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<h2> CHAPTER XXVI. HOW THE THREE COMRADES GAINED A MIGHTY TREASURE </h2>
<p>It was a bright, crisp winter's day when the little party set off from
Bordeaux on their journey to Montaubon, where the missing half of their
Company had last been heard of. Sir Nigel and Ford had ridden on in
advance, the knight upon his hackney, while his great war-horse trotted
beside his squire. Two hours later Alleyne Edricson followed; for he had
the tavern reckoning to settle, and many other duties which fell to him as
squire of the body. With him came Aylward and Hordle John, armed as of
old, but mounted for their journey upon a pair of clumsy Landes horses,
heavy-headed and shambling, but of great endurance, and capable of jogging
along all day, even when between the knees of the huge archer, who turned
the scale at two hundred and seventy pounds. They took with them the
sumpter mules, which carried in panniers the wardrobe and table furniture
of Sir Nigel; for the knight, though neither fop nor epicure, was very
dainty in small matters, and loved, however bare the board or hard the
life, that his napery should still be white and his spoon of silver.</p>
<p>There had been frost during the night, and the white hard road rang loud
under their horses' irons as they spurred through the east gate of the
town, along the same broad highway which the unknown French champion had
traversed on the day of the jousts. The three rode abreast, Alleyne
Edricson with his eyes cast down and his mind distrait, for his thoughts
were busy with the conversation which he had had with Sir Nigel in the
morning. Had he done well to say so much, or had he not done better to
have said more? What would the knight have said had he confessed to his
love for the Lady Maude? Would he cast him off in disgrace, or might he
chide him as having abused the shelter of his roof? It had been ready upon
his tongue to tell him all when Sir Oliver had broken in upon them.
Perchance Sir Nigel, with his love of all the dying usages of chivalry,
might have contrived some strange ordeal or feat of arms by which his love
should be put to the test. Alleyne smiled as he wondered what fantastic
and wondrous deed would be exacted from him. Whatever it was, he was ready
for it, whether it were to hold the lists in the court of the King of
Tartary, to carry a cartel to the Sultan of Baghdad, or to serve a term
against the wild heathen of Prussia. Sir Nigel had said that his birth was
high enough for any lady, if his fortune could but be amended. Often had
Alleyne curled his lip at the beggarly craving for land or for gold which
blinded man to the higher and more lasting issues of life. Now it seemed
as though it were only by this same land and gold that he might hope to
reach his heart's desire. But then, again, the Socman of Minstead was no
friend to the Constable of Twynham Castle. It might happen that, should he
amass riches by some happy fortune of war, this feud might hold the two
families aloof. Even if Maude loved him, he knew her too well to think
that she would wed him without the blessing of her father. Dark and murky
was it all, but hope mounts high in youth, and it ever fluttered over all
the turmoil of his thoughts like a white plume amid the shock of horsemen.</p>
<p>If Alleyne Edricson had enough to ponder over as he rode through the bare
plains of Guienne, his two companions were more busy with the present and
less thoughtful of the future. Aylward rode for half a mile with his chin
upon his shoulder, looking back at a white kerchief which fluttered out of
the gable window of a high house which peeped over the corner of the
battlements. When at last a dip of the road hid it from his view, he
cocked his steel cap, shrugged his broad shoulders, and rode on with
laughter in his eyes, and his weather-beaten face all ashine with pleasant
memories. John also rode in silence, but his eyes wandered slowly from one
side of the road to the other, and he stared and pondered and nodded his
head like a traveller who makes his notes and saves them up for the
re-telling.</p>
<p>"By the rood!" he broke out suddenly, slapping his thigh with his great
red hand, "I knew that there was something a-missing, but I could not
bring to my mind what it was."</p>
<p>"What was it then?" asked Alleyne, coming with a start out of his reverie.</p>
<p>"Why, it is the hedgerows," roared John, with a shout of laughter. "The
country is all scraped as clear as a friar's poll. But indeed I cannot
think much of the folk in these parts. Why do they not get to work and dig
up these long rows of black and crooked stumps which I see on every hand?
