I know not what he meant by threatening my nurse."

Said Jack: "And how old art thou now, Christopher mine?"

Said the youngling, laughing: "By my lord the Castellan's reckoning I am
twenty and two years; but if thou wilt trow my good and kind nurse, that
yet liveth a kind dame, thou must take twelve months off the tale."

Jack sat silent a little; then he laughed and said: "Well, thou art a
mickle babe, Christopher, and it may be that one day many a man shall
know it. But now tell me again; thou hadst said to me before that thou
hast known neither father nor mother, brother nor sisters: is it so,
verily?"

Said Christopher: "Never a kinsman of blood have I, though many
well-wishers."

Said Jack: "Well, now hast thou father and mother, brethren and sisters,
though they be of the sort of man-slayers and strong-thieves and
outlaws; yet they love thee, lad, and thou mayst one day find out how
far thou mayst trust them."

Christopher nodded and smiled at him merrily; then he fell silent
awhile, and the outlaw sat looking on him; at last he said suddenly:
"Foster-father, tell me what I am, and of what kindred, I pray thee;
for, methinks, thou knowest thereof; and what wonder, wise man as thou
art."

"Forsooth, son Christopher, I have a deeming thereof, or somewhat more,
and when it is waxen greater yet, I will tell it thee one day, but not
now. But hearken! for I have other tidings for thee. Thou art now whole
and strong, and in a few days thou mayst wend the wild-wood as stoutly
as e'er a one of us. Now, therefore, how sayest thou, if I bid thee fare
a two days' journey with David and Gilbert thy brethren, and thy sister
Joanna, till they bring thee to a fair little stead which I call mine
own, to dwell there awhile? For, meseemeth, lad, that the air of the
Tofts here may not be overwholesome unto thee."

Christopher reddened, and he half rose up, and said: "What is this,
foster-father? Is it that there shall be battle at the Tofts, and that
thou wouldst have me away thence? Am I then such a weakling?"

Said Jack, laughing: "Be still now, thou sticked one. The Tofts go down
to battle at some whiles; but seldom comet battle to the Tofts; and no
battle do I look for now. But do my bidding, sweet fosterling, and it
will be better for me and better for thee, and may, perchance, put off
battle for awhile; which to me as now were not unhandy. If thou wilt
but abide at Littledale for somewhile, there shall be going and coming
betwixt us, and thou shalt drink thy Yule at the Tofts, and go back
afterwards, and ever shalt thou have thy sweet fellows with thee; so be
wise, since thou goest not perforce."

"Yea, yea," said Christopher, laughing; "thou puttest force on no man,
is it not so, foster-father? Wherefore I will go, and uncompelled."

Therewith came up to them, from out of the wild-wood, David, and with
him Joanna, who was the wife of Gilbert, and one of those fair maidens
from the Wailful Castle, though not the fairest of them; they had been
a-hunting, for ever those three would willingly go together, Gilbert,
David, and Joanna; and now Gilbert had abided behind, to dight the
quarry for fetching home. Christopher looked on the two joyfully, as a
man getting whole after sickness smiles on goodly things; and Joanna was
fair to see in her hunter's attire, with brogues tied to her naked feet,
and the shapeliness of her legs bare to the knee beneath the trussing up
of her green skirts.

They greeted Christopher kindly, and Joanna sat down by him to talk,
but Jack of the Tofts took his son by the arm, and went toward the house
with him in earnest speech.




CHAPTER XI. HOW CHRISTOPHER CAME TO LITTLEDALE TO ABIDE THERE A WHILE.


In about a week's time from this, those four fellows went their ways
southward from the Tofts, having with them four good nags and four
sumpter beasts laden with such things as they needed, whereof were
weapons enough, though they all, save Christopher, bare bows; and he
and the others were girt with swords, and a leash of good dogs followed
them. Two milch kine also they drave with them.

Merry they were all as they went their ways through the woods, but the
gladness of Christopher was even past words; wherefore, after a little,
he spake scarce at all, but sat in his saddle hearkening the tales and
songs and jests of his fellows, who went close beside him, for more
often they went a-foot than rode. And, forsooth, as the sweet morning
wore, it seemed to him, so great was his joy, as if all the fair show
of the greenery, and the boles of the ancient oaks, and the squirrels
running from bough to bough, and the rabbits scuttling from under the
bracken, and the hind leaping in the wood-lawn, and the sun falling
through the rustling leaves, and the wind on his face, and the scent of
the forest, yea, and his fair companions and their loveliness & valiancy
and kindness, and the words and songs that came from their dear mouths,
all these seemed to him, as it were, one great show done for the behoof
and pleasure of him, the man come from the peril of death and the
sick-bed.

They lay that night in all glee under the green boughs; and arose on the
morrow, and went all day, and again slept in the greenwood, and the
next morning came down into a fair valley, which was indeed Littledale,
through which ran a pleasant little river; and on a grassy knoll, but
a short way from its bank, was a long framed hall, somewhat narrow,
and nought high, whitherward they turned them straightway, and were
presently before the door; then Gilbert drew a key from out of his scrip
and unlocked the door, and they entered, and found within a fair little
hall, with shut-beds out from it on the further side, and kitchen, and
store-bowers at the end; all things duly appointed with plenishing, and
meal and wine; for it was but some three months since one of Jack of the
Tofts' allies, Sir Launcelot a'Green and his wife and two bairns, had
left it till their affair was made straight; whereas he had dwelt there
a whole year, for he had been made an outlaw of Meadham, and was a dear
friend of the said Jack.

"Now," said David smiling, "here is now thy high house and thy castle,
little King Christopher; how doth it like thee?"

"Right well," said Christopher; "and, to say sooth, I would almost that
it were night, or my bones do else, that I might lie naked in a bed."

"Nay, lad," said Gilbert, "make it night now, and we will do all that
needs must be done, while thou liest lazy, as all kings use to do."

"Nay," said Christopher, "I will be more a king than so, for I will do
neither this nor that; I will not work and I will not go to bed, but
will look on, till it is time for me to take to the crooked stick and
the grey-goose wing and seek venison."

"That is better than well," said David; "for I can see by thine eyes,
that are dancing with pleasure, that in three or four days thou wilt be
about the thickets with us."

"Meantime," said Joanna, "thou shalt pay for thy meat and drink by
telling us tales when we come home weary."

"Yea," said Christopher laughing, "that ye may go to sleep before your
time."

So they talked, and were joyous and blithe together, and between them
they made the house trim, and decked it with boughs and blossoms; and
though Christopher told them no tale that night, Joanna and David sang
both; and in a night or two it was Christopher that was the minstrel. So
when the morrow came there began their life of the woodland; but, save
for the changing of the year and the chances of the hunt, the time
passed on from day to day with little change, and it was but seldom that
any man came their way. When Yule was, they locked the house door behind
them and went their ways home to the Tofts; and now of all of these
wayfarers was Christopher by far the hardest and strongest, for his side
had utterly forgotten Simon's knife. At the Tofts they were welcomed
with all triumph, and they were about there in the best of cheer, till
it was wearing toward Candlemas, and then they took occasion of a bright
and sunny day to go back to Littledale once more, and there they abode
till spring was come and was wearing into summer, and messages had come
and gone betwixt them and the Tofts, and it was agreed that with the
first of autumn they should go back to the Tofts and see what should
betide.

But now leave we Christopher and these good fellows of the Tofts and
turn to Goldilind, who is yet dwelling amid no very happy days in the
Castle of Greenharbour, on the northernmost marches of Meadham.




CHAPTER XII. OF GOLDILIND IN THE MAY MORNING AT GREENHARBOUR.


May was on the land now, and was come into its second week, and
Goldilind awoke on a morn in the Castle of Greenharbour; but little did
her eyes behold of the May, even when they were fully open; for she
was lying, not in her own chamber, which was proper, and even somewhat
stately, and from whence she could look on the sky and greenwood, but
in a chamber low down amidst the footings of the wall, little lighted,
unadorned, with nought in it for sport or pleasure; nought, forsooth,
save the pallet bed on which she lay, a joint stool and water ewer.
To be short, though it were called the Least Guard-chamber, it was a
prison, and she was there dreeing her penance, as Dame Elinor would
call the cruelty of her malice, which the chaplain, Dame Elinor's
led captain, had ordained her for some sin which the twain had forged
between them.

She lay there naked in her smock, with no raiment anigh her, and this
was the third morning whereon she had awakened to the dusky bare walls,
and a long while had their emptiness made of the hours: but she lay
quiet and musing, not altogether without cheer now; for indeed she was
not wont to any longer penance than this she had but now tholed, so she
looked for release presently: and, moreover, there had grown in her mind
during those three days a certain purpose; to wit, that she would get
hold of the governor of the castle privily, and two or three others of
the squires who most regarded her, and bewail her case to them, so that
she might perchance get some relief. Forsooth, as she called to mind
this resolve, her heart beat and her cheek flushed, for well she knew
that there was peril in it, and she forecast what might be the worst
that would come thereof, while, on the other hand, the best that might
be seemed to her like a glimpse of Paradise.

As she lay there and turned the matter over in her mind for this many an
hundred time, there came a key into the lock, and the door opened;
and thereby entered a tall woman, dark-haired, white-skinned, somewhat
young, and not ill-favoured: Goldilind still lay there, till the
new-comer said to her in a hard voice, wherein was both threatening and
mockery: "Rise up, our Lady! the Dame Elinor saith that it is enough,
and that thou art to go forth. Nay, hold a while; for I say unto thee
that it is yet early in the day, and that thy chamber is not yet dight
for thee, so thou must needs bestow thyself elsewhere till it be done."

Goldilind rose up, and said smiling: "Yea, Aloyse, but thou hast not
brought my raiment: and thou seest!"

The maid stood looking at her a moment somewhat evilly, and then said:
"Well, since it is but scant six o'clock, I may do that; but I bid thee
ask me not overmuch; for meseemeth Dame Elinor is not overwell pleased
with thee to-day, nor our chaplain either."

Therewith she turned and went out, locking the door behind her, and came
back presently bearing on her arm a green gown and other raiment: she
laid them on the stool before the Lady, and said: "Hasten, my Lady, and
let me go to my place: sooth to say, it may well be double trouble to
thee to don thy clothes, for thou mayst have to doff them again before
long."

Goldilind answered nought, but reddened and paled again as she clad her
under the waiting-maid's eyes. Then they went out together, and up a
short stone stair, till they were level with the greensward without.
Then the maid turned to Goldilind and said: "And now thou art clad and
out, my Lady, I wot not where thou art to go to, since to thy chamber
thou must not go. Nay, hold and hearken! here we be at the door which
opens on to the Foresters' Garth under the Foresters' Tower, thither
shalt thou abide till I come to fetch thee. How now, my Lady! what else
wouldst thou?"

Goldilind looked on her with a smile, yet with eagereyes, and said: "O
good Aloyse, wouldst thou but give me a piece of bread? for I hunger;
thou wottest my queenly board hath not been overloaded these last days."

"Ha!" said Aloyse; "if thou ask me overmuch I fear thou mayst pay for
it, my Lady; but this last asking thou shalt have, and then none other
till all thy penance thou hast dreed. Abide!"

Therewith she went up the stairs, and Goldilind, who now was but weak
with her prison and the sudden light, and the hope and fear of her
purpose of bewailing her story, sat her down on the stair there, almost,
as it were, 'twixt home and hell, till her heart came back to her and
the tears began to flow from her eyes. Forthright came back Aloyse,
bearing a white loaf and a little pitcher of milk on a silver
serving-dish; she laid them down, unlocked the door into the garden, and
thrust Goldilind through by the shoulders; then she turned and took up
her serving-dish with the bread and milk, and handed it to Goldilind
through the door, and said: "Now is my Lady served. It were indeed well
that my Lady should strengthen herself this hour for the hour next to
come."

Therewith she turned about, and shut and locked the door; and the King's
daughter fell to eagerly on her bread, and thought of little till
she had eaten and drunk, save that she felt the sweet scent of the
gilliflowers and eglantine as it were a part of her meal.

Then she went slowly down the garden, treading the greensward beside the
flowers; and she looked on the hold, and the low sun gilded the walls
thereof and glittered in a window here and there, and though there was
on her a foreboding of the hours of that day, she did what she might
to make the best of the fragrant May morning and the song of birds and
rustle of leaves, though, indeed, at whiles the tears would gush out of
her eyes when she thought how young she was and how feeble, and the pity
of herself became sweet unto her.




CHAPTER XIII. OF GOLDILIND IN THE GARTH.


Now, as she went in that garden with her face turned toward the postern
which led into the open space of the greenwood, which was but two
bow-shots from the thicket, she heard the clatter of horse-hoofs on the
loose stones of the path, and how they stopped at the said postern; and
presently there was a key in the lock, the door opened, and a man came
in walking stiffly, like a rider who has ridden far and fast. He was
clad in jack and sallet, and had a sword by his side, and on his sleeve
was done in green and gold a mountain aflame; so that Goldilind knew him
at once for a man of Earl Geoffrey's; and, indeed, she had seen the
man before, coming and going on errands that she knew nought of, and
on which nothing followed that was of import to her. Therefore, as
she watched him cross the garden and go straight up to the door of the
Foresters' Tower, and take out another key and enter, she heeded him but
little, nor did his coming increase her trouble a whit.

She walked on toward the postern, and now she saw that the errand-bearer
had left it open behind him, and when she came close up to it, she saw
his horse tied to a ring in the wall, a strong and good bay nag. The
sight of him, and the glimpse of the free and open land, stirred in her
the misery of her days and the yearning for the loveliness of the world
without, converse of friends, hope of the sufficiency of desire, and the
sweetness of love returned. And so strong a wave of anguish swept over
her, that she bowed her down upon the grass and wept bitterly. Yet but
a little while it lasted; she rose up presently and looked warily all
round her, and up to the Castle, and saw none stirring; she drew up the
skirts of her green gown into her girdle, till the hem but just hid her
knees; then she stepped lightly through the half-open door with flushed
cheeks and glittering eyes, while her heart rose within her; then she
lifted her hand, unhitched the reins from the iron ring, and quietly
led the horse close under the garth-wall, and stole gently up the
slope which, as all roads from the Castle, went straightway toward the
thicket, but this was the straightest. So she went, till she came to the
corner of the garth-wall, and a little further; and the Castle on that
side was blind, save for the swale on the battlement, whereon in that
deep peace was little going; and, moreover, it was not even yet six
o'clock.




CHAPTER XIV. GOLDILIND GOES FREE.


There then she stayed the horse, and, flushed and panting, got lightly
into the saddle and bestrode it, and, leaning over on the beast's neck,
smote his flanks with her heels; the horse was fresh, though his
master had been weary, whereas the said messenger had gotten him from
a forester some six miles away in the wood that morning, so the nag
answered to her call for speed, and she went a great gallop into the
wood, and was hidden in a twinkling from any eyes that might be looking
out of the Castle.

Without checking the nag she sped along, half mad with joy at the
freedom of this happy morn. Nigh aimless she was, but had an inkling
that it were well with her if she could hold northward ever; for the old
man aforesaid had told her of Oakenrealm, and how it lay northward of
them; so that way she drifted as the thicket would suffer her. When she
had gone as much of a gallop as she might for some half hour, she drew
rein to breathe her nag, and hearkened; she turned in the saddle, but
heard nought to affright her, so she went on again, but some what more
soberly; and thuswise she rode for some two hours, and the day waxed
hot, and she was come to a clear pool amidst of a little clearing,
covered with fine greensward right down to the water's edge.

There she made stay, and got off her horse, and stood awhile by him
as he cropped the sweet grass; and the birds sang at the edge of the
thicket, and the rabbits crept and gambolled on the other side of the
water; and from the pool's edge the moorhens cried. She stood half
leaning against the side of the horse till she became somewhat drowsy;
yea, and even dreamed a little, and that little but ill, it seemed, as
she gave a troubled cry and shrank together and turned pale. Then she
rubbed her eyes and smiled, and turned to the pool, where now a little
ripple was running over the face of it, and a thought came upon her,
and she set her hand to the clasp of her gown and undid it, and drew the
gown off her shoulders, and so did off all her raiment, and stood
naked a little on the warm sunny grass, and then bestirred her and went
lightly into the pool, and bathed and sported there, and then came on to
the grass again, and went to and fro to dry her in the air and sun. Then
she did on her raiment again, and laid her down under a thorn-bush
by the pool-side, and there, would she, would she not, went to sleep
soundly and dreamed not. And when she awoke she deemed her sleep had
been long, but it was not so, but scarce a score of minutes. Anyhow, she
sprang up now and went to her horse, and drew the girths tight (which
she had loosed erewhile,) and so bestrode the good horse, and shook the
reins, and rode away much comforted and enheartened.




CHAPTER XV. OF GOLDILIND IN THE WILD-WOOD.


Goldilind rode on, hastening yet to put as many miles as she might
betwixt her and Greenharbour. Within a three hours from her bathing she
fell a-hungering sore, and knew not what to do to eat, till she found a
pouch made fast to the saddle-bow, and therein a little white loaf, that
and no more, which she took and ate the half of with great joy, sitting
down by a brook-side, whence she had her drink.

Then again she mounted, and rode on till dusk overtook her just as she
came to a little river running from the north from pool to shallow, and
shallow to pool. And whereas she was now exceeding weary, and the good
horse also much spent, and that the grass was very sweet and soft down
to the water's edge, and that there was a thick thorn-bush to cover her,
she made up her mind that this place should be her bed-chamber. So she
took saddle and bridle off the horse, as he must needs bite the grass,
and then when she had eaten the other half of her bread, she laid her
down on the green grass, with her head on the saddle, and when she had
lain listening to the horse cropping the grass close anigh her for
a minute or two, she fell fast asleep, and lay there long and had no
dreams.




CHAPTER XVI. WHAT GOLDILIND FOUND IN THE WOOD.


When she awoke it was broad day and bright sun, and she rose up to her
feet and looked about, and saw the horse standing close by, and sharing
the shade with her, whisking his tail about lazily. Then she turned,
and saw the stream rippling out from the pool over the clean gravel, and
here and there a fish darting through the ripple, or making clean rings
on the pool as he quietly took a fly; the sky was blue and clear, there
was scarce a breath of air, and the morning was already hot; no worse
than yesterday sang the birds in the bushes; but as she looked across
the river, where, forsooth, the alders grew thick about the pool's edge,
a cock blackbird, and then another, flew out from the close boughs,
where they had been singing to their mates, with the sharp cry that they
use when they are frighted. Withal she saw the bush move, though, as
aforesaid, the morning was without wind. She had just stooped to do off
her foot-gear (for she was minded to bathe again), but now she stopped
with one shoe in her hand, and looked on the bushes keenly with beating
heart, and again she thought she saw the boughs shaken, and stood, not
daring to move a while; but they moved no more now when she had looked
steadily at them a space, and again a blackbird began singing loud just
where they had been shaken. So she gathered heart again, and presently
turned her hand once more to stripping her raiment off her, for she
would not be baulked of her bath; but when the stripping was done,
she loitered not naked on the bank as she had done the day before, but
walked swiftly into the shallow, and thence down into the pool, till
nothing but her head and the whiteness of her shoulders showed over the
dark water. Even then she turned her head about twice to look into the
over-side bushes, but when she saw nothing stir there she began to play
in the water, but not for long, but came splashing through the shallow
and hurried on her raiment.

When she was clad again she went up to the horse, and patted and
caressed him, and did bridle and saddle on him, and was going to climb
upon him, when, of a sudden, she thought she would lead him across, lest
there should be a hole near the other bank and he might stumble into
it unwarily; so she bared her feet once more and trussed up her gown
skirts, and so took the ford, leading the beast; the water was nowhere
up to mid-leg of her, and she stepped ashore on to short and fine grass,
which spread like a meadow before her, with a big thorn or two scattered
about it, and a little grassy hill beset with tall elms toward the top,
coming down into the flat of the meadow and drawing round it nearly up
to the river on the north side.

But now she stood staring in wonder and some deal of fear; for there
were three milch kine feeding on the meadow, and, moreover, under a
thorn, scarce a hundred yards from where she stood, was a tall man
standing gazing on her. So stricken was she that she might neither cry
out nor turn aside; neither did she think to pull her gown out of her
girdle to cover the nakedness of her legs.

When they had thus stood a little while the man began to move toward
her very slowly, nor did she dare to flee any the more. But when he was
within half a dozen paces her face flushed red, and she did pull her
gown out of its trusses and let it flow down. But he spake to her in a
pleasant voice, and said: "May I speak to thee, maiden?"

