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X
THE BURNING OF EVIL HOLD
IT was an early winter day in the year 1215. A band of men
were marching across the high moorlands east of the wild waste lands of
the Peak. At their head rode Robin Hood, clothed in chain mail, the
helm upon his head sparkling in the westering sun. Behind him came
sixty of his men, bronzed, honest-faced yeomen, each with his bow and
quiver, and a sword strapped to his side. A score of them were his old
outlaws, and head and shoulders above them stalked Little John, his
brown, keen eyes looking sharply this way and that over the wide moors
which stretched away to the purple distance on every side. Immediately
behind Robin walked Ket the Trow, sturdy though small, a fighter, yet a
man of craft in every look and gesture of him. Not far off were
Scarlet, Will Stuteley, and Much, the Miller's son.
The face of Robin wore a thoughtful, even a moody air. He had
gone with the barons when they had wrested the charter of liberty from
the tyrannous hands of John; and had stayed south with them, believing
that the fight for freedom had been gained. Then suddenly they had
learned that foreign mercenaries were landing to aid the king against
his rebel barons; the foreign hordes, thirsting for blood and plunder,
had been seen in such strength that the barons had almost lost heart
and had retreated. Many had gone to defend their own castles and lands
when they learned that the king's mercenaries had stolen north,
harrying, burning, and slaying, and Robin Hood had done likewise,
fearing lest evil should befall his gentle wife in the peaceful vale of
Malaset upon the marshes of Lancaster.
Robin wondered, indeed, whether he had started too late. At
every step of the way northward they saw the marks of rapine and
massacre where the king had passed with his foreign hordes. Every house
and village they passed was destroyed by fire, corpses lay stiff on the
snow, or weltered on the hearthstone which had known the laughter and
the joy in life of those who now lay dead. Smoke rose over the wintry
horizon, showing where the burning and slaying of the ruffianly army of
the shameless king still went on. One castle which they passed was a
smoking ruin, and in its blackened and smouldering hall they found two
young ladies, one dumb with grief, the other half mad in her sorrow,
leaning over the body of their father, an old knight, whom his king had
tortured to death in an attempt to wring from him the place where he
had hidden his store of money.
Now and then, as he rode, Robin raised his head and glanced
quickly before him. He dreaded lest he should see a cloud of smoke
which should show that some band of the evil army of the king had come
so far westward to Malaset. But against the violet clouds of the wintry
sky where the sun was sinking there was no blur of rolling reek.
At length the road descended from the moors and wound round
crags and limestone cliffs down toward the valley of Malaset. Almost
unconsciously Robin pushed on faster, so eager was he to reach a point
where at a bend in the road he could see the castle. At length he
reached the place, stopped for a moment, and his men, hurrying behind
him, heard him give a dreadful cry. Next moment he had struck spurs
into his horse's flanks and thundered down the sloping track.
They reached the bend and looked upon the low keep of the
castle. A light gray smoke, as if from smouldering timber, rose from
the pile, and a dreadful silence brooded over all. The men groaned, and
then began to run, uttering fearful cries of vengeance and despair as
they rushed toward ruined homes and slain loved ones.
With a strange, cold calmness on him, Robin leaped from his
horse in the courtyard, in which bodies of men lay here and there,
still and contorted. He strode into the hall; a thin reek of smoke
filled the apartment. The place had been fired, but the fire had not
caught. Only some broken benches smouldered in a heap, amid which the
bodies of defenders and their assailants were mingled together in the
close fierce embrace in which they had given each other death. Up the
winding-stair in the wall he strode, to the solar or lady's bower.
The door was shut, and he opened it gently. There in the
light of the westering sun lay a figure on the bed, its face very white
and set. It was Marian. Her body was draped in black and was very
still, and he knew that she was dead. On her breast her long fair hands
were folded, and her dark hair framed her face and breast in a soft
beauty. A short black arrow lay beside the corpse.
A sudden movement came from behind the arras and the slight
figure of a woman darted toward him and threw herself on her knees
before him. It was Sibbie, wife to Gilbert of the White Hand, the fairy
maid who had been tirewoman to Fair Marian. She did not weep, but her
face looked up into his with grief in the great brown, faithful eyes. "Who has done
this, Sibbie?" asked Robin in a quiet low voice.