A franklin of Hampshire would think shame to have such litter upon his
soil."</p>
<p>"Thou foolish old John!" quoth Aylward. "You should know better, since I
have heard that the monks of Beaulieu could squeeze a good cup of wine
from their own grapes. Know then that if these rows were dug up the wealth
of the country would be gone, and mayhap there would be dry throats and
gaping mouths in England, for in three months' time these black roots will
blossom and snoot and burgeon, and from them will come many a good
ship-load of Medoc and Gascony which will cross the narrow seas. But see
the church in the hollow, and the folk who cluster in the churchyard! By
my hilt! it is a burial, and there is a passing bell!" He pulled off his
steel cap as he spoke and crossed himself, with a muttered prayer for the
repose of the dead.</p>
<p>"There too," remarked Alleyne, as they rode on again, "that which seems to
the eye to be dead is still full of the sap of life, even as the vines
were. Thus God hath written Himself and His laws very broadly on all that
is around us, if our poor dull eyes and duller souls could but read what
He hath set before us."</p>
<p>"Ha! mon petit," cried the bowman, "you take me back to the days when you
were new fledged, as sweet a little chick as ever pecked his way out of a
monkish egg. I had feared that in gaining our debonair young man-at-arms
we had lost our soft-spoken clerk. In truth, I have noted much change in
you since we came from Twynham Castle."</p>
<p>"Surely it would be strange else, seeing that I have lived in a world so
new to me. Yet I trust that there are many things in which I have not
changed. If I have turned to serve an earthly master, and to carry arms
for an earthly king, it would be an ill thing if I were to lose all
thought of the great high King and Master of all, whose humble and
unworthy servant I was ere ever I left Beaulieu. You, John, are also from
the cloisters, but I trow that you do not feel that you have deserted the
old service in taking on the new."</p>
<p>"I am a slow-witted man," said John, "and, in sooth, when I try to think
about such matters it casts a gloom upon me. Yet I do not look upon myself
as a worse man in an archer's jerkin than I was in a white cowl, if that
be what you mean."</p>
<p>"You have but changed from one white company to the other," quoth Aylward.
"But, by these ten finger-bones! it is a passing strange thing to me to
think that it was but in the last fall of the leaf that we walked from
Lyndhurst together, he so gentle and maidenly, and you, John, like a great
red-limbed overgrown moon-calf; and now here you are as sprack a squire
and as lusty an archer as ever passed down the highway from Bordeaux,
while I am still the same old Samkin Aylward, with never a change, save
that I have a few more sins on my soul and a few less crowns in my pouch.
But I have never yet heard, John, what the reason was why you should come
out of Beaulieu."</p>
<p>"There were seven reasons," said John thoughtfully. "The first of them was
that they threw me out."</p>
<p>"Ma foi! camarade, to the devil with the other six! That is enough for me
and for thee also. I can see that they are very wise and discreet folk at
Beaulieu. Ah! mon ange, what have you in the pipkin?"</p>
<p>"It is milk, worthy sir," answered the peasant-maid, who stood by the door
of a cottage with a jug in her hand. "Would it please you, gentles, that I
should bring you out three horns of it?"</p>
<p>"Nay, ma petite, but here is a two-sous piece for thy kindly tongue and
for the sight of thy pretty face. Ma foi! but she has a bonne mine. I have
a mind to bide and speak with her."</p>
<p>"Nay, nay, Aylward," cried Alleyne. "Sir Nigel will await us, and he in
haste."</p>
<p>"True, true, camarade! Adieu, ma cherie! mon coeur est toujours a toi. Her
mother is a well-grown woman also. See where she digs by the wayside. Ma
foi! the riper fruit is ever the sweeter. Bon jour, ma belle dame! God
have you in his keeping! Said Sir Nigel where he would await us?"</p>
<p>"At Marmande or Aiguillon. He said that we could not pass him, seeing that
there is but the one road."</p>
<p>"Aye, and it is a road that I know as I know the Midhurst parish butts,"
quoth the bowman. "Thirty times have I journeyed it, forward and backward,
and, by the twang of string! I am wont to come back this way more laden
than I went. I have carried all that I had into France in a wallet, and it
hath taken four sumpter-mules to carry it back again. God's benison on the
man who first turned his hand to the making of war! But there, down in the
dingle, is the church of Cardillac, and you may see the inn where three
poplars grow beyond the village. Let us on, for a stoup of wine would