Fear was yet in her soul, so that she might not speak for a little, and
then she said: "O, I beseech thee, bring me not back to Greenharbour!"
And she paled sorely as she spake the word.

But he said: "I wot not of Greenharbour, how to find the way thereto,
though we have heard of it. But comfort thyself, I pray thee, there is
nought to fear in me."

The sound of his voice was full pleasant to her, and when she hearkened
him, how kind and frank it was, then she knew how much of terror was
blent with her joy in her newly-won freedom and the delight of the kind
and happy words. Yet still she spoke not, and was both shamefast and
still not altogether unafraid. Yet, sooth to say, though his attire was
but simple, he was nought wild or fierce to look on. From time to time
she looked on him, and then dropped her eyes again. In those glances she
saw that he was grey-eyed, and smooth-cheeked, and round-chinned, and
his hair curly and golden; and she must needs think that she had never
seen any face half so fair. He was clad but in a green coat that came
not down to his knees, and brogues were tied to his feet, and no more
raiment he had; and for hat he had made him a garland of white may
blossom, and well it sat there: and again she looked on him, and thought
him no worse than the running angel that goes before the throne of God
in the picture of the choir of Meadhamstead; and she looked on him and
marvelled.

Now she hung her head before him and wished he would speak, and even so
did he, and said: "Maiden, when I first saw thee from amidst of the bush
by the river yonder, I deemed thou wert a wood-wight, or some one of the
she-Gods of the Gentiles come back hither. For this is a lonely place,
and some might deem that the Devil hath might here more than in other
places; and when I saw thee, that thou wouldst do off thy raiment to
bathe thee, though soothly I longed to lie hidden there, I feared thee,
lest thou shouldst be angry with me if I were to see thee unclad; so I
came away; yet I went not far, for I was above all things yearning to
see thee; and sooth it is, that hadst thou not crossed the water, I
should presently have crossed it myself to seek thee, wert thou Goddess,
or wood-wife, or whatever might have come of it. But now thou art come
to us, and I have heard thy voice beseeching me not to bring thee to
Greenharbour, I see that thou art a woman of the kindred of Adam. And
yet so it is, that even now I fear thee somewhat. Yet I will pray thee
not to be wroth if I ask thee whether I may do aught for thy need."

Now she began somewhat to smile, and she looked him full in the face,
and said: "Forsooth, my need is simple, for I am hungry."

He smote himself on the breast, and said: "See now, what a great fool I
am, not to have known it without telling, instead of making long-winded
talk about myself. Come quickly, dear maiden, and leave thine horse to
crop the grass."

So he hurried on to the thorn-bush aforesaid, and she went foot to foot
with him, but he touched her not; and straightway she sat her down on
the root of the thorn, and smiled frankly on him, and said:

"Nay, sir, and now thou hast made me go all this way I am out of breath
and weary, so I pray thee of the victual at once."

But he had been busy with his scrip which he had left cast down there,
and therewithal reached out to her a mighty hunch of bread and a piece
of white cheese, and said:

"Now shall I fetch thee milk." Wherewith he took up a bowl of aspen tree
that had lain by the scrip, and ran off to one of the kine and milked
the bowl full, and came back with it heedfully, and set it down beside
her and said: "This was the nighest thing to hand, but when thou hast
eaten and rested then shall we go to our house, if thou wilt be so kind
to me; for there have we better meat and wine to boot."

She looked up at him smiling, but her pleasure of the meat and the
kindness was so exceeding, that she might not refrain from tears also,
but she spake not.

As for him, he knelt beside her, looking on her wistfully; and at last
he said: "I shall tell thee, that I am glad that thou wert hungry and
that I have seen thee eating, else might I have deemed thee somewhat
other than a woman of mankind even yet."

She said: "Yea, and why wouldst thou not believe my word thereto?"

He said, reddening: "I almost fear to tell thee, lest thou think me
overbold and be angry with me."

"Nay," she said, "tell me, for I would know."

Said he: "The words are not easy in my rude mouth; but this is what
I mean: that though I be young I have seen fair women not a few, but
beside any of them thou art a wonder;....and loth I were if thou wert
not really of mankind, if it were but for the glory of the world."

She hung her head and answered nought a while, and he also seemed
ashamed: but presently she spake: "Thou hast been kind to us, wouldst
thou tell us thy name? and then, if it like thee, what thou art?"

"Lady," he said, "my name is easy to tell, I hight Christopher; and
whiles folk in merry mockery call me Christopher King; meseems because I
am of the least account of all carles. As for what else I am, a woodman
I am, an outlaw, and the friend of them: yet I tell thee I have never
by my will done any harm to any child of man; and those friends of mine,
who are outlaws also, are kind and loving with me, both man and woman,
though needs must they dwell aloof from kings' courts and barons'
halls."

She looked at him wondering, and as if she did not altogether understand
him; and she said: "Where dost thou dwell?"

He said: "To-day I dwell hard by; though where I shall dwell to-morrow,
who knows? And with me are dwelling three of my kind fellows; and the
dearest is a young man of mine own age, who is my fellow in all matters,
for us to live and die each for the other. Couldst thou have seen him,
thou wouldst love him I deem."

"What name hath he?" said Goldilind.

"He hight David," said Christopher.

But therewith he fell silent and knit his brow, as though he were
thinking of some knotty point: but in a while his face cleared, and he
said: "If I durst, I would ask thee thy name, and what thou art?"

"As to my name," said she, "I will not tell it thee as now. As to what I
am, I am a poor prisoner; and much have I been grieved and tormented,
so that my body hath been but a thing whereby I might suffer anguish.
Something else am I, but I may not tell thee what as yet."

He looked on her long, and then arose and went his way along the very
track of their footsteps, and he took the horse and brought him back to
the thorn, and stood by the lady and reddened, and said: "I must tell
thee what I have been doing these last minutes."

"Yea," said she, looking at him wonderingly, "hast thou not been
fetching my horse to me?"

"So it is," said he; "but something else also. Ask me, or I cannot tell
thee."

She laughed, and said: "What else, fair sir?"

Said he: "Ask me what, or I cannot tell thee."

"Well, what, then?" said she.

He answered, stammering and blushing: "I have been looking at thy foot
prints, whereby thou camest up from the water, to see what new and
fairer blossoms have come up in the meadow where thy feet were set e'en
now."

She answered him nothing, and he held his peace. But in a while she
said: "If thou wouldst have us come to thine house, thou shalt lead
us thither now." And therewith she took her foot-gear from out of her
girdle, as if she would do it on, and he turned his face away, but
sighed therewith. Then she reddened and put them back again, and rose
up lightly, and said: "I will go afoot; and wilt thou lead the horse for
me?"

So did he, and led her by all the softest and most flowery ways, turning
about the end of a spur of the little hill that came close to the water,
and going close to the lip of the river. And when they had thus turned
about the hill there was a somewhat wider vale before them, grassy
and fair, and on a knoll, not far from the water, a long frame-house
thatched with reed.

Then said Christopher: "Lady, this is now Littledale, and yonder the
house thereof."

She said quietly: "Lovely is the dale, and fair the house by seeming,
and I would that they may be happy that dwell therein!"

Said Christopher: "Wilt thou not speak that blessing within the house as
without?"

"Fain were I thereof," she said. And therewith they came into the garth,
wherein the apple trees were blossoming, and Goldilind spread abroad
her hands and lifted up her head for joy of the sight and the scent, and
they stayed awhile before they went on to the door, which was half open,
for they feared none in that place, and looked for none whom they might
not deal with if he came as a foe.

Christopher would have taken a hand of her to lead her in, but both
hands were in her gown to lift up the hem as she passed over the
threshold; so he durst not.

Fair and bright now was the hall within, with its long and low windows
goodly glazed, a green halling on the walls of Adam and Eve and the
garden, and the good God walking therein; the sun shone bright through
the southern windows, and about the porch it was hot, but further toward
the dais cool and pleasant.

So Goldilind sat down in the coolest of the place at the standing table;
but Christopher bestirred himself, and brought wine and white bread, and
venison and honey, and said: "I pray thee to dine, maiden, for it is
now hard on noon; and as for my fair fellows, I look not for them before
sunset for they were going far into the wood."

She smiled on him, and ate and drank a little deal, and he with her.
Sooth to say, her heart was full, and though she had forgotten her fear,
she was troubled, because, for as glad as she was, she could not be as
glad as her gladness would have her, for the sake of some lack, she knew
not what.

Now spake Christopher: "I would tell thee something strange, to wit,
though it is little more than three hours since I first saw thee beside
the river, yet I seem to know thee as if thou wert a part of my life."

She looked on him shyly, and he went on: "This also is strange, and,
withal, it likes me not, that when I speak of my fair fellows here,
David, and Gilbert, and Joanna, they are half forgotten to my heart,
though their names are on my tongue; and this house, doth it like thee,
fair guest?"

"Yea, much," she said; "it seems joyous to me: and I shall tell thee
that I have mostly dwelt in unmerry houses, though they were of greater
cost than this."

Said Christopher: "To me it hath been merry and happy enough; but now it
seems to me as if it had all been made for thee and this meeting."

"Is it therefore no longer merry to thee because of that?" she said,
smiling, yet flushing much red therewith. Now it was his turn not to
answer her, and she cast down her eyes before him, and there was silence
between them.

Then she looked at him steadily, and said: "It is indeed grievous that
thou shouldest forget thine old friends for me, and that it should have
come into thy mind that this fair and merry house was not made for thy
fair fellows and thy delight with them, but for me, the chance-comer.
For, hearken, whereas thou saidst e'en now, that I was become a part of
thy life, how can that be? For if I become the poor captive again, how
canst thou get to me, thou who art thyself a castaway, as thou hast told
me? Yea, but even so, I shall be too low for thee to come down to me.
And if I become what I should be, then I must tell thee that I shall
be too high for thee to climb up to me; so that in one way or other we
shall be sundered, who have but met for an hour or two."

He hung his head a while as they stood there face to face, for both of
them had arisen from the board; but presently he looked up to her with
glittering eyes, and said: "Yea, for an hour or two; why then do we
tarry and linger, and say what we have no will to say, and refrain from
what our hearts bid us?"

Therewith he caught hold of her right wrist, and laid his hand on her
left shoulder, and this first time that he had touched her, it was as if
a fire ran through all his body and changed it into the essence of her:
neither was there any naysay in her eyes, nor any defence against him in
the yielding body of her. But even in that nick of time he drew back a
little, and turned his head, as a man listening, toward the door, and
said: "Hist! hist! Dost thou hear, maiden?" She turned deadly pale: "O
what is it? What is it? Yea, I hear; it is horses drawing nigh, and the
sound of hounds baying. But may it not be thy fellows coming back?"

"Nay, nay," he said; "they rode not in armour. Hark to it! and these
hounds are deep-voiced sleuth-dogs! But come now, there may yet be
time."

He turned, and caught up axe and shield from off the wall, and drew her
toward a window that looked to the north, and peered out of it warily;
but turned back straightway, and said: "Nay, it is too late that way,
they are all round about the house. Maiden, get thou up into the solar
by this stair, and thou wilt find hiding-place behind the traverse of
the bed; and if they go away, and my fellows come in due time, then art
thou safe. But if not, surely they shall do thee no hurt; for I think,
indeed, that thou art some great one."

And he fell to striding down the hall toward the door; but she ran after
him, and caught his arm, and said: "Nay, nay, I will not hide, to be
dragged out of my refuge like a thief: thou sayest well that I am of the
great; I will stand by thee and command and forbid as a Queen. O go not
to the door! Stay by me, stay!"

"Nay, nay," he said, "there is nought for it but the deed of arms. Look!
seest thou not steel by the porch?"

And therewith he broke from her and ran to the door, and was met upon
the very threshold by all-armed men, upon whom he fell without more ado,
crying out: "For the Tofts! For the Tofts! The woodman to the rescue!"
And he hewed right and left on whatsoever was before him, so that what
fell not, gave back, and for a moment of time he cleared the porch; but
in that nick of time his axe brake on the basnet of a huge man-at-arms,
and they all thrust them on him together and drave him back into the
hall, and came bundling after him in a heap. But he drave his shield
at one, and then with his right hand smote another on the bare face, so
that he rolled over and stirred no more till the day of doom. Then was
there a weapon before him, might he have stooped to pick it up; but he
might not; so he caught hold of a sturdy but somewhat short man by the
collar and the lap of his leather surcoat, and drew aback, and with a
mighty heave cast him on the rout of them, who for their parts had drawn
back a little also, as if he had been a huge stone, and down went two
before that artillery; and they set up a great roar of wonder and fear.
But he followed them, and this time got an axe in his hand, so mazed
they were by his onset, and he hewed at them again and drave them aback
to the threshold of the door: but could get them no further, and they
began to handle long spears to thrust at him.

But then came forward a knight, no mickle man, but clad in very goodly
armour, with a lion beaten in gold on his green surcoat; this man smote
up the spears, and made the men go back a little, while he stood on the
threshold; so Christopher saw that he would parley with him, and forbore
him, and the knight spake: "Thou youngling, art thou mad? What doest
thou falling on my folk?"

"And what do ye," said Christopher fiercely, "besetting the houses of
folk with weapons? Now wilt thou take my life. But I shall yet slay one
or two before I die. Get thee back, lord, or thou shalt be the first."

But the knight, who had no weapon in his hand, said: "We come but
to seek our own, and that is our Lady of Meadham, who dwelleth at
Greenharbour by her own will. And if thou wilt stand aside thou mayst go
free to the devil for us."

Now would Christopher have shouted and fallen on, and gone to his death
there and then; but even therewith a voice, clear and sweet, spake at
the back of him, and said: "Thou kind host, do thou stand aside and let
us speak that which is needful." And therewith stepped forth Goldilind
and stood beside Christopher, and said: "Sir Burgreve, we rode forth to
drink the air yesterday, and went astray amidst the wild-wood, and were
belated, so that we must needs lie down under the bare heaven; but this
morning we happened on this kind forester, who gave us to eat, and took
us to his house and gave us meat and drink; for which it were seemlier
to reward him than threaten him. Now it is our pleasure that ye lead us
back to Greenharbour; but as for this youth, that ye do him no hurt, but
let him go free, according to thy word spoken e'en now, Sir Burgreve."

She spake slowly and heavily, as one who hath a lesson to say, and it
was to be seen of her that all grief was in her heart, though her words
were queenly. Some of them that heard laughed; but the Burgreve spake,
and said: "Lady, we will do thy will in part, for we will lead thee to
Greenharbour in all honour; but as to this young man, if he will not be
slain here and now, needs must he with us. For he hath slain two of our
men outright, and hath hurt many, and, methinks, the devil of the woods
is in his body. So do thou bid him be quiet, if thou wouldst not see his
blood flow."

She turned a pale unhappy face on Christopher, and said: "My friend,
we bid thee withstand them no more, but let them do with thee as they
will."

Christopher stood aside therewith, and sat down on a bench and laughed,
and said in a high voice: "Stout men-at-arms, forsooth, to take a maid's
kirtle to their shield."

But therewith the armed men poured into the hall, and a half dozen of
the stoutest came up unto Christopher where he sat, and bound his hands
with their girdles, and he withstood them no whit, but sat laughing in
their faces, and made as if it were all a Yule-tide game. But inwardly
his heart burned with anger, and with love of that sweet Lady.

Then they made him stand up, and led him without the house, and set him
on a horse, and linked his feet together under the belly thereof. And
when that was done he saw them lead out the Lady, and they set her in a
horse litter, and then the whole troop rode off together, with two
men riding on either side of the said litter. In this wise they left
Littledale.




CHAPTER XVII. GOLDILIND COMES BACK TO GREENHARBOUR.


They rode speedily, and had with them men who knew the woodland ways,
so that the journey was nought so long thence as Goldilind had made it
thither; and they stayed not for nightfall, since the moon was bright,
so that they came before the Castle-gate before midnight. Now Goldilind
looked to be cast into prison, whatever might befall her upon the
morrow; but so it went not, for she was led straight to her own chamber,
and one of her women, but not Aloyse, waited on her, and when she tried
to have some tidings of her, the woman spake to her no more than if she
were dumb. So all unhappily she laid her down in her bed, foreboding the
worst, which she deemed might well be death at the hand of her jailers.
As for Christopher, she saw the last of him as they entered the
Castle-gate, and knew not what they had done with him. So she lay in
dismal thoughts, but at last fell asleep for mere weariness.

When she awoke it was broad day, and there was someone going about in
the chamber; she turned, and saw that it was Aloyse. She felt sick
at heart, and durst not move or ask of tidings; but presently Aloyse
turned, and came to the bed, and made an obeisance, but spake not.
Goldilind raised her head, and said wearily: "What is to be done,
Aloyse, wilt thou tell me? For my heart fails me, and meseems, unless
they have some mercy, I shall die to-day."

"Nay," said the chambermaid, "keep thine heart up; for here is one at
hand who would see thee, when it is thy pleasure to be seen."

"Yea," said Goldilind, "Dame Elinor to wit." And she moaned, and fear
and heart-sickness lay so heavy on her that she went nigh to swooning

But Aloyse lifted up her head, and brought her wine and made her drink,
and when Goldilind was come to herself again the maid said: "I say, keep
up thine heart, for it is not Dame Elinor and the rods that would see
thee, but a mighty man; nay, the most mighty, to wit, Earl Geoffrey, who
is King of Meadham in all but the name."

Goldilind did in sooth take heart at this tidings, and she said: "I
wonder what he may have to do here; all this while he hath not been to
Greenharbour, or, mayhappen, it might have been better for me."

"I wot not," said Aloyse, "but even so it is. I shall tell thee, the
messenger, whose horse thou didst steal, brought no other word in his
mouth save this, that my Lord Earl was coming; and come he did; but
that was toward sunset, long after they had laid the blood-hounds on thy
slot, and I had been whipped for letting thee find the way out a-gates.
Now, our Lady, when thou hast seen the Earl, and hast become our Lady
and Mistress indeed, wilt thou bethink thee of the morn before yesterday
on my behalf?"

"Yea," said Goldilind, "if ever it shall befall."

"Befall it shall," said Aloyse; "I dreamed of thee three nights ago, and
thou sitting on thy throne commanding and forbidding the great men. But
at worst no harm hath happened save to my shoulders and sides, by thy
stealing thyself, since thou hast come back in the nick of time, and of
thine own will, as men say. But tell me now of thine holiday, and if it
were pleasant to thee?"

Goldilind fell a-weeping at the word, bethinking her of yesterday
morning, and Aloyse stood looking on her, but saying nought. At last
spake Goldilind softly: "Tell me, Aloyse, didst thou hear any speaking
of that young man who was brought in hither last night? Have they slain
him?"

Said Aloyse: "Soothly, my Lady, I deem they have done him no hurt,
though I wot not for sure. There hath been none headed or hanged in the
base-court to-day. I heard talk amongst the men-at-arms of one whom they
took; they said he was a wonder of sheer strength, and how that he cast
their men about as though he were playing at ball. Sooth to say, they
seemed to bear him no grudge therefor. But now I would counsel thee to
arise; and I am bidden to tire and array thee at the best. And now I
would say a word in thine ear, to wit, that Dame Elinor feareth thee
somewhat this morn."

So Goldilind arose, and was arrayed like a very queen, and was served
of what she would by Aloyse and the other women, and sat in her chamber
awaiting the coming of the mighty Lord of Meadham.




CHAPTER XVIII. EARL GEOFFREY SPEAKS WITH GOLDILIND.


But a little while had she sat there, before footsteps a many came to
the door, which was thrown open, and straight it was as if the sun had
shone on a flower-bed, for there was come Earl Geoffrey and his lords
all arrayed most gloriously. Then came the Earl up the chamber to
Goldilind, and bent the knee before her, and said: "Lady and Queen, is
it thy pleasure that thy servant should kiss thine hand?"

She made him little cheer, but reached out to him her lily hand in its
gold sleeve, and said: "Thou must do thy will."

So he kissed the hand reverently, and said: "And these my lords, may
they enter and do obeisance and kiss hands, my Lady?"

Said Goldilind: "I will not strive to gainsay their will, or thine, my
Lord."

So they entered and knelt before her, and kissed her hand; and, to say
sooth, most of them had been fain to kiss both hands of her, yea, and
her cheeks and her lips; though but little cheer she made them, but
looked sternly on them.

