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+<title>The Secret Chamber at Chad</title>
+
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Secret Chamber at Chad, by Evelyn Everett-Green
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Secret Chamber at Chad
+
+Author: Evelyn Everett-Green
+
+Release Date: April 20, 2005 [EBook #15670]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECRET CHAMBER AT CHAD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Martin Robb
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>The Secret Chamber at Chad</h1>
+<h2>by Everett Evelyn-Green.</h2>
+<hr />
+<table cellspacing="5" align="center" summary="Table of Contents">
+<caption>Table of Contents</caption>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterI">Chapter I</a>:</td>
+<td>A Mysterious Visitor.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterII">Chapter II</a>:</td>
+<td>The Household At Chad.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterIII">Chapter III</a>:</td>
+<td>Brother Emmanuel.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterIV">Chapter IV</a>:</td>
+<td>The Travelling Preacher.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterV">Chapter V</a>:</td>
+<td>A Warning.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterVI">Chapter VI</a>:</td>
+<td>Watched!</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterVII">Chapter VII</a>:</td>
+<td>An Imposing Spectacle.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterVIII">Chapter VIII</a>:</td>
+<td>Hidden Away.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterIX">Chapter IX</a>:</td>
+<td>The Search.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="toc"><a href="#ChapterX">Chapter X</a>:</td>
+<td>From Peril To Safety.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2><a name="ChapterI" id="ChapterI">Chapter I</a>: A Mysterious
+Visitor.</h2>
+<p>The great house at Chad was wrapped in sleep. The brilliant
+beams of a June moon illuminated the fine pile of gray masonry with
+a strong white light. Every castellated turret and twisted chimney
+stood out in bold relief from the heavy background of the pine wood
+behind, and the great courtyard lay white and still, lined by a
+dark rim of ebon shadow.</p>
+<p>Chad, without being exactly a baronial hall of the first
+magnitude, was nevertheless a very fine old house. It had been
+somewhat shorn of its pristine glories during the Wars of the
+Roses. One out of its original two quadrangles had then been laid
+in ruins, and had never been rebuilt. But the old inner quadrangle
+still remained standing, and made an ample and commodious dwelling
+house for the family of the Chadgroves who inhabited it; whilst the
+ground which had once been occupied by the larger outer quadrangle,
+with its fortifications and battlements, was now laid out in
+terraces and garden walks, which made a pleasant addition to the
+family residence.</p>
+<p>The seventh Henry was on the throne. The battle of Bosworth
+Field had put an end to the long-drawn strife betwixt the houses of
+York and Lancaster. The exhausted country was beginning to look
+forward to a long period of prosperity and peace; and the household
+at Chad was one of the many that were rejoicing in the change which
+had come upon the public outlook, and was making the most of the
+peaceful years which all trusted lay before the nation.</p>
+<p>Several changes of some importance had passed over Chad during
+the previous century. The wars had made gaps in the ranks of the
+family to whom it had always belonged. There had been sundry edicts
+of confiscation--as speedily repealed by the next change in the
+fate of the day; and more than once the head had been struck down
+by death, and the house and lands had passed either to a minor or
+to some other branch of the family. There had been the confusion
+and strife betwixt the various branches of the family which was a
+characteristic of that age of upheaval and strife; but the present
+owner of the estate, Sir Oliver Chadgrove, seemed firmly settled in
+his place. He had fought on Henry's side at Bosworth, and had been
+confirmed by that monarch in the possession of the estate of Chad;
+and since that day none had tried to dispute his claim; nor,
+indeed, would it have been very easy to do so, as he was
+undoubtedly the rightful representative of the older branch of the
+family.</p>
+<p>A just and kindly man, he was beloved of those about him, and
+would have been <span lang="en-GB" xml:lang=
+"en-GB">staunchly</span> supported by his retainers had any
+adversary arisen against him. His only enemy was the Lord of
+Mortimer, who owned Mortimer's Keep, the adjoining property, and
+had cast covetous eyes on Chad during the stormy days of the late
+wars, more than once trying unsuccessfully to step in between the
+disputing parties and claim it as his own, not by the power of
+right, but by that of might alone. However, he had not been
+successful in this attempt; and for the past few years there had
+been a semblance of friendliness between Sir Oliver and his proud
+and powerful neighbour.</p>
+<p>The knight was well aware that the friendliness was more a
+seeming than a reality. He was perfectly well acquainted with the
+rapacious character of the owner of Mortimer's Keep, and with his
+covetous designs upon Chad. He knew he was a secret foe, always on
+the watch for any cause of complaint against him; and he could
+often feel that it would take very little to stir up the old
+jealous strife and hostility. Still, for the present an armed truce
+was the order of the day, and Sir Oliver, knowing his own loyalty,
+the cleanness of his hands, and the uprightness of his dealings,
+was not much afraid that his enemy would ever succeed in ousting
+him from his lands, or in gaining possession of the fair park and
+house of Chad for himself.</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver was personally liked by the king, which was another
+point in his favour. Without being a brilliant ruler like his
+successors, the seventh Henry had the faculty of choosing men of
+parts to place about him, and he had recognized in Sir Oliver
+Chadgrove certain qualities which he approved, and of which he
+wished to avail himself from time to time. So the knight was
+frequently summoned to attend the king, and occasionally his wife
+went with him and appeared at court. On this particular bright June
+night, both the master and the mistress were absent, being at
+Windsor with the king's court; and the three boys--the children
+with whom Providence had blessed them--were the only members of the
+family sleeping beneath the roof of the great house.</p>
+<p>The bedchamber of the three boys was a large, bare room looking
+out across the wooded park and ridge of hills, through which the
+little river of Chad meandered leisurely. The boys would have
+preferred the courtyard for their lookout; but a lover of nature
+could not but be struck by the exceeding beauty of the view from
+this row of latticed casements. And indeed the green expanse of
+home-like country had its charm even for high-spirited boys; and
+Edred, the second child of the house, often sat for hours together
+on the wide window ledge, gazing his fill at the shifting lights
+and shadows, and dreaming dreams of his own about what he saw.</p>
+<p>The long room contained three small narrow beds, and very little
+furniture besides, In each of these beds a boy lay sleeping. The
+moonlight streaming in through the uncurtained windows illuminated
+the whole room, and showed the curly heads, two dark and one fair,
+lying on the hard pillows, and shone so straight into the face of
+the eldest boy, that he stirred a little in his sleep, and half
+turned round.</p>
+<p>He was a handsome lad of some eight or nine summers, with
+regular, strongly-marked features, and dark hair and eyes. The
+brown hand and arm which lay exposed to view showed a muscular
+development that betokened great strength to come when the boy
+should be grown to manhood, and the face exhibited a like promise
+of strength of will and character.</p>
+<p>Bertram Chadgrove, half aroused by the strong light of the moon
+in his face, opened his dark eyes sleepily for a few minutes, and
+then turned over towards the wall, and prepared to slumber again.
+But before he had sunk to sleep he became further aroused by a very
+peculiar sound in the wall (as it seemed), close to which his bed
+was stationed; and instead of drowsing off again, he woke up with
+all his faculties on the alert, much as a watchdog does, and
+sitting up in bed he listened with all his ears.</p>
+<p>Yes; there could be no mistaking it! There was certainly a
+sound--a muffled, curious sound--within the very wall itself. He
+pressed his ear against the panel, and his eyes shone brightly in
+the moonlight.</p>
+<p>"It is some living thing," he whispered to himself. "Methinks it
+is surely some human thing. Rats can make strange sounds, I know,
+but not such sounds as these. A human being, and within the
+thickness of the wall! How can such a thing be? I never heard the
+like before. It comes nearer--I hear the groping of hands close
+beside mine ear. Heaven send it be not a spirit from the other
+world! I fear no mortal arm, of flesh and blood, but I desire not
+to see a visitor from the land of shadows."</p>
+<p>For a moment the boy's flesh crept on his bones, and the hair of
+his head seemed to rise up from his scalp. The groping of those
+phantom hands against the wall just beside him was enough to fill
+the stoutest heart with terror, in an age when superstition was
+always rife. He strove to call to his brothers; but his voice was
+no more than a whisper, and his throat felt dry and parched.
+Failing in making himself heard by his companions, he cowered down
+and drew the clothes right over his head, shivering with fear; and
+it was several minutes before his native courage came to his aid,
+and he felt ashamed of this paroxysm of terror.</p>
+<p>"Fie upon me for a white-livered poltroon!" he cried, as the
+chill sweat of fear ceased to break out upon him, and he rallied
+his courage and his determination.</p>
+<p>"I am no better than a maid! Shame upon me for a coward! I will
+not call to Edred and Julian. It shall not be said of me, even by
+mine own self, that I dared not face even a spirit from the lower
+world alone. I will find out what this sound is, and that without
+the help of any other living soul, else shall I despise myself
+forever!"</p>
+<p>And with that resolve hot within him, Bertram threw back his
+coverings and prepared to rise from his bed, when his attention was
+arrested by some strange stealthy sounds close against the great
+carved chimney piece, on the same side of the room as his own
+bed.</p>
+<p>His brothers slept on the opposite side of the big room. None of
+the sounds which were so astonishing Bertram would penetrate to
+their sleeping senses. Had the eldest boy not been awake at the
+beginning, he would scarce have heard the sound, so cautious and
+soft it was. But this noise was something new. It was like hands
+fumbling and groping in search of something. Bertram held his
+breath to listen, growing hot and cold by turns. But he drew some
+of his clothes cautiously towards him, and silently slipped into
+his nether garments. He felt that if there were some unseen enemy
+striving in mysterious fashion to penetrate into this room, he
+could better meet him if he were clothed, however scantily, than he
+could do as he was; and he had ample time to put on even his
+doublet and hose, and to cover himself up again in bed, with his
+small poniard closely held in his hand, before there was any
+further development of that strange night's drama which he was so
+breathlessly watching.</p>
+<p>That something or somebody was seeking to find entrance into the
+room, he could not doubt for a moment; but, on the other hand, it
+seemed an incredible surmise, because the wall along which the
+unknown visitor had plainly felt his way was an outside wall, and
+if there really were any person thus moving, he must be walking
+along some secret passage in the thickness of the wall itself.</p>
+<p>Such a thing was not impossible. Bertram knew of more than one
+such passage contrived in the thickness of the wall in his ancient
+home, and all the family were acquainted with a certain secret
+hiding place that existed, cleverly contrived in the rambling old
+building, which, with its various levels and its wilderness of
+chimneys, might well defy detection, even with the most skilled
+search. But the boy knew of no such passage or chamber in
+connection with their sleeping room, and he was sure his parents
+did not know of one either, or any member of the household.
+Therefore it was immensely surprising to hear these uncanny sounds,
+and it was small wonder if they did give rise to a wave of
+supernatural terror, of which the boy was man enough to feel
+ashamed the moment reason had time to assert her sway.</p>
+<p>"I have done no wrong; I confessed but three days since, and
+received blessing and absolution. If any spirit were to come to
+visit this room, it could do me no hurt. Besides, methinks a spirit
+would pass easily along the straightest place, and would not need
+to fumble thus as if in search of hidden bolts.</p>
+<p>"Ha! what is that! Methought some spring shot back. Hist! here
+IT comes!"</p>
+<p>The boy lay back upon his bed, drawing the clothes silently up
+to his very eyes. The moonlight had shifted just a little, and no
+longer illumined his face. That was now in shadow, and would scarce
+reveal the fact that he was awake. He lay perfectly still, scarce
+daring to draw his breath, and the next moment a strange thing
+happened.</p>
+<p>The whole of one of the great carved pillars that supported the
+high mantle shelf swung noiselessly forward, and stood out at right
+angles to the wall. From where he lay Bertram could not see, but he
+could well understand that when this was done a narrow doorway had
+been revealed, and the next moment a shadowy figure glided with
+noiseless steps into the room.</p>
+<p>The figure was poorly clad in a doublet of serge much the worse
+for wear, and the moonlight showed a strangely haggard face and
+soiled and torn raiment. Yet there was an air of dignity about the
+mysterious visitor which showed to the astonished boy that he must
+at some time have been in better circumstances, and lying quite
+still Bertram watched his movements with breathless attention.</p>
+<p>With a quick, scared glance round him, as though afraid that
+even the silence might be the silence of treachery, the gaunt
+figure advanced with covert eagerness across the floor, leaving the
+door wide open behind him, as if to be ready for him should he
+desire to fly; and precipitating himself upon a ewer of cold water
+standing upon the floor, he drank and drank and drank as though he
+would never cease.</p>
+<p>Plainly he was consumed by the most raging thirst. Bertram had
+never seen anything but an exhausted horse after a burning summer's
+chase in the forest drink in such a fashion. And as he watched, all
+fear left him in a moment, for certainly no phantom could drink dry
+this great ewer of spring water; and if he had only a creature of
+flesh and blood to deal with, why, then there was certainly no
+cause for fear.</p>
+<p>In place of dread and terror, a great pity welled up in the
+generous heart of the boy. He had all the hatred for oppression and
+the chivalrous desire to help the oppressed that seem born in the
+hearts of the sons of British birth. Who and what manner of man
+this was he did not know; but he was evidently some poor hunted
+creature, going in very fear of his life, and as such the boy
+pitied him from the very ground of his heart, and would gladly have
+helped him had he known how.</p>
+<p>He lay for a few moments wondering and pondering. Certainly his
+father was no foe to any man. He could not be hiding from his
+displeasure. The fugitive had rather taken refuge in his house; and
+if so, who better could be found to help him than the son of the
+owner?</p>
+<p>"Our father and our mother alike have always taught us to
+befriend the stranger and the oppressed," said the boy to himself.
+"I will ask this stranger of himself, and see if I may befriend
+him. I would gladly learn the trick of yon door. It would be a
+goodly secret to have for our very own."</p>
+<p>It was plain that the fugitive, though aware that the room was
+tenanted, had satisfied himself that the occupants were all asleep.
+He had ceased his frightened, furtive looks around him, and was
+quaffing the last of the water with an air of relish and relief
+that was good to see, pausing from time to time to stretch his
+limbs and to draw in great gulps of fresh air through the open
+window by which he stood, as a prisoner might do who had just been
+released from harsh captivity.</p>
+<p>The moonlight shining upon his face showed it haggard, unkempt,
+and unshorn. Plainly he had been several days in hiding; and by the
+gauntness of his figure, and the wolfish gleam in his eye as it
+roved quickly round the apartment, as if in search of food, it was
+plain that he was suffering keenly from hunger, too.</p>
+<p>Bertram's decision was quickly taken. Whilst the man's face was
+turned the other way, he quickly rose from his bed, and crossing
+the room with noiseless steps, laid a hand upon his arm.</p>
+<p>"Hist, friend!" he whispered whilst the start given by the
+other, and the hoarse exclamation that broke from his lips, might
+have wakened sleepers who were not healthy, tired boys. "Fear not;
+I am no foe to betray thee. Tell me who and what thou art, and I
+will help thee all I may."</p>
+<p>The frightened eyes bent upon him bespoke a great terror. The
+man's voice died away as he tried to speak. The only word Bertram
+could catch seemed to be a prayer that he would not betray him.</p>
+<p>"Betray thee! Never! Why, good fellow, dost not know that the
+Chadgroves never betray those who trust in them? Hence sometimes
+has trouble come upon them. But before we talk, let me get thee
+food. Methinks thou art well-nigh starved."</p>
+<p>"Food! food! Ah, if thou wouldst give me that, young master, I
+would bless thee forever! I have well-nigh perished with hunger and
+thirst. Heaven be thanked that I have tasted water once again!"</p>
+<p>"Come hither," said Bertram cautiously. "First close this narrow
+doorway, the secret of which thou must teach me in return for what
+I will do for thee, and then I will take thee to another chamber,
+where our voices will not disturb my brothers, and we can talk, and
+thou canst eat at ease. I must know thy story, and I pledge myself
+to help thee. Show me now the trick of this door. I swear I will
+make no treacherous use of the secret."</p>
+<p>"I will trust thee, young sir. I must needs do so, for without
+human help I must surely die.</p>
+<p>"Seest thou this bunch of grapes so cunningly carved here? This
+middle grape of the cluster will turn round in the fingers that
+know how to find and grasp it, and so turning and turning slowly,
+unlooses a bolt within--here--and so the whole woodwork swings out
+upon hinges and reveals the doorway. Where that doorway leads I
+will show thee anon, if thou wouldst know the trick of the secret
+chamber at Chad that all men have now forgotten. It may be that it
+will some day shelter thee or thine, for thou hast enemies abroad,
+even as I have."</p>
+<p>Bertram was intensely interested as he examined and mastered the
+simple yet clever contrivance of this masked door; but quickly
+remembering the starved condition of his companion, he led him
+cautiously into an adjoining room, where were a table and some
+scant furniture, and gliding down the staircase and along dim
+corridors just made visible by the reflected radiance of the moon,
+he reached the buttery, and armed himself with a venison pasty, a
+loaf of bread, and a bottle of wine. Hurrying back with these, he
+soon had the satisfaction to see the stranger fall upon them with
+the keen relish of a man who has fasted to the last limits of
+endurance; and only after he had seen that the keen edge of his
+hunger had been satisfied did he try to learn more of him and his
+concerns.</p>
+<p>"Now tell me, my good friend, who and what thou art," said the
+boy, "and how comes it that thou seekest shelter here, and that
+thou knowest more of Chad than we its owners do. That is the thing
+which has been perplexing me this long while. I would fain hear
+from thy story how it comes about."</p>
+<p>"That is soon told, young sir. Thou dost not, probably, remember
+the name of Warbel as that of some of the retainers of thy
+grandsire, but--"</p>
+<p>"I have heard the name," said the boy. "I have heard my father
+speak of them. But I knew not that there were any of that name now
+living."</p>
+<p>"I am a Warbel--I trow the last of my race. I was born beyond
+the seas; but I was early brought to England, and I heard munch of
+the strife that encompassed Chad, because my father and grandfather
+both knew the place well, and would fain have gone back and lived
+in the old country had not fortune otherwise decreed it. To make a
+long story short, they never returned to the place. But when I was
+grown to man's estate, I was offered a post in the household of the
+Lord of Mortimer, and as it was the best thing that had fallen in
+my way, I accepted it very gladly; for I knew that name, too, and I
+knew naught against the haughty lord, albeit my father and
+grandsire had not loved the lords of that name who lived before
+him.</p>
+<p>"For many years I have been in his service, and for a while all
+went well with me. I was made one of his gentlemen, and he seemed
+to favour me. But of late there has been a change towards me--I
+know not how or why. I have offended him without intending it, and
+he has sometimes provoked me almost beyond endurance by his proud
+insolence. But that I might have borne, for he was my master, had
+it not been for the insolence and insults I had to bear from others
+amongst his servants, and from one youth in particular, who seemed
+to me to be trying to oust me from my place, and to get himself the
+foremost place in his master's favour. That made my hot blood boil
+again and again, until at last the thing I believe they had long
+planned happened, and I had to fly for my life."</p>
+<p>The man paused, and Bertram, who was drinking in this story,
+asked eagerly: "And what was that?"</p>
+<p>"It was four days ago now, in the hall where we had supped. We
+had drunk much wine in honour of our master's birthday, and then we
+began playing and dicing to pass the time till we retired to bed.
+My adversary was this youth whom I so greatly distrust. As we
+played I detected him in unfair practices. He vowed I lied, and
+called upon me to prove my words at the sword's point; but in my
+fury and rage I sprang upon him with my bare hands, and would have
+wrung his neck--the insolent popinjay--had I been able. As it was,
+we struggled and swayed together till my greater weight caused him
+to fall over backwards against one of the tables, and I verily
+believe his back is broken. I know not whether he is living yet.
+But as he is not only a great favourite with the Lord of Mortimer,
+but a distant kinsman to boot, no sooner was the deed done than all
+in the hall called to me to save myself by flight, for that the
+master would revenge such a death upon the perpetrator of it
+without mercy, and that if I wished to spare my neck I must fly
+without an instant's delay.</p>
+<p>"I knew this but too well myself. The baron was a fearful man to
+meet in his rage. Where to fly I knew not, but stay I could not. I
+had bare time to rush to my room, don a dress that would not excite
+inquiry if I had to lie hid in the forest a few days. I did not
+think flight would be so difficult a matter, but I knew that every
+moment spent in Mortimer's Keep was at peril of my life; and I had
+but just made my escape through a small postern door before I heard
+the alarm bell ring, the drawbridge go up, and knew that the edict
+had gone forth for my instant apprehension."</p>
+<p>He paused with a slight shudder, and seemed to be listening
+intently.</p>
+<p>"There is naught to fear here," said Bertram. "Tell me more of
+thy flight."</p>
+<p>"It was terrible," answered the man. "I had not looked to be
+hunted like the wild beasts of the forest; and yet an hour had not
+gone by before I heard, by the baying of the fierce hounds that are
+kept at Mortimer, that a hunting party had sallied forth; and I
+knew that I was the quarry. I doubled and ran like any hare. I knew
+the tricks of the wild things that have skill in baffling the dogs,
+and at last I reached the shelter of these walls, and ran there for
+protection. I had thrown off the dogs at the last piece of water;
+and in the marshy ground the scent did not lie, and could not be
+picked up. For a brief moment I was safe; but I was exhausted
+almost to death. I could go no further. I lay down beneath the
+shadow of some arbour within the sheltering precincts of Chad, and
+wondered what would become of me."</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes! and then--?"</p>
+<p>"Then I remembered a story told me by my grandsire, years and
+years gone by, of a secret chamber at Chad, which had sheltered
+many a fugitive in the hour of peril. Lying out in the soft night
+air, I recalled bit by bit all that I had been told--the very
+drawings the old man had made to amuse me in a childish sickness,
+how the door opened, and how access was had to the chamber. I knew
+that the country round would be hunted for days, and that I could
+never escape the malice of the Lord of Mortimer if I pursued my way
+to the sea. He would overtake and kill me before I could make shift
+to gain that place of refuge. But I bethought me of the secret
+chamber and its story, and methought I might slip in unseen did I
+but watch my opportunity, find my way up the winding stair to this
+room, and so to the secret chamber beyond."</p>
+<p>"And thou didst?"</p>
+<p>"Ay, I did, the very next morning. I saw thee and thy brothers
+sally forth a-hunting. I saw the men follow in thy train. I had
+heard that the knight and his lady with their retinue were absent
+at Windsor. It needed no great skill to slip in unseen and gain the
+longed-for hiding place. I had some food in my wallet. I fondly
+hoped it would prove enough; but the sounds of hunting day by day
+all around have told me too well that I must not venture forth; and
+as this room was slept in by night, I feared to sally forth after
+food, lest I should be found and betrayed. I had heard of the
+merciful nature of the master of Chad; but in his absence I knew
+not what his servants might say or do. Doubtless there is a reward
+offered for my apprehension; and if that be so, how could I help
+fearing that any hired servant would betray me to my lord?"</p>
+<p>"And thou thoughtest that servants slept in this room, and dared
+not show thyself either by day or night for fear thou mightest be
+betrayed! And only hunger and thirst drove thee forth at
+length?"</p>
+<p>"Ay. And from my heart do I thank thee for thy kindness, young
+sir; and gladly will I show thee in return the trick of yon
+chamber. If thou canst kindle a torch it will light us better, for
+the way thither is wondrous tortuous and narrow."</p>
+<p>Bertram had a little lantern--a very treasured possession of
+his--and after the usual tedious process of lighting had been gone
+through, he softly led the way back to the sleeping chamber. With
+his own hands he undid the fastening of the door and saw it swing
+open, and then the two passed through into a very narrow aperture,
+which proved to be a long narrow gallery contrived in the thickness
+of the wall, which would only just admit of the passage of one
+figure at a time.</p>
+<p>As they went in they drew to the door, and the fugitive showed
+his young companion how the bolt upon the inner side might be
+unloosed.</p>
+<p>"It is easy enow in the light, but hard to feel in the black
+darkness," he remarked; and then they pursued their devious way on
+and on through this strange passage, which wound up and down and in
+and out, and landed them at last at the foot of a spiral staircase,
+so narrow and squeezed in by masonry as to be barely serviceable
+for the purpose for which it was contrived. It led them to a small
+door, through which they passed, to find themselves in a room of
+fair size but very low, and without any window, which seemed to
+occupy (as indeed it did) a portion of the house between two of the
+other floors, and was so contrived as to absolutely defy detection
+be the examination of the structure of the house never so
+exhaustive. If the secret door were not found, nothing else would
+ever betray this cunning hiding-place. Doubtless that was why,
+during the many changes that had prevailed at Chad during the past
+fifty years, the knowledge of its very existence had been lost.</p>
+<p>"Air comes in freely through many cracks and slits," explained
+the prisoner. "It is not an unpleasant place save in the heat of
+the middle day, when it becomes like a veritable oven. That is why
+my thirst was so unbearable. There is a bed, as thou seest, and a
+chair and a few other things. One could be comfortable here were it
+not for starvation and thirst."</p>
+<p>"I will feed thee so long as thou remainest hid," cried the boy,
+with generous ardour. "Thou shalt hide there by day, and by night
+shalt wander abroad an thou wilt, to breathe the air and stretch
+thy limbs. My brothers and I will be thy friends. Thou needst fear
+nothing now. We will find out when it is safe for thee to leave thy
+retreat, and then thou shalt go forth without fear; or, if thou
+likest it better, thou shalt abide here till our father returns and
+take service with him. I doubt not he would be glad enow to number
+a Warbel again amongst his trusty servants."</p>
+<p>The man's face lighted up wonderfully.</p>
+<p>"If he would do that," he cried eagerly, "I should have no wish
+for anything better. But my master, the baron--"</p>
+<p>"My father fears not the baron!" answered the boy proudly; "and,
+besides, his young kinsman is not dead. We heard something of his
+side of the tale, and the youth is not even like to die now. My
+father could protect thee from his wrath. Stay here, and thou wilt
+have naught to fear."</p>
+<p>The fugitive took the lad's hand and pressed it to his lips.</p>
+<p>"I will serve thee for ever and ever for this boon," he
+answered; and Bertram went back to his room, to lie awake and muse
+over what had befallen till the dawn broke and his brothers awoke
+to the new day.</p>
+<p>To keep any secret from his two brothers was a thing impossible
+to Bertram, and before they had finished dressing that morning,
+Edred and Julian were both made aware of the strange adventure of
+the night previous. Looking up to Bertram, as they both did, as the
+embodiment of prowess and courage, they did not grudge him his
+wonderful discovery, but they were eager to visit the fugitive
+themselves, and to carry him food and drink.</p>
+<p>The days that followed were days of absolute enchantment to the
+boys, who delighted in waiting on Warbel and passing hours in his
+company. He told them entrancing stories of adventure and peril. He
+was devoted to his three youthful keepers, and wished for nothing
+better than to enter service with their father.</p>
+<p>Later on, when all hue and cry after the missing man was over,
+and when Lord Mortimer's young kinsman was so far recovered that it
+would be impossible to summon Warbel for any injury inflicted on
+him, Bertram conducted him to the hut of one of his father's
+woodmen, who promised to keep him safe till the return of the
+knight.</p>
+<p>When Sir Oliver came back, Warbel was brought to him, told a
+part of his tale, and was admitted readily as a member of the
+household; but the story of his incarceration in the secret chamber
+remained a secret known only to himself and the three boys. So
+delightful a mystery as the existence of this unknown chamber was
+too precious to be parted with; and it was a compact between the
+boys and the man, who now became their chief attendant and body
+servant, that the trick of that door and the existence of that
+chamber were to be told to none, but kept as absolutely their own
+property.</p>
+<h2><a name="ChapterII" id="ChapterII">Chapter II</a>: The
+Household At Chad.</h2>
+<p>The office of mistress of a large household in the sixteenth
+century was no sinecure. It was not the fashion then to depute to
+the hands of underlings the supervision of the details of domestic
+management; and though the lady of the Hall might later in the day
+entertain royalty itself, the early hours of the morning were spent
+in careful and busy scrutiny of kitchen, pantry, and store or still
+room, and her own fair hands knew much of the actual skill which
+was required in the preparation of the many compounds which graced
+the board at dinner or supper.</p>
+<p>Lady Chadgrove was no exception to the general rule of careful
+household managers; and whilst her lord and master went hunting or
+hawking in the fresh morning air, or shut himself up in his library
+to examine into the accounts his steward laid before him or concern
+himself with some state business that <span lang="en-US" xml:lang=
+"en-US">might</span> have been placed in his hands, she was almost
+always to be found in the offices of the house, looking well after
+the domestic details of household management, and seeing that each
+servant and scullion was doing the work appointed with steadiness
+and industry.</p>
+<p>There was need for some such careful supervision of the daily
+routine, for the large houses in the kingdom were mainly dependent
+upon their own efforts for the necessaries of life throughout the
+year. In towns there were shops where provisions could be readily
+bought, but no such institution as that of country shops had been
+dreamed of as yet. The lord of the manor killed his own meat, baked
+his own bread, grew his own wheat, and ground his own flour. He had
+his own brewery within the precinct of the great courtyard, where
+vast quantities of mead and ale were brewed, cider and other
+lighter drinks made, and even some sorts of simple home-grown
+wines. Chad boasted its own "vineyard," where grapes flourished in
+abundance, and ripened in the autumn as they will not do now.</p>
+<p>Nothing, perhaps, shows more clearly the change that has passed
+upon our climate by slow degrees than a study of the parish records
+of ancient days. Vineyards were common enough in England some
+hundreds of years ago, and wine was made from the produce as
+regularly as the season came round. Then there were the simpler
+fruit wines from gooseberries, currants, and elderberries, to say
+nothing of cowslip wine and other light beverages which it was the
+pride of the mistress to contrive and to excel in the making. Our
+forefathers, though they knew nothing of the luxuries of tea and
+coffee, were by no means addicted to the drinking of water.
+Considering the sanitary conditions in which they lived in those
+days, and the fearful contamination of water which frequently
+prevailed, and which doubtless had much to do with the spread of
+the Black Death and other like visitations, this was no doubt an
+advantage. Still there were drawbacks to the habit of constant
+quaffing of fermented drinks at all hours of the day, and it was
+often a difficult matter to keep in check the sin of drunkenness
+that prevailed amongst all classes of the people.</p>
+<p>At Chad the gentle influence of the lady of the manor had done
+much to make this household an improvement on many of its
+neighbours. Although there was always abundance of good things and
+a liberal hospitality to strangers of all sorts, it was not often
+that any unseemly roistering disturbed the inmates of Chad. The
+servants and retainers looked up to their master and mistress with
+loyalty and devotion, curbed their animal passions and wilder moods
+out of love and reverence for them, and grew more civilized and
+cultivated almost without knowing it, until the wild orgies which
+often disgraced the followings of the country nobility were almost
+unknown here.</p>
+<p>Possibly another humanizing and restraining influence that acted
+silently upon the household was the presence of a young monk, who
+had been brought not long since from a neighbouring monastery, to
+act in the capacity of chaplain to the household and tutor to the
+boys, now fast growing towards man's estate. There was a beautiful
+little chapel connected with Chad. It had fallen something into
+neglect and ruin during the days of the civil wars, and had been
+battered about in some of the struggles that had raged round Chad.
+But Sir Oliver had spent both money and loving care in restoring
+and beautifying the little place, and now the daily mass was said
+there by Brother Emmanuel, and the members of the household were
+encouraged to attend as often as their duties would permit. The
+brother, too, would go about amongst the people and talk with them
+as they pursued their tasks, and not one even of the rudest and
+roughest but would feel the better for the kindly and beneficent
+influence of the youthful ecclesiastic.</p>
+<p>Brother Emmanuel had one of those keenly intelligent and
+versatile minds that are always craving a wider knowledge, and
+think no knowledge, even of the humblest, beneath notice. He would
+ask the poorest wood cutter to instruct him in the handling of his
+tool or in the simple mysteries of his craft as humbly as though he
+were asking instruction from one of the learned of the land. No
+information, no occupation came amiss to him. He saw in all toil a
+dignity and a power, and he strove to impress upon every worker, of
+whatever craft he might be, that to do his day's work with all his
+might and with the best powers at his command was in truth one
+excellent way of serving God, and more effectual than any number of
+<i>Paters</i> and <i>Aves</i> said whilst idling away the time that
+should be given to his master's service.</p>
+<p>Such teaching might not be strictly orthodox from a monkish
+standpoint, but it commended itself to the understanding and the
+approval of simple folks; and the brother was none the less beloved
+and respected that his talk and his teaching did not follow the
+cut-and-dried rules of his order. Sir Oliver and his wife thought
+excellently of the young man, and to the boys he was friend as well
+as tutor.</p>
+<p>On this hot midsummer day the mistress of Chad was making her
+usual morning round of the kitchens and adjoining offices--her
+simple though graceful morning robe, and the plain coif covering
+her hair, showing that she was not yet dressed for the duties which
+would engross her later in the day. She had a great bunch of keys
+dangling at her girdle, and her tablets were in her hands, where
+from time to time she jotted down some brief note to be entered
+later in those household books which she kept herself with
+scrupulous care, so that every season she knew exactly how many
+gallons or hogsheads of mead or wine had been brewed, what had been
+the yield of every crop in the garden or meadow, what stores of
+conserves had <span lang="en-US" xml:lang="en-US">been</span> made
+from each fruit as its season came in, and whether that quantity
+had proved sufficient for the year's consumption.</p>
+<p>The cherry crop was being gathered in today. Huge baskets of the
+delicious fruit were ranged along one wall of the still room, and
+busy hands were already preparing the bright berries for the
+preserving pan or the rows of jars that were likewise placed in
+readiness to receive them. The cherry trees of Chad were famous for
+their splendid crop, and the mistress had many wonderful recipes
+and preparations by which the fruit was preserved and made into all
+manner of dainty conserves that delighted all who partook of
+them.</p>
+<p>"I will come anon, and help you with your task," said the lady
+to the busy wenches in the still room, who were hard at work
+preparing the fruit. "I will return as soon as I have made my
+round, and see that all is going well."</p>
+<p>The girls smiled, and dropped their rustic courtesies. Some
+amongst them were not the regular serving maids of the place, but
+were the daughters of the humbler retainers living round and about,
+who were glad to come to assist at the great house when there was
+any press of work--a thing that frequently happened from April to
+November.</p>
+<p>None who assisted at Chad at such times ever went away empty
+handed. Besides the small wage given for the work done, there was
+always a basket of fruit, or a piece of meat, or a flagon of wine,
+according to the nature of the task, set aside for each assistant
+who did not dwell beneath the roof of Chad. And if there was
+sickness in any cottage from which a worker came, there was certain
+to be some little delicacy put into a basket by the hands of the
+mistress, and sent with a kindly word of goodwill and sympathy to
+the sufferer.</p>
+<p>It was small wonder, then, that the household and community of
+Chad was a happy and peaceable one, or that the knight and his lady
+were beloved of all around.</p>
+<p>The morning's round was no sinecure, even though the mistress
+was today as quick as possible in her visit of inspection. Three
+fat bucks had been brought in from the forest yester-eve, when the
+knight and his sons had returned from hunting. The venison had to
+be prepared, and a part of it dried and salted down for winter use;
+whilst of course a great batch of pies and pasties must be put in
+hand, so that the most should be made of the meat whilst it was
+still fresh.</p>
+<p>When that matter had been settled, there were the live creatures
+to visit--the calves in their stalls, the rows of milch kine, and
+the great piggery, where porkers of every kind and colour were
+tumbling about in great excitement awaiting their morning meal. The
+mistress of the house generally saw the pigs fed each day, to
+insure their having food proper to them, and not the offal and foul
+remnants that idle servants loved to give and they to eat were not
+some supervision exercised. The care of dogs and horses the lady
+left to her husband and sons, but the cows, the pigs, and the
+poultry she always looked after herself.</p>
+<p>Her daily task accomplished, she returned to the still room,
+prepared for a long morning over her conserves. It was but
+half-past nine now; for the breakfast hour in baronial houses was
+seven all the year round, and today had been half-an-hour earlier
+on account of the press of work incident to the harvesting of the
+cherry crop. Several of the servants who were generally occupied
+about the house had risen today with the lark, to be able to help
+their lady, and soon a busy, silent party was working in pantry and
+still room under the careful eye of the mistress.</p>
+<p>One old woman who had been accommodated with a chair, though her
+fingers were as brisk as any of the younger girls', from time to
+time addressed a question or a remark to her lady, which was always
+kindly answered. She was the old nurse of Chad, having been nurse
+to Sir Oliver in his infancy, and having since had charge of his
+three boys during their earliest years. She was growing infirm now,
+and seldom left her own little room in a sunny corner of the big
+house, where her meals were taken her by one of the younger maids.
+But in the warm weather, when her stiff limbs gained a little more
+power, she loved on occasion to come forth and take a share in the
+life of the house, and work with the busy wenches under the
+mistress's eye at the piles of fruit from the successive summer and
+autumn crops as they came in rotation.</p>
+<p>"And where be the dear children?" she asked once; "I have not
+set eyes on them the livelong day. Methought the very smell of the
+cherries would have brought them hither, as bees and wasps to a
+honey pot."</p>
+<p>The lady smiled slightly.</p>
+<p>"I doubt not they will be here anon; but doubtless they have
+paid many visits to the trees ere the store was garnered. I think
+they are in the tilt yard with Warbel. It is there they are
+generally to be found in the early hours of the day."</p>
+<p>"They be fine, gamesome lads," said the old woman fondly--"chips
+of the old block, true Chads every one of them;" for the custom
+with the common people was to call the lord of the manor by the
+name of his house rather than by his own patronymic, and Sir Oliver
+was commonly spoken of as "Chad" by his retainers; a custom which
+lingered long in the south and west of the country.</p>
+<p>"They are well-grown, hearty boys," answered the mother quietly,
+though there was a light of tender pride in her eyes. "Bertram is
+almost a man in looks, though he is scarce seventeen yet.
+Seventeen! How time flies! It seems but yesterday since he was a
+little boy standing at my knee to say his light tasks, and walking
+to and fro holding his father's hand. Well, Heaven be praised, the
+years have been peaceful and prosperous, else would not they have
+fled by so swiftly."</p>
+<p>"Heaven be praised indeed!" echoed the old woman. "For now the
+master is so safely seated at Chad that he would be a bold man who
+tried to oust him. But in days gone by I have sorely feared yon
+proud Lord of Mortimer. Methought he would try to do him a
+mischief. His spleen and spite, as all men say, are very
+great."</p>
+<p>The lady's face clouded slightly, but her reply was quiet and
+calm.</p>
+<p>"I fear me they are that still; but he lacks all cause of
+offence. My good lord is careful in all things to avoid making ill
+blood with a jealous neighbour. That he has always cast covetous
+eyes upon Chad is known throughout the countryside; but I trow he
+would find it something difficult to make good any claim."</p>
+<p>"Why, verily!" cried the nurse, with energy. "He could but come
+as a foul usurper, against whom would every honest hand be raised.
+But, good my mistress, what is the truth of the whisper I have
+heard that the Lord of Mortimer has wed his daughter to one who
+calls himself of the house of Chad? I cannot believe that any of
+the old race would mate with a Mortimer. Is it but the idle gossip
+of the ignorant? or what truth is there in it?"</p>
+<p>"I scarce know myself the rights of the matter," answered Lady
+Chadgrove, still with a slight cloud upon her brow. "It is
+certainly true that Lord Mortimer has lately wed his only child, a
+daughter, to a knight who calls himself Sir Edward Chadwell, and
+makes claim to be descended from my lord's house. Men say that he
+makes great boasting that the Chadwells are an older branch than
+the Chadgroves, and that by right of inheritance Chad is his.</p>
+<p>"Methinks he would find it very hard to make good any such
+claim. Belike it is but idle boasting. Yet it may be that there
+will be some trouble in store. He has taken up his abode at
+Mortimer's Keep, and maybe we shall hear ill news before long."</p>
+<p>All eyes were fixed for a moment on the lady's face, and then
+the hands moved faster than before, whilst a subdued murmur went
+round the group. Not one heart was there that did not beat with
+indignation at the thought that any should dare to try to disturb
+the peace of the rightful lord of Chad. If the loyalty and
+affection of all around would prove a safeguard, the knight need
+have no fear from the claims advanced by any adversary.</p>
+<p>"There has been a muttering of coming tempest anent those vexed
+forest rights," continued the lady, in reply to some indignant
+words from the nurse. "I would that difficult question could be
+settled and laid at rest; but my good lord has yielded something
+too much already for the sake of peace and quietness, and at each
+concession Mortimer's word was passed that he would claim no
+further rights over the portion that remained to us. But his word
+is broken without scruple, and we cannot ever be giving way. Were
+no stand to be made, the whole forest track would soon be claimed
+by Mortimer, and we should have nothing but the bare park that is
+fenced about and cannot be filched bit by bit away. But all the
+world knows that Chad has forest rights equal to those of Mortimer.
+It is but to seek a quarrel that the baron continues to push his
+claims ever nearer and nearer our walls."</p>
+<p>Another murmur of indignation went round; but there was no time
+for further talk, as at that moment the three boys entered from the
+tilt yard; hot, thirsty, and breathless, and the fair-haired lad
+with the dreamy blue eyes held a kerchief to his head that was
+stained with blood.</p>
+<p>"Art hurt, Edred?" asked the mother, looking up.</p>
+<p>"'Tis but a scratch," answered the boy. "I am not quite a match
+for Bertram yet; but I will be anon. I must learn to be quicker in
+my defence. Thanks, gentle mother; belike it will be better for it
+to be bound up. It bleeds rather too fast for comfort, but thy
+hands will soon stop that."</p>
+<p>The other boys fell upon the fruit with right good will, whilst
+the mother led her second son to the small pump nigh at hand, and
+bathed and dressed the rather ugly wound in his head.</p>
+<p>Neither mother nor son thought anything of the hurt. It was easy
+enough to give and receive hard blows in the tilt yard, and bruises
+and cuts were looked upon as part of the discipline of life.</p>
+<p>As soon as the dressing was over, Edred joined his brothers, and
+did his share in diminishing the pile of luscious fruit. And as
+they ate they chattered away to the old woman of their prowess in
+tilt yard and forest, relating how Bertram had slain a fat buck
+with his own hands the previous day, and how they had between them
+given the <i>coup-de-grace</i> to another, which had been brought
+to bay at the water, father and huntsmen standing aloof to let the
+boys show their strength and skill.</p>
+<p>Nine years had passed since that strange night when Bertram had
+been awakened by the advent of the mysterious stranger at his
+bedside. He had developed since then from a sturdy little boy into
+a fine-grown youth of seventeen, who had in his own eyes, and in
+the eyes of many others, well-nigh reached man's estate; and who
+would, if need should arise, go forth equipped for war to fight the
+king's battles. He was a handsome, dark-haired, dark-eyed youth,
+with plenty of determination and force of character, and with a
+love of Chad so deeply rooted in his nature, that to be the heir of
+that property seemed to him the finest position in all the world,
+and he would not have exchanged it for that of Prince of Wales.</p>
+<p>The second son, Edred (Ethelred was his true name; he was called
+after his mother, Etheldred), was some half-head shorter than his
+brother, but a fine boy for all that. He was fifteen, and whilst
+sharing to a great extent in the love of sport and of warlike games
+so common in that day, he was also a greater lover of books than
+his brothers, and would sometimes absent himself from their
+pastimes to study with Brother Emmanuel and learn from him many
+things that were not written in books. The other lads gave more
+time to study than was usual at that period; for both Sir Oliver
+and his lady believed in the value of book lore and the use of the
+pen, deploring the lack of learning that had prevailed during the
+confusion of the late wars, and greatly desiring its revival. But
+it was Edred who really inherited the scholarly tastes of his
+parents, and already the question of making a monk of him was under
+serious discussion. The boy thought that if he might have a few
+more years of liberty and enjoyment he should like the life of the
+cloister well.</p>
+<p>Julian bore a strong resemblance to Bertram both in person and
+disposition. He was a very fine boy, nearly fourteen years old, and
+had been the companion of his brothers from infancy, so that he
+often appeared older than his age. All three brothers were bound
+together in bonds of more than wonted affection. They not only
+shared their sports and studies, but held almost all their
+belongings in common. Each lad had his own horse and his own
+weapons, whilst Edred had one or two books over which he claimed
+absolute possession; but for the rest, they enjoyed all properties
+in common, and it had hardly entered into their calculations that
+they could ever be separated, save when the idea of making Edred
+into a monk came under discussion; and as that would not be done
+for some years, it scarcely seemed worth troubling over now.
+Perhaps things would turn out differently in the end, and they
+would remain together at Chad for the whole of their natural
+lives.</p>
+<p>Nurse never wearied of the tales told by her young masters, and
+listened with fond pride to the recital. So eagerly were Bertram
+and Julian talking, that they did not heed the sound of the horn at
+the gate way which bespoke the arrival of some messenger; but Edred
+slipped out to see who could be coming, and presently he returned
+with a frown upon his brow.</p>
+<p>"There is a messenger at the gate who wears the livery of
+Mortimer," he said. "An insolent knave to boot, who flung his
+missive in the face of old Ralph, and spurred off with a mocking
+laugh. I would I had had my good steed between my knees, and I
+would have given the rascal a lesson in manners. I like not these
+messengers from Mortimer; they always betide ill will to my
+father."</p>
+<p>Lady Chadgrove looked anxious for a moment, but her brow soon
+cleared as she made answer: "I shall be sorry if aught comes to
+grieve or vex your father; but so long as we are careful to give no
+just cause for offence, we need not trouble our heads overmuch as
+to the jealous anger of the Lord of Mortimer. I misdoubt me if he
+can really hurt us, be he never so vindictive. The king is just,
+and he values the services of your father. He will not permit him
+to be molested without cause. And methinks my Lord of Mortimer
+knows as much, else he would have wrought us more ill all these
+past years."</p>
+<p>"He is a tyrant and an evil liver!" cried Bertram hotly; "and
+his servants be drunken, brawling knaves, every one--as insolent as
+their master. If I had been old Ralph, I would have hurled back his
+missive in his face, and bidden him deliver it rightly."</p>
+<p>"Nay, nay, my son; that would but be to stir up strife. If
+others comport themselves ill, that is no reason why our servants
+should do the like. I would never give a foe a handle against me by
+the ill behaviour of even a serving man. Let them act never so
+surlily, I would that they were treated with all due courtesy."</p>
+<p>Bertram and Julian hardly entered into their mother's feelings
+on this point; but Edred looked up eagerly, and it was plain that
+he understood the feelings which prompted the words, for he said in
+a low voice:</p>
+<p>"Methinks thou art right, gentle mother; albeit I did sorely
+long to give the varlet a lesson to teach him better. But perchance
+it was well I was not nigh enough. Surely it must be nigh upon the
+hour for dinner. Our sport has whet the edge of appetite, and I
+would fain hear what the missive was which yon knave brought with
+him. Our father will doubtless tell us at the table."</p>
+<p>It was indeed nearly noon, and mistress and maids alike
+relinquished their tasks to prepare for the meal which was the
+chiefest of the day, though the supper was nothing to be
+despised.</p>
+<p>The long table in the great banqueting hall was a goodly sight
+to see when the dinner was spread, and the retainers of the better
+sort and some amongst the upper servants sat down with the master
+and his family to partake of the good cheer. At one end of the long
+board sat the knight and his lady side by side; to their right were
+the three boys, the young monk, and Warbel the armourer, who now
+held a post of some importance in the house. Opposite to these were
+other gentlemen-at-arms and their sons, who were resident at Chad;
+and at the lower end of the table, below the great silver salt
+cellars, sat the seneschal, the lowlier retainers, and certain
+trusted servants who held responsible positions at Chad. The cooks
+and scullions and underlings dined in the great kitchen immediately
+after their masters' meal had been served.</p>
+<p>The table at Chad always groaned with good things, except at
+such seasons as the Church decreed a fast, and then the diet was
+scrupulously kept within the prescribed bounds. Sir Oliver and his
+wife were both devout and earnest people, and had every reverence
+for their spiritual superiors. The Benedictine Priory of Chadwater
+stood only a mile and a half distant, and the prior was on
+excellent terms with the owner of Chad. Brother Emmanuel had been
+an inmate of the priory before he was selected by Sir Oliver for
+the education of his sons. He was considered a youth of no small
+promise, and the knight was well pleased at the progress made by
+his boys since they had been studying with him.</p>
+<p>Today there was a look of annoyance upon the handsome face of
+Sir Oliver Chadgrove. It was a striking countenance at all times,
+in which sternness of purpose and kindness of heart were blended in
+a fashion that was both attractive and unusual. He had the same
+regular features, rather square in the outline, which he had
+transmitted to his children; and his hair, which was now silvered
+with many streaks, had been raven black in its day. His carriage
+was upright and fearless, and he was very tall and powerfully
+proportioned. It was Bertram's keenest ambition to grow up in all
+points like his father, and he copied him, consciously and
+unconsciously, in a fashion that often raised a smile on his
+mother's face.</p>
+<p>"I have been favoured with another insolent letter from my Lord
+of Mortimer," he said. "He had better take heed that he try not my
+patience too far, and that I go not to the king and lay a complaint
+before him. I will do so if I be much more troubled."</p>
+<p>"What says he now, father?" asked Bertram eagerly, forgetting in
+his eagerness the generally observed maxim that the sons spoke not
+at table till they were directly addressed. But the knight did not
+himself heed this breach of decorum.</p>
+<p>"It is the same old story; but every year he grows more grasping
+and more insolent. Today he complains, forsooth, that the last buck
+we killed was killed on his ground, and by rights belonged to him.
+He threatens that his foresters and huntsmen will wage war with us
+in future if we 'trespass' upon his rights, and wrest our spoil
+from us! Beshrew me if I submit to much more! Patience and
+forbearance are useless with such a man. I would I had not conceded
+all I have done in the interests of peace."</p>
+<p>Bertram's face was crimson with anger, Edred's eyes had widened
+in astonishment, whilst Julian burst out in indignant remonstrance
+and argument.</p>
+<p>"His ground! his rights! How can he dare say that? Why, the buck
+was killed at Juno's Pool; and all the world knows that that is
+within the confines of Chad, and that all forest rights there
+belong to the Lord of Chad! I would I could force his false words
+down his false throat! I would I could--" but the boy suddenly
+ceased, because he caught his mother's warning eye upon him, and
+saw that his father had opened his lips to speak.</p>
+<p>"Ay, and he knows it himself as well as we do; but he is growing
+bolder and bolder through that monstrous claim he is ever
+threatening to push--the claim of his son-in-law to be rightful
+Lord of Chad! Phew! he will find it hard to prove that claim, or to
+oust the present lord. But Mortimer has money and to spare, and
+Chad has long been to him what Naboth's vineyard was to King
+Ahab--</p>
+<p>"Brother Emmanuel, that simile is thine, and a right good one,
+too.</p>
+<p>"He will seize on any pretext to pick a quarrel; and if he
+dares, he will push that quarrel at the point of the sword. I do
+not fear him; I have the right on my side. But we may not blind
+ourselves to this: that he is a right bitter and treacherous foe,
+and that should we give any, even the smallest cause of suspicion
+or offence, he would seize upon that to ruin us."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver looked keenly round the table at all assembled there,
+and many knew better than his sons what was in his mind at the time
+and what had caused him to speak thus.</p>
+<p>For a long while now the leaven of Lollardism had been working
+silently in the country, and there were very many even amongst
+orthodox sons of the Church who were more or less "bitten" by some
+of the new notions. It need hardly be said that wherever light is,
+it will penetrate in a mysterious and often inexplicable fashion;
+and although there was much extravagance and perversion in the
+teachings of the advanced Lollards, there was undoubtedly amongst
+them a far clearer and purer light than existed in the hearts of
+those of the common people who had been brought up beneath the sway
+of the priests, themselves so often ignorant and ill-living
+men.</p>
+<p>And so the light gradually spread; and many who would have
+repudiated the name of Lollard with scorn and loathing were
+beginning to hold some of their tenets, and to wish for a simpler
+and purer form of faith, and for liberty to study the Scriptures
+for themselves; and no one knew better the leavening spirit of the
+age than did Sir Oliver Chadgrove, himself a man of liberal views
+and devout habit of mind, and his wife, who shared his every
+thought and opinion.</p>
+<p>They had both heard the stirring and enlightened preaching of
+Dean Colet, and were great admirers of his; but they took the view
+that that divine himself held--namely, that the Church would
+gradually reform herself from within; that she was awakening to the
+need of some reformation and advance; and that her sons were safe
+within her fold, and must patiently await her own work there.</p>
+<p>This was exactly the feeling of the knight and his lady. They
+rejoiced in the words they had heard, and in the wider knowledge of
+the Scriptures which had been thus unfolded; but that any such
+doctrine, when preached and taught by the Lollard heretics, could
+be right or true they would have utterly denied and repudiated. The
+Lollards had won for themselves a bad name, and were thought of
+with scorn and contempt. Nevertheless, in country places the leaven
+of their teaching permeated far and wide, and Sir Oliver had more
+than once occasion to fear that amongst his own retainers some were
+slightly tainted by heresy.</p>
+<p>Of course if it could be proved against him that his followers
+were Lollards, his enemy might take terrible advantage and deal him
+a heavy blow. It was the one charge which if proved would strike
+him to the earth; even the king's favour would scarce serve him
+then. The king would not stand up in opposition to the Church; and
+if the Church condemned his house as <span lang="en-US" xml:lang=
+"en-US">being</span> a harbouring place for heretics, then indeed
+he would be undone.</p>
+<p>It was this thing which was in his mind as he glanced with keen
+eyes round his table on this bright midsummer day; and his wife,
+and the monk, and the bulk of those sitting there read the true
+meaning of his words and of his look, and recognized the truth of
+the grave word of warning.</p>
+<h2><a name="ChapterIII" id="ChapterIII">Chapter III</a>: Brother
+Emmanuel.</h2>
+<p>The hush of a Sabbath was upon the land. The sounds of life and
+industry were no longer heard around Chad. Within and without the
+house a calm stillness prevailed, and the hot summer sunshine lay
+broad upon the quiet fields and the garden upon which so much
+loving care had of late years been spent.</p>
+<p>The white and red roses, no longer the symbols of party strife,
+were blooming in their midsummer glory. The air was sweet with
+their fragrance, and bees hummed drowsily from flower to flower. In
+the deep shadow cast by a huge cedar tree, that reared its stately
+head as high as the battlements of the turret, a small group had
+gathered this hot afternoon. The young monk was there in the black
+cassock, hood, and girdle that formed the usual dress of the
+Benedictine in this country, and around him were grouped his three
+pupils, to whom he was reading out of the great Latin Bible that
+was one of the treasures of Sir Oliver's library.</p>
+<p>All the boys were Latin scholars, and had made much progress in
+their knowledge of that language since the advent of the young monk
+into the household. They had likewise greatly increased in their
+knowledge of the Scriptures; for Brother Emmanuel was a sound
+believer in the doctrine preached by the Dean of St. Paul's, and of
+the maxims laid down by him--that the Scriptures were not to be
+pulled to fragments, and each fragment explained without reference
+to the context, but to be studied and examined as a whole, and so
+explained, one portion illuminating and illustrating another. After
+such a fashion had Brother Emmanuel long been studying the Word of
+God, and after such a method did he explain it to his pupils.</p>
+<p>All three boys were possessed of clear heads and quick
+intelligence, and their minds had expanded beneath the influence of
+the young monk's teaching. They all loved a quiet hour spent with
+him in reading and expounding the Bible narrative, and today a
+larger portion than usual had been read; for the heat made exertion
+unwelcome even to the active lads, and it was pleasanter here
+beneath the cedar tree than anywhere else besides.</p>
+<p>"Now, I would fain know," began Julian, after a pause in the
+reading, "why it is that it is thought such a vile thing for men to
+possess copies of God's Word in their own tongue that they may read
+it to themselves. It seems to me that men would be better and not
+worse for knowing the will of God in all things; and here it is set
+down clearly for every man to understand. Yet, if I understand not
+amiss, it is made a cause of death for any to possess the
+Scriptures in his own tongue."</p>
+<p>"Yea, that is what the heretic Lollards do--read and expound the
+Scriptures in the vulgar tongue and after their own fashion," said
+Bertram. "Have a care, Julian, how thou seemest to approve their
+methods; for there is a great determination in high places to put
+down at once and for all the vile doctrines which are corrupting
+all the land."</p>
+<p>"I approve no heresy," cried Julian eagerly. "I do but ask why
+it be heresy to read the Word of God, and to have in possession a
+portion of it in the language of one's country."</p>
+<p>"Marry, dost thou not know that one reason is the many errors
+the translators have fallen into, which deceive the unwary and lead
+the flock astray?" cried Edred eagerly. "Brother Emmanuel has told
+me some amongst these, and there are doubtless many others of which
+he may not have heard. A man may not drink with impunity of
+poisoned waters; neither is it safe to take as the Word of God a
+book which may have many perversions of His truth."</p>
+<p>Edred looked up at Brother Emmanuel for confirmation of this
+explanation. It was the monk's habit to encourage the boys to
+discuss any question of interest freely amongst themselves, he
+listening in silence the while, and later on giving them the
+benefit of his opinion. All the three turned to him now to see what
+he would say upon a point that was already agitating the country,
+and was preparing the way for a shaking that should lead to an
+altogether new state of existence both in Church and State. Even
+out here in the garden, in the sanctuary of their own home, with
+only their friend and spiritual pastor to hear them, the boys spoke
+with bated breath, as though fearful of uttering words which might
+have within them some germ of that dreaded sin of heresy.</p>
+<p>As for Brother Emmanuel, he sat with his hands folded in his
+sleeves, the great book upon his knees, a slight and thoughtful
+smile playing around the corners of his finely-cut mouth. His whole
+face was intensely spiritual in expression. The features were
+delicately cut, and bore the impress of an ascetic life, as well as
+of gentle birth and noble blood. He was, in fact, a scion of an
+ancient and powerful house; but it was one of those houses that had
+suffered sorely in the recent strife, and whose members had been
+scattered and cut off. He had no powerful relatives and friends to
+turn to now for promotion to rich benefice or high ecclesiastical
+preferment, and he had certainly never lamented this fact. In heart
+and soul he was a follower of the rules of poverty laid down by the
+founder of his order, and would have thought himself untrue to his
+calling had he suffered himself to be endowed with worldly wealth.
+Even such moneys as he received from Sir Oliver for the instruction
+given to his sons were never kept by himself. All were given either
+to the poor by his hands direct, or placed at the disposal of the
+Prior of Chadwater, where he had been an inmate for a short time
+previous to his installation as chaplain at Chad. He had not sought
+this office; he would rather have remained beneath the priory
+walls. He thought that it was something contrary to the will of the
+founders for monks to become parochial priests, or to hold offices
+and benefices which took them from the shelter of their monastery
+walls. But such things were of daily occurrence now, and were
+causing bitter jealousy to arise betwixt the parochial clergy and
+the monks, sowing seeds of strife which played a considerable part
+in the struggle this same century was to see. But it was useless to
+try to stem the current single-handed, and the rule of obedience
+was as strong within him as that of poverty and chastity.</p>
+<p>When sent forth by his prior (who secretly thought that this
+young monk was too strict and ascetic and too keen-witted to be a
+safe inmate of a house which had long fallen from its high estate,
+and was becoming luxurious and wealthy and lax), he had gone
+unmurmuringly to Chad, and since then had become so much interested
+in his pupils and in his round of daily duties there that he had
+not greatly missed the life of the cloister.</p>
+<p>He had leisure for thought and for study. He had access to a
+library which, although not large, held many treasures of book
+making, and was sufficient for the requirements of the young monk.
+He could keep the hours of the Church in the little chantry
+attached to the house, and he was taken out of the atmosphere of
+jealousy and bickering which, to his own great astonishment and
+dismay, he had found to be the prevailing one at Chadwater.</p>
+<p>On the whole, he had benefited by the change, and was very happy
+in his daily duties. He rejoiced to watch the unfolding minds of
+his three pupils, and especially to train Edred for the life of the
+cloister, to which already he had been partially dedicated, and
+towards which he seemed to incline.</p>
+<p>And now, eagerly questioned by the boys upon that vexed point of
+the translated Scriptures and their possession by the common
+people, he looked thoughtfully out before him, and gave his answer
+in his own poetic fashion.</p>
+<p>"The Word of God, my children, is as a fountain of life. Those
+who drink of it drink immortality and joy and peace passing all
+understanding. The Saviour of mankind--Himself the Word of God--has
+given Himself freely, that all men may come to Him, and, drinking
+of the living water, may find within their hearts a living fountain
+which shall cause that they never thirst again. But the question
+before us is not whether men shall drink of this fountain--we know
+that they must do so to live--but how they shall drink of it; how
+and in what manner the waters of life shall be dispensed to
+them."</p>
+<p>The boys fixed their eyes eagerly upon him. Julian nodded his
+head, and Edred's eyes grew deep with the intensity of his wish to
+follow the workings of the mind of his instructor.</p>
+<p>"For that we must look back to the days of our Lord, when He was
+here upon earth. HOW did He give forth the Word of Life? How did He
+rule that it was from that time forward to be given to men?"</p>
+<p>"He preached to the people who came to Him," answered Edred,
+"and He directed His apostles and disciples to do likewise--to go
+forth into all lands and preach the gospel to every creature."</p>
+<p>"Just so," answered Brother Emmanuel, with an other of his
+slight peculiar smiles. "In other words, he intrusted the
+Word--Himself, the news of Himself--to a living ministry, to men,
+that through the mouths of His apostles and those disciples who had
+received regular instruction from Him and from them the world might
+be enlightened with the truth."</p>
+<p>The boys listened eagerly, with mute attention.</p>
+<p>"Go on," said Edred breathlessly. "Prithee tell us more."</p>
+<p>"Our blessed Lord and Master laid no charge upon His apostles to
+write of Him--to send forth into the world a written testimony. We
+know that the inspired Word is written from end to end by the will
+of God. It was necessary for the preservation of the truth in its
+purity that its doctrines should be thus set down--that there
+should be in existence some standard by which in generations to
+come the learned ones of the earth might be able to judge of the
+purity of the doctrines preached, and refute heresies and errors
+that might and would creep in; but it was to men, to a living
+ministry, that our Saviour intrusted the precious truths of His
+gospel, and to a living ministry men should look to have those
+truths unfolded."</p>
+<p>"I see that point," cried Edred eagerly. "I had never thought of
+it quite in that way before. Does it so state the matter anywhere
+in the Holy Book? I love to gather the truth from its pages. Thou
+hast not told us that we are wrong in that."</p>
+<p>"Nay, under guidance all men should seek to those holy truths;
+but will they find the priceless jewel if they seek it without
+those aids our blessed Lord Himself has appointed? Wouldst thou
+know more of His will in this matter? Then thou shalt."</p>
+<p>The monk turned the leaves of the book awhile, and then paused
+at an open page.</p>
+<p>"On earth, as we have seen, the blessed Saviour intrusted His
+truth to the care of chosen men. Now let us see how He acted when,
+ascended into the heavens, He looked down upon earth, and directed
+from thence the affairs of this world. Did He then ordain that a
+written testimony was to be prepared and sent forth into all lands?