"Who but that fiend, Isenbart de Belame!" said the woman in a
fierce restrained voice. "He slew her while she spoke with him from the
gateguard room. With this arrow — the selfsame arrow which my brother
Hob shot in his table at Evil Hold — he let out her dear life. She
fell into my arms, smiled at me, but could not speak, and so died. On
the second day — 'twas but yesterday they left — they stormed the
castle, but bitter and hard was the fighting in the courtyard and the
hall, and then, for fear you should return, they plundered far and wide
through the manor and so left with Hob my brother wounded and a
prisoner, and ten others, whom they promised to torture when they
reached Evil Hold again."
Ket the Trow had crept into the room immediately behind Robin
and heard all. His sister turned to him and silently they clasped
hands. Then, loosing them, they each raised the right forefinger in the
air, and swiftly made a strange gesture as if they wrote a letter or
marked a device. It was the sign of undying vengeance by which the
people of the Underworld vowed to go through flood and fire, pains, and
pangs, and never to slacken in their quest, never to rest, until they
had avenged the death of their lady.
Robin bent and kissed the cold forehead of his wife. Then,
uncovering, he knelt beside her and prayed. He spoke no word, but he
craved the aid of the Virgin in his vow to stamp out utterly the life
and power of the lord of the Evil Hold and all his mates in wickedness.
That night, by the light of torches, the body of Marian was
lowered to the grave beside her father and her kinsfolk in the little
church of Malaset, while in the castle, those of the villeins and
freemen who had fled from their farms and holdings at the approach of
de Belame and his evil horde were busily engaged in furbishing up arms
and harness. All were filled with a hard resolution, and each had made
up his mind to die in the attempt to pull down the Evil Hold and its
power.
At dawn, in silence, Robin and his band set forth. They did
not look back once, but stubbornly they mounted the moorside road and
kept their faces fixed toward the east. At the same time Robin sent a
messenger to Sir Herbrand de Tranmire, now an old man, reminding him of
his promise to aid him in breaking down the castle of Wrangby, and
asking if he could not come himself, to send all the men he could
spare, well armed, to meet Robin at the Mark Oak by Wrangby Mere.
Similar messages were sent by Robin to other knights and freemen who
had suffered from the oppression of de Belame. Many had promised
"Squire Robin" aid if ever he needed it, for all had recognized in him
a brave man and a generous one; and all had known that some day they
would have to join their forces with him to end the villainies and
wicked customs of the Evil Hold.
On his way to Wrangby Robin called at the castles and
manor-houses of other knights to ask their aid. Some places he found
were gutted and in ruins, with their brave defenders lying dead, the
prey of their king's malignant cruelty. Many men, however, quickly
responded to his appeal, so that when at evening, as the twilight was
creeping over the misty moor, Robin rode in sight of Wrangby Castle, he
had three hundred men at his back, sufficient at least to prevent the
garrison from breaking forth.
He stopped a bowshot from the great gate and sounded his
horn. On the tower above the portal appeared two men in complete mail,
one wearing a bronze helmet which shone dully in the faint light. "I would speak
to Isenbart de Belame!" cried Robin.
"Wolf's-head!" came the reply, like the snarl of a wolf, "you
are speaking to Sir Isenbart de Belame, lord of Wrangby and the Fells.
What do you and your rabble want?"
"I will tell ye," cried Robin. "Deliver yourself up to me
with the prisoners you have taken! You shall have the judgment of your
peers upon your evil deeds, and for the murder of my wife, the lady
Marian. If you do not do this, then we will take your evil castle by
storm, and the death of you and your men shall be on your head!"
"If ye do not leave my lands by dawn," was the fierce reply,
"you and your tail of whipped curs and villeins, I will come out and
beat you to death with my dogwhips. Go, wolf's-head and rascal! I will
speak no more with thee!"
With a gesture as if he had no more attention to bestow on
creatures so mean, he turned aside and spoke to the other knight who
was with him. Both had their vizors down, and in the gathering twilight
their figures were becoming dimmer every moment. Suddenly a little
figure sped forward in the gloom before Robin's horse, then stood still
and the twang of a bowstring was heard. Next moment the knight beside
de Belame was seen to put his hands to his vizor and then staggered. He
recovered himself instantly, however, and drew an arrow from between
the bars of his helmet. With a gesture of rage he dashed it over the
battlements and yelled something in derision which could not be heard.