Then the Earl spake to her, and told her of her realm, and how folk
thrived, and of the deep peace that was upon the land, and of the merry
days of Meadham, and the praise of the people. And she answered him
nothing, but as he spake her bosom began to heave, and the tears came
into her eyes and rolled down her cheeks. Then man looked on man, and
the Earl said: "My masters, I deem that my Lady hath will to speak to me
privily, as to one who is her chiefest friend and well-willer. Is it so,
my Lady?"

She might not speak for the tears that welled out from her heart; but
she bowed her head and strove to smile on him.

But the Earl waved his hand, and those lords, and the women also, voided
the chamber, and left those two alone, the Earl standing before her.
But ere he could speak, she arose from her throne and fell on her knees
before him, and joined hands palm to palm, and cried in a broken voice:
"Mercy! Mercy! Have pity on my young life, great Lord!"

But he lifted her up, and set her on her throne again, and said: "Nay,
my Lady, this is unmeet; but if thou wouldst talk and tell with me I am
ready to hearken."

She strove with her passion a while, and then she said: "Great Lord, I
pray thee to hearken, and to have patience with a woman's weak heart.
Prithee, sit down here beside me.

"It were unfitting," he said; "I shall take a lowlier seat." Then he
drew a stool to him, and sat down before her, and said: "What aileth
thee? What wouldest thou?"

Then she said: "Lord Earl, I am in prison; I would be free."

Quoth he: "Yea, and is this a prison, then?"

"Yea," she said, "since I may not so much as go out from it and come
back again unthreatened; yet have I been, and that unseldom, in a worser
prison than this: do thou go look on the Least Guard-chamber, and see if
it be a meet dwelling for thy master's daughter."

He spake nought awhile; then he said: "And, yet if it grieveth thee, it
marreth thee nought; for when I look on thee mine eyes behold the beauty
of the world, and the body wherein is no lack."

She reddened and said: "If it be so, it is God's work, and I praise him
therefor. But how long will it last? For grief slayeth beauty."

He looked on her long, and said: "To thy friends I betook thee, and I
looked that they should cherish thee; where then is the wrong that I
have done thee?"

She said: "Maybe no wrong wittingly; since now, belike, thou art come
to tell me that all this weary sojourn is at an end, and that thou wilt
take me to Meadhamstead, and set me on the throne there, and show my
father's daughter to all the people."

He held his peace, and his face grew dark before her while she watched
it. At last he spake in a harsh voice: "Lady," he said, "it may not be;
here in Greenharbour must thou abide, or in some other castle apart from
the folk."

"Yea," she said, "now I see it is true, that which I foreboded when
first I came hither: thou wouldst slay me, that thou mayest sit safely
in the seat of thy master's daughter; thou durst not send me a man with
a sword to thrust me through, therefore thou hast cast me into prison
amongst cruel jailers, who have been bidden by thee to take my life
slowly and with torments. Hitherto I have withstood their malice and
thine; but now am I overcome, and since I know that I must die, I have
now no fear, and this is why I am bold to tell thee this that I have
spoken, though I wot now I shall be presently slain. And now I tell thee
I repent it, that I have asked grace of a graceless face."

Although she spake strong words, it was with a mild and steady voice.
But the Earl was sore troubled, and he rose up and walked to and fro
of the chamber, half drawing his sword and thrusting it back into the
scabbard from time to time. At last he came back to her, and sat down
before her and spake:

"Maiden, thou art somewhat in error. True it is that I would sit firm in
my seat and rule the land of Meadham, as belike none other could. True
it is also that I would have thee, the rightful heir, dwell apart from
the turmoil for a while at least; for I would not have thy white hands
thrust me untimely from my place, or thy fair face held up as a banner
by my foemen. Yet nowise have I willed thy death or thine anguish; and
if all be true as thou sayest it, and thou art so lovely that I know not
how to doubt it, tell me then what these have done with thee."

She said: "Sir, those friends to whom thou hast delivered me are my
foes, whether they were thy friends or not. Wilt thou compel me to tell
thee all my shame? They have treated me as a thrall who had whiles to
play a queen's part in a show. To wit, thy chaplain whom thou hast given
me has looked on me with lustful eyes, and has bidden me buy of him ease
and surcease of pain with my very body, and hath threatened me more evil
else, and kept his behest."

Then leapt up the Earl and cried out: "Hah! did he so? Then I tell thee
his monk's hood shall not be stout enough to save his neck. Now, my
child, thou speakest; tell me more, since my hair is whitening."

She said: "The sleek, smooth-spoken woman to whom thou gavest me, didst
thou bid her to torment me with stripes, and the dungeon, and the dark,
and solitude, and hunger?"

"Nay, by Allhallows!" he said, "nor thought of it; trust me she shall
pay therefor if so she hath done."

She said: "I crave no vengeance, but mercy I crave, and thou mayst give
it me."

Then were they both silent, till he said: "Now I, for my part, will pray
thee bear what thou must bear, which shall be nought save this, that thy
queenship lie quiet for a while; nought else of evil shall betide thee
henceforth; but as much of pleasure and joy as may go with it. But tell
me, there is a story of thy snatching a holiday these two days, and of a
young man whom thou didst happen on. Tell me now, not as a maiden to
her father or warder, but as a great lady might tell a great lord, what
betid betwixt you two: for thou art not one on whom a young and doughty
man may look unmoved. By Allhallows! but thou art a firebrand, my Lady!"
And he laughed therewith.

Goldilind flushed red exceeding; but she answered steadily: "Lord Earl,
this is the very sooth, that I might not fail to see it, how he thought
me worth looking on, but he treated me with all honour, as a brother
might a sister."

"Tell me," said the Earl, "what like was this man?"

Said she: "He was young, but strong beyond measure; and full doughty:
true it is that I saw him with mine eyes take and heave up one of our
men in his hands and cast him away as a man would a clod of earth."

The Earl knit his brow: "Yea," said he, "and that story I have heard
from the men-at-arms also. But what was the man like of aspect?"

She reddened: "He was of a most goodly body," she said, "fair-eyed, and
of a face well carven; his speech kind and gentle." And yet more she
reddened.

Said the Earl: "Didst thou hear what he was, this man?"

She said: "I deem from his own words that he was but a simple forester."

"Yea," quoth the Earl, "a simple forester? Nay, but a woodman, an
outlaw, a waylayer; so say our men, that he fell on them with the cry:
A-Tofts! A-Tofts! Hast thou never heard of Jack of the Tofts?"

"Nay, never," said she.

Said the Earl: "He is the king of these good fellows; and a perilous
host they be. Now I fear me, if he be proven to be one of these, there
will be a gallows reared for him to-morrow, for as fair and as doughty
as he may be."

She turned all pale, and her lips quivered: then she rose up, and fell
on her knees before the Earl, and cried out: "O sir, a grace, a grace, I
pray thee! Pardon this poor man who was so kind to me!"

The Earl raised her up and smiled, and said: "Nay, my Lady Queen,
wouldst thou kneel to me? It is unmeet. And as for this woodman, it is
for thee to pardon him, and not for me; and since, by good luck, he is
not hanged yet, thy word hath saved his neck." She sat down in her chair
again, but still looked white and scared. But the Earl spake again, and
kindly:

"Now to all these matters I shall give heed, my Lady; wherefore I will
ask leave of thee, and be gone; and to-morrow I will see thee again, and
lay some rede before thee. Meantime, be of good cheer, for thou shalt be
made as much of as may be, and live in mickle joy if thou wilt. And if
any so much as give thee a hard word, it shall be the worse for them."

Therewith he arose, and made obeisance to her, and departed. And she
abode quiet, and looking straight before her, till the door shut, and
then she put her hands to her face and fell a-weeping, and scarce knew
what ailed her betwixt hope, and rest of body, and love, though that she
called not by its right name.




CHAPTER XIX. EARL GEOFFREY SPEAKETH WITH CHRISTOPHER.


Now it is to be said that the Earl had had much tidings told him of
Christopher, and had no intent to put him to death, but rather meant to
take him into the company of his guard, to serve him in all honour;
and that which he said as to hanging him was but to try Goldilind; but
having heard and seen of her such as we have told, he now thought it
good to have a privy talk with this young man. So he bade a squire lead
him to where Christopher was held in ward, and went much pondering.

So the squire brought him to the self-same Littlest Guardroom (in sooth
a prison) where Goldilind had lain that other morn; and he gave the
squire leave, and entered and shut the door behind him, so that he and
Christopher were alone together. The young man was lying on his back
on the pallet, with his hands behind his head, and his knees drawn up,
murmuring some fag-end of an old song; but when he heard the door shut
to he sat up, and, turning to the new-comer, said: "Art thou tidings? If
so, then tell me quickly which it is to be, the gallows or freedom?"

"Friend," said the Earl sternly, "dost thou know who I am?"

"Nay," said Christopher; "by thine attire thou shouldst be some great
man; but that is of little matter to me, since thou wilt neither bid
slay me, or let me go, for a heedless word."

Quoth the Earl: "I am the master of the land of Meadham, so there is
no need to tell thee that I have thy life or death in my hand. Now thou
wilt not deny that thou art of the company of Jack o' the Tofts?"

"It is sooth," said Christopher.

"Well," said the Earl, "thou art bold then to have come hither, for
thou sayest it that thou art a wolf's-head and forfeit of thy life. Now,
again, thou didst take the Lady of Meadham home to thy house yesterday,
and wert with her alone a great while. Now according to thy dealings
with her thou dost merit either the most evil of deaths, or else it may
be a reward: hah! what sayest thou?"

Christopher leapt up, and said in a loud voice: "Lord King, whatsoever I
may be, I am not each man's dastard; when I saw that pearl of all women,
I loved her indeed, as who should not, but it was even as I had loved
the Mother of God had she come down from the altar picture at the Church
of Middleham of the Wood. And whoso saith otherwise, I give him the lie
back in his teeth, and will meet him face to face if I may; and then,
meseems, it will go hard with him."

Spake the Earl, laughing: "I will be no champion against thee, for I
hold my skin and my bones of too much price thereto. And, moreover,
though meseemeth the Blessed Virgin would have a hot lover in thee were
she to come down to earth anigh thy dwelling, yet trow I thy tale, that
thou hast dealt with my Lady in honour. Therefore, lad, what sayest
thou, wilt thou be a man of mine, and bear arms for me, and do my will?"

Spake Christopher: "Lord, this is better than hanging."

"Why, so it is, lad," said the Earl, laughing again, "and some would
say better by a good deal. But hearken! if thou take it, thou must abide
here in Greenharbour--a long while, maybe; yea, even so long as my Lady
dwelleth here."

Christopher flushed and said: "Lord, thou art kind and gracious, and I
will take thy bidding."

The Earl said: "Well, so it shall be then; and presently thou shalt go
out of this guard-room a free man. But abide a while."

Therewith he drew a stool to him and sat down, and spake not for a long
while; and Christopher abode his pleasure; at last spake the Earl: "One
day, mayhappen, we may make a wedding for thee, and that no ill one."

Christopher laughed: "Lord," said he, "what lady will wed me, a no man's
son?"

Said the Earl: "Not if the Lord of Meadham be thy friend? Well then, how
if the Lady and Queen of Meadham make thee the wedding?"

Said Christopher: "I were liefer to make mine own wedding, whenso I
need a woman in my bed: I will compel no woman, nor ask others to compel
her."

The Earl rose up, and fell to pacing the prison to and fro; and at last
he stood over against Christopher, and said: "Hearken, forester: I will
foretell thy fortune; it is that thou shalt become great by wedding."

Christopher held his peace; and the Earl spake again: "Now is the
shortest word best. We deem thee both goodly and doughty, and would wed
thee to a great lady, even that one to whom thou hast shown kindness in
the wilderness."

Said Christopher: "It is the wont of great lords to mock poor folk,
therefore I must not show anger against thee."

"I mock thee not," said the Earl; "I mean nought, but as my words say."

"Nay then," said Christopher, "thou biddest me an evil deed, great Lord.
What I said was that I would compel no woman; and shall I compel her who
is the wonder of the world and my very own Lady?"

"Hold thy peace, sir fool," said the Earl; "let me tell thee that she
is as like to compel thee as thou her. And as to her being thy Lady, she
shall be thy Lady and wife indeed; but not here, for above all things
will she get her away from Greenharbour, and thou shalt be her champion,
to lead her about the world like a knight errant."

Now was Christopher so troubled that he knew not what countenance to
make, and scarce might he get a word out of his mouth a long while. At
last he said: "Lord, I see that I must needs do thy will if this be no
trap which thou hast set for me. But overwonderful it is, that a great
lady should be wedded to a gangrel churl."

The Earl laughed: "Many a ferly fares to the fair-eyed," quoth he; "and
also I will tell thee in thine ear that this Lady may not be so great as
her name is great. Did she praise her life-days to thee?"

"Nay," said Christopher; "I mind me well, she called herself the poor
captive."

"She said but sooth," quoth the Earl; "and her going away from
Greenharbour is instead of her captivity; and I tell thee it is by that
only I may make her joyous. And now one word: thou that criest out For
the Tofts in battle art not altogether unfriended, meseemeth."

Christopher looked up proudly and fiercely: he said: "Forsooth, Lord, my
friends are good, though thou callest them wolf-heads and gallows-meat."

"Champion," said the Earl, laughing, "that may well be sooth; and there
are a many ups and downs in the world. Bethink thee that the time may
come when thou and thy friends may wend to my help, and may win the
names of knight and baron and earl: such hap hath been aforetime. And
now I crave of thee, when thou comest back to the Tofts, to bid Jack
fall upon other lands than Meadham when he rideth, because of the gift
and wedding that I give thee now. So, lad, I deem that thou hast chosen
thy part; but let not the tale thereof go out of thy mouth, or thou wilt
gab away thy wedding. Lo, thou, I leave this door open behind me; and
presently shall the smith come here to do away thine irons; and I shall
send a squire to thee to lead thee to a fair chamber, and to bring thee
goodly raiment, and do thou play amongst thy fellows as one of the
best of them; and show them, if thou wilt, some such feats in peace as
yesterday thou showedst them in battle. And to-morrow there will be new
tidings." And therewith he departed.

No worse than his word he was, and anon came the smith and the squire;
and he was brought to a chamber, and raiment of fine linen and silk and
embroidery was brought to him: and when he was new clad he looked like
a king's son, whereas aforetime he looked like a God of the Gentiles of
old. All men praised his beauty and his courtesy, and after dinner was,
and they had rested, they bade him play with them and show them his
prowess, and he was nought loth thereto, and did what he might in
running and leaping, and casting of the bar, and shooting in the
bow. And in all these things he was so far before everyone, that they
marvelled at him, and said it was well indeed that he had not been slain
yesterday. As to wrestling, therein he might do but little; for all
forbore him after the first man had stood before him, a squire, well
learned in war, and long and tough, and deemed a very stark man; him
Christopher threw over his shoulder as though he had been a child of
twelve years. So wore the day at Greenharbour in merrier wise for all
good folk than for many a day had been the wont there.




CHAPTER XX. OF THE WEDDING OF CHRISTOPHER AND GOLDILIND.


Early on the morrow came the Earl unto Goldilind, and she received him
gladly, as one who had fashioned life anew for her. And when he had sat
down by her, he spake and said: "Lady, thou cravedst of me yesterday two
things; the first was freedom from the captivity of Greenharbour; and
the second, life and liberty for the varlet that cherished thee in the
wild-wood the other day. Now thy first asking grieved me, for that thou
hast been tyrannously done by; and thy second I wondered at; but since
I have seen the young man, I wonder the less; for he is both so goodly,
and so mighty of body, and of speech bold and free, yet gentle and of
all courtesy, that he is meet to be knight or earl, yea, or very king.
Now, therefore, in both these matters I will well to do thy pleasure,
and in one way it may be; and thou mayst then go forth from Greenharbour
as free as a bird, and thy varlet's life may be given unto him, and
mickle honour therewith. Art thou, then, willing to do after my rede and
my commandment, so that both these good things may betide thee?"

"Right willing am I," she said, "to be free and happy and to save the
life of a fair youth and kind."

"Then," said he, "there is one thing for thee to do: that this day
thou wed this fair and kind youth, and let him lead thee forth from
Greenharbour; and, belike, he will bring thee to no ill stead; for his
friends are mightier than mayhappen thou deemest."

She turned as red as blood at his word; she knit her brows, and her eyes
flashed as she answered: "Is it seemly for a King's daughter to wed a
nameless churl? And now I know thee, Lord Earl, what thou wouldst do;
thou wouldst be King of Meadham and put thy master's daughter to the
road." And she was exceeding wroth.

But he said, smiling somewhat: "Was it then seemly for the King's
daughter to kneel for this man's life, and go near to swooning for joy
when it was granted to her?"

"Yea," she said, "for I love him with all my body and soul; and I
would have had him love me par amours, and then should I have been his
mistress and he my servant; but now shall he be my master and I his
servant." And still was she very wroth.

Quoth the Earl: "As to the matter of my being King of Meadham, that will
I be, whatever befall, or die in the place else. So if thou wilt not do
my rede, then must the varlet whom thou lovest die, and at Greenharbour
must thou abide with Dame Elinor. There is no help for it."

She shrieked out at that word of his, and well nigh swooned, lying back
in her chair: but presently fell a-weeping sorely. But the Earl said:
"Hearken, my Lady, I am not without warrant to do this. Tell me, hast
thou ever seen any fairer or doughtier than this youngling?"

"Never," said she.

"So say we all," he said. "Now I shall tell thee (and I can bring
witness to it) that in his last hour the King, thy father, when he gave
thee into my keeping, spake also this: that I should wed thee to none
save the fairest and doughtiest man that might be found: even so would I
do now. What then sayest thou?"

She answered not, but still wept somewhat; then said the Earl: "Lady,
give me leave, and I shall send thy women to thee, and sit in the great
hall for an hour, and if within that while thou send a woman of thine
to say one word, Yes, unto me, then is all well. But if not, then do I
depart from Greenharbour straightway, and take the youngling with me to
hang him up on the first tree. Be wise, I pray thee."

And therewith he went his ways. But Goldilind, being left alone a
little, rose up and paced the chamber to and fro, and her tears and
sobbing ceased; and a great and strange joy grew up in her heart,
mingled with the pain of longing, so that she might rest in nowise. Even
therewith the door opened, and her women entered, Aloyse first, and she
called to her at once, and bade her to find Earl Geoffrey in the great
hall, and say to him: Yes. So Aloyse went her ways, and Goldilind bade
her other women to array her in the best and goodliest wise that they
might. And the day was yet somewhat young. Now it must be said of Earl
Geoffrey that, in spite of his hard word, he had it not in his heart
either to slay Christopher or to leave Goldilind at Greenharbour to the
mercy of Dame Elinor.




CHAPTER XXI. OF THE WEDDING OF THOSE TWAIN.


Now were folk gathered in the hall, and the Earl Geoffrey was standing
on the dais by the high-seat, and beside him a worthy clerk, the Abbot
of Meadhamstead, a monk of St. Benedict, and next to him the Burgreve
of Greenharbour, and then a score of knights all in brave raiment, and
squires withal, and sergeants; but down in the hall were the men-at-arms
and serving-men, and a half hundred of folk of the countryside, queans
as well as carles, who had been gathered for the show and bidden in. No
other women were there in the hall till Goldilind and her serving-women
entered. She went straight up the hall, and took her place in the
high-seat; and for all that her eyes seemed steady, she had noted
Christopher standing by the shot-window just below the dais.

Now when she was set down, and there was silence in the hall, Earl
Geoffrey came forth and said: "Lords and knights, and ye good people,
the Lady Goldilind, daughter of the Lord King Roland that last was, is
now of age to wed; and be it known unto you, that the King, her father,
bade me, in the last words by him spoken, to wed her to none but the
loveliest and strongest that might be, as witness I can bring hereto.
Now such a man have I sought hereto in Meadhamstead and the much-peopled
land of Meadham, and none have I come on, however worthy he were of
deeds, or well-born of lineage, but that I doubted me if he were so fair
or so doughty as might be found; but here in this half-desert corner of
the land have I gotten a man than whom none is doughtier, as some of you
have found to your cost. And tell me all you, where have ye seen any as
fair as this man?" And therewith he made a sign with his hand, and
forth strode Christopher up on to the dais; and he was so clad, that
his kirtle was of white samite, girt with a girdle of goldsmith's work,
whereby hung a good sword of like fashion, and over his shoulders was
a mantle of red cloth-of-gold, furred with ermine, and lined with green
sendall; and on his golden curled locks sat a chaplet of pearls.

