by Harold Lamb
Thoughtfully Jeanne nodded. "But how would you find a way into the Hotel St. Pol, Messire Hugh?" she asked. "Have you a plan?"
"Get me a good horse, and I will make shift to do it."
"Then wait!" Suddenly the girl rose and caught up her fiddle. "Don't pull a snoop-don't go out to look for aught, until I come back. For, truly, Messire Hugh, I can aid you in this." At the stairway she turned to glance back at him shyly. "Will you promise to await me?"
"If you make haste!"
In her own way, Jeanne did hasten, skipping through narrow alleys and under archways, toward the great street of St. Jacques.
When she came abreast a gray wall with gate towers and tree tops showing over it, she walked slowly, her eyes alert. This, she knew, was the entrance to the Hotel St. Pol, with its gardens. She had visited its courtyard before, to play for the seigneurs, and she meant to try now to slip through into the building itself, and gain the presence of the king. She had seen his face in the streets, and she thought that no one would heed a fiddling girl. Then, if fortune served her, she might cry aloud the message that Hugh of Bearn was bringing from Navarre. These great lords, no doubt, would pay little heed to a girl's word, but still the message would be spoken, and the king himself might send for the real messenger-
The archers lounging before the half-closed grille gates turned to stare at her, and one of them thrust a pike shaft before her, grinning.
"Pardie," another grunted, 'Ais the fiddling wench who hath half the rogues' brigade at her summons. Let her go, Mulph."
Safely in the courtyard, Jeanne plucked idly on the strings of her fiddle while she surveyed the prospect. On the left was a blank wall, on the right the stables and quarters of the men-at-arms. At the end of this, a roadway led into the gardens. In front of her rose the bulk of the hotel itself, with barred embrasures for windows, and a single arched gate, where stood men of the inner guard and an officer talking to a priest.
She went up to them boldly, and touched the officer's arm. "Messire, I have word for Renault."
He shrugged indifferently, "So have a-many."
"'Tis a word about the crack he did last night," Jeanne whispered.
The Burgundian frowned swiftly, and she smiled up at him, trusting that he would not know all the lieutenant's spies by sight, and would have to admit her.
"Eh, well." He turned to the pikemen of the guard. "One of you bear her in and look to her. Renault is away for the nonce."
Jeanne had expected that the lieutenant might be out of the hotel, but she had got herself within the doors. Listening intently to the scraps of talk she caught in the halls, she went with the pikeman obediently as far as the door of a tower room that seemed to be a private reception chamber. "Now verily," she said wistfully, "I have never seen my lord of Burgundy. Is it his wont to pass this way?"
"Nay-he walks i' the garden, and thou'lt not see him."
But Jeanne thought otherwise. Humming to herself, she rested her head against a bar, listening patiently. Her guardian tired of watching her and yawned heartily, then strolled out into the corridor. When she heard him in talk with another soldier she slipped to the door.
Without a sound she edged behind the two and into the corridor away from them.
Almost running-for the guard in the tower room might miss her any moment-Jeanne reached a narrow door and opened it swiftly, giving inward thanks that no sentry stood there. Closing the door behind her, she glanced up, and down the stretch of lawn and tulip beds, at the Burgundian nobles who sat in talk by a fountain-at the distant group of squires and servants, and at the two figures who walked apart, opposite her, in the shade of a high myrtle hedge.
One, in a plain gray mantle, thin and stooped, she knew to be the sick Louis. The taller man in a green hunting jerkin, with a horn at his belt and a whip in his hand, must be John of Burgundy.
Without hesitating, as if she had been summoned to do that, the girl raised the fiddle on her arm and drew the bow across the strings. It was a dance she played-"Gentilz galans de France"-as she moved out over the grass, the sunlight striking on her red-gold head.
The two figures by the hedge were nearer, but they paid no heed to her. Instead, a man in a long velvet tabard who carried an ivory staff strode toward her, overtaking her.
"What mummery is this?" he demanded.
"'Tis the doing of my lord the Duke," she retorted, without ceasing her playing. But, as she did so, she caught a glimpse of the pikeman who had her in charge emerging from the door. And the staff bearer caught her arm.