It was Ket the Trow who had made this marvelous shot in the
twilight, so that men wondered that it could have reached the mark so
unerringly. Yet by reason of the fact that the bolt had been shot at so
great an angle, the arrow had only torn the flesh on the forehead of
the knight.
That night Robin and his men hemmed the castle closely, so
that no one could come out or go in unseen. Under the Mark Oak he took
counsel with the knights who had brought aid.
"Squire Robin," said one, Sir Fulk of the Dykewall, "I cannot
see how we can hope to beat down that strong keep. We have no siege
engines, we cannot break down the wall in any place, the ditch is full
of water, and I doubt not that such a man as de Belame is well
provisioned for a long siege."
"I see no reason why we should not take the castle," said
young Squire Denvil of Toomlands, as eager and brave as a hawk. "We can
get the Wrangby peasants, who hate their lords, to cut down trees and
make rafts for us. With these, and under cover of our shields, we can
pole across the ditch and cut the chains of the drawbridge. Then we can
prise up the portcullis, and once within can hack down the gate."
After long council this seemed the only way by which they
could hope to take the castle. It would mean the loss of many lives, no
doubt, but the walls of the castle were thick and high, and there was
no other way out or in but by the great gate. Ket the Trow was called
and bidden to go to the villeins of Wrangby in the hovels a mile from
the castle, and ask them to come to aid Robin in rooting out their evil
lords. In an hour he returned.
"I went to Cole the Reeve," he said, "and gave him the
bidding. He called the homagers (chief men) and told them what you
wanted. Their eyes said they would quickly come, but long they thought
in silence. Then one said, 'Six times hath the Evil Hold been set about
by strong lords and never hath it been taken. Satan loves his own, and
'tis vain to fight against the evil lords. They have ever had power,
and will ever keep it.' And they were silent to all I urged upon them,
and shook their heads and went away."
Robin thereupon commanded parties of his own men to take it
in turn during the night to cut down young trees to make rafts with
them, and short scaling-ladders to get at the chains of the drawbridge,
and by the light of torches, in among the trees, the work went on all
night, while Robin went from place to place seeing that strict guard
was kept. Just before daybreak he took some sleep, but was awakened by
the arrival of a band of peasants from Wrangby, the very men who the
night before had refused to aid him against their lords. At their head
was an old man, gray, of great frame and fierce aspect. In his hands he
bore a tall billhook, with a long wide blade as keen and bright as a
razor. When Robin saw him he knew him for one of the men who had shot
with him at the contest at Nottingham before the sheriff.
"Master," said the old man, going to Robin, "I bring you
these men. They denied you last night. They were but half men then, but
I have spoken with them, and now they will help you to pull down this
nest of bandit lords and slayers of women and children and maimers of
men."
"I thank thee, Rafe of the Billhook," replied Robin, and
turned to the peasants. One of them stepped forth and spoke for his
fellows.
"We have taken the oath," he said, "and we will go with thee
to the end. Rather we will be destroyed now than live longer in our
misery under our evil oppressors."
The poor men seemed depressed and subdued, as if all the
manliness had been beaten out of them by years of ill-usage at the
hands of their lords.
"Ye will not fail, brothers," said Rare, and his look was
fierce, as he shook his huge billhook. "I swore, when they thrust me
from my cot in Barnisdale Wood and slew my wife and my boy, that I
would come back and help to root these fiends out of their nest of
stone. The time has come, brothers, and God and the Virgin are fighting
for us."
"You are Thurstan of Stone Cot, whom de Belame thrust from
your holding thirty winters ago?" asked Robin.
"You speak
truly," replied Thurstan; "I have returned at my appointed time."
