Part 6 (2/2)
”Aye,” said his father, ”do not forget him. For he is a good lad and a bold, as indeed he proved to the hilt yestreen.”
”In what consisted his boldness?” asked the Earl.
”In that he dared come home to me with a c.o.c.k-and-bull story of a witch lady, who appeared suddenly where none had been a moment before, and who had immediately enchanted my lord Earl. Well nigh did I twist his neck, but he stuck to it. Then came riding by my lord Abbot on his way to Thrieve, and I judged that the matter, as one of witchcraft, was more his affair than mine.”
”Now hearken,” cried the Earl, in quick, high tones of anger, ”let there be no more of such folly, or on your life be it. The lady whom you insulted was travelling with her company through Galloway from France. She invited me to sup with her, and dared me to adventure to Edinburgh in her company. Answer me, wherein was the witchcraft of that, saving the witchery natural to all fair women?”
”Did she not prophesy to you that to-day you would be Duke of Touraine, and receive the amba.s.sadors of the King of France?”
”Well,” said the Earl, ”where is your wit that you give ear to such babblings? Did she not come from that country, as I tell you, and who should hear the latest news more readily than she?”
The smith looked a little nonplussed, but stuck to it stoutly that none but a witch woman would ride alone at nightfall upon a Galloway moor, or unless by enchantment set up a pavilion of silk and strange devices under the pines of Loch Roan.
”Well,” said Earl William, feeling his advantage and making the most of it, ”I see that in all my little love affairs I must needs take my master armourer with me to decide whether or no the lady be a witch.
He shall resolve for me all spiritual questions with his forehammer.
Malise MacKim a witch p.r.i.c.ker! Ha--this is a change indeed. Malise the Smith will make the censor of his lord's love affairs, after what certain comrades of his have told me of his own ancient love-makings.
Will he deign to come to the weapon-showing to-day, and instead of examining the swords and halberts, the French arbalasts and German fusils, demit that part of his office to Ninian the Highlandman, and go peering into ladies' eyes for sorceries and scanning their lips for such signs of the devil as lurk in the dimples of their chins? In this he will find much employment and that of a congenial sort.”
Malise was vanquished, less by the sarcasm of the Earl than by the fear that perhaps the Highlandman might indeed have his place of honour as chief military expert by his master's right hand at the examination of weapons that day on the green holms of Balmaghie.
”I may have been overhasty, my lord,” he said hesitatingly, ”but still do I think that the woman was far from canny.”
The Earl laughed and, turning him about by the shoulders, gave him a push down the stair, crying, ”Oh, Malise, Malise, have you lived so long in the world without finding out that a beautiful woman is always uncanny!”
The levy that day of clansmen owning fealty to the Douglas was no hasty or local one. It was not, indeed, a ”rising of the countryside,”
such as took place when the English were reported to be over the border, when the beacon fires were thrown west from Criffel to Screel, from Screel to Cairnharrow, and then tossed northward by the three Cairnsmuirs and topmost Merrick far over the uplands of Kyle, till from the sullen brow of Brown Carrick the bale fire set the town drum of Ayr beating its alarming note. Still this muster was a day on which every Douglas va.s.sal must ride in mail with all his spears behind him--or bide at home and take the consequences.
All the night from distant parishes and outlying valleys hors.e.m.e.n had been riding, clothed in complete panoply of mail. These were the knights, barons, freeholders, who owned allegiance to the house of Douglas. Each lord was followed by his appointed tail of esquires and men-at-arms; behind these dense cl.u.s.ters of heavily armed spearmen marched steadily along the easiest paths by the waterside and over the lower hill pa.s.ses. Light running footmen slung their swords over their backs by leathern bandoliers and p.r.i.c.ked it briskly southwards over the bent so brown. Archers there were from the border towards the Solway side--lithe men, accustomed to spring from tussock to tuft of shaking gra.s.s, whose long strides and odd spasmodic side leapings betrayed even on the plain and unyielding pasture lands the place of their amphibious nativity.
”The Jack herons of Lochar,” these were named by the men of Galloway.
But there was no jeering to their faces, for not one of those Maxwells, Sims, Patersons, and d.i.c.ksons would have thought twice of leaping behind a tree stump to wing a cloth-yard shaft into a scoffer's ribs at thirty yards, taking his chance of the dule tree and the hempen cord thereafter for the honour of Lochar.
CHAPTER VIII
THE CROSSING OF THE FORD
It was still early morning of the great day, when Sholto and Laurence MacKim, leaving their mother in the kitchen, and their young sister Magdalen trying a yet prettier knot to her kerchief, took their way by the fords of Glen Lochar to an eminence then denominated plainly the Whinny Knowe, the same which afterwards gained and has kept to this day the more fatal designation of Knock Cannon. The lads were dressed as became the sons of so prosperous a craftsman (and master armourer to boot) as Malise MacKim of the Carlinwark.
Laurence, the younger, wore his archer's jack over the suit of purple velvet, high boots of yellow leather, and, withal, a dainty cap set far back on his head, from which sprouted the wing of a blackc.o.c.k in as close imitation as Master Laurence dared compa.s.s of the Earl Douglas himself. His bow was slung at his back all ready for the inspection. A sash of orange silk was twisted about his slim waist, and in this he would set his thumb knowingly, and stare boldly as often as the pair of brothers overtook a pretty girl. For Master Laurence loved beauty, and thought not lightly of his own.
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