by Tom Bevan
Chapter XXIV.
TWO CHANCE WAYFARERS.
It was the feast of St. Thomas, the sky gray blue, with a pale,cold-looking sun, the Queen's highway frozen into an iron hardness, andthe pools and ditches frost-bound. The wind had shaken the hoar fromthe trees and hedges, and the holly-berries stood out in brilliantbunches against the dark green of the encircling leaves. Along theroad between Bristol and Gloucester, and, but for the wintry haze thatnarrowed the horizon, within sight of the latter city, trudged a burlyfellow, staff in hand and a sea song on his lips. His thick shoonawoke echoes from hedge to hedge, and his iron-shod staff rang inunison. Hosen of warm, gray homespun covered his legs, and he had adoublet of the same goodly stuff; a cap, trimmed with otter-skin, waspulled down tightly over his ears, and an ample cloak of somewhat gaudyblue flapped in the keen wind; rime, and tiny beads of frozen vapour,hung like pearls in his black beard. He rolled in his walk as a sailorshould, and sometimes he whistled the air of his song by way of changefrom the singing of the words.
"Then ho! for the Spanish Main, And ha! for the Spanish gold; King Philip's ships are riding deep With the weight of wealth untold. They're prey for the saucy lads Who dance on the Plymouth Hoe; They'll all sail home thro' the fleecy foam, With a rich galleon in tow-tow-tow, With a rich galleon in tow!"
The mariner swung his staff in rhythm with the swing of his chorus, andhis hearty voice pealed out like a trumpet on the sharp air.
"A spirited song well sung!" cried a voice in the sailor's rear.
He turned sharply around, and found a thin, wiry fellow close at hisheels. "_Madre de Dios!_" he cried, with a Spanish oath. "Where didstthou spring from? I heard no steps behind me."
"Hardly possible, friend, that thou shouldst hear a little fellow likeme against thy song, staff, and heavier footfalls. I fell in thy wakeout of the lane at Quedgely, and have been trying to come up with theefor the sake of thy jolly company."
"Is yonder parcel of huts Quedgely?"
"Ay. Thou art a stranger; Devon, if thy speech is to be trusted."
"Devon is my bonny country, lad--Devon every inch of me. Dost knowDevon?"
"But little. 'Tis a brave shire, and breeds brave sons. Could I beborn again, I'd pray to see the sun first from a Devon cradle."
"Thy hand, brother. If thou wert less yellow in the gills I'd kissthee. Art for Gloucester?"
"I am."
"So am I, for to-day; to-morrow I go farther on. Dost know these partswell?"
"There are parts that I know worse; but I am not native to the place."
"Maybe thou hast never been in Dean Forest?"
The stranger looked at the sailor sharply and queerly. "Dean Forest,"he repeated. "Yes, I have travelled some parts of that wild region.Thou art surely not thinking of going thither at this time o' the year!"
"By bad fortune, I am. And from what I hear, 'tis a dangerous place,full of fierce beasts and uncouth people. But go thither I must, for Iseek a man I shall not find elsewhere. If thou wouldst find a hawk,needs must that thou find a hawk's nest; no other bird's will serve thypurpose--that is my position. Is there any chance that I shall lightupon some forest fellow during Yule-tide business in Gloucester?"
"That I cannot say; but I may be able to help thee. Whom dost thouseek?"
"A Devon man, Rob of Paignton."
"Thou art hunting a bundle of hay to find a needle. The forest is awild place, as full of holes as of hills, and its people are not muchgiven to travelling or to gossip with any but their nearest neighbours.Hast no more precise knowledge?"
"None, except that Rob dwells with a tall fellow named Morgan."
Again the sallow stranger eyed his companion keenly. He shook hishead. "Tall fellows are not scarce amongst the foresters, and Morgansare as plentiful as oak trees."
"Then am I like to be long a-searching. However, tired eyes ne'erfound a treasure; I must find Rob and the fellow with whom he dwells.How far is it to Gloucester now?"
"A matter of less than three miles to the Cross."
"Dost know of a good inn, one where beef and ale is not stinted, andwhere the hay in the beds is sweet?"
"There's the 'New Inn' in the Northgate Street, as snug a place as aman can wish to put head into on a cold day. I shall rest there untilto-morrow."