She lowered the fiddle and cried out in a clear voice:
"Sire-"
The pale face of Louis turned toward her irresolutely, when the pikeman came up, swearing under his breath, and at a word from him she was pulled back and bustled toward the door. Behind her she heard the voice of John of Burgundy:
"A fiddling wench, Sire, seeking a coin." And then, louder, "Give her silver, from my hand."
"Hearest thou?" grunted the pikeman in her ear. "His Grace will have a word with thee, anon, when Renault is here. Nay, thou red vixen, we'll bide his coming here, within sight of His Grace. I'll have no more of thy trickery! "
Renault, however, was delayed. With two mounted men and a spy in beggar's garb he was searching the alley by the market to finish the work that he had begun the night before-having heard from the pseudo-beggar that Hugh of Bearn still breathed in a rogue's cellar, after a sorcerer had brought him back to life by black enchantment. Renault swore that a good knife-thrust would put an end to any spell.
At that hour Giron and Pied-a-Botte were warming themselves in the sun at the alley's mouth, waiting for Hugh to come out. One glimpse of the Burgundian helmets, and the two rogues were flying to hiding. Down the cellar stair they tumbled, hissing to the wounded man to hold his tongue, for the Gardener was riding by with two armed churls.
"Eschec!" Giron whispered. '"Tis the big Mark wi' two blades, come to the spot of his night's work."
In a moment Giron began to feel the skin crawl upon his back and skull. For the horses did not trot by. They halted, stamping, and iron clanked as men dropped from the stirrups. Then slow steps came upon the stair, and the gloom of the cellar was lightened by the gleam of a lantern. Giron shrank back into a corner.
A man in a mail shirt appeared, the lantern lifted high in one hand, a drawn sword in the other. At his shoulder walked the silent lieutenant, the point of his red beard jutting forward and his eyes narrowed. Renault paused to make certain of what the cellar hid-the two rogues shivering against the wall, and Hugh of Bearn standing motionless, unarmed, with bandaged head and tight-clenched hands.
"So," quoth Renault, his beard bristling in a grin, "the dead hath come to life. I regret, messire, that necessity compels me to send you back into the grave you have just now quitted."
He waited to hear the southerner beg for mercy, but he waited in vain. Hugh shrugged his shoulders and smiled.
"A pity," he said, "that you must strike such a foul blow twice. Give me a sword, and I pledge you there will be no bungling."
"Nay," Renault grunted, "I swear by the tete-Diou there will be no mistake this time."
He had left a man to watch the horses, and now-being ever careful in such matters-he called to the other Burgundian: "Slay me those rats by the wall."
To Giron, who had been watching for a chance to slip up the stair, this was the voice of doom. He roared in fear, and in desperation flung himself at the swordsman with the lantern. Midway in his rush he lowered his head and crashed against the other's chest. Unprepared for this butting, the Burgundian fell heavily, throwing out his arms. The lantern clanked on the floor and went out, while the sword slid over the stones. Before the light vanished, Hugh leaped for the blade and caught it up.
Then he stepped swiftly aside, hearing as he did so the familiar whistle of steel through the air. Renault had cut at him savagely, and missed. Hugh let himself down quietly on one knee, holding his sword upright, beside his head.
The cellar was almost in darkness-only a faint light coming down the stair. Giron and the soldier were struggling and cursing on the floor, drowning all other sounds.
"A moi, Picard!" Renault shouted, and changed his position as he did so. Mailed feet clattered down the stairs as the third soldier hastened to obey. Then there was a crash, a yell of pain, and renewed scuffling.
Pied-a-Botte had followed the example of his chum, and Hugh judged by the sounds that the two rogues could hold their own at this hand-fighting on the floor. But Renault was slashing about him methodically-knowing that a man without armor would have no chance at matching cuts in the dark with him. And he glanced ever at the gray square of the stairway.
But Hugh had no mind to try a run for it. "Nay, Renault," he called, "this way!"
At once the other's sword struck against his uplifted blade, the sparks flying. Hugh's blade yielded and then twisted suddenly around the Bur- gundian's as he rose to his feet. The two swords were in touch now, grinding together.