hearten us upon our way."</p>
<p>The highway had lain through the swelling vineyard country, which
stretched away to the north and east in gentle curves, with many a peeping
spire and feudal tower, and cluster of village houses, all clear cut and
hard in the bright wintry air. To their right stretched the blue Garonne,
running swiftly seawards, with boats and barges dotted over its broad
bosom. On the other side lay a strip of vineyard, and beyond it the
desolate and sandy region of the Landes, all tangled with faded gorse and
heath and broom, stretching away in unbroken gloom to the blue hills which
lay low upon the furthest sky-line. Behind them might still be seen the
broad estuary of the Gironde, with the high towers of Saint Andre and
Saint Remi shooting up from the plain. In front, amid radiating lines of
poplars, lay the riverside townlet of Cardillac—gray walls, white
houses, and a feather of blue smoke.</p>
<p>"This is the 'Mouton d'Or,'" said Aylward, as they pulled up their horses
at a whitewashed straggling hostel. "What ho there!" he continued, beating
upon the door with the hilt of his sword. "Tapster, ostler, varlet, hark
hither, and a wannion on your lazy limbs! Ha! Michel, as red in the nose
as ever! Three jacks of the wine of the country, Michel—for the air
bites shrewdly. I pray you, Alleyne, to take note of this door, for I have
a tale concerning it."</p>
<p>"Tell me, friend," said Alleyne to the portly red-faced inn-keeper, "has a
knight and a squire passed this way within the hour?"</p>
<p>"Nay, sir, it would be two hours back. Was he a small man, weak in the
eyes, with a want of hair, and speaks very quiet when he is most to be
feared?"</p>
<p>"The same," the squire answered. "But I marvel how you should know how he
speaks when he is in wrath, for he is very gentle-minded with those who
are beneath him."</p>
<p>"Praise to the saints! it was not I who angered him," said the fat Michel.</p>
<p>"Who, then?"</p>
<p>"It was young Sieur de Crespigny of Saintonge, who chanced to be here, and
made game of the Englishman, seeing that he was but a small man and hath a
face which is full of peace. But indeed this good knight was a very quiet
and patient man, for he saw that the Sieur de Crespigny was still young
and spoke from an empty head, so he sat his horse and quaffed his wine,
even as you are doing now, all heedless of the clacking tongue."</p>
<p>"And what then, Michel?"</p>
<p>"Well, messieurs, it chanced that the Sieur de Crespigny, having said this
and that, for the laughter of the varlets, cried out at last about the
glove that the knight wore in his coif, asking if it was the custom in
England for a man to wear a great archer's glove in his cap. Pardieu! I
have never seen a man get off his horse as quick as did that stranger
Englishman. Ere the words were past the other's lips he was beside him,
his face nigh touching, and his breath hot upon his cheeks. 'I think,
young sir,' quoth he softly, looking into the other's eyes, 'that now that
I am nearer you will very clearly see that the glove is not an archer's
glove.' 'Perchance not,' said the Sieur de Crespigny with a twitching lip.
'Nor is it large, but very small,' quoth the Englishman. 'Less large than
I had thought,' said the other, looking down, for the knight's gaze was
heavy upon his eyelids. 'And in every way such a glove as might be worn by
the fairest and sweetest lady in England,' quoth the Englishman. 'It may
be so,' said the Sieur de Crespigny, turning his face from him. 'I am
myself weak in the eyes, and have often taken one thing for another,'
quoth the knight, as he sprang back into his saddle and rode off, leaving
the Sieur de Crespigny biting his nails before the door. Ha! by the five
wounds, many men of war have drunk my wine, but never one was more to my
fancy than this little Englishman."</p>
<p>"By my hilt! he is our master, Michel," quoth Aylward, "and such men as we
do not serve under a laggart. But here are four deniers, Michel, and God
be with you! En avant, camarades! for we have a long road before us."</p>
<p>At a brisk trot the three friends left Cardillac and its wine-house behind
them, riding without a halt past St. Macaire, and on by ferry over the
river Dorpt. At the further side the road winds through La Reolle,
Bazaille, and Marmande, with the sunlit river still gleaming upon the
right, and the bare poplars bristling up upon either side. John and
Alleyne rode silent on either side, but every inn, farm-steading, or
castle brought back to Aylward some remembrance of love, foray, or
plunder, with which to beguile the way.</p>
<p>"There is the smoke from Bazas, on the further side of Garonne," quoth he.