+No. What we learn then is that when He ascended into the heavens
+and received and gave gifts to men, He gave to them apostles,
+prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers--a living ministry
+again, a fourfold living ministry--that by this living ministry,
+surely typified in the vision of St. John by the four living
+creatures with the fourfold head, the saints were to be perfected,
+the unity of the faith preserved, and the body of Christ edified
+and kept in its full growth and perfection till He come Himself to
+claim the Bride."</p>
+<p>Edred's eyes were full of vivid intelligence. He followed in the
+Latin tongue the words as Brother Emmanuel spoke them, and looking
+up he asked wistfully:</p>
+<p>"But where are they now, the apostles and prophets, the
+evangelists and pastors? Have we got them with us yet?"</p>
+<p>"We have at least the semblance of them; doubtless but for our
+own sins and shortcomings we should have a fuller ministry--a
+fuller outpouring of the water of life through those four God-given
+channels by which the Church is to be fed. We have the apostolic
+office ever in exercise in our spiritual head at Rome. St. Peter
+has left us a successor, and his throne shall never be empty so
+long as the world lasts. Now and again the prophetic fire bursts
+forth in some holy man who has fasted and prayed until the veil
+betwixt the seen and the unseen has grown thin. Would to God there
+was more light of prophecy in the earth! Perchance in His grace and
+mercy He will outpour His Spirit once again upon the earth, and
+gather about his Holiness a band of men lighted by fire from above.
+In our wandering friars, ever going forth to the people with the
+word of the gospel, we have the office of evangelist in exercise;
+and the priest who guides the flock and dwells in the midst of the
+people of the land, surely he is the pastor, the keeper of the
+sheep. And thus we see that our blessed Saviour's gifts to men have
+been preserved all through these long centuries, and are still
+amongst us in greater or less degree; and we can well understand
+that having given us these channels, by which His vineyard is to be
+watered, by which the living waters are to flow forth, it is not
+His will that every man should be his own evangelist or pastor,
+feeding himself at will, drinking, perhaps to surfeit, of the
+precious waters which should be conveyed to him through the
+appointed channel, but that he should be under dutiful obedience
+and submission, and that thus and thus only may unity and peace be
+preserved, and the body grow together into its perfect stature and
+<span lang="en-GB" xml:lang="en-GB">fullness.</span>"</p>
+<p>"I see all that exactly," cried Bertram, "and I will strive to
+keep it in mind. I mislike the very name of Lollard, and I well
+know that they be a mischievous and pernicious brood, whom it were
+well to see exterminated root and branch. Yet no man can fail to
+see that they love the Scriptures, and I felt they were in the
+right there. Now I well see that they may love the Word as much as
+they will, but that they must still seek to be taught and fed by
+those who are over them in the Church, and not seek to eat and
+drink (in the spiritual sense of the word) at their own will and
+pleasure. That is truly what the Church has ever taught, but I
+never heard it so clearly explained before.</p>
+<p>"Come, Julian; the sun is losing much of its power now. Let us
+stroll along the margin of the stream, and see where best we may
+fish upon the morrow.</p>
+<p>"Edred, wilt thou come? No; I thought not. Thou art half a monk
+already. We will leave thee with Brother Emmanuel to talk more on
+these hard matters. I have heard enough to satisfy me, I shall
+never want to turn Lollard now. The name was always enough, but now
+I see more and more clearly how wrong-headed and wilful they
+be."</p>
+<p>Julian, too, had got an answer that completely satisfied him,
+and he readily rose to go with his brother. Those two found an hour
+or two of thought and study as much at a time as they cared for.
+They called their dogs and sallied forth over the fields towards
+the shady, well-fringed river banks, and Brother Emmanuel was left
+alone with his second pupil, Edred, whose eyes were still fixed
+upon the black lettering of the great Bible open at the last
+passage under discussion.</p>
+<p>The monk bent an earnest glance upon the boy's face. He saw that
+an argument which had completely satisfied the other two had not
+satisfied this other keener mind. But he asked no questions,
+leaving the boy to speak or not as he chose. These were days in
+which too much questioning was a dangerous thing. Many men felt as
+though they were treading the crust of a volcano, and that a single
+unwary step might plunge them headlong into the burning gulf.</p>
+<p>When even such a man as Bishop Peacock had been threatened with
+the stake, and sent into perpetual imprisonment, even after having
+"recanted" his errors, no wonder that all men holding broad or
+enlightened opinions trembled for themselves. And yet, as thought
+will not be bound, and the young are ever the most ardent in the
+pursuit of truth, and the most impatient under the yoke of fetters
+unwillingly worn, so neither this young monk nor his still more
+youthful companion could be content to drift on without looking
+into the stirring questions of the day for themselves.</p>
+<p>Edred's mind at this moment was working rapidly and following up
+a train of thought as fascinating as it was new. He suddenly turned
+back to the very beginning of the book, and began reading to
+himself some words he found there. Presently he looked up quickly
+into his instructor's face.</p>
+<p>"Thy words about four channels put me in mind of the four
+streams we read of in the beginning, that watered the garden of the
+Lord. It seemed to me as if perchance there was some connection
+betwixt them--that the Lord's plan has ever been the same. Surely
+He led forth the children of Israel through the wilderness beneath
+four standards. And here the four streams are all given. But we
+hear no more of any of them later, do we, save the river Euphrates.
+Out of the four three seem to have been lost," and the boy raised
+his eyes with a perplexed expression and looked earnestly at his
+teacher.</p>
+<p>Between those two existed one of those keen bonds of sympathy
+that often enable persons to communicate their thoughts without the
+medium of words. In a moment the monk had read what was in the
+boy's mind, and in a fashion he answered as though Edred had
+spoken.</p>
+<p>"Thou thinkest that even as some of God's watering rivers ran
+dry, so some of His channels of grace, whereby He meant all men to
+be replenished with heavenly light and grace, may perchance have
+become choked and useless. Is not that thy thought, my son?"</p>
+<p>"My father, is it sin thus to think?" asked Edred, almost
+beneath his breath. "I cannot shut mine eyes and mine ears. I have
+heard whispers of terrible corruption in high places even at Rome
+itself. I try not to hear or to think too much, but I cannot help
+my burning desire to know more of what passes in the world. It was
+but a short year ago that a godly man coming from foreign lands
+told us fearful tales of the corruption even of the papal court. O
+my father, I fear to whisper it even to thee; but I cannot but ask
+in my heart, can the popes be truly apostles? And if not, can we
+say that the channel of grace once given to men is open yet for us
+to drink from? Ah, pardon me if I err! I will do penance for my
+evil thoughts. But where may we find now those four life-giving
+streams by which Christ purposed to keep His body, the Church,
+nourished and sustained? Prophets there be none, save here and
+there a spark of the old fire. Those travelling friars are
+sometimes holy men; but, alas! they are bitter foes of the very
+Church from which they profess to be sent out, and are oft laid
+under the papal ban. We have our pastor priests; but do they feed
+the flock? O my father, how can I walk with closed eyes through
+this world of sin and strife? If the channels run dry, if the
+pastors refuse food to the hungry people, can it be sin if they
+strive to feed themselves, even though they be something too
+ignorant to do it wisely and well?"</p>
+<p>A very grave, thoughtful, and austere look was stamped upon the
+face towards which Edred directed his gaze. It was long before he
+received any answer, and then it was but a sorrowful one.</p>
+<p>"My son, I will not blame thee for these thoughts, albeit they
+be charged with peril in these days. It is human nature thus to
+question and thus to doubt. We may not blind our eyes, though we
+must ever strive to chasten our hearts, that we fall not into the
+condemnation of those who speak evil of dignities, and bring a
+railing accusation against those set over them. I, too, have had my
+period of storm-tossed doubts and fears; but I have learned to fix
+mine eyes upon the Holy One of Israel, who never slumbers nor
+sleeps--upon the crucified Saviour, who has suffered that death of
+agony and shame that He may draw <span lang="en-US" xml:lang=
+"en-US">all</span> men unto Himself. How He will do it I know not.
+How He will open up again the closed channels, and make ready His
+Church to meet Him and receive Him, I can not even conjecture. But
+His word cannot fail; and in His own appointed time, and in His own
+appointed way, I verily believe that He will draw unto Himself all
+men who have ever called upon His name, and all those unto whom His
+name has never been proclaimed, and who, therefore, have never
+rejected Him. In that hope and that belief I try to rest; and
+fixing my eyes and thoughts upon Him and Him alone, I strive to
+forget the chaos and the strife of earth, and to look upon all men
+as brothers in Christ, if they will but bow the knee at that thrice
+holy name."</p>
+<p>Edred looked at him with wide-open eyes.</p>
+<p>"Heretics call upon the name of Jesus. Thinkest thou that
+heretics will be saved? I thought they were doomed to hellfire
+forever!"</p>
+<p>The boy spoke in a voice that was little more than a whisper. He
+was almost afraid to hear the answer, lest it should convey a germ
+of the dreaded heresy, and yet how eager he was to know what
+Brother Emmanuel really thought.</p>
+<p>"It is not for me to say who will and who will not be saved," he
+said, slowly and thoughtfully; "and we are expressly told that
+there will be punishment for those who fall away from the faith.
+Yet we are not told that error will be punished with everlasting
+death. And there be places in Holy Scripture which tell us that
+'whoso believeth and is baptized shall be saved;' and heretics
+believe that Christ died for the world. It says, again, that those
+who love the Lord are born of God; and shall they perish
+everlastingly? My son, the mercies of God are very great; from end
+to end of this book we are told that. Knowing so much, need we ask
+more? With Him rests the judgment of all mankind. He alone can read
+the heart. Let that thought be enough for us. Whether the sin of
+heresy is as vile in His eyes as in those of man, He alone knows;
+we do not. Let us strive for our own part to keep the unity of the
+faith in the bond of peace, and leave all else to Him."</p>
+<p>As he spoke, Brother Emmanuel gently closed the book, as though
+to close the discussion likewise; and Edred, looking up and round
+about him, drawing a long breath meantime, suddenly gave a start,
+which attracted the attention of his preceptor.</p>
+<p>A short distance away--how he had got there neither of the pair
+knew; they had been too much engrossed in their talk to take much
+heed of external impressions--was an elderly monk, clad in the same
+gown and hood as Brother Emmanuel, betokening that he too was of
+the Benedictine order; and his face, shrouded in its cowl, was
+turned towards the pair with a very peculiar expression upon it. A
+sinister smile was in the narrow beady eyes; the features, which
+were coarse and somewhat bloated from luxurious living, were set in
+a look of ill-concealed malice; and the salutation addressed to the
+pair when he saw himself perceived had in it something of an
+incongruous sound.</p>
+<p>"<i>Pax vobiscum</i>!" said the newcomer, lifting his hand as if
+to impart a blessing.</p>
+<p>Edred instinctively bent the knee, but Brother Emmanuel's face
+did not move a muscle.</p>
+<p>"Hast thou come with a message for me from the reverend father?"
+he asked quietly.</p>
+<p>"Nay, not for thee. My message was to Sir Oliver; but I will
+report to the father how excellently I found thee
+employed--training thy pupils in all godliness and honesty, and in
+that hatred of heresy which it behoves all true sons of the Church
+to cherish."</p>
+<p>There was a spiteful gleam in the man's eyes as he spoke these
+words that made Edred shiver; but the calm regard of the younger
+monk did not waver.</p>
+<p>"I have taught him nothing but what I have heard our good Dean
+of St. Paul's speak before princes and prelates in the pulpit,"
+answered Brother Emmanuel, not pretending to misunderstand the
+innuendo conveyed. "Methinks it would profit many of our brothers
+in country places to hear what is being thought and taught in
+Oxford and London, in all the great centres of the country. The
+reverend father knows well what I hold and what I teach."</p>
+<p>So clear and steadfast was the light in the young monk's eyes,
+that the regard of the other fell before it. He made a gesture, as
+if to repudiate the defence as a thing quite superfluous.</p>
+<p>"The piety and orthodoxy of Brother Emmanuel are known far and
+wide," he answered, in a tone that was half cringing, half
+spiteful; "no truer son of the Church than he lives in all the
+land."</p>
+<p>And then with another salutation he turned and glided away in
+the lengthening shadows, whilst Edred turned to Brother Emmanuel
+with rather a scared face, and asked:</p>
+<p>"Dost think he heard what we were saying?"</p>
+<p>"Belike he caught a phrase or two," was the answer, spoken
+gravely but quite calmly. "I would not speak words of which I am
+ashamed; at the same time, it is well in these perilous days to use
+all caution, for an enemy can well distort and magnify the words he
+hears, till they sound like rank heresy. For myself I have no fear.
+I prize not my life greatly, though to die as a heretic, cut off
+from the Church of Christ, is a fearful thing to think of. Yet even
+that might be better than denying the truth--if indeed one believes
+the truth to lie without, which assuredly I do not. But thou, my
+son, would do well to think something less of these matters. Thou
+art but a child in years, and--"</p>
+<p>"I am quickly rising to man's estate," answered the boy, rather
+impetuously, "and my thoughts will not be chained. I must give them
+liberty to rove where they will. All men are talking and thinking
+of these things, and wherefore not I? But, Brother Emmanuel, tell
+me, who was yon black-browed brother? Methinks I have seen his face
+before; but beneath the cowl many faces look alike. Who was he? and
+wherefore looked he so askance at thee?"</p>
+<p>"Brother Fabian loves me not," answered the monk with a slight
+smile. "I scarce know how it began; it seemed to commence from the
+day I entered the priory. I had looked to find things there
+somewhat different. Perchance I spoke more than I should, being
+young and ardent, and fresh from places where a different order
+reigned. Brother Fabian holds various offices in the priory. He
+liked not my words. Methinks he has never forgotten or forgiven. He
+has always sour looks for me, and ofttimes sneering words. But I
+heed them not greatly; they do not touch me near."</p>
+<p>Edred was looking straight out before him, with a gaze in which
+there was much of shrinking and surprise.</p>
+<p>"Brothers in the same monastery at enmity one with the other!"
+he said slowly, grasping more than had been spoken, with that quick
+intuition which existed between tutor and pupil. "Some, leading
+lives of luxury, indignant with those who would protest against
+them. Brother Emmanuel, my father, my friend, when these things
+come before me, I turn with loathing from the thought of entering
+the life of the cloister; and yet how I long to give myself wholly
+to the cause of God! How can I judge? how can I choose aright?"</p>
+<p>"Thou must not try to choose," answered the young monk, with a
+touch of austerity in his tone; "thou must await that leading and
+that guiding which never fail those who truly wait upon the blessed
+Son of God, and strive to do not their will but the will of Him who
+pleased not Himself. At the foot of His Cross--before the altar,
+where His precious body and blood are ever abiding in memorial of
+His one sacrifice for sin--there is the place to seek grace and
+guidance; there is the place where peace may be found. Because man
+is frail, shall we despise the ordinances of God? Because men are
+able to make (if such be their will) a hell upon earth even of holy
+places, is that any reason why we shall think scorn of those
+sanctuaries, provided by the merciful goodness of God, where men
+may flee for shelter from the world, and lead a life of devotion
+and fasting and prayer? My son, beware of the manifold snares of
+the devil. The young are ever ready to condemn and to revolt. It is
+the nature of the unchastened will of man. Be patient, and watch
+unto prayer. The day will surely come when (if thou wilt but listen
+for it) the voice will speak in thine heart, and tell thee what
+thou art called upon to do, even as it spoke in mine, and called me
+from the snares and enticements of the world to the haven of the
+cloister. I know not yet what my work in this world will be; but it
+is enough that my Lord and Master knows. I am here, abiding in my
+place and awaiting my call. May He grant that whensoever and
+howsoever that call may come, I may hear it and be ready for it,
+and may follow the guiding voice even to the end."</p>
+<p>A rapt look was in the dark eyes. Edred caught the enthusiasm of
+that look, and half unconsciously sank down upon his knee.</p>
+<p>"Bless me, even me also, O my father!" he cried, scarce knowing
+what words he chose; and the thin, strong hand was laid upon his
+head.</p>
+<p>"God be with thee and bless thee, my son," said the monk, in
+grave, steadfast tones; "and may He be thy guide and thy portion
+henceforth and forever. May He show thee the way in which He would
+have thee to go, and give thee grace and strength to follow it unto
+the end."</p>
+<p>For a moment deep silence prevailed. Both were rapidly reviewing
+the words that day spoken, and the thoughts suggested by the bare
+discussion of such subjects; and Edred, rising and looking with a
+strange smile into the monk's face, said softly:</p>
+<p>"Methinks it would not be hard to die in a righteous cause; but
+to be hunted to death through the spite and malice of a treacherous
+foe, that would be an evil fate. I would fight with the best member
+I possess against such an one, were he to be mine own enemy or
+thine."</p>
+<p>A smile crossed Brother Emmanuel's face.</p>
+<p>"Go to, boy! thou art more soldier than monk yet. Methinks thou
+wouldst fight bravely and well in a good cause. Perchance that
+would be the best and happiest lot for thee--</p>
+<p>"There be thy brothers coming up from the water. Go join them,
+and think not too much for thy years. Be a youth as long as thou
+mayest. Manhood's cares will come all too fast."</p>
+<p>With that he turned and went quietly towards the house, whilst
+Edred went forth to meet his brothers.</p>
+<h2><a name="ChapterIV" id="ChapterIV">Chapter IV</a>: The
+Travelling Preacher.</h2>
+<p>Perhaps it was the memory of those spiteful and malicious
+glances bent upon his preceptor by Brother Fabian that suggested to
+Edred upon the day following to pay a visit to the secret chamber
+that had once before so well sheltered a helpless fugitive.</p>
+<p>The secret of that chamber still remained with the three boys
+and their faithful esquire, Warbel. To no other living soul in the
+house had any of these four ever named the matter. The boys might
+not have been able to give any reason for this reticence towards
+their parents, but the fact remained that they had never revealed
+the secret to them, and that although tradition still spoke of a
+cleverly-masked chamber somewhere at Chad, it was now popularly
+supposed to have been in that part of the house which had boon
+demolished during the Wars of the Roses. Children did not chatter
+to their parents in days of old as they do now. They might love
+them never so well, but they held them in reverence and even in
+awe. They were silent in their presence, as a rule, unless spoken
+to first, and the habit of conversational intimacy did not grow up
+until a much later period in their lives. Thus the adventures of
+Warbel, and his strange midnight visit to their bedchamber, had
+never been told to Sir Oliver or his wife. All they knew was that
+the man had taken refuge from the anger of the Lord of Mortimer in
+one of their woodmen's huts. They were glad to give him shelter and
+employment at Chad, and had never regretted the hospitality
+extended to him; for he had proved the most faithful of servants,
+and his devotion to the boys was so great that they could be
+trusted anywhere in his keeping.</p>
+<p>As for the anger of his proud neighbour, Sir Oliver had made
+light of that. The Lord of Mortimer could not make any thing out of
+so small a matter, and at that time had other more weighty affairs
+on hand. Warbel's stories to his fellows of the harshness and
+tyrannical rule at Mortimer made his own servants more loyal and
+stanch than ever. Chad was a peaceable and happy abode for all its
+inmates, and the need for secret hiding places had so far never
+arisen.</p>
+<p>The boys in years gone by had almost regretted this fact. They
+had pictured so vividly how they would hide their father or some
+friend of his in this secret chamber, should peril menace them from
+any quarter, that it had seemed sometimes almost a pity that so
+secure a hiding place should be of so little use, when it might
+have done such excellent service had the need arisen.</p>
+<p>However, as years sped by and the lads began to know more of
+life, they ceased to regret that the secret chamber remained
+without an occupant. From time to time they visited it, swept out
+the dust and cobwebs that had accumulated there, and bit by bit
+collected a few more odds and ends of furniture, so that the place
+now wore a look of greater comfort and habitation than it had done
+when they saw it first.</p>
+<p>Once when Edred had been laid up by an accident to his foot, he
+had amused himself by making a number of feather pillows from the
+feathers of the birds his brothers shot and brought home to him.
+These feathers were dressed in the proper way by the boys
+themselves, and then made up into large pillows or cushions, which
+were then taken up to the secret chamber (at that time the
+favourite hobby of the boys), in order to make restful and
+comfortable the hard pallet bed, in case any fugitive were forced
+to take shelter there. In the same way had several rudely-made
+rugs, formed of the skins of wild bears taken in the woods, and
+tanned by the boys in a fashion of their own, found their way
+thither; and altogether the place had assumed an aspect of some
+comfort and even luxury, although it was now several years since
+any further additions had been made to its plenishings.</p>
+<p>Edred looked round the strange apartment with a thoughtful air
+as he emerged into it from the long, dark, twisting passage he had
+threaded with the security of one to whom every winding and turn
+was known. It was dim and dark there, but sufficient light filtered
+in through cracks and cleverly-contrived apertures to render it
+easy to move about; and when the eye grew used to the dimness,
+everything could be seen with pretty fair distinctness.</p>
+<p>"It would not be a bad hiding place," mused the boy, speaking
+half aloud. "Methinks over there one could even read without much
+trouble. Yes, without doubt one could; and that crack might be
+judiciously enlarged without any peril. It does but give upon the
+leads behind the main chimney stack, and the tiles would cover any
+aperture I made."</p>
+<p>He took out his large hunting knife from his girdle as he spoke,
+and worked away awhile in silence. Very soon he had considerably
+added to the amount of light in the strange room. He eyed his
+handiwork with considerable satisfaction.</p>
+<p>"That is better. It would be something gloomy to be shut up here
+without light enough to study by; but with books and food one might
+spend many a week here and not be overwhelmed with <span lang=
+"en-GB" xml:lang="en-GB">dullness.</span> The place is something
+straight, to be sure, and there is bare room for a tall man to
+stand upright."</p>
+<p>Edred drew himself to his full height, and found that his head
+did not quite reach the beams which formed the ceiling.</p>
+<p>"I trow Brother Emmanuel could just stand; he is not greatly
+taller than I. And he is marvellous contented with a very little,
+and has been used to passing days and weeks in the solitude of his
+cell. Sure this would not be to him an evil place. If he had but a
+book or two and the needful food, he would be vastly content.</p>
+<p>"I wonder if he can be in any sort of peril. I liked not the
+looks or the words of you malicious monk. Our father and mother
+often say that these be times when men must walk warily, and
+ofttimes they tell of godly men even in high places who have fallen
+into disgrace and been accused of fearful sins. It is not safe in
+these days to have for enemies those who are within the pale of the
+Church--monks and priors, men who are held up as examples and
+models of true faith and piety.</p>
+<p>"I know not whether they merit the praise men give to them.
+Methinks Brother Emmanuel could teach them many things both in
+precept and practice. But it is not for me to be the judge in such
+matters; yet if he were in any kind of peril, I would lay down my
+life to save him!"</p>
+<p>The boy's eyes kindled at the thought. He cherished for his
+preceptor an ardent and enthusiastic love, and he had his share of
+that chivalrous devotion and self-sacrifice which has been the
+brightest ornament of days that have much of darkness and cruelty
+to disgrace them.</p>
+<p>His face wore a very earnest look as he set about his homely
+task of cleaning and setting in order this secret chamber. He was
+more than two hours over his task, for he went through it with
+unwonted energy. The place looked almost tempting before he had
+done with it, and he looked about him with satisfied eyes at the
+close of his labours.</p>
+<p>There was a convenient spout, meant to carry off the rain water
+from the complex level of the old roof, which made an excellent
+substitute for a dust shoot. It could be got at from this place
+without difficulty, and Edred shot down his rubbish without any
+trouble through a funnel-like piece of wood he and his brothers had
+contrived for the purpose many years before. Then he stood quite
+still at the aperture whence the soft breeze came blowing in, lost
+in thought.</p>
+<p>"It doth get very hot here in the summer days," he remarked,
+"and in especial at this end of the room, where it abuts upon the
+leads. It is cooler yonder, but then it is also darker. The air and
+the light come in at this side, but so does the heat likewise. And
+how thirsty one gets, too! My throat is parched and dry. I mind me
+how poor Warbel suffered in like manner when he was here. Food
+could be brought in without trouble. I will amass even now by slow
+degrees some of those hard oaten cakes that keep good for weeks,
+and some salted venison that would last the winter through.</p>
+<p>"But water--how could that be brought? Suppose that we too were
+watched; suppose we dared not go through the secret door? What
+would become of the prisoner?</p>
+<p>"I must talk to Bertram and Julian about that. Bertram has a
+wonderful gift for getting out of such difficulties; he has a
+marvellous quick wit. We never thought in old days how the water
+was to be conveyed; we thought a few bottles of wine would last a
+lifetime. But to die of thirst would be worse than to face one's
+foes. I shall not really rest till I have thought how such a danger
+might be guarded against."</p>
+<p>Edred left the place with a thoughtful air. He gained their own
+long sleeping room without adventure. Nobody was ever there at this
+hour of the day, and he sat down on his bed to think and plan.</p>
+<p>There his brothers found him later when they came rushing up
+tumultuously to find him.</p>
+<p>"Ha! thou art there. We have been seeking thee everywhere. What
+hast thou been doing, brother?"</p>
+<p>"I have been up to the room," answered the boy. "I have been
+making it all ready. I was something disturbed by what chanced
+yester-afternoon. I told thee of Brother Fabian and his evil
+looks?"</p>
+<p>The other two nodded.</p>
+<p>"Yes, verily; but they be brothers of one fraternity. Surely one
+Benedictine would not hurt another?"</p>
+<p>"I know not that. I was talking this day with Warbel. He has
+been about in the world. He has seen priests and monks accused of
+heresy the one by the other; and none are so fearfully persecuted
+as those who wear the tonsure, if men do but suspect them of that
+sin.</p>
+<p>"Brother Emmanuel a heretic!" cried Bertram, with flashing eyes.
+"I would force the word down the false throat of any who dared to
+say so! Brother Emmanuel is a right holy man. Art thou mad, Edred,
+to think such a thing?"</p>
+<p>The boy shook his head doubtfully.</p>
+<p>"I would I were," he replied; "but methinks Brother Emmanuel
+himself thinks that peril may menace him. I understand not rightly
+these matters; but I saw that yesterday upon his face which showed
+me that he felt he stood something in peril, albeit he has no fear.
+He is not of the stuff of which cowards are made."</p>
+<p>Julian's eyes were wide with affright.</p>
+<p>"They say the Lollards and heretics are to be sought out and
+burned, and that right soon," he said, in low, awe-struck tones.
+"Some of our people heard it today from those at Mortimer. The Lord
+of Mortimer has become very zealous to help the priests and monks
+to scent out all suspected of heresy and make a great example of
+them.</p>
+<p>"Edred, thou dost not think they will take Brother
+Emmanuel--and--burn--him?"</p>
+<p>The last words were little more than a whisper.</p>
+<p>"I will die sooner than see it done!" cried the boy
+passionately. "But in these days no man may say who is safe.
+Therefore went I up to the chamber this very day to set it in
+order;" and then he told his brothers of the difficulty that had
+beset him there, and how he felt no security for any person in
+hiding there so long as the difficulty of conveying water to him
+remained so great.</p>
+<p>Bertram grasped the situation in a moment. He well knew that if
+any person were suspected of lying hidden in the house, a close
+watch might well be kept upon every member of the household, and
+that it might be hard indeed to pay more than a very occasional
+visit to the prisoner. If, for instance, suspicion were to fall
+upon the boys in this matter, it would be probable they would be
+placed under some restraint; they might be carried off to the
+priory and forced to do some penance there. It would never do for
+the prisoner to be entirely dependent upon them for supplies of the
+precious commodity; and yet what else was to be done?</p>
+<p>"I must think about it," cried Bertram. "I shall never rest till
+I have thought of some method. Would we had not left it so long! We
+have had all these years to make our plans, and we have never
+thought of this thing till trouble seems like to be at the very
+doors.</p>
+<p>"Still it may but be our fantasy. Neither Brother Emmanuel nor
+any other may need the shelter of this room. We will trust it may
+be so.</p>
+<p>"Yet I will cudgel my brains for a plan. It would be a fearful
+thing to know him to be shut up here, and yet to be unable to visit
+him with the necessaries of life. How poor Warbel drank when he
+issued forth that night. Methinks I see him now. One would have
+thought he had never tasted water before."</p>
+<p>"But we came not to talk of all this," interrupted Julian, who
+had been evincing a few signs of impatience latterly; "we came to
+tell of the fair held today and tomorrow at Chadwick. Our father
+says we may go thither tomorrow if we will. Warbel says they will
+bait a bull, and perhaps a bear; and that there will be fighting
+with the quarterstaff and shooting with cross and long bow, and
+many other like spectacles. He will attend us, and we may be off
+with the light of day, an we will. That is what we came to tell
+thee, Edred."</p>
+<p>Edred was boy enough to be well pleased at this news. Any
+variety in the day's round was pleasing to the lads, who found life
+a little monotonous, albeit pleasant enough. It was a relief, too,
+to turn from grave thoughts and anxious forebodings to the
+anticipation of simpler pleasures, and the boys all ran to seek
+Warbel and ask him what these village fairs were like; for they had
+been much interrupted during the recent wars, and only now that
+peace had been for some years established did they begin to revive
+and gain their old characteristics.</p>
+<p>At break of day on the morning following, the little party
+started forth on foot to walk the five miles which separated them
+from the village of Chadwick. It was a pleasant enough walk through
+the green forest paths before the heat of the day had come. The
+three boys and Warbel headed the party, and were followed by some
+eight or ten men of various degree, some bent on a day's pleasure
+for themselves, others there with a view of attending upon their
+master's sons.</p>
+<p>Bertram felt that he could have dispensed with any attendance
+save that of Warbel; but Sir Oliver had given his own orders. With
+so powerful and jealous a neighbour within easy reach of the
+village, he felt bound to be careful of his children. They were but
+striplings after all, and doubtless his unscrupulous neighbour
+would be delighted to hold one or more as a hostage should excuse
+arise for opening hostilities of any kind. He knew well the
+unscrupulous character of the man with whom he had to deal, and he
+acted with prudence and foresight accordingly.</p>
+<p>The little village when reached proved to be all <i>en fete</i>.
+Rude arches of greenery crossed every pathway to the place, and all
+the people had turned out in their holiday dresses upon the green
+to join in the dances and see the sights. There was a miracle play
+going on in one place, repeated throughout the day to varying
+groups of spectators. In another corner some rude gipsy juggling
+was to be seen, at which the rustic yokels gazed with wondering
+eyes. There were all the usual country games in full swing; and the
+baiting of a great bull, which was being led to the centre of the
+green, attracted the attention of the bulk of the spectators, and
+drew them away from other sports. The actors in the miracle play
+threw off their dresses to come and witness this delightful
+pastime, and hardly any of those present seemed to regard for a
+moment the sufferings of the poor brute, or the savage nature of
+the whole performance.</p>
+<p>Edred, however, belonged to that very small minority, and whilst
+his two brothers pressed into the ring, he wandered away elsewhere
+to see what was to be seen. His attention was attracted by a little
+knot of persons gathered together under the shade of a great oak
+tree, rather far away from the green that was the centre of
+attraction. The shade looked inviting, now that the heat was
+growing greater, and the boy felt some curiosity to know what was
+the attraction which kept this little group so compact and quiet.
+On the green were shouting and yelling and noise of every
+description; but Edred could hear no sound of any kind proceeding
+from this little group till he approached quite near, and then he
+was aware of the sound of a single voice speaking in low tones and
+very earnestly.</p>
+<p>When he got nearer still he saw that the speaker was a little
+hunchback, and that he had in his hand a small book from which he
+was reading aloud to the people about him. And this fact surprised
+the boy not a little, for it was very unusual for any person in the
+lower ranks of life to be able to read; and yet this man was
+evidently in poor circumstances, for his clothes were shabby and
+his hands were hardened by manual toil.</p>
+<p>Drawing nearer in great curiosity, Edred became aware that what
+the hunchback was reading was nothing more or less than a part of
+the gospel narrative in the English tongue, to which the people
+about him were listening in amazement, and with keen curiosity and
+attention.</p>
+<p>Edred was familiar enough with the Latin version of the
+Scriptures, and had studied them under the guidance of Brother
+Emmanuel with great care and attention; but he had never yet heard
+the words read out in their entirety in his native tongue, and he
+was instantly struck and fascinated by the freshness and
+suggestiveness of the familiar language when used for this purpose.
+He was conscious that it gave to the words a new life and meaning;
+that it seemed, as it were, to drive them home to the heart in a
+new fashion, and to make them the property of the listener as they
+could never be when a dead language was used as the medium of
+expression. He felt a strange thrill run through him as the story
+of Calvary was thus read in the low, impassioned tones of the
+hunchback; and he was not surprised to see that tears were running
+down many faces, and that several women could hardly restrain their
+sobs.</p>
+<p>Now and again the hunchback paused and added a few explanatory
+words of his own; now and again he broke forth into a rhapsody not
+lacking in a certain rude eloquence, in which he besought his
+hearers to come to their Saviour with their load of sin--their
+Saviour, who was the one and only Mediator between God and man.
+Were not His own words enough--"Father, forgive them"? What need,
+then, of the priest; the confessional; the absolution of man? To
+God and to Him alone was the remission of sins. Let those who loved
+their Lord seek to Him, and see what bliss and happiness resulted
+from this personal bond between the erring soul and the loving
+Saviour.</p>
+<p>Edred shivered slightly as he stood, yet something in the
+impassioned gestures of the hunchback, and the strange enthusiastic
+light which shone in his eyes, attracted him in spite of himself.
+That this was rank heresy he well knew. He knew that one of the
+Lollard tenets had always been that confession was a snare devised
+of man and not appointed by God. Edred himself could have quoted
+many passages from Holy Writ which spoke of some need of confession
+through the medium of man, and of sins remitted by God-appointed
+ministers. He had been well instructed in such matters by Brother
+Emmanuel, who, whatever his enemies might allege against him, was a
+stanch son of the Church, even though he might be gifted with a
+wide tolerance and a mind open to conviction; and his pupil was not
+to be easily convinced against his will. Nor was Edred convinced of
+the justice and truth of many things that this ignorant man spoke;
+but what did strike him very greatly was his intense earnestness,
+his fiery and impassioned gestures, the absolute confidence he
+possessed in the righteousness of his own cause, and his utter
+freedom from any kind of doubt or fear--the eloquence of one of
+nature's orators that carries away the heart far more than the
+studied oratory which is the result of practice and artifice.</p>
+<p>Whilst the man spoke, Edred felt himself carried away in spite
+of his inner consciousness that there was a flaw in the argument of
+the preacher. He was intensely interested by the whole scene. He
+could not help watching the faces of the group of which he made
+one, watching the play of emotion upon them as they followed with
+breathless attention their instructor's words, and drank in his
+fiery eloquence as though it were life-giving water.</p>
+<p>And was it wonderful this should be so? the youth asked of
+himself. Were not these poor people fairly starving for want of
+spiritual food? and what food did they receive from the hands of
+their parish priest? Edred knew the old man well. He was a
+kind-hearted sexagenarian, and in those days that was accounted an
+immense age. He mumbled through the mass on Sundays; he baptized
+the children and buried the dead when need arose; and if sent for
+by some person in extremity, would go and administer the last rites
+of the Church. But beyond that his duties did not go, and no living
+soul in the place remembered hearing him speak a word of
+instruction or admonition on his own account. He had a passion for
+gardening, and spent all his spare time with his flowers; and his
+people went their way as he did his, and their lives never touched
+on any point.</p>
+<p>Such being the case, was it wonderful that the people should
+come with eagerness to hear of the Saviour from whomsoever would
+tell them of Him? Edred well remembered Brother Emmanuel's words
+about the four God-given channels of grace--the living ministry by
+which He had meant His Church to be perfected. But how when the
+streams grew choked? how when the ministry had become a dead
+letter? Was the Church, were the people, to die of inanition? Might
+not God pardon them for listening to any messenger who came with
+His name upon his lips? Surely He who lived in the heavens would
+pardon them even if it were sin, seeing that it was the instinctive
+love of His own wandering sheep which brought them crowding round
+any shepherd who would teach them of Him, even though he did not
+come in the God-directed order.</p>
+<p>Some such thoughts in a more chaotic form surged through Edred's
+head as he stood listening, almost causing him to lose the words of
+the preacher, though the tenor of his discourse was plain. He
+almost wished he might enter into a discussion with this
+enthusiast, and point out to him where he thought him extravagant
+and wrong; but young as he was, Edred yet knew something of the
+futility of argument with those whose minds are made up, and
+caution withheld him from entering into any argument with one who
+was plainly a Lollard preacher. So, after listening with sympathy
+and interest for a long while, he quietly stole away again.</p>
+<p>The bull baiting was over by this time. The games and other
+sports were recommencing with greater energy after this brief
+interruption. The miracle play was again represented, and Edred
+stood a few minutes to watch, thinking within his heart that this
+representation, half comical, half blasphemous (though the people
+who regarded it seemed in no way aware of this), was a strange way
+of bringing home the realities of the Scriptures, when it could be
+done so far more faithfully and eloquently by simply reading the
+gospel words in the tongue of the common people.</p>
+<p>His eye roved from the actors, with their mincing words and
+artificial gestures, to the group still collected beneath the tree,
+and he could not but contrast the two methods in his own mind, and
+wonder for a moment whether the Lollards could be altogether so
+desperately wicked as their enemies would make out.</p>
+<p>He was half afraid of allowing himself to think too much on such
+themes, and went in search of his brothers. He found Warbel looking
+out for him in some anxiety. He had missed the boy for some little
+while from his charge, and as the field was filling fast with
+followers and servants wearing the Mortimer livery, he was glad to
+have the three boys all together beneath his care.</p>
+<p>He would have been glad to get them to leave the place, but
+Bertram would not hear of it. He wished to try his own skill at
+some of the sports; and Julian, of course, must needs follow his
+example.</p>
+<p>The skill and address of the Chadgrove brothers won the hearty
+admiration of the rustics, but it also brought them more than once
+into rivalry and collision with some of Mortimer's
+gentlemen-at-arms, who were not best pleased to be overmatched by
+mere striplings. It was also galling and irritating to them to note
+the popularity of these lads with the rustics. Any success of
+theirs was rewarded by loud shouting and applause, whilst no
+demonstration of satisfaction followed any feat performed by those
+wearing the livery of Mortimer. And if the lads scored a triumph
+over any of these latter, the undisguised delight of the beholders
+could not pass unnoticed by the vanquished.</p>
+<p>Altogether there were so much jealousy and ill will aroused that
+little scuffles between the followers of Chad and Mortimer had
+already taken place in more than one part of the field. Warbel was
+getting very uneasy, and had persuaded Edred to use his influence
+with his brothers to return home before any real collision should
+have occurred, when a great tumult and shouting suddenly arose to
+interrupt the whispered colloquy, and Edred saw a great rush being
+made in the direction of the oak tree, where the hunchback preacher
+had been keeping his station the whole day long, always surrounded
+by a little knot of listeners.</p>
+<p>Shouts and yells were filling the air, the voices being those of
+Mortimer's following.</p>
+<p>"A Lollard, a Lollard! A heretic! Down with him! Away with him!
+To the fire with him! A Lollard, a Lollard!"</p>
+<p>A deep flush overspread Edred's face. He made a spring forward;
+but Warbel laid a detaining hand upon his arm.</p>
+<p>"It is no case for us to interfere in," he said, with clouded
+brow. "If they have a heretic to deal with we must not meddle. It
+is not England's way for a score to attack one; but we must not
+interpose betwixt Mortimer and a heretic. That would be too much
+peril."</p>
+<p>But almost before the man had done speaking Edred broke away,
+crying out excitedly: "My brothers, my brothers! they are there in
+the thick of it!" and with a groan of terror and dismay Warbel
+recognized the voice of Bertram raised in angry scorn.</p>
+<p>"Stand back, you cowards! Who ever heard of fifty men against
+one, and he a cripple? The first who touches him I strike dead. A
+heretic! Pooh! nonsense. He is but a poor travelling peddler with
+his pack. See, here is the pack to speak for itself. For shame to
+mar a merry holiday in this <span lang="en-US" xml:lang=
+"en-US">unmannerly</span> fashion! No; I will not give him up! Ye
+are no better than a pack of howling, ravening wolves. I am the
+Lord of Chad, and I will see that no violence is done this day.
+Back to your sports, ye unmannerly knaves. Are ye fit for nothing
+but to set upon one helpless man and worry him as dogs worry their
+helpless prey?"</p>
+<p>Howls, execrations, oaths followed freely; but the village
+people were to a man with their young lord, and the scions of
+Mortimer felt it by instinct.</p>
+<p>"Who is he? Whence came he?" was being asked on all sides; but
+none could give an answer. He was a stranger to the village, but
+all those who had been drinking in his words rallied round him, and
+declared he was but a simple peddler whose wares they had been
+buying; and Bertram, who really thought so, stood beside the tree,
+opened the bundle, and showed the innocent nature of the wares.</p>
+<p>His brothers had forced their way to his side by this time, and
+helped to make a ring round the poor hunchback; and Edred kept a
+very sharp eye upon the emptying of the pack, resolved if there
+should be any book at the bottom to contrive that it should not
+reach the eyes of any of the vindictive followers of Mortimer.</p>
+<p>But there was nothing of the sort to be seen. The man was both
+too poor and too wary to carry such dangerous things with him. His
+own thin volume had been slipped into some secret receptacle about
+his person, and his calmness of bearing helped to convince all who
+were open to conviction that he was innocent of the charge brought
+against him.</p>
+<p>With dark, lowering faces, and many muttered threats, the
+Mortimer retainers drew off, seeing that with public feeling dead
+against them they could not prevail to work their will upon the
+intended victim. But <span lang="en-US" xml:lang=
+"en-US">Warbel</span> was made very anxious by the words he heard
+openly spoken on all sides, and he would have given much to have
+hindered this act of Bertram's, generous and manly though he knew
+it to have been.</p>
+<p>"It is ill work drawing down the charge of heresy," he remarked,
+as he got the boys at last in full march <span lang="en-US"
+xml:lang="en-US">homeward.</span> "Any other charge one can laugh
+to scorn; but no man may tell where orthodoxy ends and heresy
+begins. Godly bishops have been sent to prison, and priests to the
+stake. How may others hope to escape?"</p>
+<p>"Tush!" answered Bertram lightly; "there was never a heretic at
+Chad yet, and never will be one, I trow. Was I to see a poor
+cripple like that done to death without striking a blow in his
+defence--he in Chadwick, of which my father is lord of the manor?
+Was I to see Mortimer's men turning a gay holiday into a scene of
+horror and affright? Never! I were unworthy of my name had I not
+interposed. The man was no heretic, and if he had been--"</p>
+<p>"Have a care, sir, how thou speakest; have a care, I entreat
+thee! Thou knowest not what ears may be listening!" cried Warbel,
+in a real fright.</p>
+<p>Bertram laughed half scornfully.</p>
+<p>"I have no need to be ashamed of what I think. I am a true son
+of the Church, and fear not what the vile Mortimer scum may say.
+But to pleasure thee, good Warbel, I will say no more. We will make
+our way home with all speed, and tell the tale to our father. I
+doubt not he will say it was well done. The Lord of Chad would ever
+have the defenceless protected, and stand between them and the
+false and treacherous bloodhounds of Mortimer. I have no fear that
+he will blame me. He would have done the same in my place."</p>
+<p>"I trow he would," answered Warbel in a low voice; "but that
+does not make the deed done without peril of some sort following to
+the doer."</p>
+<h2><a name="ChapterV" id="ChapterV">Chapter V</a>: A Warning.</h2>
+<p>Sir Oliver and his wife listened with some anxiety to the boys'
+story of the rescue of the peddler. Bertram observed the cloud upon
+his father's brow, and eagerly asked if he had done wrong.</p>
+<p>"I say not so, my son," replied the knight. "I would ever have a
+child of mine merciful and just--the protector of the oppressed,
+and the champion of the defenceless; nevertheless--"</p>
+<p>"And it was those bloodhounds of Mortimer's who were setting
+upon him," broke in Julian vehemently. "What right had they to
+molest him? Could we of Chad, upon our own soil, stand by and see
+it done? I trow, father, that thou wouldst have done the same hadst
+thou been there."</p>
+<p>A smile flitted over the face of the knight. He loved to see the
+generous fire burning in his boys' eyes; but for all that his face
+was something anxious as he made reply:</p>
+<p>"Belike I should, my son, albeit perhaps in a something less
+vehement fashion. My authority would have served to keep down riot,
+and the charge against the peddler could have been forthwith
+examined, and if found false the man could then have been sent on
+his way in safety. But it is dangerous work just now to appear to
+side with those against whom the foul charge of heresy is brought.
+Knowest thou--know any of ye--what gave rise to the sudden
+suspicion?"</p>
+<p>Edred, who knew much more of the real nature of the peddler's
+occupation that day, kept his lips close sealed. He would not for
+worlds have told what he had seen and heard. His brothers were
+plainly ignorant of the peddler's exhortation, reading, and
+preaching. It was not for him to add to the anxieties of his
+parents.</p>
+<p>Julian was the first to answer the question.</p>
+<p>"It was but the idle spite of the people of Mortimer," he
+answered. "They had baited the bull and the bear, and they had the
+mind to bait or burn a heretic whilst their blood was up, as a fit
+end to their day's pleasuring. I saw them prowling round the tree
+where the fellow was talking to the women and showing his wares;
+and suddenly they raised the shout. I called out to Bertram that
+Mortimer's people were bent on a mischief, and he sprang to the
+peddler's side before any had touched him, and we disappointed the
+hell hounds of their prey. He had nothing in his pack but such
+wares as all peddlers have; and the people vowed he had done naught
+all the day but sell to all who came. It would have been sin and
+shame for us of Chad to have stood by to see him hounded perhaps to
+death. We could not choose but balk those evil men of their will.
+None of our blood could have stood by to see such ill done!"</p>
+<p>"I cannot blame ye, my sons," said the knight. "Ye have the
+blood of your forefathers in your veins, and it goes against all of
+us at Chad to see injustice and unrighteousness committed. I do but
+wish the cry raised against yon man had been anything else than
+that of heresy. The priests and magistrates are very busy now
+searching out all those suspected of that vile sin, and those who
+shelter them are accounted as guilty as those who are proved
+tainted. Our foe of Mortimer is very zealous in the good cause, and
+will not scruple to employ against us every weapon in his power. It
+would be an excellent thing in his eyes to show how mine own
+children had stood up to defend a Lollard heretic. I would we knew
+something more anent this man and his views.</p>
+<p>"Warbel, didst thou know him? Is he anyone known in and about
+Chad?"</p>
+<p>"I never saw his face <span lang="en-US" xml:lang=
+"en-US">before</span>, sir," answered Warbel. "I know not so much
+as his name. I had thought of making some inquiries of the village
+folks. All I noted was that he seemed always to have plenty of
+persons around and about him, and his wares were nothing very
+attractive. Still, it is often the tales peddlers tell and the way
+they have with them that keeps a crowd always about them. Some of
+the folks of the place must know who and what he is."</p>
+<p>"Yes, verily; and it would be well for thee to ride over
+tomorrow and make all needful inquiry. It would set my mind at rest
+to know that there was no cause of complaint against him. We cannot
+be blind to the fact that heretical doctrines are widely spread by
+those purporting to be hawkers and peddlers. Yet there must be many
+honest men who would scorn to be so occupied, and who know not even
+the name of these pestilent heresies."</p>
+<p>And with that charge the knight tried to dismiss the subject
+from his mind; whilst Edred went to bed feeling terribly uneasy,
+and dreamed all night of the secret chamber, and how the time came
+when they were all forced to take refuge in it from the hatred of
+the Lord of Mortimer and his bloodthirsty followers.</p>
+<p>But not even to his brothers did he tell all that he had heard
+and all that he knew. The words of the gospel in the familiar
+language of his country haunted him persistently. He felt a strange
+wish to hear more, although he believed the wish to be sin, and
+strove against it might and main. Some of the passages clung
+tenaciously to his memory, and he fell asleep repeating them. When
+he woke the words were yet in his mind, and they seemed to get
+between him and the words of his task that day when the boys went
+to their tutor for daily instruction.</p>
+<p>Brother Emmanuel had never found Edred so inattentive and absent
+before. He divined that the boy must have something on his mind,
+and let him alone. He was not surprised that he lingered when the
+others had gone, and then in a low voice asked his preceptor if he
+would meet him in the chantry, as he felt he could not be happy
+till he had made confession of a certain matter, done penance, and
+received absolution.</p>
+<p>A request of that sort never met a denial from the monk. He sent
+Edred to the chantry to pray for an hour, and met him there at the
+end of that time to listen to all he had to say.</p>
+<p>Edred's story was soon told--nothing held back, not even the
+innermost thoughts of his heart--and the expression of the face
+beneath the enshrouding cowl was something strange to see.</p>
+<p>It was long before the monk spoke, and meantime Edred lay
+prostrate at his feet, thankful to transfer the burden weighing him
+down to the keeping of another, but little guessing what the burden
+was to him to whom he made this confession.</p>
+<p>Well did Brother Emmanuel know and recognize the peril of
+entertaining such thoughts, longings, and aspirations as were now
+assailing the heart of this unconscious boy. That there was sin in
+all these feelings he did not doubt; that heavy penance must be
+done for them he would not for a moment have wished to deny. But
+yet when he came to place reason in the place of the formulas of
+the Church in which he had been reared, he knew not how to condemn
+that longing after the Word of God which was generally the first
+step towards the dreaded sin of heresy.</p>
+<p>No one more sincerely abhorred the name and the sin of heresy.
+When men denied the presence of the living God in the sacraments of
+the Church, or attacked its time-honoured practices in which the
+heart of the young monk was bound up, then the whole soul of the
+enthusiast rose up in revolt, and he felt that such blasphemers
+well deserved the fiery doom they brought upon themselves. But when
+their sin was possessing a copy of the living Word; when all that
+could be alleged against them was that they met together to read
+that Word which was denied to them by their lawful pastors and
+teachers, and which they had no opportunity of hearing
+otherwise--then indeed did it seem a hard thing that they should be
+so mercilessly condemned and persecuted.</p>
+<p>Yet he could not deny that this reading and expounding of the
+Scriptures by the ignorant and unlearned led almost invariably to
+those other sins of blasphemy and irreverence which curdled the
+very blood in his veins. Again and again had his heart burned
+within him to go forth amongst the people himself; to take upon
+himself and put in practice the office of evangelist, which he knew
+to be a God-appointed ministry, and yet which was so seldom
+worthily fulfilled, and himself to proclaim aloud the gospel, that
+all might have news of the Son of God, yet might be taught to
+reverence the holy sacraments more rather than less for the sake of
+Him who established them upon earth, and to respect the priesthood,
+even though it might in its members show itself unworthy, because
+it was a thing given by Christ for the edification of the body, and
+because He Himself, the High Priest passed into the heavens, must
+needs have His subordinate priests working with Him and by Him on
+earth.</p>
+<p>Again and again had longings such as these filled his soul, and
+he had implored leave to go forth preaching and teaching. But he
+had never won permission to do this. The request had been treated
+with contempt, and he himself had been suspected of ambition and
+other unworthy motives. He had submitted to the will of his
+superiors, as his vow of obedience obliged him to do; but none the
+less did his heart burn within him as he saw more and more plainly
+how men were thirsting for living waters, and realized with
+ever-increasing intensity of pain and certainty that if the Church
+herself would not give her children to drink out of pure fountains,
+they would not be hindered from drinking of poisoned springs, and
+thus draw down upon themselves all manner of evils and
+diseases.</p>
+<p>He had never doubted for a moment the pureness of the source
+from which he himself drank. He was not blind to the imperfections
+many and great of individuals in high places, and the corruptions
+which had crept within the pale of the Church, but these appeared
+to him incidental and capable of amendment. He never guessed at any
+deeper poison at work far below, tainting the very waters at their
+source. He was in all essential points an orthodox son of Rome; but
+he had imbibed much of the spirit of the Oxford Reformers, of whom
+Colet was at this time the foremost, and his more enlightened
+outlook seemed to the blind and bigoted of his own order to savour
+something dangerously of heresy.</p>
+<p>He did not know himself seriously suspected. His conscience was
+too clear, his devotion to the Church too pure, to permit of his
+easily fearing unworthy suspicions. He knew himself no favourite
+with the stately but self-indulgent Prior of Chadwater; knew that
+Brother Fabian, whom he had once sternly rebuked for an act of open
+sin, was his bitter enemy. But he had not greatly heeded this,
+strong in his own innocence, and he had been far happier at Chad in
+the more truly pure atmosphere of that secular house than in the
+so-called sanctity of the cloister.</p>
+<p>And now he found his own thoughts, aspirations, and yearnings
+repeated in the mind of his favourite pupil, and he was confronted
+by a problem more difficult to solve than any that had met him
+before. In his own case he felt he had a compass to steer by--the
+restraint and guidance of his vows and his habit to help him. But
+how would it be with this ardent and imaginative boy? His mind was
+struggling to free itself from artificial trammels. To what goal
+might not that wish lead?</p>
+<p>Earnestly he looked upon the bowed form at his feet, and in his
+eyes there was a great compassion. But his lips pronounced, with
+sternness and decision, the words of the heavy penance imposed, and
+at the end of the prescribed formulas he raised the boy and looked
+searchingly into his face.</p>
+<p>"My son," he said, very gently yet very impressively, "remember
+that the first sin that entered into the world was the sin of
+disobedience. Remember that Satan's most powerful weapon is the one
+which he employed towards our first mother when he bid her eat of
+the tree of knowledge, because that knowledge is good--a God-given
+thing--when he persuaded her that God was wrong in keeping anything
+hidden from her that in itself was good. The same sin by which
+death entered the world has abounded there ever since. God and the
+Son of God and the Church have always taught that there be certain
+things hidden, only to be revealed to man by God or through the
+ordinances of the Church, not to be sought after through curiosity
+by unlettered men themselves. Yet <span lang="en-GB" xml:lang=
+"en-GB">for as much</span> as Satan is never at rest, and can
+transform himself on occasion into an angel of light, he is ever
+present with men urging them on to pry into these hidden mysteries
+and to make light of the ordinances of God. He puts into their
+mouth words similar to those by which he tempted the woman to her
+fall, and men listen greedily as our first mother did, and are led
+into destruction when they think they are walking forth into the
+light of day.</p>
+<p>"My son, beware of this sin; beware of this temptation. Remember
+the many solemn warnings against disobedience contained in the Word
+of God; remember how obedience is insisted on throughout that holy
+volume. Thou mayest not always see the reason--thou mayest not
+always recognize the authority; but remember that there is a
+blessing upon those who obey, and be not in haste to break the bond
+under which thou wast born, remembering who has placed thee where
+thou art, and who has bidden us give all dutiful obedience to the
+powers that be."</p>
+<p>Edred made a deep reverence, crossed himself silently in token
+of submission, and prostrated himself upon the step of the altar,
+to lie there fasting till set of sun as one part of his penance.
+With a murmured prayer and blessing the monk left him, hoping that
+he had spoken a word of seasonable warning to one whose heart was
+enkindled with ardent devotion, whilst his active mind and vivid
+imagination were in danger of leading him into perilous paths.</p>
+<p>No questions were asked of Edred respecting this penance, which
+took him away from his ordinary occupations during the chief part
+of the two following days. He and Brother Emmanuel alone knew the
+reason for it, and it was against the traditions of the house that
+any open notice should be taken by others.</p>
+<p>The episode of the peddler and the outbreak with the followers
+of Mortimer had begun to fade somewhat from the minds of those at
+Chad. No complaint had reached that house from Mortimer's Keep, as
+had been expected, and it was hoped that the thing would never be
+heard of again.</p>
+<p>Yet it was with something of a sinking heart that Sir Oliver
+heard the third day that the Prior of Chadwater desired speech of
+him; and as he mounted his horse and summoned his servants about
+him, he wondered, not without considerable uneasiness, what this
+summons might mean.</p>
+<p>He had always been on good terms with the handsome prior of the
+Benedictine monastery. The choicest of the game, the fattest of the
+bucks slain in the forest, the chiefest specimens of his wife's
+culinary triumphs, always found their way to the prior's table, and
+an excellent understanding had always been maintained between the
+two houses. But the knight had observed of late that the prior had
+become more slack in those visits of friendly courtesy which once
+had been common enough between them; and when he had presented
+himself at the monastery, he had not been quite certain that his
+welcome was as cordial as heretofore. It was not until latterly
+that this had caused him any uneasiness--it had taken him some
+while to feel sure that it was anything but his own fantasy; but he
+had just begun to feel that something was amiss, and now this
+summons seemed to him to have an evil import.</p>
+<p>However, there was nothing for it but to go; and a clear
+conscience keeps a man bold even in face of greater peril than was
+likely to assail him now. He thought it probable that some rumour
+of the stir on the fair day had reached the ecclesiastic, and that
+he wanted an account of it in detail. Sir Oliver was quite prepared
+to give him that, and entered the presence of the prior with a bold
+front and an air of cordial courtesy such as he was wont to wear in
+the presence of this dignitary.</p>
+<p>There was nothing alarming in the prior's manner. He received
+his guest graciously, bid him be seated in the best chair reserved
+for the use of guests, and asked him of the welfare of his
+household with benevolence and friendly interest. But after all
+that had been said, his face took another look, and he brought up
+the subject of the travelling peddler or preacher, and asked the
+knight what his sons meant by standing champions to a notable and
+pernicious Lollard heretic.</p>
+<p>The knight started at the words, and disclaimed any such
+knowledge both on behalf of himself and his sons. He told the tale
+as Bertram and Julian had told it him; and there was such sincerity
+in his manner, and his character both for orthodoxy and for
+scrupulous truthfulness in word and deed was so widely known and
+respected, that the prior's brow unbent somewhat, and he looked
+less stern and severe.</p>
+<p>"I believe your story, Sir Knight," he said. "I believe that
+your sons sinned in ignorance. But none the less is it true that
+they have stood champions for a pestilent heretic; and that is an
+offence not likely to escape the vengeful notice of the Lord of
+Mortimer, who is always on the lookout for a cause of complaint
+against person or persons at Chad."</p>
+<p>"That is very true," replied Sir Oliver, thoughtfully and
+gravely. "I was greatly vexed when I heard of the affair, and
+chided my boys for their hot-headed rashness. Howbeit there be many
+there to testify that the man was at that time but hawking his
+wares, and my sons could not know that he was a secret heretic and
+Lollard."</p>
+<p>"Nay, but when that cry was raised they should not have stood at
+his side as his champions without more knowledge of the truth. The
+man is now known to have been preaching well nigh the whole day
+long, reading portions of those accursed translations of Wycliffe's
+which are damnation to all who possess them or listen to them, and
+expounding thereupon in the fashion that sends persons raving mad
+with the poison of heresy. The man is in hiding somewhere in the
+woods about; but he will soon be caught and handed over to the
+secular power to be doomed to death. And I like not the story of
+your sons' part in all this; it hath an ugly look."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver hid his anxiety beneath a cloak of dignified
+submission. He well knew the best way of putting things straight
+with the prior.</p>
+<p>"I greatly grieve over the hotheadedness of the lads, but I will
+gladly make such amends as lies in my power. They sinned in
+ignorance, as you, reverend father, believe, and for such sins the
+indulgence of the Church may be won by the payment of such sum as
+shall be thought right. If you will tell me what I ought to give to
+purchase this indulgence, I will do my utmost to meet the just
+claim; and Holy Church shall be richer and not poorer for the
+trespass unwittingly made by the sons of Chad."</p>
+<p>The prior looked pleased at this ready suggestion, and named a
+sum which, though sufficiently heavy, was within Sir Oliver's
+means, and which he promised should be immediately paid. He knew
+that the prior, though a man fond of money, and somewhat greedy in
+gaining possession of all he could, was not treacherous or unjust;
+and that if he had accepted this sum as the price of the pardon of
+the boys' escapade, he would stand their friend, and not allow them
+to be persecuted by Mortimer for the same offence, should the
+matter ever be brought up against them again.</p>
+<p>Indeed, now that the arrangement had been so amicably entered
+into, Sir Oliver was rather glad that the subject had been
+broached. The prior was the most powerful man in the county, and to
+have him for a friend was everything. It was his game to hold the
+balance very nicely betwixt the owners of Mortimer and Chad,
+keeping his neutral position, and not permitting either party to
+overstep the limits beyond a certain extent. After what had just
+passed, he felt assured that the prior would not permit his boys to
+be harried or accused of countenancing heresy by their enemy, and
+he was well pleased at the interview and its result.</p>
+<p>He rose now as if to go, but the prior motioned him to resume
+his seat.</p>
+<p>"There is yet another matter upon which I would speak to you,"
+he said. "You have beneath your roof one of our younger brethren,
+Brother Emmanuel. How have you found him comport himself since he
+has been free from the restraints of the cloister?"</p>
+<p>The knight looked surprised at the question.</p>
+<p>"He is in all ways a very godly and saintly youth," he replied.