And Renault sought to lock hilts-to bear back the slighter man with his greater strength. But the southerner's blade yielded again, and parried deftly when the Burgundian tried to thrust, for at this game of touch in the darkness the skill of the wounded man was a match for the brawn of the lieutenant. Sweat dripped into Renault's eyes and he panted, maddened by the void before him and the elusive, clinging length of steel that quivered against his own.
He forgot that the southerner's strength must soon give out, and he bethought him of his dagger. His left hand plucked it from his belt and he stepped forward to strike. In that instant the other blade left his own and thrust through the links of his mail. Fire scorched Renault's side, and red flames filled the black void before his eyes. He fell forward into the flames.
Five minutes later, when Hugh had struck a light and kindled the lantern again, Renault lay unconscious on the stones. At sight of the bloodstained sword above them in the southerner's hand, the two soldiers gave up wrestling with Giron and Pied-a-Botte.
"Watch over these fellows," Hugh said, "for I have horses waiting above to take me to the St. Pol, and something-" he pointed to the wounded Renault-"that will open the gate to me. Now help me lift him to his saddle."
They did that, and the gabs and rummies of the alley came out to stare. The rogues and the dogs of the town whispered and sniffed as the horses paced under arch and balcony toward the house of John of Burgundy.
The archers at the gate gave back before the stranger with the bandaged head who cried to them that Renault had been sore wounded.
"And where is your seigneur?" he demanded.
They said that His Grace the Duke was walking in the garden.
"Nay," Hugh retorted, "is not your king here?" And when they pointed to the garden road, he turned that way, holding the unconscious Renault. He guided the two horses between the myrtle hedges, across the wide lawn, with a score of guardsmen walking by him, whispering. He saw the two figures apart, beyond the fountain, and turned that way.
While the Burgundians and the nobles of the court looked on curiously, he let Renault down into the hands of the soldiers, and, before anyone could speak, he cried to Louis, "Sire, a message from Navarre!"
The words reached the ear of the king, and before the onlookers recovered from sheer astonishment at hearing a reigning prince addressed by a strange lad from the saddle, Hugh had dismounted and come forward to kneel within a stone's toss of the two lords. And John of Burgundy broke the silence in an amused voice:
"His Majesty hath not come to the garden to hear messages of state. Go thou, and wait upon the chamberlain in the evening." Carelessly he ran the whip he held through tense fingers-taking swift note how Louis glanced irresolutely about-and he added thoughtfully, "But let us see the letter thou hast, or a token of thy mission."
And the southerner, who had nothing of the kind to show, laughed. He pointed to the wounded Renault, now outstretched upon the grass.
"There lieth the token, my lord-your follower who tried twice to slay me upon my way hither."
The silence that followed was again broken by the Burgundian: "This is mad talk, and out of place. What proof hast thou? Speak!"
Duke John knew well that he could not now dismiss this man, for too many ears had heard Hugh's charge. But he saw that Hugh had come alone, without companions or witnesses.
"There is one," responded the southerner instantly, "who can give proof to my lord the King."
Again his arm went out, to point toward the door where Jeanne stood, spellbound with anxiety, beside her guard. And Jeanne hesitated not a second. Slipping under the arm of the soldier she was across the lawn, her fiddle clutched tightly. She gasped as she came within the ring of those about the pale man in the gray mantle, and she plumped herself down beside Hugh. Her clear voice cut through the rising murmurs:
"Sire, 'tis truth, every whit. The Gardener scragged him i' the alley and tripped his gear away, and I brought the Arabian sorcerer who fetched him back to life, and I tried to carry his message to you, so they should not waylay him again. Now the Seigneur Dieu must have brought him hither unharmed, and by that token you must hear him."
All in a breath she cried it out, and laughter echoed her. Some of the listeners shouted angrily, and John of Burgundy with one swift glance at her eager face understood that here was a witness he could not deal with.
"Away with the rogues," he ordered, "and end this mummery!"
But before his men could lay hand on the two, the stooped figure in the gray cloak stepped forward. Louis had found his voice at last.
"Silence!" he cried; and after a moment: "Speak, thou," he bade the southerner.