Then to the lords and all the people he seemed so fair and fearless and
kind that they gave a great shout of welcome; and Goldilind came forth
from her chair, as fair as a June lily, and came to Christopher and
reached out her hand to him, but he refrained him a moment, so that all
they could see how sweet and lovely a hand it was, and then he took it,
and drew her to him, and kissed her mouth before them all; and still he
held her hand, till the Abbot of Meadhamstead aforetold came and stood
by them and blessed them.

Then spake the Earl again: "Lo ye, here hath been due betrothal of these
twain, and ye may see how meet they be for each other in goodliness
and kindness. Now there lacketh nought but they should be wedded
straightway; and all is arrayed in the chapel; wherefore if this holy
man will come with us and do on his mass-hackle, our joy shall be
fulfilled; save that thereafter shall feast and merriment await all you
in this hall, and we shall be there to welcome all comers in this house
of Greenharbour, whereas this our gracious Lady has long abided so
happily."

Man looked on man here and there, and smiled a little as he spake, but
none said aught, for there were none save the Earl's servants there, and
a sort of poor wretches.

So therewithal they went their ways to the chapel where was the wedding
done as grandly as might be, considering they were in no grander place
than Greenharbour. And when all was done, and folk began to flow away
from the chapel, and Goldilind sat shamefaced but strangely happy in
a great stall of the choir, the Earl called Christopher unto him, and
said: "My lad, I deem that some great fortune shall betide thee since
already thou hast begun so luckily. But I beseech thee mar not thy
fortune by coming back with thy fair wife to the land of Meadham; or
else it may be thou shalt cast thy life away, and that will bring her
sorrow, as I can see well."

He spake this grimly, though he smiled as he spake. But he went on more
gently: "I will not send you twain away empty-handed; when ye go out
a-gates into the wide world, ye shall find two fair horses for your
riding, well bedight, and one with a woman's saddle; and, moreover,
a sumpter beast, not very lightly burdened, for on one side of him he
beareth achest wherein is, first of all, the raiment of my Lady, and
beneath it some deal of silver and gold and gems; but on the other
side is victual and drink for the way for you, and raiment for thee,
youngling. How sayest thou, is it well?"

"It is well, Lord," said Christopher; "yet would I have with me the
raiment wherewith I came hither, and my bow and my sax."

"Yea and wherefore, carle?" said Earl Geoffrey.

Said the youngling: "We be going to ride the wild-wood, and it might be
better for safety's sake that I be so clad as certain folk look to see
men ride there."

But he reddened as he spake; and the Earl said: "By Allhallows! but it
is not ill thought of; and, belike, the same-like kind of attire might
be better to hide the queenship of the Lady from the wood-folk than that
which now she weareth?"

"True is that, Lord," quoth Christopher.

"Yet," said the Earl, "I will have you go forth from the Castle clad in
your lordly weed, lest folk of mine say that I have stripped my Lady and
cast her forth: don ye your poor raiment when in the wood ye be."

Therewith he called to a squire, and bade him seek out that poor raiment
of the new-wedded youngling, and bow withal and shafts good store, and
do all on the sumpter; and, furthermore, he bade him tell one of my
Lady's women to set on the sumpter some of Goldilind's old and used
raiment. So the squire did the Earl's will, and both got Christopher's
gear and also found Aloyse and gave her the Earl's word.

She smiled thereat, and went straightway and fetched the very same
raiment, green gown and all, which she had brought to Goldilind
in prison that other day, and in which Goldilind had fled from
Greenharbour. And when she had done them in the chest above all the
other gear, she stood yet beside the horses amidst of the varlets and
squires who were gathered there to see the new-wedded folk depart.

Presently then came forth through the gate those two, hand in hand, and
Earl Geoffrey with them. And he set Goldilind on her horse himself, and
knelt before her to say farewell, and therewith was Christopher on his
horse, and him the Earl saluted debonairly.

But just as they were about shaking their reins to depart, Aloyse fell
down on her knees before the Earl, who said: "What is toward, woman?"

"A grace, my Lord, a grace," said she.

"Stand up on thy feet," said the Earl, "and ye, my masters, draw out of
earshot."

Even so did they; and the Earl bade her speak, and she said: "Lord, my
Lady is going away from Greenharbour, and anon thou wilt be going, and
I shall be left with the sleek she-devil yonder that thou hast set over
us, and here there will be hell for me without escape, now that my Lady
is gone. Wherefore I pray thee take me with thee to Meadhamstead, even
if it be to prison; for here I shall die the worst of deaths."

Earl Geoffrey smiled on her sourly, and said: "If it be as I understand,
that thou hast lifted thine hand against my Lady, wert thou wending
with me, thou shouldst go just so far as the first tree. Thou mayst deem
thyself lucky if I leave thee behind here. Nor needest thou trouble
thee concerning Dame Elinor; little more shalt thou hear of her
henceforward."

But Goldilind spake and said: "My Lord Earl, I would ask grace for this
one; for what she did to me she did compelled, and not of her free will,
and I forgive it her. And moreover, this last time she suffered in her
body for the helping of me; so if thou mightest do her asking I were the
better pleased."

"It shall be as thou wilt, my Lady," said the Earl, "and I will have her
with me and keep her quiet in Meadhamstead; but, by Allhallows! had it
not been for thy word we would have had her whipped into the wild-wood,
and hanged up on to a tree thereafter."

Then Aloyse knelt before Goldilind and kissed her feet, and wept, and
drew back pale and trembling. But Goldilind shook her rein once for
all now, and her apple-grey horse went forth with her; Christopher came
after, leading the sumpter beast, and forth they went, and passed over
the open green about the Castle, and came on to the woodland way whereby
Goldilind had fled that other time.




CHAPTER XXII. OF THE WOODLAND BRIDE-CHAMBER.


They rode in silence a good way, and it was some three hours after noon,
and the day as fair and bright as might be. Christopher held his peace
for sweet shame that he was alone with a most fair maid, and she his
own, and without defence against him. But she amidst of her silence
turned, now red, and now somewhat pale, and now and again she looked
somewhat askance on him, and he deemed her looks were no kinder than
they should be.

At last she spake, yet not looking on him, and said: "So, Forester,
now is done what I must needs do: thy life is saved, and I am quit of
Greenharbour, and its prison, and its torments: whither away then?"

Quoth he, all dismayed, for her voice was the voice of anger: "I wot
not whither, save to the house thou hast blessed already with thy dear
body."

At that word she turned quite pale, and trembled, and spake not for a
while, and smote her horse and hastened on the way, and he after her;
but when he was come up with her again, then she said, still not
looking at him: "A house of woodmen and wolf-heads. Is that a meet
dwelling-place for me? Didst thou hear men at Greenharbour say that I am
a Queen?"

"Hear them I did," quoth he; "but meseemeth nought like a Queen had they
done with thee."

She said: "And dost thou mock me with that? thou?" And she burst out
weeping. He answered not, for sore grief smote him, remembering her hand
in his but a little while ago. And again she hurried on, and he followed
her.

When he came up with her she said: "And thou, didst thou woo me as a
Queen?"

"Lady," he said, "I wooed thee not at all; I was given to thee, would I,
would I not: great joy was that to me."

Then said she: "Thou sayest sooth, thou hast not wooed me, but taken
me." She laughed therewith, as one in bitterness. But presently she
turned to him, and he wondered, for in her face was longing and kindness
nought like to her words. But he durst not speak to her lest he should
anger her, and she turned her face from him again: and she said: "Wert
thou given to me? meseems I was given to thee, would I, would I not; the
Queen to the Churl, the Wood-man, the Wolf-head." And again she rode on,
and he followed, sick at heart and wondering sorely.

When they were riding together again, they spake not to each other,
though she stole glances at him to see how he fared; but he rode on with
knit brows and a stern countenance. So in a while she began to speak to
him again, but as if there were nought but courtesy between them, and
neither love nor hatred. She fell to asking him of woodland matters,
concerning bird and beast and things creeping; and at first he would
scarce answer her at all, and then were his answers short; but at last,
despite of all, he began to forget both grief and anger, so much the
sweetness of her speech wound about his heart; and, withal, she fell to
asking him of his fellows and their life in the woods, and of Jack of
the Tofts and the like; and now he answered her questions fully, and
whiles she laughed at his words, and he laughed also; and all pleasure
had there been of this converse, if he had not beheld her from time to
time and longed for the fairness of her body, and feared her wrath at
his longing.

So wore the day, and the sun was getting low, and they were come to
another woodland pool which was fed by a clear-running little brook,
and up from it went a low bank of greensward exceeding sweet, and
beyond that oak trees wide-branched and great, and still fair greensward
beneath them and hazel-thicket beyond them. There, then, Goldilind
reined up, and looked about her, but Christopher looked on her and
nought else. But she said: "Let to-morrow bring counsel; but now am I
weary to-night, and if we are not to ride night-long, we shall belike
find no better place to rest in. Wilt thou keep watch while I sleep?"

"Yea," he said, bowing his head to her soberly; and therewith he got
off his horse, and would have helped her down from hers, but she slipped
lightly down and stood before him face to face, and they were very nigh
to each other, she standing close to her horse. Her face was pale to
his deeming and there was a piteous look in her eyes, so that he yearned
towards her in his bowels, and reached his hand toward her; but she
shrank aback, leaning against her horse, and said in a trembling voice,
looking full at him, and growing yet paler: "Forester, dost thou think
it seemly that thou shouldst ride with us, thou such as thou hast told
thyself to be, in this lordly raiment, which they gave thee yonder as
part of the price for thy leading us away into the wild-wood?"

"Lady," said he, "whether it be seemly or not, I see that it is thy will
that I should go clad as a woodland churl; abide a little, and thy will
shall be done."

Therewith he did off the burden from the sumpter horse, and set the
chests on the earth; then he took her horse gently, and led him with
the other two in under the oak trees, and there he tethered them so that
they could bite the grass; and came back thereafter, and took his old
raiment out of the chest, and said: "What thou wilt have me do, I
will do now; and this all the more as to-morrow I should have done it
unbidden, and should have prayed thee to do on garments less glorious
than now thou bearest; so that we may look the less strange in the
woodland if we chance to fall in with any man."

Nought she answered as he turned toward the hazel copse; she had been
following him with her eyes while he was about that business, and when
his back was turned, she stood a moment till her bosom fell a-heaving,
and she wept; then she turned her about to the chest wherein was her
raiment, and went hastily and did off her glorious array, and did on the
green gown wherewith she had fled, and left her feet bare withal.
Then she looked up and saw Christopher, how he was coming from out the
hazel-thicket new clad in his old raiment, and she cried out aloud, and
ran toward him. But he doubted that some evil had betid, and that she
was chased; so he drew out his sword; but she ran up to him and cried
out: "Put up thy sword, here is none save me."

But he stood still, gazing on her in wonderment, and now she was drawn
near to him she stood still before him, panting. Then he said: "Nay,
Lady, for this night there was no need of thy disguising thee, to-morrow
it had been soon enough."

She said: "I were fain if thou wouldst take my hand, and lead me back to
our resting-place."

Even so he did, and as their palms met he felt how her hand loved him,
and a flood of sweetness swept over his heart, and made an end of all
its soreness. But he led her quietly back again to their place. Then she
turned to him and said: "Now art thou the woodland god again, and the
courtier no more; so now will I worship thee." And she knelt down before
him, and embraced his knees and kissed them; but he drew her up to him,
and cast his arms about her, and kissed her face many times, and said:
"Now art thou the poor captive again."

She said: "Now hast thou forgiven me; but I will tell thee that my
wilfulness and folly was not all utterly feigned; though when I was
about it I longed for thee to break it down with the fierceness of a
man, and bid me look to it how helpless I was, and thou how strong and
my only defence. Not utterly feigned it was: for I will say it, that
I was grieved to the heart when I bethought me of Meadhamstead and the
seat of my fathers. What sayest thou then? Shalt thou be ever a woodman
in these thickets, and a follower of Jack of the Tofts? If so thou wilt,
it is well."

He took her by the shoulders and bent her backwards to kiss her, and
held her up above the earth in his arms, waving her this way and that,
till she felt how little and light she was in his grasp, though she was
no puny woman; then he set her on her feet again, and laughed in her
face, and said: "Sweetling, let to-morrow bring counsel. But now let it
all be: thou hast said it, thou art weary; so now will I dight thee a
bed of our mantles, and thou shalt lie thee down, and I shall watch thee
as thou badest me."

Therewith he went about, and plucked armfuls of the young bracken, and
made a bed wide and soft, and spread the mantles thereover.

But she stood awhile looking on him; then she said: "Dost thou think
to punish me for my wilful folly, and to shame me by making me speak to
thee?"

"Nay," he said, "it is not so."

She said: "I am not shamed in that I say to thee: if thou watch this
night, I will watch by thee; and if I lie down to rest this night, thou
shalt lie by me. For my foemen have given me to thee, and now shalt thou
give thyself to me."

So he drew near to her shyly, like unto one who hath been forgiven. And
there was their bridal bed, and nought but the oak boughs betwixt them
and the bare heavens.




CHAPTER XXIII. THEY FALL IN WITH FRIENDS.


Now awoke Goldilind when the morning was young and fresh, and she drew
the mantle up over her shoulders; and as she did so, but half awake, she
deemed she heard other sounds than the singing of the black-birds and
throstles about the edge of the thicket, and she turned her eyes toward
the oak trees and the hazel-thicket, and saw at once three of mankind
coming on foot over the greensward toward her. She was afraid, so that
she durst not put out a hand to awaken Christopher, but sat gazing on
those three as they came toward her; she saw that two were tall men,
clad much as Christopher; but presently she saw that there was a woman
with them, and she took heart somewhat thereat; and she noted that one
of the men was short-haired and dark-haired, and the other had long red
hair falling about his shoulders; and as she put out her hand and laid
it on Christopher's shoulder, the red-haired one looked toward her a
moment under the sharp of his hand (for the sun was on their side),
and then set off running, giving out a great whoop therewithal. Even
therewith leapt up Christopher, still half awake, and the red-haired man
ran right up to him, and caught him by the shoulders, and kissed him on
both cheeks; so that Goldilind saw that these were the fellows whereof
Christopher had told, and she stood there shame-fast and smiling.

Presently came up the others, to wit, Gilbert and Joanna, and they also
kissed and embraced Christopher, and all they were as full of joy as
might be. Then came Joanna to Goldilind, and said: "I wot not who this
may be, brother, yet meseems she will be someone who is dear to thee,
wherefore is she my sister." And therewith she kissed Goldilind; and she
was kind, and sweet of flesh, and goodly of body, and Goldilind rejoiced
in her.

Joanna made much of her, and said to her: "Here is to do, whereas two
men have broken into a lady's chamber; come, sister, let us to the
thicket, and I will be thy tiring-maid, and while these others tell
their tales we shall tell ours." And she took her hand and they went
into the hazels; but the two new-come men seemed to find it hard to keep
their eyes off Goldilind, till the hazels had hidden her.

Then turned David to Christopher, and said: "Thy pardon, little King,
that we have waked thee so early; but we wotted not that thou hadst been
amongst the wood-women; and, sooth to say, my lad, we had little ease
till we found thee, after we came home and saw all those hoof-marks
yonder."

"Yea," said Gilbert, "if we had lost thee we had been finely holpen up,
for we could neither have gone back to the Tofts nor into the kingdom:
for I think my father would have hanged us if we had come back with a
'By the way, Christopher is slain.' But tell us, lad, what hath befallen
thee with yonder sweetling?"

"Yea, tell us," said David, "and sit down here betwixt us, with thy back
to the hazel-thicket, or we shall get no tale out of thee--tush, man,
Joanna will bring her back, and that right soon, I hope."

Christopher laughed, and sat down between them, and told all how it
had gone with him, and of Goldilind, who she was. The others hearkened
heedfully, and Gilbert said: "With all thou hast told us, brother, it
is clear we shall find it hard to dwell in Littledale; so soon as thy
loveling hath rested her at our house, we must go our ways to the Tofts,
and take counsel of our father."

Christopher yea-said this, and therewithal was come Joanna leading
Goldilind duly arrayed (yet still in her green gown, for she would none
other), fresh, blushing, and all lovely; and David and Christopher
did obeisance before her as to a great lady; but she hailed them as
brothers, merrily and kindly, and bade them kiss her; and they kissed
her cheek, but shyly, and especially David.

Thereafter they broke their fast under the oak trees, and spent a merry
hour, and then departed, the two women riding the horses, the others
afoot; so came they to the house of Littledale, some while before
sunset, and were merry and glad there. Young they were, troubles were
behind them, and many a joy before them.




CHAPTER XXIV. THEY TAKE COUNSEL AT LITTLEDALE.


Ten days they abode in the house of Littledale in all good cheer, and
Joanna led Goldilind here and there about the woods, and made much of
her, so that the heart within her was full of joy, for the freedom
of the wild-woods and all the life thereof was well-nigh new to her;
whereas on the day of her flight from Greenharbour, and on two other
such times, deadly fear, as is aforesaid, was mingled with her joyance,
and would have drowned it utterly, but for the wilfulness which hardened
her heart against the punishment to come. But now she was indeed free,
and it seemed to her, as to Christopher when he was but new healed of
his hurt, as if all this bright beauty of tree and flower, and beast and
bird, was but made for her alone, and she wondered that her fellow could
be so calm and sedate amidst of all this pleasure. And now, forsooth,
was her queenhood forgotten, and better and better to her seemed
Christopher's valiant love; and the meeting in the hall of the eventide
was so sweet to her, that she might do little but stand trembling whiles
Christopher came up to her, and Joanna's trim feet were speeding her
over the floor to meet her man, that she might be a sharer in his deeds
of the day.

Many tales withal Joanna told the Queen of the deeds of her husband and
his kindred, and of the freeing of her and the other three from their
captivity at Wailing Knowe, and of the evil days they wore there before
the coming of their lads, which must have been worser by far, thought
Goldilind, than the days of Greenharbour; so with all these tales, and
the happy days in the house of the wild-woods, Goldilind now began to
deem of this new life as if there had been none other fated for her,
so much a part was she now become of the days of those woodmen and
wolf-heads.

But when the last of those ten days was wearing to an end and those five
were sitting happy in the hall (albeit David sat somewhat pensive, now
staring at Goldilind's beauty, now rising from his seat to pace the
floor restlessly), Gilbert spake and said: "Brethren, and thou, Queen
Goldilind, it may be that the time is drawing near for other deeds
than letting fly a few shafts at the dun deer, and eating our meat, and
singing old songs as we lie at our ladies' feet; for though we be at
peace here in the wild-wood, forgetting all things save those that are
worthy to be remembered, yet in the cities and the courts of kings guile
is not forgotten, and pride is alive, and tyranny, and the sword is
whetted for innocent lives, and the feud is eked by the destruction of
those who be sackless of its upheaving. Wherefore it behoveth to defend
us by the ready hand and the bold heart and the wise head. So, I say,
let us loiter here no longer, but go our ways to-morrow to the Tofts,
and take the rede of our elders. How say ye, brethren?"

Quoth Christopher: "Time was, brother, when what thou sayest would have
been as a riddle to me, and I would have said: Here are we merry, though
we be few; and if ye lack more company, let me ride to the Tofts and
come back with a half score of lads and lasses, and thus let us eke our
mirth; and maybe they will tell us whitherward to ride. But now there is
a change, since I have gained a gift over-great for me, and I know that
they shall be some of the great ones who would be eager to take it from
me; and who knows what guile may be about the weaving even now, as on
the day when thou first sawest this hall, beloved."

Goldilind spake and sighed withal: "Whither my lord will lead me,
thither will I go; but here is it fair and sweet and peaceful; neither
do I look for it that men will come hither to seek the Queen of
Meadham."

David said: "Bethink thee, though, my Lady, that he who wedded thee to
the woodman may yet rue, and come hither to undo his deed, by slaying
the said woodman, and showing the Queen unto the folk."

Goldilind turned pale; but Joanna spake: "Nay, brother David, why
wilt thou prick her heart with this fear? For my part, I think that,
chance-hap apart, we might dwell here for years in all safety, and
happily enough, maybe. Yet also I say that we of the Tofts may well be
eager to show this jewel to our kindred, and especially to our father
and mother of the Tofts; so to-morrow we will set about the business of
carrying her thither, will she, nill she." And therewith she threw her
arms about Goldilind, and clipped her and kissed her; and Goldilind
reddened for pleasure and for joy that she was so sore prized by them
all.