Under the guidance of this man, and with the eager help of
Little John and Gilbert of the White Hand, preparations were soon
ready, and after a good meal had been taken and mass had been heard,
the rafts were carried down to the ditch before the great gate. Showers
of arrows greeted them, but the raft bearers were supported by archers
who were commanded by Scarlet and Will Stuteley, and who scanned with
keen eyes every slit in the walls. Their bolts searched out and struck
everything that moved behind the arrow slits, and any one who came to
the battlements of the castle was hit by several arrows. Quickly the
rafts were launched and poled across the ditch, and ladders were reared
on the sills beside the huge drawbridge which blocked up the portcullis
and the gates beyond. Soon the blows of iron upon iron told how
mightily the smiths were striving to cut the chains on either side
which held the drawbridge up. For a time it looked as if they would
have an easy task, for Robin's archers made it impossible for any one
to lean from the battlements to shoot them. Suddenly, however, the
inside gates were thrown open and a crowd of bowmen began to shoot at
the smiths through the bars of the portcullis. One smith fell from his
ladder into the ditch a great arrow sticking in his breast; the other
had his hand transfixed.
Others took their places at once, however, and Scarlet, Will
the Bowman, and two other archers stood on the ladders with the smiths,
and returned the shooting as best they could, though the space was so
confined that hardly could they draw their bows. At length a shout went
up-one chain was cut through and the drawbridge shook and trembled. A
few more blows with the hammer on the other side, and with a mighty
crash the drawbridge fell across the moat, being smashed in half by
reason of its weight. Robin and a select band of archers swarmed over
the ruined drawbridge which held together sufficiently to allow of
this, and shooting between the bars of the portcullis poured in such
flights of arrows that the garrison, which was indifferently provided
with bowmen, was compelled to retreat behind the gates, which finally
they had to close.
Then a great tree trunk was run forward by forty willing
hands, and the bridge having been covered with rafting to support the
weight of extra men, the battering-ram was dashed against the
portcullis. Again and again this was done, the archers on the bank
picking off those on the castle wall or at the arrow slits who tried to
shoot down the besiegers. Many of Robin's men were killed, however, for
the defence was as bitter as the attack, and everywhere in the castle
could be heard the voices of Sir Isenbart and his fellow knights, Sir
Baldwin, Sir Scrivel, or Sir Roger of Doncaster, angrily urging the
archers and stonethrowers to continue their efforts. Several of Robin's
archers and those of the ramming party, though these had shields over
their heads, were either killed or disabled by bolts or crushed by huge
stones, but still the great tree trunk hammered at the portcullis,
making it to shake and crack here and there.
At last the castle gate was thrown open again and a deadly
flight of arrows flew out, dealing death from between the bars of the
portcullis. But Robin led up his archers, and again compelled the
garrison to retreat, while other men-at-arms took the vacant places
beside the ram, the head of which was now so split and torn that it
seemed like a mop. Still it thudded and crashed against the bars of the
portcullis, two of which were so bent and cracked, that soon the great
grille would be broken through sufficiently to allow men to enter.
Robin, Sir Fulk, and another knight, Sir Robert of Staithes,
were standing beside the ramming party urging them on, Robin with a
watchful eye on the inner gate, lest it should open again to let forth
a shower of bolts.
"Three more good blows from master oak, lads," cried Robin,
"and in we go. The wooden gate will not keep us long!"
Just then there came quick shouts from Will the Bowman who
stood with his archers on the bank. "Back! back!"
he cried, "they throw fire down!"
"Into the moat!" shouted Robin, hearing the warning cries.
Most heard him and jumped at once. But other poor fellows were too
late.
Down from the battlements poured a deluge of boiling tar, and
quickly after came burning brands and red-hot stones. Some half-dozen
men who had not heard the cries were whelmed in the deathly rain and
killed. The lighted brands and red-hot stones instantly set fire to the
rafting, the drawbridge and the ram, which were covered with tar, and
soon a furnace fire raged, cutting off the besiegers from what a few
moments before had seemed almost certain victory.
Robin and those who had escaped swam to the bank, while Will
and his archers searched the walls with their arrows. But they had not
been able to prevent the tar from being heaved over, for the men who
had dragged the cauldron to the battlements had been protected by
shields held before them by others.
Robin looked at the gulf of fire before him and at the angry
and gloomy faces of his men.
"Never mind, lads," he cried. "They can't get out themselves,
and when the fire has burned itself out we will cross by fresh rafts. A
few more blows and the bars will be broken enough to let us in. Will
and you, Scarlet," he cried, turning to Stuteley and the other old
outlaw, "see that you let no one of the evil crew mend those broken
bars."
"He will have to mend the hole in his own carcass, first,"
said Scarlet, with a laugh. He cocked his eye quickly over arrow slit
and battlement as he held his bow in readiness to shoot.
