Part 28 (1/2)
”Well!” roared the n.o.bleman, in a voice that made the rafters ring.
”What would you with Count Bertrich?”
”I bear an urgent despatch to you from my Lord the Archbishop of Treves,” replied the messenger.
”Then down on your knees and present it,” cried the Count, beating the table with his flagon.
”I am Envoy of his Lords.h.i.+p of Treves,” said the messenger, sternly.
”You told us that before,” shouted the Count; ”and now you stand in the hall of Bertrich. Kneel, therefore, to its master.”
”I represent the Archbishop,” reiterated the messenger, ”and I kneel to none but G.o.d and the Emperor.”
Count Bertrich rose somewhat uncertainly to his feet, his whole frame trembling with anger, and volleyed forth oaths upon threats. The tall n.o.bleman at his right hand also rose, as did many of the others who sat at the table, and, placing his hand on the arm of his furious host, said warningly:
”My Lord Count, the man is right. It is against the feudal law that he should kneel, or that you should demand it. The Archbishop of Treves is your overlord, as well as ours, and it is not fitting that his messenger should kneel before us.”
”That is truth--the feudal law,” muttered others down each side of the table.
The enraged Count glared upon them one after another, partially subdued by their breaking away from him.
The Envoy stood calm and collected, awaiting the outcome of the tumult.
The Count, cursing the absent Archbishop and his present guests with equal impartiality, sat slowly down again, and flinging his empty flagon at an attendant, demanded that it should be refilled. The others likewise resumed their seats; and the Count cried out, but with less of truculence in his tone:
”What message sent the Archbishop to Castle Bertrich?”
”My Lord, the Archbishop of Treves requires me to inform Count Bertrich and the a.s.sembled n.o.bles that the Hungarians have forced pa.s.sage across the Rhine, and are now about to make their way through the defiles of the Eifel into this valley, intending to march thence upon Treves, laying that ancient city in ruin and carrying havoc over the surrounding country. His Lords.h.i.+p commands you, Count Bertrich, to rally your men about you and to hold the infidels in check in the defiles of the Eifel until the Archbishop comes, at the bead of his army, to your relief from Treves.”
There was deep silence in the vast hall after this startling announcement. Then the Count replied:
”Tell the Archbishop of Treves that if the Lords of the Rhine cannot keep back the Hungarians, it is hardly likely that we, less powerful, near the Moselle, can do it.”
”His Lords.h.i.+p urges instant compliance with his request, and I am to say that you refuse at your peril. A few hundred men can hold the Hungarians in check while they are pa.s.sing through the narrow ravines of the Eifel, while as many thousands might not be successful against them should they once reach the open valleys of the Alf and the Moselle. His Lords.h.i.+p would also have you know that this campaign is as much in your own interest as in his, for the Hungarians, in their devastating march, spare neither high nor low.”
”Tell his Lords.h.i.+p,” hiccoughed the Count, ”that I sit safely in my Castle of Bertrich, and that I defy all the Hungarians who were ever let loose to disturb me therein. If the Archbishop keeps Treves as tightly as I shall hold Castle Bertrich, there is little to fear from the invaders.”
”Am I to return to Treves then with your refusal?” asked the Envoy.
”You may return to Treves as best pleases you, so that you rid us of your presence here, where you mar good company.”
The Envoy, without further speech, bowed to Count Bertrich and also to the a.s.sembled n.o.bles, pa.s.sed silently out of the hall, once more reaching the courtyard of the castle, where he demanded that his horse be brought to him.
”The animal has had but scant time for feeding and rest,” said the Captain.
”'Twill be sufficient to carry us to the blacksmith's hut,” answered the Envoy, as he put his foot in stirrup.
The blacksmith, still standing at the door of his smithy, heard, coming from the castle, the click of the broken shoe, but this time the rider drew up before him and said:
”The offer of help which you tendered me a little ago I shall now be glad to accept. Do your work well, smith, and know that in performing it, you are obliging an envoy of the Archbishop of Treves.”
The armourer raised his cap at the mention of the august name, and invoked a blessing upon the head of that renowned and warlike prelate.