+"He instructs my sons after an excellent fashion, keeps the hours
+of the Church with a scrupulous precision I have never seen
+equalled, and instructs all who come to him for advice or
+assistance in a manner that makes him beloved of all. Whenever I
+have talked with him or gone to him for spiritual counsel, I have
+been greatly struck by his spiritual insight, his purity of
+thought, his earnestness of mind, and his knowledge of the Holy
+Scriptures."</p>
+<p>The prior shifted a little in his seat, and coughed behind his
+hand somewhat dubiously.</p>
+<p>"He was ever prone to observe the hours well. He lived
+blamelessly here in all outward observances; but as for his
+knowledge of the Holy Scriptures, it may be that it goes something
+too far. It is whispered abroad that some of his words savour
+strongly of those very Lollard heresies which are about to be put
+down with fire and sword. Hast thou heard and seen naught of
+that?"</p>
+<p>A thrill of indignation ran through Sir Oliver's frame. It was
+only by an effort that he restrained a hasty exclamation. He well
+knew that the wave of enlightened feeling rising within the Church
+herself had found no echo in the remoter parts of the kingdom,
+where bigotry and darkness and intolerance still reigned supreme.
+He was perfectly aware that the most enlightened sons of the Church
+who had dared to bid the people study the Word of God, and
+especially to study it as a whole, would have been denounced as
+heretics had they lifted up their voices in many parts of the
+kingdom. This very enlightened understanding, which was so marked a
+feature in Brother Emmanuel, had been one of the strongest bonds
+between him and his patron, and it seemed little short of monstrous
+to the knight to hear such an accusation brought against one who
+had lived a godly and blameless life, had observed far more
+rigorously all the laws of the Church than the prior or the
+fraternity thought of doing, and was a far truer and better son
+than they ever attempted to be.</p>
+<p>But he restrained his indignation, and only answered very
+calmly:</p>
+<p>"I have seen naught of it; indeed, I have seen so much to the
+contrary, that methinks it is but an idle tale, not worth your
+reverence's attention. In every matter, word or deed, Brother
+Emmanuel is faithful to his vows and to his calling. He is an able
+instructor of youth; and were your reverence to examine him as
+strictly as possible, I do not believe that any cause of offence,
+however trivial, could be found against him."</p>
+<p>"I am well pleased to hear such good testimony," returned the
+prior, who was regarding his visitor with a scrutiny not altogether
+agreeable to the knight. "At the same time, it is not always well
+for a monk to remain too long away from the cloister, and a change
+of instructor is ofttimes better for the young. I have been
+thinking that it might be well to recall Brother Emmanuel, and send
+in his place Brother Fabian, in whom I repose the greatest
+confidence. How would such a change meet your good pleasure? If
+Brother Emmanuel is in need of penance, it can better be imposed
+here than elsewhere--and by all I hear it seems to me that he
+stands something in need of the discipline of the monastery; and
+Brother Fabian would make an excellent substitute as an instructor
+for the lads."</p>
+<p>Whilst the prior was speaking, thought had been rapid with Sir
+Oliver, and something in the prior's look--a subtlety and almost
+cruelty about the lines of the mouth--warned him that there was in
+this proposition that which boded evil to someone.</p>
+<p>It flashed across him that Brother Emmanuel was perhaps to be
+made a victim of ecclesiastical tyranny and cruelty. He knew that
+the ascetic young monk had been no favourite with his brethren at
+Chadwater; and if they could bring against him some charge of
+heresy, however trifling, it was like enough that he might be
+silently done to death, as others of his calling had been for less
+fearful offences. Monastic buildings held their dark secrets, as
+the world was just beginning to know; and only a short while back
+he had heard a whisper that it was not wise for a monk to be too
+strict in his hours and in his living. Then again, Brother Fabian
+was a coarse, illiterate man, utterly unfit to be the guide and
+instructor of youth. Sir Oliver had not dined at the prior's table
+and spent hours in his company for nothing, and he knew many of the
+monks tolerably well. Brother Fabian was the one he liked the
+least; indeed he had a strong dislike and distrust of the man, and
+was well aware that the ecclesiastical habit was the only thing
+about him that savoured of sanctity or the monastic life. He would
+not have allowed the contaminating presence of such a man near his
+sons, even had he been indued with the needful learning for the
+task of instructor. As it was, he knew that the monk could barely
+spell through his breviary, and it was plain that the prior must
+have another reason for wishing to induct him into the house.</p>
+<p>Nor was the reason difficult to divine. It was not as an
+instructor but as a spy that Brother Fabian was to come. The
+whispers abroad--doubtless spread industriously by his vengeful
+foe--had not been without effect, and men had begun to suspect that
+his household was tainted with heresy. Brother Emmanuel was
+suspected, his sons were probably suspected as being his pupils,
+and possibly some other members of his household too. Brother
+Fabian was to be sent to act as spy, and if bribed (as was most
+probable) by the Lord of Mortimer, would doubtless find some cause
+of offence which could be twisted into an accusation of heresy
+against someone there.</p>
+<p>It was difficult for Sir Oliver to see his way all in a moment.
+To oppose this scheme or to submit to it appeared alike dangerous.
+His independence and honest English pride revolted against any
+attempt to coerce him in his domestic arrangements, or to submit to
+interference there, even from the ministers of the Church.</p>
+<p>But it was needful to walk warily, and the prior was watching
+him as a cat does a mouse.</p>
+<p>"Will you give me a few days to consider this matter?" he asked,
+in as easy a tone as he could. "Your reverence knows that changes
+are not of themselves welcome to me; and my sons have made such
+progress with Brother Emmanuel that I am something loath to part
+with him. Also, they are at this moment going through a course of
+study which none other could conclude with the same advantage.
+Brother Fabian is doubtless an excellent brother of his order, but
+he has scarce the same learning as Brother Emmanuel. Nevertheless,
+I will well consider the change proposed, and give it all dutiful
+heed. But I should like to speak with my wife anent the matter, and
+learn her will. It is not a matter of pressing haste, by what I
+have gathered from your words?"</p>
+<p>"No, not one of pressing haste. Yet I would not long delay,"
+answered the prior. "I may not speak too openly, but there be
+reasons why I would have Brother Emmanuel beneath this roof once
+more. I will leave thee one week to consider and to get the course
+of study completed. At the week's end, methinks, I shall be
+constrained to bid Brother Emmanuel return home. But if all be well
+after a short time has sped by, he may return again to thee."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver was looking full at the handsome but crafty face of
+the prior, and as the last words passed his lips he saw a flicker
+in the eyes which made him say within his heart:</p>
+<p>"If Brother Emmanuel once re-enters these walls, he will never
+sally forth again. Mischief is meant him; of that I am convinced.
+What must I do? Must I give him up to his death? And how can I save
+him, even if I would?"</p>
+<p>These thoughts were surging in his heart as he rode home. The
+peril he had feared against those of his own name and race had been
+averted. The payment of what was practically a heavy fine would
+secure to the boys immunity from the results of their rashness; but
+with the monk it was far different. What had aroused the animosity
+of the fraternity, and why mischief was planned against him, Sir
+Oliver could not divine; but that something had occurred to arouse
+it he could not doubt.</p>
+<p>No sooner had he reached home than he sought Brother Emmanuel in
+his own bare room, and laid before him the account of what had
+passed.</p>
+<p>A strange look crossed the young monk's face.</p>
+<p>"Then it is known!" he said simply.</p>
+<p>"What is known?"</p>
+<p>"That I am the author of a certain pamphlet, written some while
+ago, and taken to Germany to be printed, giving an account of some
+of the corruptions and abuses that have stolen into the Church, and
+in especial into the monasteries and religious houses of this land.
+I could not choose but write it. If the Church is to be saved, it
+can only be by her repudiation of such corruptions, and by a
+process of self cleansing that none can do for her. I always knew
+that if suspected my life would pay the forfeit; but I know not how
+the authorship has been discovered. Yet the great ones of the land
+have ways we know not of; and if the truth is not known, it is
+suspected. I am to go back to the priory; but once there, I shall
+never go forth again. Yet what matter? I always knew if the thing
+were known my life would .pay the forfeit. I wrote as the Spirit
+bid me; I know that God was with me then. I am ready to lay down my
+life in a good cause; I am not afraid what man can do unto me."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver looked into that young face, which the martyr spirit
+illuminated and glorified, and an answering spark kindled in his
+own eyes.</p>
+<p>"If that is thine offence, and not the alleged one of heresy, I
+will stand thy friend," he said; "and thou shalt not go forth from
+Chad to thy death so long as I have a roof to shelter thee. I will
+stand thy friend and protector so long as I have a house to call
+mine own."</p>
+<h2><a name="ChapterVI" id="ChapterVI">Chapter VI</a>:
+Watched!</h2>
+<p>"I am glad thou hast so resolved, my husband; but hast thou
+considered what it may mean to thee?"</p>
+<p>Lady Chadgrove spoke gently, laying her hand upon her husband's
+arm with a gesture unwontedly tender; for neither was demonstrative
+of the deep affection which existed between them, and he knew that
+only strong emotion evoked such action from her.</p>
+<p>"I know that if I refuse to give up Brother Emmanuel I may draw
+down upon myself stern admonition, and perchance something worse,
+but I mean not that it come to open defiance of any injunction from
+the Church. Brother Emmanuel must leave Chad secretly, and be far
+away ere the week of grace expires. We are but twenty miles from
+the coast. This very day I shall ride thither and see what small
+trading vessels are in the bay about to fare forth to foreign
+shores. I shall negotiate with some skipper making for some Dutch
+port to carry thither the person whom I shall describe to him, and
+who will show him this ring"--and Sir Oliver displayed an emerald
+upon his own finger--"in token that he is the person to be taken
+aboard. Those trading skippers are used to such jobs, and if they
+be paid they know how to hold their peace and ask no questions. In
+Holland the brother will be safer than in any other land. The spite
+of the Prior of Chadwater is not like to pursue him there. But here
+his life is not safe from hour to hour."</p>
+<p>"And how if it comes to be known that thou hast planned this
+escape?" asked the lady, a little anxiously.</p>
+<p>"I have thought of that too, dame," replied the knight, smiling.
+"Let but the good brother be safely out of the country, and whilst
+the hue and cry is still going on here after him I will to the king
+and tell him all the story. Our pious Dean Colet, who knows Brother
+Emmanuel, and knows, too, that it is meet the corrupt practices
+that have crept within the pale of Holy Church should be made
+known, that they may be swept away and reformed, will stand my
+friend, and together we can so persuade his Majesty that even if
+the prior and Mortimer both combine to accuse me before him he will
+not allow their spite to touch me. The king knows right well that
+there is need of amendment within the Church herself. We have heard
+words spoken in the Cathedral of London which would be accounted
+rank heresy here. There is light abroad which must one day reach to
+the ends of the earth, and truly it sometimes seemeth to me that if
+the priests, the abbots, and the monks set their faces steadfastly
+against this light, they will fall into some terrible pitfall, but
+they will never quench the light with their united strength."</p>
+<p>The lady gave one quick glance round, as though afraid that even
+the walls might have ears, and such sentiments were not those that
+it was safe to blazon abroad. But Sir Oliver, strong in the
+consciousness of his own deep and abiding love for the Church and
+for all the doctrines which she upheld, was bold to speak his mind
+in private when the subject broached was the one of corruptions and
+abuses which some of the sturdiest and noblest sons of the Church
+were now engaged in examining and denouncing, none dreaming of
+charging them with heresy on that account.</p>
+<p>But the mother had noted the presence of Edred, who had come in
+quietly whilst the discussion was going on, and was now standing
+listening to his father's words with kindling eyes; and she made a
+sign to her husband which caused him to turn round, and then the
+boy spoke.</p>
+<p>"The horses are ready at the door, father, and Bertram prays
+that he may accompany thee. He is donning his riding dress
+already."</p>
+<p>"With all my heart," answered the knight readily, "an he can
+ride the forty miles betwixt this and tomorrow at the same hour;
+for I do not purpose to be long absent."</p>
+<p>"Bertram would ride all day and all night and feel it not,"
+answered Edred with a proud smile; "and he loves the sight and the
+smell of the salt sea, and would be loath to miss the chance of
+seeing it. Father, art thou going to aid Brother Emmanuel to fly?
+Is there peril for him abroad?"</p>
+<p>The knight bent a quick, keen glance upon his son.</p>
+<p>"I fear so, my boy; and Brother Emmanuel himself thinks that ill
+is meant him. And it is better to seek safety in flight at the
+first hint of danger than to dally and delay, and perhaps find at
+last that it is too late to fly. Thou, my son, wilt for this one
+day and night be left in charge of thy mother and thy home and all
+within it; for I must needs take with me Warbel and a score of our
+stoutest fellows, for the lonely road to the coast is none too safe
+for travellers of the better sort. Be thou watchful and vigilant,
+and keep thine eyes and thine ears alike open. Heed well that the
+gates be closed early, and that all be made safe, and let not
+Brother Emmanuel adventure himself without the walls. Use all
+discretion and heed, and fare thee well. I shall reach the coast
+tonight, and do my business with all speed, and be in the saddle
+again with the light of dawn, so thou mayest look to see us again
+before noon."</p>
+<p>And with a tender farewell to his wife, the knight mounted and
+rode away with his gallant little train; and the lady looked after
+him from the window, and said to Edred, who quickly came to her to
+learn more, if he could, of the words he had recently heard:</p>
+<p>"Now may the blessed saints and our Lord Himself be with him!
+for no braver and truer gentleman lives in the length and breadth
+of this land. There be few, indeed, who would imperil their own
+safety rather than yield up one who is after all little more than a
+stranger. Heaven send that he repent not this deed! May God be with
+him in all his ways!"</p>
+<p>"My mother," said Edred cautiously, "is it that Brother Emmanuel
+is in sore peril? He is so devout and faithful a son of the Church
+that it is hard to credit it."</p>
+<p>"In sooth, my son, these be matters hard to be understood; but
+thy father truly holds that he were safer out of this country and
+out of reach of the Prior of Chadwater and the Lord of Mortimer.
+Men's words can be turned and twisted till the best may be accused
+of heresy; and again, if a monk has fallen beneath the wrath of his
+superior, no man may tell what would befall were he to return to
+the power of his spiritual father. Sure those holy men who founded
+the orders of godly recluses little dreamed what those places might
+become in time, and with the ever-increasing love of ease and
+wealth which seems implanted in the heart of man.</p>
+<p>"Heaven pardon me if I speak or think amiss! but it is strange
+to hear and see what passes in the world. But one must use all
+caution even in thought, and I would not have thee speak aught of
+this save in a whisper in thy brother's ear, that he too may use
+all caution and discretion till we can find occasion to send
+Brother Emmanuel forth in safety.</p>
+<p>"We have a week before us ere he will be summoned hence. Strive
+that none shall suspect aught of difference or coming change. Keep
+well the hours of study. Give none occasion for remark. For all we
+know, a spy may be in our midst; and at least any servant of ours
+might well be questioned by any of the monks of Chadwater, to whom
+he might go to confess, as to what was passing in the house, and
+see no hurt in answering questions. Wherefore be very wise and
+discreet, and give none occasion for remark.</p>
+<p>"Thou dost understand me, my son? I may trust thee? Remember
+that thine own father's welfare may be imperilled by the veriest
+trifle should men suspect him of striving to outwit the prior."</p>
+<p>Edred's eyes expressed a great comprehension and sympathy. He
+took his mother's hand and kissed it, slightly bending the
+knee.</p>
+<p>"Thou mayest trust me, sweet mother," he answered. "Methinks I
+know well all thou wouldst say. I will be cautious, and I will
+teach caution to Julian. No harm shall come to any beneath this
+roof from word or deed of ours."</p>
+<p>And then the lady went to her delayed household duties, whilst
+Edred went in search of his brother, to take him to the room where
+their studies were usually prosecuted, that the household wheels
+might revolve after the accustomed manner.</p>
+<p>But Julian was nowhere to be seen. Edred sought him and called
+him lustily, till at length the old seneschal at the gate heard
+him, and informed him that his brother had gone a short distance on
+foot with the travellers, but that he would doubtless be back ere
+long.</p>
+<p>Julian was light and fleet of foot as a deer, and often ran for
+many miles beside his father's charger, the nature of the wooded
+country round Chad giving him many advantages. Edred wandered forth
+a little way to meet him on his return, and was presently aware of
+a cowled figure standing close against a great beech tree, and so
+motionless and rigid was the attitude that the boy had to look
+somewhat closely to be certain that it was not a part of the tree
+trunk itself.</p>
+<p>He paused and examined the figure with an intense curiosity not
+unmixed with suspicion. His own light footfall did not appear to
+have been heard, and the motionless figure, partly concealed behind
+the tree, remained in the same rigid attitude, as though intently
+watching some approaching object.</p>
+<p>For a moment a superstitious thrill ran through the boy's frame.
+He had heard stories of ghostly visitants to these woods, some of
+which wore the garb of the monks of the neighbouring priory; but he
+had never seen any such apparition, and would not have thought of
+it now had it not been for the peculiar and unnatural quietude of
+this figure. As it was, he paused, gazing intently at it, wondering
+if indeed it were a being of flesh and blood.</p>
+<p>He was just summoning up courage to go forward and salute it,
+when it moved forward in a gliding and cautious fashion. Edred felt
+ashamed of his momentary thrill of fear, for he recognized at once
+the awkward gait and rolling step of Brother Fabian, and knew that
+his preceptor's bitterest foe was lingering in the precincts of his
+home.</p>
+<p>Resolved not to be seen himself, the boy sprang up a
+neighbouring tree as lightly as a squirrel, and from that vantage
+ground he saw that his brother Julian was approaching, and that the
+monk had stepped out to greet the lad. He heard the sound of the
+nasal tones, so different from the refined accents of Brother
+Emmanuel.</p>
+<p>"Peace be with thee, my son."</p>
+<p>Julian stopped short, and slightly bent the knee. He looked up
+into Brother Fabian's face with a look which Edred well knew, and
+which implied no love for his interlocutor. A stranger, however,
+would be probably pleased at the frank directness of the gaze, not
+noting the underlying hardihood and defiance.</p>
+<p>"Alone, my son?" questioned the brother. "Methought I saw thee
+not long since with thy father and brother and the servants. How
+comes it thou art now alone?"</p>
+<p>"I saw thee not," answered Julian, without attempting to reply
+to the question.</p>
+<p>"Belike no. I was telling my beads out here in the forest. Thou
+didst pass me by all unknowing; but I was nigh thy path the while
+nevertheless. Whither--"</p>
+<p>"That is something strange," remarked the boy, affecting not to
+hear the commencement of another question; "for I could be sworn
+that not a squirrel or field mouse crosses my path but that I mark
+him down. But I may not linger thus; the hour of our studies is
+already here. I wish you good e'en; I must away home."</p>
+<p>The boy would have been gone with a bound the next instant had
+not the monk laid a detaining hand upon his arm. Edred saw by the
+reluctance of his brother's mien that he resented being thus
+stayed.</p>
+<p>"One moment, good my son," said Brother Fabian. "Tell me whither
+thy father and brother have gone. It is something too late in the
+day for a hunting party; yet I knew not that the good knight
+purposed any journey."</p>
+<p>Edred saw the sudden flash that came into Julian's eyes. He was
+in an agony lest the boy should betray his father's destination,
+which to the astute mind of the monk might betray much more than
+his brother himself knew; but as he heard Julian's words he drew
+his breath more freely.</p>
+<p>"Marry, hast thou not heard that my Lord of Beaumaris and
+Rochefort goes a-hunting tomorrow with great muster? My father has
+gone to join the goodly company assembling there. Wilt thou not go
+thither too, Master Monk, and join the revelry that will make the
+hall ring tonight? I trow there is welcome for all who come. I
+would my father had taken me."</p>
+<p>"Go to, saucy boy, go to!" replied the brother, half piqued,
+half amused by the lad's boldness in thus implying that his place
+was at a riotous revel such as generally took place when some great
+baron invited his friends for a day's sport in the forest.</p>
+<p>It was like enough that this hunting party had been arranged for
+the morrow, and this road certainly led to Beaumaris and Rochefort.
+The reply seemed to satisfy the monk, and he relaxed his grasp of
+the boy's arm.</p>
+<p>"I must not keep thee from thy studies longer," he said. "Say,
+what does Brother Emmanuel teach you?"</p>
+<p>"The Latin tongue and the use of the pen. Edred is a fine scribe
+already. And he hath taught us our letters in Greek likewise; for
+men are saying, he tells us, that it is shame that that language
+has been neglected so long, since the Holy Scriptures were written
+in it first."</p>
+<p>"And he doubtless teaches you from the Holy Scriptures--"</p>
+<p>"Ay; and from the writings of the fathers, and the mass book,"
+added the boy. "We can all read Latin right well now. But I must be
+going, an it please thee-"</p>
+<p>"Yea, verily thou wilt make a fine scholar one of these days. I
+am glad thou hast so good an instructor. And that reminds me--I
+would have speech with Brother Emmanuel some day soon. I have a
+missal that I think he would greatly like sight of. I misdoubt me
+if the prior would like it carried forth from the library; but if
+he would meet me one day here in the forest, I will strive to
+secrete it and let him have sight of it. It hath wonderful pictures
+and lettering such as he loves. Wilt tell him of it, boy, and ask
+if he will have sight of it?"</p>
+<p>"I will tell him," answered Julian. "But I trow he will have
+naught to do with it an it has been filched away from the library
+without the reverend prior's permission. Brother Emmanuel teaches
+us more of the doctrine of obedience than of any other. I trow he
+will not budge an inch!"</p>
+<p>A scowling look passed over the features of the monk, which had
+hitherto been smiling and bland. He took Julian by the arm again,
+and said in a low voice:</p>
+<p>"I have something of import to speak to Brother Emmanuel. He
+will do well to heed me, and to hear what I have to say. Bid him be
+at this spot two days hence just as the sun goes down. Tell him if
+he come not he may live to repent it bitterly."</p>
+<p>"Wilt thou not come back with me?" asked the boy, with a quick,
+distrustful look into the bloated face beneath the cowl. "Thou
+canst speak at ease with him at home. It were better than out here
+in the forest. I will lead thee to him straight, and thou canst say
+all that is in thine heart."</p>
+<p>But the monk dropped his arm and turned quickly away; his voice
+bespoke ill-concealed irritation.</p>
+<p>"I may not linger longer here. The vesper bell will be ringing
+by now. Give Brother Emmanuel my message. I would see him here in
+the forest. And now farewell, boy; go home as fast as thou wilt,
+and put a bridle on thy forward tongue, lest haply it lead thee one
+day into trouble."</p>
+<p>The monk strode away in the direction of the priory. Julian took
+the path towards Chad, with many backward glances at the retreating
+figure, and hardly was it lost in the thick underwood of the forest
+than he found his brother standing at his side.</p>
+<p>"Thou here, Edred? Whence camest thou?"</p>
+<p>Edred pointed to his leafy hiding place, and laid a finger on
+his lips in token of caution. Julian pursued his way awhile in
+silence, and only when they had increased the distance betwixt
+themselves and the monk by many hundred yards, the elder brother
+said, in low tones and very cautiously:</p>
+<p>"Have a care, Julian; methinks he is not going home. He is here
+as a spy, I do not doubt. I saw him watching and spying like a
+veritable messenger sent for such a purpose.</p>
+<p>"O Julian, I was right glad at the answer thou gavest him about
+our father. I trembled lest thou shouldst say he was bound for the
+coast."</p>
+<p>Both brothers had been too well trained in the creed which
+allows and encourages the practice of speaking falsehood and even
+doing evil in a good cause, to feel that any kind of shame attached
+to a falsehood spoken to conceal from a crafty enemy a thing it
+would be perilous to others for him to know. And indeed diplomatic
+falsehood has never been eradicated from the world even since purer
+light has shone in upon it. It is very hard to meet craft,
+falsehood, and treachery by absolute frankness and truthful
+honesty. In the long run it does sometimes prove to be the
+strongest weapon a man can wield; but the temptation to meet craft
+by craft, deceit by deceit, is strong in human nature, and until a
+much later date was openly advocated as the only policy sane men
+could adopt when they dealt with foes always eager to outwit them.
+And certainly these lads would have felt themselves justified in
+going to far greater lengths to save their father from suspicion,
+or their preceptor and friend from peril.</p>
+<p>"Then thou heardest all? I scarce know why I spoke as I did, for
+our father has always been the friend of the brethren of Chadwater.
+But the look in the man's eye made me cautious, and I minded a few
+parting words spoken by Bertram. Tell me, Edred, what it is that is
+stirring; I would know more."</p>
+<p>"Verily it is that Brother Emmanuel stands in some peril from
+those of his own community. He has written something they mislike,
+and they mean to have him back to answer for it. Both he and our
+father think that if once he enters Chadwater again he will never
+come forth alive. Wherefore our father will not give him up to his
+enemies, but will contrive for him to escape. That is what he has
+gone to the coast for today; and when he knows that a vessel is
+ready and about to sail, Brother Emmanuel must be spirited away in
+the dead of the night; and when the prior comes to search for
+him--as doubtless he will do when we can find him not--it will
+puzzle him to lay hands upon him, for he will be away on the high
+seas."</p>
+<p>"Good!" cried Julian, delighted. "Edred, I mislike those cruel,
+crafty monks. Methinks they are little like the saintly men of old
+who fled to the cloister to rid themselves of the trammels of the
+world. I--"</p>
+<p>But Edred laid a hand upon his brother's arm and checked him
+suddenly, pointing to another stationary figure a short distance
+away amongst the trees--a figure wearing the dress of a lay brother
+of the priory, and engaged in keeping a close and careful watch
+upon the main entrance to the house.</p>
+<p>"Hist!" whispered Edred; "we must not let him hear such words.
+Julian, mark my word, this house is watched. The prior has set his
+spies upon it. He fears lest Brother Emmanuel shall escape; or else
+the watch is set so that any going forth of his may be known, and
+he will be set upon and swiftly bound, and carried away to the
+priory, whence, I fear me, no man will ever see him re-issue."</p>
+<p>Both the boys had stopped short, and now they looked into each
+other's faces with dismay.</p>
+<p>Their light footfalls had not been heard, nor even the sound of
+their voices; for a strong breeze had sprung up, and was rustling
+the leaves overhead, and several birds were singing lustily. The
+brothers had time to take in the situation without being seen
+themselves, and they then drew hack into a leafy covert and spoke
+in whispers.</p>
+<p>"Edred, do thou go back to the house instantly and openly, and
+warn Brother Emmanuel that he go not forth. Belike he might come
+out in search of us, since the hour is long past when we should
+have been with him. That must not be. Go and tell him all we have
+seen; whilst I will creep like a wildcat round the house, and see
+if there be other spies keeping watch like those we have seen."</p>
+<p>"Ay, do so," replied Edred earnestly. "I fear me we shall find
+that every door is watched. But if thou art seen, go forward
+boldly. Let none guess that you suspect aught. Doubtless each
+watcher is well primed with some excellent reason for being found
+there. Speak them friendly, and do not show distrust."</p>
+<p>"I will be as wise as a serpent," answered the boy, with one of
+his keen looks which bespoke him older in mind than in years.</p>
+<p>Edred felt that his junior was better fitted to cope with a spy
+than he himself; and gladly taking the other office upon himself,
+he walked gaily forward, whistling a roundelay as he moved, and
+affecting not to see the dark figure by the oak, which pressed
+closer and closer out of sight as the lad strode by.</p>
+<p>"Verily he means to remain unseen," thought Edred to himself.
+"If he had not been a spy he would have greeted me as I passed. He
+is after no good. Thank Heaven we have seen and heard what we have!
+We can so manage now that Brother Emmanuel set not foot beyond the
+courtyard for long enough to come--not till he may sally forth to
+make his way to the coast."</p>
+<p>And then a sudden fear smote the boy that per chance this night
+journey to the coast might not be so easy to accomplish as had been
+hoped. If the cunning prior had set a watch upon Chad with the very
+object of preventing the escape of his intended victim, might it
+not well be that his father's forethought would be of no avail?</p>
+<p>But it would not do to lose heart--time might show a way of
+escape; and Edred hurried within, and found Brother Emmanuel
+awaiting his tardy pupils, the great Bible open before him, the
+sunset light illuminating his face till, to the boy's ardent
+imagination, it seemed to be encircled by a nimbus.</p>
+<p>His story was soon excitedly told, and as Brother Emmanuel heard
+of Sir Oliver's sudden journey, a look almost as of pain crossed
+his face.</p>
+<p>"I have told thy father that I cannot and will not suffer harm
+to befall him and his through his kindness to me. Boy, boy, these
+be evil days in which to offend the powers that be; and it were
+better, far better, I should give myself up to death than that hurt
+should fall upon those I love and those who have befriended me with
+such generosity and love."</p>
+<p>But Edred passionately disclaimed and explained.</p>
+<p>"Brother, holy father, speak not so! thou wilt break our hearts!
+We love thee! thou knowest that we love thee! And we think, we are
+assured, that we can yet save thee, and ourselves too. Do not break
+our hearts by giving thyself up ere we have tried our utmost. It
+may be--nay, I am assured of it--that our blessed Saviour has a
+great work for thee to do for Him somewhere. Has He not Himself
+charged His servants if they be persecuted in one city to flee to
+another? He has not bid them give themselves up to their foes, to
+be hindered from doing the work He has put it into their hearts to
+do.</p>
+<p>"Pardon my forwardness if I seem to teach my preceptor. I do but
+repeat words thou hast taught me. Stay with us--stay at Chad. There
+be ways and means both for hiding and for flight of which few know
+or dream. Let us have this alms to do for our Lord, that we hide
+and save one of His servants. Thou canst little know what grief and
+sorrow thou wouldst cause to us, or thou couldst not talk of giving
+thyself up."</p>
+<p>The boy's earnestness was so deep that it could not but produce
+an impression. Although full of heroic courage and capabilities of
+self sacrifice, it was against human nature that Brother Emmanuel
+should desire to cast away his life, and that not by raising a
+protest for any point of conscience, but simply to be quietly put
+out of the way, that he might no longer expose the luxury and vice
+prevailing in the monastic retreat of which he was a member.</p>
+<p>He had seen a row of underground niches, some of which had been
+walled up; and tradition asserted that living monks had been thus
+buried alive for being untrue to their vows. He quite believed the
+prior capable of accusing him of the same sin and ordering him to a
+like fate. In the eyes of the haughty ecclesiastic such a betrayal
+of cloister secrets would be looked upon as treachery to his vows,
+whilst in reality it was his very love for his vows, and his horror
+at their violation, which had inspired the pen that had poured
+forth burning words of denunciation and scorn. To die openly for
+the cause would have been one thing--a martyr has ofttimes spoken
+more eloquently by his death than by his life--but to be thus
+buried in a living grave would benefit none; and who would not
+shrink from such a fate?</p>
+<p>The pause which succeeded Edred's impassioned appeal was broken
+by the entrance of Julian, flushed and heated.</p>
+<p>"It is as we thought. The house is watched. There be six or
+seven spies posted around it--most of them lay brothers, but some
+monks themselves. Every entrance is watched closely. None can go in
+or out unmarked by one or another. Doubtless they have some signal
+which may at any time bring all of them together to one spot.</p>
+<p>"Brother Emmanuel, thou must not adventure thyself beyond the
+courtyard till this watch ceases. Were they spies of my Lord of
+Mortimer's, we might go forth and drive them hence. But none may
+lay a finger on a monk. They are all ready with a story that they
+are on the watch for some heretic in hiding in the woods. I spoke
+to one to see what he would say, and he began about the hunchback
+of the fair, whom they have not caught yet, and professed to be
+watching for him. Doubtless they would all say the same did any
+question them; but they strive to keep out of sight as far as may
+be, and some have found hollow trees where they might pass days and
+nights and none be the wiser."</p>
+<p>There could be no study for the boys that day; they were too
+deeply moved and excited. Moreover, Edred had his father's charge
+to keep, and as sundown was nigh at hand, the two brothers visited
+every gate and portal and saw the house made fast within and
+without.</p>
+<p>An air of excitement and mystery seemed to permeate the place.
+The servants had caught some of the infection, and whispers of
+loyalty and affection were murmured many times in the boys' ears as
+they pursued their round. At last, all being safely ordered, they
+went by common consent to their own room, and stood looking at the
+secret door which led to the hiding place none knew of but
+themselves and Warbel.</p>
+<p>"I trow we shall need it now," said Edred. "But all is in
+readiness for the fugitive; all has been done save to bring in the
+victuals. Brother, shall we do that this very night? I would there
+were a supply there for a month, and a couple of gallon jars of
+good mead and some bottles of wine. We must put water there, too,
+but not till the last minute. They say men must have water, else
+they die; but sure they could live for long on good mead and ale.
+Hath Bertram any plan for getting water to the chamber save what we
+can carry ourselves? He said he would not rest till we had done
+somewhat; but--"</p>
+<p>A light sparkled in Julian's eyes.</p>
+<p>"Come, and thou shalt see, thou brother of books," he said.
+"Whilst thou hast been doing thy penance for what sin we know not,
+and been reading amain with Brother Emmanuel, we have not been
+idle. Come, and I will show thee what we have contrived. I trow
+none need perish of thirst in the secret chamber now who knows
+aught of our contrivance."</p>
+<p>With eager steps Julian led the way, and Edred no less eagerly
+followed. It was very dark in the secret chamber; but the means of
+kindling a light were now there, and soon a small dim lantern was
+lighted.</p>
+<p>"Come hither," said Julian, taking the light and leading the way
+into a corner that lay beneath the leads of the house; and when
+there Edred saw a metal trough or receiver, rudely made but
+effectual for the purpose of holding any liquid, something similar
+to what the animals in the yard were fed and watered from. Above
+this trough was a piece of iron pipe with a bung at the end.</p>
+<p>"That trough and pipe Bertram and I fashioned in the
+blacksmith's forge with our own hands," said the boy proudly, "and
+I trow both are good enow and strong. Dost know what does the other
+end of the pipe? Why, we have inserted it into the great rainwater
+tank yonder above our heads, which our grandsire contrived, and
+which is fed from the roofs and battlements of all the towers. Thou
+hast heard our father tell how he read of such things in days of
+old, when men built wondrous palaces, and had hanging gardens, and
+I know not what beside. He set the tank up there, and, as thou
+knowest, it is not now greatly used, albeit there is always water
+there, and at times men draw it forth. It may not be the best or
+purest, but it will serve for washing, and for drinking too were a
+man in a great strait. It is all pure and sweet now; for in the
+thunderstorm three nights since Bertram got up and let off all the
+stagnant water by the pipe which can be opened below, and the rain
+soon filled it again, it poured down with such goodwill. We need
+not fear that any captive will die of thirst. He has but to draw
+this bung and water will pour forth into this trough till he stops
+it again. He can pour away the surplus down the pipe with the dust
+and such like.</p>
+<p>"I trow whoever lives up here awhile will have no such bad
+housing. And if we but get the place victualled this night, it will
+be ready for Brother Emmanuel whensoever he may need it."</p>
+<h2><a name="ChapterVII" id="ChapterVII">Chapter VII</a>: An
+Imposing Spectacle.</h2>
+<p>"To appear at the priory with all our household! Surely, my
+husband, that command is something strange?"</p>
+<p>Lady Chadgrove raised her eyes anxiously to her lord's face, to
+see thereon an answering look of perplexity not untinged by
+anxiety. He was perusing a paper held in his hands.</p>
+<p>"Such is the missive," he remarked. "It was brought by a lay
+brother but now. Methinks the fellow is yet in the kitchen. Our
+mead is not to be lightly disdained. I will send young Julian to
+talk with him, and learn if may be the cause of this strange
+summons. I would not willingly give cause of offence to the lord
+prior; and the money has been paid that was promised, so methinks
+he means no hurt to me or mine. But it is not safe to adventure
+oneself into the lion's mouth. I would gladly know what is behind
+all this. I am something ill at ease."</p>
+<p>"All the household would mean Brother Emmanuel likewise," said
+the lady. "Perchance it is but a means of drawing him within the
+toils."</p>
+<p>"It is like enough. It will be the day on which the week of
+grace expires. Would to God I could see my way more clearly! I am
+in a great strait betwixt mine own conscience and the authority of
+the Church. How can I deliver up a faithful and devoted son of the
+Church to certain death, when my house is his <span lang="en-US"
+xml:lang="en-US">only</span> refuge and protection? Yet how may I
+refuse obedience to my spiritual fathers and superiors, to whom I
+owe submission in all things, in right of their office, albeit as
+men I know them to be--faulty?".</p>
+<p>He paused, as if reluctant to put his thoughts into words even
+to his wife. He was going through that mental and spiritual
+struggle which was speedily to do so great a work in the
+world--that struggle which led to the final fall of the religious
+houses in this land. Viewed as a God-appointed ordinance, or at
+least as a bulwark and rampart of the Church, it seemed a fearful
+thing to hold them in aught but awe and reverence, and to look upon
+their sons as saints and godly men, in whom the Spirit of the Lord
+was working. But when the corrupt practices within those walls were
+known, when men were convinced, sorely against their will, that the
+inmates were licentious, depraved, covetous, and tyrannical, then
+indeed it became hard to recognize their God-appointed mission.</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver was no heretic; he had not even the faint sympathy
+with and comprehension of the tenets of the heretics which were
+creeping into some enlightened minds. He had imbibed some new and
+enlightened views from stanch sons of the Church, who were
+themselves preaching the doctrine of internal reform, but he went
+no further in these matters than his teachers. The very name of
+heresy was odious to him, but none the less did it go sorely
+against the grain to be a slave to the haughty Prior of Chadwater,
+and at his bidding to violate (as it seemed to him) the sacred laws
+of hospitality.</p>
+<p>Whilst Julian was gone upon his errand, he paced the floor
+restlessly and moodily.</p>
+<p>"I would we had got him off before this coil began. But who
+could have thought it would come--and Brother Emmanuel so true and
+faithful a son of the Church? Knowest thou, wife, that he keeps
+vigil three nights in the week in the chantry, watching
+sleeplessly, lest the Lord coming suddenly should find the whole
+house sleeping? Edred keeps watch one night, and good old Margaret
+another. I did but lately know this thing. Brother Emmanuel holds
+that the Church should ever be watching and waiting for her Lord,
+lest He come as a thief in the night. He would have prayers
+ceaselessly ascending before Him. It is his grief and pain that
+within the cloister walls, whence he has come, no true vigil is
+kept, but that sloth and ease have taken the place of watching and
+vigil and prayer. And such a man as that they would have me deliver
+to his death!"</p>
+<p>"Art sure they mean him ill, my husband? It seems scarce
+possible."</p>
+<p>"I am very sure that it is so," answered the knight, with a
+stern glance bent upon the sunny landscape beyond the open window.
+"It is strange, but it is true; and I sometimes think that some
+fearful and unlooked-for judgment must some day fall upon men
+who--"</p>
+<p>But Sir Oliver paused, for his wife had made a gesture, as if to
+check the impetuous words that sprang to his lips. He smiled a
+little darkly.</p>
+<p>"Thou art right, good dame. Such words are better left unspoke.
+If it be dangerous to think some things, it be more dangerous to
+speak one's thoughts. Let it be enough for us that the Lord
+reigneth, be the earth never so unquiet. He sitteth a judge and a
+king. In His hands are the final issues of all things."</p>
+<p>The lady bent her head with due reverence, and then asked
+eagerly:</p>
+<p>"And when does the fishing smack sail?"</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver shook his head impatiently.</p>
+<p>"Not for full fourteen days: it had but just come into port, and
+there be much merchandise to unlade and lade again. The skipper was
+an honest fellow, and a true-hearted man to boot. He would not take
+my gold, but said his passenger should bring it with him when he
+came; for he knew there was a chance he might not contrive to come,
+and he would not receive aught for services he might never have
+power to render. But he knows his business, and once safe on board
+the sloop our fugitive will be safe enow. But not till it be almost
+ready for sea--not till the skipper could weigh anchor at a
+moment's notice. He himself said he must not come aboard till the
+last moment. Were any hue and cry to be made after him, any vessel
+in port would be certain to be searched. How to keep him safe for
+these fourteen--nay, it is but twelve days now--is the thing that
+is perplexing me. Until the close of the appointed week naught will
+be done; but there will be one long week after that which will tax
+our resources to the utmost. And this summons from the prior makes
+the whole question the more difficult."</p>
+<p>"And the boys say that the house is being watched. Hast not
+heard as much? There be spies from the priory posted round and
+about. All the gates are watched. Edred thinks it is to strive to
+seize Brother Emmanuel should he venture forth from the shelter of
+the walls.</p>
+<p>"I like not the thought of all those prying eyes. My husband,
+these be strange times in which we dwell."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver's face was dark and thoughtful.</p>
+<p>"Ay, verily they be. How can men wonder that the ignorant and
+unlearned turn with loathing and scorn from such crooked and
+cowardly ways?--</p>
+<p>"How now, Julian? Hast learned the cause of this ado? What says
+the lay brother? Hast thou sounded him with care and with all due
+caution?"</p>
+<p>Julian and Edred came in together. Julian looked flushed and
+excited, Edred pale and thoughtful, and his eyes were glowing with
+a strange fire.</p>
+<p>"Ay, verily, we have found it all out," cried the younger boy,
+with eager excitement of manner. "Methinks it will be a fine sight.
+Father, hast heard of the thing which men call the 'Great
+Abjuration'--was not that the name, Edred?"</p>
+<p>The elder boy made a sign of assent.</p>
+<p>"It is for the heretics and Lollards," pursued Julian eagerly.
+"It hath been done before in many places, and here it is to be done
+two days from hence. All those persons who are suspected of heresy,
+or have been found guilty, are to be called before the lord prior
+and the Lord of Mortimer, and they will be bidden to abjure all
+their false doctrines publicly. The whole village will be assembled
+to hear them recant; high and low, rich and poor, all are to meet
+together in the great quadrangle of the priory to hear and see. The
+lay brother says it will be a fine sight. If they will not recant,
+the prior will give them over to the Lord of Mortimer, who will see
+that they suffer as heretics are wont to do. If they abjure their
+errors, the prior will set them their penances; and these be no
+light thing, by what the brother says. Some will be branded in the
+cheek, that they carry the mark of their shame all their days; some
+will have a green badge affixed to their arm, to wear until they
+have leave to cast it off, that all men may know they have been
+touched by the pollution; whilst others will be set to menial toil
+in the monasteries, and will perchance spend the rest of their
+lives there, sundered from their friends and their homes and all
+those whom they love.</p>
+<p>"In truth, I marvel how any man can meddle with heresy in these
+days. The bishops have resolved to stamp it out once and for all,
+and methinks they will do so right well if they take such steps as
+these."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver's face looked a little relieved as he heard his son's
+words.</p>
+<p>"Then everybody within the district is to be summoned to meet at
+the priory upon this same day?"</p>
+<p>"Ay, verily; all are to be there, from the highest to the
+lowest. The lay brothers are going round the country, bidding all
+to the spectacle. It is thought that after all have seen what will
+take place upon that day, there will be no longer any fear of
+heresy round Chad and Mortimer."</p>
+<p>The boy ran off to try to learn more details. Edred stood
+looking at his father with troubled eyes.</p>
+<p>"Father," he said, in a low voice, "must Brother Emmanuel go
+with us that day?"</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver looked down at the paper in his hands.</p>
+<p>"It bids me to attend with my family and all my household, save
+such as must be left to take due care of the house in my absence,"
+said he. Then he paused awhile in silent thought, and looking up he
+said suddenly, "Go fetch Brother Emmanuel hither."</p>
+<p>Edred vanished silently and swiftly, and soon afterwards
+returned with the monk at his side.</p>
+<p>The past few days had left their mark on the thin, spiritual
+face of the young ecclesiastic. The knowledge of the peril in which
+he stood had not daunted his courage, though it had drawn lines in
+his face and deepened the fire which burned within those dark,
+resolute eyes. His face looked as though he had slept but little,
+as though his nights had been passed in watching and prayer, as was
+indeed the case. He had an air of calm, resolute courage and
+hopefulness, though it was plain that he knew the danger of his
+position, and was fully alive to the peril which menaced him.</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver placed the paper in his hand, and watched him
+silently whilst he perused it. When he had finished he handed it
+back, and stood for a moment looking out of the window with an
+expression of thoughtful concentration on his face. At the end of a
+few moments he looked up quickly, and said:</p>
+<p>"You and yours will attend, Sir Oliver?"</p>
+<p>"Yes; we must needs do that. But you?"</p>
+<p>Brother Emmanuel lifted his head and threw it back with a
+gesture of resolution and independence.</p>
+<p>"Sir Oliver," he said, "upon the day when your household is
+bidden to the priory, I cease, by the command of my superior, to be
+a member of this household. Upon that day your command over me (if
+I may use the word)--your responsibility over me--ceases. Whatever
+I may do or not do is no concern of yours. I am no longer the
+instructor of your sons, nor the priest within your walls. What I
+do I do of mine own self. None can rightly call you to task for it.
+Let that be your safeguard; let that be your answer to all
+questions. The prior has ordained that from that day I cease to
+remain here. From the dawning of that day you have no part nor lot
+in my life. I take its control into mine own hands, and it were
+better you should not even know whither I go nor what I do."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver bent a searching look upon him.</p>
+<p>"So be it," he answered, after a moment's thought. "But this one
+word I say to thee: Thou hast been true and faithful to me and
+mine; wherefore my roof and my walls shall be thy shelter until
+thou goest forth of thine own freewill. Be not afraid to remain
+here with me. I will defend thee with every power I have until such
+time as thou mayest safely escape beyond the seas."</p>
+<p>He held out his hand. The monk took it and pressed it between
+both of his.</p>
+<p>"The Lord deal with thee and thine as thou hast dealt with me,"
+was the reply, spoken in deep, earnest accents.</p>
+<p>The knight bent his head in response to the benediction; and
+Brother Emmanuel moved silently away, closely followed by Edred,
+who looked pale and troubled.</p>
+<p>"Thou dost not think he will present himself at the priory with
+the rest of the world?" asked Lady Chadgrove, with anxiety in face
+and voice; and her husband thoughtfully shook his head as he made
+reply:</p>
+<p>"I trow not. I have spoken to him of that before, and he was
+very well resolved to fly the country and strive to finish the work
+he has begun, to join the band who are toiling might and main to
+bring a purer and holier spirit within the pale of the Church and
+her servants. It is a work to which he has long felt called, and he
+believes that it will be faithfully carried out somewhere, if not
+here. For a while he will be safer beyond the seas; but he may
+return and join with those in Oxford and London who are toiling in
+the same cause. He knows of the sloop--where it lies and when it
+sails; and I trow he is laying plans of his own. It were better not
+to ask of these. I would rather walk in ignorance. A man cannot
+betray, however inadvertently, what he knows not, and the subtle
+skill in questioning possessed by our reverend prior might win the
+secret from any unskilled person ere he knew he had revealed it. I
+know not what he means to do, nor shall I seek to know. But he has
+courage, spirit, and a consciousness of integrity which may carry
+him through much. Methinks he has judged wisely and well both for
+us and himself.</p>
+<p>"When this day comes," touching the paper in his hand, "it is
+very true that I am no longer accountable for him as a member of my
+house hold. He has received his recall from his superior. It is for
+him to answer to it or not as he thinks best."</p>
+<p>A sense of excitement and uneasiness pervaded the whole of the
+house during the two following days. In all men's mouths was talk
+of this solemn abjuration which was about to be forced upon all
+those suspected of heresy; and many persons who had tampered
+slightly and privately with doubtful matters went about looking
+uneasy and troubled, fearful lest they might find themselves
+accused of illicit practices, and be summoned forth to do penance
+in a more or less severe form before they could hope to receive
+absolution.</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver Chadgrove's household was strictly orthodox in all
+outward matters; but the leaven of Lollardism was wonderfully
+penetrating, and he himself had suspected and feared that some of
+his servants might be tainted therewith. He awaited the day with
+almost as much anxiety as any of his dependants, for he well knew
+that the Lord of Mortimer would lose no opportunity of dealing him
+a heavy blow; and if he could be proved guilty of harbouring
+heretics or even suspected persons in his house, it would give his
+enemy a handle against him that he would not be slow to use.</p>
+<p>As for the boys, it was plain that something of unwonted
+excitement was agitating their minds; but in the general anxiety
+pervading the whole household little account was taken of this.</p>
+<p>The day came at last, dawning fair and clear. Sir Oliver
+assembled his household early in the courtyard, and every retainer
+was clad in his best and <span lang="en-US" xml:lang=
+"en-US">mounted</span> upon his best charger. It was well to make a
+goodly display of strength and wealth on an occasion like the
+present. Doubtless the Lord of Mortimer would be there with all his
+train, and Chad must not cut a much poorer figure in the eyes of
+the beholders.</p>
+<p>None knew better than Sir Oliver how far a goodly seeming went
+in condoning offences and allaying suspicion, especially in the
+eyes of such a worldly-wise man as the Prior of Chadwater. A proud
+bearing, a goodly following, a gorgeous retinue, would be a far
+better proof of orthodoxy in his eyes than any saintliness of life
+and conduct. Mortimer would know that right well, though, as he had
+been elected as the secular agent to assist the prior in his work
+today, plainly no stigma of any kind was thought to rest upon his
+household. Sir Oliver knew that Mortimer was a larger property than
+Chad, and that the baron was a greater man than the knight. It was
+reasonable enough that he had been selected for this office, and
+such choice need imply no distrust of himself on the prior's part;
+but still there was an uneasy, underlying consciousness that he was
+suspected and watched, and the espionage which had been kept up all
+this while on his house was a plain proof that he was not entirely
+trusted.</p>
+<p>The priory and its adjacent buildings formed a very fine
+specimen of medieval architecture. The abbey was in itself a
+masterpiece of beauty, and the great block formed by refectories
+and dormitories stood at right angles to it. The prior's house,
+with its ample accommodation and its guest chambers, formed an
+other side to the great quadrangle; whilst the granaries,
+storehouses, and such-like buildings formed the fourth--the whole
+enclosing a very large space, which formed the exercising ground of
+the monks when they were kept by their rules within the precincts
+of their home.</p>
+<p>The smoothest of green grass, carefully kept and tended, formed
+the carpet of this enclosure; and today the whole quadrangle formed
+an animated and picturesque spectacle on account of the shifting,
+many-coloured groups of people gathered together there with looks
+of expectation and wonder.</p>
+<p>A holiday appearance was presented by the crowd; for however ill
+at ease any person might feel, it was his aim and object to look as
+jovial and well assured as possible. Every knee was bent whenever
+any monk appeared. The professions of reverence and orthodoxy were
+almost comic in their display.</p>
+<p>The whole of the rural population had gathered in this open
+space when the master of Chad and his retainers rode in, followed
+by the humbler servants and many women and children on foot. But
+the Lord of Mortimer had not yet put in an appearance, though some
+of his retainers and men-at-arms might be seen mingling with the
+crowd; and Sir Oliver and his wife and sons looked curiously about
+them as they reined back their horses against the wall, wondering
+whether they should dismount altogether, and what the order of the
+day's proceedings was to be.</p>
+<p>There were two great raised platforms at one end of the open
+enclosure, and upon these platforms, both of which were draped with
+cloth, many seats had been arranged. One of these was canopied, and
+was plainly for the prior; but beyond this Sir Oliver could be sure
+of nothing.</p>
+<p>When, however, it became known that the party from Chad had
+arrived, a lay brother came out and bid them dismount and send away
+their steeds to the meadow beyond, where one or two of the servants
+could see to them; and as soon as this had been done, Sir Oliver
+was told that he and his lady would occupy certain seats upon one
+of the platforms, but that there would not be room for more than
+his eldest son to have a place there beside him. The younger boys
+must remain in the crowd.</p>
+<p>Edred and Julian were well pleased at this, and gave each other
+a quick pressure of the hand. Edred was intensely excited; and
+gradually edged his way to a good position not far from the
+platform, that he might hear and see everything; and Julian stood
+beside him, as intent upon the proceedings as anyone.</p>
+<p>With a great show of ecclesiastical pomp, forth came the prior
+with his monks in attendance, and closely following them the
+haughty Lord of Mortimer; with his son-in-law, Sir Edward Chadwell,
+by his side, and his daughter following her husband. With these
+came many knights and persons of standing in the county; and whilst
+the prior and the monks grouped themselves upon one platform, the
+barons, knights, and nobles took their appointed places on the
+other, the owners of Mortimer and Chad being for once in their
+lives elbow to elbow, and constrained to exchange words and looks
+of greeting.</p>
+<p>A deep hush fell upon the crowd, and the people surged back
+against the walls, leaving the centre space vacant. At the same
+time certain men wearing the garb and the air of jailers or
+executioners came forth and stood in the midst of the open
+space--one of them bearing the glowing brazier and the branding
+iron, which he placed on a slab of stone in the very centre of the
+enclosure.</p>
+<p>When all preparations were complete, the prior arose, and in a
+loud and solemn voice commanded that the prisoners should be
+brought forth--those persons who had not been merely suspected of
+heresy, but had been found with heretical books in their
+possession, or were known to be in the habit of meeting together to
+read such books and hear the pestilent doctrines which vile and
+wicked persons were propagating in the land.</p>
+<p>At that command a number of monks appeared, leading bound, and
+in scant and miserable clothing, about a score of men and women,
+foremost amongst whom was the hunchback, whose face and voice were
+alike well known to Edred. Most of the prisoners were trembling and
+cowering; but he held his head erect, and looked calmly round upon
+the assembled potentates. There was no fear or shrinking in his
+pinched face. He eyed the prior with a look as unbending as his
+own.</p>
+<p>Then began a long harangue from the great man, in which the
+wiles of the devil in the pestilent doctrines of the heretics,
+so-called Lollards, were forcibly and not illogically pointed out.
+When no man might give answer, when none might show where
+misrepresentation came in, where there was nothing given but the
+one side of the question, it was not difficult to make an excellent
+case against the accused. The early heretics, mostly unlettered
+people, always marred the purity of the cause by falling into
+exaggeration and foolishness, by denouncing what was good as well
+as what was corrupt in a system against which they were
+revolting--thus laying themselves open to attack and confutation,
+and alienating from them many who would have striven to stand their
+friend and to have gently set them right had they been less
+headstrong and less prone to tear away and condemn every practice
+the meaning of which they were, through ignorance and want of
+comprehension, unable to enter into.</p>
+<p>In the hands of the skilful prior their doctrines were indeed
+made to look vile and blasphemous and foolish in the extreme. Many
+persons shuddered at hearing what words had been used by them with
+regard to the holy sacraments; and most of the persons brought to
+their trial were weeping and terrified at their own conduct before
+the prior's speech was half through. Only the hunchback retained
+his bold front, and looked back with scorn into the face of the
+prelate as he made point after point in his scathing
+denunciation.</p>
+<p>When the harangue ended, the prior made a sign to his servants,
+and immediately one of the most timorous and craven of the
+prisoners was brought up before him. He was far too cunning a judge
+to try first to bend the spirit of the hunchback. He knew that with
+that man he could do nothing, and he knew too what marvels were
+sometimes accomplished by the example of self devotion. So
+commencing with a weak and trembling woman, who was ready to sink
+into the ground with fear and shame merely at being thus had up
+before the eyes of the whole place, he easily obtained a solemn
+recantation and abjuration of every form of heresy; and in a tone
+of wonderful mildness, though of solemn warning, too, told her that
+since she was a woman and young, and had doubtless been led away by
+others, she should be pardoned after she had paid a visit barefoot
+to a shrine forty miles off--a shrine much derided by the heretic
+teachers--and had returned in like fashion, having tasted nothing
+but bread and water the whole time of the journey.</p>
+<p>Then came, one after another, the weakest and most timorous of
+the craven crowd. The infection of fear had seized upon them.
+Ignorant, superstitious, scarcely understanding the new teachings
+that had attracted them, and fearfully terrified of falling under
+the ban of the Church under whose shelter they had always lived,
+was it wonderful that one after another should abjure their
+heretical opinions, and swear to listen to the enticer no more?
+Some strove to ask questions upon the points which troubled them;
+but scarce any sort of disputing was allowed. The prior was subtle
+in fence, and by a few scathing words could generally quell the
+questioner and make him wish his objection unspoken.</p>
+<p>And those who showed a tendency towards disputation were far
+more harshly dealt with than those who abjured at once. The red-hot
+iron, the badge of shame, the servitude which might be lifelong
+were imposed upon them. So a sense of despair fell upon the little
+band, and they yielded one by one; only three refusing to take the
+words of the oath--the hunchback and two more, one being a lad of
+about sixteen summers; and after using every threat and argument to
+overcome their obstinacy, the prior called upon the Lord of
+Mortimer as the representative of the secular arm, and delivered
+the prisoners over to him to be dealt with after the manner of the
+law.</p>
+<p>A shuddering groan went up, as if involuntarily, from many
+throats as the prisoners were led away by the guards of Mortimer.