It was now past noon, and while a party watched the
portcullis, and others took a hasty meal, a third party were sent with
the peasants to cut fresh rafts.
As Robin was directing the work of the wood-cutters, he saw,
coming over the moor, a great party of footmen, preceded by two knights
on horseback. His keen eyes gazed at the blazons on their shields, and
at sight of the three white swallows of the one, and the five green
trees of the other he waved his hand in welcome. They were Sir Walter
de Beauforest and young Alan-a-Dale, and in a little while they were
shaking hands with Robin.
"We received thy message yesterday," said Sir Walter, "and we
have come as quickly as we could. I trust we have not arrived too
late."
"Nay, the castle hath not yet fallen into my hands," said
Robin, "and your forces will be welcome."
He then related what had been done and the plans he had made
for taking the place, which they found were good, and promised to aid
him all they could. Alan told him that Sir Herbrand was sending a party
to help Robin, but being old and feeble he could not come himself, much
as he would like to have struck a blow against his enemies of Wrangby.
Now all this while Ket the Trow wandered through the camp
with a gloomy look. Sometimes he took his place with the archers by the
moat, and his was the keenest eye to see a movement at an arrow slit or
on the battlements, and his was the swiftest arrow to fly at the mark.
But things were going too slowly for Ket. He yearned for a speedy and
complete revenge for the murder of his beloved mistress. Moreover, he
knew that inside that castle his loved brother Hob lay in some noisome
dungeon wounded, perhaps suffering already some cruel torture.
Round and round the castle Ket went, creeping from cover to
cover, his dark eyes searching the smooth stone of the walls for some
loophole whereby he could enter. He had been inside once, when he had
shot the message on the table before Sir Isenbart de Belame, when
Ranulf of the Waste had been slain. That night he had followed some of
the knights when they had returned from a foray, bringing rich gear as
spoil and captives for ransom. He had been close on their backs, and in
the confusion he had marched in through the gate and had secreted
himself in the darkness. Then at night he had crept down a drain which
opened out some twelve feet above the ditch, and, under cover of a
storm of wind and rain had dropped into the water and so got safely
away.
But now, try as he might, the great high walls baffled him,
for he could see no way by which he could win into the strong keep.
Once in, he doubted not that he could worm his way to his brother,
release him and then slay the guards and open the gates to Robin and
his men.
He lay in a thick bush of hazel at the rear of the castle and
scanned the walls narrowly. Now and then he cast his eyes warily round
the moorland to where the forest and the fells hemmed in the Wrangby
lands.
What was that? At one and the same moment two strange things
had happened. He had seen a sword flash twice from the battlements of
the castle, as if it was a signal, and instantly there had been a
momentary glint as of a weapon from between the leafless trees of a
wood on the edge of the forest some half a mile away. He looked long
and earnestly at the point, but nothing stirred or showed again.
"Strange," thought Ket; "was that a signal? If so, who was he
to whom the man in the castle was making signs?"
Ket's decision was soon taken, and like a ferret, creeping
from bush to bush, he made his way toward the wood. He reached the
verge and looked between the trees. There, with the muzzles of their
horses tied up to prevent their making a noise, lay some thirty fierce
moss-riders. He knew them at once. They were the men of Thurlstan, from
whom he had rescued Fair Marian several years before. A man raised his
great shock head of white hair and looked over the moor toward the camp
of the besiegers. Then his teeth showed in a mocking sneer, and Ket
knew that this was old Grame Gaptooth himself, lord of Thudstan.
"'Twill be dark in an hour, and then we will make that rabble
fly!" said the old raider.
Ket guessed at once, and rightly, that these marauders,
kinsmen to Sir Isenbart, had ridden to join him in the plundering foray
of King John, lured by the hope of slaughter and booty. They had
discovered that the castle was besieged, had made their presence known
to their friends in the castle, and now lay waiting for the short
winter day to end. Then they would ride down fiercely among Robin's
band, and by their cries they would give Sir Isenbart the signal to
issue forth. Then, surprised, and taken between two forces, who knows?
perhaps Robin Hood and his men would be cut to pieces.