CHAPTER XXV. NOW THEY ALL COME TO THE TOFTS.


Next morning, while the day was yet young, they rode together, all of
them, the nighest way to the Tofts, for they knew the wood right well.
Again they slept one night under the bare heavens, and, rising betimes
on the morrow, came out under the Tofts some four hours after high noon,
on as fair and calm a day of early summer as ever was seen.

They rode up straight to the door of the great hall, and found but few
folk about, and those mostly women and children; Jack was ridden abroad,
they said, but they looked to see him back to supper, him and his sons,
for he was no great way gone.

Meantime, when they got off their horses, the women and children
thronged round about them; and the children especially about
Christopher, whom they loved much. The maidens, also, would not have
him pass into the hall unkissed, though presently, after their faces had
felt his lips, they fell a-staring and wondering at Goldilind, and when
Christopher took her by the hand and gave her welcome to the House
of the Tofts, and they saw that she was his, they grew to be somewhat
afraid, or it might be shy, both of her and of him.

Anyhow, folk came up to them in the hall, and made much of them, and
took them unto chambers and washed their feet, and crowned them with
flowers, and brought them into the hall again, and up on to the dais,
and gave them to eat and drink. Thither came to them also the Lady
Margaret, Jack's wedded wife, and made them the most cheer that she
might; and unto her did Christopher tell his story as unto his very
mother; and what there was in the house, both of carle and of quean,
gathered round about to hearken, and Christopher nothing loth. And
Goldilind's heart warmed toward that folk, and in sooth they were a
goodly people to look on, and frank and happy, and of good will, and
could well of courtesy, though it were not of the courts.

Wore the bright day, and it drew toward sunset, and now the carles came
straight into the hall by twos and threes, till there were a many within
its walls. But to each one of these knots as they entered, someone,
carle or quean, spake a word or two, and straightway the new-comers went
up to the dais and greeted Christopher pleasantly, and made obeisance to
Goldilind.

At last was the hall, so quiet erst, grown busy as a beehive, and amidst
the throng thereof came in the serving-folk, women and men, and set the
endlong boards up (for the high-table was a standing one of oak, right
thick and strong); and then they fell to bringing in the service, all
but what the fire was dealing with in the kitchen. And whiles this was
a-doing, the sun was sinking fast, and it was dusk in the hall by then
it was done, though without the sky was fair and golden, and about the
edges of the thicket were the nightingales singing loud and sweet, but
within was the turmoil of many voices, whereof few heeded if their words
were loud or soft.

Amidst all this, from close to the hall, rang out the sound of many
horns winding a woodland tune. None was afeard or astonied, because
all knew it for the horns of Jack of the Tofts; but they stilled their
chattering talk somewhat, and abided his coming; and even therewith came
the sound of many feet and the clash of weapons, and men poured in, and
there was the gleam of steel, as folk fell back to the right and left,
and gave room to the new-comers. Then a loud, clear, and cheery voice
cried out from amidst of them: "Light in the hall, men and maids!
Candles, candles! Let see who is here before us!"

Straightway then was there running hither and thither and light sprang
up over all the hall, and there could folk see Jack of the Tofts, and
a score and a half of his best, every man of them armed with shield and
helm and byrny, with green coats over their armour, and wreaths of young
oak about their basnets; there they stood amidst of the hall, and every
man with his naked sword in his fist. Jack stood before his folk clad in
like wise with them, save that his head was bare but for an oak wreath.
Men looked on a while and said nought, while Jack looked proudly and
keenly over the hall, and at last his eye caught Christopher's, but he
made the youngling no semblance of greeting. Christopher's heart fell,
and he misdoubted if something were not wrong; but he spake softly to
one who stood by him, and said: "Is aught amiss, Will Ashcroft? this is
not the wont here."

Said the other: "Not in thy time; but for the last seven days it hath
been the wont, and then off weapons and to supper peaceably."




CHAPTER XXVI. OF THE KING OF OAKENREALM.


Even therewith, and while the last word had but come to Christopher's
ears, rang out the voice of Jack of the Tofts again, louder and clearer
than before: and he said: "Men in this hall, I bear you tidings! The
King of Oakenrealm is amongst us to-night."

Then, forsooth, was the noise and the turmoil, and cries and shouts and
clatter, and fists raised in air and weapons caught down from the wall,
and the glitter of spear-points and gleam of fallow blades. For the name
of Rolf, King of Oakenrealm, was to those woodmen as the name of the
Great Devil of Hell, so much was he their unfriend and their dastard.
But Jack raised up his hand, and cried: "Silence ye! Blow up, horns, The
Hunt's Up!"

Blared out the horns then, strong and fierce, under the hall-roof, and
when they were done, there was more silence in the hall than in the
summer night without; only the voice of the swords could not be utterly
still, but yet tinkled and rang as hard came against hard here and there
in the hush.

Again spake Jack: "Let no man speak! Let no man move from his place! I
SEE THE KING! Ye shall see him!"

Therewith he strode up the hall and on to the dais, and came up to
where stood Christopher holding Goldilind's hand, and she all pale
and trembling; but Jack took him by the shoulder, and turned him about
toward a seat which stood before the board, so that all men in the hall
could see it; then he set him down in it, and took his sword from his
girdle, and knelt down before the young man, and took his right hand,
and said in a loud voice: "I, Jack of the Tofts, a free man and a
sackless, wrongfully beguilted, am the man of King Christopher of
Oakenrealm, to live and die for him as need may be. Lo, Lord, my
father's blade! Wilt thou be good to me and gird me therewith, as thy
father girt him?"

Now when Christopher heard him, at first he deemed that all this
was some sport or play done for his pastime and the pleasure of the
hall-folk in all kindness and honour. But when he looked in the eyes of
him, and saw him fierce and eager and true, he knew well it was no jest;
and as the shouts of men went up from the hall and beat against the
roof, himseemed that he remembered, as in a dream, folk talking a-nigh
him when he was too little to understand, of a king and his son, and
a mighty man turned thief and betrayer. Then his brow cleared, and his
eyes shone bright, and he leaned forward to Jack and girt him with the
sword, and kissed his mouth, and said: "Thou art indeed my man and my
thane and my earl, and I gird thee with thy sword as my father girded
thy father."

Then stood up Jack o' the Tofts and said: "Men in this hall, happy is
the hour, and happy are ye! This man is the King of Oakenrealm, and he
yonder is but a thief of kings, a dastard!"

And again great was the shouting, for carle and quean, young and old,
they loved Christopher well: and Jack of the Tofts was not only their
war-duke and alderman, but their wise man also, and none had any thought
of gainsaying him. But he spake again and said: "Is there here any old
man, or not so old, who hath of past days seen our King that was, King
Christopher to wit, who fell in battle on our behalf? If so there be,
let him come up hither."

Then arose a greybeard from a bench nigh the high-table, and came up on
to the dais; a very tall man had he been, but was now somewhat bowed by
age. He now knelt before Christopher, and took his hand, and said: "I,
William of Whittenham, a free man, a knight, sackless of the guilt which
is laid on me, would be thy man, O my lord King, to serve thee in all
wise; if so be that I may live to strike one stroke for my master's son,
whom now I see, the very living image of the King whom I served in my
youth."

Then Christopher bent down to him and kissed him, and said: "Thou art
indeed my man and my thane & my baron; and who knows but that thou mayst
have many a stroke to strike for me in the days that are nigh at hand."

And again the people shouted: and then there came another and another,
and ten more squires and knights and men of estate, who were now indeed
woodmen and wolf-heads, but who, the worst of them, were sackless of
aught save slaying an unfriend, or a friend's unfriend, in fair fight;
and all these kneeled before him, and put their hands in his, and gave
themselves unto him.

When this was done, there came thrusting through the throng of the hall
a tall woman, old, yet comely as for her age; she went right up on to
the dais, and came to where sat Christopher, and without more ado
cast her arms about him and kissed him, and then she held him by the
shoulders and cried out: "O, have I found thee at last, my loveling,
and my dear, and my nurse-chick? and thou grown so lovely and yet so big
that I may never more hold thee aloft in mine arms, as once I was wont;
though high enough belike thou shalt be lifted; and I say praise be to
God and to his Hallows that thou art grown so beauteous and mighty a
man!"

Therewith she turned about toward the hall-throng and said: "Thou, duke
of these woodmen, and all ye in this hall, I have been brought hither
by one of you; and though I have well-nigh died of joy because of the
suddenness of this meeting, yet I thank him therefor. For who is
this goodly and gracious young man save the King's son of Oakenrealm,
Christopher that was; and that to my certain knowledge; for he is my
fosterling and my milk-child, and I took him from the hands of the
midwife in the High House of Oakenham a twenty-one years ago; and they
took him from Oakenham, and me with him to the house of Lord Richard the
Lean, at Longholms, and there we dwelt; but in a little while they took
him away from Longholms to I wot not whither, but would not suffer me
to go along with him, and ever sithence have I been wandering about and
hoping to see this lovely child again, and now I see him, what he is,
and again I thank God and Allhallows therefor."

Once more then was there stir and glad tumult in the hall. But Goldilind
stood wondering, and fear entered into her soul; for she saw before her
a time of turmoil and unpeace, and there seemed too much between her and
the sweetness of her love. Withal it must be said, that for as little
as she knew of courts and war-hosts, she yet seemed to see lands without
that hall, and hosts marching, and mighty walls glittering with spears,
and the banners of a great King displayed; and Jack of the Tofts and his
champions and good fellows seemed but a frail defence against all that,
when once the hidden should be shown, and the scantiness of the woodland
should cry on the abundance of the kingdom to bow down.

Now she came round the board and stood beside Christopher, and he turned
to her, and stood up and took her hand, in such wise that she felt the
caress of it; and joy filled her soul, as if she had been alone with him
in the wild-wood.

But he spake and said: "All ye my friends: I see and wot well that ye
would have me sit in my father's seat and be the King of Oakenrealm,
and that ye will give me help and furtherance therein to the utmost; nor
will I cast back the gift upon you; and I will say this, that when I am
King indeed, it is my meaning and my will now, that then I shall be
no less one of you good fellows and kind friends than ye have known me
hitherto; and even so I deem that ye think of me. But, good friends, it
is not to be hidden that the road ye would have me wend with you is like
to be rough; and it may well be that we shall not come to be kings or
kings' friends but men hunted, and often, maybe, men taken and slain.
Therefore, till one thing or the other come, the kingship, or the
taking, I will try to be no less joyous than now I am, and so meseemeth
shall ye; and if ye be of this mind, then shall the coming days be no
worse than the days which have been; and God wot they have been happy
enough. Now again, ye see this most fair lady, whose hand I hold; she
is my beloved and my wife; and therewithal she is the true Queen of
Meadham, and a traitor sits in her place even as a traitor sits in mine.
But I must tell you that when she took me for her beloved, she knew not,
nor did I, that I was a King's son, but she took me as a woodman and
an outcast, and as a wood-man and outcast I wooed her, trusting in the
might that was in my body, and the love that was in my heart; and now
before all you, my friends, I thank her and worship her that my body and
my love was enough for her; as, God wot, the kingship of the whole earth
should not be overmuch for her, if it lay open to her to take. But,
sweet friends, here am I talking of myself as a King wedded unto a
Queen, whereas meseemeth the chiefest gift our twin kingship hath
brought you to-night is the gift of two most mighty unfriends for you;
to wit, her foeman and mine. See ye to it, then, if the wild-wood yonder
is not a meeter dwelling for us than this your goodly hall; and fear not
to put us to the door as a pair of make-bates and a peril to this goodly
company. Lo you, the sky without has not yet lost all memory of the sun,
and in a little while it will be yellowing again to the dawn. Nought
evil shall be the wild-wood for our summer dwelling; and what! ere the
winter come, we may have won us another house where erst my fathers
feasted. And thereto, my friends, do I bid you all."

But when they heard his friendly words, and saw the beauty of the fair
woman whose hand he held, his face grew so well-beloved to them, that
they cried out with so great a voice of cheer, wordless for their very
joy, that the timbers of the hall quavered because of it, and it went
out into the wild-wood as though it had been the feastful roaring of the
ancient gods of the forest.

But when the tumult sank a little, then cried out Jack of the Tofts:
"Bring now the mickle shield, and let us look upon our King."

So men went and fetched in a huge ancient shield, plated with
berry-brown iron, inlaid with gold, and the four biggest men in the
hall took it on their shoulders and knelt down anigh the dais, before
Christopher, and Jack said aloud: "King! King! Stand up here! for this
war-board of old days is the castle and the burg alone due to thee, and
these four fellows here are the due mountains to upbear it."

Then lightly strode Child Christopher on to the shield, and when he
stood firm thereon, they rose heedfully underneath him till they were
standing upright on their feet, and the King stood on the shield as if
he were grown there, and waved his naked sword to the four orts.

Then cried out an old woman in a shrill voice: "Lo, how the hills rise
up into tall mountains; even so shall arise Child Christopher to the
kingship."

Thereat all the folk laughed for joy and cried out: "Child Christopher!
Child Christopher, our King!" And for that word, when he came to the
crown indeed, and ruled wide lands, was he called Child Christopher; and
that name clave to him after he was dead, and but a name in the tale of
his kindred.

Now the King spake and said: "Friends, now is it time to get to the
board, and the feast which hath been stayed this while; and I pray you
let it be as merry as if there were no striving and unpeace betwixt us
and the winning of peace. But to-morrow we will hallow-in the Mote, and
my earl and my barons and good men shall give counsel, and then shall it
be that the hand shall do what the heart biddeth."

Therewith he leapt down from the shield, and went about the hall talking
to this one and that, till the board was full dight; then he took his
place in the high-seat, beside Jack of the Tofts; and David and Gilbert
and his other foster-brethren sat on either side of him, and their wives
with them; and men fell to feasting in great glee.

But one thing there is yet to tell of this feast. When men had drunk a
cup or two, and drunk memories to good men dead, and healths to good men
living, amidst this arose a grey-head carle from the lower end of the
hall, and said: "Child Christopher, thy grace, that I may crave a boon
of thee on this day of leal service.'

"Ask then," said Christopher, with a pleasant face.

"King," quoth the carle, "here are we all gathered together, and we have
before us the most beautifullest woman of the world, who sitteth by thy
side; now to-night we be all dear friends, and there is no lack between
us; yet who can say how often we may meet and things be so? I do not say
that there shall enmity and dissension arise between us, though that may
betide; but it is not unlike that another time thou, King, and thy mate,
may be prouder than now ye be, since now ye are new to it. And if that
distance grow between us, it will avail nought to ask my boon then."

"Well, well, ask it now, friend," said the King, laughing; "I were fain
of ending the day with a gift."

"This it is then, King," said the carle: "since we are here set down
before the loveliest woman in the world, grant us this, that all we
men-folk may for this once kiss the face of her, if she will have it
so."

Huge laughter and cheers arose at his word; but King Christopher arose
and said: "Friend, thy boon is granted with a good will; or how sayest
thou, Goldilind my beloved?"

For all answer she stood up blushing like a rose, and held out her two
hands to the men in the hall. And straightway the old carle rose up and
went in haste to the high-table, before another man might stir, and took
Goldilind by the chin, and kissed her well-favouredly, and again men
laughed joyously. Then came before her Jack of the Tofts and all his
sons, one after other, and kissed her face, save only David, who knelt
humbly before her, and took her right hand and kissed it, while the
tears were in his eyes. Then came many of the men in the hall, and some
were bold, but many were shy, and when they came before her durst kiss
neither hand nor face of her, but their hearts were full of her when
they went to their places again; and all the assembly was praising her.

So wore the time of that first night of the kingship of Child
Christopher.




CHAPTER XXVII. OF THE HUSTING OF THE TOFTS.


When morning was, there were horns sounding from the tower on the toft,
and all men hastening in their war-gear to the topmost of the other
toft, the bare one, whereon was no building; for thereon was ever the
mote-stead of these woodmen. But men came not only from the stead and
houses of the Tofts, but also from the woodland cots and dwellings
anigh, of which were no few. And they that came there first found King
Christopher sitting on the mound amid the mote-stead, and Jack of the
Tofts and his seven sons sitting by him, and all they well-weaponed
and with green coats over their hauberks; and they that came last found
three hundreds of good men and true gathered there, albeit this was but
the Husting of the Tofts.

So when there were no more to come, then was the Mote hallowed, and the
talk began; but short and sharp was their rede, for well did all men wot
who had been in the hall the night before that there was now no time to
lose. For though nigh all the men that had been in the hall were well
known to each other, yet might there perchance have been some spy
unknown, who had edged him in as a guest to one of the good men. Withal,
as the saw saith: The word flieth, the wight dieth. And it were well if
they might gather a little host ere their foeman might gather a mickle.

First therefore arose Jack of the Tofts, and began shortly to put forth
the sooth, that there was come the son of King Christopher the Old, and
that now he was seeking to his kingdom, not for lust of power and gain,
but that he might be the friend of good men and true, and uphold them
and be by them upholden. And saith he: "Look ye on the face of this man,
and tell me where ye shall find a friend friendlier than he, and more
single-hearted?" And therewith he laid his hand on Christopher's head,
and the young man rose up, blushing like a maid, and thereafter a long
time could no lord be heard for the tumult of gladness and the clashing
of weapons.

But when it was a little hushed, then spake Jack again: "Now need no man
say more to man on this matter, for ye call this curly-headed lad the
King of Oakenrealm, even as some of ye did last night."

Mighty was the shout of yea-say that arose at that word; and when it was
stilled, a grey-head stood up and said: "King Christopher, and thou, our
leader, whom we shall henceforth call Earl, it is now meet that we shear
up the war-arrow, and send it forth to whithersoever we deem our friends
dwell, and that this be done at once here in this Mote, and that the
hosting be after three nights' frist in the plain of Hazeldale, which
all ye know is twelve miles nigher to Oakenrealm than this."

All men yea-said this, no one gainsaid it; and straightway was fire
kindled and the bull slain, for the said elder had brought him thither;
and the arrow was sheared and scorched and reddened, and the runners
were fetched, and the word given them, and they were sped on their
errand.

Up rose then another, a young man, and spake: "Many stout fellows be
here, and some wise and well-ruled, and many also hot-head and wilful:
Child Christopher is King now, and we all know him that when he cometh
into the fray he is like to strike three strokes for two that any other
winneth; but as to his lore of captainship, if he hath any, he was born
with it, as is like enough, seeing who was his father; therefore we need
a captain well-proven, to bid us how to turn hither and thither, and
where to gather thickest, and where to spread thinnest; and when to fall
on fiercely and when to give way, and let the thicket cover us; for wise
in war shall our foemen be. Now therefore if anyone needeth a better
captain than our kin-father and war-father Jack of the Tofts, he must
needs go fetch him from otherwhere! How sayest thou, Christopher lad?"

Great cheer there was at the word, and laughter no little therewith. But
Christopher stood up, and took Jack by the hand, and said: "Now say I,
that if none else follow this man into battle, yet will I; and if none
else obey him to go backward or forward to the right hand or to the left
as he biddeth, yet will I. Thou, Wilfrid Wellhead, look to it that thou
dost no less. But ye folk, what will ye herein?"

So they all yea-said Jack of the Tofts for captain; and forsooth they
might do no less, for he was wary and wise, and had done many deeds, and
seen no little of warfare.

Then again arose a man of some forty winters, strong built and not
ungoodly, but not merry of countenance, and he spake: "King and
war-leader, I have a word to say: We be wending to battle, we carles,
with spear in fist and sword by side; and if we die in the fray, of
the day's work is it; but what do we with our kinswomen, as mothers and
daughters and wives and she-friends, and the little ones they have borne
us? For, see ye! this warfare we are faring, maybe it shall not last
long, and yet maybe it shall; and then may the foeman go about us and
fall on this stead if we leave them behind here with none to guard them;
and if, on the other hand, we leave them men enough for their warding,
then we minish our host overmuch. What do we then?"

Then spake Jack of the Tofts: "This is well thought of by Haward of
Whiteacre, and we must look to it. And, by my rede, we shall have our
women and little ones with us; and why not? For we shall then but be
moving Toftstead as we move; and ever to some of us hath it been as a
camp rather than an house. Moreover, ye know it, that our women be no
useless and soft queans, who durst not lie under the oak boughs for a
night or two, or wade a water over their ankles, but valiant they be,
and kind, and helpful; and many of them are there who can draw a bow
with the best, and, it may be, push a spear if need were. How say ye,
lads?"