+The prior looked sternly round to check the demonstration,
+reminding the people that the burning of the body was as nothing,
+it was the eternal burning of the soul in hell that men should
+fear; and that if in the midst of the flames the guilty persons
+recanted their sins, it was just possible that even then the
+merciful God would hear and receive their prayer, and that they
+might be saved from the eternal death of the soul.</p>
+<p>Then somewhat changing his tone, though still speaking with
+gravity and even with sadness, he told the people of the pain with
+which he had heard stories of the sympathy evinced by some even
+amongst those standing about him for the wicked and pestilent
+disturbers of the public peace and the safety of the Church. One or
+two persons he called upon by name, and rebuked with some severity
+for words reported to have been dropped by them which savoured, if
+not of heresy itself, yet of carelessness and irreverence for
+sacred things which bordered dangerously on heresy. One after
+another these persons came forward trembling, asked pardon, and
+were dismissed not unkindly, but with many an admonition for the
+future. It was made plain and patent to all that the bishops had
+absolutely resolved to stamp out heresy once and for all; and for
+once the prior and abbots, the monks and the friars, were in accord
+and working hand in hand. It was useless for any to hope to stem
+such a tide as that--such was the tenor of the prior's
+speech--heresy was to be exterminated. On that point there was no
+manner of doubt; and if, knowing this, persons chose deliberately
+to put themselves under the ban of the law, well, their blood must
+be upon their own head. Neither God nor man would have mercy upon
+them.</p>
+<p>Several of the retainers and a few of the actual household of
+Chad had received admonitions of this sort. Sir Oliver looked on
+uneasily, catching a subdued look of triumph in the eyes of his
+rival and foe. He did not believe his household seriously tainted
+with heresy. He knew that certain of them who had been with him in
+London had imbibed the teaching of Dean Colet and his pupils, and
+he did not know, any more than the dean himself, that the Lollards
+secretly encouraged each other to go and hear a man who spoke so
+much of the truth they themselves held.</p>
+<p>The line where orthodoxy ends and heresy begins has been at all
+times hard to define, and perhaps the upholders of the "Church"
+knew as little as anybody how hard this definition was
+becoming.</p>
+<p>Several persons had stood forth (invited by the prior to do so)
+and confessed to dangerous sentiments which they now saw to be
+utterly wrong, and vowed to abjure forever; or had accused other
+persons of words which required explanation, or of deeds which
+suggested a leaning towards secret meetings where heresy might be
+discussed.</p>
+<p>But the day's proceedings seemed drawing to a close, and nothing
+of any great peril to the Lord of Chad had occurred, when just at
+the close of the afternoon Brother Fabian suddenly came forward and
+whispered a few words in the prior's ear; and he, after a moment of
+apparent hesitation, spoke aloud.</p>
+<p>"It is with great grief that I learn that one of our own
+brethren has been heard to utter words which sound strangely like
+those of heresy; but since it is our bounden duty that strict
+justice be done to all, whether high or low, rich or poor, nay,
+whether it be our own son or brother, I here call upon Brother
+Emmanuel to stand forth publicly, as others have done, and answer
+the charge brought against him."</p>
+<p>The prior looked round as he spoke these words in a loud voice;
+but there was no movement either in the crowd or amongst the cowled
+monks, and he spoke the name again without eliciting any
+response.</p>
+<p>The Lord of Mortimer leaned forward and spoke to his
+neighbour.</p>
+<p>"Methinks this brother was a member of your household, Sir
+Oliver," he said, with a gleam of malice in his eye. "Surely you
+received a mandate bidding you come with all your household. Where
+is this preceptor of your sons?"</p>
+<p>"His duties ceased last night," replied Sir Oliver calmly, in a
+tone loud enough to reach the prior's ears. "He had command to
+return today to the priory, and last evening he said farewell to me
+and mine. I have not seen him today."</p>
+<p>"Did he know of the summons to all to attend the gathering here
+today?"</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver bent his head.</p>
+<p>"He did. I showed him the paper myself."</p>
+<p>"Then wherefore is he not here?"</p>
+<p>"That know I not. I did not know he was not here. I do not know
+it even now. I have never known Brother Emmanuel fail in obedience
+yet."</p>
+<p>The name was being whispered all round. The monks were
+professing to be searching for the missing brother. The prior
+looked at Sir Oliver with some sternness.</p>
+<p>"Where is this monk?" he asked,</p>
+<p>"I do not know," was the firm response. "I have not seen him
+since his farewell yesternight."</p>
+<p>"You thought he was coming hither?"</p>
+<p>"I knew naught. He told me naught of his purposes."</p>
+<p>The prior's eyes flashed ominously.</p>
+<p>"Have a care, Sir Oliver, have a care. Brother Emmanuel is yet
+within the walls of Chad. I have reason to know he has not left
+them the whole of this past week. He has been disobedient to his
+vow of submission. He has not come at my bidding."</p>
+<p>"I know naught of it," replied the knight calmly.</p>
+<p>The Lord of Mortimer leaned forward once more with an evil smile
+in his eyes.</p>
+<p>"Let not mistaken generosity get the better of prudence, my
+brother," he said, with derisiveness in his tone. "You know well
+that the penalty of hiding and harbouring a heretic is little short
+of that of heresy itself. Have a care you do not lose all just for
+the caprice of the moment, which in time to come you will have
+leisure bitterly to repent."</p>
+<p>The prior, too, was eying him sternly.</p>
+<p>"Lord Mortimer gives good counsel, Sir Oliver," he said. "Thou
+knowest I am no enemy of thine. What has this day passed must have
+shown thee that. Thou knowest that there be some here who might
+have been called before me today to answer for their deeds who have
+been spared for their youth and gentle birth. Thou hast had proof
+that I am no enemy of thine. But the walls of Chad must not harbour
+a heretic. Brother Emmanuel is there; he hath been there, and hath
+not sallied forth this many days, showing that a guilty conscience
+keeps him within. He cannot go forth without my knowledge; and if
+thou wilt not give him up to me, I must obtain authority and have
+the house searched and the man dragged forth. And I tell thee
+freely, if it be found that thou hast lent thine aid in harbouring
+a heretic and disobedient monk, thy lands will be forfeit, if not
+thy life, and the Lord of Mortimer will be likewise Lord of
+Chad."</p>
+<p>At that moment, had any person had eyes to heed it, it might
+have been observed that Edred and Julian slipped like veritable
+shadows through the packed crowd. The next moment they had reached
+the gateway, had passed under it without exciting any observation,
+and as soon as they reached the cover of the forest, they set off
+to run towards Chad as fast as their legs could carry them--far
+faster than their horses could have borne them through the narrow
+paths of the tangled wood.</p>
+<h2><a name="ChapterVIII" id="ChapterVIII">Chapter VIII</a>: Hidden
+Away.</h2>
+<p>Fleetly, silently, untiringly ran the two brothers, without
+exchanging a single word of their purpose even to each other. The
+distance from the priory to the house was a matter of some two
+miles, but to the trained and hardy limbs of the country-bred lads
+a two miles' run was a trifle, and they were only slightly flushed
+and winded when they paused, by mutual consent, a short distance
+from Chad, at a point where the tall turrets and battlements became
+visible over the treetops.</p>
+<p>Julian, who was a few paces in advance, pulled up short, and
+caught his brother by the arm.</p>
+<p>"Hist!" he whispered cautiously. "I trow the prior's spies be
+still on the watch. We must not be seen coming in this guise. Let
+us wait a few moments till our breath be returned; then we will go
+forward boldly and openly.</p>
+<p>"Edred, have a care how thou answerest me when I shall speak to
+thee anon. We have a part to play, and Brother Emmanuel's life may
+hang upon how we play it."</p>
+<p>Edred nodded assent. He was more weary, because more deeply
+excited, than his brother, and no sleep had visited his eyes the
+previous night. It had been spent with Brother Emmanuel in vigil in
+the chantry. The strain of watching and deeply-seated anxiety was
+telling upon the boy. He was glad that Julian had all his wits
+about him, for his own head seemed swimming and his mind
+unhinged.</p>
+<p>They stood silent awhile, until both had regained their breath;
+then putting on their caps, which for convenience they had carried
+in their hands hitherto, they started forth again at a leisurely
+pace, and with an air of openness and fearlessness, in the
+direction of the main entrance, talking to each other as they went
+in no softened tones.</p>
+<p>"It was a fine sight!" cried Julian. "I would not have missed it
+for worlds. That villainous hunchback! So he was a damnable heretic
+after all! I grieve we ever stood his friend. May he perish like
+the vile creature he is! I will ask Brother Emmanuel to set me a
+penance for having touched him that day when we thought him an
+innocent trader.</p>
+<p>"Edred, thinkest thou that it can be true that Brother Emmanuel
+is himself a heretic? If it be, we must drive him forth with blows
+and curses. To sit down at board with a heretic, to hear teaching
+from his lips! Beshrew me, but one might as well have a friend from
+the pit for an instructor! It cannot be; surely it cannot be."</p>
+<p>The boy spoke hotly and angrily. He had stopped short as if in
+the heat of argument, and Edred saw by the flash in his eye that he
+had caught sight of some lurking spy close at hand.</p>
+<p>"Belike no," answered Edred cautiously, but taking his cue
+instantly from the other. "I did not well hear what Brother Fabian
+said; surely it could be naught so bad as that?"</p>
+<p>"I scarcely heard myself. I was something aweary by that time of
+the spectacle, and methought all the heretics had been dealt with.
+I saw that thou, like myself, wouldst fain stretch thy limbs once
+again, and I had shifted too far away to be certain what was said.
+But I did hear the name of Brother Emmanuel spoken, and there was a
+call for him, and he came not.</p>
+<p>"Edred, can it be that he feared to come? Hath he a guilty
+conscience? If that be so, shall we strive to find him and keep
+watch upon him ourselves, that if the good prior comes to search
+for him at Chad we may be able to give him up, though he have
+hidden himself never so cunningly?"</p>
+<p>"Marry, a good thought. It is certainly something strange that
+he did not come at the prior's summons-and he a brother of the
+order too. Sure, it looks somewhat as though he were afraid. But if
+that be so, we shall scarce find him at Chad. He will have
+benefited by the absence of the household to make good his
+escape.</p>
+<p>"Beshrew me, but he is a crafty knave. Who would have thought it
+of him?"</p>
+<p>"When men turn heretic they seem to be indued with all the
+cunning of the devil!" cried Julian hotly. "But let us not dally
+here; let us run within and strive to seek and to find him. It may
+be he will think he may hide himself the better in some nook or
+corner of the house, since he be well known all around; and the
+good prior said somewhat of having kept a watch upon him. But I
+trow he cannot hide so well but what we shall find him. I would
+fain earn my forgiveness for having shielded one heretic by helping
+to give up another.</p>
+<p>"Come, Edred, let us be going. Those priests are as crafty as
+foxes when the heretic leaven gets into them."</p>
+<p>The brothers dashed away again towards the house; and when once
+within the shelter of the walls, Julian nipped his brother's hand,
+saying in a whisper:</p>
+<p>"There was a spy overhead who drank in every word. He had no
+notion mine eyes had seen him, for he was marvellous well
+concealed, and I never should have found his hiding place had I not
+chanced one day to see him climbing into it. Nobody will suspect
+now that we have had a hand in the hiding of the good brother. But
+let us make all haste, for no man knows when the bloodhounds may be
+upon us to strive to take him away."</p>
+<p>Edred's face was very pale, but steady and resolved. He
+understood, better perhaps than his younger brother, the peril of
+the enterprise upon which they had embarked. But he did not shrink
+from that one whit, only he did hope and trust that his father
+would never be implicated by their conduct; for if, after all, the
+priest were to be found hidden within the precincts of Chad, it was
+easy to prophesy a great reverse of fortune to all who dwelt
+therein.</p>
+<p>However, even that consideration did not move him at this
+moment. Brother Emmanuel, their preceptor and friend and comrade
+(for he had been all three to his pupils during his residence
+beneath their roof), stood in deadly peril of his life, and to save
+him from the malice of his foes must be the first consideration
+now. The existence of the secret chamber was not known even to
+their father. Not a soul in the house or in the world knew of it
+save the three brothers and Warbel. Warbel was absolutely to be
+trusted. He owed too much himself to that retreat to wish to betray
+its existence to others, and he loathed and hated the whole
+household of Mortimer; and it was very plain to all concerned that
+Mortimer was working hand in hand with the prior in this
+matter--the one to obtain possession of the person of the offending
+monk, the other to find cause of accusation against the owner of
+Chad for harbouring and concealing a suspected person, in defiance
+of the laws of the land and of the Church.</p>
+<p>That there was conspiracy afoot against Chad and its master
+Edred did not for a moment doubt; but the first consideration must
+now be the safe hiding of Brother Emmanuel, and the boys dashed
+eagerly through the empty house, to find him in the little chantry,
+where so many of his hours were spent.</p>
+<p>He was reading the office of vespers without any congregation to
+assist. Instinctive reverence caused the boys to kneel in silence
+till the brief service concluded, and then, after prostrating
+themselves before the altar, they beckoned vehemently to the monk
+to follow them, and conducted him up a narrow winding stair, but
+little used, to the large sleeping chamber which the three brothers
+had shared ever since their early childhood.</p>
+<p>Once there Julian carefully locked the door, whilst Edred in
+brief and graphic words told the story of that day's spectacle.
+Brother Emmanuel listened calmly, with his features set into an
+expression which the boys were beginning to know well, although
+they did not read its meaning aright. Sternness and resolve were
+strangely blended with an infinite compassion and a look of almost
+divine tenderness; his words were few, and carried little of their
+meaning home to the hearts of the boys.</p>
+<p>"And thus they strive, thus they think to check the growth of
+the evil weed by fire and by the sword! Yet even nature may teach
+them that the burned field only yields the richer crop, and that
+the plough tearing its way along is a fertilizer of the earth.
+Would to heaven they would send forth evangelists from the Church,
+not with fire and sword, but with the sword of the Spirit--the Word
+of God--with the lamp of life in their hands; not to deny the
+people that life-giving fount, but to give them to drink through
+the channels God Himself has appointed! Then, indeed, methinks
+heresy would soon cease to exist. But theirs is not the way; God
+who dwelleth in the heavens will soon show them that. Theirs is not
+the way!"</p>
+<p>But time there was none now for one of those conversations in
+which Edred's heart delighted. Julian burst in then with the story
+of the latest scene in that solemn spectacle--of the whispered
+words of Brother Fabian; of the call for Brother Emmanuel; of the
+appeal made to Sir Oliver, and his reply; and finally of the
+certainty that the house would speedily be searched, and the
+necessity of getting into safe hiding before that happened.</p>
+<p>"Safe hiding!" said Brother Emmanuel with a slight smile; "my
+kind pupils, there can be no safe hiding from the messengers sent
+forth from the Church. Wherever I am they will find and drag me
+forth. I am grateful for all the goodness shown to me at Chad by
+all within its walls; but none shall suffer on my account. It hath
+not pleased God to open to me a way of escape, wherefore I must now
+yield myself to the will of my enemies; and it were better to go
+forth and be taken by the spies without than to remain here a
+source of peril to those within these walls."</p>
+<p>"But there is yet another way!" cried Edred with flashing eyes.
+"Thou shalt not go forth, and yet thou shalt not be a source of
+peril to any living soul. Brother Emmanuel, methinks it was God's
+doing, or that of the holy saints, that this hap befell us which
+revealed to us a safe hiding place of which none knows but
+ourselves, not even our father and mother, and the secret of which
+we have preserved unto this day, resisting the temptation to
+divulge it to any living soul. Time presses. When we are there I
+will tell thee all the tale--how this secret place came to our
+knowledge. But now let us tarry no longer, but come quickly and see
+for thyself. Once within that friendly shelter thou wilt have
+naught to fear save the loneliness to which thou art well used.</p>
+<p>"See, there is Julian already opening the door. Come, my father,
+come!"</p>
+<p>Julian had kindled the little lamp the boys had constructed for
+themselves, and which was much upon the principle of a modern
+bull's-eye, and could be safely carried through draughty passages
+without flickering or going out; and now the wondering monk allowed
+Edred to take him by the hand and lead him step by step along the
+narrow, tortuous passage. Julian closed the door behind them,
+showing how the cleverly-contrived spring acted; then they
+proceeded step by step in cautious silence--for this passage
+skirted a great portion of the house, and was very long--towards
+their destination, till at last they stood within the secret
+chamber itself; and Julian extinguished the light, to let the
+evening sunshine filter in and show how much of illumination it
+could give.</p>
+<p>"Now, Brother Emmanuel, let us show you all," said Edred
+eagerly; "for methinks it must be very few visits we must pay thee,
+and those at dead of night. For I much mistake me if we be not
+closely watched by some spy of the prior's these next days, and it
+will not do for any to think we have hidden haunts of our own."</p>
+<p>"Nay, nay, my children; ye must not run into peril for me. Far
+rather would I--"</p>
+<p>"I know--I know!" cried Edred. "But in truth thou needst not
+fear to rest here. This is the lost chamber, the secret of which
+had perished for well nigh a generation, till kindly fortune made
+it known to us. All men think that the chamber lay in the portion
+of Chad that was destroyed in the late wars. None dream it still
+exists. But here it is, and Bertram has made out little by little
+exactly where it lies, and I will tell it thee.</p>
+<p>"This portion at the lower and darker end is jammed in betwixt
+the ceiled roof of the great gun room and that attic chamber where
+the dry roots are stored away in the winter months before the frost
+binds them into the ground. None enter that attic in the summertide
+save rats and mice, and though there may be many passing to and fro
+in the gun room, no sound from here can penetrate there; for we
+have tried times and again, when there has been none by to hear, if
+we can make each other hear sounds from either place. From the gun
+room noise will, if very great, penetrate hither; but nothing thou
+canst do will make them below hear thee.</p>
+<p>"Then this wider and lighter and loftier portion, where the
+light comes in, is but a space filched away from the roofs and
+leads, and jammed in in such a fashion that it would defy a
+magician to find it from without. We tried days and days and could
+not do it, and never did, albeit we can climb like cats and had an
+inkling where it was--until we put Julian within to shout aloud and
+guide us by his voice. It is so placed that none can get really
+nigh to those places where the cracks are made to let in the light
+and air. Thou needst not fear, though all the monks in the priory
+come to search, that this hiding place will ever be found."</p>
+<p>The monk looked around the narrow chamber and drew an
+involuntary breath of relief. If indeed this thing were so, if
+indeed he might lie hidden from discovery and defy the most
+stringent search, might it not be a God-appointed means of
+salvation for him? Might he not be doing wrong in insisting upon
+falling into the hands of men? Would it indeed be possible for him
+to secrete himself without bringing down upon others the wrath he
+himself would escape?</p>
+<p>Whilst he stood thus debating with himself, the boys pulled him
+by the sleeve and spoke eagerly, though involuntarily in low
+tones.</p>
+<p>"And see further. Here is food laid up against this day. It will
+all keep for many weeks. It is but poor fare, but not poorer than
+thou art well used to--salted meat, and dried fish, and oaten cake;
+which keeps moist far longer than any other. Here are a few
+confections, and here is wine, and a jar of good mead. As for
+water, it may be had at this trough here, and a goodly supply; only
+it comes with somewhat of a rush, and the bung is not easily rammed
+back in its place. It is best to raise the tube--so--in the hand;
+but we could not make shift to do better. There is the lantern, and
+oil in this vessel, and none can see the light at night from any
+place when it is burned. I have placed three books in you corner--I
+dared not take more from the library; but I knew thou wouldst have
+thy breviary with thee, and thou art never dull. If it may be done
+safely, one of us will visit thee from time to time; and if there
+is any way of escape open to thee, thou shalt surely hear
+thereof.</p>
+<p>"But be not dismayed if days go by and thou hearest naught. It
+may be safer that thou shouldst be left quite alone. Thou wilt not
+think thyself forgotten?"</p>
+<p>Brother Emmanuel's eyes were fixed with a tender gaze upon the
+faces of the bold, generous boys. He took their hands in his, and
+they bent the knee to receive his blessing. His words were few and
+brief, but each lad as he rose resolved deep down in his heart that
+he would suffer the penalty of death itself sooner than betray the
+secret hiding place and give the brother up to his foes.</p>
+<p>Then with a few more last words respecting the hiding place and
+the arrangements made for the comfort of its occupant, the pair
+stole away, and soon found themselves safely within the walls of
+their own room, the door of which was still safely locked. They
+looked each other in the face with a proud, glad smile.</p>
+<p>"It is done!" cried Edred, drawing a long breath.</p>
+<p>"Nay, not altogether," answered Julian, with eyes that flashed
+with excitement; and drawing a step nearer his brother, he said in
+changed tones, "Now must that rascally priest have fled, and it
+behoves us to search the precincts of the place with all diligence.
+We must not leave a nook or a cranny unvisited, and must make a
+mighty coil. Thou takest me, brother, dost thou not?"</p>
+<p>Edred made a quick, eager sign of assent.</p>
+<p>"Ay, Julian, I do; and when we have done all that, let us back
+to the priory again. We must whisper in our father's ear that
+Brother Emmanuel is safe. Then will he act with a freer hand. And
+it were better, perchance, that we were all there to ride back with
+him when he takes his leave."</p>
+<p>Julian assented at once to this proposition; and forth went the
+boys, at first calling aloud the name of their tutor, and then
+halting, always within earshot of one of the spies, to <span lang=
+"en-US" xml:lang="en-US">debate</span> where he could have
+concealed himself, darting hither and thither, as if suddenly
+remembering some new place, and ever returning disappointed and
+vexed.</p>
+<p>"He is a veritable fox!" cried Julian, flinging his cap on the
+ground in a well-assumed tempest of chagrin. "He must have left
+Chad altogether, for not a trace of him is here; and I looked to
+have the pleasure of bringing him ourselves before the reverend
+prior, to atone for having helped that other pestilent fellow to
+avoid for a while the hand of the law. A plague upon him and his
+cunning ways! Unless he have found the secret chamber our father
+knows of, and which he once took us to see, there be no other place
+in all Chad where he can be lurking, unless he has been moving from
+spot to spot at our approach. A pest upon the crafty rogue!"</p>
+<p>"We shall do no good loitering here, since he be really gone,"
+remarked Edred, in a tone of vexation very like his brother's;
+"perchance he may have fallen into the hands of the prior through
+the watch of which he spoke. I trust it may be so. But for us, I
+trow we had better go back to see the end of the day's spectacle.
+We can do no more at Chad. If he is hiding he will not dare come
+forth now, with all the folks returning so soon; and if he has got
+clean away, nothing we can do will bring him back."</p>
+<p>Julian grumbled in the finest phrases he could think of as the
+two pursued their way back towards the priory, increasing their
+speed as they left Chad behind, and very quickly gaining the
+meadow, where the servants were already beginning to collect the
+horses and get them ready for their masters.</p>
+<p>The day's proceedings were over. Refreshments were being served
+in the refectory to all of the better sort. Sir Oliver's two
+younger sons had never been missed; but Edred contrived to slip
+into the hall, and in passing beside his father's chair to whisper
+in his ear the four simple words:</p>
+<p>"Brother Emmanuel is safe!"</p>
+<p>None heard the whisper, not even Bertram, who was sitting next
+his father, though he read it in his brother's eye the next moment.
+Edred had affected to catch the clasp of his belt against his
+father's chair as he passed by, and in pausing to free it had bent
+his head and spoken the brief message.</p>
+<p>No change passed over Sir Oliver's face. Not a creature present
+observed the trifling by-play. Wine had circulated freely, and much
+laughing and talking were going on. The prior had unbent from his
+judicial severity, and even the Lord of Mortimer was smiling and
+bland, although there was something in his aspect that suggested
+the fierce feline play of a man-eating creature biding its time and
+toying with its victim.</p>
+<p>Just before the close of the feast Sir Oliver rose to his
+feet.</p>
+<p>"My lord prior, and you knights and gentlemen," he said
+suddenly, addressing all those who sat at the board in one
+comprehensive glance round the table. "I have been not a little
+disturbed and astonished today by hearing that there is ill known
+of one who has been long a member of my household--Brother
+Emmanuel--whom the reverend prior himself sent forth to be the
+instructor of my sons, and who has always comported himself right
+reverently and seemly in my house. But inasmuch as there is cause
+of offence in him, and that he has this day refused obedience to
+his lawful superior, and has not come at the bidding of the prior,
+I cannot but own him in fault, and decline to have further dealings
+with him. I do not know whether he is yet at Chad. I have not seen
+him since his farewell last evening. But if he be yet there, let
+the Lord of Mortimer, or you, holy father, send a company of
+servants to bring him thence.</p>
+<p>"I have heard it whispered around that he is hiding within the
+walls of Chad, and that we of that household know where he lurks.
+My reply to that whisper is a denial (which I will take upon oath
+if need be) that I know aught whatever about him; and furthermore,
+I will throw open my house, upon any day and at any time, to
+whatever persons shall be sent to seek him, and will aid them in
+every possible way in the finding of the offender."</p>
+<p>A murmur of approval went round the company. The prior looked
+pleased, and a smile crossed his face.</p>
+<p>The only person who did not seem gratified by this openness was
+the Lord of Mortimer, whose face contracted sourly, and who gave a
+keen glance at his rival, as though he would have read his very
+soul. But the calm gaze with which Sir Oliver returned this look
+did not appear to restore his equanimity, and he flashed a glance
+at his son-in-law which plainly betokened surprise and chagrin.</p>
+<p>"Well spoken, Sir Oliver," said the prior; "and since I have
+excellent reason to know that the brother has not left Chad, and
+cannot do it without my knowledge, it is plain to me that he is
+hiding in some place there, albeit all unknown to you and yours.
+Wherefore, on the morrow, I myself, together with my good friend
+the Lord of Mortimer, will present ourselves at Chad, and make full
+search, and we shall no doubt find the heretic monk cowering away
+in some undreamed-of hiding place, and will drag him thence to the
+fate he so well merits.</p>
+<p>"Chad has its secrets, has it not? I have heard of them in days
+gone by."</p>
+<p>"It has several cunning nooks and crannies, but all of these
+will I myself display to you upon the morrow," replied the knight
+calmly; and the Lord of Mortimer arose with a crafty smile upon his
+face, and addressed the prior in these words:</p>
+<p>"Reverend father, I do not willingly speak ill of my neighbours,
+least of all of one who is now near akin to me through the marriage
+of my daughter with Sir Edward, who comes of the old stock of Chad.
+Yet I cannot but state here, in this place, that I hold Sir Oliver
+to have drawn down suspicion upon himself by failing to give up
+Brother Emmanuel a week ago when it was demanded of him. There be
+something to my mind strange and unworthy in such an act; and I
+here call upon all men to witness that I verily believe we shall
+find this traitor monk sheltering within the walls of Chad, and
+that if this be so I shall openly accuse Sir Oliver before all the
+world--before the king himself--of harbouring traitors and
+heretics, and shall make petition that Chad and all that pertains
+to it be forfeit, as the penalty for such evil courses, and be
+given to the rightful lord by inheritance--Sir Edward
+Chadwell."</p>
+<p>The partisans of Mortimer raised a cheer; those of Chad received
+the challenge with groans and curses. Sir Oliver spoke not a word,
+but sat with his head proudly erect, and his eyes gleaming somewhat
+dangerously; whilst the prior commanded silence by a gesture of his
+hand, and spoke to quell the tumult.</p>
+<p>"My Lord of Mortimer, I have far more trust than you in the
+integrity of good Sir Oliver. I trow he will be able to clear
+himself of whatever suspicions lie upon him; and if the monk be
+found within his house, he shall have every opportunity of
+explaining his presence there. At the same time, I will not deny
+that it will look ill for him if he be found there; and that the
+tongues of all suspicious persons may be silenced, so that none
+shall say there has been opportunity for him to get the monk
+secretly away from the place, I will double the watch that has
+already been set around Chad, and I will send thither with Sir
+Oliver and his family two of my trustiest sons, Brother Fabian and
+Brother Nathaniel, to keep strict watch within doors, that there be
+no cause for any enemy to say that any there have aided an unlawful
+escape, or have striven to hide a miscreant from those who justly
+demand him."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver bent his head.</p>
+<p>"Any brother coming from Chadwater will be an honoured guest at
+Chad," he said. "I was about to ask if Brother Fabian was to be
+sent thither to instruct my sons."</p>
+<p>"Ay, and to find out what germs of heresy yon false monk may not
+have implanted!" cried Lord Mortimer, losing control of himself as
+he saw the calmness of his enemy, and felt that the prey he had so
+confidently looked to be his might even now slip from his grasp.
+"It was those lads from Chad who strove to protect yon miserable
+hunchback who will be burned to ashes for his sins ere three more
+days have gone by. How explain you such conduct as that, Sir
+Oliver? Are you and your dame rearing up a heretic brood, to cumber
+the land in days to come?"</p>
+<p>But the prior here interposed somewhat sternly. He had no
+intention of allowing his table to be made the scene of a
+disturbance that might lead to bloodshed. He turned somewhat
+sternly upon the haughty baron, and his words were few and
+plain.</p>
+<p>"My Lord of Mortimer, Sir Oliver has answered to me for that
+offence. You take something too much upon yourself in thus striving
+to sit in judgment, and that in mine own presence.</p>
+<p>"And now, gentlemen, the sun will be shortly setting, and some
+of you have many miles to ride. We have done the day's work in a
+thorough and righteous fashion; and I will now give you my
+blessing, and dismiss you to your homes. I trust this may be the
+last time that I have to assemble you together to drive from
+amongst us those who are tainted by the curse of heresy."</p>
+<p>Half an hour later the party for Chad were riding quietly
+<span lang="en-US" xml:lang="en-US">homeward</span> through the
+forest with two cowled monks in their company. The last charge to
+these from the prior had been:</p>
+<p>"Thou, Brother Fabian, keep a sharp eye by night and by day upon
+the boys; and thou, Brother Nathaniel, upon the knight and his
+lady. If any of those are in the secret, be it your mission to find
+out and bring it home to them."</p>
+<h2><a name="ChapterIX" id="ChapterIX">Chapter IX</a>: The
+Search.</h2>
+<p>"If Brother Emmanuel is found, Chad will be forfeit."</p>
+<p>Such was the burden of Edred's thoughts as he rode homeward at
+his brothers' side, just behind their father and mother, at the
+close of that eventful day's proceedings.</p>
+<p>It was a thought that could not but be fraught with some terror
+to the boy, who knew that he had been instrumental in hiding the
+threatened monk, and that if by some gruesome chance the secret
+were to be discovered, their bitter enemy would make it an excuse
+for prosecuting his malicious and covetous purpose towards Chad
+with redoubled ardour, and with every prospect of success. At
+present the prior was standing neutral betwixt the two foes; at
+present the king was well disposed towards Sir Oliver. But should
+it be proved beyond dispute that he had set the Church at defiance,
+and had harboured a suspected heretic within his walls, then the
+prior would at once turn against him, and representations would be
+made to the king which would almost force him to turn away his
+favour. The Lord of Chad would be a disgraced and suspected person,
+whilst in all probability the wiles of the ambitious Mortimer would
+prove successful, and the claim of Sir Edward Chadwell would be
+admitted, and the estate pass into his hands.</p>
+<p>The thought was maddening. The bare idea of being forced to
+leave the old home sent the hot blood coursing through the boy's
+body. If such a thing as that were to befall them, it would break
+their father's heart. And how should he ever hold up his head
+again, knowing that in some sort he had been the author of the
+mischief?</p>
+<p>All the brothers had been heart and soul together in their
+desire to hide the brother from the wrath and unjust tyranny of the
+prior; but Edred felt as though the greatest responsibility had
+been his, though he could scarcely have said why.</p>
+<p>Julian had certainly taken the lead in the final act of the
+drama; but Julian was yet a boy, and did not thoroughly realize the
+perils which might follow such a course. Edred did, and his face
+was grave and thoughtful; and when from time to time he stole a
+glance at Bertram, he saw that his elder brother's face was
+overcast and anxious, too.</p>
+<p>They did not dare to exchange a single word upon the subject
+nearest to their hearts as they rode decorously behind <span lang=
+"en-US" xml:lang="en-US">their</span> parents and the two monks.
+The whole train had to restrain their horses to the ambling pace of
+the steed bestridden by the monks, who were by no means skilled
+riders; and dusk had fallen ere they all rode into the courtyard of
+Chad, where the bustle of dismounting afforded the brothers the
+chance of escaping for a few minutes to their upper chamber
+together.</p>
+<p>"We must not stay a minute; the spies will be after us!"
+whispered Bertram. "But one question I must ask. Is he there?"</p>
+<p>"Yea, verily; and none need visit him for many days. It were
+better not.</p>
+<p>"But, brothers both, lend me your strong arms here. I would move
+this great chest across the fireplace. Ask no question; I will show
+you why anon."</p>
+<p>Edred was the speaker, and he indicated an enormous carved oak
+chest quite twelve feet in length, which was kept in this room to
+hold the clothing of the three lads. They did from time to time
+change its position in the room, so that no remark would be excited
+by the fact that it had been moved. As Edred wished to place it
+now, it would stand right across the fireplace, blocking entirely
+the secret door; but Bertram looked a little doubtfully at it when
+it was in place, saying tentatively:</p>
+<p>"Thou dost not think it would draw attention to the carved
+pillars of the fireplace? We shall have cunning and crafty men to
+deal with on the morrow."</p>
+<p>Edred smiled slightly.</p>
+<p>"Wait till the morrow comes, and thou shalt see," he answered;
+and then the brothers hastened down again, knowing that any sudden
+disappearance on their part might be marked and held as
+suspicious.</p>
+<p>They had not, however, been gone long enough to be missed, and
+the two monks who had been told off to keep watch within this house
+had but just made their way into the hall, where hot spiced wine
+was being dispensed, and the table set out for supper.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding the feast recently partaken of at the priory,
+the brothers appeared by no means loath to sit down once again, and
+Edred could not but observe how differently they comported
+themselves from Brother Emmanuel, and how thoroughly they
+appreciated the dainty viands which were brought out in their
+honour.</p>
+<p>He did not mean to sit in judgment--he scarcely knew that he was
+doing so; yet as be watched their deep potations, and marked how
+they chose the best portions, and stinted themselves in no good
+thing, his stern young mind could not but rise up in revolt, the
+more so that these very men were actually here on purpose to strive
+to capture a brother of their own order, and deliver him over to
+death. And so far as the youth understood the matter, the offence
+for which it was resolved he should suffer was that he was too
+faithful to the vows he had taken upon himself, and too ardent in
+striving to enforce upon others the rules he held binding upon
+himself.</p>
+<p>But at least if these brothers ate and drank merrily, they were
+not therefore the better watchers. They had smiled a little
+scornfully as he contrasted their good feeding and deep drinking
+and subsequent visible sleepiness with the spare and frugal meal
+always taken by Brother <span lang="en-US" xml:lang=
+"en-US">Emmanuel</span>, to be followed as often as not by a long
+night vigil in the chantry. There was small look of watchfulness
+about these men. Any vigil kept by them would be but a mockery of
+the term. It was all they could do to stumble through the office of
+compline when the meal was ended and the household about to retire,
+and there was no suggestion on their part of wishing to remain to
+keep vigil.</p>
+<p>But Edred resolved that he would watch again that night. He had
+done so the previous night with Brother Emmanuel, both thinking
+that it might be the last watch they would ever hold together. Now
+the boy felt that he could not sleep, at least for many hours; and
+since their mother had whispered to them that Brother Fabian was to
+share their room, since he said it was his duty to keep watch upon
+the boys till next morning, it seemed well to leave his bed for the
+drowsy monk, aid keep vigil himself in the silent chantry.</p>
+<p>The brother looked puzzled when he heard what one of his young
+charges proposed to do. Edred looked him full in the face as he
+answered:</p>
+<p>"Brother Emmanuel taught us that it were not well that all
+within the house should be sleeping. We know not when the Lord may
+appear--at midnight, at cock crowing, or in the morning; and
+methinks whenever He may come, He would gladly find one soul
+holding vigil and waiting for His appearing. Lock the door of the
+chantry upon me, my father. Thou canst see that there is but the
+one door by which we may come or go. If thou fearest to leave me
+here, lock the door upon me until such time as it pleases thee to
+release me."</p>
+<p>The brother regarded the boy with perplexed looks, and slowly
+shook his head, as though such an attitude of mind were wholly
+incomprehensible. But he did not oppose his resolve. It would not
+do to appear astonished at the idea of keeping vigil. He passed out
+of the chantry muttering to himself, and Edred prostrated himself
+before the altar, above which the solitary lamp burned clear and
+bright, and offered up most earnest prayers for the safety of
+Brother Emmanuel, for the failure and <span lang="en-US" xml:lang=
+"en-US">discomfiture</span> of his foes, and for his safe escape
+when the time was ripe into some country where his enemies were not
+like to find him.</p>
+<p>How the hours of the night passed he scarcely knew. He might
+perhaps have slept at his post awhile, or have remained in a dreamy
+and passive state; for it did not seem long before the morning sun
+came glinting in at the eastern window, and the boy saw that the
+day had come which was to be a momentous one to Chad.</p>
+<p>Before very long, sounds of life about, and later on within the
+house, warned him that he was not the only watcher now; and feeling
+very drowsy and weary, he resolved to creep upstairs and share
+Julian's couch for the remaining hours before the working day
+should commence.</p>
+<p>He had not been locked into the chantry. Perhaps Brother Fabian
+felt a little shame in his suspicions, or perhaps he forgot to take
+the precaution. The door yielded to his touch, and he found himself
+at liberty to go where he would.</p>
+<p>But before <span lang="en-US" xml:lang="en-US">turning</span>
+his steps to his room upstairs, he made an expedition to an
+outhouse on what appeared to be a curious errand. It was a dirty,
+neglected place, and was full of dust and flue and cobweb. The boy
+began deliberately collecting masses of this flue and web, and
+presently he swept up carefully a good-sized heap of dust, which he
+as deliberately placed in a wooden box, and proceeded to make in
+one end a number of small holes.</p>
+<p>Carefully carrying away this strange load, and bearing it with
+great secrecy, the boy mounted the stairs very softly, and put down
+the handkerchief in which the flue was placed in the small unused
+room beside their sleeping chamber. With the box still in his hands
+he stole on tiptoe into the room and looked carefully round
+him.</p>
+<p>His brothers were sleeping lightly, looking as though they would
+be easily and speedily aroused. But the monk was snoring deeply,
+and the bloated face which was turned towards him displayed that
+abandonment of repose which bespeaks a very sound and even sottish
+slumber.</p>
+<p>The boy looked with repulsion at the flushed face, the open
+mouth, and dropped jaw. Something in the expression of that
+sleeping face filled him with scorn and loathing. No danger of this
+man's awakening; his half-drunken sleep was far too heavy and
+sodden.</p>
+<p>Edred stepped lightly across the room towards the chest which he
+had had moved the previous evening, and lying at full length along
+the floor, he proceeded to shake his box after the manner of a
+pepper pot until he had made beneath the chest a soft layer of dust
+which looked like the accumulation of weeks. It was deftly and
+skilfully done, and although he looked critically at the after
+effect, to make sure there was nothing artificial about the aspect,
+he could not detect anything amiss.</p>
+<p>The next step was to carry away his box, empty it out of a
+window, and break in pieces the perforated part, that there might
+be no tracing his action in this matter. Then gaining possession of
+his handkerchief full of flue, he stole softly back again, and laid
+great flakes between the legs of the chest and the wall, stuffed
+light fragments into the interstices of the carving, and laid them
+upon any projecting ledge that was likely to have caught such light
+dirt as it filtered through the air.</p>
+<p>A soft movement in the room told him that his brothers were
+awake and watching him, though the monk still snored on in his
+stertorous fashion. One after the other the pair stole from their
+beds and looked for a moment at this skilful travesty of nature's
+handiwork, and both nodded in token of approval and
+congratulation.</p>
+<p>Edred had an artist's eye for effect, and did not spoil his
+handiwork by overdoing it. The result produced was exactly as if
+the chest had stood for some time in its present position, so that
+the dust had gathered beneath it and the flue had clung to the wall
+behind it. No one looking at its position there could doubt that it
+had been there for a period of some weeks.</p>
+<p>Satisfied with the result of his manoeuvre, the boy flung away
+the rest of his spoil, and throwing himself upon one of his
+brothers' beds was soon lost in healthy sleep.</p>
+<p>When he awoke the sun was high in the sky, and he found himself
+alone with Father Fabian, who appeared likewise only just to have
+awakened.</p>
+<p>Brother Emmanuel would long ago have held early mass in the
+chantry, but this new inmate appeared by no means disposed to
+follow in the footsteps of his predecessors. He rubbed his eyes,
+and seemed scarce to know where he was; but he accepted Edred's
+offers of assistance, and was soon ready to leave the room in
+search of the meal to which he was accustomed.</p>
+<p>All Chad was in a stir of expectation. It was known throughout
+the house that a great search was to be instituted after the
+<span lang="en-US" xml:lang="en-US">missing</span> priest, who had,
+as it were, disappeared into thin air.</p>
+<p>Everybody knew that he had been within the precincts of Chad
+upon the previous day. Some amongst the few servants who had been
+left behind to take care of the house had seen him moving quietly
+about from the chantry to the courtyard and back. It was now well
+known that spies were lurking in the forest round Chad with a view
+of intercepting any attempt at flight, and it was plain they had
+seen nothing of him. Therefore, unless he had escaped their
+vigilance by cunning and artifice, he must still be somewhere
+within the precincts of the house; and on the whole this appeared
+the most probable theory. In a place like Chad, where there were
+all manner of outbuildings, sheds, and lofts; to say nothing of all
+the corners and hiding places within the house itself, it would be
+very tempting to take refuge in one of these nooks and crannies,
+and to trust to the chance of concealment rather than run the
+gauntlet of meeting foes in the open.</p>
+<p>Brothers from the monasteries, to say nothing of hunted
+heretics, had the reputation of being marvellous cunning in their
+methods. It was like enough that Brother Emmanuel had long been
+planning some such concealment for himself, and had made his plans
+cleverly and astutely. Such was the prevailing opinion at Chad, and
+scarcely a member of the household but hoped and trusted his hiding
+place would not be detected, even though they did not know how
+seriously the fortunes of their master might be affected were the
+monk to be found hidden in his house.</p>
+<p>They all loved Brother Emmanuel for his own sake, and hated the
+Lord of Mortimer. And it was well known that that haughty baron was
+making common cause with the prior of Chadwater in this matter,
+doubtless in the hope of disgracing Sir Oliver in the eyes of the
+ecclesiastical powers.</p>
+<p>So a general feeling of excitement and uncertainty prevailed
+during the early hours of the morning. Sir Oliver and his wife
+strove to appear calm and tranquil, but inwardly they were consumed
+by anxiety. They felt something very much approaching certainty
+that their own sons knew what had befallen the monk--probably his
+very hiding-place; and they were by no means certain that it might
+not be within the very precincts of Chad itself. The knight's
+generosity and love of justice were sufficiently stirred to make
+him willing to run some risk in the cause; he had resolved to ask
+no question, and to let matters take their own course. But he could
+not help feeling a tremor run through him as he heard the winding
+of the horn which bespoke the presence of the visitors at his gate,
+and he went forth to meet them with a sinking heart, albeit his
+mien was calm and untroubled and his bearing dignified and
+assured.</p>
+<p>The prior and the Lord of Mortimer headed the train, and behind
+followed a goodly retinue of men wearing the livery of the baron,
+to say nothing of the lay brothers and the cowled monks, who were
+skilful in matters pertaining to search, and who had come to assist
+in the examination of the whole of the great house.</p>
+<p>Upon the face of Lord Mortimer and upon that of his son-in-law
+there was an ill-disguised look of vindictive triumph. It was easy
+to see that they were fully assured of the presence of the fugitive
+within these walls, and that they did not mean to leave until he
+had been dragged forth from his hiding place.</p>
+<p>The guests of the better quality were respectfully conducted
+into the great hall, and refreshments were placed before them. Sir
+Oliver put his whole house and possessions into the hands of the
+prior, who was invited to make any kind of investigation and
+examination that he thought necessary. The knight repeated what he
+had said the previous day as to his entire ignorance where the monk
+was hiding, and whether he was hiding at all. But no obstacle of
+any kind would be placed by him against the most stringent search,
+and he would either accompany the searchers or remain passive where
+he was, exactly as the reverend father judged best.</p>
+<p>This statement was well received by the prior, who turned to the
+Lord of Mortimer and suggested that in the first place his armed
+troopers, who were well used to this kind of work, should make a
+strict search through all the outbuildings of whatever kind,
+posting his men wherever he thought needful, and taking any steps
+such as the smoking of chimneys and kindred methods that might in
+any wise be likely to dislodge the fugitive. Meantime the rest of
+the party would remain where they were, and the house should only
+be searched if it was made clear that the monk was not hiding
+without.</p>
+<p>Lord Mortimer retired to give his orders, and the rest of the
+company remained in the hall. The boys would better have liked the
+house searched first, that their anxiety might be the sooner
+relieved. It was keeping them on tenterhooks all this time, as they
+knew well that no result could accrue from any search of the outer
+yards or buildings, and it was hard to wait all that time in
+uncertainty and suspense.</p>
+<p>But they heard the order given without making any sign. It was
+well for them at this crisis that they had been trained in habits
+of self control and reserve. No one, to look at the three boys,
+would have guessed them to be greatly interested in the
+proceedings. They remained standing in the background, with an air
+of quiet respect and submission appropriate to the young in
+presence of their spiritual superiors. The prior, as his keen eye
+travelled over the faces in the hall, never suspected for a moment
+that those three quiet lads knew aught of this matter. But, pleased
+by their air and bearing, he called them to him and asked them some
+questions, to assure himself that they had been properly taught by
+the recalcitrant monk whom now he had resolved to find and to
+punish for his rebellion and temerity.</p>
+<p>The boys replied with such ready intelligence and so much actual
+learning that he could not but be pleased with them. Edred, in
+particular, showed such readiness and aptitude that the prior was
+surprised, and laying a kindly hand upon the boy's head, asked him
+how soon they would be welcoming him at Chadwater.</p>
+<p>The youth looked up with grave, thoughtful eyes.</p>
+<p>"I know not that, my father. I have had thoughts of the
+religious life; but--"</p>
+<p>"Well, boy, what is the 'but'?" asked the prior with a smile,
+but a keen flash of the eye which did not pass unheeded.</p>
+<p>Edred saw the flash, and was put at once upon his guard. This
+was not Brother Emmanuel, to whom he could open his whole soul and
+ask counsel and advice.</p>
+<p>"I misdoubt me at times if I be fit for the life," he answered.
+"There is too much of the world in my heart, I fear me. I used to
+think I was fit to be a monk, but I am the less sure now."</p>
+<p>"Well, well, I would fain have a promising lad like thee beneath
+my care; but there is time to talk of that later.</p>
+<p>"Well, my Lord of Mortimer, how goes the search? Is all in train
+for it?"</p>
+<p>"Ay, reverend father; and I trow if the miscreant be in hiding
+anywhere without the house, he will shortly be brought before us. I
+am no novice in this manner of work, and I have laid my plans that
+he will scarce escape us. If that fail, we must try the house
+itself. It will go hard if we find him not somewhere. We have full
+information that he has not left the place;" and here he flashed an
+insolent look of triumph at Sir Oliver, who took not the smallest
+notice either of the speech or the look.</p>
+<p>Edred retired to his former place beside his brothers, and the
+party awaited the result of the search with what patience they
+might. Now and then shouts and calls broke the stillness, and faces
+would flush with excitement at the sound; but the shouts always
+died away again into silence, and at last there came a trooper into
+the hall to salute the company and report that there was no one
+hidden in any of the places without. Not a rat or a mouse could
+have failed to be turned out after the stringent search to which
+the premises had been subjected.</p>
+<p>The Lord of Mortimer then rose and said:</p>
+<p>"Keep the men posted as I have given orders. Let none stir from
+his vantage ground. And be thou there to see that the closest watch
+is kept. We go in person to search the house, and if any living
+thing seeks to make escape by door or window, it will be thine
+office and that of thy men to seize and hold him."</p>
+<p>"We will not fail, my lord," said the man, who again saluted and
+withdrew.</p>
+<p>Then the prior rose and called his monks about him, whilst the
+Lord of Mortimer did the like with his followers.</p>
+<p>"Sir Oliver," said the prior, "I would have spared you this
+unwelcome formality had it been possible, but my duty must be done.
+I will ask you to be our conductor throughout the house, and will
+crave permission to post my servants hither and thither about the
+passages as seems to me best, and to take such steps as shall
+appear needful for proving to the satisfaction of all that this
+traitor monk is not hidden within your walls."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver bent his head.</p>
+<p>"Take what steps you will, reverend father; I and mine are at
+your disposal. Whatever means you desire to use, do so without
+hesitation. Shall my people arm themselves with tools to remove
+panelling or flooring? You have but to command them; they shall
+instantly obey."</p>
+<p>The Lord of Mortimer again looked taken aback for a moment.
+There was a confidence in Sir Oliver's manner that did not appear
+to be assumed. He would have preferred another aspect in his
+foe.</p>
+<p>"We have brought all things needful for a rigorous search,"
+answered the prior. "We hope and trust nothing will be needed. Is
+it true that there are secret hiding places in the house, my son?
+It would be well, perhaps, to visit any such first."</p>
+<p>"There be two," answered Sir Oliver quietly, though his heart
+beat rather fast. What if Brother Emmanuel had learned the secret
+of either of those places, and had sought refuge in one? True, it
+would have been worse than useless to deny their existence. Many in
+the household knew of them and how they might be entered.</p>
+<p>Probably the prior or some of his monks had the trick of those
+chambers by heart. Chad had been through many vicissitudes, and the
+monks had often been its guests. Secrets once known to them were
+never allowed to be lost. It would have been idle to seek to put
+the searchers off the scent. He led the way to the places where the
+masked doors lay--one was much after the pattern of that in the
+boys' chamber--and in each case himself opened the door, letting
+his guests go in to examine for themselves.</p>
+<p>Those were terrible moments for him; but the hearts of the boys
+did not palpitate. Each time the search party came forth with looks
+of baffled disappointment. Each time the Lord of Mortimer's face
+was dark and gloomy. He had reckoned somewhat confidently on
+finding the fugitive in one of these known hiding places. He had
+hoped Sir Oliver would profess an ignorance of at least one of the
+two. His face was fierce and vindictive as the second was "drawn
+blank."</p>
+<p>But the excitement of the boys was slowly augmenting as the
+party moved higher and higher in the house, leaving scouts posted
+in various places, and, as it were, spreading a
+cleverly-constructed net all through Chad, which it would be
+impossible for any person being hunted from spot to spot finally to
+escape.</p>
+<p>The prior's idea now was that the monk might be gliding before
+them from place to place, confident that his knowledge of the
+intricacies of the house would give him the chance of evading them
+at the last. It was a desperate game, to be sure, but one that had
+been successfully tried by others on more than one occasion. He
+therefore posted his men with great skill and acumen; and knowing
+the house accurately, was able to feel secure that if this were the
+game being played, the prey would sooner or later be his.</p>
+<p>Lord Mortimer, on the other hand, gave his attention to the
+panelled walls, the carved chimney pieces, the flooring of the old
+rooms; and many were the blows struck here and there by his orders,
+and great was the damage done to certain panelled rooms, in the
+hopes of coming upon some masked door or passage.</p>
+<p>It was this energy on his part that caused such anxiety to the
+boys. Suppose he were to attack the carving which really concealed
+the masked door in their room? Might not his eagle eye light upon
+that, too, and might not all be discovered? The boys felt almost
+sick with apprehension as they approached the door of their room,
+and Edred's whole heart went up in a voiceless prayer that no
+discovery might be made.</p>
+<p>Nothing in the aspect of the room attracted comment. All looked
+matter of fact and innocent enough, and the prior was growing
+something weary with the unavailing search. The usual thumping on
+the walls was commenced; but even the carved mantel pillars were so
+solid that no hollow sound was given forth when they were struck.
+The prior turned away.</p>
+<p>"There is naught here, methinks, my Lord of Mortimer."</p>
+<p>"Wait one moment," replied the baron. "This carving be something
+deep and ponderous. I always suspect traps when I see such pains
+bestowed upon it. Let me examine a while further. These grapes look
+to me as if they had been fingered something often. Let me examine
+further."</p>
+<p>Edred's heart was in his mouth. It was all he could do to
+restrain himself from seeking to attract the prior's attention in
+another direction; but his sound sense told him that this sudden
+interruption would be suspicious. Julian nipped him by the arm, as
+those strong fingers went travelling over the carved work with dire
+intent. Both started when the Lord of Mortimer exclaimed:</p>
+<p>"Take away yon chest; it encumbers me."</p>
+<p>The servants did his bidding in a moment; and then a sudden
+change came over his face. The eager look died away. He remained
+awhile looking down at the floor, which was covered with dust and
+flue, as was also the carving which had been concealed behind the
+chest. The prior looked down too, and shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+<p>"That tells a tale, my lord. Naught has been disturbed here for
+many a long day. Let us pursue our search elsewhere. No fugitive
+could have passed by that spot since yesterday, when Brother
+Emmanuel was last seen."</p>
+<p>The baron could not but assent. He looked once again at the
+carving, but he had had no real reason to suspect aught, and he
+turned away to go elsewhere. Another grip of the arm showed Edred
+how Julian's feelings had been stirred; but the lads did not even
+look at each other as they moved on behind the company, and they
+now hardly heard or heeded what passed during the remaining hour of
+that long search.</p>
+<p>For them the crisis had passed when they turned from the room
+where the secret lay. If not discovered at that awful moment when
+Lord Mortimer's hand was actually upon the bunch of grapes beneath
+which lay the spring, they surely need not fear any other manoeuvre
+on his part.</p>
+<p>And at last the long search ended. Even the Lord of Mortimer had
+to own himself beaten. Reluctantly and with scowling brow he
+followed the prior back to the long banqueting hall, where the
+tables had already been laid with savoury viands. He had been
+worsted where he had been most confident of success, and he was as
+furious as a bear robbed of her whelps.</p>
+<p>The prior was taking Sir Oliver by the hand and speaking words
+of goodwill, professing great satisfaction at the result of this
+stringent search; his only vexation being that the monk had
+contrived to give them the slip. In the back of his head the prior
+had a lurking feeling that Sir Oliver had been in some sort
+concerned in Brother Emmanuel's escape, and was rejoicing at it;
+but inasmuch as he had entirely failed to bring home any charge
+against him, and as in all other respects he was a good neighbour
+and true son of the Church, he was willing enough to restore him to
+favour and confidence, and was not sorry on the whole that the
+haughty Lord of Mortimer was not going to have it all his own
+way.</p>
+<p>The astute ecclesiastic knew very well that he himself did
+better for holding a neutral position between two adversaries both
+desiring his friendship and good opinion, than he would do were
+Chad and Mortimer to be in the same hands. He was disappointed at
+not finding the monk, but not sorry Sir Oliver stood vindicated. He
+set himself down to the board with a hearty goodwill; but the baron
+refused the proffered hospitality of his rival, and summoned his
+attendants about him.</p>
+<p>"I will say farewell this time, Sir Oliver," he said haughtily.
+"But remember I still hold that we have only been foiled by your
+cunning; not that you are innocent in this matter. If ever I can
+prove this thing against you, I shall do so; and I recommend the
+reverend prior to keep his watch still upon this house, as I fully
+believe yon traitor monk is in hiding here."</p>
+<p>"And I, my lord baron," said Sir Oliver proudly, "will give you
+fair warning that I will speedily to the king, to lay before him
+the history of this day and the insults to which I have been
+subjected through you and your groundless suspicions of me. I have
+not resisted what you have chosen to do, knowing well the use you
+would have made of such resistance. But I have not forgotten the
+many acts of aggression and hostility of which you have been
+guilty; and this last day's work, in which your servants have made
+themselves, as it were, masters of Chad, shall be answered for at
+some future day. You have thought good to threaten me. I too will
+threaten you. I threaten you with the displeasure of the king when
+this thing comes to his ears; and I shall seek him now without
+delay, and tell him all I have suffered at your hands."</p>
+<h2><a name="ChapterX" id="ChapterX">Chapter X</a>: From Peril To
+Safety.</h2>
+<p>"My son, what hast thou done to thyself?"</p>
+<p>Edred was stumbling across the courtyard, supported by Julian,
+his face streaming with blood and muffled in a great kerchief. He
+was unable to speak himself, but Julian spoke eagerly for him.</p>
+<p>"I trow the fault is half mine. It was done in tilting. I was
+careless, and saw not that Edred's guard was down. I fear me I have
+something hurt him. I trust it is not the eye. Look to it quickly,
+sweet mother. It was a nasty blow."</p>
+<p>"It is not of serious nature," muttered Edred through his
+wrappings; "it will be well right quickly."</p>
+<p>The mother hurried the two boys into a small room of her own
+where she kept medicaments of various kinds, and where all wounds
+of a trifling character were washed and dressed. Julian hurried to
+fetch her all she needed; and just at that moment Sir Oliver came
+hastily in looking for his wife.</p>
+<p>"How now, Edred?" he exclaimed. "Hast thou been in the wars
+again?" for Edred was something famed for getting hard knocks and
+ugly scratches in his mimic encounters with his more skilled and
+dexterous brothers. "Why, boy, but this is a worse business than
+usual. I am sorry for it, for I had something purposed to take thee
+with me to Windsor on the next morrow, as well as Bertram, and show
+thee to the king, and give thee a glimpse of the world of court.
+But if thou be in such plight as this, thou wilt scarce be fit to
+go."</p>
+<p>"I must await another time," muttered Edred, in the same
+indistinct way, and Julian added with an air of chagrin:</p>
+<p>"It was a villainous mischance. I would I had been more careful.
+I am always having the ill luck to hurt Edred."</p>
+<p>"Nay, the fault is mine!" exclaimed the other boy.</p>
+<p>"And now thou wilt be hindered from seeing the king and his fine
+court."</p>
+<p>"Perchance thou wilt go in my stead."</p>
+<p>"Nay, that will I not. An thou stayest at home for fault of
+mine, I will stay to keep thee company.</p>
+<p>"Now, gentle mother, prithee see if he be much hurt. I cannot
+rest till I know."</p>
+<p>The lady was ready now to make her examination, and gently
+removed the rude wrappings the boys had made for themselves.
+Edred's face presented an ugly appearance as these were taken away.
+He had a great gash across his brow, which passed dangerously near
+to the eye, and had laid open the cheek almost as far as the mouth,
+<span lang="en-US" xml:lang="en-US">and</span> knocked out one back
+tooth. The knight looked concerned at the magnitude of the damage,
+and spoke rather sharply to Julian.</p>
+<p>"Thou must have a care with these weapons of thine, or thou wilt
+do thy brother a fatal mischief one of these days. See, boy, had
+that blow of thine swerved but the half of an inch, thy brother
+would have lost the sight of an eye forever--nay, he might have
+lost his life; for an injury to the eye oft penetrates to the
+brain, and then the skill of the leech is of no avail.</p>
+<p>"Good wife, is thy skill sufficient for these hurts? or shall we
+send to seek a surgeon's aid?"</p>
+<p>"Methinks I can do all that is needful. They are ugly scratches
+and painful, but not over deep. The lad will not be scarred,
+methinks, when the wound is well healed. See, it looks better
+already after the bathing.</p>
+<p>"Run, Julian, for the roll of lint and the strapping in yon
+cupboard.</p>
+<p>"The boy will be a sorry spectacle for a few short days, but
+after that I trow he will feel none the worse."</p>
+<p>"It is but a scratch," said Edred, speaking more freely now,
+though with a mumbling accent, as though his lips were swollen,
+which, indeed, one of them was. "I scarce feel it, now it is
+bathed. Do not look so grave anent the matter, my father."</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver, relieved to find matters no worse, went on his way;
+and Lady Chadgrove proceeded to bind up and plaster the bruised
+face with the skill and dexterity of which she was mistress. She
+had no attention to spare for Julian, or she might have been
+surprised to note that he secreted for himself a certain amount of
+the dressing she had used, and looked on very intently whilst she
+applied the remainder to his brother's face.</p>
+<p>When her ministrations were accomplished, Edred was greatly
+disguised. His face was almost entirely swathed in linen, and one
+eye was completely bandaged up. Julian laughed aloud as he saw the
+object presented by his brother; and Edred would have joined in the
+laugh if he had had free play with his facial muscles.</p>
+<p>The mother looked gently scandalized.</p>
+<p>"Sure, it is no laughing matter, Julian. I am not wont to make
+much of these boyish mischiefs. Lads must learn to give and to take
+hard blows as they grow to manhood. Yet I would that thou wert
+something more careful. Thou mightest have killed thy brother, or
+have caused him life-long injury, today."</p>
+<p>Julian looked grave enough then; but Edred caressed his mother
+gently, saying:</p>
+<p>"Nay, chide him not. He is the best of brothers. It was as much
+my fault as his."</p>
+<p>And then the pair went away together, and did not pause until
+they had reached their own room, when they suddenly seized each
+other by the hand and commenced cutting extraordinary capers,
+indicative of a secret understanding and triumph.</p>
+<p>"It could not have turned out better," said Edred, speaking
+stiffly with his bandaged face and swollen lips.</p>
+<p>"I fear me thou dost suffer somewhat."</p>
+<p>"It is naught. I scarce feel it, now mother has bound it up. And
+thy stroke was wondrous skilful, Julian--brow and eye and mouth all
+scratched."</p>
+<p>"The praise should be thine for standing thus rigid to let me
+thus mark thee. Hadst thou flinched, as many another would have
+done--as I should have done, I trow--it could not have been done a
+tithe as well. Wrapped and bandaged as thou must be these next days
+to come, not a creature could know thee. Everything can be carried
+out according to the plan. Not even our father will suspect aught.
+The only fear is lest thou shouldst take a fever or somewhat of
+that sort, so that they say thou must not ride forth a few miles
+with our father when he fares forth to Windsor at the dawning of
+the next morrow after tomorrow's dawn."</p>
+<p>"No fear of that," answered Edred boldly. "I am not wont to
+trouble a sickbed. I have had knocks and blows as hard as this
+before. Art sure thou hast enough of the linen and the strapping to
+serve the purpose? And dost think thou canst apply it rightly? It
+will be thy hands, not mine, that must do all that. I shall be far
+away when the moment comes. Art sure that thou canst do all as it
+should be done? Thou and Bertram will have all the last
+arrangements to carry through. How my heart will be in my mouth
+until I see thee and my double approaching in the gray light of the
+morning!"</p>
+<p>"I trow we shall not disappoint thee!" cried the boy excitedly;
+adding after a moment's pause, "Methinks in the matter of artifice
+both Bertram and I can beat thee, albeit thou art the best of us in
+other matters. What a boon that that fat, slothful, ignorant monk
+no longer shares this room! That might have been a rare trouble.
+But since he loves well the soft bed of the guest chamber in lieu
+of these hard pallets, he is not like to trouble us again. They put
+their trust in the spies around the house. Let their spies do their
+worst, I trow we shall outwit them yet."</p>
+<p>And the boys took hands again and renewed their impromptu
+triumph dance. Their hearts were brimming over with satisfaction
+and hope. They had had a tough problem to think out during the past
+days, but now it seemed in a fair way of solution.</p>
+<p>When the prior had left Chad after the banquet prepared for him,
+he professed himself perfectly satisfied that the missing Brother
+Emmanuel was not concealed upon the premises yet for all that,
+since the Lord of Mortimer had declared himself still dissatisfied,
+and because the escape of the monk was difficult to credit, nothing
+having been seen or heard of him abroad, he judged it wise still to
+keep his watch upon the place, that all might be satisfied that no
+precaution had been left untaken.</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver had briefly, and with a slight accent of scorn,
+agreed with all the prior said, and had professed himself perfectly
+agreeable to the arrangement. He had nothing to hide either in his
+own comings and goings or in those of any member of his household.
+So long as his movements were not interfered with or his liberties
+infringed, the whole forest might be alive with spies for all that
+he cared. He had not known of the first watch set upon his house,
+and he was indifferent to the second. He should be soon leaving
+home to seek the king, and all he demanded was that the sanctity of
+his house should be duly regarded in his absence. Of course the
+prior fully agreed to that. Indeed, after the rigorous and
+exhaustive search that had been already made, there was no reason
+why any further entrance should be made into Chad.</p>
+<p>But although Sir Oliver had heard this mandate with indifference
+and contempt, it had filled the hearts of the boys with dismay. In
+a week's time the vessel would sail that was to carry Brother
+Emmanuel away to foreign soil, and out of the clutches of his
+present enemies; and if this guard around the house were to be
+maintained all that while, what chance had they of smuggling their
+fugitive away and down to the coast, as they had set their hearts
+on doing?</p>
+<p>But inasmuch as necessity has ever been the mother of invention,
+and the lads were not only bold and fearless but ready of resource,
+they had laid their heads together with some good effect, and now
+the first and one of the most important steps of the little drama
+had been carried to a successful conclusion.</p>
+<p>The next day was a busy and bustling one at Chad. Upon the
+morrow its lord and master rode forth to Windsor with his eldest
+son and the best of his followers. There was a great burnishing of
+arms and grooming and feeding of steeds. Every man was looking up
+his best riding dress and putting it into <span lang="en-GB"
+xml:lang="en-GB">spic</span>-and-span order, and the whole place
+rang with the sound of cheery voices and the clash of steel.</p>
+<p>In and out and backwards and forwards throughout the day passed
+the three boys, watching everything, asking eager questions of all,
+and expressing keen interest in the whole expedition.</p>
+<p>Edred was of course a great figure. His face was all swathed up.