With the stealth of a wild cat, Ket began to back away and to
creep deeper into the wood behind where the mossriders lay. With
infinite care he proceeded, since the cracking of a twig might reveal
his presence to the fierce raiders. When he had covered some fifty
yards he carefully rose to his feet and then, like a shadow, flitted
from tree to tree through the forest toward the camp of Robin.
The Thurlstan men heard from where they lay the shouts of men
as they yelled defiance at the garrison; and the short sharp words of
command of Robin and the knights as they supervised the placing of the
rafts of timber in the ditch before the gate. Then, in a little while,
the twilight and the mist deepened over the land, the forest seemed to
creep nearer and darkness descended rapidly.
"Now, lads," said Grame Gaptooth, getting to his feet and
grasping his horse's bridle, "mount and make ready. Walk your horses
till ye are a hundred yards from where thou seest their fires burning,
then use the spur and shout my cry, 'Gaptooth o' the Wall.' Then with
spur and sword mow me those dogs down, and when Belame hears us he will
come forth, and the killing will be a merry one between us. Now, up and
away!"
Quietly over the long coarse grass the raiders passed, and
then, with a sudden fierce shout, they dashed upon the groups about the
fires. But, strangely enough, the men-at-arms they rode among turned as
if they expected them; three knights rode out of the gloom against the
raiders, and amid the shouts of "Gaptooth o' the Wall, Gaptooth o' the
Wall," the fierce fighting began.
Counselled by Ket the Trow, Robin had ordered his men to
retreat a little toward the castle, so that the garrison should hear
clearly when the border men attacked them; and this was done. Eagerly
the moss men followed, and their enemies seemed to fly before them.
They pressed on more quickly, still shouting their war cry. Suddenly
they heard answering cries. "Belame! Belame!" came like a fierce bellow
from the castle gate, which was dashed open, the portcullis slowly
mounted, and out from its yawning jaws swept knights and men-at-arms.
Robin had placed the rafts over the blackened timbers of the drawbridge
so that the garrison could come out without delay, and over these they
came in a mad rush, causing the timbers to heave and rock, and soon the
cries of "Gaptooth" and "Belame" mingled in fierce delight.
Suddenly, above the din, came the clear call of a bugle from
somewhere in the rear. At the same time three short, sharp notes rose
from beneath the castle walls. Out of the forest of the Mark Oak swept
ten knights and a hundred men-at-arms, the force which Sir Herbrand had
sent, and which had arrived as darkness fell, in time to form part of
the plan which Robin and the knights, with the counsel of Ket the Trow,
had formed for the destruction of their enemy.
The men who had seemed to be caught between those who shouted
"Belame" and those who cried "Gaptooth!" now suddenly came back in
greater numbers. The troop of de Belame heard the rush of men behind
them where, as they thought, they had left none but their own garrison;
and the moss riders turned, as avenging cries of "Marian! Marian!"
answered by other shouts of "Tranmire and St. George" sounded fiercely
all about them.
Then indeed came the fierce crash of battle. Caught between
the two wings of Robin's party, which now outnumbered de Belame and his
friends, the Wrangby lords fought for dear life. No quarter was asked
or given. Peasant with bill or axe fought men-at-arms on foot or hacked
at the knight of coat-armor on horseback; and everywhere Rare of the
Bill fought in fierce delight, his glittering bill in his hand, looking
out meanwhile for Sir Isenbart himself. Robin also sought everywhere in
the gloom for the slayer of his wife. Distinguishable by the bronze of
his helmet, Sir Isenbart raged like a boar to and fro, dealing death or
wounds with every blow, chanting the while his own fierce name. Robin
saw him and strove to follow him, but the press of battle kept them
asunder. Close behind Robin stalked Little John, a huge doubleheaded
axe in his hand, making wider the path cleared by his master through
their foes.
"John, for the love of the Virgin, go strike down that bronze
helm," cried Robin at length. "It is de Belame! Man, for love of me,
let him not escape!"
Little chance there seemed of that now, even if the brave,
fierce tyrant wished to run. He was checked in his path of slaughter,
now, for Rafe of the Bill and twenty Wrangby villeins had surrounded
him, tearing at his limbs, wrenching at his armor to drag him down
among their feet. Long years of hatred and misery thrilled in every
nerve, but more skilful with the humble weapons of the soil than with
arms, they went down before his keen sword like stalks of wheat before
the sickle. Swiftly he struck here and there, shaking off his
assailants as a bear tosses off the dogs. Rafe strove to reach him with
his great bill, thrusting and hacking at him, but de Belame's stout
shield received all the fierce blows, and for the moment it seemed that
he would win through.