Now this also they yea-said gladly; forsooth they had scarce been fain
of leaving the women behind, at least the younger ones, even had they
been safe at the Tofts; for there is no time when a man would gladlier
have a fair woman in his arms than when battle and life-peril are
toward.

Thereafter the Mote sundered, when the Captain had bidden his men this
and that matter that each should look to; and said that he, for his
part, with King Christopher and a chosen band, would set off for
Hazeldale on the morrow morn, whereas some deal of the gathering would
of a certainty be come thither by then; and that there was enough left
of that day to see to matters at the Tofts.

So all men went about their business, which was, for the most part,
seeing to the victualling of the host.




CHAPTER XXVIII. OF THE HOSTING IN HAZELDALE.


On the morrow early was Jack of the Tofts dight for departure, with
Christopher and David and Gilbert and five score of his best men. But
when they went out of the porch into the sweet morning, lo! there was
Goldilind before them, clad in her green gown, and as fresh and dear
as the early day itself. And Jack looked on her and said: "And thou, my
Lady and Queen, thou art dight as thou wouldst wend with us?"

"Yea," she said, "and why not?"

"What sayest thou, King Christopher?" said the Captain.

"Nay," said King Christopher, reddening, "it is for thee to yea-say or
nay-say; though true it is that I have bidden her farewell for two days'
space." And the two stood looking on one another.

But Jack laughed and said: "Well, then, so be it; but let us get to
the way, or else when the sweethearts of these lads know that we have a
woman with us we shall have them all at our backs." Thereat all laughed
who were within earshot, and were merry.

So they wended the woodland ways, some afoot, some a-horseback, of
whom was Jack of the Tofts, but Christopher and David went afoot. And
Goldilind rode a fair white horse which the Captain had gotten her.

As they went, and King Christopher ever by Goldilind's right hand,
and were merry and joyous, they two were alone in the woodland way; so
Christopher took her hand and kissed it, and said: "Sweetling, why
didst thou tell me nought of thy will to come along with us? Never had I
balked thee."

She looked at him, blushing as a rose, and said: "Dear friend, I will
tell thee; I knew that thou wouldst make our parting piteous-sweet this
morning; and of that I would not be balked. See, then, how rich I am,
since I have both parted from thee and have thee." And therewith she
louted down from her saddle, and they kissed together sweetly, and so
thereafter wore the way.

So came they to the plain of Hazeldale, which was a wide valley with a
middling river winding about it, the wild-wood at its back toward the
Tofts, and in front down-land nought wooded, save here and there a tree
nigh a homestead or cot; for that way the land was builded for a space.
Forsooth it was not easy for the folk thereabout to live quietly, but if
they were friends in some wise to Jack of the Tofts.

So when the company of the Tofts came out into the dale about three
hours after noon, it was no wonder to them to see men riding and going
to and fro, and folk pitching tents and raising booths nigh to the cover
of the wood; and when the coming of the Toft-folk was seen, and the
winding of their horns heard, there was many a glad cry raised in
answer, and many an horn blown, and all men there came running together
toward where now was stayed Jack of the Tofts and Christopher and their
men.

Then Goldilind bade Christopher help her light down; so he took her in
his arms, and was not over hasty in setting her down again. But when
she stood by him, she looked over the sunny field darkened by the folk
hastening over the greensward, and her eyes glittered and her cheek
flushed, and she said: "Lord King, be these some others of thy men?"

"Yea, sweetling," said he, "to live and die with me."

She looked on him, and said softly: "Maybe it were an ill wish to wish
that I were thou; yet if it might be for one hour!"

Said he: "Shall it not be for more than one hour? Shall it not be for
evermore, since we twain are become one?"

"Nay," she said, "this is but a word; I am but thine handmaid: and now I
can scarce refrain my body from falling before thy feet."

He laughed in her face for joy, and said: "Abide a while, until these
men have looked on thee, and then shalt thou see how thou wilt be a
flame of war in their hearts that none shall withstand."

Now were the dale-dwellers all come together in their weapons, and they
were glad of their King and his loveling; and stout men were they all,
albeit some were old, and some scarce of man's age. So they were ranked
and told over, and the tale of them was over six score who had obeyed
the war-arrow, and more and more, they said, would come in every hour.
But now the Captains of them bade the Toft-folk eat with them; and they
yea-said the bidding merrily, and word was given, and sacks and
baskets brought forth, and barrels to boot, and all men sat down on the
greensward, and high was the feast and much the merriment on the edge of
Hazeldale.




CHAPTER XXIX. TIDINGS COME TO HAZELDALE.


But they had not done their meat, and had scarce begun upon their drink,
ere they saw three men come riding on the spur over the crown of the
bent before them; these made no stay for aught, but rode straight
through the ford of the river, as men who knew well where it was, and
came on hastily toward the feasters by the wood-edge. Then would some
have run to meet them, but Jack of the Tofts bade them abide till he had
heard the tidings; whereas they needed not to run to their weapons, for,
all of them, they were fully dight for war, save, it might be, the doing
on of their sallets or basnets. But Jack and Christopher alone went
forward to meet those men; and the foremost of them cried out at once:
"I know thee, Jack of the Tofts! I know thee! Up and arm! up and arm!
for the foemen are upon thee; and so choose thee whether thou wilt fight
or flee."

Quoth Jack, laughing: "I know thee also, Wat of Whiteend; and when thou
hast told me how many and who be the foemen, we will look either to
fighting or fleeing."

Said Wat: "Thou knowest the blazon of the banner which we saw, three red
wolves running on a silver field?"

"Yea, forsooth," said Jack; "'tis the Baron of Brimside that beareth
that shield ever; and the now Baron, hight the Lord Gandolf, how many
was he?"

Said Wat: "Ten hundreds or more. But what say fellows?"

Quoth the other twain: "More, more they were."

Said Jack of the Tofts: "And when shall he be here, deem ye?"

"In less than an hour," said Wat, "he will be on thee with great and
small; but his riders, some of them, in lesser space."

Then turned Jack about and cried out for David, and when he came, he
said: "Put thy long legs over a good horse, and ride straight back to
the Tofts and gather whatever may bear spear and draw bow, and hither
with them, lad, by the nighest road; tarry not, speak no word, be gone!"

So David turned, and was presently riding swiftly back through the
woodland paths. But Jack spake to the bearers of tidings: "Good fellows,
go ye yonder and bid them give you a morsel and a cup; and tell all
the tidings, and this, withal, that we have nought to flee from a good
fightstead for Gandolf of Brimside." Therewith he turned to Christopher
and said: "Thy pardon, King, but these matters must be seen to
straightway. Now do thou help me array our folk, for there is heart
enough in them as in thee and me; and mayhappen we may make an end to
this matter now and here. Moreover, the Baron of Brimside is a stout
carle, so fight we must, meseemeth."

Then he called to them one of the captains of the Tofts and they three
spake together heedfully a little, and thereafter they fell to work
arraying the folk; and King Christopher did his part therein deftly and
swiftly, for quick of wit he was, and that the more whenso anything was
to be done.

As to the array, the main of the folk that were spearmen and billmen but
moved forward somewhat from where they had dined to the hanging of the
bent, so that their foemen would have the hill against them or ever
they came on point and edge. But the bowmen, of whom were now some two
hundreds, for many men had come in after the first tally, were spread
abroad on the left hand of the spearmen toward the river, where the
ground was somewhat broken, and bushed with thorn-bushes. And a bight of
the water drew nearer to the Tofters, amidst of which was a flat eyot,
edged with willows and covered with firm and sound greensward, and was
some thirty yards endlong and twenty overthwart. So there they abode the
coming of the foe, and it was now hard on five o'clock.

But Christopher went up to Goldilind where she stood amidst of the
spearmen, hand turning over hand, and her feet wandering to and fro
almost without her will; and when he came to her, she had much ado to
refrain her from falling on his bosom and weeping there. But he cried
to her gaily: "Now, my Lady and Queen, thou shalt see a fair play toward
even sooner than we looked for; and thine eyes shall follow me, if the
battle be thronged, by this token, that amongst all these good men and
true I only wear a forgilded basnet with a crown about it."

"O!" she said, "if it were but over, and thou alive and free! I would
pay for that, I deem, if I might, by a sojourn in Greenharbour again."

"What!" he said, "that I might have to thrust myself into the peril of
snatching thee forth again?" And he laughed merrily. "Nay," said he,
"this play must needs begin before it endeth; and by Saint Nicholas, I
deem that to-day it beginneth well."

But she put her hands before her face, and her shoulders were shaken
with sobs. "Alas! sweetling," said he, "that my joy should be thy
sorrow! But, I pray thee, take not these stout-hearts for runaways. And
Oh! look, look!"

She looked up, wondering and timorous, but all about her the men sprang
up and shouted, and tossed up bill and sword, and the echo of their
cries came back from the bowmen on the left, and Christopher's sword
came rattling out of the scabbard and went gleaming up aloft. Then words
came into the cry of the folk, and Goldilind heard it, that they cried
"Child Christopher! King Christopher!" Then over her head came a sound
of flapping and rending as the evening wind beat about the face of the
wood; and she heard folk cry about her: "The banner, the banner! Ho for
the Wood-wife of Oakenrealm!"

Then her eyes cleared for what was aloof before her, and she saw a dark
mass come spreading down over the bent on the other side of the river,
and glittering points and broad gleams of white light amidst of it, and
noise came from it; and she knew that here were come the foemen. But
she thought to herself that they looked not so many after all; and she
looked at the great and deft bodies of their folk, and their big-headed
spears and wide-bladed glaves and bills, and strove with her heart and
refrained her fear, and thrust back the image which had arisen before
her of Greenharbour come back again, and she lonely and naked in the
Least Guard-chamber: and she stood firm, and waved her hand to greet the
folk.

And lo! there was Christopher kneeling before her and kissing her hand,
and great shouts arising about her of "The Lady of Oakenrealm! The Lady
of Meadham! For the Lady! For the Lady!"




CHAPTER XXX. OF THE FIELD THAT WAS SET IN THE HOLM OF HAZELDALE.


Now thither cometh Jack o' the Tofts, and spake to Christopher: "See
thou, lad--Lord King, I should say; this looketh not like very present
battle, for they be stayed half way down the bent; and lo thou, some
half score are coming forth from the throng with a white shield raised
aloft. Do we in likewise, for they would talk with us."

"Shall we trust them, father?" said Christopher.

"Trust them we may, son," said Jack; "Gandolf is a violent man, and a
lifter of other men's goods, but I deem not so evil of him as that he
would bewray troth."

So then they let do a white cloth over a shield and hoist it on a
long spear, and straightway they gat to horse, Jack of the Tofts, and
Christopher, and Haward of Whiteacre, and Gilbert, and a half score all
told; and they rode straight down to the ford, which was just below the
tail of the eyot aforesaid, and as they went, they saw the going of the
others, who were by now hard on the waterside; and said Jack: "See now,
King Christopher, he who rides first in a surcoat of his arms is
even the Baron, the black bullet-headed one; and the next to him, the
red-head, is his squire and man, Oliver Marson, a stout man, but fierce
and grim-hearted. Lo thou, they are taking the water, but they are
making for the eyot and not our shore: son mine, this will mean a
hazeled field in the long run; but now they will look for us to come
to them therein. Yea, now they are aland and have pitched their white
shield. And hearken, that is their horn; blow we an answer: ho, noise!
set thy lips to the brass."

So then, when one horn had done its song, the other took it up, and
all men of both hosts knew well that the horns blew but for truce and
parley.

Now come the Toft-folk to the ford, and take the water, which was very
shallow on their side, and when they come up on to the eyot, they find
the Baron and his folk off their horses, and lying on the green grass,
so they also lighted down and stood and hailed the new comers. Then
uprose the Lord Gandolf, and greeted the Toft-folk, and said: "Jack of
the Tofts, thou ridest many-manned to-day."

"Yea, Lord," said Jack, "and thou also. What is thine errand?"

"Nay," said the Baron, "what is thine? As for mine host here, there came
a bird to Brimside and did me to wit that I should be like to need a
throng if I came thy way; and sooth was that. Come now, tell us what is
toward, thou rank reiver, though I have an inkling thereof; for if this
were a mere lifting, thou wouldst not sit still here amidst thy friends
of Hazeldale."

"Lord," said Jack o' the Tofts, "thou shalt hear mine errand, and then
give heed to what thou wilt do. Look to the bent under the wood, and
tell me, dost thou see the blazon of the banner under which be my men?"

"That can I not," said the Lord Gandolf; "but I have seen the banner
of Oakenrealm, which beareth the wood-woman with loins garlanded with
oak-leaves, look much like to it at such a distance."

Said Jack: "It is not ill guessed. Yonder banner is the King's banner,
and beareth on it the woman of Oakenrealm."

The Lord bent his brows on him, and said: "Forsooth, rank reiver, I
wotted not that thou hadst King Rolf for thy guest."

Quoth Jack of the Tofts: "Forsooth, Lord, no such guest as the Earl
Marshal Rolf would I have alive in my poor house."

"Well, Jack," said the big Lord, grinning, "arede me the riddle, and
then we shall see what is to be done, as thou sayest."

"Lord," said Jack, "dost thou see this young man standing by me?"

"Yea," said the other, "he is big enough that I may see him better than
thy banner: if he but make old bones, as is scarce like, since he is of
thy flock, he shall one day make a pretty man; he is a gay rider now.
What else is he?"

Quoth Jack of the Tofts: "He is my King and thy King, and the all-folk's
King, and the King of Oakenrealm: and now, hearken mine errand: it is to
make all folk name him King."

Said the Lord: "This minstrel's tale goes with the song the bird sang
to me this morning; and therefore am I here thronging--to win thy head,
rank reiver, and this young man's head, since it may not better be, and
let the others go free for this time. Hah! what sayest thou? and thou,
youngling? 'Tis but the stroke of a sword, since thou hast fallen into
my hands, and not into the hangman's or the King's."

"Thou must win them first, Lord," said Jack of the Tofts. "Therefore,
what sayest thou? Where shall we cast down the white shield and uprear
the red?"

"Hot art thou, head, heart, and hand, rank reiver," said the Lord; "bide
a while." So he sat silent a little; then he said: "Thou seest, Jack
of the Tofts, that now thou hast thrust the torch into the tow; if I go
back to King Rolf without the heads of you twain, I am like to pay for
it with mine own. Therefore hearken. If we buckle together in fight
presently, it is most like that I shall come to my above, but thou art
so wily and stout that it is not unlike that thou, and perchance this
luckless youngling, may slip through my fingers into the wood; and then
it will avail me little with the King that I have slain a few score
nameless wolf-heads. So, look you! here is a fair field hazelled by God;
let us two use it to-day, and fight to the death here; and then if thou
win me, smite off my head, and let my men fight it out afterwards, as
best they may without me, and 'tis like they will be beaten then. But if
I win thee, then I win this youngling withal, and bear back both heads
to my Lord King, after I have scattered thy wolf-heads and slain as many
as I will; which shall surely befall, if thou be slain first."

Then cried out Jack of the Tofts: "Hail to thy word, stout-heart! this
is well offered, and I take it for myself and my Lord King here." And
all that stood by and heard gave a glad sound with their voices, and
their armour rattled and rang as man turned to man to praise their
captains.

But now spake Christopher: "Lord of Brimside, it is nought wondrous
though thou set me aside as of no account, whereas thou deemest me no
king or king's kindred; but thou, Lord Earl, who wert once Jack of the
Tofts, I marvel at thee, that thou hast forgotten thy King so soon. Ye
twain shall now wot that this is my quarrel, and that none but I shall
take this battle upon him.

"Thou servant of Rolf, the traitor and murderer, hearken! I say that I
am King of Oakenrealm, and the very son of King Christopher the Old; and
that will I maintain with my body against every gainsayer. Thou Lord of
Brimside, wilt thou gainsay it? Then I say thou liest, and lo here, my
glove!" And he cast it down before the Lord.

Again was there good rumour, and that from either side of the
bystanders; but Jack of the Tofts stood up silent and stiff, and the
Baron of Brimside laughed, and said: "Well, swain, if thou art weary of
life, so let it be, as for me; but how sayest thou, Jack of the Tofts?
Art thou content to give thine head away in this fashion, whereas thou
wottest that I shall presently slay this king of thine?"

Said Jack: "The King of Oakenrealm must rule me as well as others of
his liege-men: he must fight if he will, and be slain if he will." Then
suddenly he fell a-laughing, and beat his hand on his thigh till
the armour rattled again, and then he cried out: "Lord Gandolf, Lord
Gandolf, have a care, I bid thee! Where wilt thou please to be buried,
Lord?"

Said the other: "I wot not what thou wilt mean by thy fooling, rank
reiver. But here I take up this youngling's glove; and on his head be
his fate! Now as to this battle. My will is, that we two champions be
all alone and afoot on the eyot. How say ye?"

"Even so be it," said Jack; "but I say that half a score on each side
shall be standing on their own bank to see the play, and the rest of the
host come no nigher than now we are."

"I yea-say it," said the Baron; "and now do thou, rank reiver, go back
to thy fellowship and tell them what we have areded, and do thou, Oliver
Marson, do so much for our folk; and bid them wot this, that if any of
them break the troth, he shall lose nought more than his life for that
same."

Therewith all went ashore to either bank, save the Baron of Brimside
and Christopher. And the Baron laid him down on the ground and fell to
whistling the tune of a merry Yule dance; but as for Christopher, he
looked on his foeman, and deemed he had seldom seen so big and stalwarth
a man; and withal he was of ripe age, and had seen some forty winters.
Then he also cast himself down on the grass, and fell into a kind of
dream, as he watched a pair of wagtails that came chirping up from the
sandy spit below the eyot; till suddenly great shouting broke out, first
from his own bent, and then from the foemen's, and Christopher knew that
the folk on either side had just heard of the battle that was to be on
the holm. The Baron arose at the sound and looked to his own men, whence
were now coming that half-score who were to look on the battle from the
bank; but Christopher stirred not, but lay quietly amongst the flowers
of the grass, till he heard the splash of horse-hoofs in the ford, and
there presently was come Jack of the Tofts bearing basnet and shield for
his lord. And he got off his horse and spake to Christopher: "If I may
not fight for thee, my son and King, yet at least it is the right of
thine Earl to play the squire to thee: but a word before thy basnet is
over thine ears; the man yonder is well-nigh a giant for stature and
strength; yet I think thou mayest deal with him, and be none the sorer
when thou liest down to-night. To be short, this is it: when thou hast
got a stroke in upon him, and he falters, then give him no time, but fly
at him in thy wild-cat manner and show what-like thews thou hast under
thy smooth skin; now thine helm, lad. So art thou dight; and something
tells me thou shalt do it off in victory."




CHAPTER XXXI. THE BATTLE ON THE HOLM.


So when Christopher was armed, Jack turned about speedily, and so gat
him back through the ford and stood there on the bank with the nine
other folk of the Tofts. And by this time was Gandolf of Brimside armed
also, and Oliver Marson, who had done his helm on him, was gone to his
side of the river.

Drew the huge man-at-arms then toward Christopher, but his sword was yet
in the sheath: Christopher set his point to the earth and abode him; and
the Baron spake: "Lad, thou art fair and bold both, as I can see it, and
Jack of the Tofts is so much an old foe of mine that he is well-nigh a
friend: so what sayest thou? If thou wilt yield thee straightway, I will
have both thine head and the outlaw's with me to King Rolf, but yet on
your shoulders and ye two alive. Haps will go as haps will; and it
maybe that ye shall both live for another battle, and grow wiser, and
mayhappen abide in the wood with the reiver's men. Hah? What sayest
thou?"

Christopher laughed and said: "Wouldst thou pardon one who is not yet
doomed, Baron? And yet thy word is pleasant to us; for we see that if we
win thee, thou shalt be good liegeman of us. Now, Baron, sword in fist!"

Gandolf drew his sword, muttering: "Ah, hah! he is lordly and kingly
enough, yet may this learn him a lesson." Indeed the blade was huge and
brown and ancient, and sword and man had looked a very terror save to
one great-hearted.

But Christopher said: "What sayest thou now, Baron, shall we cast down
our shields to earth? For why should we chop into wood and leather?"

The Baron cast down his shield, and said: "Bold are thy words, lad; if
thy deeds go with them, it may be better for thee than for me. Now keep
thee."