+One side was completely concealed by the wrappings, and as he found
+the light trying to even the other eye, his plumed hat was drawn
+low down over his brow, so that no one would have guessed who he
+was but for the fact that his mishap was well known by this time to
+all the household.</p>
+<p>Even after supper the restless boys could not keep still. Edred
+and Julian had won their father's consent to riding some few miles
+with him on the morrow towards Windsor, and they ran off as soon as
+the meal was concluded to visit their steeds and see that their
+saddles were in order. After they had done this, they sallied out
+by one of the smaller gates to take an evening stroll in the wood,
+calling out to the custodian of the portal that they should return
+by the great gate.</p>
+<p>They wandered away some distance into the wood; but when they
+returned it was only Bertram and Julian who entered the gate and
+went up to their sleeping room. However, as nobody at the larger
+entrance had seen the three sally forth, no remark was occasioned
+by the return of only two; and it was supposed that Edred would
+have retired early, since he was in somewhat battered plight, and
+had to recover strength for the early start upon the morrow.</p>
+<p>When they reached their room that night, Bertram and Julian
+carefully locked the door behind them--a precaution they did not
+often take; and when they took from the great chest their own best
+riding suits, they also took out Edred's and looked it well
+over.</p>
+<p>"It will fit him to a nicety," said Bertram. "He and Edred are
+almost of a height, and both slim and slightly built. His pale
+face, so much as may be seen beneath the white linen, will look
+mightily like Edred's in the gray light of the early morn. This hat
+has a mighty wide brim--well that Edred affects such headgear.
+Pulled over his eyes, as he wore it yesterday, there be scarce a
+feature to be seen. We have but to say he is something late, take
+him his breakfast to eat up here, and get him on to horseback
+whilst all the bustle is going on, and not even our father will
+know him. He may ride past the spies with head erect and fearless
+mien, for there is not one of them but saw Edred this day, and will
+know at a glance who rides betwixt us twain with the white linen
+about his head!"</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver had decided rather late in the day to take his lady
+with him. She was in great favour always with the queen, and of
+late they had heard that the health of that gracious lady was
+something failing. It would be a graceful attention on the part of
+the mistress of Chad to visit her and learn of her welfare, and it
+was known that the queen had considerable influence with the king,
+and he might well give more favourable notice to Sir Oliver's plea
+were his wife to urge it upon him in response to what the lady
+might tell to her of their recent troubles with their haughty
+neighbour.</p>
+<p>So that there was even more stir and excitement than usually
+attended an early morning's start. The sun was not yet up, and the
+gray dimness of the coming summer's day enshrouded the great
+courtyard as Bertram and Julian descended to it with a slim figure
+between them clad in a riding dress similar to their own, the
+slouched hat drawn over the face, which face was well wrapped and
+muffled in white linen, as Edred's had been the previous day.</p>
+<p>The lady of the house came out with a look of preoccupation upon
+her face. She noted that the boys were already in the saddle, and
+smiled.</p>
+<p>"Always in such haste," she said, as her own palfrey was led up.
+"But, Edred my son, why didst thou not come to me to have thy hurts
+looked to this morn? I was expecting thee."</p>
+<p>"Sweet mother, I bound them for him today!" cried Julian
+eagerly. "Methought I must learn to be his leech since thou wast
+going with our father, and we knew that thou wouldst have much to
+do and to think of. Methinks I have not done amiss. It scarce looks
+as neat as though thy skilful fingers had had the care of it; but
+he says it feels not amiss, and that is a great thing."</p>
+<p>"Ay, verily; and I am glad thou hast skill enough for his
+needs.</p>
+<p>"Be cautious, Edred my son, that the cold gets not to the hurts.
+Draw up the collar of thy mantle well over that left cheek of
+thine, and do not talk whilst the air bites so keenly. When the sun
+is up all will be well; but be cautious in the first chill of the
+dawn."</p>
+<p>The brothers went towards their companion, and rearranged the
+collar of his riding cloak so as still more to conceal his face.
+The hands of the younger lad were trembling somewhat; there was a
+quivering of the muscles of the face which betokened some repressed
+emotion. The muffled rider did not speak or make much movement. He
+obeyed the injunction of the lady of Chad to the letter.</p>
+<p>Sir Oliver now appeared, and lifted his wife upon her palfrey.
+He gave a look to see that his sons were mounted, and his servants
+standing ready to follow his example when he sprang to the
+saddle.</p>
+<p>Then his charger was led up, and he mounted and gave the word,
+and the little cavalcade moved out through the gate and into the
+still, dim forest track, watched intently by more than one pair of
+keen, sharp, suspicious eyes.</p>
+<p>"I trust when I come back," remarked the knight to his lady,
+"that yon spies will have grown weary of their bootless watch, and
+will have taken themselves off. It is but the malice and suspicion
+of the Lord of Mortimer which causes the prior to act so. Alone he
+would never trouble himself. He knows that Brother Emmanuel is not
+at Chad, and has not been these many days. Wherever he be, he has
+escaped the malice of his foes this time. Heaven send that he may
+long escape! He was a godly and a saintly man, and no more heretic
+than thou or I. If the Church will persist in warring thus against
+her own truest sons, then indeed will she provoke some great
+judgment upon her own head. A house divided against itself can
+never stand, and she above all others should know that."</p>
+<p>The spies had been some time passed before Sir Oliver spoke
+these words, and when he did so they were only loud enough to reach
+the ears of his wife and of his sons, who rode immediately behind
+him. Two of these turned their heads for a moment to look at him
+who rode between them, but his face was far too well concealed for
+its expression to be seen.</p>
+<p>A few miles further on and a pause was made. Julian suggested
+that he and Edred should be turning back; whilst the mother, who
+thought that Edred was scarce fit for the saddle yet, seconded the
+idea with approbation.</p>
+<p>They were passing through a very dark part of the forest, where
+the trees grew dense, and where on one side the sandstone rose up
+in a wall, quite keeping out the level rays of the rising sun. It
+was almost as dim as night in this overgrown spot.</p>
+<p>Julian sprang to his feet, and went and dutifully kissed the
+hand both of father and mother, and the bandaged lad with the
+concealed face followed his example, touching both hands reverently
+and gratefully, and murmuring some words of farewell that were only
+indistinctly heard in the champing of bits and stamping of
+impatient horse hoofs. Then whilst the mother still laid many
+charges upon Julian to be careful of his brother, and bent a few
+anxious regards upon the injured lad himself, Sir Oliver gave the
+signal for riding on again, as they had a long day's journey before
+them; and the little cavalcade vanished quickly into the forest,
+leaving the two companions and their respective steeds standing
+alone in that dim place.</p>
+<p>When the last of the horses had quite vanished, and the sound of
+their steps was no longer to be heard, Julian flung his cap
+suddenly into the air, and uttered a long and peculiar cry.</p>
+<p>Almost immediately that cry was answered from some place near at
+hand, and in a few minutes more a figure strangely like the one
+standing at Julian's side emerged from the sheltering underwood,
+leading by the rein a small forest pony, such as were much used in
+that part of the country. With bandaged face, hat drawn over the
+brows, and collar turned up to the ears, the newcomer was the very
+counterpart of the motionless figure in the path, save that the
+latter wore the better dress. Julian burst into a great laugh as
+the two stood facing each other; but for Edred the meeting was
+fraught with too much of thankful relief for him to be able to join
+in his brother's hilarity, and after standing very still for a
+moment, he suddenly bent his knee, and felt a hand laid upon his
+head in mute blessing.</p>
+<p>Then Brother Emmanuel removed the wrappings from his head, and
+looked from one brother to the other with a world of gratitude in
+his dark eyes. But it was a time for action, not words, and that
+mute, eloquent gaze was all that passed at present.</p>
+<p>"We have a servant's dress ready in the hut hard by," said Edred
+quickly; "and then we must to horse again and get to the coast as
+fast as may be. Yon sturdy little pony good Warbel has provided
+will serve us as well as any stouter nag, and look more in keeping
+with the humble part thou must play this day, Brother Emmanuel.
+Come, let us change our dress quickly. I love not to linger in this
+forest, even though we be five good miles from Chad."</p>
+<p>Julian took care of the three horses, whilst Edred and the
+disguised monk made their way through the thick growth of
+underwood.</p>
+<p>When they reappeared it seemed to the boy as though the monk was
+as greatly disguised now as he had been with the wrappings of linen
+about his face. Certainly none but a spy on the watch and on the
+right scent would recognize in this serving man the young
+ecclesiastic of a few weeks back.</p>
+<p>There was a stubble of beard upon his lips and chin which was in
+itself a marvellous disguise. He wore a loose riding dress, with a
+slouch hat and a high collar to the cloak which shaded and changed
+the outline of his features. There was nothing of the monk in his
+look, save perhaps in the steady glance of his eyes, where a bright
+intelligence and keen devotion beamed.</p>
+<p>Julian flung his cap into the air again as he cried
+joyously:</p>
+<p>"Why, not even the lord prior himself would know thee now. Sure,
+thou mightest almost have ridden past the spies themselves thus
+habited. We may push on in open daylight now, and none will heed
+thy presence."</p>
+<p>Edred had now put on the riding dress which Brother Emmanuel had
+hitherto worn, so that on their return the same pair might be seen
+to re-enter the house. The disguised monk mounted the forest pony
+and followed his young masters, who pushed on quietly to the coast,
+feeling a greater and greater security with every mile they put
+between themselves and their home.</p>
+<p>It was the day for the sailing of the sloop that would carry the
+monk away to a safe retreat. They were not afraid of losing the
+boat, for it was not to sail till nightfall; but their impatience
+acted like a spur, and drove them steadily forward; and save for
+the needful halts to refresh themselves and their beasts, they did
+not tarry or draw rein.</p>
+<p>It was growing towards the westering of the sun when they beheld
+the great sea lying before them far below, and Edred's eyes glowed
+with joy as he saw the white-winged shallops flitting hither and
+thither on the wide expanse of blue water, and pictured how soon
+Brother Emmanuel would be sailing away out of the reach of peril.
+Truly God had been very good in hearing and answering prayer. Edred
+had, by some instinct for which he could not account, addressed his
+prayers of late less to the blessed Virgin and more to the Son of
+God Himself--struck, perhaps, by the words he had heard from the
+lips of the heretic peddler about the "one Mediator, the man Christ
+Jesus." He now turned in his saddle and waited till Brother
+Emmanuel came up. It was too solitary a place for them to care to
+keep up the appearance of master and servant.</p>
+<p>Riding thus side by side, Brother Emmanuel talked with the boys
+out of the fulness of his heart. His week of captivity had been
+spent in deep and earnest thought, and some of these thoughts were
+imparted to the boys in that last serious talk. He bid them hold in
+all reverence and godly fear that Church which was the body of
+Christ, and those ordinances which had been given at the beginning
+for the perfecting of the saints, and which were God's ways of
+dealing with man. But he warned them in solemn tones of the fearful
+disease which had attacked the body, and which threatened a fearful
+remedy before that body could be cleansed; he warned them also of
+the perils which beset the path of those who should live to see the
+coming struggle. There would be men who would vow that whatever the
+Church said and did must be right because the Church was the body
+of Christ, not knowing that even that body can become corrupt
+(though never the Head) if the will of man be put in the stead of
+the will of God; and these would cling to the corruptions as
+closely as to the ordinances of God, and become bitter persecutors
+of those who would arise and seek to cleanse and renew the body by
+God-given remedies. But again there would be men who would arise
+and deny that there was a body, would condemn the very name of the
+Church, and avow that what the Lord wanted was not a body, but a
+number of individuals each seeking light and salvation in his own
+fashion. That would be a fearful evil--an evil which would rend the
+body into a thousand schisms, and bring down at last the heavy
+wrath of God, who has from the beginning taught men that the body
+must be without spot or wrinkle or any such thing before it can be
+fit to be the bride of the Lamb.</p>
+<p>The young monk earnestly strove to show the perils of both these
+ways to the boys who rode beside him, and his words were earnestly
+listened to, and, by one at least, laid seriously to heart, to be
+remembered in after days almost as the words of prophecy, and
+destined to have a lasting effect upon his own future career.</p>
+<p>From that day Edred renounced all thought of the monastic life,
+feeling that such a life would but trammel his conscience and
+stultify his judgment. He resolved to live his life in the world,
+whilst seeking to be not of the world. How that resolve was kept
+there is no space in these pages to tell.</p>
+<p>Slowly and quietly the three friends jogged down into the little
+fishing and trading hamlet that lay at the base of the cliffs. In
+the small bay lay one or two sloops and frigates, and it was not
+hard to find the owner of the one which was to sail that night and
+carry Brother Emmanuel away. Julian found the man, and made all
+arrangements; whilst Edred saw that Brother Emmanuel made a
+sufficient meal, and sat talking with him to the very last,
+drinking in new thoughts and aspirations with every word, and
+striving, in the joy of knowing his beloved preceptor to be safe,
+to still the ache at heart which this parting involved.</p>
+<p>The sun was just setting as the boat bearing Brother Emmanuel to
+the sloop pushed off from shore. The skipper resolved to set sail
+forthwith, and the boys stood watching whilst she shook out her
+canvas to the favouring breeze, and glided like a white-winged sea
+bird out from the shelter of the bay and into the wide ocean.</p>
+<p>There were smarting tears in Edred's eyes despite his joy and
+relief. But Julian had room only for the latter feeling, and waved
+his cap with an air of exultant triumph as the sails expanded more
+and more and the little vessel went skimming its way over the
+shining sea.</p>
+<p>"He is safe, and we have saved him!" he cried with flashing
+eyes. "Let men say what they will, but he was no heretic. I fear
+not but that we have done right in the sight of God, even though we
+may not whisper in the confessional this deed, nor receive priestly
+absolution therefor."</p>
+<p>"God will give us His pardon if we have done amiss," said Edred
+thoughtfully. "But I have no fear that He regards this deed as a
+sin. It was done in His name, and as such will He receive it."</p>
+<p>"Yes, verily; though perchance it were better to leave such
+words unsaid. And now we must to horse and make all speed back to
+Chad. As it is we shall not reach it till after nightfall, and they
+will something wonder at our delay."</p>
+<p>"They will but think we went far and rested long for thy sake.
+We have travelled leisurely today to keep the horses fresh. We can
+travel back in the cool right merrily. It is but twenty miles. We
+can take the most of it at a hand gallop."</p>
+<p>The boys and the horses were alike refreshed and ready for a
+gallop through the cool evening air, rushing on as fast as the
+nature of the road would let them, they reached Chad in three
+hours, and rode beneath the gateway just as the old seneschal was
+wondering how much longer he must wait before he closed the gate
+for the night.</p>
+<p>The spies saw them ride in, as they had (to their thinking) seen
+them ride out; and all unconscious that the prey had escaped their
+vigilance, continued their weary and fruitless watch with the
+pertinacity which in so many like cases had given them success at
+the last.</p>
+<p>One bright evening some three weeks later the bugle at the gate
+was loudly blown, and Edred and Julian came flying out to welcome
+their eldest brother, who had ridden hither with some dozen
+servants to bring news to his brothers at home.</p>
+<p>"We have had marvellous good hap. The king received us right
+graciously, and heard our story with kingly friendliness and
+goodwill. He is none of your bigoted, priest-ridden monarchs; and
+although he hates true heresy, and would destroy it root and
+branch, he cries shame that all enlightened men who would cleanse
+the Church from some of her corrupt practices should be branded by
+that evil term. The great and worthy Dean Colet was called in, and
+he knows well the pamphlet Brother Emmanuel wrote, and says it is a
+work which should be read and taken to heart by all. That such a
+man should be dubbed a heretic is vile and wicked; and right glad
+were all to hear that he had escaped the malice of his enemies, and
+fled where they could not reach him. I did not dare even then to
+tell all the tale, but I said how we had laid our heads together
+and had helped him to escape. The king and the queen themselves
+praised me for our courage, and called me a good lad and a brave
+one not even to trouble our father with the knowledge of a secret
+that might have made ill work for him.</p>
+<p>"My Lord of Mortimer had not been idle. He had been before us in
+seeking the king; but as good chance befell, he had a quarrel with
+young Henry, the king's fiery son; and the prince was mightily
+offended, and made his sire offended likewise. Wherefore Mortimer
+was something in disgrace even before we got there, and when our
+story was told he was called up before the king and prince. And all
+our old forest rights have been restored to us--nay, have been
+widened and increased, and that at the expense of Mortimer. Ye
+should have seen his face when that mandate was brought forth and
+duly signed and sealed with the royal seal and delivered to our
+father! And the prior has been warned to take his spies from Chad,
+and the prince has promised to come and visit us, and to enjoy a
+week's hunting in the forest."</p>
+<p>Bertram's breath gave out before he had well finished outpouring
+his story, and the pause was filled by a great huzza, led off by
+Julian, and taken up by all the company, who were hearing scraps of
+like information from the men-at-arms who had conducted home the
+heir.</p>
+<p>"Our parents are constrained to remain awhile longer at court;
+but I hungered to bring the news to Chad, and to hear the end of
+the story."</p>
+<p>Bertram here dismounted, and taking his brothers by the arm, led
+them up to their own room, which was always their favourite
+haunt.</p>
+<p>"<span>I see that thy face is well-nigh recovered, Edred; but it
+stood us in marvellous good stead. Tell me, how fared you when you
+parted from us? All went well?"</span></p>
+<p>"<span>Excellent well in all truth. Not a soul accosted us by
+the way. We saw him take boat to the sloop, and saw the sloop sail
+out of the bay. In truth, it seems like a dream now that it is all
+passed. But it was a fearful time whilst it lasted."</span></p>
+<p>"<span>Yet it has led to good. We are higher in favour with the
+king than ever, and I trow it will be long ere our haughty
+neighbour dares to raise his crest against us."</span></p>
+<p>Bertram paused smiling, and laid his hand upon the <span lang=
+"en-US" xml:lang="en-US">masked</span> door which had kept its
+secret so long.</p>
+<p>"<span>And if it be that our gracious prince doth in very truth
+visit us here, methinks that to him and to him alone will we tell
+the whole of the strange story, and disclose to him the trick of
+the secret chamber at Chad!"</span></p>
+<p><br /></p>
+<p>The End.</p>
+<p><br /></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Secret Chamber at Chad, by Evelyn Everett-Green
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/15670.txt b/15670.txt
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+++ b/15670.txt
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+Project Gutenberg's The Secret Chamber at Chad, by Evelyn Everett-Green
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Secret Chamber at Chad
+
+Author: Evelyn Everett-Green
+
+Release Date: April 20, 2005 [EBook #15670]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECRET CHAMBER AT CHAD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Martin Robb
+
+
+
+
+THE SECRET CHAMBER AT CHAD
+by Everett Evelyn-Green.
+
+Table of Contents
+
+CHAPTER I: A MYSTERIOUS VISITOR.
+CHAPTER II: THE HOUSEHOLD AT CHAD.
+CHAPTER III: BROTHER EMMANUEL.
+CHAPTER IV: THE TRAVELLING PREACHER.
+CHAPTER V: A WARNING.
+CHAPTER VI: WATCHED!
+CHAPTER VII: AN IMPOSING SPECTACLE.
+CHAPTER VIII: HIDDEN AWAY.
+CHAPTER IX: THE SEARCH.
+CHAPTER X: FROM PERIL TO SAFETY.
+
+
+
+Chapter I: A Mysterious Visitor.
+
+
+The great house at Chad was wrapped in sleep. The brilliant beams
+of a June moon illuminated the fine pile of gray masonry with a
+strong white light. Every castellated turret and twisted chimney
+stood out in bold relief from the heavy background of the pine wood
+behind, and the great courtyard lay white and still, lined by a
+dark rim of ebon shadow.
+
+Chad, without being exactly a baronial hall of the first magnitude,
+was nevertheless a very fine old house. It had been somewhat shorn
+of its pristine glories during the Wars of the Roses. One out of
+its original two quadrangles had then been laid in ruins, and had
+never been rebuilt. But the old inner quadrangle still remained
+standing, and made an ample and commodious dwelling house for the
+family of the Chadgroves who inhabited it; whilst the ground which
+had once been occupied by the larger outer quadrangle, with its
+fortifications and battlements, was now laid out in terraces and
+garden walks, which made a pleasant addition to the family
+residence.
+
+The seventh Henry was on the throne. The battle of Bosworth Field
+had put an end to the long-drawn strife betwixt the houses of York
+and Lancaster. The exhausted country was beginning to look forward
+to a long period of prosperity and peace; and the household at Chad
+was one of the many that were rejoicing in the change which had
+come upon the public outlook, and was making the most of the
+peaceful years which all trusted lay before the nation.
+
+Several changes of some importance had passed over Chad during the
+previous century. The wars had made gaps in the ranks of the family
+to whom it had always belonged. There had been sundry edicts of
+confiscation--as speedily repealed by the next change in the fate
+of the day; and more than once the head had been struck down by
+death, and the house and lands had passed either to a minor or to
+some other branch of the family. There had been the confusion and
+strife betwixt the various branches of the family which was a
+characteristic of that age of upheaval and strife; but the present
+owner of the estate, Sir Oliver Chadgrove, seemed firmly settled in
+his place. He had fought on Henry's side at Bosworth, and had been
+confirmed by that monarch in the possession of the estate of Chad;
+and since that day none had tried to dispute his claim; nor,
+indeed, would it have been very easy to do so, as he was
+undoubtedly the rightful representative of the older branch of the
+family.
+
+A just and kindly man, he was beloved of those about him, and would
+have been staunchly supported by his retainers had any adversary
+arisen against him. His only enemy was the Lord of Mortimer, who
+owned Mortimer's Keep, the adjoining property, and had cast
+covetous eyes on Chad during the stormy days of the late wars, more
+than once trying unsuccessfully to step in between the disputing
+parties and claim it as his own, not by the power of right, but by
+that of might alone. However, he had not been successful in this
+attempt; and for the past few years there had been a semblance of
+friendliness between Sir Oliver and his proud and powerful
+neighbour.
+
+The knight was well aware that the friendliness was more a seeming
+than a reality. He was perfectly well acquainted with the rapacious
+character of the owner of Mortimer's Keep, and with his covetous
+designs upon Chad. He knew he was a secret foe, always on the watch
+for any cause of complaint against him; and he could often feel
+that it would take very little to stir up the old jealous strife
+and hostility. Still, for the present an armed truce was the order
+of the day, and Sir Oliver, knowing his own loyalty, the cleanness
+of his hands, and the uprightness of his dealings, was not much
+afraid that his enemy would ever succeed in ousting him from his
+lands, or in gaining possession of the fair park and house of Chad
+for himself.
+
+Sir Oliver was personally liked by the king, which was another
+point in his favour. Without being a brilliant ruler like his
+successors, the seventh Henry had the faculty of choosing men of
+parts to place about him, and he had recognized in Sir Oliver
+Chadgrove certain qualities which he approved, and of which he
+wished to avail himself from time to time. So the knight was
+frequently summoned to attend the king, and occasionally his wife
+went with him and appeared at court. On this particular bright June
+night, both the master and the mistress were absent, being at
+Windsor with the king's court; and the three boys--the children
+with whom Providence had blessed them--were the only members of the
+family sleeping beneath the roof of the great house.
+
+The bedchamber of the three boys was a large, bare room looking out
+across the wooded park and ridge of hills, through which the little
+river of Chad meandered leisurely. The boys would have preferred
+the courtyard for their lookout; but a lover of nature could not
+but be struck by the exceeding beauty of the view from this row of
+latticed casements. And indeed the green expanse of home-like
+country had its charm even for high-spirited boys; and Edred, the
+second child of the house, often sat for hours together on the wide
+window ledge, gazing his fill at the shifting lights and shadows,
+and dreaming dreams of his own about what he saw.
+
+The long room contained three small narrow beds, and very little
+furniture besides, In each of these beds a boy lay sleeping. The
+moonlight streaming in through the uncurtained windows illuminated
+the whole room, and showed the curly heads, two dark and one fair,
+lying on the hard pillows, and shone so straight into the face of
+the eldest boy, that he stirred a little in his sleep, and half
+turned round.
+
+He was a handsome lad of some eight or nine summers, with regular,
+strongly-marked features, and dark hair and eyes. The brown hand
+and arm which lay exposed to view showed a muscular development
+that betokened great strength to come when the boy should be grown
+to manhood, and the face exhibited a like promise of strength of
+will and character.
+
+Bertram Chadgrove, half aroused by the strong light of the moon in
+his face, opened his dark eyes sleepily for a few minutes, and then
+turned over towards the wall, and prepared to slumber again. But
+before he had sunk to sleep he became further aroused by a very
+peculiar sound in the wall (as it seemed), close to which his bed
+was stationed; and instead of drowsing off again, he woke up with
+all his faculties on the alert, much as a watchdog does, and
+sitting up in bed he listened with all his ears.
+
+Yes; there could be no mistaking it! There was certainly a sound--a
+muffled, curious sound--within the very wall itself. He pressed his
+ear against the panel, and his eyes shone brightly in the
+moonlight.
+
+"It is some living thing," he whispered to himself. "Methinks it is
+surely some human thing. Rats can make strange sounds, I know, but
+not such sounds as these. A human being, and within the thickness
+of the wall! How can such a thing be? I never heard the like
+before. It comes nearer--I hear the groping of hands close beside
+mine ear. Heaven send it be not a spirit from the other world! I
+fear no mortal arm, of flesh and blood, but I desire not to see a
+visitor from the land of shadows."
+
+For a moment the boy's flesh crept on his bones, and the hair of
+his head seemed to rise up from his scalp. The groping of those
+phantom hands against the wall just beside him was enough to fill
+the stoutest heart with terror, in an age when superstition was
+always rife. He strove to call to his brothers; but his voice was
+no more than a whisper, and his throat felt dry and parched.
+Failing in making himself heard by his companions, he cowered down
+and drew the clothes right over his head, shivering with fear; and
+it was several minutes before his native courage came to his aid,
+and he felt ashamed of this paroxysm of terror.
+
+"Fie upon me for a white-livered poltroon!" he cried, as the chill
+sweat of fear ceased to break out upon him, and he rallied his
+courage and his determination.
+
+"I am no better than a maid! Shame upon me for a coward! I will not
+call to Edred and Julian. It shall not be said of me, even by mine
+own self, that I dared not face even a spirit from the lower world
+alone. I will find out what this sound is, and that without the
+help of any other living soul, else shall I despise myself
+forever!"
+
+And with that resolve hot within him, Bertram threw back his
+coverings and prepared to rise from his bed, when his attention was
+arrested by some strange stealthy sounds close against the great
+carved chimney piece, on the same side of the room as his own bed.
+
+His brothers slept on the opposite side of the big room. None of
+the sounds which were so astonishing Bertram would penetrate to
+their sleeping senses. Had the eldest boy not been awake at the
+beginning, he would scarce have heard the sound, so cautious and
+soft it was. But this noise was something new. It was like hands
+fumbling and groping in search of something. Bertram held his
+breath to listen, growing hot and cold by turns. But he drew some
+of his clothes cautiously towards him, and silently slipped into
+his nether garments. He felt that if there were some unseen enemy
+striving in mysterious fashion to penetrate into this room, he
+could better meet him if he were clothed, however scantily, than he
+could do as he was; and he had ample time to put on even his
+doublet and hose, and to cover himself up again in bed, with his
+small poniard closely held in his hand, before there was any
+further development of that strange night's drama which he was so
+breathlessly watching.
+
+That something or somebody was seeking to find entrance into the
+room, he could not doubt for a moment; but, on the other hand, it
+seemed an incredible surmise, because the wall along which the
+unknown visitor had plainly felt his way was an outside wall, and
+if there really were any person thus moving, he must be walking
+along some secret passage in the thickness of the wall itself.
+
+Such a thing was not impossible. Bertram knew of more than one such
+passage contrived in the thickness of the wall in his ancient home,
+and all the family were acquainted with a certain secret hiding
+place that existed, cleverly contrived in the rambling old
+building, which, with its various levels and its wilderness of
+chimneys, might well defy detection, even with the most skilled
+search. But the boy knew of no such passage or chamber in
+connection with their sleeping room, and he was sure his parents
+did not know of one either, or any member of the household.
+Therefore it was immensely surprising to hear these uncanny sounds,
+and it was small wonder if they did give rise to a wave of
+supernatural terror, of which the boy was man enough to feel
+ashamed the moment reason had time to assert her sway.
+
+"I have done no wrong; I confessed but three days since, and
+received blessing and absolution. If any spirit were to come to
+visit this room, it could do me no hurt. Besides, methinks a spirit
+would pass easily along the straightest place, and would not need
+to fumble thus as if in search of hidden bolts.
+
+"Ha! what is that! Methought some spring shot back. Hist! here IT
+comes!"
+
+The boy lay back upon his bed, drawing the clothes silently up to
+his very eyes. The moonlight had shifted just a little, and no
+longer illumined his face. That was now in shadow, and would scarce
+reveal the fact that he was awake. He lay perfectly still, scarce
+daring to draw his breath, and the next moment a strange thing
+happened.
+
+The whole of one of the great carved pillars that supported the
+high mantle shelf swung noiselessly forward, and stood out at right
+angles to the wall. From where he lay Bertram could not see, but he
+could well understand that when this was done a narrow doorway had
+been revealed, and the next moment a shadowy figure glided with
+noiseless steps into the room.
+
+The figure was poorly clad in a doublet of serge much the worse for
+wear, and the moonlight showed a strangely haggard face and soiled
+and torn raiment. Yet there was an air of dignity about the
+mysterious visitor which showed to the astonished boy that he must
+at some time have been in better circumstances, and lying quite
+still Bertram watched his movements with breathless attention.
+
+With a quick, scared glance round him, as though afraid that even
+the silence might be the silence of treachery, the gaunt figure
+advanced with covert eagerness across the floor, leaving the door
+wide open behind him, as if to be ready for him should he desire to
+fly; and precipitating himself upon a ewer of cold water standing
+upon the floor, he drank and drank and drank as though he would
+never cease.
+
+Plainly he was consumed by the most raging thirst. Bertram had
+never seen anything but an exhausted horse after a burning summer's
+chase in the forest drink in such a fashion. And as he watched, all
+fear left him in a moment, for certainly no phantom could drink dry
+this great ewer of spring water; and if he had only a creature of
+flesh and blood to deal with, why, then there was certainly no
+cause for fear.
+
+In place of dread and terror, a great pity welled up in the
+generous heart of the boy. He had all the hatred for oppression and
+the chivalrous desire to help the oppressed that seem born in the
+hearts of the sons of British birth. Who and what manner of man
+this was he did not know; but he was evidently some poor hunted
+creature, going in very fear of his life, and as such the boy
+pitied him from the very ground of his heart, and would gladly have
+helped him had he known how.
+
+He lay for a few moments wondering and pondering. Certainly his
+father was no foe to any man. He could not be hiding from his
+displeasure. The fugitive had rather taken refuge in his house; and
+if so, who better could be found to help him than the son of the
+owner?
+
+"Our father and our mother alike have always taught us to befriend
+the stranger and the oppressed," said the boy to himself. "I will
+ask this stranger of himself, and see if I may befriend him. I
+would gladly learn the trick of yon door. It would be a goodly
+secret to have for our very own."
+
+It was plain that the fugitive, though aware that the room was
+tenanted, had satisfied himself that the occupants were all asleep.
+He had ceased his frightened, furtive looks around him, and was
+quaffing the last of the water with an air of relish and relief
+that was good to see, pausing from time to time to stretch his
+limbs and to draw in great gulps of fresh air through the open
+window by which he stood, as a prisoner might do who had just been
+released from harsh captivity.
+
+The moonlight shining upon his face showed it haggard, unkempt, and
+unshorn. Plainly he had been several days in hiding; and by the
+gauntness of his figure, and the wolfish gleam in his eye as it
+roved quickly round the apartment, as if in search of food, it was
+plain that he was suffering keenly from hunger, too.
+
+Bertram's decision was quickly taken. Whilst the man's face was
+turned the other way, he quickly rose from his bed, and crossing
+the room with noiseless steps, laid a hand upon his arm.
+
+"Hist, friend!" he whispered whilst the start given by the other,
+and the hoarse exclamation that broke from his lips, might have
+wakened sleepers who were not healthy, tired boys. "Fear not; I am
+no foe to betray thee. Tell me who and what thou art, and I will
+help thee all I may."
+
+The frightened eyes bent upon him bespoke a great terror. The man's
+voice died away as he tried to speak. The only word Bertram could
+catch seemed to be a prayer that he would not betray him.
+
+"Betray thee! Never! Why, good fellow, dost not know that the
+Chadgroves never betray those who trust in them? Hence sometimes
+has trouble come upon them. But before we talk, let me get thee
+food. Methinks thou art well-nigh starved."
+
+"Food! food! Ah, if thou wouldst give me that, young master, I
+would bless thee forever! I have well-nigh perished with hunger and
+thirst. Heaven be thanked that I have tasted water once again!"
+
+"Come hither," said Bertram cautiously. "First close this narrow
+doorway, the secret of which thou must teach me in return for what
+I will do for thee, and then I will take thee to another chamber,
+where our voices will not disturb my brothers, and we can talk, and
+thou canst eat at ease. I must know thy story, and I pledge myself
+to help thee. Show me now the trick of this door. I swear I will
+make no treacherous use of the secret."
+
+"I will trust thee, young sir. I must needs do so, for without
+human help I must surely die.
+
+"Seest thou this bunch of grapes so cunningly carved here? This
+middle grape of the cluster will turn round in the fingers that
+know how to find and grasp it, and so turning and turning slowly,
+unlooses a bolt within--here--and so the whole woodwork swings out
+upon hinges and reveals the doorway. Where that doorway leads I
+will show thee anon, if thou wouldst know the trick of the secret
+chamber at Chad that all men have now forgotten. It may be that it
+will some day shelter thee or thine, for thou hast enemies abroad,
+even as I have."
+
+Bertram was intensely interested as he examined and mastered the
+simple yet clever contrivance of this masked door; but quickly
+remembering the starved condition of his companion, he led him
+cautiously into an adjoining room, where were a table and some
+scant furniture, and gliding down the staircase and along dim
+corridors just made visible by the reflected radiance of the moon,
+he reached the buttery, and armed himself with a venison pasty, a
+loaf of bread, and a bottle of wine. Hurrying back with these, he
+soon had the satisfaction to see the stranger fall upon them with
+the keen relish of a man who has fasted to the last limits of
+endurance; and only after he had seen that the keen edge of his
+hunger had been satisfied did he try to learn more of him and his
+concerns.
+
+"Now tell me, my good friend, who and what thou art," said the boy,
+"and how comes it that thou seekest shelter here, and that thou
+knowest more of Chad than we its owners do. That is the thing which
+has been perplexing me this long while. I would fain hear from thy
+story how it comes about."
+
+"That is soon told, young sir. Thou dost not, probably, remember
+the name of Warbel as that of some of the retainers of thy
+grandsire, but--"
+
+"I have heard the name," said the boy. "I have heard my father
+speak of them. But I knew not that there were any of that name now
+living."
+
+"I am a Warbel--I trow the last of my race. I was born beyond the
+seas; but I was early brought to England, and I heard munch of the
+strife that encompassed Chad, because my father and grandfather
+both knew the place well, and would fain have gone back and lived
+in the old country had not fortune otherwise decreed it. To make a
+long story short, they never returned to the place. But when I was
+grown to man's estate, I was offered a post in the household of the
+Lord of Mortimer, and as it was the best thing that had fallen in
+my way, I accepted it very gladly; for I knew that name, too, and I
+knew naught against the haughty lord, albeit my father and
+grandsire had not loved the lords of that name who lived before
+him.
+
+"For many years I have been in his service, and for a while all
+went well with me. I was made one of his gentlemen, and he seemed
+to favour me. But of late there has been a change towards me--I
+know not how or why. I have offended him without intending it, and
+he has sometimes provoked me almost beyond endurance by his proud
+insolence. But that I might have borne, for he was my master, had
+it not been for the insolence and insults I had to bear from others
+amongst his servants, and from one youth in particular, who seemed
+to me to be trying to oust me from my place, and to get himself the
+foremost place in his master's favour. That made my hot blood boil
+again and again, until at last the thing I believe they had long
+planned happened, and I had to fly for my life."
+
+The man paused, and Bertram, who was drinking in this story, asked
+eagerly: "And what was that?"
+
+"It was four days ago now, in the hall where we had supped. We had
+drunk much wine in honour of our master's birthday, and then we
+began playing and dicing to pass the time till we retired to bed.
+My adversary was this youth whom I so greatly distrust. As we
+played I detected him in unfair practices. He vowed I lied, and
+called upon me to prove my words at the sword's point; but in my
+fury and rage I sprang upon him with my bare hands, and would have
+wrung his neck--the insolent popinjay--had I been able. As it was,
+we struggled and swayed together till my greater weight caused him
+to fall over backwards against one of the tables, and I verily
+believe his back is broken. I know not whether he is living yet.
+But as he is not only a great favourite with the Lord of Mortimer,
+but a distant kinsman to boot, no sooner was the deed done than all
+in the hall called to me to save myself by flight, for that the
+master would revenge such a death upon the perpetrator of it
+without mercy, and that if I wished to spare my neck I must fly
+without an instant's delay.
+
+"I knew this but too well myself. The baron was a fearful man to
+meet in his rage. Where to fly I knew not, but stay I could not. I
+had bare time to rush to my room, don a dress that would not excite
+inquiry if I had to lie hid in the forest a few days. I did not
+think flight would be so difficult a matter, but I knew that every
+moment spent in Mortimer's Keep was at peril of my life; and I had
+but just made my escape through a small postern door before I heard
+the alarm bell ring, the drawbridge go up, and knew that the edict
+had gone forth for my instant apprehension."
+
+He paused with a slight shudder, and seemed to be listening
+intently.
+
+"There is naught to fear here," said Bertram. "Tell me more of thy
+flight."
+
+"It was terrible," answered the man. "I had not looked to be hunted
+like the wild beasts of the forest; and yet an hour had not gone by
+before I heard, by the baying of the fierce hounds that are kept at
+Mortimer, that a hunting party had sallied forth; and I knew that I
+was the quarry. I doubled and ran like any hare. I knew the tricks
+of the wild things that have skill in baffling the dogs, and at
+last I reached the shelter of these walls, and ran there for
+protection. I had thrown off the dogs at the last piece of water;
+and in the marshy ground the scent did not lie, and could not be
+picked up. For a brief moment I was safe; but I was exhausted
+almost to death. I could go no further. I lay down beneath the
+shadow of some arbour within the sheltering precincts of Chad, and
+wondered what would become of me."
+
+"Yes, yes! and then--?"
+
+"Then I remembered a story told me by my grandsire, years and years
+gone by, of a secret chamber at Chad, which had sheltered many a
+fugitive in the hour of peril. Lying out in the soft night air, I
+recalled bit by bit all that I had been told--the very drawings the
+old man had made to amuse me in a childish sickness, how the door
+opened, and how access was had to the chamber. I knew that the
+country round would be hunted for days, and that I could never
+escape the malice of the Lord of Mortimer if I pursued my way to
+the sea. He would overtake and kill me before I could make shift to
+gain that place of refuge. But I bethought me of the secret chamber
+and its story, and methought I might slip in unseen did I but watch
+my opportunity, find my way up the winding stair to this room, and
+so to the secret chamber beyond."
+
+"And thou didst?"
+
+"Ay, I did, the very next morning. I saw thee and thy brothers
+sally forth a-hunting. I saw the men follow in thy train. I had
+heard that the knight and his lady with their retinue were absent
+at Windsor. It needed no great skill to slip in unseen and gain the
+longed-for hiding place. I had some food in my wallet. I fondly
+hoped it would prove enough; but the sounds of hunting day by day
+all around have told me too well that I must not venture forth; and
+as this room was slept in by night, I feared to sally forth after
+food, lest I should be found and betrayed. I had heard of the
+merciful nature of the master of Chad; but in his absence I knew
+not what his servants might say or do. Doubtless there is a reward
+offered for my apprehension; and if that be so, how could I help
+fearing that any hired servant would betray me to my lord?"
+
+"And thou thoughtest that servants slept in this room, and dared
+not show thyself either by day or night for fear thou mightest be
+betrayed! And only hunger and thirst drove thee forth at length?"
+
+"Ay. And from my heart do I thank thee for thy kindness, young sir;
+and gladly will I show thee in return the trick of yon chamber. If
+thou canst kindle a torch it will light us better, for the way
+thither is wondrous tortuous and narrow."
+
+Bertram had a little lantern--a very treasured possession of
+his--and after the usual tedious process of lighting had been gone
+through, he softly led the way back to the sleeping chamber. With
+his own hands he undid the fastening of the door and saw it swing
+open, and then the two passed through into a very narrow aperture,
+which proved to be a long narrow gallery contrived in the thickness
+of the wall, which would only just admit of the passage of one
+figure at a time.
+
+As they went in they drew to the door, and the fugitive showed his
+young companion how the bolt upon the inner side might be unloosed.
+
+"It is easy enow in the light, but hard to feel in the black
+darkness," he remarked; and then they pursued their devious way on
+and on through this strange passage, which wound up and down and in
+and out, and landed them at last at the foot of a spiral staircase,
+so narrow and squeezed in by masonry as to be barely serviceable
+for the purpose for which it was contrived. It led them to a small
+door, through which they passed, to find themselves in a room of
+fair size but very low, and without any window, which seemed to
+occupy (as indeed it did) a portion of the house between two of the
+other floors, and was so contrived as to absolutely defy detection
+be the examination of the structure of the house never so
+exhaustive. If the secret door were not found, nothing else would
+ever betray this cunning hiding-place. Doubtless that was why,
+during the many changes that had prevailed at Chad during the past
+fifty years, the knowledge of its very existence had been lost.
+
+"Air comes in freely through many cracks and slits," explained the
+prisoner. "It is not an unpleasant place save in the heat of the
+middle day, when it becomes like a veritable oven. That is why my
+thirst was so unbearable. There is a bed, as thou seest, and a
+chair and a few other things. One could be comfortable here were it
+not for starvation and thirst."
+
+"I will feed thee so long as thou remainest hid," cried the boy,
+with generous ardour. "Thou shalt hide there by day, and by night
+shalt wander abroad an thou wilt, to breathe the air and stretch
+thy limbs. My brothers and I will be thy friends. Thou needst fear
+nothing now. We will find out when it is safe for thee to leave thy
+retreat, and then thou shalt go forth without fear; or, if thou
+likest it better, thou shalt abide here till our father returns and
+take service with him. I doubt not he would be glad enow to number
+a Warbel again amongst his trusty servants."
+
+The man's face lighted up wonderfully.
+
+"If he would do that," he cried eagerly, "I should have no wish for
+anything better. But my master, the baron--"
+
+"My father fears not the baron!" answered the boy proudly; "and,
+besides, his young kinsman is not dead. We heard something of his
+side of the tale, and the youth is not even like to die now. My
+father could protect thee from his wrath. Stay here, and thou wilt
+have naught to fear."
+
+The fugitive took the lad's hand and pressed it to his lips.
+
+"I will serve thee for ever and ever for this boon," he answered;
+and Bertram went back to his room, to lie awake and muse over what
+had befallen till the dawn broke and his brothers awoke to the new
+day.
+
+To keep any secret from his two brothers was a thing impossible to
+Bertram, and before they had finished dressing that morning, Edred
+and Julian were both made aware of the strange adventure of the
+night previous. Looking up to Bertram, as they both did, as the
+embodiment of prowess and courage, they did not grudge him his
+wonderful discovery, but they were eager to visit the fugitive
+themselves, and to carry him food and drink.
+
+The days that followed were days of absolute enchantment to the
+boys, who delighted in waiting on Warbel and passing hours in his
+company. He told them entrancing stories of adventure and peril. He
+was devoted to his three youthful keepers, and wished for nothing
+better than to enter service with their father.
+
+Later on, when all hue and cry after the missing man was over, and
+when Lord Mortimer's young kinsman was so far recovered that it
+would be impossible to summon Warbel for any injury inflicted on
+him, Bertram conducted him to the hut of one of his father's
+woodmen, who promised to keep him safe till the return of the
+knight.
+
+When Sir Oliver came back, Warbel was brought to him, told a part
+of his tale, and was admitted readily as a member of the household;
+but the story of his incarceration in the secret chamber remained a
+secret known only to himself and the three boys. So delightful a
+mystery as the existence of this unknown chamber was too precious
+to be parted with; and it was a compact between the boys and the
+man, who now became their chief attendant and body servant, that
+the trick of that door and the existence of that chamber were to be
+told to none, but kept as absolutely their own property.
+
+
+
+Chapter II: The Household At Chad.
+
+
+The office of mistress of a large household in the sixteenth
+century was no sinecure. It was not the fashion then to depute to
+the hands of underlings the supervision of the details of domestic
+management; and though the lady of the Hall might later in the day
+entertain royalty itself, the early hours of the morning were spent
+in careful and busy scrutiny of kitchen, pantry, and store or still
+room, and her own fair hands knew much of the actual skill which
+was required in the preparation of the many compounds which graced
+the board at dinner or supper.
+
+Lady Chadgrove was no exception to the general rule of careful
+household managers; and whilst her lord and master went hunting or
+hawking in the fresh morning air, or shut himself up in his library
+to examine into the accounts his steward laid before him or concern
+himself with some state business that might have been placed in his
+hands, she was almost always to be found in the offices of the
+house, looking well after the domestic details of household
+management, and seeing that each servant and scullion was doing the
+work appointed with steadiness and industry.
+
+There was need for some such careful supervision of the daily
+routine, for the large houses in the kingdom were mainly dependent
+upon their own efforts for the necessaries of life throughout the
+year. In towns there were shops where provisions could be readily
+bought, but no such institution as that of country shops had been
+dreamed of as yet. The lord of the manor killed his own meat, baked
+his own bread, grew his own wheat, and ground his own flour. He had
+his own brewery within the precinct of the great courtyard, where
+vast quantities of mead and ale were brewed, cider and other
+lighter drinks made, and even some sorts of simple home-grown
+wines. Chad boasted its own "vineyard," where grapes flourished in
+abundance, and ripened in the autumn as they will not do now.
+
+Nothing, perhaps, shows more clearly the change that has passed
+upon our climate by slow degrees than a study of the parish records
+of ancient days. Vineyards were common enough in England some
+hundreds of years ago, and wine was made from the produce as
+regularly as the season came round. Then there were the simpler
+fruit wines from gooseberries, currants, and elderberries, to say
+nothing of cowslip wine and other light beverages which it was the
+pride of the mistress to contrive and to excel in the making. Our
+forefathers, though they knew nothing of the luxuries of tea and
+coffee, were by no means addicted to the drinking of water.
+Considering the sanitary conditions in which they lived in those
+days, and the fearful contamination of water which frequently
+prevailed, and which doubtless had much to do with the spread of
+the Black Death and other like visitations, this was no doubt an
+advantage. Still there were drawbacks to the habit of constant
+quaffing of fermented drinks at all hours of the day, and it was
+often a difficult matter to keep in check the sin of drunkenness
+that prevailed amongst all classes of the people.
+
+At Chad the gentle influence of the lady of the manor had done much
+to make this household an improvement on many of its neighbours.
+Although there was always abundance of good things and a liberal
+hospitality to strangers of all sorts, it was not often that any
+unseemly roistering disturbed the inmates of Chad. The servants and
+retainers looked up to their master and mistress with loyalty and
+devotion, curbed their animal passions and wilder moods out of love
+and reverence for them, and grew more civilized and cultivated
+almost without knowing it, until the wild orgies which often
+disgraced the followings of the country nobility were almost
+unknown here.
+
+Possibly another humanizing and restraining influence that acted
+silently upon the household was the presence of a young monk, who
+had been brought not long since from a neighbouring monastery, to
+act in the capacity of chaplain to the household and tutor to the
+boys, now fast growing towards man's estate. There was a beautiful
+little chapel connected with Chad. It had fallen something into
+neglect and ruin during the days of the civil wars, and had been
+battered about in some of the struggles that had raged round Chad.
+But Sir Oliver had spent both money and loving care in restoring
+and beautifying the little place, and now the daily mass was said
+there by Brother Emmanuel, and the members of the household were
+encouraged to attend as often as their duties would permit. The
+brother, too, would go about amongst the people and talk with them
+as they pursued their tasks, and not one even of the rudest and
+roughest but would feel the better for the kindly and beneficent
+influence of the youthful ecclesiastic.
+
+Brother Emmanuel had one of those keenly intelligent and versatile
+minds that are always craving a wider knowledge, and think no
+knowledge, even of the humblest, beneath notice. He would ask the
+poorest wood cutter to instruct him in the handling of his tool or
+in the simple mysteries of his craft as humbly as though he were
+asking instruction from one of the learned of the land. No
+information, no occupation came amiss to him. He saw in all toil a
+dignity and a power, and he strove to impress upon every worker, of
+whatever craft he might be, that to do his day's work with all his
+might and with the best powers at his command was in truth one
+excellent way of serving God, and more effectual than any number of
+Paters and Aves said whilst idling away the time that should be
+given to his master's service.
+
+Such teaching might not be strictly orthodox from a monkish
+standpoint, but it commended itself to the understanding and the
+approval of simple folks; and the brother was none the less beloved
+and respected that his talk and his teaching did not follow the
+cut-and-dried rules of his order. Sir Oliver and his wife thought
+excellently of the young man, and to the boys he was friend as well
+as tutor.
+
+On this hot midsummer day the mistress of Chad was making her usual
+morning round of the kitchens and adjoining offices--her simple
+though graceful morning robe, and the plain coif covering her hair,
+showing that she was not yet dressed for the duties which would
+engross her later in the day. She had a great bunch of keys
+dangling at her girdle, and her tablets were in her hands, where
+from time to time she jotted down some brief note to be entered
+later in those household books which she kept herself with
+scrupulous care, so that every season she knew exactly how many
+gallons or hogsheads of mead or wine had been brewed, what had been
+the yield of every crop in the garden or meadow, what stores of
+conserves had been made from each fruit as its season came in, and
+whether that quantity had proved sufficient for the year's
+consumption.
+
+The cherry crop was being gathered in today. Huge baskets of the
+delicious fruit were ranged along one wall of the still room, and
+busy hands were already preparing the bright berries for the
+preserving pan or the rows of jars that were likewise placed in
+readiness to receive them. The cherry trees of Chad were famous for
+their splendid crop, and the mistress had many wonderful recipes
+and preparations by which the fruit was preserved and made into all
+manner of dainty conserves that delighted all who partook of them.
+
+"I will come anon, and help you with your task," said the lady to
+the busy wenches in the still room, who were hard at work preparing
+the fruit. "I will return as soon as I have made my round, and see
+that all is going well."
+
+The girls smiled, and dropped their rustic courtesies. Some amongst
+them were not the regular serving maids of the place, but were the
+daughters of the humbler retainers living round and about, who were
+glad to come to assist at the great house when there was any press
+of work--a thing that frequently happened from April to November.
+
+None who assisted at Chad at such times ever went away empty
+handed. Besides the small wage given for the work done, there was
+always a basket of fruit, or a piece of meat, or a flagon of wine,
+according to the nature of the task, set aside for each assistant
+who did not dwell beneath the roof of Chad. And if there was
+sickness in any cottage from which a worker came, there was certain
+to be some little delicacy put into a basket by the hands of the
+mistress, and sent with a kindly word of goodwill and sympathy to
+the sufferer.
+
+It was small wonder, then, that the household and community of Chad
+was a happy and peaceable one, or that the knight and his lady were
+beloved of all around.
+
+The morning's round was no sinecure, even though the mistress was
+today as quick as possible in her visit of inspection. Three fat
+bucks had been brought in from the forest yester-eve, when the
+knight and his sons had returned from hunting. The venison had to
+be prepared, and a part of it dried and salted down for winter use;
+whilst of course a great batch of pies and pasties must be put in
+hand, so that the most should be made of the meat whilst it was
+still fresh.
+
+When that matter had been settled, there were the live creatures to
+visit--the calves in their stalls, the rows of milch kine, and the
+great piggery, where porkers of every kind and colour were tumbling
+about in great excitement awaiting their morning meal. The mistress
+of the house generally saw the pigs fed each day, to insure their
+having food proper to them, and not the offal and foul remnants
+that idle servants loved to give and they to eat were not some
+supervision exercised. The care of dogs and horses the lady left to
+her husband and sons, but the cows, the pigs, and the poultry she
+always looked after herself.
+
+Her daily task accomplished, she returned to the still room,
+prepared for a long morning over her conserves. It was but
+half-past nine now; for the breakfast hour in baronial houses was
+seven all the year round, and today had been half-an-hour earlier
+on account of the press of work incident to the harvesting of the
+cherry crop. Several of the servants who were generally occupied
+about the house had risen today with the lark, to be able to help
+their lady, and soon a busy, silent party was working in pantry and
+still room under the careful eye of the mistress.
+
+One old woman who had been accommodated with a chair, though her
+fingers were as brisk as any of the younger girls', from time to
+time addressed a question or a remark to her lady, which was always
+kindly answered. She was the old nurse of Chad, having been nurse
+to Sir Oliver in his infancy, and having since had charge of his
+three boys during their earliest years. She was growing infirm now,
+and seldom left her own little room in a sunny corner of the big
+house, where her meals were taken her by one of the younger maids.
+But in the warm weather, when her stiff limbs gained a little more
+power, she loved on occasion to come forth and take a share in the
+life of the house, and work with the busy wenches under the
+mistress's eye at the piles of fruit from the successive summer and
+autumn crops as they came in rotation.
+
+"And where be the dear children?" she asked once; "I have not set
+eyes on them the livelong day. Methought the very smell of the
+cherries would have brought them hither, as bees and wasps to a
+honey pot."
+
+The lady smiled slightly.
+
+"I doubt not they will be here anon; but doubtless they have paid
+many visits to the trees ere the store was garnered. I think they
+are in the tilt yard with Warbel. It is there they are generally to
+be found in the early hours of the day."
+
+"They be fine, gamesome lads," said the old woman fondly--"chips of
+the old block, true Chads every one of them;" for the custom with
+the common people was to call the lord of the manor by the name of
+his house rather than by his own patronymic, and Sir Oliver was
+commonly spoken of as "Chad" by his retainers; a custom which
+lingered long in the south and west of the country.
+
+"They are well-grown, hearty boys," answered the mother quietly,
+though there was a light of tender pride in her eyes. "Bertram is
+almost a man in looks, though he is scarce seventeen yet.
+Seventeen! How time flies! It seems but yesterday since he was a
+little boy standing at my knee to say his light tasks, and walking
+to and fro holding his father's hand. Well, Heaven be praised, the
+years have been peaceful and prosperous, else would not they have
+fled by so swiftly."
+
+"Heaven be praised indeed!" echoed the old woman. "For now the
+master is so safely seated at Chad that he would be a bold man who
+tried to oust him. But in days gone by I have sorely feared yon
+proud Lord of Mortimer. Methought he would try to do him a
+mischief. His spleen and spite, as all men say, are very great."
+
+The lady's face clouded slightly, but her reply was quiet and calm.
+
+"I fear me they are that still; but he lacks all cause of offence.
+My good lord is careful in all things to avoid making ill blood
+with a jealous neighbour. That he has always cast covetous eyes
+upon Chad is known throughout the countryside; but I trow he would
+find it something difficult to make good any claim."
+
+"Why, verily!" cried the nurse, with energy. "He could but come as
+a foul usurper, against whom would every honest hand be raised.
+But, good my mistress, what is the truth of the whisper I have
+heard that the Lord of Mortimer has wed his daughter to one who
+calls himself of the house of Chad? I cannot believe that any of
+the old race would mate with a Mortimer. Is it but the idle gossip
+of the ignorant? or what truth is there in it?"
+
+"I scarce know myself the rights of the matter," answered Lady
+Chadgrove, still with a slight cloud upon her brow. "It is
+certainly true that Lord Mortimer has lately wed his only child, a
+daughter, to a knight who calls himself Sir Edward Chadwell, and
+makes claim to be descended from my lord's house. Men say that he
+makes great boasting that the Chadwells are an older branch than
+the Chadgroves, and that by right of inheritance Chad is his.
+
+"Methinks he would find it very hard to make good any such claim.
+Belike it is but idle boasting. Yet it may be that there will be
+some trouble in store. He has taken up his abode at Mortimer's
+Keep, and maybe we shall hear ill news before long."
+
+All eyes were fixed for a moment on the lady's face, and then the
+hands moved faster than before, whilst a subdued murmur went round
+the group. Not one heart was there that did not beat with
+indignation at the thought that any should dare to try to disturb
+the peace of the rightful lord of Chad. If the loyalty and
+affection of all around would prove a safeguard, the knight need
+have no fear from the claims advanced by any adversary.
+
+"There has been a muttering of coming tempest anent those vexed
+forest rights," continued the lady, in reply to some indignant
+words from the nurse. "I would that difficult question could be
+settled and laid at rest; but my good lord has yielded something
+too much already for the sake of peace and quietness, and at each
+concession Mortimer's word was passed that he would claim no
+further rights over the portion that remained to us. But his word
+is broken without scruple, and we cannot ever be giving way. Were
+no stand to be made, the whole forest track would soon be claimed
+by Mortimer, and we should have nothing but the bare park that is
+fenced about and cannot be filched bit by bit away. But all the
+world knows that Chad has forest rights equal to those of Mortimer.
+It is but to seek a quarrel that the baron continues to push his
+claims ever nearer and nearer our walls."
+
+Another murmur of indignation went round; but there was no time for
+further talk, as at that moment the three boys entered from the
+tilt yard; hot, thirsty, and breathless, and the fair-haired lad
+with the dreamy blue eyes held a kerchief to his head that was
+stained with blood.
+
+"Art hurt, Edred?" asked the mother, looking up.
+
+"'Tis but a scratch," answered the boy. "I am not quite a match for
+Bertram yet; but I will be anon. I must learn to be quicker in my
+defence. Thanks, gentle mother; belike it will be better for it to
+be bound up. It bleeds rather too fast for comfort, but thy hands
+will soon stop that."
+
+The other boys fell upon the fruit with right good will, whilst the
+mother led her second son to the small pump nigh at hand, and
+bathed and dressed the rather ugly wound in his head.
+
+Neither mother nor son thought anything of the hurt. It was easy
+enough to give and receive hard blows in the tilt yard, and bruises
+and cuts were looked upon as part of the discipline of life.
+
+As soon as the dressing was over, Edred joined his brothers, and
+did his share in diminishing the pile of luscious fruit. And as
+they ate they chattered away to the old woman of their prowess in
+tilt yard and forest, relating how Bertram had slain a fat buck
+with his own hands the previous day, and how they had between them
+given the coup-de-grace to another, which had been brought to bay
+at the water, father and huntsmen standing aloof to let the boys
+show their strength and skill.
+
+Nine years had passed since that strange night when Bertram had
+been awakened by the advent of the mysterious stranger at his
+bedside. He had developed since then from a sturdy little boy into
+a fine-grown youth of seventeen, who had in his own eyes, and in
+the eyes of many others, well-nigh reached man's estate; and who
+would, if need should arise, go forth equipped for war to fight the
+king's battles. He was a handsome, dark-haired, dark-eyed youth,
+with plenty of determination and force of character, and with a
+love of Chad so deeply rooted in his nature, that to be the heir of
+that property seemed to him the finest position in all the world,
+and he would not have exchanged it for that of Prince of Wales.
+
+The second son, Edred (Ethelred was his true name; he was called
+after his mother, Etheldred), was some half-head shorter than his
+brother, but a fine boy for all that. He was fifteen, and whilst
+sharing to a great extent in the love of sport and of warlike games
+so common in that day, he was also a greater lover of books than
+his brothers, and would sometimes absent himself from their
+pastimes to study with Brother Emmanuel and learn from him many
+things that were not written in books. The other lads gave more
+time to study than was usual at that period; for both Sir Oliver
+and his lady believed in the value of book lore and the use of the
+pen, deploring the lack of learning that had prevailed during the
+confusion of the late wars, and greatly desiring its revival. But
+it was Edred who really inherited the scholarly tastes of his
+parents, and already the question of making a monk of him was under
+serious discussion. The boy thought that if he might have a few
+more years of liberty and enjoyment he should like the life of the
+cloister well.
+
+Julian bore a strong resemblance to Bertram both in person and
+disposition. He was a very fine boy, nearly fourteen years old, and
+had been the companion of his brothers from infancy, so that he
+often appeared older than his age. All three brothers were bound
+together in bonds of more than wonted affection. They not only
+shared their sports and studies, but held almost all their
+belongings in common. Each lad had his own horse and his own
+weapons, whilst Edred had one or two books over which he claimed
+absolute possession; but for the rest, they enjoyed all properties
+in common, and it had hardly entered into their calculations that
+they could ever be separated, save when the idea of making Edred
+into a monk came under discussion; and as that would not be done
+for some years, it scarcely seemed worth troubling over now.
+Perhaps things would turn out differently in the end, and they
+would remain together at Chad for the whole of their natural lives.
+
+Nurse never wearied of the tales told by her young masters, and
+listened with fond pride to the recital. So eagerly were Bertram
+and Julian talking, that they did not heed the sound of the horn at
+the gate way which bespoke the arrival of some messenger; but Edred
+slipped out to see who could be coming, and presently he returned
+with a frown upon his brow.