Twilight was falling over the gray river, and vespers chimed from the bell towers when Jeanne came back to the door of her lodging, sitting sidewise on the great horse behind Hugh of Bearn. And out of the shadows of the doorway sounded a warning hiss:
"Eschec!"
Two shaggy dogs seemed to be crouched there, but the girl recognized Giron and Pied-a-Botte, clutching packs upon their knees. "And what?" she asked.
The big picklock came to the stirrup. "Flash the drag, little Jeanne. We're for St. Denis before the Red Duke twists our gullet in a rope necklace. Come away!"
"Nay," she laughed, "there's no fair fiddling out of Paris."
Giron grumbled under his breath, jerked his thumb at Pied-a-Botte, and the two rogues vanished with their packs. Jeanne looked at the ground. "You'll be wanting, Messire Hugh, to ride from the city before the hour of closing the gates. The duke, they say, hath a long arm and a long memory for vengeance."
But he was looking at the bright head hovering near his arm. The sight of her caught at his heart as if she had laid some witchery upon him. "And what of thee, little Jeanne? Sure it is the duke will not forget thee."
"No harm ever comes to me."
"Then will I see to it." He put his arm about her, pressing his head against the tangle of red-gold tresses. "For I will be riding to the south, and I will be taking you with me. 'Tis fair in my hills."
"There's no good fiddling out of Paris, messire," she said slowly. "And I-I am of these streets, having no love for your hills and olive trees and cattle."
"That is even a lie. Giron hath told me how you have ever the love of the place of your nourishing. And I will not cease from wanting you. So if you abide in Paris, so do I. Faith, now you must hide me from the duke's anger and heal me these wounds of mine."
"Healed you are already, Hugh of Bearn! You fought a champion this day at hand strokes."
"Yet never will I be quit of the spell you have laid upon me, little Jeanne."
Full into his eyes she looked swiftly, seeing in them a strange hunger. Fear of what she had done filled the girl. "May the good God forgive me!" she cried, and turned to him suddenly. "Now get this horse of yours going, and I will show you the way."
Around strange corners she guided him, to a tall house. Dismounting here, they climbed to the top o
f the stairs and Jeanne went to the curtained door. At her summons the dark figure of the Arab appeared. He welcomed them gravely, for he had heard what had passed at the Hotel St. Pol.
"'Tis a cure he must have," Jeanne pointed to the southerner, "for the-for that-oh, you know well the elixir I mean. He hath taken from it a kind of fever, and, pardie, it was a sinful thing I did."
Glancing at the flushed faces of the lad and the girl, Athir smiled. "Jeanne," he said, "I know no remedy save one for this ailment Messire Hugh hath now."
"Then give it him."
"That only can you do-I have naught will serve him."
Dismayed, the girl chewed her lip, until she flung up her head with quick resolve. "Tell him, then-I cannot. Tell him what elixir I had from you, and gave him secretly."
Turning to his table, the Arab took from it a long vial half full of a red fluid which Jeanne recognized instantly. "This? I keep it for patrons who are more credulous than wise. By Allah," he smiled, "it is no more than spirits of wine which we call al-kahol. And this-" he took from a bowl a pinch of gray powder-"is pepper. Nay, little Jeanne, there is no elixir of the kind you sought."
"What," demanded Hugh impatiently, "is all this talk of drinks?"
Jeanne drew a long breath and her eyes flashed warningly at the Arab. "It is no matter," she said with dignity. "Come away now, I pray thee, Messire Hugh-to thy hills, if it must be. But come quickly."
Thus said Khalil el Khadr, my good lord, the far-wandering, the wise, the truth-telling, and the never-fearing lord my master, favored of God-Khalil the Badawan who came from no city but the sands of Yamen, who rode to the great city of the iron men, the Franks-and of this city was his tale, often told to me, the unworthy, the. scribe. Upon teller and hearer be the peace of God! Thus said he:
Praise to the Giver, who hath bestowed upon men the earth, with its vast spaces to wander in!
It was the year 6o3.* It was near the setting of the sun, in the bazaar of the metalworkers, which is a narrow street looking out upon the water. The water of the port of Costatinah was dark.