And therewith he leapt forward and swept his huge sword around; but
Christopher swerved speedily and enough, so that the blade touched him
not, and the huge man had over-reached himself, and ere he had his sword
well under sway again, Christopher had smitten him so sharply on the
shoulder that the mails were sundered & the blood ran; and withal the
Baron staggered with the mere weight of the stroke. Then Christopher
saw his time, and leapt aloft and dealt such a stroke on the side of his
head, that the Baron tottered yet more; but now was he taught by those
two terrible strokes, and he gathered all his heart to him, and all the
might of his thews, and leapt aback and mastered his sword, and came on
fierce but wary, shouting out for Brimside and the King.

Christopher cried never a cry, but swung his sword well within his
sway, and the stroke came on Gandolf's fore-arm and brake the mails and
wounded him, and then as the Baron rushed forward, the wary lad gat his
blade under his foeman's nigh the hilts, and he gave it a wise twist and
forth flew the ancient iron away from its master.

Gandolf seemed to heed not that he was swordless, but gave out a great
roar and rushed at Christopher to close with him, and the well-knit
lad gave back before him and turned from side to side, and kept the
sword-point before Gandolf's eyes ever, till suddenly, as the Baron was
running his fiercest, he made a mighty sweep at his right leg, since
he had no more to fear his sword, and the edge fell so strong and true,
that but for the byrny-hose he had smitten the limb asunder, and even
as it was it made him a grievous wound, so that the Lord of Brimside fell
clattering to the earth, and Christopher bestrode him and cried: "How
sayest thou, champion, is it enough?"

"Yea, enough, and maybe more," said the Baron. "Wilt thou smite off mine
head? Or what wilt thou?"

Said Christopher: "Here hath been enough smiting, meseemeth, save thy
lads and ours have a mind to buckle to; and lo thou! men are running
down from the bents towards us from both sides, yet not in any warlike
manner as yet. Now, Baron, here cometh thy grim squire that I heard
called Oliver, and if thou wilt keep the troth, thou shalt bid him order
thy men so that they fall not upon us till the battle be duly pitched.
Then shalt thou be borne home, since thou canst not go, with no
hindrance from us."

Now was Oliver come indeed, and the other nine with him, and on the
other side was come Jack of the Tofts and four others.

Then spake the Baron of Brimside: "I may do better than thou biddest me;
for now I verily trow herein, that thou art the son of Christopher the
Old; so valiant as thou art, and so sad a smiter, and withal that
thou fearest not to let thy foeman live. So hearken all ye, and thou
specially, Oliver Marson, my captain: I am now become the man of my lord
King Christopher, and will follow him whereso he will; and I deem that
will presently be to Oakenham, and the King's seat there. Now look to it
that thou, Oliver, order my men under King Christopher's banner, till
I be healed; and then if all be not over, I shall come forth myself,
shield on neck and spear in fist, to do battle for my liege lord; so
help me God and St. James of the Water!"

Therewith speech failed him and his wit therewith; so betwixt them they
unarmed him and did him what leechdom they might do there and then; and
he was nowise hurt deadly: as for Child Christopher, he had no scratch
of steel on him. And Oliver knelt before him when he had dight his own
lord, and swore fealty to him then and there; and so departed, to order
the folk of Brimside and tell them the tidings, and swear them liege men
of King Christopher.




CHAPTER XXXII. OF GOLDILIND AND CHRISTOPHER.


Now Jack of the Tofts said a word to one of his men, and he rode
straightway up into the field under the wood, and spake to three of the
captains of the folk, and they ranked a hundred of the men, of those who
were best dight, and upraised amongst them the banner of Oakenrealm,
and led all them down to the river bank; and with these must needs go
Goldilind; and when they came down thither, Christopher and Jack were
there on the bank to hail them, and they raised a great shout when they
saw their King and their Earl standing there, and the shout was given
back from the wood-side; and then the men of Brimside took it up, for
they had heard the bidding of their Lord, and he was now in a pavilion
which they had raised for him on the mead, and the leeches were looking
to his hurts; and they feared him, but rather loved than hated him, and
he was more to them than the King in Oakenrealm and they were all ready
to do his will.

But as to Goldilind, her mind it had been, as she was going down the
meadow, that she would throw herself upon Christopher's bosom and love
him with glad tears of love; but as she came and stood over against him,
she was abashed, and stood still looking on him, and spake no word; and
he also was ashamed before all that folk to say the words whereof his
heart was full, and longed for the night, that they might be alone
together.

But at last he said: "Lady and Queen, thou seest that we be well-beloved
that they rejoice so much in a little deed of mine." And still she spake
nought, and held hand in hand.

But Jack of the Tofts spake and said: "By St. Hubert! the deed may be
little, though there be men who would think no little of overcoming the
biggest man and the fellest fighter of Oakenrealm, but at least great
things shall come thereof. King, thy strokes of this day have won thee
Oakenrealm, or no man I know in field, and many a mother's son have they
saved from death. For look thou yonder over the river, Goldilind, my
Lady, and tell me what thou seest." She turned to him and said: "Lord
Earl, I see warriors a many."

"Yea," said Jack, "and stout fellows be they for the more part; and hard
had been the hand-play had we met, ere they had turned their backs; but
now, see thou, we shall wend side by side toward Oakenrealm, for our
Lord there hath won them to his friends; and doubt thou not that when
they see him and thee anigh, they shall be friends indeed. What! dost
thou weep for this? Or is it because he hath done the deed and not thou?
or rather, because thine heart is full for the love of him?"

She smiled kindly on Jack, but even therewith she felt two hands laid on
her shoulders, and Christopher kissed her without any word.




CHAPTER XXXIII. A COUNCIL OF CAPTAINS: THE HOST COMES TO BROADLEES, AND
MAKES FOR WOODWALL.


That night, though there was some little coming and going between the
Tofters and the Brimsiders, yet either flock slept on their own side of
the river. Moreover, before the midst of the night, cometh David to
the wood-side, and had with him all men defensible of the Tofts and the
houses thereabout, and most of the women also many of whom bore spear or
bow, so that now by the wood-side, what with them of the Tofts and the
folk who joined them thereto from the country-side about Hazeldale,
there were well-nigh ten hundreds of folk under weapons; and yet more
came in the night through; for the tidings of the allegiance of Brimside
was spreading full fast.

Betimes on the morrow was King Christopher afoot, and he and Jack and
David and Gilbert, and they twelve in company, went down to the banner
by the water-side; and to them presently came Oliver Marson and ten
other of the captains of Brimside, and did them to wit that the Baron
were fain if they would come to his pavilion and hold counsel therein,
for that he was not so sick but he might well speak his mind from where
he lay. So thither they went all, with good will, and the Baron greeted
them friendly, and made what reverence he might to Christopher, and bade
him say what was his mind and his will. But Christopher bade them who
were his elders in battle to speak; and the Baron laughed outright and
said: "Meseemeth, Lord King, thou didst grow old yesterday at my costs;
but since thou wilt have me to speak, I will even do so. And to make
matters the shorter, I will say that I wot well what ye have to do; and
that is, to fall upon the Earl Marshal's folk ere they fall upon us. Now
some folk deem we should fare to Brimside and have a hosting there; but
I say nay; whereas it lieth out of the road to Oakenham, and thereby is
our road, meseemeth; and it is but some six days' riding hence, save, as
is most like, two of those days be days of battle But if we go straight
forward with banners displayed, each day's faring shall be a day of
hosting and gathering; for I tell thee, Lord King, the fame of thee has
by now gone far in this country-side. Wherefore I say no more, since
I wax weary, than this: to the road this morning, and get we so far as
Broadlees ere night-fall, for there we shall get both victual and folk."

There was good cheer made at his word, so Christopher spake: "Baron of
Brimside, thou hast spoken my very mind and will; and but if these lords
and captains gainsay it, let us tarry no longer, but array all our folk
in good order and take tale of them, and so for Broadlees. What say ye,
lords?"

None nay-said it, so there was no more talk save as to the ordering of
this or the other company. And it was so areded that the Brimside men
should fare first at the head of the host with the banner of Brimside,
and that then should go the mingled folk of the country-side, and lastly
the folk of the Tofts with the banner of Oakenrealm; so that if the host
came upon foemen, they might be for a cloud to hide the intent of their
battles awhile till they might take their advantage.

So went the captains to their companies, and the Tofters and their mates
crossed the river to the men of Brimside, who gave them good cheer when
they came amongst them; and it was hard to order the host for a while,
so did the upland folk throng about the King and the Queen; and happy
were they who had a full look on Goldilind; and yet were some so lucky
and so bold that they kissed a hand of her; and one there was, a very
tall young man, and a goodly, who stood there and craved to kiss her
cheek, and she did not gainsay him, and thereafter nought was good to
him save an occasion to die for her.

As for Christopher, he spake to many, and said to them that wheresoever
his banner was, he at least should be at the forefront whenso they came
upon unpeace; and so soon as they gat to the road, he went from company
to company, speaking to many, and that so sweetly and friendly that all
praised him, and said that here forsooth was a king who was all good and
nothing bad, whereas hitherto men had deemed them lucky indeed if their
king were half good and half bad.

Merry then was the road to Broadlees, and they came there before
night-fall; and it was a little cheaping town and unwalled, and if the
folk had had any will to ward them, they lacked might. But when they
found they were not to be robbed, and that it was but the proclaiming of
King Christopher in the market-place, and finding victual and house-room
for the host, and the Mayor taking a paper in payment thereof, none
stirred against them, and a many joined the host to fight for the fair
young King. Now nought as yet had they heard at Broadlees of any force
stirring against them.

But in the morning when they went on their ways again, and were
bound for Cheaping Woodwall, which was a fenced town, they sent out
well-horsed riders to espy the road, who came back on the spur two
hours after noon, and did them to wit that there was a host abiding them
beneath the walls of Woodwall under the banner of Walter the White, an
old warrior and fell fighter; but what comfort he might have from them
of Woodwall they wotted not; but they said that the tidings of their
coming had gone abroad, and many folk were abiding the issue of this
battle ere they joined them to either host. Now on these tidings the
captains were of one mind, to wit, to fare on softly till they came to
a defensible place not far from the foemen, since they could scarce come
to Woodwall in good order before nightfall, and if they were unfoughten
before, to push forward to battle in the morning.

Even so did they, and made a halt at sunset on a pleasant hill above a
river some three miles from Woodwall, and there they passed the night
unmeddled with.




CHAPTER XXXIV. BATTLE BEFORE WOODWALL.


When morning was, the captains came to King Christopher to council:
but while they were amidst of their talk came the word that the foe was
anigh and come close to the river-bank; whereat was none abashed; but to
all it seemed wisdom to abide them on the vantage-ground. So then there
was girding of swords and doing on of helms; as for ordering of the
folk, it was already done, for all the host was ranked on the bent-side,
with the banner of Oakenrealm in the midst; on its left hand the banner
of the Tofts, and on the right the banner of Brimside.

Now when Christopher was come to his place, he looked down and saw how
the foemen were pouring over the river, for it was nowhere deep, and
there were four quite shallow fords: many more were they than his folk,
but he deemed that they fared somewhat tumultuously; and when the bowmen
of the Tofts began shooting, the foemen, a many of them, stayed amidst
of the river to bend bow in their turn, and seemed to think that were
nigh enough already; nay, some went back again to the other bank, to
shoot thence the surer and the drier, and some went yet a little further
back on the field. So that when their sergeants and riders were come
on to the hither bank, they lacked about a fifth of all their host;
and they themselves, for all they were so many, had some ado to make up
their minds to go forward.

Forsooth, when they looked up to the bent and saw the three banners of
Oakenrealm and the Tofts and Brimside all waving over the same ranks,
they knew not what to make of it. And Christopher's host, when they saw
them hang back, brake out into mocking whoops and shouts, and words were
heard in them: "Come and dine at Brimside, good fellows! Come up to the
Tofts for supper and bed! A Christopher! A Christopher!" and so forth.
Now all King Christopher's men were afoot, saving a band of the riders
of Brimside, who bestrode strong and tall horses, and bore jack and
sallet and spear, but no heavy armour.

So Christopher heard and saw, and the heart rose high in him, and he
sent messengers to the right and the left, and bade the captains watch
till he waved his sword aloft, and then all down the bent together; and
he bade the Brimside riders edge a little outward and downward, and be
ready for the chase, and suffer not any of the foemen to gather together
when once they fell to running; for he knew in his heart that the folk
before him would never abide their onfall. And the day was yet young,
and it lacked four hours of noon.

King Christopher abode ill he saw the foemen were come off the level
ground, and were mounting the bent slowly, and not in very good order
or in ranks closely serried. Then he strode forth three paces, and
waved his sword high above his head, and cried out: "A Christopher! A
Christopher! Forward, banner of the Realm!" And forth he went, steady
and strong, and a great shout arose behind him, and none shrank or
lagged, but spears and bills, and axes and swords, all came on like a
wall of steel, so that to the foemen the earth seemed alive with death,
and they made no show of abiding the onset, but all turned and ran, save
Walter the White and a score of his knights, who forsooth were borne
down in a trice, and were taken to mercy, those of them who were not
slain at the first crash of weapons.

There then ye might have seen great clumps of men making no defence, but
casting down their weapons and crying mercy; and forsooth so great was
the throng, that no great many were slain; but on the other hand, but
few gat away across the water, and on them presently fell the Brimside
riders, and hewed down and slew and took few to mercy. And some few
besides the first laggards of the bowmen, it might be three hundreds in
all, escaped, and gat to Woodwall, but when they of the town saw them,
they made up their minds speedily, and shut their gates, and the poor
fleers found but the points of shafts and the heads of quarrels before
them.

But on the field of deed those captives were somewhat fearful as to what
should be done with them, and they spake one to the other about it, that
they would be willing to serve the new King, since he was so mighty.
And amidst of their talk came the captains of King Christopher, and they
drew into a ring around them, and the lords bade them look to it whether
they would be the foemen of the King, the son of that King Christopher
the Old. "If so ye be," said they, "ye may escape this time; but ye see
how valiant a man he is, and how lucky withal, and happy shall they be
whom he calleth friends. Now what say ye, will ye take up your weapons
again, and be under the best of kings and a true one, or will ye depart
and take the chance of his wrath in the coming days? We say, how many of
you will serve King Christopher."

Then arose from them a mighty shout: "All! All! One and All!" Albeit
some there were who slunk away and said nought; and none heeded them.

So then all the sergeants and the common folk swore allegiance to King
Christopher; but of the knights who were left alive, some said Yea, and
some Nay; and these last were suffered to depart, but must needs ride
unarmed.

Now by the time all was done, and the new men had dined along with the
rest of the host, and of the new-comers tale had been taken, the day was
wearing; so they set off for Woodwall, and on the way they met the Mayor
and Aldermen thereof, who came before King Christopher and knelt to him,
and gave him the keys of their town; so he was gracious to them, and
thanked them, and bade see to the victual and lodging of the host, and
that all should be paid thereafter. And they said that they had seen to
all this before they came forth of the town, and that if the Lord King
would ride forth, he would find fair lodging in the good town. So King
Christopher was pleased, and bade the burgesses ride beside him, and he
talked merrily with them on the way, so that their hearts rejoiced over
the kindness of their lord.

So they came to the gate, and there the King made stay till Goldilind
was fetched to him, so that they might ride into the good town side
by side. And in the street was much people thronging, and the sun was
scarce set, so that the folk could see their King and Queen what they
were; and they who were nighest unto them, they let their shouts die
out, so were their hearts touched with the sight of them and the love of
their beauty.

Thus rode they in triumph through the street till they were come to
their lodging, which was great and goodly as for a cheaping town; and so
the day was gone and the night was come, and the council and the banquet
were over; then were the King and Goldilind together again, like any
up-country lad and lass. But she stood before him and said: "O thou King
and mighty warrior, surely I ought to fear thee now, but it is not so,
so sore as I desire thee; but yet it maketh both laughter and tears come
to me when I think of the day we rode away from Greenharbour with thee,
and I seemed to myself a great lady, though I were unhappy; and though
I loved thy body, I feared lest the churl's blood in thee might shame me
perchance, and I was proud and unkind to thee, and I hurt thee sorely;
and now I will say it, and confess, that somewhat I joyed to see thine
anguish, for I knew that it meant thy love for me and thy desire to me.
Lo now, wilt thou forgive me this, or wilt thou punish me, O Lord King?"

He laughed. "Sweetling," he said, "meseemeth now all day long I have
been fighting against raiment rather than men; no man withstood me in
the battle, for that they feared the crown on my helm and the banner
over my head; and when those good men of the town brought me the keys,
how should I have known them from borrel folk but for their scarlet
gowns and fur hoods? And meseemed that when they knelt to me, it was the
scarlet gowns kneeling to the kingly armour. Therefore, sweetheart, if
thou fearest that the King should punish thee for so wounding the poor
Christopher of those few days ago, as belike thou deservest it, bid the
King do off his raiment, and do thou in likewise, and then there shall
be no King to punish, and no King's scather to thole the punishment, but
only Christopher and Goldilind, even as they met erewhile on the dewy
grass of Littledale."

She blushed blood-red; but ere his words were done, her hands were busy
with girdle and clasp, and her raiment fell from her to the earth, and
his kingly raiment was cast from him, and he took her by the hand and
led her to the bed of honour, that their love might have increase that
night also.




CHAPTER XXXV. AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE AND AN EVIL DEED.


When morning was, and it was yet early, the town was all astir and the
gates were thrown open, and weaponed men thronged into it crying out for
Christopher the King. Then the King came forth, and Jack o' the Tofts
and his sons, and Oliver Marson, and the captains of Brimside; and the
host was blown together to the market-place, and there was a new tale of
them taken, and they were now hard on seventy hundreds of men. So then
were new captains appointed, and thereafter they tarried not save to eat
a morsel, but went out a-gates faring after the banners to Oakenrealm,
all folk blessing them as they went.

Nought befell them of evil that day, but ever fresh companies joined
them on the road; and they gat harbour in another walled town, hight
Sevenham, and rested there in peace that night, and were now grown to
eighty hundreds.

Again on the morrow they were on the road betimes, and again much folk
joined them, and they heard no tidings of any foeman faring against
them; whereat Jack o' the Tofts marvelled, for he and others had deemed
that now at last would Rolf the traitor come out against them. Forsooth,
when they had gone all day and night was at hand, it seemed most like to
the captains that he would fall upon them that night, whereas they were
now in a somewhat perilous pass; for they must needs rest at a little
thorpe amidst of great and thick woods, which lay all round about the
frank of Oakenham as a garland about a head. So there they kept watch
and ward more heedfully than their wont was; and King Christopher lodged
with Goldilind at the house of a good man of the thorpe.

Now when it lacked but half an hour of midnight, and Jack o' the Tofts
and Oliver Marson and the Captain of Woodwall had just left him, after
they had settled the order of the next day's journey, and Goldilind lay
abed in the inner chamber, there entered one of the men of the watch
and said: "Lord King, here is a man hereby who would see thee; he is
weaponed, and he saith that he hath a gift for thee: what shall we do
with him?"

Said Christopher: "Bring him in hither, good fellow." And the man went
back, and came in again leading a tall man, armed, but with a hood done
over his steel hat, so that his face was hidden, and he had a bag in his
hand with something therein.

Then spake the King and said: "Thou man, since thy face is hidden, this
trusty man-at-arms shall stand by thee while we talk together."

"Lord," said the man, "let there be a dozen to hear our talk I care not;
for I tell thee that I come to give thee a gift, and gift-bearers are
oftenest welcome."

Quoth the King: "Maybe, yet before thou bring it forth I would see thy
face, for meseems I have an inkling of thy voice."

So the man cast back his hood, and lo, it was Simon the squire. "Hah!"
said Christopher, "is it thou then! hast thou another knife to give me?"

"Nay," said Simon, "only the work of the knife." And therewith he set
his hand to the bag and drew out by the hair a man's head, newly hacked
off and bleeding, and said: "Hast thou seen him before, Lord? He was a
great man yesterday, though not so great as thou shalt be to-morrow."

"Once only I have seen him," said Christopher, "and then he gave me this
gift" (and he showed his father's ring on his finger): "thou hast slain
the Earl Marshal, who called himself the King of Oakenrealm: my traitor
and dastard he was but thy friend. Wherefore have I two evil deeds to
reward thee, Simon, the wounding of me and the slaying of him. Dost thou
not deem thee gallows-ripe?"

"King," said Simon, "what wouldst thou have done with him hadst thou
caught him?"

Said Christopher: "I had slain him had I met him with a weapon in his
fist; and if we had taken him I had let the folk judge him."