+
+"There is a messenger at the gate who wears the livery of
+Mortimer," he said. "An insolent knave to boot, who flung his
+missive in the face of old Ralph, and spurred off with a mocking
+laugh. I would I had had my good steed between my knees, and I
+would have given the rascal a lesson in manners. I like not these
+messengers from Mortimer; they always betide ill will to my
+father."
+
+Lady Chadgrove looked anxious for a moment, but her brow soon
+cleared as she made answer: "I shall be sorry if aught comes to
+grieve or vex your father; but so long as we are careful to give no
+just cause for offence, we need not trouble our heads overmuch as
+to the jealous anger of the Lord of Mortimer. I misdoubt me if he
+can really hurt us, be he never so vindictive. The king is just,
+and he values the services of your father. He will not permit him
+to be molested without cause. And methinks my Lord of Mortimer
+knows as much, else he would have wrought us more ill all these
+past years."
+
+"He is a tyrant and an evil liver!" cried Bertram hotly; "and his
+servants be drunken, brawling knaves, every one--as insolent as
+their master. If I had been old Ralph, I would have hurled back his
+missive in his face, and bidden him deliver it rightly."
+
+"Nay, nay, my son; that would but be to stir up strife. If others
+comport themselves ill, that is no reason why our servants should
+do the like. I would never give a foe a handle against me by the
+ill behaviour of even a serving man. Let them act never so surlily,
+I would that they were treated with all due courtesy."
+
+Bertram and Julian hardly entered into their mother's feelings on
+this point; but Edred looked up eagerly, and it was plain that he
+understood the feelings which prompted the words, for he said in a
+low voice:
+
+"Methinks thou art right, gentle mother; albeit I did sorely long
+to give the varlet a lesson to teach him better. But perchance it
+was well I was not nigh enough. Surely it must be nigh upon the
+hour for dinner. Our sport has whet the edge of appetite, and I
+would fain hear what the missive was which yon knave brought with
+him. Our father will doubtless tell us at the table."
+
+It was indeed nearly noon, and mistress and maids alike
+relinquished their tasks to prepare for the meal which was the
+chiefest of the day, though the supper was nothing to be despised.
+
+The long table in the great banqueting hall was a goodly sight to
+see when the dinner was spread, and the retainers of the better
+sort and some amongst the upper servants sat down with the master
+and his family to partake of the good cheer. At one end of the long
+board sat the knight and his lady side by side; to their right were
+the three boys, the young monk, and Warbel the armourer, who now
+held a post of some importance in the house. Opposite to these were
+other gentlemen-at-arms and their sons, who were resident at Chad;
+and at the lower end of the table, below the great silver salt
+cellars, sat the seneschal, the lowlier retainers, and certain
+trusted servants who held responsible positions at Chad. The cooks
+and scullions and underlings dined in the great kitchen immediately
+after their masters' meal had been served.
+
+The table at Chad always groaned with good things, except at such
+seasons as the Church decreed a fast, and then the diet was
+scrupulously kept within the prescribed bounds. Sir Oliver and his
+wife were both devout and earnest people, and had every reverence
+for their spiritual superiors. The Benedictine Priory of Chadwater
+stood only a mile and a half distant, and the prior was on
+excellent terms with the owner of Chad. Brother Emmanuel had been
+an inmate of the priory before he was selected by Sir Oliver for
+the education of his sons. He was considered a youth of no small
+promise, and the knight was well pleased at the progress made by
+his boys since they had been studying with him.
+
+Today there was a look of annoyance upon the handsome face of Sir
+Oliver Chadgrove. It was a striking countenance at all times, in
+which sternness of purpose and kindness of heart were blended in a
+fashion that was both attractive and unusual. He had the same
+regular features, rather square in the outline, which he had
+transmitted to his children; and his hair, which was now silvered
+with many streaks, had been raven black in its day. His carriage
+was upright and fearless, and he was very tall and powerfully
+proportioned. It was Bertram's keenest ambition to grow up in all
+points like his father, and he copied him, consciously and
+unconsciously, in a fashion that often raised a smile on his
+mother's face.
+
+"I have been favoured with another insolent letter from my Lord of
+Mortimer," he said. "He had better take heed that he try not my
+patience too far, and that I go not to the king and lay a complaint
+before him. I will do so if I be much more troubled."
+
+"What says he now, father?" asked Bertram eagerly, forgetting in
+his eagerness the generally observed maxim that the sons spoke not
+at table till they were directly addressed. But the knight did not
+himself heed this breach of decorum.
+
+"It is the same old story; but every year he grows more grasping
+and more insolent. Today he complains, forsooth, that the last buck
+we killed was killed on his ground, and by rights belonged to him.
+He threatens that his foresters and huntsmen will wage war with us
+in future if we 'trespass' upon his rights, and wrest our spoil
+from us! Beshrew me if I submit to much more! Patience and
+forbearance are useless with such a man. I would I had not conceded
+all I have done in the interests of peace."
+
+Bertram's face was crimson with anger, Edred's eyes had widened in
+astonishment, whilst Julian burst out in indignant remonstrance and
+argument.
+
+"His ground! his rights! How can he dare say that? Why, the buck
+was killed at Juno's Pool; and all the world knows that that is
+within the confines of Chad, and that all forest rights there
+belong to the Lord of Chad! I would I could force his false words
+down his false throat! I would I could--" but the boy suddenly
+ceased, because he caught his mother's warning eye upon him, and
+saw that his father had opened his lips to speak.
+
+"Ay, and he knows it himself as well as we do; but he is growing
+bolder and bolder through that monstrous claim he is ever
+threatening to push--the claim of his son-in-law to be rightful
+Lord of Chad! Phew! he will find it hard to prove that claim, or to
+oust the present lord. But Mortimer has money and to spare, and
+Chad has long been to him what Naboth's vineyard was to King Ahab--
+
+"Brother Emmanuel, that simile is thine, and a right good one, too.
+
+"He will seize on any pretext to pick a quarrel; and if he dares,
+he will push that quarrel at the point of the sword. I do not fear
+him; I have the right on my side. But we may not blind ourselves to
+this: that he is a right bitter and treacherous foe, and that
+should we give any, even the smallest cause of suspicion or
+offence, he would seize upon that to ruin us."
+
+Sir Oliver looked keenly round the table at all assembled there,
+and many knew better than his sons what was in his mind at the time
+and what had caused him to speak thus.
+
+For a long while now the leaven of Lollardism had been working
+silently in the country, and there were very many even amongst
+orthodox sons of the Church who were more or less "bitten" by some
+of the new notions. It need hardly be said that wherever light is,
+it will penetrate in a mysterious and often inexplicable fashion;
+and although there was much extravagance and perversion in the
+teachings of the advanced Lollards, there was undoubtedly amongst
+them a far clearer and purer light than existed in the hearts of
+those of the common people who had been brought up beneath the sway
+of the priests, themselves so often ignorant and ill-living men.
+
+And so the light gradually spread; and many who would have
+repudiated the name of Lollard with scorn and loathing were
+beginning to hold some of their tenets, and to wish for a simpler
+and purer form of faith, and for liberty to study the Scriptures
+for themselves; and no one knew better the leavening spirit of the
+age than did Sir Oliver Chadgrove, himself a man of liberal views
+and devout habit of mind, and his wife, who shared his every
+thought and opinion.
+
+They had both heard the stirring and enlightened preaching of Dean
+Colet, and were great admirers of his; but they took the view that
+that divine himself held--namely, that the Church would gradually
+reform herself from within; that she was awakening to the need of
+some reformation and advance; and that her sons were safe within
+her fold, and must patiently await her own work there.
+
+This was exactly the feeling of the knight and his lady. They
+rejoiced in the words they had heard, and in the wider knowledge of
+the Scriptures which had been thus unfolded; but that any such
+doctrine, when preached and taught by the Lollard heretics, could
+be right or true they would have utterly denied and repudiated. The
+Lollards had won for themselves a bad name, and were thought of
+with scorn and contempt. Nevertheless, in country places the leaven
+of their teaching permeated far and wide, and Sir Oliver had more
+than once occasion to fear that amongst his own retainers some were
+slightly tainted by heresy.
+
+Of course if it could be proved against him that his followers were
+Lollards, his enemy might take terrible advantage and deal him a
+heavy blow. It was the one charge which if proved would strike him
+to the earth; even the king's favour would scarce serve him then.
+The king would not stand up in opposition to the Church; and if the
+Church condemned his house as being a harbouring place for
+heretics, then indeed he would be undone.
+
+It was this thing which was in his mind as he glanced with keen
+eyes round his table on this bright midsummer day; and his wife,
+and the monk, and the bulk of those sitting there read the true
+meaning of his words and of his look, and recognized the truth of
+the grave word of warning.
+
+
+
+Chapter III: Brother Emmanuel.
+
+
+The hush of a Sabbath was upon the land. The sounds of life and
+industry were no longer heard around Chad. Within and without the
+house a calm stillness prevailed, and the hot summer sunshine lay
+broad upon the quiet fields and the garden upon which so much
+loving care had of late years been spent.
+
+The white and red roses, no longer the symbols of party strife,
+were blooming in their midsummer glory. The air was sweet with
+their fragrance, and bees hummed drowsily from flower to flower. In
+the deep shadow cast by a huge cedar tree, that reared its stately
+head as high as the battlements of the turret, a small group had
+gathered this hot afternoon. The young monk was there in the black
+cassock, hood, and girdle that formed the usual dress of the
+Benedictine in this country, and around him were grouped his three
+pupils, to whom he was reading out of the great Latin Bible that
+was one of the treasures of Sir Oliver's library.
+
+All the boys were Latin scholars, and had made much progress in
+their knowledge of that language since the advent of the young monk
+into the household. They had likewise greatly increased in their
+knowledge of the Scriptures; for Brother Emmanuel was a sound
+believer in the doctrine preached by the Dean of St. Paul's, and of
+the maxims laid down by him--that the Scriptures were not to be
+pulled to fragments, and each fragment explained without reference
+to the context, but to be studied and examined as a whole, and so
+explained, one portion illuminating and illustrating another. After
+such a fashion had Brother Emmanuel long been studying the Word of
+God, and after such a method did he explain it to his pupils.
+
+All three boys were possessed of clear heads and quick
+intelligence, and their minds had expanded beneath the influence of
+the young monk's teaching. They all loved a quiet hour spent with
+him in reading and expounding the Bible narrative, and today a
+larger portion than usual had been read; for the heat made exertion
+unwelcome even to the active lads, and it was pleasanter here
+beneath the cedar tree than anywhere else besides.
+
+"Now, I would fain know," began Julian, after a pause in the
+reading, "why it is that it is thought such a vile thing for men to
+possess copies of God's Word in their own tongue that they may read
+it to themselves. It seems to me that men would be better and not
+worse for knowing the will of God in all things; and here it is set
+down clearly for every man to understand. Yet, if I understand not
+amiss, it is made a cause of death for any to possess the
+Scriptures in his own tongue."
+
+"Yea, that is what the heretic Lollards do--read and expound the
+Scriptures in the vulgar tongue and after their own fashion," said
+Bertram. "Have a care, Julian, how thou seemest to approve their
+methods; for there is a great determination in high places to put
+down at once and for all the vile doctrines which are corrupting
+all the land."
+
+"I approve no heresy," cried Julian eagerly. "I do but ask why it
+be heresy to read the Word of God, and to have in possession a
+portion of it in the language of one's country."
+
+"Marry, dost thou not know that one reason is the many errors the
+translators have fallen into, which deceive the unwary and lead the
+flock astray?" cried Edred eagerly. "Brother Emmanuel has told me
+some amongst these, and there are doubtless many others of which he
+may not have heard. A man may not drink with impunity of poisoned
+waters; neither is it safe to take as the Word of God a book which
+may have many perversions of His truth."
+
+Edred looked up at Brother Emmanuel for confirmation of this
+explanation. It was the monk's habit to encourage the boys to
+discuss any question of interest freely amongst themselves, he
+listening in silence the while, and later on giving them the
+benefit of his opinion. All the three turned to him now to see what
+he would say upon a point that was already agitating the country,
+and was preparing the way for a shaking that should lead to an
+altogether new state of existence both in Church and State. Even
+out here in the garden, in the sanctuary of their own home, with
+only their friend and spiritual pastor to hear them, the boys spoke
+with bated breath, as though fearful of uttering words which might
+have within them some germ of that dreaded sin of heresy.
+
+As for Brother Emmanuel, he sat with his hands folded in his
+sleeves, the great book upon his knees, a slight and thoughtful
+smile playing around the corners of his finely-cut mouth. His whole
+face was intensely spiritual in expression. The features were
+delicately cut, and bore the impress of an ascetic life, as well as
+of gentle birth and noble blood. He was, in fact, a scion of an
+ancient and powerful house; but it was one of those houses that had
+suffered sorely in the recent strife, and whose members had been
+scattered and cut off. He had no powerful relatives and friends to
+turn to now for promotion to rich benefice or high ecclesiastical
+preferment, and he had certainly never lamented this fact. In heart
+and soul he was a follower of the rules of poverty laid down by the
+founder of his order, and would have thought himself untrue to his
+calling had he suffered himself to be endowed with worldly wealth.
+Even such moneys as he received from Sir Oliver for the instruction
+given to his sons were never kept by himself. All were given either
+to the poor by his hands direct, or placed at the disposal of the
+Prior of Chadwater, where he had been an inmate for a short time
+previous to his installation as chaplain at Chad. He had not sought
+this office; he would rather have remained beneath the priory
+walls. He thought that it was something contrary to the will of the
+founders for monks to become parochial priests, or to hold offices
+and benefices which took them from the shelter of their monastery
+walls. But such things were of daily occurrence now, and were
+causing bitter jealousy to arise betwixt the parochial clergy and
+the monks, sowing seeds of strife which played a considerable part
+in the struggle this same century was to see. But it was useless to
+try to stem the current single-handed, and the rule of obedience
+was as strong within him as that of poverty and chastity.
+
+When sent forth by his prior (who secretly thought that this young
+monk was too strict and ascetic and too keen-witted to be a safe
+inmate of a house which had long fallen from its high estate, and
+was becoming luxurious and wealthy and lax), he had gone
+unmurmuringly to Chad, and since then had become so much interested
+in his pupils and in his round of daily duties there that he had
+not greatly missed the life of the cloister.
+
+He had leisure for thought and for study. He had access to a
+library which, although not large, held many treasures of book
+making, and was sufficient for the requirements of the young monk.
+He could keep the hours of the Church in the little chantry
+attached to the house, and he was taken out of the atmosphere of
+jealousy and bickering which, to his own great astonishment and
+dismay, he had found to be the prevailing one at Chadwater.
+
+On the whole, he had benefited by the change, and was very happy in
+his daily duties. He rejoiced to watch the unfolding minds of his
+three pupils, and especially to train Edred for the life of the
+cloister, to which already he had been partially dedicated, and
+towards which he seemed to incline.
+
+And now, eagerly questioned by the boys upon that vexed point of
+the translated Scriptures and their possession by the common
+people, he looked thoughtfully out before him, and gave his answer
+in his own poetic fashion.
+
+"The Word of God, my children, is as a fountain of life. Those who
+drink of it drink immortality and joy and peace passing all
+understanding. The Saviour of mankind--Himself the Word of God--has
+given Himself freely, that all men may come to Him, and, drinking
+of the living water, may find within their hearts a living fountain
+which shall cause that they never thirst again. But the question
+before us is not whether men shall drink of this fountain--we know
+that they must do so to live--but how they shall drink of it; how
+and in what manner the waters of life shall be dispensed to them."
+
+The boys fixed their eyes eagerly upon him. Julian nodded his head,
+and Edred's eyes grew deep with the intensity of his wish to follow
+the workings of the mind of his instructor.
+
+"For that we must look back to the days of our Lord, when He was
+here upon earth. HOW did He give forth the Word of Life? How did He
+rule that it was from that time forward to be given to men?"
+
+"He preached to the people who came to Him," answered Edred, "and
+He directed His apostles and disciples to do likewise--to go forth
+into all lands and preach the gospel to every creature."
+
+"Just so," answered Brother Emmanuel, with an other of his slight
+peculiar smiles. "In other words, he intrusted the Word--Himself,
+the news of Himself--to a living ministry, to men, that through the
+mouths of His apostles and those disciples who had received regular
+instruction from Him and from them the world might be enlightened
+with the truth."
+
+The boys listened eagerly, with mute attention.
+
+"Go on," said Edred breathlessly. "Prithee tell us more."
+
+"Our blessed Lord and Master laid no charge upon His apostles to
+write of Him--to send forth into the world a written testimony. We
+know that the inspired Word is written from end to end by the will
+of God. It was necessary for the preservation of the truth in its
+purity that its doctrines should be thus set down--that there
+should be in existence some standard by which in generations to
+come the learned ones of the earth might be able to judge of the
+purity of the doctrines preached, and refute heresies and errors
+that might and would creep in; but it was to men, to a living
+ministry, that our Saviour intrusted the precious truths of His
+gospel, and to a living ministry men should look to have those
+truths unfolded."
+
+"I see that point," cried Edred eagerly. "I had never thought of it
+quite in that way before. Does it so state the matter anywhere in
+the Holy Book? I love to gather the truth from its pages. Thou hast
+not told us that we are wrong in that."
+
+"Nay, under guidance all men should seek to those holy truths; but
+will they find the priceless jewel if they seek it without those
+aids our blessed Lord Himself has appointed? Wouldst thou know more
+of His will in this matter? Then thou shalt."
+
+The monk turned the leaves of the book awhile, and then paused at
+an open page.
+
+"On earth, as we have seen, the blessed Saviour intrusted His truth
+to the care of chosen men. Now let us see how He acted when,
+ascended into the heavens, He looked down upon earth, and directed
+from thence the affairs of this world. Did He then ordain that a
+written testimony was to be prepared and sent forth into all lands?
+No. What we learn then is that when He ascended into the heavens
+and received and gave gifts to men, He gave to them apostles,
+prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers--a living ministry
+again, a fourfold living ministry--that by this living ministry,
+surely typified in the vision of St. John by the four living
+creatures with the fourfold head, the saints were to be perfected,
+the unity of the faith preserved, and the body of Christ edified
+and kept in its full growth and perfection till He come Himself to
+claim the Bride."
+
+Edred's eyes were full of vivid intelligence. He followed in the
+Latin tongue the words as Brother Emmanuel spoke them, and looking
+up he asked wistfully:
+
+"But where are they now, the apostles and prophets, the evangelists
+and pastors? Have we got them with us yet?"
+
+"We have at least the semblance of them; doubtless but for our own
+sins and shortcomings we should have a fuller ministry--a fuller
+outpouring of the water of life through those four God-given
+channels by which the Church is to be fed. We have the apostolic
+office ever in exercise in our spiritual head at Rome. St. Peter
+has left us a successor, and his throne shall never be empty so
+long as the world lasts. Now and again the prophetic fire bursts
+forth in some holy man who has fasted and prayed until the veil
+betwixt the seen and the unseen has grown thin. Would to God there
+was more light of prophecy in the earth! Perchance in His grace and
+mercy He will outpour His Spirit once again upon the earth, and
+gather about his Holiness a band of men lighted by fire from above.
+In our wandering friars, ever going forth to the people with the
+word of the gospel, we have the office of evangelist in exercise;
+and the priest who guides the flock and dwells in the midst of the
+people of the land, surely he is the pastor, the keeper of the
+sheep. And thus we see that our blessed Saviour's gifts to men have
+been preserved all through these long centuries, and are still
+amongst us in greater or less degree; and we can well understand
+that having given us these channels, by which His vineyard is to be
+watered, by which the living waters are to flow forth, it is not
+His will that every man should be his own evangelist or pastor,
+feeding himself at will, drinking, perhaps to surfeit, of the
+precious waters which should be conveyed to him through the
+appointed channel, but that he should be under dutiful obedience
+and submission, and that thus and thus only may unity and peace be
+preserved, and the body grow together into its perfect stature and
+fullness."
+
+"I see all that exactly," cried Bertram, "and I will strive to keep
+it in mind. I mislike the very name of Lollard, and I well know
+that they be a mischievous and pernicious brood, whom it were well
+to see exterminated root and branch. Yet no man can fail to see
+that they love the Scriptures, and I felt they were in the right
+there. Now I well see that they may love the Word as much as they
+will, but that they must still seek to be taught and fed by those
+who are over them in the Church, and not seek to eat and drink (in
+the spiritual sense of the word) at their own will and pleasure.
+That is truly what the Church has ever taught, but I never heard it
+so clearly explained before.
+
+"Come, Julian; the sun is losing much of its power now. Let us
+stroll along the margin of the stream, and see where best we may
+fish upon the morrow.
+
+"Edred, wilt thou come? No; I thought not. Thou art half a monk
+already. We will leave thee with Brother Emmanuel to talk more on
+these hard matters. I have heard enough to satisfy me, I shall
+never want to turn Lollard now. The name was always enough, but now
+I see more and more clearly how wrong-headed and wilful they be."
+
+Julian, too, had got an answer that completely satisfied him, and
+he readily rose to go with his brother. Those two found an hour or
+two of thought and study as much at a time as they cared for. They
+called their dogs and sallied forth over the fields towards the
+shady, well-fringed river banks, and Brother Emmanuel was left
+alone with his second pupil, Edred, whose eyes were still fixed
+upon the black lettering of the great Bible open at the last
+passage under discussion.
+
+The monk bent an earnest glance upon the boy's face. He saw that an
+argument which had completely satisfied the other two had not
+satisfied this other keener mind. But he asked no questions,
+leaving the boy to speak or not as he chose. These were days in
+which too much questioning was a dangerous thing. Many men felt as
+though they were treading the crust of a volcano, and that a single
+unwary step might plunge them headlong into the burning gulf.
+
+When even such a man as Bishop Peacock had been threatened with the
+stake, and sent into perpetual imprisonment, even after having
+"recanted" his errors, no wonder that all men holding broad or
+enlightened opinions trembled for themselves. And yet, as thought
+will not be bound, and the young are ever the most ardent in the
+pursuit of truth, and the most impatient under the yoke of fetters
+unwillingly worn, so neither this young monk nor his still more
+youthful companion could be content to drift on without looking
+into the stirring questions of the day for themselves.
+
+Edred's mind at this moment was working rapidly and following up a
+train of thought as fascinating as it was new. He suddenly turned
+back to the very beginning of the book, and began reading to
+himself some words he found there. Presently he looked up quickly
+into his instructor's face.
+
+"Thy words about four channels put me in mind of the four streams
+we read of in the beginning, that watered the garden of the Lord.
+It seemed to me as if perchance there was some connection betwixt
+them--that the Lord's plan has ever been the same. Surely He led
+forth the children of Israel through the wilderness beneath four
+standards. And here the four streams are all given. But we hear no
+more of any of them later, do we, save the river Euphrates. Out of
+the four three seem to have been lost," and the boy raised his eyes
+with a perplexed expression and looked earnestly at his teacher.
+
+Between those two existed one of those keen bonds of sympathy that
+often enable persons to communicate their thoughts without the
+medium of words. In a moment the monk had read what was in the
+boy's mind, and in a fashion he answered as though Edred had
+spoken.
+
+"Thou thinkest that even as some of God's watering rivers ran dry,
+so some of His channels of grace, whereby He meant all men to be
+replenished with heavenly light and grace, may perchance have
+become choked and useless. Is not that thy thought, my son?"
+
+"My father, is it sin thus to think?" asked Edred, almost beneath
+his breath. "I cannot shut mine eyes and mine ears. I have heard
+whispers of terrible corruption in high places even at Rome itself.
+I try not to hear or to think too much, but I cannot help my
+burning desire to know more of what passes in the world. It was but
+a short year ago that a godly man coming from foreign lands told us
+fearful tales of the corruption even of the papal court. O my
+father, I fear to whisper it even to thee; but I cannot but ask in
+my heart, can the popes be truly apostles? And if not, can we say
+that the channel of grace once given to men is open yet for us to
+drink from? Ah, pardon me if I err! I will do penance for my evil
+thoughts. But where may we find now those four life-giving streams
+by which Christ purposed to keep His body, the Church, nourished
+and sustained? Prophets there be none, save here and there a spark
+of the old fire. Those travelling friars are sometimes holy men;
+but, alas! they are bitter foes of the very Church from which they
+profess to be sent out, and are oft laid under the papal ban. We
+have our pastor priests; but do they feed the flock? O my father,
+how can I walk with closed eyes through this world of sin and
+strife? If the channels run dry, if the pastors refuse food to the
+hungry people, can it be sin if they strive to feed themselves,
+even though they be something too ignorant to do it wisely and
+well?"
+
+A very grave, thoughtful, and austere look was stamped upon the
+face towards which Edred directed his gaze. It was long before he
+received any answer, and then it was but a sorrowful one.
+
+"My son, I will not blame thee for these thoughts, albeit they be
+charged with peril in these days. It is human nature thus to
+question and thus to doubt. We may not blind our eyes, though we
+must ever strive to chasten our hearts, that we fall not into the
+condemnation of those who speak evil of dignities, and bring a
+railing accusation against those set over them. I, too, have had my
+period of storm-tossed doubts and fears; but I have learned to fix
+mine eyes upon the Holy One of Israel, who never slumbers nor
+sleeps--upon the crucified Saviour, who has suffered that death of
+agony and shame that He may draw all men unto Himself. How He will
+do it I know not. How He will open up again the closed channels,
+and make ready His Church to meet Him and receive Him, I can not
+even conjecture. But His word cannot fail; and in His own appointed
+time, and in His own appointed way, I verily believe that He will
+draw unto Himself all men who have ever called upon His name, and
+all those unto whom His name has never been proclaimed, and who,
+therefore, have never rejected Him. In that hope and that belief I
+try to rest; and fixing my eyes and thoughts upon Him and Him
+alone, I strive to forget the chaos and the strife of earth, and to
+look upon all men as brothers in Christ, if they will but bow the
+knee at that thrice holy name."
+
+Edred looked at him with wide-open eyes.
+
+"Heretics call upon the name of Jesus. Thinkest thou that heretics
+will be saved? I thought they were doomed to hellfire forever!"
+
+The boy spoke in a voice that was little more than a whisper. He
+was almost afraid to hear the answer, lest it should convey a germ
+of the dreaded heresy, and yet how eager he was to know what
+Brother Emmanuel really thought.
+
+"It is not for me to say who will and who will not be saved," he
+said, slowly and thoughtfully; "and we are expressly told that
+there will be punishment for those who fall away from the faith.
+Yet we are not told that error will be punished with everlasting
+death. And there be places in Holy Scripture which tell us that
+'whoso believeth and is baptized shall be saved;' and heretics
+believe that Christ died for the world. It says, again, that those
+who love the Lord are born of God; and shall they perish
+everlastingly? My son, the mercies of God are very great; from end
+to end of this book we are told that. Knowing so much, need we ask
+more? With Him rests the judgment of all mankind. He alone can read
+the heart. Let that thought be enough for us. Whether the sin of
+heresy is as vile in His eyes as in those of man, He alone knows;
+we do not. Let us strive for our own part to keep the unity of the
+faith in the bond of peace, and leave all else to Him."
+
+As he spoke, Brother Emmanuel gently closed the book, as though to
+close the discussion likewise; and Edred, looking up and round
+about him, drawing a long breath meantime, suddenly gave a start,
+which attracted the attention of his preceptor.
+
+A short distance away--how he had got there neither of the pair
+knew; they had been too much engrossed in their talk to take much
+heed of external impressions--was an elderly monk, clad in the same
+gown and hood as Brother Emmanuel, betokening that he too was of
+the Benedictine order; and his face, shrouded in its cowl, was
+turned towards the pair with a very peculiar expression upon it. A
+sinister smile was in the narrow beady eyes; the features, which
+were coarse and somewhat bloated from luxurious living, were set in
+a look of ill-concealed malice; and the salutation addressed to the
+pair when he saw himself perceived had in it something of an
+incongruous sound.
+
+"Pax vobiscum!" said the newcomer, lifting his hand as if to impart
+a blessing.
+
+Edred instinctively bent the knee, but Brother Emmanuel's face did
+not move a muscle.
+
+"Hast thou come with a message for me from the reverend father?" he
+asked quietly.
+
+"Nay, not for thee. My message was to Sir Oliver; but I will report
+to the father how excellently I found thee employed--training thy
+pupils in all godliness and honesty, and in that hatred of heresy
+which it behoves all true sons of the Church to cherish."
+
+There was a spiteful gleam in the man's eyes as he spoke these
+words that made Edred shiver; but the calm regard of the younger
+monk did not waver.
+
+"I have taught him nothing but what I have heard our good Dean of
+St. Paul's speak before princes and prelates in the pulpit,"
+answered Brother Emmanuel, not pretending to misunderstand the
+innuendo conveyed. "Methinks it would profit many of our brothers
+in country places to hear what is being thought and taught in
+Oxford and London, in all the great centres of the country. The
+reverend father knows well what I hold and what I teach."
+
+So clear and steadfast was the light in the young monk's eyes, that
+the regard of the other fell before it. He made a gesture, as if to
+repudiate the defence as a thing quite superfluous.
+
+"The piety and orthodoxy of Brother Emmanuel are known far and
+wide," he answered, in a tone that was half cringing, half
+spiteful; "no truer son of the Church than he lives in all the
+land."
+
+And then with another salutation he turned and glided away in the
+lengthening shadows, whilst Edred turned to Brother Emmanuel with
+rather a scared face, and asked:
+
+"Dost think he heard what we were saying?"
+
+"Belike he caught a phrase or two," was the answer, spoken gravely
+but quite calmly. "I would not speak words of which I am ashamed;
+at the same time, it is well in these perilous days to use all
+caution, for an enemy can well distort and magnify the words he
+hears, till they sound like rank heresy. For myself I have no fear.
+I prize not my life greatly, though to die as a heretic, cut off
+from the Church of Christ, is a fearful thing to think of. Yet even
+that might be better than denying the truth--if indeed one believes
+the truth to lie without, which assuredly I do not. But thou, my
+son, would do well to think something less of these matters. Thou
+art but a child in years, and--"
+
+"I am quickly rising to man's estate," answered the boy, rather
+impetuously, "and my thoughts will not be chained. I must give them
+liberty to rove where they will. All men are talking and thinking
+of these things, and wherefore not I? But, Brother Emmanuel, tell
+me, who was yon black-browed brother? Methinks I have seen his face
+before; but beneath the cowl many faces look alike. Who was he? and
+wherefore looked he so askance at thee?"
+
+"Brother Fabian loves me not," answered the monk with a slight
+smile. "I scarce know how it began; it seemed to commence from the
+day I entered the priory. I had looked to find things there
+somewhat different. Perchance I spoke more than I should, being
+young and ardent, and fresh from places where a different order
+reigned. Brother Fabian holds various offices in the priory. He
+liked not my words. Methinks he has never forgotten or forgiven. He
+has always sour looks for me, and ofttimes sneering words. But I
+heed them not greatly; they do not touch me near."
+
+Edred was looking straight out before him, with a gaze in which
+there was much of shrinking and surprise.
+
+"Brothers in the same monastery at enmity one with the other!" he
+said slowly, grasping more than had been spoken, with that quick
+intuition which existed between tutor and pupil. "Some, leading
+lives of luxury, indignant with those who would protest against
+them. Brother Emmanuel, my father, my friend, when these things
+come before me, I turn with loathing from the thought of entering
+the life of the cloister; and yet how I long to give myself wholly
+to the cause of God! How can I judge? how can I choose aright?"
+
+"Thou must not try to choose," answered the young monk, with a
+touch of austerity in his tone; "thou must await that leading and
+that guiding which never fail those who truly wait upon the blessed
+Son of God, and strive to do not their will but the will of Him who
+pleased not Himself. At the foot of His Cross--before the altar,
+where His precious body and blood are ever abiding in memorial of
+His one sacrifice for sin--there is the place to seek grace and
+guidance; there is the place where peace may be found. Because man
+is frail, shall we despise the ordinances of God? Because men are
+able to make (if such be their will) a hell upon earth even of holy
+places, is that any reason why we shall think scorn of those
+sanctuaries, provided by the merciful goodness of God, where men
+may flee for shelter from the world, and lead a life of devotion
+and fasting and prayer? My son, beware of the manifold snares of
+the devil. The young are ever ready to condemn and to revolt. It is
+the nature of the unchastened will of man. Be patient, and watch
+unto prayer. The day will surely come when (if thou wilt but listen
+for it) the voice will speak in thine heart, and tell thee what
+thou art called upon to do, even as it spoke in mine, and called me
+from the snares and enticements of the world to the haven of the
+cloister. I know not yet what my work in this world will be; but it
+is enough that my Lord and Master knows. I am here, abiding in my
+place and awaiting my call. May He grant that whensoever and
+howsoever that call may come, I may hear it and be ready for it,
+and may follow the guiding voice even to the end."
+
+A rapt look was in the dark eyes. Edred caught the enthusiasm of
+that look, and half unconsciously sank down upon his knee.
+
+"Bless me, even me also, O my father!" he cried, scarce knowing
+what words he chose; and the thin, strong hand was laid upon his
+head.
+
+"God be with thee and bless thee, my son," said the monk, in grave,
+steadfast tones; "and may He be thy guide and thy portion
+henceforth and forever. May He show thee the way in which He would
+have thee to go, and give thee grace and strength to follow it unto
+the end."
+
+For a moment deep silence prevailed. Both were rapidly reviewing
+the words that day spoken, and the thoughts suggested by the bare
+discussion of such subjects; and Edred, rising and looking with a
+strange smile into the monk's face, said softly:
+
+"Methinks it would not be hard to die in a righteous cause; but to
+be hunted to death through the spite and malice of a treacherous
+foe, that would be an evil fate. I would fight with the best member
+I possess against such an one, were he to be mine own enemy or
+thine."
+
+A smile crossed Brother Emmanuel's face.
+
+"Go to, boy! thou art more soldier than monk yet. Methinks thou
+wouldst fight bravely and well in a good cause. Perchance that
+would be the best and happiest lot for thee--
+
+"There be thy brothers coming up from the water. Go join them, and
+think not too much for thy years. Be a youth as long as thou
+mayest. Manhood's cares will come all too fast."
+
+With that he turned and went quietly towards the house, whilst
+Edred went forth to meet his brothers.
+
+
+
+Chapter IV: The Travelling Preacher.
+
+
+Perhaps it was the memory of those spiteful and malicious glances
+bent upon his preceptor by Brother Fabian that suggested to Edred
+upon the day following to pay a visit to the secret chamber that
+had once before so well sheltered a helpless fugitive.
+
+The secret of that chamber still remained with the three boys and
+their faithful esquire, Warbel. To no other living soul in the
+house had any of these four ever named the matter. The boys might
+not have been able to give any reason for this reticence towards
+their parents, but the fact remained that they had never revealed
+the secret to them, and that although tradition still spoke of a
+cleverly-masked chamber somewhere at Chad, it was now popularly
+supposed to have been in that part of the house which had boon
+demolished during the Wars of the Roses. Children did not chatter
+to their parents in days of old as they do now. They might love
+them never so well, but they held them in reverence and even in
+awe. They were silent in their presence, as a rule, unless spoken
+to first, and the habit of conversational intimacy did not grow up
+until a much later period in their lives. Thus the adventures of
+Warbel, and his strange midnight visit to their bedchamber, had
+never been told to Sir Oliver or his wife. All they knew was that
+the man had taken refuge from the anger of the Lord of Mortimer in
+one of their woodmen's huts. They were glad to give him shelter and
+employment at Chad, and had never regretted the hospitality
+extended to him; for he had proved the most faithful of servants,
+and his devotion to the boys was so great that they could be
+trusted anywhere in his keeping.
+
+As for the anger of his proud neighbour, Sir Oliver had made light
+of that. The Lord of Mortimer could not make any thing out of so
+small a matter, and at that time had other more weighty affairs on
+hand. Warbel's stories to his fellows of the harshness and
+tyrannical rule at Mortimer made his own servants more loyal and
+stanch than ever. Chad was a peaceable and happy abode for all its
+inmates, and the need for secret hiding places had so far never
+arisen.
+
+The boys in years gone by had almost regretted this fact. They had
+pictured so vividly how they would hide their father or some friend
+of his in this secret chamber, should peril menace them from any
+quarter, that it had seemed sometimes almost a pity that so secure
+a hiding place should be of so little use, when it might have done
+such excellent service had the need arisen.
+
+However, as years sped by and the lads began to know more of life,
+they ceased to regret that the secret chamber remained without an
+occupant. From time to time they visited it, swept out the dust and
+cobwebs that had accumulated there, and bit by bit collected a few
+more odds and ends of furniture, so that the place now wore a look
+of greater comfort and habitation than it had done when they saw it
+first.
+
+Once when Edred had been laid up by an accident to his foot, he had
+amused himself by making a number of feather pillows from the
+feathers of the birds his brothers shot and brought home to him.
+These feathers were dressed in the proper way by the boys
+themselves, and then made up into large pillows or cushions, which
+were then taken up to the secret chamber (at that time the
+favourite hobby of the boys), in order to make restful and
+comfortable the hard pallet bed, in case any fugitive were forced
+to take shelter there. In the same way had several rudely-made
+rugs, formed of the skins of wild bears taken in the woods, and
+tanned by the boys in a fashion of their own, found their way
+thither; and altogether the place had assumed an aspect of some
+comfort and even luxury, although it was now several years since
+any further additions had been made to its plenishings.
+
+Edred looked round the strange apartment with a thoughtful air as
+he emerged into it from the long, dark, twisting passage he had
+threaded with the security of one to whom every winding and turn
+was known. It was dim and dark there, but sufficient light filtered
+in through cracks and cleverly-contrived apertures to render it
+easy to move about; and when the eye grew used to the dimness,
+everything could be seen with pretty fair distinctness.
+
+"It would not be a bad hiding place," mused the boy, speaking half
+aloud. "Methinks over there one could even read without much
+trouble. Yes, without doubt one could; and that crack might be
+judiciously enlarged without any peril. It does but give upon the
+leads behind the main chimney stack, and the tiles would cover any
+aperture I made."
+
+He took out his large hunting knife from his girdle as he spoke,
+and worked away awhile in silence. Very soon he had considerably
+added to the amount of light in the strange room. He eyed his
+handiwork with considerable satisfaction.
+
+"That is better. It would be something gloomy to be shut up here
+without light enough to study by; but with books and food one might
+spend many a week here and not be overwhelmed with dullness. The
+place is something straight, to be sure, and there is bare room for
+a tall man to stand upright."
+
+Edred drew himself to his full height, and found that his head did
+not quite reach the beams which formed the ceiling.
+
+"I trow Brother Emmanuel could just stand; he is not greatly taller
+than I. And he is marvellous contented with a very little, and has
+been used to passing days and weeks in the solitude of his cell.
+Sure this would not be to him an evil place. If he had but a book
+or two and the needful food, he would be vastly content.
+
+"I wonder if he can be in any sort of peril. I liked not the looks
+or the words of you malicious monk. Our father and mother often say
+that these be times when men must walk warily, and ofttimes they
+tell of godly men even in high places who have fallen into disgrace
+and been accused of fearful sins. It is not safe in these days to
+have for enemies those who are within the pale of the Church--monks
+and priors, men who are held up as examples and models of true
+faith and piety.
+
+"I know not whether they merit the praise men give to them.
+Methinks Brother Emmanuel could teach them many things both in
+precept and practice. But it is not for me to be the judge in such
+matters; yet if he were in any kind of peril, I would lay down my
+life to save him!"
+
+The boy's eyes kindled at the thought. He cherished for his
+preceptor an ardent and enthusiastic love, and he had his share of
+that chivalrous devotion and self-sacrifice which has been the
+brightest ornament of days that have much of darkness and cruelty
+to disgrace them.
+
+His face wore a very earnest look as he set about his homely task
+of cleaning and setting in order this secret chamber. He was more
+than two hours over his task, for he went through it with unwonted
+energy. The place looked almost tempting before he had done with
+it, and he looked about him with satisfied eyes at the close of his
+labours.
+
+There was a convenient spout, meant to carry off the rain water
+from the complex level of the old roof, which made an excellent
+substitute for a dust shoot. It could be got at from this place
+without difficulty, and Edred shot down his rubbish without any
+trouble through a funnel-like piece of wood he and his brothers had
+contrived for the purpose many years before. Then he stood quite
+still at the aperture whence the soft breeze came blowing in, lost
+in thought.
+
+"It doth get very hot here in the summer days," he remarked, "and
+in especial at this end of the room, where it abuts upon the leads.
+It is cooler yonder, but then it is also darker. The air and the
+light come in at this side, but so does the heat likewise. And how
+thirsty one gets, too! My throat is parched and dry. I mind me how
+poor Warbel suffered in like manner when he was here. Food could be
+brought in without trouble. I will amass even now by slow degrees
+some of those hard oaten cakes that keep good for weeks, and some
+salted venison that would last the winter through.
+
+"But water--how could that be brought? Suppose that we too were
+watched; suppose we dared not go through the secret door? What
+would become of the prisoner?
+
+"I must talk to Bertram and Julian about that. Bertram has a
+wonderful gift for getting out of such difficulties; he has a
+marvellous quick wit. We never thought in old days how the water
+was to be conveyed; we thought a few bottles of wine would last a
+lifetime. But to die of thirst would be worse than to face one's
+foes. I shall not really rest till I have thought how such a danger
+might be guarded against."
+
+Edred left the place with a thoughtful air. He gained their own
+long sleeping room without adventure. Nobody was ever there at this
+hour of the day, and he sat down on his bed to think and plan.
+
+There his brothers found him later when they came rushing up
+tumultuously to find him.
+
+"Ha! thou art there. We have been seeking thee everywhere. What
+hast thou been doing, brother?"
+
+"I have been up to the room," answered the boy. "I have been making
+it all ready. I was something disturbed by what chanced
+yester-afternoon. I told thee of Brother Fabian and his evil
+looks?"
+
+The other two nodded.
+
+"Yes, verily; but they be brothers of one fraternity. Surely one
+Benedictine would not hurt another?"
+
+"I know not that. I was talking this day with Warbel. He has been
+about in the world. He has seen priests and monks accused of heresy
+the one by the other; and none are so fearfully persecuted as those
+who wear the tonsure, if men do but suspect them of that sin.
+
+"Brother Emmanuel a heretic!" cried Bertram, with flashing eyes. "I
+would force the word down the false throat of any who dared to say
+so! Brother Emmanuel is a right holy man. Art thou mad, Edred, to
+think such a thing?"
+
+The boy shook his head doubtfully.
+
+"I would I were," he replied; "but methinks Brother Emmanuel
+himself thinks that peril may menace him. I understand not rightly
+these matters; but I saw that yesterday upon his face which showed
+me that he felt he stood something in peril, albeit he has no fear.
+He is not of the stuff of which cowards are made."
+
+Julian's eyes were wide with affright.
+
+"They say the Lollards and heretics are to be sought out and
+burned, and that right soon," he said, in low, awe-struck tones.
+"Some of our people heard it today from those at Mortimer. The Lord
+of Mortimer has become very zealous to help the priests and monks
+to scent out all suspected of heresy and make a great example of
+them.
+
+"Edred, thou dost not think they will take Brother
+Emmanuel--and--burn--him?"
+
+The last words were little more than a whisper.
+
+"I will die sooner than see it done!" cried the boy passionately.
+"But in these days no man may say who is safe. Therefore went I up
+to the chamber this very day to set it in order;" and then he told
+his brothers of the difficulty that had beset him there, and how he
+felt no security for any person in hiding there so long as the
+difficulty of conveying water to him remained so great.
+
+Bertram grasped the situation in a moment. He well knew that if any
+person were suspected of lying hidden in the house, a close watch
+might well be kept upon every member of the household, and that it
+might be hard indeed to pay more than a very occasional visit to
+the prisoner. If, for instance, suspicion were to fall upon the
+boys in this matter, it would be probable they would be placed
+under some restraint; they might be carried off to the priory and
+forced to do some penance there. It would never do for the prisoner
+to be entirely dependent upon them for supplies of the precious
+commodity; and yet what else was to be done?
+
+"I must think about it," cried Bertram. "I shall never rest till I
+have thought of some method. Would we had not left it so long! We
+have had all these years to make our plans, and we have never
+thought of this thing till trouble seems like to be at the very
+doors.
+
+"Still it may but be our fantasy. Neither Brother Emmanuel nor any
+other may need the shelter of this room. We will trust it may be
+so.
+
+"Yet I will cudgel my brains for a plan. It would be a fearful
+thing to know him to be shut up here, and yet to be unable to visit
+him with the necessaries of life. How poor Warbel drank when he
+issued forth that night. Methinks I see him now. One would have
+thought he had never tasted water before."
+
+"But we came not to talk of all this," interrupted Julian, who had
+been evincing a few signs of impatience latterly; "we came to tell
+of the fair held today and tomorrow at Chadwick. Our father says we
+may go thither tomorrow if we will. Warbel says they will bait a
+bull, and perhaps a bear; and that there will be fighting with the
+quarterstaff and shooting with cross and long bow, and many other
+like spectacles. He will attend us, and we may be off with the
+light of day, an we will. That is what we came to tell thee,
+Edred."
+
+Edred was boy enough to be well pleased at this news. Any variety
+in the day's round was pleasing to the lads, who found life a
+little monotonous, albeit pleasant enough. It was a relief, too, to
+turn from grave thoughts and anxious forebodings to the
+anticipation of simpler pleasures, and the boys all ran to seek
+Warbel and ask him what these village fairs were like; for they had
+been much interrupted during the recent wars, and only now that
+peace had been for some years established did they begin to revive
+and gain their old characteristics.
+
+At break of day on the morning following, the little party started
+forth on foot to walk the five miles which separated them from the
+village of Chadwick. It was a pleasant enough walk through the
+green forest paths before the heat of the day had come. The three
+boys and Warbel headed the party, and were followed by some eight
+or ten men of various degree, some bent on a day's pleasure for
+themselves, others there with a view of attending upon their
+master's sons.
+
+Bertram felt that he could have dispensed with any attendance save
+that of Warbel; but Sir Oliver had given his own orders. With so
+powerful and jealous a neighbour within easy reach of the village,
+he felt bound to be careful of his children. They were but
+striplings after all, and doubtless his unscrupulous neighbour
+would be delighted to hold one or more as a hostage should excuse
+arise for opening hostilities of any kind. He knew well the
+unscrupulous character of the man with whom he had to deal, and he
+acted with prudence and foresight accordingly.
+
+The little village when reached proved to be all en fete. Rude
+arches of greenery crossed every pathway to the place, and all the
+people had turned out in their holiday dresses upon the green to
+join in the dances and see the sights. There was a miracle play
+going on in one place, repeated throughout the day to varying
+groups of spectators. In another corner some rude gipsy juggling
+was to be seen, at which the rustic yokels gazed with wondering
+eyes. There were all the usual country games in full swing; and the
+baiting of a great bull, which was being led to the centre of the
+green, attracted the attention of the bulk of the spectators, and
+drew them away from other sports. The actors in the miracle play
+threw off their dresses to come and witness this delightful
+pastime, and hardly any of those present seemed to regard for a
+moment the sufferings of the poor brute, or the savage nature of
+the whole performance.
+
+Edred, however, belonged to that very small minority, and whilst
+his two brothers pressed into the ring, he wandered away elsewhere
+to see what was to be seen. His attention was attracted by a little
+knot of persons gathered together under the shade of a great oak
+tree, rather far away from the green that was the centre of
+attraction. The shade looked inviting, now that the heat was
+growing greater, and the boy felt some curiosity to know what was
+the attraction which kept this little group so compact and quiet.
+On the green were shouting and yelling and noise of every
+description; but Edred could hear no sound of any kind proceeding
+from this little group till he approached quite near, and then he
+was aware of the sound of a single voice speaking in low tones and
+very earnestly.
+
+When he got nearer still he saw that the speaker was a little
+hunchback, and that he had in his hand a small book from which he
+was reading aloud to the people about him. And this fact surprised
+the boy not a little, for it was very unusual for any person in the
+lower ranks of life to be able to read; and yet this man was
+evidently in poor circumstances, for his clothes were shabby and
+his hands were hardened by manual toil.
+
+Drawing nearer in great curiosity, Edred became aware that what the
+hunchback was reading was nothing more or less than a part of the
+gospel narrative in the English tongue, to which the people about
+him were listening in amazement, and with keen curiosity and
+attention.
+
+Edred was familiar enough with the Latin version of the Scriptures,
+and had studied them under the guidance of Brother Emmanuel with
+great care and attention; but he had never yet heard the words read
+out in their entirety in his native tongue, and he was instantly
+struck and fascinated by the freshness and suggestiveness of the
+familiar language when used for this purpose. He was conscious that
+it gave to the words a new life and meaning; that it seemed, as it
+were, to drive them home to the heart in a new fashion, and to make
+them the property of the listener as they could never be when a
+dead language was used as the medium of expression. He felt a
+strange thrill run through him as the story of Calvary was thus
+read in the low, impassioned tones of the hunchback; and he was not
+surprised to see that tears were running down many faces, and that
+several women could hardly restrain their sobs.
+
+Now and again the hunchback paused and added a few explanatory
+words of his own; now and again he broke forth into a rhapsody not
+lacking in a certain rude eloquence, in which he besought his
+hearers to come to their Saviour with their load of sin--their
+Saviour, who was the one and only Mediator between God and man.
+Were not His own words enough--"Father, forgive them"? What need,
+then, of the priest; the confessional; the absolution of man? To
+God and to Him alone was the remission of sins. Let those who loved
+their Lord seek to Him, and see what bliss and happiness resulted
+from this personal bond between the erring soul and the loving
+Saviour.
+
+Edred shivered slightly as he stood, yet something in the
+impassioned gestures of the hunchback, and the strange enthusiastic
+light which shone in his eyes, attracted him in spite of himself.
+That this was rank heresy he well knew. He knew that one of the
+Lollard tenets had always been that confession was a snare devised
+of man and not appointed by God. Edred himself could have quoted
+many passages from Holy Writ which spoke of some need of confession
+through the medium of man, and of sins remitted by God-appointed
+ministers. He had been well instructed in such matters by Brother
+Emmanuel, who, whatever his enemies might allege against him, was a
+stanch son of the Church, even though he might be gifted with a
+wide tolerance and a mind open to conviction; and his pupil was not
+to be easily convinced against his will. Nor was Edred convinced of
+the justice and truth of many things that this ignorant man spoke;
+but what did strike him very greatly was his intense earnestness,
+his fiery and impassioned gestures, the absolute confidence he
+possessed in the righteousness of his own cause, and his utter
+freedom from any kind of doubt or fear--the eloquence of one of
+nature's orators that carries away the heart far more than the
+studied oratory which is the result of practice and artifice.
+
+Whilst the man spoke, Edred felt himself carried away in spite of
+his inner consciousness that there was a flaw in the argument of
+the preacher. He was intensely interested by the whole scene. He
+could not help watching the faces of the group of which he made
+one, watching the play of emotion upon them as they followed with
+breathless attention their instructor's words, and drank in his
+fiery eloquence as though it were life-giving water.
+
+And was it wonderful this should be so? the youth asked of himself.
+Were not these poor people fairly starving for want of spiritual
+food? and what food did they receive from the hands of their parish
+priest? Edred knew the old man well. He was a kind-hearted
+sexagenarian, and in those days that was accounted an immense age.
+He mumbled through the mass on Sundays; he baptized the children
+and buried the dead when need arose; and if sent for by some person
+in extremity, would go and administer the last rites of the Church.
+But beyond that his duties did not go, and no living soul in the
+place remembered hearing him speak a word of instruction or
+admonition on his own account. He had a passion for gardening, and
+spent all his spare time with his flowers; and his people went
+their way as he did his, and their lives never touched on any
+point.
+
+Such being the case, was it wonderful that the people should come
+with eagerness to hear of the Saviour from whomsoever would tell
+them of Him? Edred well remembered Brother Emmanuel's words about
+the four God-given channels of grace--the living ministry by which
+He had meant His Church to be perfected. But how when the streams
+grew choked? how when the ministry had become a dead letter? Was
+the Church, were the people, to die of inanition? Might not God
+pardon them for listening to any messenger who came with His name
+upon his lips? Surely He who lived in the heavens would pardon them
+even if it were sin, seeing that it was the instinctive love of His
+own wandering sheep which brought them crowding round any shepherd
+who would teach them of Him, even though he did not come in the
+God-directed order.
+
+Some such thoughts in a more chaotic form surged through Edred's
+head as he stood listening, almost causing him to lose the words of
+the preacher, though the tenor of his discourse was plain. He
+almost wished he might enter into a discussion with this
+enthusiast, and point out to him where he thought him extravagant
+and wrong; but young as he was, Edred yet knew something of the
+futility of argument with those whose minds are made up, and
+caution withheld him from entering into any argument with one who
+was plainly a Lollard preacher. So, after listening with sympathy
+and interest for a long while, he quietly stole away again.
+
+The bull baiting was over by this time. The games and other sports
+were recommencing with greater energy after this brief interruption.
+The miracle play was again represented, and Edred stood a few minutes
+to watch, thinking within his heart that this representation, half
+comical, half blasphemous (though the people who regarded it seemed
+in no way aware of this), was a strange way of bringing home the
+realities of the Scriptures, when it could be done so far more
+faithfully and eloquently by simply reading the gospel words in the
+tongue of the common people.
+
+His eye roved from the actors, with their mincing words and
+artificial gestures, to the group still collected beneath the tree,
+and he could not but contrast the two methods in his own mind, and
+wonder for a moment whether the Lollards could be altogether so
+desperately wicked as their enemies would make out.
+
+He was half afraid of allowing himself to think too much on such
+themes, and went in search of his brothers. He found Warbel looking
+out for him in some anxiety. He had missed the boy for some little
+while from his charge, and as the field was filling fast with
+followers and servants wearing the Mortimer livery, he was glad to
+have the three boys all together beneath his care.
+
+He would have been glad to get them to leave the place, but Bertram
+would not hear of it. He wished to try his own skill at some of the
+sports; and Julian, of course, must needs follow his example.
+
+The skill and address of the Chadgrove brothers won the hearty
+admiration of the rustics, but it also brought them more than once into
+rivalry and collision with some of Mortimer's gentlemen-at-arms, who
+were not best pleased to be overmatched by mere striplings. It was also
+galling and irritating to them to note the popularity of these lads
+with the rustics. Any success of theirs was rewarded by loud shouting
+and applause, whilst no demonstration of satisfaction followed any feat
+performed by those wearing the livery of Mortimer. And if the lads
+scored a triumph over any of these latter, the undisguised delight of
+the beholders could not pass unnoticed by the vanquished.
+
+Altogether there were so much jealousy and ill will aroused that
+little scuffles between the followers of Chad and Mortimer had
+already taken place in more than one part of the field. Warbel was
+getting very uneasy, and had persuaded Edred to use his influence
+with his brothers to return home before any real collision should
+have occurred, when a great tumult and shouting suddenly arose to
+interrupt the whispered colloquy, and Edred saw a great rush being
+made in the direction of the oak tree, where the hunchback preacher
+had been keeping his station the whole day long, always surrounded
+by a little knot of listeners.
+
+Shouts and yells were filling the air, the voices being those of
+Mortimer's following.
+
+"A Lollard, a Lollard! A heretic! Down with him! Away with him! To
+the fire with him! A Lollard, a Lollard!"
+
+A deep flush overspread Edred's face. He made a spring forward; but
+Warbel laid a detaining hand upon his arm.
+
+"It is no case for us to interfere in," he said, with clouded brow.
+"If they have a heretic to deal with we must not meddle. It is not
+England's way for a score to attack one; but we must not interpose
+betwixt Mortimer and a heretic. That would be too much peril."
+
+But almost before the man had done speaking Edred broke away,
+crying out excitedly: "My brothers, my brothers! they are there in
+the thick of it!" and with a groan of terror and dismay Warbel
+recognized the voice of Bertram raised in angry scorn.
+
+"Stand back, you cowards! Who ever heard of fifty men against one,
+and he a cripple? The first who touches him I strike dead. A
+heretic! Pooh! nonsense. He is but a poor travelling peddler with
+his pack. See, here is the pack to speak for itself. For shame to
+mar a merry holiday in this unmannerly fashion! No; I will not give
+him up! Ye are no better than a pack of howling, ravening wolves. I
+am the Lord of Chad, and I will see that no violence is done this
+day. Back to your sports, ye unmannerly knaves. Are ye fit for
+nothing but to set upon one helpless man and worry him as dogs
+worry their helpless prey?"
+
+Howls, execrations, oaths followed freely; but the village people
+were to a man with their young lord, and the scions of Mortimer
+felt it by instinct.
+
+"Who is he? Whence came he?" was being asked on all sides; but none
+could give an answer. He was a stranger to the village, but all
+those who had been drinking in his words rallied round him, and
+declared he was but a simple peddler whose wares they had been
+buying; and Bertram, who really thought so, stood beside the tree,
+opened the bundle, and showed the innocent nature of the wares.
+
+His brothers had forced their way to his side by this time, and
+helped to make a ring round the poor hunchback; and Edred kept a
+very sharp eye upon the emptying of the pack, resolved if there
+should be any book at the bottom to contrive that it should not
+reach the eyes of any of the vindictive followers of Mortimer.
+
+But there was nothing of the sort to be seen. The man was both too
+poor and too wary to carry such dangerous things with him. His own
+thin volume had been slipped into some secret receptacle about his
+person, and his calmness of bearing helped to convince all who were
+open to conviction that he was innocent of the charge brought
+against him.
+
+With dark, lowering faces, and many muttered threats, the Mortimer
+retainers drew off, seeing that with public feeling dead against
+them they could not prevail to work their will upon the intended
+victim. But Warbel was made very anxious by the words he heard
+openly spoken on all sides, and he would have given much to have
+hindered this act of Bertram's, generous and manly though he knew
+it to have been.
+
+"It is ill work drawing down the charge of heresy," he remarked, as
+he got the boys at last in full march homeward. "Any other charge
+one can laugh to scorn; but no man may tell where orthodoxy ends
+and heresy begins. Godly bishops have been sent to prison, and
+priests to the stake. How may others hope to escape?"
+
+"Tush!" answered Bertram lightly; "there was never a heretic at
+Chad yet, and never will be one, I trow. Was I to see a poor
+cripple like that done to death without striking a blow in his
+defence--he in Chadwick, of which my father is lord of the manor?
+Was I to see Mortimer's men turning a gay holiday into a scene of
+horror and affright? Never! I were unworthy of my name had I not
+interposed. The man was no heretic, and if he had been--"
+
+"Have a care, sir, how thou speakest; have a care, I entreat thee!
+Thou knowest not what ears may be listening!" cried Warbel, in a
+real fright.
+
+Bertram laughed half scornfully.
+
+"I have no need to be ashamed of what I think. I am a true son of
+the Church, and fear not what the vile Mortimer scum may say. But
+to pleasure thee, good Warbel, I will say no more. We will make our
+way home with all speed, and tell the tale to our father. I doubt
+not he will say it was well done. The Lord of Chad would ever have
+the defenceless protected, and stand between them and the false and
+treacherous bloodhounds of Mortimer. I have no fear that he will
+blame me. He would have done the same in my place."
+
+"I trow he would," answered Warbel in a low voice; "but that does
+not make the deed done without peril of some sort following to the
+doer."
+
+
+
+Chapter V: A Warning.
+
+
+Sir Oliver and his wife listened with some anxiety to the boys'
+story of the rescue of the peddler. Bertram observed the cloud upon
+his father's brow, and eagerly asked if he had done wrong.
+
+"I say not so, my son," replied the knight. "I would ever have a
+child of mine merciful and just--the protector of the oppressed,
+and the champion of the defenceless; nevertheless--"
+
+"And it was those bloodhounds of Mortimer's who were setting upon
+him," broke in Julian vehemently. "What right had they to molest
+him? Could we of Chad, upon our own soil, stand by and see it done?
+I trow, father, that thou wouldst have done the same hadst thou
+been there."
+
+A smile flitted over the face of the knight. He loved to see the
+generous fire burning in his boys' eyes; but for all that his face
+was something anxious as he made reply:
+
+"Belike I should, my son, albeit perhaps in a something less
+vehement fashion. My authority would have served to keep down riot,
+and the charge against the peddler could have been forthwith
+examined, and if found false the man could then have been sent on
+his way in safety. But it is dangerous work just now to appear to
+side with those against whom the foul charge of heresy is brought.
+Knowest thou--know any of ye--what gave rise to the sudden
+suspicion?"
+
+Edred, who knew much more of the real nature of the peddler's
+occupation that day, kept his lips close sealed. He would not for
+worlds have told what he had seen and heard. His brothers were
+plainly ignorant of the peddler's exhortation, reading, and
+preaching. It was not for him to add to the anxieties of his
+parents.
+
+Julian was the first to answer the question.
+
+"It was but the idle spite of the people of Mortimer," he answered.
+"They had baited the bull and the bear, and they had the mind to
+bait or burn a heretic whilst their blood was up, as a fit end to
+their day's pleasuring. I saw them prowling round the tree where
+the fellow was talking to the women and showing his wares; and
+suddenly they raised the shout. I called out to Bertram that
+Mortimer's people were bent on a mischief, and he sprang to the
+peddler's side before any had touched him, and we disappointed the
+hell hounds of their prey. He had nothing in his pack but such
+wares as all peddlers have; and the people vowed he had done naught
+all the day but sell to all who came. It would have been sin and
+shame for us of Chad to have stood by to see him hounded perhaps to
+death. We could not choose but balk those evil men of their will.
+None of our blood could have stood by to see such ill done!"