"There were three sisters yonder, the daughters of a farrier, and, by
these ten finger-bones! a man might ride for a long June day and never set
eyes upon such maidens. There was Marie, tall and grave, and Blanche
petite and gay, and the dark Agnes, with eyes that went through you like a
waxed arrow. I lingered there as long as four days, and was betrothed to
them all; for it seemed shame to set one above her sisters, and might make
ill blood in the family. Yet, for all my care, things were not merry in
the house, and I thought it well to come away. There, too, is the mill of
Le Souris. Old Pierre Le Caron, who owned it, was a right good comrade,
and had ever a seat and a crust for a weary archer. He was a man who
wrought hard at all that he turned his hand to; but he heated himself in
grinding bones to mix with his flour, and so through over-diligence he
brought a fever upon himself and died."</p>
<p>"Tell me, Aylward," said Alleyne, "what was amiss with the door of yonder
inn that you should ask me to observe it."</p>
<p>"Pardieu! yes, I had well-nigh forgot. What saw you on yonder door?"</p>
<p>"I saw a square hole, through which doubtless the host may peep when he is
not too sure of those who knock."</p>
<p>"And saw you naught else?"</p>
<p>"I marked that beneath this hole there was a deep cut in the door, as
though a great nail had been driven in."</p>
<p>"And naught else?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Had you looked more closely you might have seen that there was a stain
upon the wood. The first time that I ever heard my comrade Black Simon
laugh was in front of that door. I heard him once again when he slew a
French squire with his teeth, he being unarmed and the Frenchman having a
dagger."</p>
<p>"And why did Simon laugh in front of the inn-door!" asked John.</p>
<p>"Simon is a hard and perilous man when he hath the bitter drop in him;
and, by my hilt! he was born for war, for there is little sweetness or
rest in him. This inn, the 'Mouton d'Or,' was kept in the old days by one
Francois Gourval, who had a hard fist and a harder heart. It was said that
many and many an archer coming from the wars had been served with wine
with simples in it, until he slept, and had then been stripped of all by
this Gourval. Then on the morrow, if he made complaint, this wicked
Gourval would throw him out upon the road or beat him, for he was a very
lusty man, and had many stout varlets in his service. This chanced to come
to Simon's ears when we were at Bordeaux together, and he would have it
that we should ride to Cardillac with a good hempen cord, and give this
Gourval such a scourging as he merited. Forth we rode then, but when we
came to the Mouton d'Or,' Gourval had had word of our coming and its
purpose, so that the door was barred, nor was there any way into the
house. 'Let us in, good Master Gourval!' cried Simon, and 'Let us in, good
Master Gourval!' cried I, but no word could we get through the hole in the
door, save that he would draw an arrow upon us unless we went on our way.
'Well, Master Gourval,' quoth Simon at last, 'this is but a sorry welcome,
seeing that we have ridden so far just to shake you by the hand.' 'Canst
shake me by the hand without coming in,' said Gourval. 'And how that?'