Robin and John broke through the weakening ranks of their
foes at last, and leaping over the dead that lay in heaps they rushed
toward Sir Isenbart. But too late they reached him. With a great
shearing blow, the bill in the vengeful hands of old Thurstan had
lighted upon the right shoulder of the knight, cutting deep into the
bone. Another moment and the bill would have swept de Belame's head
from his shoulders; but Robin caught the stroke on his shield, crying: "Kill him not;
the rope shall have him!"
Rafe dropped his bill. "Ay, you are right," he growled. "He
deserves not to die by honest steel — let the hangman have the felon."
De Belame, his
right arm paralyzed, yet kept his seat and cried:
"Kill me, wolf's-head! Kill me with thy sword! I am a
gentleman of coat-armor! I yield not to such carrion!" He thrust spurs
into his horse and strove to dash away from among them. But the great
arms of Rafe were about him, and they dragged him from his seat.
"Coat-armor," snarled the fierce man. "Had I my way I would
blazon thy skin with as evil a pattern as thou and thy fiends have cut
on poor folks' bodies. Coat-armor and a good hempen rope will go well
together this night!"
"John and you, Rafe, bind up his wound, then bring the
prisoner to the castle, which I doubt not is ours," said Robin, and he
would not leave them until he saw the wound bound up. Then, securely
tied, de Belame, silent now and sullen, was carried toward the castle.
The battle had ceased everywhere by now. Few of the Wrangby
men were left alive; so fierce had been the hatred of them that no more
than a dozen had staggered away in the darkness, and among these was
only one knight, Sir Roger of Doncaster, a sly man who preferred
plotting to fighting. Of the moss riders, not one was alive, and Gap
tooth himself had ridden his last cruel foray.
As to the castle, following the plan which Ket the Trow had
made, this had been quickly seized. With young Squire Denvil and a
chosen party of forty men, Ket had silently hidden in the water beside
the rafts which lay before the great gate. When de Belame and his men
had dashed from the castle in exultant answer to Gaptooth's call, and
the gate-guard were standing under the portcullis, certain of victory
and grumbling at being left behind and out of the killing, dripping men
had risen as if from their very feet, and hardly had they realized what
it meant before death had found them. Then, silently, Ket and the
Squire of Toomlands, followed closely by their men, had swept into the
castle, cutting down all who opposed them. They had gained the place
without the loss of a single man, and as all but a dozen of the
garrison had sallied out to what all had thought was certain victory,
the struggle had been brief.
A little later, into the hall where Sir Isenbart and his
fellow knights had often sat carousing over their cups or torturing
some poor captive, came Robin and such of the knights who had aided him
as had come unharmed through the battle. Taking his seat in de Belame's
chair at the high table, the knights in other seats beside him, Robin
bade the prisoners be brought in. Torches gleamed from the pillars of
the hall on the scarred, hacked armor of the conquerors, and the faces
of every man-at-arms, peasant, and knight was hard and stern as they
looked at the group which entered.
There were but two prisoners, Sir Isenbart de Belame and Sir
Baldwin the Killer, who had received his name for the cruelty and
number of the deaths he had inflicted in years of rapine and foray
throughout the lands of Wrangby and the Peak. As the door of the hall
opened men heard the sound of distant knocking of axes on wood: the
gallows were already being reared before the gate of the Evil Hold.
"Isenbart de Belame," began Robin in a stern voice, "here in
thy castle, in thy hall where often thy miserable captives, men and
women, rich and poor, gentle and simple, craved thy mercy and got
naught but brutal jests or evil injury — here thou comest at last to
find thy judgment. All who have anything to charge against this man de
Belame, or his comrade in cruelty and oppression, Baldwin, stand forth,
and as God hears and sees all, tell the truth on peril of his soul!"
