Part 6 (1/2)

Horseshoe-wise round a mighty fire of logs, with a small table covered with decanters and gla.s.ses between each pair, some dozen men sat at their wine. There was, of course, Master Dobson, his meagre body all a twitter with importance, sitting in the centre of the bend, opposite the fire, whence he could survey all his guests at once, and urge them on with their carousing.

”My son returneth, my lord,” he said, ”with news from the wors.h.i.+pful the Mayor, and he hath brought with him a worthy yeoman, one Master Wheatman, who--”

”Of the Hanyards, Esquire,” said I in a testy whisper.

”Ha, yes,” he corrected and compromised, ”Master Wheatman of the Hanyards, a loyal subject of His Gracious Majesty.”

”The best friend and hardest hitter in broad Staffords.h.i.+re,” added Jack heartily.

I stepped into the horseshoe and made a bow general to the company, and a lower one for the benefit of my Lord Brocton, who sat next to the hearth in pride of place and comfort. Some years older than I, but not yet thirty, handsome as a G.o.d carved by Phidias, but with drink and devilment already marking him out for a d.a.m.ned soul, he sat there, the idol of that lord-wors.h.i.+pping company. The only vacant chair was on his left. It was Jack's place, earned by his father's guineas, which had remained vacant during his absence. The good lad, I record it with pride, notwithstanding a forbidding glance from his father, motioned me towards it, and fetched a gla.s.s and poured out wine for me. As I was stepping forward his lords.h.i.+p was good enough to address me.

”Ha, Master Wheatman of the Hanyards,”--there was a sneer in his voice,--”it is well I see thee on the right side, or, by gad and His Gracious Majesty, we'd have that other five hundred acres of yours.” He tossed off a b.u.mper of wine and added, ”Or a solatium, Master Wheatman, a solatium.”

I caught Jack's eye as I stepped right into the middle of the group. To my astonishment it was glowing with anger. Did he not think I could take care of myself? Really Jack was becoming mysterious, but I supposed that as I was Kate's brother he was feeling unusually interested in my welfare.

For my own part I was quite comfortable, and I replied easily, ”As a matter of fact, my lord, I have chosen my side expressly on account of the well-known propensities of your lords.h.i.+p's family.”

For a full minute nothing was heard in the room but the cracking and sputtering of the fire. This was not because of what I had said, though no one present, and he least of all, could be fool enough to misunderstand it, but because of its effect on him. Then, as now, blood flowed like water on far lighter occasions than this, and Brocton, with all his faults, was a ready fighter. For once, however, his fingers did not seek his sword hilt, but fumbled with his empty gla.s.s, and his face went white as the ashes at his feet. At length he recovered himself somewhat.

”The loyal propensities of my family are well known to all men,” he said.

”And its determination to profit by them,” I retorted coldly, and plumped me down at his side.

Right opposite me was the rector, a gross, sack-faced, ignorant jolt-head, jowled like a pig and dew-lapped like an ox. Nature had meant him for a butcher, but, being a by-blow of a great house, a discerning patron had diverted him bishopward. In a voice husky with feeling and wine, he said, ”Surely it is the part of a gracious king to reward such faithful service as that of the n.o.ble Earl of Ridgeley and my Lord Brocton.”

”Decidedly, your reverence,” I answered briskly, ”and of others too, and if, as seems likely, the Highlanders have left a vacant deanery or two behind them, I hope your loyal services and pastoral life will be suitably rewarded with one.”

Here Jack drew up another chair and I moved to make more room, so that he could sit next to Brocton, to whom he was soon detailing in eager whispers the result of his visit to the town hall. The others took up the broken links of talk, and this gave me an opportunity of inspecting the company.

There could be no doubt about the man on my left. His vicious, pimply face manifested him Major Tixall, and Mistress Margaret's shudder was easily accounted for. He turned his shoulder to me and talked to another officer, who, so far, was only in his apprentices.h.i.+p at the same game.

Beyond were two other officers of a wholly different stamp, and the one who smiled at me with his eyes I took to be Sir Ralph Sneyd, a young Staffords.h.i.+re baronet of high repute. Then came Master Dobson, separating the military sheep from the civilian goats. There was the Friday-faced clothier and mercer, Master Allwood, strange company here since he was the elder of a dissenting congregation in the town, and therefore well separated from his reverence. The worthy mercer's dissent did not extend, so rumour had it, to the making of hard bargains, and doubtless he was for once hob-n.o.bbing with the great in respect of his long purse rather than of his long prayers. Other townsmen, whose names I did not know or cannot recall, separated deacon from rector.

The last man in the company, sitting opposite to his lords.h.i.+p, was a stranger, and by far the man best worth looking at in the room. He had drawn back a little, either out of the heat of the fire or to avoid his reverence's vinous gossip as much as possible. Except that he was certainly neither soldier nor parson, and probably not a lawyer, I could make nothing of him. He had a ma.s.sive head and a resolute and intelligent face. He wore no wig and his hair was grey and closely cropped. I judged him to be a man nearing sixty, but he appeared strong and vigorous. He was dressed with rich unostentation, in grey jacket and breeches, with a lighter grey, silver-b.u.t.toned waistcoat, and stockings to match.

There was only one thing to be talked about in any company in Stafford that night. What was going to happen? What of truth and substance was there in the rumours that filled all mouths? At Master Dobson's two currents of opinion ran violently in opposite directions. The soldiers on my left were of course certain that the Stuart Prince and his Highland rabble would be driven back. The towns-people opposite were equally impressed with the fact that so far he had not been driven back but had carried all before him.

Sir Ralph had been stoutly maintaining that the rebellion was hopeless.

”There's no getting away from it, Sir Ralph,” squeaked Master Dobson, summing up for the doubtful townsmen; ”between the rebels and us this night there's not thirty miles nor three hundred men, and you've so far only got about two thousand men in Stafford. I'm as loyal a man as any in England, but there's no getting away from that.”

”n.o.body wants to get away from it, Master Dobson,” replied Sir Ralph.

”Any body of men with arms in their hands and the knack of using them, can march much farther than the Highlanders have come, if no other body of armed men stands in their way. The Stuart Prince's march will come to an end just as soon as he is opposed, and we're here to oppose him.”

Master Dobson was still gloomy. ”What sort of men have you got? Raw militia lads, young recruits, and newly raised dragoons form at least half of your force in Stafford.”

”Agreed,” said Sir Ralph, ”but we're rapidly licking 'em into shape, and the Duke will be after us to-morrow with the regulars.”

”My good Sir Ralph,” put in the mercer, ”fifty thousand savage Highlanders will cut through Stafford as easily as if it were a Ches.h.i.+re cheese. I fear the worst.”

”My worthy sir,” said his lords.h.i.+p, and in his dulcet tones I heard the tinkle of the mercer's guineas, ”you need fear nothing. Neither stick nor stone in Stafford will be disturbed. We are at least strong enough to make good terms.”