+
+"I cannot blame ye, my sons," said the knight. "Ye have the blood
+of your forefathers in your veins, and it goes against all of us at
+Chad to see injustice and unrighteousness committed. I do but wish
+the cry raised against yon man had been anything else than that of
+heresy. The priests and magistrates are very busy now searching out
+all those suspected of that vile sin, and those who shelter them
+are accounted as guilty as those who are proved tainted. Our foe of
+Mortimer is very zealous in the good cause, and will not scruple to
+employ against us every weapon in his power. It would be an
+excellent thing in his eyes to show how mine own children had stood
+up to defend a Lollard heretic. I would we knew something more
+anent this man and his views.
+
+"Warbel, didst thou know him? Is he anyone known in and about
+Chad?"
+
+"I never saw his face before, sir," answered Warbel. "I know not so
+much as his name. I had thought of making some inquiries of the
+village folks. All I noted was that he seemed always to have plenty
+of persons around and about him, and his wares were nothing very
+attractive. Still, it is often the tales peddlers tell and the way
+they have with them that keeps a crowd always about them. Some of
+the folks of the place must know who and what he is."
+
+"Yes, verily; and it would be well for thee to ride over tomorrow
+and make all needful inquiry. It would set my mind at rest to know
+that there was no cause of complaint against him. We cannot be
+blind to the fact that heretical doctrines are widely spread by
+those purporting to be hawkers and peddlers. Yet there must be many
+honest men who would scorn to be so occupied, and who know not even
+the name of these pestilent heresies."
+
+And with that charge the knight tried to dismiss the subject from
+his mind; whilst Edred went to bed feeling terribly uneasy, and
+dreamed all night of the secret chamber, and how the time came when
+they were all forced to take refuge in it from the hatred of the
+Lord of Mortimer and his bloodthirsty followers.
+
+But not even to his brothers did he tell all that he had heard and
+all that he knew. The words of the gospel in the familiar language
+of his country haunted him persistently. He felt a strange wish to
+hear more, although he believed the wish to be sin, and strove
+against it might and main. Some of the passages clung tenaciously
+to his memory, and he fell asleep repeating them. When he woke the
+words were yet in his mind, and they seemed to get between him and
+the words of his task that day when the boys went to their tutor
+for daily instruction.
+
+Brother Emmanuel had never found Edred so inattentive and absent
+before. He divined that the boy must have something on his mind,
+and let him alone. He was not surprised that he lingered when the
+others had gone, and then in a low voice asked his preceptor if he
+would meet him in the chantry, as he felt he could not be happy
+till he had made confession of a certain matter, done penance, and
+received absolution.
+
+A request of that sort never met a denial from the monk. He sent
+Edred to the chantry to pray for an hour, and met him there at the
+end of that time to listen to all he had to say.
+
+Edred's story was soon told--nothing held back, not even the
+innermost thoughts of his heart--and the expression of the face
+beneath the enshrouding cowl was something strange to see.
+
+It was long before the monk spoke, and meantime Edred lay prostrate
+at his feet, thankful to transfer the burden weighing him down to
+the keeping of another, but little guessing what the burden was to
+him to whom he made this confession.
+
+Well did Brother Emmanuel know and recognize the peril of
+entertaining such thoughts, longings, and aspirations as were now
+assailing the heart of this unconscious boy. That there was sin in
+all these feelings he did not doubt; that heavy penance must be
+done for them he would not for a moment have wished to deny. But
+yet when he came to place reason in the place of the formulas of
+the Church in which he had been reared, he knew not how to condemn
+that longing after the Word of God which was generally the first
+step towards the dreaded sin of heresy.
+
+No one more sincerely abhorred the name and the sin of heresy. When
+men denied the presence of the living God in the sacraments of the
+Church, or attacked its time-honoured practices in which the heart
+of the young monk was bound up, then the whole soul of the
+enthusiast rose up in revolt, and he felt that such blasphemers
+well deserved the fiery doom they brought upon themselves. But when
+their sin was possessing a copy of the living Word; when all that
+could be alleged against them was that they met together to read that
+Word which was denied to them by their lawful pastors and teachers,
+and which they had no opportunity of hearing otherwise--then indeed
+did it seem a hard thing that they should be so mercilessly condemned
+and persecuted.
+
+Yet he could not deny that this reading and expounding of the
+Scriptures by the ignorant and unlearned led almost invariably to
+those other sins of blasphemy and irreverence which curdled the
+very blood in his veins. Again and again had his heart burned
+within him to go forth amongst the people himself; to take upon
+himself and put in practice the office of evangelist, which he knew
+to be a God-appointed ministry, and yet which was so seldom
+worthily fulfilled, and himself to proclaim aloud the gospel, that
+all might have news of the Son of God, yet might be taught to
+reverence the holy sacraments more rather than less for the sake of
+Him who established them upon earth, and to respect the priesthood,
+even though it might in its members show itself unworthy, because
+it was a thing given by Christ for the edification of the body, and
+because He Himself, the High Priest passed into the heavens, must
+needs have His subordinate priests working with Him and by Him on
+earth.
+
+Again and again had longings such as these filled his soul, and he
+had implored leave to go forth preaching and teaching. But he had
+never won permission to do this. The request had been treated with
+contempt, and he himself had been suspected of ambition and other
+unworthy motives. He had submitted to the will of his superiors, as
+his vow of obedience obliged him to do; but none the less did his
+heart burn within him as he saw more and more plainly how men were
+thirsting for living waters, and realized with ever-increasing
+intensity of pain and certainty that if the Church herself would
+not give her children to drink out of pure fountains, they would
+not be hindered from drinking of poisoned springs, and thus draw
+down upon themselves all manner of evils and diseases.
+
+He had never doubted for a moment the pureness of the source from
+which he himself drank. He was not blind to the imperfections many
+and great of individuals in high places, and the corruptions which
+had crept within the pale of the Church, but these appeared to him
+incidental and capable of amendment. He never guessed at any deeper
+poison at work far below, tainting the very waters at their source.
+He was in all essential points an orthodox son of Rome; but he had
+imbibed much of the spirit of the Oxford Reformers, of whom Colet
+was at this time the foremost, and his more enlightened outlook
+seemed to the blind and bigoted of his own order to savour
+something dangerously of heresy.
+
+He did not know himself seriously suspected. His conscience was too
+clear, his devotion to the Church too pure, to permit of his easily
+fearing unworthy suspicions. He knew himself no favourite with the
+stately but self-indulgent Prior of Chadwater; knew that Brother
+Fabian, whom he had once sternly rebuked for an act of open sin,
+was his bitter enemy. But he had not greatly heeded this, strong in
+his own innocence, and he had been far happier at Chad in the more
+truly pure atmosphere of that secular house than in the so-called
+sanctity of the cloister.
+
+And now he found his own thoughts, aspirations, and yearnings
+repeated in the mind of his favourite pupil, and he was confronted
+by a problem more difficult to solve than any that had met him
+before. In his own case he felt he had a compass to steer by--the
+restraint and guidance of his vows and his habit to help him. But
+how would it be with this ardent and imaginative boy? His mind was
+struggling to free itself from artificial trammels. To what goal
+might not that wish lead?
+
+Earnestly he looked upon the bowed form at his feet, and in his
+eyes there was a great compassion. But his lips pronounced, with
+sternness and decision, the words of the heavy penance imposed, and
+at the end of the prescribed formulas he raised the boy and looked
+searchingly into his face.
+
+"My son," he said, very gently yet very impressively, "remember
+that the first sin that entered into the world was the sin of
+disobedience. Remember that Satan's most powerful weapon is the one
+which he employed towards our first mother when he bid her eat of
+the tree of knowledge, because that knowledge is good--a God-given
+thing--when he persuaded her that God was wrong in keeping anything
+hidden from her that in itself was good. The same sin by which
+death entered the world has abounded there ever since. God and the
+Son of God and the Church have always taught that there be certain
+things hidden, only to be revealed to man by God or through the
+ordinances of the Church, not to be sought after through curiosity
+by unlettered men themselves. Yet for as much as Satan is never at
+rest, and can transform himself on occasion into an angel of light,
+he is ever present with men urging them on to pry into these hidden
+mysteries and to make light of the ordinances of God. He puts into
+their mouth words similar to those by which he tempted the woman to
+her fall, and men listen greedily as our first mother did, and are
+led into destruction when they think they are walking forth into
+the light of day.
+
+"My son, beware of this sin; beware of this temptation. Remember
+the many solemn warnings against disobedience contained in the Word
+of God; remember how obedience is insisted on throughout that holy
+volume. Thou mayest not always see the reason--thou mayest not
+always recognize the authority; but remember that there is a
+blessing upon those who obey, and be not in haste to break the bond
+under which thou wast born, remembering who has placed thee where
+thou art, and who has bidden us give all dutiful obedience to the
+powers that be."
+
+Edred made a deep reverence, crossed himself silently in token of
+submission, and prostrated himself upon the step of the altar, to
+lie there fasting till set of sun as one part of his penance. With
+a murmured prayer and blessing the monk left him, hoping that he
+had spoken a word of seasonable warning to one whose heart was
+enkindled with ardent devotion, whilst his active mind and vivid
+imagination were in danger of leading him into perilous paths.
+
+No questions were asked of Edred respecting this penance, which
+took him away from his ordinary occupations during the chief part
+of the two following days. He and Brother Emmanuel alone knew the
+reason for it, and it was against the traditions of the house that
+any open notice should be taken by others.
+
+The episode of the peddler and the outbreak with the followers of
+Mortimer had begun to fade somewhat from the minds of those at
+Chad. No complaint had reached that house from Mortimer's Keep, as
+had been expected, and it was hoped that the thing would never be
+heard of again.
+
+Yet it was with something of a sinking heart that Sir Oliver heard
+the third day that the Prior of Chadwater desired speech of him;
+and as he mounted his horse and summoned his servants about him, he
+wondered, not without considerable uneasiness, what this summons
+might mean.
+
+He had always been on good terms with the handsome prior of the
+Benedictine monastery. The choicest of the game, the fattest of the
+bucks slain in the forest, the chiefest specimens of his wife's
+culinary triumphs, always found their way to the prior's table, and
+an excellent understanding had always been maintained between the
+two houses. But the knight had observed of late that the prior had
+become more slack in those visits of friendly courtesy which once
+had been common enough between them; and when he had presented
+himself at the monastery, he had not been quite certain that his
+welcome was as cordial as heretofore. It was not until latterly
+that this had caused him any uneasiness--it had taken him some
+while to feel sure that it was anything but his own fantasy; but he
+had just begun to feel that something was amiss, and now this
+summons seemed to him to have an evil import.
+
+However, there was nothing for it but to go; and a clear conscience
+keeps a man bold even in face of greater peril than was likely to
+assail him now. He thought it probable that some rumour of the stir
+on the fair day had reached the ecclesiastic, and that he wanted an
+account of it in detail. Sir Oliver was quite prepared to give him
+that, and entered the presence of the prior with a bold front and
+an air of cordial courtesy such as he was wont to wear in the
+presence of this dignitary.
+
+There was nothing alarming in the prior's manner. He received his
+guest graciously, bid him be seated in the best chair reserved for
+the use of guests, and asked him of the welfare of his household
+with benevolence and friendly interest. But after all that had been
+said, his face took another look, and he brought up the subject of
+the travelling peddler or preacher, and asked the knight what his
+sons meant by standing champions to a notable and pernicious
+Lollard heretic.
+
+The knight started at the words, and disclaimed any such knowledge
+both on behalf of himself and his sons. He told the tale as Bertram
+and Julian had told it him; and there was such sincerity in his
+manner, and his character both for orthodoxy and for scrupulous
+truthfulness in word and deed was so widely known and respected,
+that the prior's brow unbent somewhat, and he looked less stern and
+severe.
+
+"I believe your story, Sir Knight," he said. "I believe that your
+sons sinned in ignorance. But none the less is it true that they
+have stood champions for a pestilent heretic; and that is an
+offence not likely to escape the vengeful notice of the Lord of
+Mortimer, who is always on the lookout for a cause of complaint
+against person or persons at Chad."
+
+"That is very true," replied Sir Oliver, thoughtfully and gravely.
+"I was greatly vexed when I heard of the affair, and chided my boys
+for their hot-headed rashness. Howbeit there be many there to
+testify that the man was at that time but hawking his wares, and my
+sons could not know that he was a secret heretic and Lollard."
+
+"Nay, but when that cry was raised they should not have stood at
+his side as his champions without more knowledge of the truth. The
+man is now known to have been preaching well nigh the whole day
+long, reading portions of those accursed translations of Wycliffe's
+which are damnation to all who possess them or listen to them, and
+expounding thereupon in the fashion that sends persons raving mad
+with the poison of heresy. The man is in hiding somewhere in the
+woods about; but he will soon be caught and handed over to the
+secular power to be doomed to death. And I like not the story of
+your sons' part in all this; it hath an ugly look."
+
+Sir Oliver hid his anxiety beneath a cloak of dignified submission.
+He well knew the best way of putting things straight with the
+prior.
+
+"I greatly grieve over the hotheadedness of the lads, but I will
+gladly make such amends as lies in my power. They sinned in
+ignorance, as you, reverend father, believe, and for such sins the
+indulgence of the Church may be won by the payment of such sum as
+shall be thought right. If you will tell me what I ought to give to
+purchase this indulgence, I will do my utmost to meet the just
+claim; and Holy Church shall be richer and not poorer for the
+trespass unwittingly made by the sons of Chad."
+
+The prior looked pleased at this ready suggestion, and named a sum
+which, though sufficiently heavy, was within Sir Oliver's means,
+and which he promised should be immediately paid. He knew that the
+prior, though a man fond of money, and somewhat greedy in gaining
+possession of all he could, was not treacherous or unjust; and that
+if he had accepted this sum as the price of the pardon of the boys'
+escapade, he would stand their friend, and not allow them to be
+persecuted by Mortimer for the same offence, should the matter ever
+be brought up against them again.
+
+Indeed, now that the arrangement had been so amicably entered into,
+Sir Oliver was rather glad that the subject had been broached. The
+prior was the most powerful man in the county, and to have him for
+a friend was everything. It was his game to hold the balance very
+nicely betwixt the owners of Mortimer and Chad, keeping his neutral
+position, and not permitting either party to overstep the limits
+beyond a certain extent. After what had just passed, he felt
+assured that the prior would not permit his boys to be harried or
+accused of countenancing heresy by their enemy, and he was well
+pleased at the interview and its result.
+
+He rose now as if to go, but the prior motioned him to resume his
+seat.
+
+"There is yet another matter upon which I would speak to you," he
+said. "You have beneath your roof one of our younger brethren,
+Brother Emmanuel. How have you found him comport himself since he
+has been free from the restraints of the cloister?"
+
+The knight looked surprised at the question.
+
+"He is in all ways a very godly and saintly youth," he replied. "He
+instructs my sons after an excellent fashion, keeps the hours of
+the Church with a scrupulous precision I have never seen equalled,
+and instructs all who come to him for advice or assistance in a
+manner that makes him beloved of all. Whenever I have talked with
+him or gone to him for spiritual counsel, I have been greatly
+struck by his spiritual insight, his purity of thought, his
+earnestness of mind, and his knowledge of the Holy Scriptures."
+
+The prior shifted a little in his seat, and coughed behind his hand
+somewhat dubiously.
+
+"He was ever prone to observe the hours well. He lived blamelessly
+here in all outward observances; but as for his knowledge of the
+Holy Scriptures, it may be that it goes something too far. It is
+whispered abroad that some of his words savour strongly of those
+very Lollard heresies which are about to be put down with fire and
+sword. Hast thou heard and seen naught of that?"
+
+A thrill of indignation ran through Sir Oliver's frame. It was only
+by an effort that he restrained a hasty exclamation. He well knew
+that the wave of enlightened feeling rising within the Church
+herself had found no echo in the remoter parts of the kingdom,
+where bigotry and darkness and intolerance still reigned supreme.
+He was perfectly aware that the most enlightened sons of the Church
+who had dared to bid the people study the Word of God, and
+especially to study it as a whole, would have been denounced as
+heretics had they lifted up their voices in many parts of the
+kingdom. This very enlightened understanding, which was so marked a
+feature in Brother Emmanuel, had been one of the strongest bonds
+between him and his patron, and it seemed little short of monstrous
+to the knight to hear such an accusation brought against one who
+had lived a godly and blameless life, had observed far more
+rigorously all the laws of the Church than the prior or the
+fraternity thought of doing, and was a far truer and better son
+than they ever attempted to be.
+
+But he restrained his indignation, and only answered very calmly:
+
+"I have seen naught of it; indeed, I have seen so much to the
+contrary, that methinks it is but an idle tale, not worth your
+reverence's attention. In every matter, word or deed, Brother
+Emmanuel is faithful to his vows and to his calling. He is an able
+instructor of youth; and were your reverence to examine him as
+strictly as possible, I do not believe that any cause of offence,
+however trivial, could be found against him."
+
+"I am well pleased to hear such good testimony," returned the
+prior, who was regarding his visitor with a scrutiny not altogether
+agreeable to the knight. "At the same time, it is not always well
+for a monk to remain too long away from the cloister, and a change
+of instructor is ofttimes better for the young. I have been
+thinking that it might be well to recall Brother Emmanuel, and send
+in his place Brother Fabian, in whom I repose the greatest
+confidence. How would such a change meet your good pleasure? If
+Brother Emmanuel is in need of penance, it can better be imposed
+here than elsewhere--and by all I hear it seems to me that he
+stands something in need of the discipline of the monastery; and
+Brother Fabian would make an excellent substitute as an instructor
+for the lads."
+
+Whilst the prior was speaking, thought had been rapid with Sir
+Oliver, and something in the prior's look--a subtlety and almost
+cruelty about the lines of the mouth--warned him that there was in
+this proposition that which boded evil to someone.
+
+It flashed across him that Brother Emmanuel was perhaps to be made
+a victim of ecclesiastical tyranny and cruelty. He knew that the
+ascetic young monk had been no favourite with his brethren at
+Chadwater; and if they could bring against him some charge of
+heresy, however trifling, it was like enough that he might be
+silently done to death, as others of his calling had been for less
+fearful offences. Monastic buildings held their dark secrets, as
+the world was just beginning to know; and only a short while back
+he had heard a whisper that it was not wise for a monk to be too
+strict in his hours and in his living. Then again, Brother Fabian
+was a coarse, illiterate man, utterly unfit to be the guide and
+instructor of youth. Sir Oliver had not dined at the prior's table
+and spent hours in his company for nothing, and he knew many of the
+monks tolerably well. Brother Fabian was the one he liked the
+least; indeed he had a strong dislike and distrust of the man, and
+was well aware that the ecclesiastical habit was the only thing
+about him that savoured of sanctity or the monastic life. He would
+not have allowed the contaminating presence of such a man near his
+sons, even had he been indued with the needful learning for the
+task of instructor. As it was, he knew that the monk could barely
+spell through his breviary, and it was plain that the prior must
+have another reason for wishing to induct him into the house.
+
+Nor was the reason difficult to divine. It was not as an instructor
+but as a spy that Brother Fabian was to come. The whispers
+abroad--doubtless spread industriously by his vengeful foe--had not
+been without effect, and men had begun to suspect that his
+household was tainted with heresy. Brother Emmanuel was suspected,
+his sons were probably suspected as being his pupils, and possibly
+some other members of his household too. Brother Fabian was to be
+sent to act as spy, and if bribed (as was most probable) by the
+Lord of Mortimer, would doubtless find some cause of offence which
+could be twisted into an accusation of heresy against someone
+there.
+
+It was difficult for Sir Oliver to see his way all in a moment. To
+oppose this scheme or to submit to it appeared alike dangerous. His
+independence and honest English pride revolted against any attempt
+to coerce him in his domestic arrangements, or to submit to
+interference there, even from the ministers of the Church.
+
+But it was needful to walk warily, and the prior was watching him
+as a cat does a mouse.
+
+"Will you give me a few days to consider this matter?" he asked, in
+as easy a tone as he could. "Your reverence knows that changes are
+not of themselves welcome to me; and my sons have made such
+progress with Brother Emmanuel that I am something loath to part
+with him. Also, they are at this moment going through a course of
+study which none other could conclude with the same advantage.
+Brother Fabian is doubtless an excellent brother of his order, but
+he has scarce the same learning as Brother Emmanuel. Nevertheless,
+I will well consider the change proposed, and give it all dutiful
+heed. But I should like to speak with my wife anent the matter, and
+learn her will. It is not a matter of pressing haste, by what I
+have gathered from your words?"
+
+"No, not one of pressing haste. Yet I would not long delay,"
+answered the prior. "I may not speak too openly, but there be
+reasons why I would have Brother Emmanuel beneath this roof once
+more. I will leave thee one week to consider and to get the course
+of study completed. At the week's end, methinks, I shall be
+constrained to bid Brother Emmanuel return home. But if all be well
+after a short time has sped by, he may return again to thee."
+
+Sir Oliver was looking full at the handsome but crafty face of the
+prior, and as the last words passed his lips he saw a flicker in
+the eyes which made him say within his heart:
+
+"If Brother Emmanuel once re-enters these walls, he will never
+sally forth again. Mischief is meant him; of that I am convinced.
+What must I do? Must I give him up to his death? And how can I save
+him, even if I would?"
+
+These thoughts were surging in his heart as he rode home. The peril
+he had feared against those of his own name and race had been
+averted. The payment of what was practically a heavy fine would
+secure to the boys immunity from the results of their rashness; but
+with the monk it was far different. What had aroused the animosity
+of the fraternity, and why mischief was planned against him, Sir
+Oliver could not divine; but that something had occurred to arouse
+it he could not doubt.
+
+No sooner had he reached home than he sought Brother Emmanuel in
+his own bare room, and laid before him the account of what had
+passed.
+
+A strange look crossed the young monk's face.
+
+"Then it is known!" he said simply.
+
+"What is known?"
+
+"That I am the author of a certain pamphlet, written some while
+ago, and taken to Germany to be printed, giving an account of some
+of the corruptions and abuses that have stolen into the Church, and
+in especial into the monasteries and religious houses of this land.
+I could not choose but write it. If the Church is to be saved, it
+can only be by her repudiation of such corruptions, and by a
+process of self cleansing that none can do for her. I always knew
+that if suspected my life would pay the forfeit; but I know not how
+the authorship has been discovered. Yet the great ones of the land
+have ways we know not of; and if the truth is not known, it is
+suspected. I am to go back to the priory; but once there, I shall
+never go forth again. Yet what matter? I always knew if the thing
+were known my life would .pay the forfeit. I wrote as the Spirit
+bid me; I know that God was with me then. I am ready to lay down my
+life in a good cause; I am not afraid what man can do unto me."
+
+Sir Oliver looked into that young face, which the martyr spirit
+illuminated and glorified, and an answering spark kindled in his
+own eyes.
+
+"If that is thine offence, and not the alleged one of heresy, I
+will stand thy friend," he said; "and thou shalt not go forth from
+Chad to thy death so long as I have a roof to shelter thee. I will
+stand thy friend and protector so long as I have a house to call
+mine own."
+
+
+
+Chapter VI: Watched!
+
+
+"I am glad thou hast so resolved, my husband; but hast thou
+considered what it may mean to thee?"
+
+Lady Chadgrove spoke gently, laying her hand upon her husband's arm
+with a gesture unwontedly tender; for neither was demonstrative of
+the deep affection which existed between them, and he knew that
+only strong emotion evoked such action from her.
+
+"I know that if I refuse to give up Brother Emmanuel I may draw
+down upon myself stern admonition, and perchance something worse,
+but I mean not that it come to open defiance of any injunction from
+the Church. Brother Emmanuel must leave Chad secretly, and be far
+away ere the week of grace expires. We are but twenty miles from
+the coast. This very day I shall ride thither and see what small
+trading vessels are in the bay about to fare forth to foreign
+shores. I shall negotiate with some skipper making for some Dutch
+port to carry thither the person whom I shall describe to him, and
+who will show him this ring"--and Sir Oliver displayed an emerald
+upon his own finger--"in token that he is the person to be taken
+aboard. Those trading skippers are used to such jobs, and if they
+be paid they know how to hold their peace and ask no questions. In
+Holland the brother will be safer than in any other land. The spite
+of the Prior of Chadwater is not like to pursue him there. But here
+his life is not safe from hour to hour."
+
+"And how if it comes to be known that thou hast planned this
+escape?" asked the lady, a little anxiously.
+
+"I have thought of that too, dame," replied the knight, smiling.
+"Let but the good brother be safely out of the country, and whilst
+the hue and cry is still going on here after him I will to the king
+and tell him all the story. Our pious Dean Colet, who knows Brother
+Emmanuel, and knows, too, that it is meet the corrupt practices
+that have crept within the pale of Holy Church should be made
+known, that they may be swept away and reformed, will stand my
+friend, and together we can so persuade his Majesty that even if
+the prior and Mortimer both combine to accuse me before him he will
+not allow their spite to touch me. The king knows right well that
+there is need of amendment within the Church herself. We have heard
+words spoken in the Cathedral of London which would be accounted
+rank heresy here. There is light abroad which must one day reach to
+the ends of the earth, and truly it sometimes seemeth to me that if
+the priests, the abbots, and the monks set their faces steadfastly
+against this light, they will fall into some terrible pitfall, but
+they will never quench the light with their united strength."
+
+The lady gave one quick glance round, as though afraid that even
+the walls might have ears, and such sentiments were not those that
+it was safe to blazon abroad. But Sir Oliver, strong in the
+consciousness of his own deep and abiding love for the Church and
+for all the doctrines which she upheld, was bold to speak his mind
+in private when the subject broached was the one of corruptions and
+abuses which some of the sturdiest and noblest sons of the Church
+were now engaged in examining and denouncing, none dreaming of
+charging them with heresy on that account.
+
+But the mother had noted the presence of Edred, who had come in
+quietly whilst the discussion was going on, and was now standing
+listening to his father's words with kindling eyes; and she made a
+sign to her husband which caused him to turn round, and then the
+boy spoke.
+
+"The horses are ready at the door, father, and Bertram prays that
+he may accompany thee. He is donning his riding dress already."
+
+"With all my heart," answered the knight readily, "an he can ride
+the forty miles betwixt this and tomorrow at the same hour; for I
+do not purpose to be long absent."
+
+"Bertram would ride all day and all night and feel it not,"
+answered Edred with a proud smile; "and he loves the sight and the
+smell of the salt sea, and would be loath to miss the chance of
+seeing it. Father, art thou going to aid Brother Emmanuel to fly?
+Is there peril for him abroad?"
+
+The knight bent a quick, keen glance upon his son.
+
+"I fear so, my boy; and Brother Emmanuel himself thinks that ill is
+meant him. And it is better to seek safety in flight at the first
+hint of danger than to dally and delay, and perhaps find at last
+that it is too late to fly. Thou, my son, wilt for this one day and
+night be left in charge of thy mother and thy home and all within
+it; for I must needs take with me Warbel and a score of our
+stoutest fellows, for the lonely road to the coast is none too safe
+for travellers of the better sort. Be thou watchful and vigilant,
+and keep thine eyes and thine ears alike open. Heed well that the
+gates be closed early, and that all be made safe, and let not
+Brother Emmanuel adventure himself without the walls. Use all
+discretion and heed, and fare thee well. I shall reach the coast
+tonight, and do my business with all speed, and be in the saddle
+again with the light of dawn, so thou mayest look to see us again
+before noon."
+
+And with a tender farewell to his wife, the knight mounted and rode
+away with his gallant little train; and the lady looked after him
+from the window, and said to Edred, who quickly came to her to
+learn more, if he could, of the words he had recently heard:
+
+"Now may the blessed saints and our Lord Himself be with him! for
+no braver and truer gentleman lives in the length and breadth of
+this land. There be few, indeed, who would imperil their own safety
+rather than yield up one who is after all little more than a
+stranger. Heaven send that he repent not this deed! May God be with
+him in all his ways!"
+
+"My mother," said Edred cautiously, "is it that Brother Emmanuel is
+in sore peril? He is so devout and faithful a son of the Church
+that it is hard to credit it."
+
+"In sooth, my son, these be matters hard to be understood; but thy
+father truly holds that he were safer out of this country and out
+of reach of the Prior of Chadwater and the Lord of Mortimer. Men's
+words can be turned and twisted till the best may be accused of
+heresy; and again, if a monk has fallen beneath the wrath of his
+superior, no man may tell what would befall were he to return to
+the power of his spiritual father. Sure those holy men who founded
+the orders of godly recluses little dreamed what those places might
+become in time, and with the ever-increasing love of ease and
+wealth which seems implanted in the heart of man.
+
+"Heaven pardon me if I speak or think amiss! but it is strange to
+hear and see what passes in the world. But one must use all caution
+even in thought, and I would not have thee speak aught of this save
+in a whisper in thy brother's ear, that he too may use all caution
+and discretion till we can find occasion to send Brother Emmanuel
+forth in safety.
+
+"We have a week before us ere he will be summoned hence. Strive
+that none shall suspect aught of difference or coming change. Keep
+well the hours of study. Give none occasion for remark. For all we
+know, a spy may be in our midst; and at least any servant of ours
+might well be questioned by any of the monks of Chadwater, to whom
+he might go to confess, as to what was passing in the house, and
+see no hurt in answering questions. Wherefore be very wise and
+discreet, and give none occasion for remark.
+
+"Thou dost understand me, my son? I may trust thee? Remember that
+thine own father's welfare may be imperilled by the veriest trifle
+should men suspect him of striving to outwit the prior."
+
+Edred's eyes expressed a great comprehension and sympathy. He took
+his mother's hand and kissed it, slightly bending the knee.
+
+"Thou mayest trust me, sweet mother," he answered. "Methinks I know
+well all thou wouldst say. I will be cautious, and I will teach
+caution to Julian. No harm shall come to any beneath this roof from
+word or deed of ours."
+
+And then the lady went to her delayed household duties, whilst
+Edred went in search of his brother, to take him to the room where
+their studies were usually prosecuted, that the household wheels
+might revolve after the accustomed manner.
+
+But Julian was nowhere to be seen. Edred sought him and called him
+lustily, till at length the old seneschal at the gate heard him,
+and informed him that his brother had gone a short distance on foot
+with the travellers, but that he would doubtless be back ere long.
+
+Julian was light and fleet of foot as a deer, and often ran for
+many miles beside his father's charger, the nature of the wooded
+country round Chad giving him many advantages. Edred wandered forth
+a little way to meet him on his return, and was presently aware of
+a cowled figure standing close against a great beech tree, and so
+motionless and rigid was the attitude that the boy had to look
+somewhat closely to be certain that it was not a part of the tree
+trunk itself.
+
+He paused and examined the figure with an intense curiosity not
+unmixed with suspicion. His own light footfall did not appear to
+have been heard, and the motionless figure, partly concealed behind
+the tree, remained in the same rigid attitude, as though intently
+watching some approaching object.
+
+For a moment a superstitious thrill ran through the boy's frame. He
+had heard stories of ghostly visitants to these woods, some of
+which wore the garb of the monks of the neighbouring priory; but he
+had never seen any such apparition, and would not have thought of
+it now had it not been for the peculiar and unnatural quietude of
+this figure. As it was, he paused, gazing intently at it, wondering
+if indeed it were a being of flesh and blood.
+
+He was just summoning up courage to go forward and salute it, when
+it moved forward in a gliding and cautious fashion. Edred felt
+ashamed of his momentary thrill of fear, for he recognized at once
+the awkward gait and rolling step of Brother Fabian, and knew that
+his preceptor's bitterest foe was lingering in the precincts of his
+home.
+
+Resolved not to be seen himself, the boy sprang up a neighbouring
+tree as lightly as a squirrel, and from that vantage ground he saw
+that his brother Julian was approaching, and that the monk had
+stepped out to greet the lad. He heard the sound of the nasal
+tones, so different from the refined accents of Brother Emmanuel.
+
+"Peace be with thee, my son."
+
+Julian stopped short, and slightly bent the knee. He looked up into
+Brother Fabian's face with a look which Edred well knew, and which
+implied no love for his interlocutor. A stranger, however, would be
+probably pleased at the frank directness of the gaze, not noting
+the underlying hardihood and defiance.
+
+"Alone, my son?" questioned the brother. "Methought I saw thee not
+long since with thy father and brother and the servants. How comes
+it thou art now alone?"
+
+"I saw thee not," answered Julian, without attempting to reply to
+the question.
+
+"Belike no. I was telling my beads out here in the forest. Thou
+didst pass me by all unknowing; but I was nigh thy path the while
+nevertheless. Whither--"
+
+"That is something strange," remarked the boy, affecting not to
+hear the commencement of another question; "for I could be sworn
+that not a squirrel or field mouse crosses my path but that I mark
+him down. But I may not linger thus; the hour of our studies is
+already here. I wish you good e'en; I must away home."
+
+The boy would have been gone with a bound the next instant had not
+the monk laid a detaining hand upon his arm. Edred saw by the
+reluctance of his brother's mien that he resented being thus
+stayed.
+
+"One moment, good my son," said Brother Fabian. "Tell me whither
+thy father and brother have gone. It is something too late in the
+day for a hunting party; yet I knew not that the good knight
+purposed any journey."
+
+Edred saw the sudden flash that came into Julian's eyes. He was in
+an agony lest the boy should betray his father's destination, which
+to the astute mind of the monk might betray much more than his
+brother himself knew; but as he heard Julian's words he drew his
+breath more freely.
+
+"Marry, hast thou not heard that my Lord of Beaumaris and Rochefort
+goes a-hunting tomorrow with great muster? My father has gone to
+join the goodly company assembling there. Wilt thou not go thither
+too, Master Monk, and join the revelry that will make the hall ring
+tonight? I trow there is welcome for all who come. I would my
+father had taken me."
+
+"Go to, saucy boy, go to!" replied the brother, half piqued, half
+amused by the lad's boldness in thus implying that his place was at
+a riotous revel such as generally took place when some great baron
+invited his friends for a day's sport in the forest.
+
+It was like enough that this hunting party had been arranged for
+the morrow, and this road certainly led to Beaumaris and Rochefort.
+The reply seemed to satisfy the monk, and he relaxed his grasp of
+the boy's arm.
+
+"I must not keep thee from thy studies longer," he said. "Say, what
+does Brother Emmanuel teach you?"
+
+"The Latin tongue and the use of the pen. Edred is a fine scribe
+already. And he hath taught us our letters in Greek likewise; for
+men are saying, he tells us, that it is shame that that language
+has been neglected so long, since the Holy Scriptures were written
+in it first."
+
+"And he doubtless teaches you from the Holy Scriptures--"
+
+"Ay; and from the writings of the fathers, and the mass book,"
+added the boy. "We can all read Latin right well now. But I must be
+going, an it please thee-"
+
+"Yea, verily thou wilt make a fine scholar one of these days. I am
+glad thou hast so good an instructor. And that reminds me--I would
+have speech with Brother Emmanuel some day soon. I have a missal
+that I think he would greatly like sight of. I misdoubt me if the
+prior would like it carried forth from the library; but if he would
+meet me one day here in the forest, I will strive to secrete it and
+let him have sight of it. It hath wonderful pictures and lettering
+such as he loves. Wilt tell him of it, boy, and ask if he will have
+sight of it?"
+
+"I will tell him," answered Julian. "But I trow he will have naught
+to do with it an it has been filched away from the library without
+the reverend prior's permission. Brother Emmanuel teaches us more
+of the doctrine of obedience than of any other. I trow he will not
+budge an inch!"
+
+A scowling look passed over the features of the monk, which had
+hitherto been smiling and bland. He took Julian by the arm again,
+and said in a low voice:
+
+"I have something of import to speak to Brother Emmanuel. He will
+do well to heed me, and to hear what I have to say. Bid him be at
+this spot two days hence just as the sun goes down. Tell him if he
+come not he may live to repent it bitterly."
+
+"Wilt thou not come back with me?" asked the boy, with a quick,
+distrustful look into the bloated face beneath the cowl. "Thou
+canst speak at ease with him at home. It were better than out here
+in the forest. I will lead thee to him straight, and thou canst say
+all that is in thine heart."
+
+But the monk dropped his arm and turned quickly away; his voice
+bespoke ill-concealed irritation.
+
+"I may not linger longer here. The vesper bell will be ringing by
+now. Give Brother Emmanuel my message. I would see him here in the
+forest. And now farewell, boy; go home as fast as thou wilt, and
+put a bridle on thy forward tongue, lest haply it lead thee one day
+into trouble."
+
+The monk strode away in the direction of the priory. Julian took
+the path towards Chad, with many backward glances at the retreating
+figure, and hardly was it lost in the thick underwood of the forest
+than he found his brother standing at his side.
+
+"Thou here, Edred? Whence camest thou?"
+
+Edred pointed to his leafy hiding place, and laid a finger on his
+lips in token of caution. Julian pursued his way awhile in silence,
+and only when they had increased the distance betwixt themselves
+and the monk by many hundred yards, the elder brother said, in low
+tones and very cautiously:
+
+"Have a care, Julian; methinks he is not going home. He is here as
+a spy, I do not doubt. I saw him watching and spying like a
+veritable messenger sent for such a purpose.
+
+"O Julian, I was right glad at the answer thou gavest him about our
+father. I trembled lest thou shouldst say he was bound for the
+coast."
+
+Both brothers had been too well trained in the creed which allows
+and encourages the practice of speaking falsehood and even doing
+evil in a good cause, to feel that any kind of shame attached to a
+falsehood spoken to conceal from a crafty enemy a thing it would be
+perilous to others for him to know. And indeed diplomatic falsehood
+has never been eradicated from the world even since purer light has
+shone in upon it. It is very hard to meet craft, falsehood, and
+treachery by absolute frankness and truthful honesty. In the long
+run it does sometimes prove to be the strongest weapon a man can
+wield; but the temptation to meet craft by craft, deceit by deceit,
+is strong in human nature, and until a much later date was openly
+advocated as the only policy sane men could adopt when they dealt
+with foes always eager to outwit them. And certainly these lads
+would have felt themselves justified in going to far greater
+lengths to save their father from suspicion, or their preceptor and
+friend from peril.
+
+"Then thou heardest all? I scarce know why I spoke as I did, for
+our father has always been the friend of the brethren of Chadwater.
+But the look in the man's eye made me cautious, and I minded a few
+parting words spoken by Bertram. Tell me, Edred, what it is that is
+stirring; I would know more."
+
+"Verily it is that Brother Emmanuel stands in some peril from those
+of his own community. He has written something they mislike, and
+they mean to have him back to answer for it. Both he and our father
+think that if once he enters Chadwater again he will never come
+forth alive. Wherefore our father will not give him up to his
+enemies, but will contrive for him to escape. That is what he has
+gone to the coast for today; and when he knows that a vessel is
+ready and about to sail, Brother Emmanuel must be spirited away in
+the dead of the night; and when the prior comes to search for
+him--as doubtless he will do when we can find him not--it will
+puzzle him to lay hands upon him, for he will be away on the high
+seas."
+
+"Good!" cried Julian, delighted. "Edred, I mislike those cruel,
+crafty monks. Methinks they are little like the saintly men of old
+who fled to the cloister to rid themselves of the trammels of the
+world. I--"
+
+But Edred laid a hand upon his brother's arm and checked him
+suddenly, pointing to another stationary figure a short distance
+away amongst the trees--a figure wearing the dress of a lay brother
+of the priory, and engaged in keeping a close and careful watch
+upon the main entrance to the house.
+
+"Hist!" whispered Edred; "we must not let him hear such words.
+Julian, mark my word, this house is watched. The prior has set his
+spies upon it. He fears lest Brother Emmanuel shall escape; or else
+the watch is set so that any going forth of his may be known, and
+he will be set upon and swiftly bound, and carried away to the
+priory, whence, I fear me, no man will ever see him re-issue."
+
+Both the boys had stopped short, and now they looked into each
+other's faces with dismay.
+
+Their light footfalls had not been heard, nor even the sound of
+their voices; for a strong breeze had sprung up, and was rustling
+the leaves overhead, and several birds were singing lustily. The
+brothers had time to take in the situation without being seen
+themselves, and they then drew hack into a leafy covert and spoke
+in whispers.
+
+"Edred, do thou go back to the house instantly and openly, and warn
+Brother Emmanuel that he go not forth. Belike he might come out in
+search of us, since the hour is long past when we should have been
+with him. That must not be. Go and tell him all we have seen;
+whilst I will creep like a wildcat round the house, and see if
+there be other spies keeping watch like those we have seen."
+
+"Ay, do so," replied Edred earnestly. "I fear me we shall find that
+every door is watched. But if thou art seen, go forward boldly. Let
+none guess that you suspect aught. Doubtless each watcher is well
+primed with some excellent reason for being found there. Speak them
+friendly, and do not show distrust."
+
+"I will be as wise as a serpent," answered the boy, with one of his
+keen looks which bespoke him older in mind than in years.
+
+Edred felt that his junior was better fitted to cope with a spy
+than he himself; and gladly taking the other office upon himself,
+he walked gaily forward, whistling a roundelay as he moved, and
+affecting not to see the dark figure by the oak, which pressed
+closer and closer out of sight as the lad strode by.
+
+"Verily he means to remain unseen," thought Edred to himself. "If
+he had not been a spy he would have greeted me as I passed. He is
+after no good. Thank Heaven we have seen and heard what we have! We
+can so manage now that Brother Emmanuel set not foot beyond the
+courtyard for long enough to come--not till he may sally forth to
+make his way to the coast."
+
+And then a sudden fear smote the boy that per chance this night
+journey to the coast might not be so easy to accomplish as had been
+hoped. If the cunning prior had set a watch upon Chad with the very
+object of preventing the escape of his intended victim, might it
+not well be that his father's forethought would be of no avail?
+
+But it would not do to lose heart--time might show a way of escape;
+and Edred hurried within, and found Brother Emmanuel awaiting his
+tardy pupils, the great Bible open before him, the sunset light
+illuminating his face till, to the boy's ardent imagination, it
+seemed to be encircled by a nimbus.
+
+His story was soon excitedly told, and as Brother Emmanuel heard of
+Sir Oliver's sudden journey, a look almost as of pain crossed his
+face.
+
+"I have told thy father that I cannot and will not suffer harm to
+befall him and his through his kindness to me. Boy, boy, these be
+evil days in which to offend the powers that be; and it were
+better, far better, I should give myself up to death than that hurt
+should fall upon those I love and those who have befriended me with
+such generosity and love."
+
+But Edred passionately disclaimed and explained.
+
+"Brother, holy father, speak not so! thou wilt break our hearts! We
+love thee! thou knowest that we love thee! And we think, we are
+assured, that we can yet save thee, and ourselves too. Do not break
+our hearts by giving thyself up ere we have tried our utmost. It
+may be--nay, I am assured of it--that our blessed Saviour has a
+great work for thee to do for Him somewhere. Has He not Himself
+charged His servants if they be persecuted in one city to flee to
+another? He has not bid them give themselves up to their foes, to
+be hindered from doing the work He has put it into their hearts to
+do.
+
+"Pardon my forwardness if I seem to teach my preceptor. I do but
+repeat words thou hast taught me. Stay with us--stay at Chad. There
+be ways and means both for hiding and for flight of which few know
+or dream. Let us have this alms to do for our Lord, that we hide
+and save one of His servants. Thou canst little know what grief and
+sorrow thou wouldst cause to us, or thou couldst not talk of giving
+thyself up."
+
+The boy's earnestness was so deep that it could not but produce an
+impression. Although full of heroic courage and capabilities of
+self sacrifice, it was against human nature that Brother Emmanuel
+should desire to cast away his life, and that not by raising a
+protest for any point of conscience, but simply to be quietly put
+out of the way, that he might no longer expose the luxury and vice
+prevailing in the monastic retreat of which he was a member.
+
+He had seen a row of underground niches, some of which had been
+walled up; and tradition asserted that living monks had been thus
+buried alive for being untrue to their vows. He quite believed the
+prior capable of accusing him of the same sin and ordering him to a
+like fate. In the eyes of the haughty ecclesiastic such a betrayal
+of cloister secrets would be looked upon as treachery to his vows,
+whilst in reality it was his very love for his vows, and his horror
+at their violation, which had inspired the pen that had poured
+forth burning words of denunciation and scorn. To die openly for
+the cause would have been one thing--a martyr has ofttimes spoken
+more eloquently by his death than by his life--but to be thus
+buried in a living grave would benefit none; and who would not
+shrink from such a fate?
+
+The pause which succeeded Edred's impassioned appeal was broken by
+the entrance of Julian, flushed and heated.
+
+"It is as we thought. The house is watched. There be six or seven
+spies posted around it--most of them lay brothers, but some monks
+themselves. Every entrance is watched closely. None can go in or
+out unmarked by one or another. Doubtless they have some signal
+which may at any time bring all of them together to one spot.
+
+"Brother Emmanuel, thou must not adventure thyself beyond the
+courtyard till this watch ceases. Were they spies of my Lord of
+Mortimer's, we might go forth and drive them hence. But none may
+lay a finger on a monk. They are all ready with a story that they
+are on the watch for some heretic in hiding in the woods. I spoke
+to one to see what he would say, and he began about the hunchback
+of the fair, whom they have not caught yet, and professed to be
+watching for him. Doubtless they would all say the same did any
+question them; but they strive to keep out of sight as far as may
+be, and some have found hollow trees where they might pass days and
+nights and none be the wiser."
+
+There could be no study for the boys that day; they were too deeply
+moved and excited. Moreover, Edred had his father's charge to keep,
+and as sundown was nigh at hand, the two brothers visited every
+gate and portal and saw the house made fast within and without.
+
+An air of excitement and mystery seemed to permeate the place. The
+servants had caught some of the infection, and whispers of loyalty
+and affection were murmured many times in the boys' ears as they
+pursued their round. At last, all being safely ordered, they went
+by common consent to their own room, and stood looking at the
+secret door which led to the hiding place none knew of but
+themselves and Warbel.
+
+"I trow we shall need it now," said Edred. "But all is in readiness
+for the fugitive; all has been done save to bring in the victuals.
+Brother, shall we do that this very night? I would there were a
+supply there for a month, and a couple of gallon jars of good mead
+and some bottles of wine. We must put water there, too, but not
+till the last minute. They say men must have water, else they die;
+but sure they could live for long on good mead and ale. Hath
+Bertram any plan for getting water to the chamber save what we can
+carry ourselves? He said he would not rest till we had done
+somewhat; but--"
+
+A light sparkled in Julian's eyes.
+
+"Come, and thou shalt see, thou brother of books," he said. "Whilst
+thou hast been doing thy penance for what sin we know not, and been
+reading amain with Brother Emmanuel, we have not been idle. Come,
+and I will show thee what we have contrived. I trow none need
+perish of thirst in the secret chamber now who knows aught of our
+contrivance."
+
+With eager steps Julian led the way, and Edred no less eagerly
+followed. It was very dark in the secret chamber; but the means of
+kindling a light were now there, and soon a small dim lantern was
+lighted.
+
+"Come hither," said Julian, taking the light and leading the way
+into a corner that lay beneath the leads of the house; and when
+there Edred saw a metal trough or receiver, rudely made but
+effectual for the purpose of holding any liquid, something similar
+to what the animals in the yard were fed and watered from. Above
+this trough was a piece of iron pipe with a bung at the end.
+
+"That trough and pipe Bertram and I fashioned in the blacksmith's
+forge with our own hands," said the boy proudly, "and I trow both
+are good enow and strong. Dost know what does the other end of the
+pipe? Why, we have inserted it into the great rainwater tank yonder
+above our heads, which our grandsire contrived, and which is fed
+from the roofs and battlements of all the towers. Thou hast heard
+our father tell how he read of such things in days of old, when men
+built wondrous palaces, and had hanging gardens, and I know not
+what beside. He set the tank up there, and, as thou knowest, it is
+not now greatly used, albeit there is always water there, and at
+times men draw it forth. It may not be the best or purest, but it
+will serve for washing, and for drinking too were a man in a great
+strait. It is all pure and sweet now; for in the thunderstorm three
+nights since Bertram got up and let off all the stagnant water by
+the pipe which can be opened below, and the rain soon filled it
+again, it poured down with such goodwill. We need not fear that any
+captive will die of thirst. He has but to draw this bung and water
+will pour forth into this trough till he stops it again. He can
+pour away the surplus down the pipe with the dust and such like.
+
+"I trow whoever lives up here awhile will have no such bad housing.
+And if we but get the place victualled this night, it will be ready
+for Brother Emmanuel whensoever he may need it."
+
+
+
+Chapter VII: An Imposing Spectacle.
+
+
+"To appear at the priory with all our household! Surely, my
+husband, that command is something strange?"
+
+Lady Chadgrove raised her eyes anxiously to her lord's face, to see
+thereon an answering look of perplexity not untinged by anxiety. He
+was perusing a paper held in his hands.
+
+"Such is the missive," he remarked. "It was brought by a lay
+brother but now. Methinks the fellow is yet in the kitchen. Our
+mead is not to be lightly disdained. I will send young Julian to
+talk with him, and learn if may be the cause of this strange
+summons. I would not willingly give cause of offence to the lord
+prior; and the money has been paid that was promised, so methinks
+he means no hurt to me or mine. But it is not safe to adventure
+oneself into the lion's mouth. I would gladly know what is behind
+all this. I am something ill at ease."
+
+"All the household would mean Brother Emmanuel likewise," said the
+lady. "Perchance it is but a means of drawing him within the
+toils."
+
+"It is like enough. It will be the day on which the week of grace
+expires. Would to God I could see my way more clearly! I am in a
+great strait betwixt mine own conscience and the authority of the
+Church. How can I deliver up a faithful and devoted son of the
+Church to certain death, when my house is his only refuge and
+protection? Yet how may I refuse obedience to my spiritual fathers
+and superiors, to whom I owe submission in all things, in right of
+their office, albeit as men I know them to be--faulty?".
+
+He paused, as if reluctant to put his thoughts into words even to
+his wife. He was going through that mental and spiritual struggle
+which was speedily to do so great a work in the world--that
+struggle which led to the final fall of the religious houses in
+this land. Viewed as a God-appointed ordinance, or at least as a
+bulwark and rampart of the Church, it seemed a fearful thing to
+hold them in aught but awe and reverence, and to look upon their
+sons as saints and godly men, in whom the Spirit of the Lord was
+working. But when the corrupt practices within those walls were
+known, when men were convinced, sorely against their will, that the
+inmates were licentious, depraved, covetous, and tyrannical, then
+indeed it became hard to recognize their God-appointed mission.
+
+Sir Oliver was no heretic; he had not even the faint sympathy with
+and comprehension of the tenets of the heretics which were creeping
+into some enlightened minds. He had imbibed some new and
+enlightened views from stanch sons of the Church, who were
+themselves preaching the doctrine of internal reform, but he went
+no further in these matters than his teachers. The very name of
+heresy was odious to him, but none the less did it go sorely
+against the grain to be a slave to the haughty Prior of Chadwater,
+and at his bidding to violate (as it seemed to him) the sacred laws
+of hospitality.
+
+Whilst Julian was gone upon his errand, he paced the floor
+restlessly and moodily.
+
+"I would we had got him off before this coil began. But who could
+have thought it would come--and Brother Emmanuel so true and
+faithful a son of the Church? Knowest thou, wife, that he keeps
+vigil three nights in the week in the chantry, watching
+sleeplessly, lest the Lord coming suddenly should find the whole
+house sleeping? Edred keeps watch one night, and good old Margaret
+another. I did but lately know this thing. Brother Emmanuel holds
+that the Church should ever be watching and waiting for her Lord,
+lest He come as a thief in the night. He would have prayers
+ceaselessly ascending before Him. It is his grief and pain that
+within the cloister walls, whence he has come, no true vigil is
+kept, but that sloth and ease have taken the place of watching and
+vigil and prayer. And such a man as that they would have me deliver
+to his death!"
+
+"Art sure they mean him ill, my husband? It seems scarce possible."
+
+"I am very sure that it is so," answered the knight, with a stern
+glance bent upon the sunny landscape beyond the open window. "It is
+strange, but it is true; and I sometimes think that some fearful
+and unlooked-for judgment must some day fall upon men who--"
+
+But Sir Oliver paused, for his wife had made a gesture, as if to
+check the impetuous words that sprang to his lips. He smiled a
+little darkly.
+
+"Thou art right, good dame. Such words are better left unspoke. If
+it be dangerous to think some things, it be more dangerous to speak
+one's thoughts. Let it be enough for us that the Lord reigneth, be
+the earth never so unquiet. He sitteth a judge and a king. In His
+hands are the final issues of all things."
+
+The lady bent her head with due reverence, and then asked eagerly:
+
+"And when does the fishing smack sail?"
+
+Sir Oliver shook his head impatiently.
+
+"Not for full fourteen days: it had but just come into port, and
+there be much merchandise to unlade and lade again. The skipper was
+an honest fellow, and a true-hearted man to boot. He would not take
+my gold, but said his passenger should bring it with him when he
+came; for he knew there was a chance he might not contrive to come,
+and he would not receive aught for services he might never have
+power to render. But he knows his business, and once safe on board
+the sloop our fugitive will be safe enow. But not till it be almost
+ready for sea--not till the skipper could weigh anchor at a
+moment's notice. He himself said he must not come aboard till the
+last moment. Were any hue and cry to be made after him, any vessel
+in port would be certain to be searched. How to keep him safe for
+these fourteen--nay, it is but twelve days now--is the thing that
+is perplexing me. Until the close of the appointed week naught will
+be done; but there will be one long week after that which will tax
+our resources to the utmost. And this summons from the prior makes
+the whole question the more difficult."
+
+"And the boys say that the house is being watched. Hast not heard
+as much? There be spies from the priory posted round and about. All
+the gates are watched. Edred thinks it is to strive to seize
+Brother Emmanuel should he venture forth from the shelter of the
+walls.
+
+"I like not the thought of all those prying eyes. My husband, these
+be strange times in which we dwell."
+
+Sir Oliver's face was dark and thoughtful.
+
+"Ay, verily they be. How can men wonder that the ignorant and
+unlearned turn with loathing and scorn from such crooked and
+cowardly ways?--
+
+"How now, Julian? Hast learned the cause of this ado? What says the
+lay brother? Hast thou sounded him with care and with all due
+caution?"
+
+Julian and Edred came in together. Julian looked flushed and
+excited, Edred pale and thoughtful, and his eyes were glowing with
+a strange fire.
+
+"Ay, verily, we have found it all out," cried the younger boy, with
+eager excitement of manner. "Methinks it will be a fine sight.
+Father, hast heard of the thing which men call the 'Great
+Abjuration'--was not that the name, Edred?"
+
+The elder boy made a sign of assent.
+
+"It is for the heretics and Lollards," pursued Julian eagerly. "It
+hath been done before in many places, and here it is to be done two
+days from hence. All those persons who are suspected of heresy, or
+have been found guilty, are to be called before the lord prior and
+the Lord of Mortimer, and they will be bidden to abjure all their
+false doctrines publicly. The whole village will be assembled to
+hear them recant; high and low, rich and poor, all are to meet
+together in the great quadrangle of the priory to hear and see. The
+lay brother says it will be a fine sight. If they will not recant,
+the prior will give them over to the Lord of Mortimer, who will see
+that they suffer as heretics are wont to do. If they abjure their
+errors, the prior will set them their penances; and these be no
+light thing, by what the brother says. Some will be branded in the
+cheek, that they carry the mark of their shame all their days; some
+will have a green badge affixed to their arm, to wear until they
+have leave to cast it off, that all men may know they have been
+touched by the pollution; whilst others will be set to menial toil
+in the monasteries, and will perchance spend the rest of their
+lives there, sundered from their friends and their homes and all
+those whom they love.
+
+"In truth, I marvel how any man can meddle with heresy in these
+days. The bishops have resolved to stamp it out once and for all,
+and methinks they will do so right well if they take such steps as
+these."
+
+Sir Oliver's face looked a little relieved as he heard his son's
+words.
+
+"Then everybody within the district is to be summoned to meet at
+the priory upon this same day?"
+
+"Ay, verily; all are to be there, from the highest to the lowest.
+The lay brothers are going round the country, bidding all to the
+spectacle. It is thought that after all have seen what will take
+place upon that day, there will be no longer any fear of heresy
+round Chad and Mortimer."
+
+The boy ran off to try to learn more details. Edred stood looking
+at his father with troubled eyes.
+
+"Father," he said, in a low voice, "must Brother Emmanuel go with
+us that day?"
+
+Sir Oliver looked down at the paper in his hands.
+
+"It bids me to attend with my family and all my household, save
+such as must be left to take due care of the house in my absence,"
+said he. Then he paused awhile in silent thought, and looking up he
+said suddenly, "Go fetch Brother Emmanuel hither."
+
+Edred vanished silently and swiftly, and soon afterwards returned
+with the monk at his side.
+
+The past few days had left their mark on the thin, spiritual face
+of the young ecclesiastic. The knowledge of the peril in which he
+stood had not daunted his courage, though it had drawn lines in his
+face and deepened the fire which burned within those dark, resolute
+eyes. His face looked as though he had slept but little, as though
+his nights had been passed in watching and prayer, as was indeed
+the case. He had an air of calm, resolute courage and hopefulness,
+though it was plain that he knew the danger of his position, and
+was fully alive to the peril which menaced him.
+
+Sir Oliver placed the paper in his hand, and watched him silently
+whilst he perused it. When he had finished he handed it back, and
+stood for a moment looking out of the window with an expression of
+thoughtful concentration on his face. At the end of a few moments
+he looked up quickly, and said:
+
+"You and yours will attend, Sir Oliver?"
+
+"Yes; we must needs do that. But you?"
+
+Brother Emmanuel lifted his head and threw it back with a gesture
+of resolution and independence.
+
+"Sir Oliver," he said, "upon the day when your household is bidden
+to the priory, I cease, by the command of my superior, to be a
+member of this household. Upon that day your command over me (if I
+may use the word)--your responsibility over me--ceases. Whatever I
+may do or not do is no concern of yours. I am no longer the
+instructor of your sons, nor the priest within your walls. What I
+do I do of mine own self. None can rightly call you to task for it.
+Let that be your safeguard; let that be your answer to all
+questions. The prior has ordained that from that day I cease to
+remain here. From the dawning of that day you have no part nor lot
+in my life. I take its control into mine own hands, and it were
+better you should not even know whither I go nor what I do."
+
+Sir Oliver bent a searching look upon him.
+
+"So be it," he answered, after a moment's thought. "But this one
+word I say to thee: Thou hast been true and faithful to me and
+mine; wherefore my roof and my walls shall be thy shelter until
+thou goest forth of thine own freewill. Be not afraid to remain
+here with me. I will defend thee with every power I have until such
+time as thou mayest safely escape beyond the seas."
+
+He held out his hand. The monk took it and pressed it between both
+of his.
+
+"The Lord deal with thee and thine as thou hast dealt with me," was
+the reply, spoken in deep, earnest accents.
+
+The knight bent his head in response to the benediction; and
+Brother Emmanuel moved silently away, closely followed by Edred,
+who looked pale and troubled.
+
+"Thou dost not think he will present himself at the priory with the
+rest of the world?" asked Lady Chadgrove, with anxiety in face and
+voice; and her husband thoughtfully shook his head as he made
+reply:
+
+"I trow not. I have spoken to him of that before, and he was very
+well resolved to fly the country and strive to finish the work he
+has begun, to join the band who are toiling might and main to bring
+a purer and holier spirit within the pale of the Church and her
+servants. It is a work to which he has long felt called, and he
+believes that it will be faithfully carried out somewhere, if not
+here. For a while he will be safer beyond the seas; but he may
+return and join with those in Oxford and London who are toiling in
+the same cause. He knows of the sloop--where it lies and when it
+sails; and I trow he is laying plans of his own. It were better not
+to ask of these. I would rather walk in ignorance. A man cannot
+betray, however inadvertently, what he knows not, and the subtle
+skill in questioning possessed by our reverend prior might win the
+secret from any unskilled person ere he knew he had revealed it. I
+know not what he means to do, nor shall I seek to know. But he has
+courage, spirit, and a consciousness of integrity which may carry
+him through much. Methinks he has judged wisely and well both for
+us and himself.
+
+"When this day comes," touching the paper in his hand, "it is very
+true that I am no longer accountable for him as a member of my
+house hold. He has received his recall from his superior. It is for
+him to answer to it or not as he thinks best."
+
+A sense of excitement and uneasiness pervaded the whole of the
+house during the two following days. In all men's mouths was talk
+of this solemn abjuration which was about to be forced upon all
+those suspected of heresy; and many persons who had tampered
+slightly and privately with doubtful matters went about looking
+uneasy and troubled, fearful lest they might find themselves
+accused of illicit practices, and be summoned forth to do penance
+in a more or less severe form before they could hope to receive
+absolution.
+
+Sir Oliver Chadgrove's household was strictly orthodox in all
+outward matters; but the leaven of Lollardism was wonderfully
+penetrating, and he himself had suspected and feared that some of
+his servants might be tainted therewith. He awaited the day with
+almost as much anxiety as any of his dependants, for he well knew
+that the Lord of Mortimer would lose no opportunity of dealing him
+a heavy blow; and if he could be proved guilty of harbouring
+heretics or even suspected persons in his house, it would give his
+enemy a handle against him that he would not be slow to use.
+
+As for the boys, it was plain that something of unwonted excitement
+was agitating their minds; but in the general anxiety pervading the
+whole household little account was taken of this.
+
+The day came at last, dawning fair and clear. Sir Oliver assembled
+his household early in the courtyard, and every retainer was clad
+in his best and mounted upon his best charger. It was well to make
+a goodly display of strength and wealth on an occasion like the
+present. Doubtless the Lord of Mortimer would be there with all his
+train, and Chad must not cut a much poorer figure in the eyes of
+the beholders.