asked Simon. 'By passing in your hand through the hole,' said he. 'Nay, my
hand is wounded,' quoth Simon, 'and of such a size that I cannot pass it
in.' 'That need not hinder,' said Gourval, who was hot to be rid of us,
'pass in your left hand.' 'But I have something for thee, Gourval,' said
Simon. 'What then?' he asked. 'There was an English archer who slept here
last week of the name of Hugh of Nutbourne.' 'We have had many rogues
here,' said Gourval. 'His conscience hath been heavy within him because he
owes you a debt of fourteen deniers, having drunk wine for which he hath
never paid. For the easing of his soul, he asked me to pay the money to
you as I passed.' Now this Gourval was very greedy for money, so he thrust
forth his hand for the fourteen deniers, but Simon had his dagger ready
and he pinned his hand to the door. 'I have paid the Englishman's debt,
Gourval!' quoth he, and so rode away, laughing so that he could scarce sit
his horse, leaving mine host still nailed to his door. Such is the story
of the hole which you have marked, and of the smudge upon the wood. I have
heard that from that time English archers have been better treated in the
auberge of Cardillac. But what have we here by the wayside?"</p>
<p>"It appears to be a very holy man," said Alleyne.</p>
<p>"And, by the rood! he hath some strange wares," cried John. "What are
these bits of stone, and of wood, and rusted nails, which are set out in
front of him?"</p>
<p>The man whom they had remarked sat with his back against a cherry-tree,
and his legs shooting out in front of him, like one who is greatly at his
ease. Across his thighs was a wooden board, and scattered over it all
manner of slips of wood and knobs of brick and stone, each laid separate
from the other, as a huckster places his wares. He was dressed in a long
gray gown, and wore a broad hat of the same color, much weather-stained,
with three scallop-shells dangling from the brim. As they approached, the
travellers observed that he was advanced in years, and that his eyes were
upturned and yellow.</p>
<p>"Dear knights and gentlemen," he cried in a high crackling voice, "worthy
Christian cavaliers, will ye ride past and leave an aged pilgrim to die of
hunger? The sight hast been burned from mine eyes by the sands of the Holy
Land, and I have had neither crust of bread nor cup of wine these two days
past."</p>
<p>"By my hilt! father," said Aylward, looking keenly at him, "it is a marvel
to me that thy girdle should have so goodly a span and clip thee so
closely, if you have in sooth had so little to place within it."</p>
<p>"Kind stranger," answered the pilgrim, "you have unwittingly spoken words
which are very grievous to me to listen to. Yet I should be loth to blame
you, for I doubt not that what you said was not meant to sadden me, nor to
bring my sore affliction back to my mind. It ill becomes me to prate too
much of what I have endured for the faith, and yet, since you have
observed it, I must tell you that this thickness and roundness of the
waist is caused by a dropsy brought on by over-haste in journeying from
the house of Pilate to the Mount of Olives."</p>
<p>"There, Aylward," said Alleyne, with a reddened cheek, "let that curb your
blunt tongue. How could you bring a fresh pang to this holy man, who hath
endured so much and hath journeyed as far as Christ's own blessed tomb?"</p>
<p>"May the foul fiend strike me dumb!" cried the bowman in hot repentance;
but both the palmer and Alleyne threw up their hands to stop him.</p>
<p>"I forgive thee from my heart, dear brother," piped the blind man. "But,
oh, these wild words of thine are worse to mine ears than aught which you
could say of me."</p>
<p>"Not another word shall I speak," said Aylward; "but here is a franc for
thee and I crave thy blessing."</p>
<p>"And here is another," said Alleyne.</p>
<p>"And another," cried Hordle John.</p>
<p>But the blind palmer would have none of their alms. "Foolish, foolish
pride!" he cried, beating upon his chest with his large brown hand.
"Foolish, foolish pride! How long then will it be ere I can scourge it
forth? Am I then never to conquer it? Oh, strong, strong are the ties of
flesh, and hard it is to subdue the spirit! I come, friends, of a noble
house, and I cannot bring myself to touch this money, even though it be to
save me from the grave."</p>
<p>"Alas! father," said Alleyne, "how then can we be of help to thee?"</p>
<p>"I had sat down here to die," quoth the palmer; "but for many years I have
carried in my wallet these precious things which you see set forth now
before me. It were sin, thought I, that my secret should perish with me. I
shall therefore sell these things to the first worthy passers-by, and from
them I shall have money enough to take me to the shrine of Our Lady at
Rocamadour, where I hope to lay these old bones."</p>
<p>"What are these treasures, then, father?" asked Hordle John. "I can but
see an old rusty nail, with bits of stone and slips of wood."</p>
<p>"My friend," answered the palmer, "not all the money that is in this
country could pay a just price for these wares of mine. This nail," he