"Then I'll cast anchor there also. I can afford to pay for goodlodgings." The sailor jingled some coins in his pouch, and sang again,
"Then ho! for the Spanish Main, And ha! for the Spanish gold."
His companion interrupted him. "When I startled thee just now, did Inot hear thy lips utter a Spanish oath?"
"Likely enough; I have a goodly stock of them, and one jumps out attimes if it happens to be near the top. How didst thou recognize itfor Spanish?"
"Because I have some knowledge of that tongue."
The sailor turned sharp on the speaker, halted, and scrutinized himclosely. "Thy face is yellow enough for a subject of King Philip," hesaid slowly; "but the general cut of thee is English."
"I am English."
"Hast sailed the Spanish Main?"
"No; I am a scholar, not a sailor. I am as well acquainted withFrench, Latin, and Greek as with Spanish and English."
"What a gift!" exclaimed the sailor admiringly. "There is not muchbody about thee; but now I look into thy face and mark thine eyes,forehead, and jowl, can well credit thee with brains. I wish I had metthee in Plymouth."
"Why, friend?"
"Because I have some papers writ in Spanish that I'd give much todecipher. Confidence for confidence, let me tell thee that I am noscholar, but just a simple sailor--"
"Who knows the Spanish Main, eh?"
"As a farmer knows his own duck pond."
"Ah! these are fine times for the brave lads who sail the seas."
"My own opinion, brother. I thank God I became a man whilst Queen Besswas a woman! The west wind blows fortunes into Devon ports nowadays.Mayhap thou hast no love for the sea?"
"'Tis the sea that hath no love for me. I am fixed ashore, and yet Ilove travel and adventure, and have seen sights in more lands thanEngland."
"So! now. I'm glad thou hast not lived a worm 'twixt book covers.Thou art a fellow of some parts, I'll warrant me. There's plenty ofspring in thy walk for one who hath pored much over books. How artthou now with, say, the sword?"
"I have held my own with fellows of more inches than myself."
The sailor pinched his companion's biceps, and took a grip of hiswrist. "Supple enough, brother, or I'm no judge."
"Oh! I should second thee well in a tussle, never fear," laughed thelittle man.
"And give me a merry time should we draw on one another."
"Oh! we are not going to fight. I am a peaceable wayfarer, glad of acheery companion on a dull day. But I would offer thee a scrap ofadvice. Jingle not thy money so easily to the first man that offersthee a friendly greeting. I have known the chink of gold turn a goodfriend into an ill foe."
"True, true. But I'll swear to thy honesty."
"A thousand thanks for the compliment."
Thus the two chance companions trudged on side by side to the southgate of Gloucester. There the pressure of a crowd brought them to ahalt for a few minutes. There was a noise of yelling and booing, andsome exclamations that caused the sailor's companion to wince.
The pressure at the gate slackening, the two pushed through and hurriedafter the noisy throng. "Some fellow being whipped at the cart-tail,"exclaimed the man of Devon, stretching his tall form to look over theheads of the swaying mob.
"Two of 'em, friend; Papishers both," remarked a delighted citizen.
"Oh!" exclaimed the younger wayfarer.
The citizen pointed first to the right and then to the left. "Ruins ofGreyfriars Monastery; ruins of Blackfriars. One rascal caught ineither place praying that the doom of Sodom and Gomorrah might fall onour town, because he and his fellow vermin were driven out years ago.I must pus
h ahead and beg the hangman to let me have a cut or two atthem. They cursed me by bell, book, and candle--but not by name, thankthe Lord: they didn't know that!"
"Why?" asked the little man.
"Because I--and many others, for the matter of that--have built a snughouse out of the stone of the monasteries. I'll have a cut at 'em ifit costs me a crown."
"Is this sort of thing to thy liking?" the sailor asked of hiscompanion.
"No," was the sharp response.
"Neither is it to mine; although, mind you, I have seen these samePapishers play some devil's tricks on good Protestants. Paignton Rob,whom I seek, hath a head ill-balanced by the loss of an ear and itsear-ring, because the priests chose to set a mark upon him. But thouand I are of more generous blood; we have seen the world, and foundhonest men in all religions--ay, and rogues in them all too. Let usget to thine inn and drink a flagon of Gloster ale to all tolerantsouls, whether they call the Pope 'Father' or 'Devil.'"
The sallow-faced man made no answer, but pushed on beside his burlycompanion.