It seemed as if the whole body of yeomen, peasants, and
franklins standing by would come forward to charge upon the two
scowling knights deeds of wrong and cruelty. "He put out my father's
eyes!" cried one. "The harvest failed one year," cried another, "and
because I could not pay him my yearly load of wheat, he pressed my son
to death," said another. Others stepped quickly up, and each gave in a
few harsh words his tale of cruel deeds. When all had ended Ket the
Trow stood forth.
"With his own evil hand that man slew the kindest lady
between Barnisdale and the Coombes o' the Moors," he cried, and pointed
his finger at de Belame. "He slew her while she spoke to him from her
castle gate, and he laughed when he saw her fall."
"He stood by and jested when Ranulf of the Waste tortured by
fire our father, Colman Grey!" cried Hob o' the Hill, limping forth
with bandaged leg and arm, and shaking his fist at de Belame, whose
face was white as he saw the hatred burn on every face about him.
"It is enough — and more than enough!" said Robin at last.
"What say you, sir knights? These men are of knightly blood and wear
coat-armor, and so should die by the sword. But they have proved
themselves no better than tavern knifers and robbers, and I adjudge
them a shameful death by the rope!"
A great shout of assent rang through the lofty hall — ''To
the rope! to the rope with them!"
"We agree with thee, Squire Robin," said Sir Fulk of the
Dykewall when silence was restored. "Both these men have lost all claim
to their rank. Their spurs should be hacked from their heels, and their
bodies swung from the gallows."
It was done. Amid the shouts of triumph of the fierce men
standing about, Little John hacked off the spurs from the heels of the
two Wrangby lords, and then with a great roar of rageful glee they were
hurried out amid the surging crowd, torches tossing their lurid light
upon hard faces and gleaming eyes, whose usual good nature was turned
to savagery for the moment.
When the act of wild justice had been done, pitch and tar and
oil were poured into every chamber of the castle, and torches were
thrust in, and lighted straw heaped up. Then all fled forth and stood
before the black walls, through whose slits the black and oily smoke
began to curl. Leaping tongues of fire darted through the ropy reek and
coiling wreathes, and soon, gathering power, the fire burst up through
the floors of the great hall and the chambers above, and roared like a
furious torrent to the dark sky. Great noises issued as the thick beams
split, and as balk and timber, rafter and buttress fell, the flames and
sparks leaped higher until the light shone far and wide over the
country. Shepherds minding their sheep far away on the distant fells
looked and looked, and would not believe their eyes; then crossed
themselves and muttered a prayer of thankfulness that somehow the Evil
Hold of Wrangby was at length ruining in fire. Bands of plunderers from
the king's evil army, as they streamed across the highlands of the
Peak, or on the hills of Yorkshire, saw the distant glare, and did not
know then that one of the blackest strongholds of their callous king
and his evil lords was going up in fire at the hands of those who, long
and cruelly oppressed, had risen at last and gained their freedom.
Next morning a smoking shell of shattered and blackened
stones was all that was left of the strong castle that had been the
sign of wrong for at least two generations. A white smoke rose from the
red-hot furnace within the walls which still stood; but so rent and
torn and seamed with fire were the stones that never again could they
be made fit for habitation.
Robin rode forth from the shadow of the Mark Oak where he and
his army had passed the night, and looked at the smoking ruins and the
two stiff gallows which stood before, on each of which hung, turning
round and round, the bodies of the evil Baldwin and de Belame.
Doffing his steel cap Robin bent his head, and in silence
gave up a prayer to the Virgin, thanking her for the help she had so
amply granted him. His men gathered round him, and taking off their
helms prayed likewise.
From over the plain came a crowd of peasants — some running,
some walking slowly, half disbelieving their own eyes. Some among them
came up to Robin, and old men and women, their faces and hands worn and
lined with toil, seized his hands and kissed them, or touched his feet
or the hem of his coat of mail with their lips. A young mother lifted
up the baby she held in her arms, and with tears in her eyes told the
child to look at Robin Hood, "the man who had slain the evil lords and
burned their den!"
"Master," said Rafe of the Bill, "go not far from us, lest
some one as evil as those lords that now swing there shall come and
possess again these lands and build another hold of fiends to torture
this land and its poor folk."
"By the sweet Mother of Heaven," said Robin Hood, and held up
his right hand in the oath gesture, "while I live no one shall possess
these lands who ruleth them not in justice and mercy as I would have
him rule them!" "Amen!" came
in deep response from all about him.