continued, pulling off his hat and turning up his sightless orbs, "is one
of those wherewith man's salvation was secured. I had it, together with
this piece of the true rood, from the five-and-twentieth descendant of
Joseph of Arimathea, who still lives in Jerusalem alive and well, though
latterly much afflicted by boils. Aye, you may well cross yourselves, and
I beg that you will not breathe upon it or touch it with your fingers."</p>
<p>"And the wood and stone, holy father?" asked Alleyne, with bated breath,
as he stared awe-struck at his precious relics.</p>
<p>"This cantle of wood is from the true cross, this other from Noah his ark,
and the third is from the door-post of the temple of the wise King
Solomon. This stone was thrown at the sainted Stephen, and the other two
are from the Tower of Babel. Here, too, is part of Aaron's rod, and a lock
of hair from Elisha the prophet."</p>
<p>"But, father," quoth Alleyne, "the holy Elisha was bald, which brought
down upon him the revilements of the wicked children."</p>
<p>"It is very true that he had not much hair," said the palmer quickly, "and
it is this which makes this relic so exceeding precious. Take now your
choice of these, my worthy gentlemen, and pay such a price as your
consciences will suffer you to offer; for I am not a chapman nor a
huckster, and I would never part with them, did I not know that I am very
near to my reward."</p>
<p>"Aylward," said Alleyne excitedly, "This is such a chance as few folk have
twice in one life. The nail I must have, and I will give it to the abbey
of Beaulieu, so that all the folk in England may go thither to wonder and
to pray."</p>
<p>"And I will have the stone from the temple," cried Hordle John. "What
would not my old mother give to have it hung over her bed?"</p>
<p>"And I will have Aaron's rod," quoth Aylward. "I have but five florins in
the world, and here are four of them."</p>
<p>"Here are three more," said John.</p>
<p>"And here are five more," added Alleyne. "Holy father, I hand you twelve
florins, which is all that we can give, though we well know how poor a pay
it is for the wondrous things which you sell us."</p>
<p>"Down, pride, down!" cried the pilgrim, still beating upon his chest. "Can
I not bend myself then to take this sorry sum which is offered me for that
which has cost me the labors of a life. Give me the dross! Here are the
precious relics, and, oh, I pray you that you will handle them softly and
with reverence, else had I rather left my unworthy bones here by the
wayside."</p>
<p>With doffed caps and eager hands, the comrades took their new and precious
possessions, and pressed onwards upon their journey, leaving the aged
palmer still seated under the cherry-tree. They rode in silence, each with
his treasure in his hand, glancing at it from time to time, and scarce
able to believe that chance had made them sole owners of relics of such
holiness and worth that every abbey and church in Christendom would have
bid eagerly for their possession. So they journeyed, full of this good
fortune, until opposite the town of Le Mas, where John's horse cast a
shoe, and they were glad to find a wayside smith who might set the matter
to rights. To him Aylward narrated the good hap which had befallen them;
but the smith, when his eyes lit upon the relics, leaned up against his
anvil and laughed, with his hand to his side, until the tears hopped down
his sooty cheeks.</p>
<p>"Why, masters," quoth he, "this man is a coquillart, or seller of false
relics, and was here in the smithy not two hours ago. This nail that he
hath sold you was taken from my nail-box, and as to the wood and the
stones, you will see a heap of both outside from which he hath filled his
scrip."</p>
<p>"Nay, nay," cried Alleyne, "this was a holy man who had journeyed to
Jerusalem, and acquired a dropsy by running from the house of Pilate to
the Mount of Olives."</p>
<p>"I know not about that," said the smith; "but I know that a man with a
gray palmer's hat and gown was here no very long time ago, and that he sat
on yonder stump and ate a cold pullet and drank a flask of wine. Then he
begged from me one of my nails, and filling his scrip with stones, he went
upon his way. Look at these nails, and see if they are not the same as
that which he has sold you."</p>
<p>"Now may God save us!" cried Alleyne, all aghast. "Is there no end then to
the wickedness of humankind? He so humble, so aged, so loth to take our
money—and yet a villain and a cheat. Whom can we trust or believe
in?"</p>
<p>"I will after him," said Aylward, flinging himself into the saddle. "Come,
Alleyne, we may catch him ere John's horse be shod."</p>
<p>Away they galloped together, and ere long they saw the old gray palmer
walking slowly along in front of them. He turned, however, at the sound of
their hoofs, and it was clear that his blindness was a cheat like all the
rest of him, for he ran swiftly through a field and so into a wood, where
none could follow him. They hurled their relics after him, and so rode
back to the blacksmith's the poorer both in pocket and in faith.</p>
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