Said Simon: "That is to say, that either thou hadst slain him thyself,
or bidden others to slay him. Now then I ask thee, King, for which
deed wilt thou slay me, for not slaying thee, or for doing thy work and
slaying thy foe?"

Said Christopher to the guard: "Good fellow, fetch here a good horse
ready saddled and bridled, and be speedy."

So the man went: and Christopher said to Simon: "For the knife in my
side, I forgive it thee; and as to the slaying of thy friend, it is not
for me to take up the feud. But this is no place for thee: if Jack of
the Tofts, or any of his sons, or one of the captains findeth thee, soon
art thou sped; wherefore I rede thee, when yonder lad hath brought thee
the horse, show me the breadth of thy back, and mount the beast, and put
the most miles thou canst betwixt me and my folk; for they love me."

Said Simon: "Sorry payment for making thee a king!"

Said Christopher: "Well, thou art in the right; I may well give gold for
getting rid of such as thou." And he put his hand into a pouch that hung
on his chair, and drew out thence a purse, and gave it unto Simon, who
took it and opened it and looked therein, and then flung it down on the
ground.

Christopher looked on him wrathfully with reddened face, and cried out:
"Thou dog! wouldst thou be an earl and rule the folk? What more dost
thou want?"

"This!" cried out Simon, and leapt upon him, knife aloft. Christopher
was unarmed utterly; but he caught hold of the felon's right arm with
his right hand, and gripped the wrist till he shrieked; then he raised
up his mighty left hand, and drave it down on Simon's head by the ear,
and all gave way before it, and the murderer fell crushed and dead to
earth.

Therewith came in the man-at-arms to tell him that the horse was come;
but stared wild when he saw the dead man on the ground. But Christopher
said: "My lad, here hath been one who would have thrust a knife into
an unarmed man, wherefore I must needs give him his wages. But now thou
hast this to do: take thou this dead man and bind him so fast on the
horse thou hast brought that he will not come off till the bindings be
undone; and bind withal the head of this other, who was once a great man
and an evil, before the slayer of him, so that it also may be fast; then
get thee to horse and lead this beast and its burden till ye are well
on the highway to Oakenham, and then let him go and find his way to the
gate of the city if God will. And hearken, my lad; seest thou this
gold which lieth scattering on the floor here? this was mine, but is no
longer, since I have given it away to the dead man just before he lifted
his hand against me. Wherefore now I will keep it for thee against thou
comest back safe to me in the morning betimes, as I deem thou wilt, if
thou wilt behight to St. Julian the helping of some poor body on the
road. Go therefore, but send hither the guard; for I am weary now, and
would go to sleep without slaying any man else."

So departed the man full of joy, and Christopher gathered his money
together again, and so fared to his bed peacefully.




CHAPTER XXXVI. KING CHRISTOPHER COMES TO OAKENHAM.


But on the morrow the first man who came to the King was the man-at-arms
aforesaid; and he told that he had done the King's errand, and ridden a
five miles on the road to Oakenham before he had left the horse with his
felon load, and that he had found nought stirring all that way when he
had passed through their own out-guards, where folk knew him and let
him go freely. "And," quoth he, "it is like enough that this gift to
Oakenham, Lord King, has by now come to the gate thereof." Then the King
gave that man the gold which he had promised, and he kissed the King's
hand and went his ways a happy man.

Thereafter sent Christopher for Jack of the Tofts, and told him in few
words what had betid, and that Rolf the traitor was dead. Then spake
Jack: "King and fosterling, never hath so mighty a warrior as thou waged
so easy a war for so goodly a kingdom as thou hast done; for surely thy
war was ended last night, wherefore will we straight to Oakenham, if so
thou wilt. But if it be thy pleasure I will send a chosen band of riders
to wend on the spur thereto, and bid them get ready thy kingly house,
and give word to the Barons and the Prelates, and the chiefs of the
Knighthood, and the Mayor and the Aldermen, and the Masters of the
Crafts, to show themselves of what mind they be towards thee. But I
doubt it not that they will deem of thee as thy father come back again
and grown young once more."

Now was Christopher eager well nigh unto weeping to behold his people
that he should live amongst, and gladly he yea-said the word of Jack of
the Tofts. So were those riders sent forward; and the host was ordered,
and Christopher rode amidst it with Goldilind by his side; and the
sun was not yet gone down when they came within sight of the gate of
Oakenham, and there before the gate and in the fields on either side
of it was gathered a very great and goodly throng, and there went forth
from it to meet the King the Bishop of Oakenham, and the Abbot of St.
Mary's and the Priors of the other houses of religion, all fairly clad
in broidered copes, with the clerks and the monks dight full solemnly;
and they came singing to meet him, and the Bishop blessed him and gave
him the hallowed bread, and the King greeted him and craved his prayers.
Then came the Burgreve of Oakenham, and with him the Barons and the
Knights, and they knelt before him, and named him to king, and the
Burgreve gave him the keys of the city. Thereafter came the Mayor and
the Aldermen, and the Masters of the Crafts, and they craved his favour,
and warding of his mighty sword; and all these he greeted kindly and
meekly, rather as a friend than as a great lord.

Thereafter were the gates opened, and King Christopher entered, and
there was no gainsaying, and none spake a word of the Traitor Rolf.

But the bells of the minster and of all the churches rang merrily, and
songs were sung sweetly by fair women gloriously clad; and whereas King
Christopher and Queen Goldilind had lighted down from their horses and
went afoot through the street, roses and all kinds of sweet flowers were
cast down before the feet of them all the way from the city gate to the
King's High House of Oakenham.

There then in the great hall of his father's house stood Christopher the
King on the dais, and Goldilind beside him. And Jack of the Tofts and
the chiefest of the Captains, and the Bishop, and the greatest lords
of the Barons, and the doughtiest of the Knights, and the Mayor and the
Aldermen, and the Masters of the Crafts, sat at the banquet with the
King and his mate; they brake bread together and drank cups of renown,
till the voidee cup was borne in. Then at last were the King & the Queen
brought to their chamber with string-play and songs and all kinds of
triumph; and that first night since he lay in his mother's womb did
Child Christopher fall asleep in the house which the fathers had builded
for him.




CHAPTER XXXVII. OF CHILD CHRISTOPHER'S DEALINGS WITH HIS FRIENDS & HIS
FOLK.


It was in the morning when King Christopher arose, and Goldilind stood
before him in the kingly chamber, that he clipped her and kissed her,
and said: "This is the very chamber whence my father departed when he
went to his last battle, and left my mother sickening with the coming
birth of me. And never came he back hither, nor did mine eyes behold him
ever. Here also lay my mother and gave birth to me, and died of sorrow,
and her also I never saw, save with eyes that noted nought that I might
remember. And my third kinsman was the traitor, that cast me forth of
mine heritage, and looked to it that I should wax up as a churl, and
lose all hope of high deeds; and at the last he strove to slay me.

"Therefore, sweet, have I no kindred, and none that are bound to cherish
me, and it is for thee to take the place of them, and be unto me both
father and mother, and brother and sister, and all kindred."

She said: "My mother I never saw, and I was but little when my father
died; and if I had any kindred thereafter they loved me not well enough
to strike one stroke for me, nay, or to speak a word even, when I was
thrust out of my place and delivered over to the hands of pitiless
people, and my captivity worsened on me as the years grew. Wherefore to
me also art thou in the stead of all kindred and affinity."

Now Christopher took counsel with Jack of the Tofts and the great men
of the kingdom, and that same day, the first day of his kingship in
Oakenham, was summoned a great mote of the whole folk; and in half a
month was it holden, and thereat was Christopher taken to king with none
gainsaying.

Began now fair life for the people of Oakenrealm; for Jack of the Tofts
abode about the King in Oakenham; and wise was his counsel, and there
was no greed in him, and yet he wotted of greed and guile in others,
and warned the King thereof when he saw it, and the tyrants were brought
low, and no poor and simple man had need to thieve. As for Christopher,
he loved better to give than to take; and the grief and sorrow of folk
irked him sorely; it was to him as if he had gotten a wound when he saw
so much as one unhappy face in a day; and all folk loved him, and the
fame of him went abroad through the lands and the roads of travel, so
that many were the wise and valiant folk that left their own land and
came into Oakenrealm to dwell there, because of the good peace and
the kindliness that there did abound; so that Oakenrealm became both
many-peopled and joyous.

Though Jack of the Tofts abode with the King at Oakenham, his sons went
back to the Tofts, and Gilbert was deemed the head man of them; folk
gathered to them there, and the wilderness about them became builded in
many places, and the Tofts grew into a goodly cheaping town, for those
brethren looked to it that all roads in the woodland should be safe and
at peace, so that no chapman need to arm him or his folk; nay, a maiden
might go to and fro on the woodland ways, with a golden girdle about
her, without so much as the crumpling of a lap of her gown unless by her
own will.

As to David, at first Christopher bade him strongly to abide with him
ever, for he loved him much. But David nay-said it, and would go home to
the Tofts; and when the King pressed him sore, at last he said: "Friend
and fellow, I must now tell thee the very sooth, and then shalt thou
suffer me to depart, though the sundering be but sorrow to me. For this
it is, that I love thy Lady and wife more than meet is, and here I find
it hard to thole my desire and my grief; but down in the thicket yonder
amongst my brethren of the woods, and man and maid, and wife and babe,
nay, the very deer of the forest, I shall become a man again, and be no
more a peevish and grudging fool; and as the years wear, shall sorrow
wear, and then, who knows but we may come together again."

Then Christopher smiled kindly on him and embraced him, but they spake
no more of that matter, but sat talking a while, and then bade each
other farewell, and David went his ways to the Tofts. But a few months
thereafter, when a son had been born to Christopher, David came to
Oakenrealm, but stayed there no longer than to greet the King, and do
him to wit that he was boun for over-sea to seek adventure. Many gifts
the King gave him, and they sundered in all loving-kindness, and the
King said: "Farewell, friend, I shall remember thee and thy kindness
for ever." But David said: "By the roof in Littledale and by the hearth
thereof, thou shalt be ever in my mind."

Thus they parted for that time; but five and twenty years afterwards,
when Child Christopher was in his most might and majesty, and Goldilind
was yet alive and lovely, and sons and daughters sat about their board,
it was the Yule feast in the King's Hall at Oakenham, and there came
a man into the hall that none knew, big of stature, grey-eyed and
hollow-cheeked, with red hair grizzled, and worn with the helm; a
weaponed man, chieftain-like and warrior-like. And when the serving-men
asked him of his name, and whence and whither, he said: "I have come
from over-seas to look upon the King, and when he seeth me he will know
my name." Then he put them all aside and would not be gainsaid, but
strode up the hall to the high-seat, and stood before the King and said:
"Hail, little King Christopher! Hail, stout babe of the woodland!"

Then the King looked on him and knew him at once, and stood up at once
with a glad cry, and came round unto him, and took his arms about him
and kissed him, and led him into the high-seat, and set him betwixt him
and Goldilind, and she also greeted him and took him by the hand and
kissed him; and Jack of the Tofts, now a very old man, but yet hale
and stark, who sat on the left hand of the King, leaned toward him and
kissed him and blessed him; for lo! it was David of the Tofts.

Spake he now and said: "Christopher, this is now a happy day!"

Said the King: "David, whither away hence, and what is thine heart set
upon?"

"On the renewal of our youth," said David, "and the abiding with thee.
By my will no further will I go than this thine house. How sayest thou?"

"As thou dost," said Christopher, "that this is indeed a happy day;
drink out of my cup now, to our abiding together, and the end of
sundering till the last cometh."

So they drank together, they two, and were happy amidst the folk of the
hall; and at last the King stood up and spake aloud, and did all to wit
that this was his friend and fellow of the old days; and he told of his
doughty deeds, whereof he had heard many a tale, and treasured them in
his heart while they were apart, and he bade men honour him, all such as
would be his friends. And all men rejoiced at the coming of this doughty
man and the friend of the King.

So there abode David, holden in all honour, and in great love of Child
Christopher and Goldilind; and when his father died, his earldom did the
King give to David his friend, who never sundered from him again, but
was with him in peace and in war, in joy and in sorrow.




CHAPTER XXXVIII. OF MATTERS OF MEADHAM.


GOES the tale back now to the time when the kingship of Child
Christopher was scarce more than one month old; and tells that as
the King sat with his Queen in the cool of his garden on a morning of
August, there came to him a swain of service, who did him to wit that an
outland lord was come, and would see him and give him a message.

So the King bade bring him in to the garden to him straight-way; so the
man went, and came back again leading in a knight somewhat stricken in
years, on whose green surcoat was beaten a golden lion.

He came to those twain and did obeisance to them, but spake, as it
seemed, to Goldilind alone: "Lady, and Queen of Meadham," said he, "it
is unto thee, first of all, that mine errand is."

Then she spoke and said: "Welcome to thee, Sir Castellan of
Greenharbour, we shall hear thy words gladly."

Said the new-comer: "Lady, I am no longer the Burgreve of Greenharbour,
but Sir Guisebert, lord of the Green March, and thy true servant and a
suitor for thy grace and pardon."

"I pardon thee not, but thank thee for what thou didst of good to me,"
said Goldilind, "and I think that now thine errand shall be friendly."

Then turned the Green Knight to the King, and he said: "Have I thy leave
to speak, Lord King?" and he smiled covertly.

But Christopher looked on the face and coat-armour of him, and called
him to mind as the man who had stood betwixt him and present death
that morning in the porch of the Littledale house; so he looked on him
friendly, and said: "My leave thou hast, Sir Knight, to speak fully and
freely, and that the more as meseemeth I saw thee first when thou hadst
weaponed men at thy back, and wert turning their staves away from my
breast."

"Even so it is, Lord King," said the Knight; "and to say sooth, I fear
thee less for thy kingship, than because I wot well that thou mayst
lightly take me up by the small of my back and cast me over thy shoulder
if thou have a mind therefor."

Christopher laughed at his word, and bade him sit down upon the green
grass and tell his errand straightway; and the Knight tarried not, but
spake out: "Queen of Meadham, I am a friend and fellow, and in some sort
a servant, to Earl Geoffrey, Regent of Meadham, whom thou knowest; and
he hath put a word in my mouth which is both short and easy for me to
tell. All goes awry in Meadham now, and men are arming against each
other, and will presently be warring, but if thou look to it; because
all this is for lack of thee. But if thou wilt vouchsafe to come to
Meadhamstead, and sit on thy throne for a little while, commanding and
forbidding; and if thou wilt appoint one of the lords for thine Earl
there, and others for thy captains, and governors and burgreves and so
forth; then if the people see thee and hear thee, the swords will go
into their sheaths, and the spears will hang on the wall again, and we
shall have peace in Meadham, for all will do thy bidding. Wherefore,
Lady and Queen, I beseech thee to come to us, and stave off the riot and
ruin. What sayest thou?"

Goldilind made answer in a while: "Sir Guisebert, true it is that I long
to see my people, and to look once more on my father's house, and the
place where he was born and died. But how know I but this is some wile
of Earl Geoffrey, for he hath not been abounding in trustiness toward
us?"

But Sir Guisebert swore on his salvation that there was no guile
therein, and they were undone save Goldilind came unto them. Then spake
Christopher: "Sir Knight, I am willing to pleasure my Lady, who, as
I can see, longeth to behold her own land and people; and also by thy
voice and thy face I deem that thou art not lying unto me, and that no
harm will befall the Lady; yet will I ask thee right out what thou and
thy lord would think thereof if she come into Meadham accompanied; to
wit, if I rode with her, and had five hundreds of good riders at my
back, would ye have guesting for so many and such stark lads?"

The Knight took up the word eagerly, and said: "Wilt thou but come,
dear lord, and bring a thousand or more, then the surer and the safer it
would be for us."

Said the King, smiling: "Well, it shall be thought on; and meantime be
thou merry with us; for indeed I deem of thee, that but for thy helping
my life had been cast away that morning in Littledale."

So they made much of the Meadham man for three days, and thereafter
they rode into Meadham and to Meadhamstead, Christopher, and Jack of the
Tofts, and Goldilind, in all honour and triumph, they and seven hundreds
of spears, and never were lords received with such joy and kindness
as were they, but it were on the day when Christopher and his entered
Oakenham.

The Earl Geoffrey was not amongst them that met them; but whenas they
sat at the banquet in the hall, and Goldilind was in the high-seat,
gloriously clad and with the kingly crown on her head, there came a
tall man up to the dais, grey-headed and keen-eyed, and he was unarmed,
without so much as a sword by his side, and clad in simple black; and he
knelt before Goldilind, and laid his head on her lap, and spake: "Lady
and Queen, here is my head to do with as thou wilt; for I have been thy
dastard, and I crave thy pardon, if so it may be, for I am Geoffrey."

She looked kindly on him, and raised him up; and then she turned to the
chief of the serving-men, and said: "Fetch me a sword with its sheath
and its girdle, and see that it be a good blade, and all well-adorned,
both sword and sheath and girdle." Even so it was done; and when she had
the sword, she bade Sir Geoffrey kneel again before her, and she girt
him with the said sword and spake: "Sir Geoffrey, all the wrong which
thou didest to me, I forgive it thee and forget it; but wherein thou
hast done well, I will remember it, for thou hast given me a mighty King
to be my man; nay, the mightiest and the loveliest on earth; wherefore I
bless thee, and will make thee my Earl to rule all Meadham under me, if
so be the folk gainsay it not. Wherefore now let these folk fetch thee
seemly garments and array thee, and then come sit amongst us, and eat
and drink on this high day; for a happy day it is when once again I sit
in my father's house, and see the faces of my folk that loveth me."

She spake loud and clear, so that most folk in the hall heard her; and
they rejoiced at her words, for Sir Geoffrey was no ill ruler, but wise
and of great understanding, keen of wit and deft of word, and a mighty
warrior withal; only they might not away with it that their Lady and
Queen had become as alien to them. So when they heard her speak her
will, they shouted for joy of the peace and goodwill that was to be.

There then sat Geoffrey at the banquet; and Christopher smiled on him,
and said: "See now, lord, if I have not done as thou badest when
thou gavest me the treasure of Greenharbour, for I have brought the
wolf-heads to thy helping and not to thy scathing. Do thou as much for
me, and be thou a good earl to thy Lady and mine, and then shalt thou
yet live and die a happy man, and my friend. Or else--"

"There shall be no else, Lord King," quoth Geoffrey; "all men henceforth
shall tell of me as a true man."

So they were blithe and joyous together. But a seven days thence was
the Allmen's Mote gathered to the wood-side without Meadhamstead, and
thronged it was: and there Goldilind stood up before all the folk
and named Sir Geoffrey for Earl to rule the land under her, and none
gainsaid it, for they knew him meet thereto. Then she named from the
baronage and knighthood such men as she had been truly told were meet
thereto to all the offices of the kingdom, and there was none whom
she named but was well-pleasing to the folk; for she had taken counsel
beforehand with all the wisest men of all degrees.

As for herself, all loved and worshipped her; and this alone seemed hard
unto them, that she must needs go back to Oakenrealm in a few days: but
when she heard them murmur thereat, she behight them, that once in every
year she would come into Meadham and spend one whole month therein; and,
were it possible, ever should that be the month of May. So when they
heard that, they all praised her, and were the more content. This custom
she kept ever thereafter, and she lay in with her second son in the city
of Meadhamstead, so that he was born therein; and she named him to be
King after her, to the great joy of that folk; and he grew up strong and
well-liking, and came to the kingship while his mother was yet alive,
and was a good man and well-beloved of his folk.

Before she turned back with her man, she let seek out Aloyse, and when
she came before her, gave her gifts and bade her come back with her to
Oakenham and serve her there if she would: and the damsel was glad, for
there in Meadhamstead was she poor and not well seen to, whereas it was
rumoured of her that she had been one of the jailers of Goldilind.

When they came back to Oakenham, there they met Gandolf, Baron of
Brimside, now whole of his hurts, and the King greeted him kindly, and
did well to him all his life; and found him ever a true man.

Good thenceforward was the life of Child Christopher and Goldilind:
whiles indeed they happed on unpeace or other trouble; but never did
fair love and good worship depart from them, either of each unto each,
or of the whole folk unto them twain.

To no man did Christopher mete out worse than his deserts, nay, to most
far better he meted: no man he feared, nor hated any save the tormentors
of poor folk; and but a little while abided his hatred of those, for
it cut short their lives, so that they were speedily done with and
forgotten. And when he died a very old man but one year after Goldilind
his dear, no king that ever lived was so bewailed by his folk as was
Child Christopher.