+
+None knew better than Sir Oliver how far a goodly seeming went in
+condoning offences and allaying suspicion, especially in the eyes
+of such a worldly-wise man as the Prior of Chadwater. A proud
+bearing, a goodly following, a gorgeous retinue, would be a far
+better proof of orthodoxy in his eyes than any saintliness of life
+and conduct. Mortimer would know that right well, though, as he had
+been elected as the secular agent to assist the prior in his work
+today, plainly no stigma of any kind was thought to rest upon his
+household. Sir Oliver knew that Mortimer was a larger property than
+Chad, and that the baron was a greater man than the knight. It was
+reasonable enough that he had been selected for this office, and
+such choice need imply no distrust of himself on the prior's part;
+but still there was an uneasy, underlying consciousness that he was
+suspected and watched, and the espionage which had been kept up all
+this while on his house was a plain proof that he was not entirely
+trusted.
+
+The priory and its adjacent buildings formed a very fine specimen
+of medieval architecture. The abbey was in itself a masterpiece of
+beauty, and the great block formed by refectories and dormitories
+stood at right angles to it. The prior's house, with its ample
+accommodation and its guest chambers, formed an other side to the
+great quadrangle; whilst the granaries, storehouses, and such-like
+buildings formed the fourth--the whole enclosing a very large
+space, which formed the exercising ground of the monks when they
+were kept by their rules within the precincts of their home.
+
+The smoothest of green grass, carefully kept and tended, formed the
+carpet of this enclosure; and today the whole quadrangle formed an
+animated and picturesque spectacle on account of the shifting,
+many-coloured groups of people gathered together there with looks
+of expectation and wonder.
+
+A holiday appearance was presented by the crowd; for however ill at
+ease any person might feel, it was his aim and object to look as
+jovial and well assured as possible. Every knee was bent whenever
+any monk appeared. The professions of reverence and orthodoxy were
+almost comic in their display.
+
+The whole of the rural population had gathered in this open space
+when the master of Chad and his retainers rode in, followed by the
+humbler servants and many women and children on foot. But the Lord
+of Mortimer had not yet put in an appearance, though some of his
+retainers and men-at-arms might be seen mingling with the crowd;
+and Sir Oliver and his wife and sons looked curiously about them as
+they reined back their horses against the wall, wondering whether
+they should dismount altogether, and what the order of the day's
+proceedings was to be.
+
+There were two great raised platforms at one end of the open
+enclosure, and upon these platforms, both of which were draped with
+cloth, many seats had been arranged. One of these was canopied, and
+was plainly for the prior; but beyond this Sir Oliver could be sure
+of nothing.
+
+When, however, it became known that the party from Chad had
+arrived, a lay brother came out and bid them dismount and send away
+their steeds to the meadow beyond, where one or two of the servants
+could see to them; and as soon as this had been done, Sir Oliver
+was told that he and his lady would occupy certain seats upon one
+of the platforms, but that there would not be room for more than
+his eldest son to have a place there beside him. The younger boys
+must remain in the crowd.
+
+Edred and Julian were well pleased at this, and gave each other a
+quick pressure of the hand. Edred was intensely excited; and
+gradually edged his way to a good position not far from the
+platform, that he might hear and see everything; and Julian stood
+beside him, as intent upon the proceedings as anyone.
+
+With a great show of ecclesiastical pomp, forth came the prior with
+his monks in attendance, and closely following them the haughty
+Lord of Mortimer; with his son-in-law, Sir Edward Chadwell, by his
+side, and his daughter following her husband. With these came many
+knights and persons of standing in the county; and whilst the prior
+and the monks grouped themselves upon one platform, the barons,
+knights, and nobles took their appointed places on the other, the
+owners of Mortimer and Chad being for once in their lives elbow to
+elbow, and constrained to exchange words and looks of greeting.
+
+A deep hush fell upon the crowd, and the people surged back against
+the walls, leaving the centre space vacant. At the same time
+certain men wearing the garb and the air of jailers or executioners
+came forth and stood in the midst of the open space--one of them
+bearing the glowing brazier and the branding iron, which he placed
+on a slab of stone in the very centre of the enclosure.
+
+When all preparations were complete, the prior arose, and in a loud
+and solemn voice commanded that the prisoners should be brought
+forth--those persons who had not been merely suspected of heresy,
+but had been found with heretical books in their possession, or
+were known to be in the habit of meeting together to read such
+books and hear the pestilent doctrines which vile and wicked
+persons were propagating in the land.
+
+At that command a number of monks appeared, leading bound, and in
+scant and miserable clothing, about a score of men and women,
+foremost amongst whom was the hunchback, whose face and voice were
+alike well known to Edred. Most of the prisoners were trembling and
+cowering; but he held his head erect, and looked calmly round upon
+the assembled potentates. There was no fear or shrinking in his
+pinched face. He eyed the prior with a look as unbending as his
+own.
+
+Then began a long harangue from the great man, in which the wiles
+of the devil in the pestilent doctrines of the heretics, so-called
+Lollards, were forcibly and not illogically pointed out. When no
+man might give answer, when none might show where misrepresentation
+came in, where there was nothing given but the one side of the
+question, it was not difficult to make an excellent case against
+the accused. The early heretics, mostly unlettered people, always
+marred the purity of the cause by falling into exaggeration and
+foolishness, by denouncing what was good as well as what was
+corrupt in a system against which they were revolting--thus laying
+themselves open to attack and confutation, and alienating from them
+many who would have striven to stand their friend and to have
+gently set them right had they been less headstrong and less prone
+to tear away and condemn every practice the meaning of which they
+were, through ignorance and want of comprehension, unable to enter
+into.
+
+In the hands of the skilful prior their doctrines were indeed made
+to look vile and blasphemous and foolish in the extreme. Many
+persons shuddered at hearing what words had been used by them with
+regard to the holy sacraments; and most of the persons brought to
+their trial were weeping and terrified at their own conduct before
+the prior's speech was half through. Only the hunchback retained
+his bold front, and looked back with scorn into the face of the
+prelate as he made point after point in his scathing denunciation.
+
+When the harangue ended, the prior made a sign to his servants, and
+immediately one of the most timorous and craven of the prisoners
+was brought up before him. He was far too cunning a judge to try
+first to bend the spirit of the hunchback. He knew that with that
+man he could do nothing, and he knew too what marvels were
+sometimes accomplished by the example of self devotion. So
+commencing with a weak and trembling woman, who was ready to sink
+into the ground with fear and shame merely at being thus had up
+before the eyes of the whole place, he easily obtained a solemn
+recantation and abjuration of every form of heresy; and in a tone
+of wonderful mildness, though of solemn warning, too, told her that
+since she was a woman and young, and had doubtless been led away by
+others, she should be pardoned after she had paid a visit barefoot
+to a shrine forty miles off--a shrine much derided by the heretic
+teachers--and had returned in like fashion, having tasted nothing
+but bread and water the whole time of the journey.
+
+Then came, one after another, the weakest and most timorous of the
+craven crowd. The infection of fear had seized upon them. Ignorant,
+superstitious, scarcely understanding the new teachings that had
+attracted them, and fearfully terrified of falling under the ban of
+the Church under whose shelter they had always lived, was it
+wonderful that one after another should abjure their heretical
+opinions, and swear to listen to the enticer no more? Some strove
+to ask questions upon the points which troubled them; but scarce
+any sort of disputing was allowed. The prior was subtle in fence,
+and by a few scathing words could generally quell the questioner
+and make him wish his objection unspoken.
+
+And those who showed a tendency towards disputation were far more
+harshly dealt with than those who abjured at once. The red-hot
+iron, the badge of shame, the servitude which might be lifelong
+were imposed upon them. So a sense of despair fell upon the little
+band, and they yielded one by one; only three refusing to take the
+words of the oath--the hunchback and two more, one being a lad of
+about sixteen summers; and after using every threat and argument to
+overcome their obstinacy, the prior called upon the Lord of
+Mortimer as the representative of the secular arm, and delivered
+the prisoners over to him to be dealt with after the manner of the
+law.
+
+A shuddering groan went up, as if involuntarily, from many throats
+as the prisoners were led away by the guards of Mortimer. The prior
+looked sternly round to check the demonstration, reminding the
+people that the burning of the body was as nothing, it was the
+eternal burning of the soul in hell that men should fear; and that
+if in the midst of the flames the guilty persons recanted their
+sins, it was just possible that even then the merciful God would
+hear and receive their prayer, and that they might be saved from
+the eternal death of the soul.
+
+Then somewhat changing his tone, though still speaking with gravity
+and even with sadness, he told the people of the pain with which he
+had heard stories of the sympathy evinced by some even amongst
+those standing about him for the wicked and pestilent disturbers of
+the public peace and the safety of the Church. One or two persons
+he called upon by name, and rebuked with some severity for words
+reported to have been dropped by them which savoured, if not of
+heresy itself, yet of carelessness and irreverence for sacred
+things which bordered dangerously on heresy. One after another
+these persons came forward trembling, asked pardon, and were
+dismissed not unkindly, but with many an admonition for the future.
+It was made plain and patent to all that the bishops had absolutely
+resolved to stamp out heresy once and for all; and for once the
+prior and abbots, the monks and the friars, were in accord and
+working hand in hand. It was useless for any to hope to stem such a
+tide as that--such was the tenor of the prior's speech--heresy was
+to be exterminated. On that point there was no manner of doubt; and
+if, knowing this, persons chose deliberately to put themselves
+under the ban of the law, well, their blood must be upon their own
+head. Neither God nor man would have mercy upon them.
+
+Several of the retainers and a few of the actual household of Chad
+had received admonitions of this sort. Sir Oliver looked on
+uneasily, catching a subdued look of triumph in the eyes of his
+rival and foe. He did not believe his household seriously tainted
+with heresy. He knew that certain of them who had been with him in
+London had imbibed the teaching of Dean Colet and his pupils, and
+he did not know, any more than the dean himself, that the Lollards
+secretly encouraged each other to go and hear a man who spoke so
+much of the truth they themselves held.
+
+The line where orthodoxy ends and heresy begins has been at all
+times hard to define, and perhaps the upholders of the "Church"
+knew as little as anybody how hard this definition was becoming.
+
+Several persons had stood forth (invited by the prior to do so) and
+confessed to dangerous sentiments which they now saw to be utterly
+wrong, and vowed to abjure forever; or had accused other persons of
+words which required explanation, or of deeds which suggested a
+leaning towards secret meetings where heresy might be discussed.
+
+But the day's proceedings seemed drawing to a close, and nothing of
+any great peril to the Lord of Chad had occurred, when just at the
+close of the afternoon Brother Fabian suddenly came forward and
+whispered a few words in the prior's ear; and he, after a moment of
+apparent hesitation, spoke aloud.
+
+"It is with great grief that I learn that one of our own brethren
+has been heard to utter words which sound strangely like those of
+heresy; but since it is our bounden duty that strict justice be
+done to all, whether high or low, rich or poor, nay, whether it be
+our own son or brother, I here call upon Brother Emmanuel to stand
+forth publicly, as others have done, and answer the charge brought
+against him."
+
+The prior looked round as he spoke these words in a loud voice; but
+there was no movement either in the crowd or amongst the cowled
+monks, and he spoke the name again without eliciting any response.
+
+The Lord of Mortimer leaned forward and spoke to his neighbour.
+
+"Methinks this brother was a member of your household, Sir Oliver,"
+he said, with a gleam of malice in his eye. "Surely you received a
+mandate bidding you come with all your household. Where is this
+preceptor of your sons?"
+
+"His duties ceased last night," replied Sir Oliver calmly, in a
+tone loud enough to reach the prior's ears. "He had command to
+return today to the priory, and last evening he said farewell to me
+and mine. I have not seen him today."
+
+"Did he know of the summons to all to attend the gathering here
+today?"
+
+Sir Oliver bent his head.
+
+"He did. I showed him the paper myself."
+
+"Then wherefore is he not here?"
+
+"That know I not. I did not know he was not here. I do not know it
+even now. I have never known Brother Emmanuel fail in obedience
+yet."
+
+The name was being whispered all round. The monks were professing
+to be searching for the missing brother. The prior looked at Sir
+Oliver with some sternness.
+
+"Where is this monk?" he asked,
+
+"I do not know," was the firm response. "I have not seen him since
+his farewell yesternight."
+
+"You thought he was coming hither?"
+
+"I knew naught. He told me naught of his purposes."
+
+The prior's eyes flashed ominously.
+
+"Have a care, Sir Oliver, have a care. Brother Emmanuel is yet
+within the walls of Chad. I have reason to know he has not left
+them the whole of this past week. He has been disobedient to his
+vow of submission. He has not come at my bidding."
+
+"I know naught of it," replied the knight calmly.
+
+The Lord of Mortimer leaned forward once more with an evil smile in
+his eyes.
+
+"Let not mistaken generosity get the better of prudence, my
+brother," he said, with derisiveness in his tone. "You know well
+that the penalty of hiding and harbouring a heretic is little short
+of that of heresy itself. Have a care you do not lose all just for
+the caprice of the moment, which in time to come you will have
+leisure bitterly to repent."
+
+The prior, too, was eying him sternly.
+
+"Lord Mortimer gives good counsel, Sir Oliver," he said. "Thou
+knowest I am no enemy of thine. What has this day passed must have
+shown thee that. Thou knowest that there be some here who might
+have been called before me today to answer for their deeds who have
+been spared for their youth and gentle birth. Thou hast had proof
+that I am no enemy of thine. But the walls of Chad must not harbour
+a heretic. Brother Emmanuel is there; he hath been there, and hath
+not sallied forth this many days, showing that a guilty conscience
+keeps him within. He cannot go forth without my knowledge; and if
+thou wilt not give him up to me, I must obtain authority and have
+the house searched and the man dragged forth. And I tell thee
+freely, if it be found that thou hast lent thine aid in harbouring
+a heretic and disobedient monk, thy lands will be forfeit, if not
+thy life, and the Lord of Mortimer will be likewise Lord of Chad."
+
+At that moment, had any person had eyes to heed it, it might have
+been observed that Edred and Julian slipped like veritable shadows
+through the packed crowd. The next moment they had reached the
+gateway, had passed under it without exciting any observation, and
+as soon as they reached the cover of the forest, they set off to
+run towards Chad as fast as their legs could carry them--far faster
+than their horses could have borne them through the narrow paths of
+the tangled wood.
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII: Hidden Away.
+
+
+Fleetly, silently, untiringly ran the two brothers, without
+exchanging a single word of their purpose even to each other. The
+distance from the priory to the house was a matter of some two
+miles, but to the trained and hardy limbs of the country-bred lads
+a two miles' run was a trifle, and they were only slightly flushed
+and winded when they paused, by mutual consent, a short distance
+from Chad, at a point where the tall turrets and battlements became
+visible over the treetops.
+
+Julian, who was a few paces in advance, pulled up short, and caught
+his brother by the arm.
+
+"Hist!" he whispered cautiously. "I trow the prior's spies be still
+on the watch. We must not be seen coming in this guise. Let us wait
+a few moments till our breath be returned; then we will go forward
+boldly and openly.
+
+"Edred, have a care how thou answerest me when I shall speak to
+thee anon. We have a part to play, and Brother Emmanuel's life may
+hang upon how we play it."
+
+Edred nodded assent. He was more weary, because more deeply
+excited, than his brother, and no sleep had visited his eyes the
+previous night. It had been spent with Brother Emmanuel in vigil in
+the chantry. The strain of watching and deeply-seated anxiety was
+telling upon the boy. He was glad that Julian had all his wits
+about him, for his own head seemed swimming and his mind unhinged.
+
+They stood silent awhile, until both had regained their breath;
+then putting on their caps, which for convenience they had carried
+in their hands hitherto, they started forth again at a leisurely
+pace, and with an air of openness and fearlessness, in the
+direction of the main entrance, talking to each other as they went
+in no softened tones.
+
+"It was a fine sight!" cried Julian. "I would not have missed it
+for worlds. That villainous hunchback! So he was a damnable heretic
+after all! I grieve we ever stood his friend. May he perish like
+the vile creature he is! I will ask Brother Emmanuel to set me a
+penance for having touched him that day when we thought him an
+innocent trader.
+
+"Edred, thinkest thou that it can be true that Brother Emmanuel is
+himself a heretic? If it be, we must drive him forth with blows and
+curses. To sit down at board with a heretic, to hear teaching from
+his lips! Beshrew me, but one might as well have a friend from the
+pit for an instructor! It cannot be; surely it cannot be."
+
+The boy spoke hotly and angrily. He had stopped short as if in the
+heat of argument, and Edred saw by the flash in his eye that he had
+caught sight of some lurking spy close at hand.
+
+"Belike no," answered Edred cautiously, but taking his cue
+instantly from the other. "I did not well hear what Brother Fabian
+said; surely it could be naught so bad as that?"
+
+"I scarcely heard myself. I was something aweary by that time of
+the spectacle, and methought all the heretics had been dealt with.
+I saw that thou, like myself, wouldst fain stretch thy limbs once
+again, and I had shifted too far away to be certain what was said.
+But I did hear the name of Brother Emmanuel spoken, and there was a
+call for him, and he came not.
+
+"Edred, can it be that he feared to come? Hath he a guilty
+conscience? If that be so, shall we strive to find him and keep
+watch upon him ourselves, that if the good prior comes to search
+for him at Chad we may be able to give him up, though he have
+hidden himself never so cunningly?"
+
+"Marry, a good thought. It is certainly something strange that he
+did not come at the prior's summons-and he a brother of the order
+too. Sure, it looks somewhat as though he were afraid. But if that
+be so, we shall scarce find him at Chad. He will have benefited by
+the absence of the household to make good his escape.
+
+"Beshrew me, but he is a crafty knave. Who would have thought it of
+him?"
+
+"When men turn heretic they seem to be indued with all the cunning
+of the devil!" cried Julian hotly. "But let us not dally here; let
+us run within and strive to seek and to find him. It may be he will
+think he may hide himself the better in some nook or corner of the
+house, since he be well known all around; and the good prior said
+somewhat of having kept a watch upon him. But I trow he cannot hide
+so well but what we shall find him. I would fain earn my
+forgiveness for having shielded one heretic by helping to give up
+another.
+
+"Come, Edred, let us be going. Those priests are as crafty as foxes
+when the heretic leaven gets into them."
+
+The brothers dashed away again towards the house; and when once
+within the shelter of the walls, Julian nipped his brother's hand,
+saying in a whisper:
+
+"There was a spy overhead who drank in every word. He had no notion
+mine eyes had seen him, for he was marvellous well concealed, and I
+never should have found his hiding place had I not chanced one day
+to see him climbing into it. Nobody will suspect now that we have
+had a hand in the hiding of the good brother. But let us make all
+haste, for no man knows when the bloodhounds may be upon us to
+strive to take him away."
+
+Edred's face was very pale, but steady and resolved. He understood,
+better perhaps than his younger brother, the peril of the
+enterprise upon which they had embarked. But he did not shrink from
+that one whit, only he did hope and trust that his father would
+never be implicated by their conduct; for if, after all, the priest
+were to be found hidden within the precincts of Chad, it was easy
+to prophesy a great reverse of fortune to all who dwelt therein.
+
+However, even that consideration did not move him at this moment.
+Brother Emmanuel, their preceptor and friend and comrade (for he
+had been all three to his pupils during his residence beneath their
+roof), stood in deadly peril of his life, and to save him from the
+malice of his foes must be the first consideration now. The
+existence of the secret chamber was not known even to their father.
+Not a soul in the house or in the world knew of it save the three
+brothers and Warbel. Warbel was absolutely to be trusted. He owed
+too much himself to that retreat to wish to betray its existence to
+others, and he loathed and hated the whole household of Mortimer;
+and it was very plain to all concerned that Mortimer was working
+hand in hand with the prior in this matter--the one to obtain
+possession of the person of the offending monk, the other to find
+cause of accusation against the owner of Chad for harbouring and
+concealing a suspected person, in defiance of the laws of the land
+and of the Church.
+
+That there was conspiracy afoot against Chad and its master Edred
+did not for a moment doubt; but the first consideration must now be
+the safe hiding of Brother Emmanuel, and the boys dashed eagerly
+through the empty house, to find him in the little chantry, where
+so many of his hours were spent.
+
+He was reading the office of vespers without any congregation to
+assist. Instinctive reverence caused the boys to kneel in silence
+till the brief service concluded, and then, after prostrating
+themselves before the altar, they beckoned vehemently to the monk
+to follow them, and conducted him up a narrow winding stair, but
+little used, to the large sleeping chamber which the three brothers
+had shared ever since their early childhood.
+
+Once there Julian carefully locked the door, whilst Edred in brief
+and graphic words told the story of that day's spectacle. Brother
+Emmanuel listened calmly, with his features set into an expression
+which the boys were beginning to know well, although they did not
+read its meaning aright. Sternness and resolve were strangely
+blended with an infinite compassion and a look of almost divine
+tenderness; his words were few, and carried little of their meaning
+home to the hearts of the boys.
+
+"And thus they strive, thus they think to check the growth of the
+evil weed by fire and by the sword! Yet even nature may teach them
+that the burned field only yields the richer crop, and that the
+plough tearing its way along is a fertilizer of the earth. Would to
+heaven they would send forth evangelists from the Church, not with
+fire and sword, but with the sword of the Spirit--the Word of
+God--with the lamp of life in their hands; not to deny the people
+that life-giving fount, but to give them to drink through the
+channels God Himself has appointed! Then, indeed, methinks heresy
+would soon cease to exist. But theirs is not the way; God who
+dwelleth in the heavens will soon show them that. Theirs is not the
+way!"
+
+But time there was none now for one of those conversations in which
+Edred's heart delighted. Julian burst in then with the story of the
+latest scene in that solemn spectacle--of the whispered words of
+Brother Fabian; of the call for Brother Emmanuel; of the appeal
+made to Sir Oliver, and his reply; and finally of the certainty
+that the house would speedily be searched, and the necessity of
+getting into safe hiding before that happened.
+
+"Safe hiding!" said Brother Emmanuel with a slight smile; "my kind
+pupils, there can be no safe hiding from the messengers sent forth
+from the Church. Wherever I am they will find and drag me forth. I
+am grateful for all the goodness shown to me at Chad by all within
+its walls; but none shall suffer on my account. It hath not pleased
+God to open to me a way of escape, wherefore I must now yield
+myself to the will of my enemies; and it were better to go forth
+and be taken by the spies without than to remain here a source of
+peril to those within these walls."
+
+"But there is yet another way!" cried Edred with flashing eyes.
+"Thou shalt not go forth, and yet thou shalt not be a source of
+peril to any living soul. Brother Emmanuel, methinks it was God's
+doing, or that of the holy saints, that this hap befell us which
+revealed to us a safe hiding place of which none knows but
+ourselves, not even our father and mother, and the secret of which
+we have preserved unto this day, resisting the temptation to
+divulge it to any living soul. Time presses. When we are there I
+will tell thee all the tale--how this secret place came to our
+knowledge. But now let us tarry no longer, but come quickly and see
+for thyself. Once within that friendly shelter thou wilt have
+naught to fear save the loneliness to which thou art well used.
+
+"See, there is Julian already opening the door. Come, my father,
+come!"
+
+Julian had kindled the little lamp the boys had constructed for
+themselves, and which was much upon the principle of a modern
+bull's-eye, and could be safely carried through draughty passages
+without flickering or going out; and now the wondering monk allowed
+Edred to take him by the hand and lead him step by step along the
+narrow, tortuous passage. Julian closed the door behind them,
+showing how the cleverly-contrived spring acted; then they
+proceeded step by step in cautious silence--for this passage
+skirted a great portion of the house, and was very long--towards
+their destination, till at last they stood within the secret
+chamber itself; and Julian extinguished the light, to let the
+evening sunshine filter in and show how much of illumination it
+could give.
+
+"Now, Brother Emmanuel, let us show you all," said Edred eagerly;
+"for methinks it must be very few visits we must pay thee, and
+those at dead of night. For I much mistake me if we be not closely
+watched by some spy of the prior's these next days, and it will not
+do for any to think we have hidden haunts of our own."
+
+"Nay, nay, my children; ye must not run into peril for me. Far
+rather would I--"
+
+"I know--I know!" cried Edred. "But in truth thou needst not fear
+to rest here. This is the lost chamber, the secret of which had
+perished for well nigh a generation, till kindly fortune made it
+known to us. All men think that the chamber lay in the portion of
+Chad that was destroyed in the late wars. None dream it still
+exists. But here it is, and Bertram has made out little by little
+exactly where it lies, and I will tell it thee.
+
+"This portion at the lower and darker end is jammed in betwixt the
+ceiled roof of the great gun room and that attic chamber where the
+dry roots are stored away in the winter months before the frost
+binds them into the ground. None enter that attic in the summertide
+save rats and mice, and though there may be many passing to and fro
+in the gun room, no sound from here can penetrate there; for we
+have tried times and again, when there has been none by to hear, if
+we can make each other hear sounds from either place. From the gun
+room noise will, if very great, penetrate hither; but nothing thou
+canst do will make them below hear thee.
+
+"Then this wider and lighter and loftier portion, where the light
+comes in, is but a space filched away from the roofs and leads, and
+jammed in in such a fashion that it would defy a magician to find
+it from without. We tried days and days and could not do it, and
+never did, albeit we can climb like cats and had an inkling where
+it was--until we put Julian within to shout aloud and guide us by
+his voice. It is so placed that none can get really nigh to those
+places where the cracks are made to let in the light and air. Thou
+needst not fear, though all the monks in the priory come to search,
+that this hiding place will ever be found."
+
+The monk looked around the narrow chamber and drew an involuntary
+breath of relief. If indeed this thing were so, if indeed he might
+lie hidden from discovery and defy the most stringent search, might
+it not be a God-appointed means of salvation for him? Might he not
+be doing wrong in insisting upon falling into the hands of men?
+Would it indeed be possible for him to secrete himself without
+bringing down upon others the wrath he himself would escape?
+
+Whilst he stood thus debating with himself, the boys pulled him by
+the sleeve and spoke eagerly, though involuntarily in low tones.
+
+"And see further. Here is food laid up against this day. It will
+all keep for many weeks. It is but poor fare, but not poorer than
+thou art well used to--salted meat, and dried fish, and oaten cake;
+which keeps moist far longer than any other. Here are a few
+confections, and here is wine, and a jar of good mead. As for
+water, it may be had at this trough here, and a goodly supply; only
+it comes with somewhat of a rush, and the bung is not easily rammed
+back in its place. It is best to raise the tube--so--in the hand;
+but we could not make shift to do better. There is the lantern, and
+oil in this vessel, and none can see the light at night from any
+place when it is burned. I have placed three books in you corner--I
+dared not take more from the library; but I knew thou wouldst have
+thy breviary with thee, and thou art never dull. If it may be done
+safely, one of us will visit thee from time to time; and if there
+is any way of escape open to thee, thou shalt surely hear thereof.
+
+"But be not dismayed if days go by and thou hearest naught. It may
+be safer that thou shouldst be left quite alone. Thou wilt not
+think thyself forgotten?"
+
+Brother Emmanuel's eyes were fixed with a tender gaze upon the
+faces of the bold, generous boys. He took their hands in his, and
+they bent the knee to receive his blessing. His words were few and
+brief, but each lad as he rose resolved deep down in his heart that
+he would suffer the penalty of death itself sooner than betray the
+secret hiding place and give the brother up to his foes.
+
+Then with a few more last words respecting the hiding place and the
+arrangements made for the comfort of its occupant, the pair stole
+away, and soon found themselves safely within the walls of their
+own room, the door of which was still safely locked. They looked
+each other in the face with a proud, glad smile.
+
+"It is done!" cried Edred, drawing a long breath.
+
+"Nay, not altogether," answered Julian, with eyes that flashed with
+excitement; and drawing a step nearer his brother, he said in
+changed tones, "Now must that rascally priest have fled, and it
+behoves us to search the precincts of the place with all diligence.
+We must not leave a nook or a cranny unvisited, and must make a
+mighty coil. Thou takest me, brother, dost thou not?"
+
+Edred made a quick, eager sign of assent.
+
+"Ay, Julian, I do; and when we have done all that, let us back to
+the priory again. We must whisper in our father's ear that Brother
+Emmanuel is safe. Then will he act with a freer hand. And it were
+better, perchance, that we were all there to ride back with him
+when he takes his leave."
+
+Julian assented at once to this proposition; and forth went the
+boys, at first calling aloud the name of their tutor, and then
+halting, always within earshot of one of the spies, to debate where
+he could have concealed himself, darting hither and thither, as if
+suddenly remembering some new place, and ever returning
+disappointed and vexed.
+
+"He is a veritable fox!" cried Julian, flinging his cap on the
+ground in a well-assumed tempest of chagrin. "He must have left
+Chad altogether, for not a trace of him is here; and I looked to
+have the pleasure of bringing him ourselves before the reverend
+prior, to atone for having helped that other pestilent fellow to
+avoid for a while the hand of the law. A plague upon him and his
+cunning ways! Unless he have found the secret chamber our father
+knows of, and which he once took us to see, there be no other place
+in all Chad where he can be lurking, unless he has been moving from
+spot to spot at our approach. A pest upon the crafty rogue!"
+
+"We shall do no good loitering here, since he be really gone,"
+remarked Edred, in a tone of vexation very like his brother's;
+"perchance he may have fallen into the hands of the prior through
+the watch of which he spoke. I trust it may be so. But for us, I
+trow we had better go back to see the end of the day's spectacle.
+We can do no more at Chad. If he is hiding he will not dare come
+forth now, with all the folks returning so soon; and if he has got
+clean away, nothing we can do will bring him back."
+
+Julian grumbled in the finest phrases he could think of as the two
+pursued their way back towards the priory, increasing their speed
+as they left Chad behind, and very quickly gaining the meadow,
+where the servants were already beginning to collect the horses and
+get them ready for their masters.
+
+The day's proceedings were over. Refreshments were being served in
+the refectory to all of the better sort. Sir Oliver's two younger
+sons had never been missed; but Edred contrived to slip into the
+hall, and in passing beside his father's chair to whisper in his
+ear the four simple words:
+
+"Brother Emmanuel is safe!"
+
+None heard the whisper, not even Bertram, who was sitting next his
+father, though he read it in his brother's eye the next moment.
+Edred had affected to catch the clasp of his belt against his
+father's chair as he passed by, and in pausing to free it had bent
+his head and spoken the brief message.
+
+No change passed over Sir Oliver's face. Not a creature present
+observed the trifling by-play. Wine had circulated freely, and much
+laughing and talking were going on. The prior had unbent from his
+judicial severity, and even the Lord of Mortimer was smiling and
+bland, although there was something in his aspect that suggested
+the fierce feline play of a man-eating creature biding its time and
+toying with its victim.
+
+Just before the close of the feast Sir Oliver rose to his feet.
+
+"My lord prior, and you knights and gentlemen," he said suddenly,
+addressing all those who sat at the board in one comprehensive
+glance round the table. "I have been not a little disturbed and
+astonished today by hearing that there is ill known of one who has
+been long a member of my household--Brother Emmanuel--whom the
+reverend prior himself sent forth to be the instructor of my sons,
+and who has always comported himself right reverently and seemly in
+my house. But inasmuch as there is cause of offence in him, and
+that he has this day refused obedience to his lawful superior, and
+has not come at the bidding of the prior, I cannot but own him in
+fault, and decline to have further dealings with him. I do not know
+whether he is yet at Chad. I have not seen him since his farewell
+last evening. But if he be yet there, let the Lord of Mortimer, or
+you, holy father, send a company of servants to bring him thence.
+
+"I have heard it whispered around that he is hiding within the
+walls of Chad, and that we of that household know where he lurks.
+My reply to that whisper is a denial (which I will take upon oath
+if need be) that I know aught whatever about him; and furthermore,
+I will throw open my house, upon any day and at any time, to
+whatever persons shall be sent to seek him, and will aid them in
+every possible way in the finding of the offender."
+
+A murmur of approval went round the company. The prior looked
+pleased, and a smile crossed his face.
+
+The only person who did not seem gratified by this openness was the
+Lord of Mortimer, whose face contracted sourly, and who gave a keen
+glance at his rival, as though he would have read his very soul.
+But the calm gaze with which Sir Oliver returned this look did not
+appear to restore his equanimity, and he flashed a glance at his
+son-in-law which plainly betokened surprise and chagrin.
+
+"Well spoken, Sir Oliver," said the prior; "and since I have
+excellent reason to know that the brother has not left Chad, and
+cannot do it without my knowledge, it is plain to me that he is
+hiding in some place there, albeit all unknown to you and yours.
+Wherefore, on the morrow, I myself, together with my good friend
+the Lord of Mortimer, will present ourselves at Chad, and make full
+search, and we shall no doubt find the heretic monk cowering away
+in some undreamed-of hiding place, and will drag him thence to the
+fate he so well merits.
+
+"Chad has its secrets, has it not? I have heard of them in days
+gone by."
+
+"It has several cunning nooks and crannies, but all of these will I
+myself display to you upon the morrow," replied the knight calmly;
+and the Lord of Mortimer arose with a crafty smile upon his face,
+and addressed the prior in these words:
+
+"Reverend father, I do not willingly speak ill of my neighbours,
+least of all of one who is now near akin to me through the marriage
+of my daughter with Sir Edward, who comes of the old stock of Chad.
+Yet I cannot but state here, in this place, that I hold Sir Oliver
+to have drawn down suspicion upon himself by failing to give up
+Brother Emmanuel a week ago when it was demanded of him. There be
+something to my mind strange and unworthy in such an act; and I
+here call upon all men to witness that I verily believe we shall
+find this traitor monk sheltering within the walls of Chad, and
+that if this be so I shall openly accuse Sir Oliver before all the
+world--before the king himself--of harbouring traitors and
+heretics, and shall make petition that Chad and all that pertains
+to it be forfeit, as the penalty for such evil courses, and be
+given to the rightful lord by inheritance--Sir Edward Chadwell."
+
+The partisans of Mortimer raised a cheer; those of Chad received
+the challenge with groans and curses. Sir Oliver spoke not a word,
+but sat with his head proudly erect, and his eyes gleaming somewhat
+dangerously; whilst the prior commanded silence by a gesture of his
+hand, and spoke to quell the tumult.
+
+"My Lord of Mortimer, I have far more trust than you in the
+integrity of good Sir Oliver. I trow he will be able to clear
+himself of whatever suspicions lie upon him; and if the monk be
+found within his house, he shall have every opportunity of
+explaining his presence there. At the same time, I will not deny
+that it will look ill for him if he be found there; and that the
+tongues of all suspicious persons may be silenced, so that none
+shall say there has been opportunity for him to get the monk
+secretly away from the place, I will double the watch that has
+already been set around Chad, and I will send thither with Sir
+Oliver and his family two of my trustiest sons, Brother Fabian and
+Brother Nathaniel, to keep strict watch within doors, that there be
+no cause for any enemy to say that any there have aided an unlawful
+escape, or have striven to hide a miscreant from those who justly
+demand him."
+
+Sir Oliver bent his head.
+
+"Any brother coming from Chadwater will be an honoured guest at
+Chad," he said. "I was about to ask if Brother Fabian was to be
+sent thither to instruct my sons."
+
+"Ay, and to find out what germs of heresy yon false monk may not
+have implanted!" cried Lord Mortimer, losing control of himself as
+he saw the calmness of his enemy, and felt that the prey he had so
+confidently looked to be his might even now slip from his grasp.
+"It was those lads from Chad who strove to protect yon miserable
+hunchback who will be burned to ashes for his sins ere three more
+days have gone by. How explain you such conduct as that, Sir
+Oliver? Are you and your dame rearing up a heretic brood, to cumber
+the land in days to come?"
+
+But the prior here interposed somewhat sternly. He had no intention
+of allowing his table to be made the scene of a disturbance that
+might lead to bloodshed. He turned somewhat sternly upon the
+haughty baron, and his words were few and plain.
+
+"My Lord of Mortimer, Sir Oliver has answered to me for that
+offence. You take something too much upon yourself in thus striving
+to sit in judgment, and that in mine own presence.
+
+"And now, gentlemen, the sun will be shortly setting, and some of
+you have many miles to ride. We have done the day's work in a
+thorough and righteous fashion; and I will now give you my
+blessing, and dismiss you to your homes. I trust this may be the
+last time that I have to assemble you together to drive from
+amongst us those who are tainted by the curse of heresy."
+
+Half an hour later the party for Chad were riding quietly homeward
+through the forest with two cowled monks in their company. The last
+charge to these from the prior had been:
+
+"Thou, Brother Fabian, keep a sharp eye by night and by day upon
+the boys; and thou, Brother Nathaniel, upon the knight and his
+lady. If any of those are in the secret, be it your mission to find
+out and bring it home to them."
+
+
+
+Chapter IX: The Search.
+
+
+"If Brother Emmanuel is found, Chad will be forfeit."
+
+Such was the burden of Edred's thoughts as he rode homeward at his
+brothers' side, just behind their father and mother, at the close
+of that eventful day's proceedings.
+
+It was a thought that could not but be fraught with some terror to
+the boy, who knew that he had been instrumental in hiding the
+threatened monk, and that if by some gruesome chance the secret
+were to be discovered, their bitter enemy would make it an excuse
+for prosecuting his malicious and covetous purpose towards Chad
+with redoubled ardour, and with every prospect of success. At
+present the prior was standing neutral betwixt the two foes; at
+present the king was well disposed towards Sir Oliver. But should
+it be proved beyond dispute that he had set the Church at defiance,
+and had harboured a suspected heretic within his walls, then the
+prior would at once turn against him, and representations would be
+made to the king which would almost force him to turn away his
+favour. The Lord of Chad would be a disgraced and suspected person,
+whilst in all probability the wiles of the ambitious Mortimer would
+prove successful, and the claim of Sir Edward Chadwell would be
+admitted, and the estate pass into his hands.
+
+The thought was maddening. The bare idea of being forced to leave
+the old home sent the hot blood coursing through the boy's body. If
+such a thing as that were to befall them, it would break their
+father's heart. And how should he ever hold up his head again,
+knowing that in some sort he had been the author of the mischief?
+
+All the brothers had been heart and soul together in their desire
+to hide the brother from the wrath and unjust tyranny of the prior;
+but Edred felt as though the greatest responsibility had been his,
+though he could scarcely have said why.
+
+Julian had certainly taken the lead in the final act of the drama;
+but Julian was yet a boy, and did not thoroughly realize the perils
+which might follow such a course. Edred did, and his face was grave
+and thoughtful; and when from time to time he stole a glance at
+Bertram, he saw that his elder brother's face was overcast and
+anxious, too.
+
+They did not dare to exchange a single word upon the subject
+nearest to their hearts as they rode decorously behind their
+parents and the two monks. The whole train had to restrain their
+horses to the ambling pace of the steed bestridden by the monks,
+who were by no means skilled riders; and dusk had fallen ere they
+all rode into the courtyard of Chad, where the bustle of
+dismounting afforded the brothers the chance of escaping for a few
+minutes to their upper chamber together.
+
+"We must not stay a minute; the spies will be after us!" whispered
+Bertram. "But one question I must ask. Is he there?"
+
+"Yea, verily; and none need visit him for many days. It were better
+not.
+
+"But, brothers both, lend me your strong arms here. I would move
+this great chest across the fireplace. Ask no question; I will show
+you why anon."
+
+Edred was the speaker, and he indicated an enormous carved oak
+chest quite twelve feet in length, which was kept in this room to
+hold the clothing of the three lads. They did from time to time
+change its position in the room, so that no remark would be excited
+by the fact that it had been moved. As Edred wished to place it
+now, it would stand right across the fireplace, blocking entirely
+the secret door; but Bertram looked a little doubtfully at it when
+it was in place, saying tentatively:
+
+"Thou dost not think it would draw attention to the carved pillars
+of the fireplace? We shall have cunning and crafty men to deal with
+on the morrow."
+
+Edred smiled slightly.
+
+"Wait till the morrow comes, and thou shalt see," he answered; and
+then the brothers hastened down again, knowing that any sudden
+disappearance on their part might be marked and held as suspicious.
+
+They had not, however, been gone long enough to be missed, and the
+two monks who had been told off to keep watch within this house had
+but just made their way into the hall, where hot spiced wine was
+being dispensed, and the table set out for supper.
+
+Notwithstanding the feast recently partaken of at the priory, the
+brothers appeared by no means loath to sit down once again, and
+Edred could not but observe how differently they comported
+themselves from Brother Emmanuel, and how thoroughly they
+appreciated the dainty viands which were brought out in their
+honour.
+
+He did not mean to sit in judgment--he scarcely knew that he was
+doing so; yet as be watched their deep potations, and marked how
+they chose the best portions, and stinted themselves in no good
+thing, his stern young mind could not but rise up in revolt, the
+more so that these very men were actually here on purpose to strive
+to capture a brother of their own order, and deliver him over to
+death. And so far as the youth understood the matter, the offence
+for which it was resolved he should suffer was that he was too
+faithful to the vows he had taken upon himself, and too ardent in
+striving to enforce upon others the rules he held binding upon
+himself.
+
+But at least if these brothers ate and drank merrily, they were not
+therefore the better watchers. They had smiled a little scornfully
+as he contrasted their good feeding and deep drinking and
+subsequent visible sleepiness with the spare and frugal meal always
+taken by Brother Emmanuel, to be followed as often as not by a long
+night vigil in the chantry. There was small look of watchfulness
+about these men. Any vigil kept by them would be but a mockery of
+the term. It was all they could do to stumble through the office of
+compline when the meal was ended and the household about to retire,
+and there was no suggestion on their part of wishing to remain to
+keep vigil.
+
+But Edred resolved that he would watch again that night. He had
+done so the previous night with Brother Emmanuel, both thinking
+that it might be the last watch they would ever hold together. Now
+the boy felt that he could not sleep, at least for many hours; and
+since their mother had whispered to them that Brother Fabian was to
+share their room, since he said it was his duty to keep watch upon
+the boys till next morning, it seemed well to leave his bed for the
+drowsy monk, aid keep vigil himself in the silent chantry.
+
+The brother looked puzzled when he heard what one of his young
+charges proposed to do. Edred looked him full in the face as he
+answered:
+
+"Brother Emmanuel taught us that it were not well that all within
+the house should be sleeping. We know not when the Lord may
+appear--at midnight, at cock crowing, or in the morning; and
+methinks whenever He may come, He would gladly find one soul
+holding vigil and waiting for His appearing. Lock the door of the
+chantry upon me, my father. Thou canst see that there is but the
+one door by which we may come or go. If thou fearest to leave me
+here, lock the door upon me until such time as it pleases thee to
+release me."
+
+The brother regarded the boy with perplexed looks, and slowly shook
+his head, as though such an attitude of mind were wholly
+incomprehensible. But he did not oppose his resolve. It would not
+do to appear astonished at the idea of keeping vigil. He passed out
+of the chantry muttering to himself, and Edred prostrated himself
+before the altar, above which the solitary lamp burned clear and
+bright, and offered up most earnest prayers for the safety of
+Brother Emmanuel, for the failure and discomfiture of his foes, and
+for his safe escape when the time was ripe into some country where
+his enemies were not like to find him.
+
+How the hours of the night passed he scarcely knew. He might
+perhaps have slept at his post awhile, or have remained in a dreamy
+and passive state; for it did not seem long before the morning sun
+came glinting in at the eastern window, and the boy saw that the
+day had come which was to be a momentous one to Chad.
+
+Before very long, sounds of life about, and later on within the
+house, warned him that he was not the only watcher now; and feeling
+very drowsy and weary, he resolved to creep upstairs and share
+Julian's couch for the remaining hours before the working day
+should commence.
+
+He had not been locked into the chantry. Perhaps Brother Fabian
+felt a little shame in his suspicions, or perhaps he forgot to take
+the precaution. The door yielded to his touch, and he found himself
+at liberty to go where he would.
+
+But before turning his steps to his room upstairs, he made an
+expedition to an outhouse on what appeared to be a curious errand.
+It was a dirty, neglected place, and was full of dust and flue and
+cobweb. The boy began deliberately collecting masses of this flue
+and web, and presently he swept up carefully a good-sized heap of
+dust, which he as deliberately placed in a wooden box, and
+proceeded to make in one end a number of small holes.
+
+Carefully carrying away this strange load, and bearing it with
+great secrecy, the boy mounted the stairs very softly, and put down
+the handkerchief in which the flue was placed in the small unused
+room beside their sleeping chamber. With the box still in his hands
+he stole on tiptoe into the room and looked carefully round him.
+
+His brothers were sleeping lightly, looking as though they would be
+easily and speedily aroused. But the monk was snoring deeply, and
+the bloated face which was turned towards him displayed that
+abandonment of repose which bespeaks a very sound and even sottish
+slumber.
+
+The boy looked with repulsion at the flushed face, the open mouth,
+and dropped jaw. Something in the expression of that sleeping face
+filled him with scorn and loathing. No danger of this man's
+awakening; his half-drunken sleep was far too heavy and sodden.
+
+Edred stepped lightly across the room towards the chest which he
+had had moved the previous evening, and lying at full length along
+the floor, he proceeded to shake his box after the manner of a
+pepper pot until he had made beneath the chest a soft layer of dust
+which looked like the accumulation of weeks. It was deftly and
+skilfully done, and although he looked critically at the after
+effect, to make sure there was nothing artificial about the aspect,
+he could not detect anything amiss.
+
+The next step was to carry away his box, empty it out of a window,
+and break in pieces the perforated part, that there might be no
+tracing his action in this matter. Then gaining possession of his
+handkerchief full of flue, he stole softly back again, and laid
+great flakes between the legs of the chest and the wall, stuffed
+light fragments into the interstices of the carving, and laid them
+upon any projecting ledge that was likely to have caught such light
+dirt as it filtered through the air.
+
+A soft movement in the room told him that his brothers were awake
+and watching him, though the monk still snored on in his stertorous
+fashion. One after the other the pair stole from their beds and
+looked for a moment at this skilful travesty of nature's handiwork,
+and both nodded in token of approval and congratulation.
+
+Edred had an artist's eye for effect, and did not spoil his
+handiwork by overdoing it. The result produced was exactly as if
+the chest had stood for some time in its present position, so that
+the dust had gathered beneath it and the flue had clung to the wall
+behind it. No one looking at its position there could doubt that it
+had been there for a period of some weeks.
+
+Satisfied with the result of his manoeuvre, the boy flung away the
+rest of his spoil, and throwing himself upon one of his brothers'
+beds was soon lost in healthy sleep.
+
+When he awoke the sun was high in the sky, and he found himself
+alone with Father Fabian, who appeared likewise only just to have
+awakened.
+
+Brother Emmanuel would long ago have held early mass in the
+chantry, but this new inmate appeared by no means disposed to
+follow in the footsteps of his predecessors. He rubbed his eyes,
+and seemed scarce to know where he was; but he accepted Edred's
+offers of assistance, and was soon ready to leave the room in
+search of the meal to which he was accustomed.
+
+All Chad was in a stir of expectation. It was known throughout the
+house that a great search was to be instituted after the missing
+priest, who had, as it were, disappeared into thin air.
+
+Everybody knew that he had been within the precincts of Chad upon
+the previous day. Some amongst the few servants who had been left
+behind to take care of the house had seen him moving quietly about
+from the chantry to the courtyard and back. It was now well known
+that spies were lurking in the forest round Chad with a view of
+intercepting any attempt at flight, and it was plain they had seen
+nothing of him. Therefore, unless he had escaped their vigilance by
+cunning and artifice, he must still be somewhere within the
+precincts of the house; and on the whole this appeared the most
+probable theory. In a place like Chad, where there were all manner
+of outbuildings, sheds, and lofts; to say nothing of all the
+corners and hiding places within the house itself, it would be very
+tempting to take refuge in one of these nooks and crannies, and to
+trust to the chance of concealment rather than run the gauntlet of
+meeting foes in the open.
+
+Brothers from the monasteries, to say nothing of hunted heretics,
+had the reputation of being marvellous cunning in their methods. It
+was like enough that Brother Emmanuel had long been planning some
+such concealment for himself, and had made his plans cleverly and
+astutely. Such was the prevailing opinion at Chad, and scarcely a
+member of the household but hoped and trusted his hiding place
+would not be detected, even though they did not know how seriously
+the fortunes of their master might be affected were the monk to be
+found hidden in his house.
+
+They all loved Brother Emmanuel for his own sake, and hated the
+Lord of Mortimer. And it was well known that that haughty baron was
+making common cause with the prior of Chadwater in this matter,
+doubtless in the hope of disgracing Sir Oliver in the eyes of the
+ecclesiastical powers.
+
+So a general feeling of excitement and uncertainty prevailed during
+the early hours of the morning. Sir Oliver and his wife strove to
+appear calm and tranquil, but inwardly they were consumed by
+anxiety. They felt something very much approaching certainty that
+their own sons knew what had befallen the monk--probably his very
+hiding-place; and they were by no means certain that it might not
+be within the very precincts of Chad itself. The knight's
+generosity and love of justice were sufficiently stirred to make
+him willing to run some risk in the cause; he had resolved to ask
+no question, and to let matters take their own course. But he could
+not help feeling a tremor run through him as he heard the winding
+of the horn which bespoke the presence of the visitors at his gate,
+and he went forth to meet them with a sinking heart, albeit his
+mien was calm and untroubled and his bearing dignified and assured.
+
+The prior and the Lord of Mortimer headed the train, and behind
+followed a goodly retinue of men wearing the livery of the baron,
+to say nothing of the lay brothers and the cowled monks, who were
+skilful in matters pertaining to search, and who had come to assist
+in the examination of the whole of the great house.
+
+Upon the face of Lord Mortimer and upon that of his son-in-law
+there was an ill-disguised look of vindictive triumph. It was easy
+to see that they were fully assured of the presence of the fugitive
+within these walls, and that they did not mean to leave until he
+had been dragged forth from his hiding place.
+
+The guests of the better quality were respectfully conducted into
+the great hall, and refreshments were placed before them. Sir
+Oliver put his whole house and possessions into the hands of the
+prior, who was invited to make any kind of investigation and
+examination that he thought necessary. The knight repeated what he
+had said the previous day as to his entire ignorance where the monk
+was hiding, and whether he was hiding at all. But no obstacle of
+any kind would be placed by him against the most stringent search,
+and he would either accompany the searchers or remain passive where
+he was, exactly as the reverend father judged best.
+
+This statement was well received by the prior, who turned to the
+Lord of Mortimer and suggested that in the first place his armed
+troopers, who were well used to this kind of work, should make a
+strict search through all the outbuildings of whatever kind,
+posting his men wherever he thought needful, and taking any steps
+such as the smoking of chimneys and kindred methods that might in
+any wise be likely to dislodge the fugitive. Meantime the rest of
+the party would remain where they were, and the house should only
+be searched if it was made clear that the monk was not hiding
+without.
+
+Lord Mortimer retired to give his orders, and the rest of the
+company remained in the hall. The boys would better have liked the
+house searched first, that their anxiety might be the sooner
+relieved. It was keeping them on tenterhooks all this time, as they
+knew well that no result could accrue from any search of the outer
+yards or buildings, and it was hard to wait all that time in
+uncertainty and suspense.
+
+But they heard the order given without making any sign. It was well
+for them at this crisis that they had been trained in habits of
+self control and reserve. No one, to look at the three boys, would
+have guessed them to be greatly interested in the proceedings. They
+remained standing in the background, with an air of quiet respect
+and submission appropriate to the young in presence of their
+spiritual superiors. The prior, as his keen eye travelled over the
+faces in the hall, never suspected for a moment that those three
+quiet lads knew aught of this matter. But, pleased by their air and
+bearing, he called them to him and asked them some questions, to
+assure himself that they had been properly taught by the
+recalcitrant monk whom now he had resolved to find and to punish
+for his rebellion and temerity.
+
+The boys replied with such ready intelligence and so much actual
+learning that he could not but be pleased with them. Edred, in
+particular, showed such readiness and aptitude that the prior was
+surprised, and laying a kindly hand upon the boy's head, asked him
+how soon they would be welcoming him at Chadwater.
+
+The youth looked up with grave, thoughtful eyes.
+
+"I know not that, my father. I have had thoughts of the religious
+life; but--"
+
+"Well, boy, what is the 'but'?" asked the prior with a smile, but a
+keen flash of the eye which did not pass unheeded.
+
+Edred saw the flash, and was put at once upon his guard. This was
+not Brother Emmanuel, to whom he could open his whole soul and ask
+counsel and advice.
+
+"I misdoubt me at times if I be fit for the life," he answered.
+"There is too much of the world in my heart, I fear me. I used to
+think I was fit to be a monk, but I am the less sure now."
+
+"Well, well, I would fain have a promising lad like thee beneath my
+care; but there is time to talk of that later.
+
+"Well, my Lord of Mortimer, how goes the search? Is all in train
+for it?"
+
+"Ay, reverend father; and I trow if the miscreant be in hiding
+anywhere without the house, he will shortly be brought before us. I
+am no novice in this manner of work, and I have laid my plans that
+he will scarce escape us. If that fail, we must try the house
+itself. It will go hard if we find him not somewhere. We have full
+information that he has not left the place;" and here he flashed an
+insolent look of triumph at Sir Oliver, who took not the smallest
+notice either of the speech or the look.
+
+Edred retired to his former place beside his brothers, and the
+party awaited the result of the search with what patience they
+might. Now and then shouts and calls broke the stillness, and faces
+would flush with excitement at the sound; but the shouts always
+died away again into silence, and at last there came a trooper into
+the hall to salute the company and report that there was no one
+hidden in any of the places without. Not a rat or a mouse could
+have failed to be turned out after the stringent search to which
+the premises had been subjected.
+
+The Lord of Mortimer then rose and said:
+
+"Keep the men posted as I have given orders. Let none stir from his
+vantage ground. And be thou there to see that the closest watch is
+kept. We go in person to search the house, and if any living thing
+seeks to make escape by door or window, it will be thine office and
+that of thy men to seize and hold him."
+
+"We will not fail, my lord," said the man, who again saluted and
+withdrew.
+
+Then the prior rose and called his monks about him, whilst the Lord
+of Mortimer did the like with his followers.
+
+"Sir Oliver," said the prior, "I would have spared you this
+unwelcome formality had it been possible, but my duty must be done.
+I will ask you to be our conductor throughout the house, and will
+crave permission to post my servants hither and thither about the
+passages as seems to me best, and to take such steps as shall
+appear needful for proving to the satisfaction of all that this
+traitor monk is not hidden within your walls."
+
+Sir Oliver bent his head.
+
+"Take what steps you will, reverend father; I and mine are at your
+disposal. Whatever means you desire to use, do so without
+hesitation. Shall my people arm themselves with tools to remove
+panelling or flooring? You have but to command them; they shall
+instantly obey."
+
+The Lord of Mortimer again looked taken aback for a moment. There
+was a confidence in Sir Oliver's manner that did not appear to be
+assumed. He would have preferred another aspect in his foe.
+
+"We have brought all things needful for a rigorous search,"
+answered the prior. "We hope and trust nothing will be needed. Is
+it true that there are secret hiding places in the house, my son?
+It would be well, perhaps, to visit any such first."
+
+"There be two," answered Sir Oliver quietly, though his heart beat
+rather fast. What if Brother Emmanuel had learned the secret of
+either of those places, and had sought refuge in one? True, it
+would have been worse than useless to deny their existence. Many in
+the household knew of them and how they might be entered.
+
+Probably the prior or some of his monks had the trick of those
+chambers by heart. Chad had been through many vicissitudes, and the
+monks had often been its guests. Secrets once known to them were
+never allowed to be lost. It would have been idle to seek to put
+the searchers off the scent. He led the way to the places where the
+masked doors lay--one was much after the pattern of that in the
+boys' chamber--and in each case himself opened the door, letting
+his guests go in to examine for themselves.
+
+Those were terrible moments for him; but the hearts of the boys did
+not palpitate. Each time the search party came forth with looks of
+baffled disappointment. Each time the Lord of Mortimer's face was
+dark and gloomy. He had reckoned somewhat confidently on finding
+the fugitive in one of these known hiding places. He had hoped Sir
+Oliver would profess an ignorance of at least one of the two. His
+face was fierce and vindictive as the second was "drawn blank."
+
+But the excitement of the boys was slowly augmenting as the party
+moved higher and higher in the house, leaving scouts posted in
+various places, and, as it were, spreading a cleverly-constructed
+net all through Chad, which it would be impossible for any person
+being hunted from spot to spot finally to escape.
+
+The prior's idea now was that the monk might be gliding before them
+from place to place, confident that his knowledge of the
+intricacies of the house would give him the chance of evading them
+at the last. It was a desperate game, to be sure, but one that had
+been successfully tried by others on more than one occasion. He
+therefore posted his men with great skill and acumen; and knowing
+the house accurately, was able to feel secure that if this were the
+game being played, the prey would sooner or later be his.
+
+Lord Mortimer, on the other hand, gave his attention to the
+panelled walls, the carved chimney pieces, the flooring of the old
+rooms; and many were the blows struck here and there by his orders,
+and great was the damage done to certain panelled rooms, in the
+hopes of coming upon some masked door or passage.
+
+It was this energy on his part that caused such anxiety to the
+boys. Suppose he were to attack the carving which really concealed
+the masked door in their room? Might not his eagle eye light upon
+that, too, and might not all be discovered? The boys felt almost
+sick with apprehension as they approached the door of their room,
+and Edred's whole heart went up in a voiceless prayer that no
+discovery might be made.
+
+Nothing in the aspect of the room attracted comment. All looked
+matter of fact and innocent enough, and the prior was growing
+something weary with the unavailing search. The usual thumping on
+the walls was commenced; but even the carved mantel pillars were so
+solid that no hollow sound was given forth when they were struck.
+The prior turned away.
+
+"There is naught here, methinks, my Lord of Mortimer."
+
+"Wait one moment," replied the baron. "This carving be something
+deep and ponderous. I always suspect traps when I see such pains
+bestowed upon it. Let me examine a while further. These grapes look
+to me as if they had been fingered something often. Let me examine
+further."
+
+Edred's heart was in his mouth. It was all he could do to restrain
+himself from seeking to attract the prior's attention in another
+direction; but his sound sense told him that this sudden
+interruption would be suspicious. Julian nipped him by the arm, as
+those strong fingers went travelling over the carved work with dire
+intent. Both started when the Lord of Mortimer exclaimed:
+
+"Take away yon chest; it encumbers me."
+
+The servants did his bidding in a moment; and then a sudden change
+came over his face. The eager look died away. He remained awhile
+looking down at the floor, which was covered with dust and flue, as
+was also the carving which had been concealed behind the chest. The
+prior looked down too, and shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"That tells a tale, my lord. Naught has been disturbed here for
+many a long day. Let us pursue our search elsewhere. No fugitive
+could have passed by that spot since yesterday, when Brother
+Emmanuel was last seen."
+
+The baron could not but assent. He looked once again at the
+carving, but he had had no real reason to suspect aught, and he
+turned away to go elsewhere. Another grip of the arm showed Edred
+how Julian's feelings had been stirred; but the lads did not even
+look at each other as they moved on behind the company, and they
+now hardly heard or heeded what passed during the remaining hour of
+that long search.
+
+For them the crisis had passed when they turned from the room where
+the secret lay. If not discovered at that awful moment when Lord
+Mortimer's hand was actually upon the bunch of grapes beneath which
+lay the spring, they surely need not fear any other manoeuvre on
+his part.
+
+And at last the long search ended. Even the Lord of Mortimer had to
+own himself beaten. Reluctantly and with scowling brow he followed
+the prior back to the long banqueting hall, where the tables had
+already been laid with savoury viands. He had been worsted where he
+had been most confident of success, and he was as furious as a bear
+robbed of her whelps.
+
+The prior was taking Sir Oliver by the hand and speaking words of
+goodwill, professing great satisfaction at the result of this
+stringent search; his only vexation being that the monk had
+contrived to give them the slip. In the back of his head the prior
+had a lurking feeling that Sir Oliver had been in some sort
+concerned in Brother Emmanuel's escape, and was rejoicing at it;
+but inasmuch as he had entirely failed to bring home any charge
+against him, and as in all other respects he was a good neighbour
+and true son of the Church, he was willing enough to restore him to
+favour and confidence, and was not sorry on the whole that the
+haughty Lord of Mortimer was not going to have it all his own way.
+
+The astute ecclesiastic knew very well that he himself did better
+for holding a neutral position between two adversaries both
+desiring his friendship and good opinion, than he would do were
+Chad and Mortimer to be in the same hands. He was disappointed at
+not finding the monk, but not sorry Sir Oliver stood vindicated. He
+set himself down to the board with a hearty goodwill; but the baron
+refused the proffered hospitality of his rival, and summoned his
+attendants about him.
+
+"I will say farewell this time, Sir Oliver," he said haughtily.
+"But remember I still hold that we have only been foiled by your
+cunning; not that you are innocent in this matter. If ever I can
+prove this thing against you, I shall do so; and I recommend the
+reverend prior to keep his watch still upon this house, as I fully
+believe yon traitor monk is in hiding here."
+
+"And I, my lord baron," said Sir Oliver proudly, "will give you
+fair warning that I will speedily to the king, to lay before him
+the history of this day and the insults to which I have been
+subjected through you and your groundless suspicions of me. I have
+not resisted what you have chosen to do, knowing well the use you
+would have made of such resistance. But I have not forgotten the
+many acts of aggression and hostility of which you have been
+guilty; and this last day's work, in which your servants have made
+themselves, as it were, masters of Chad, shall be answered for at
+some future day. You have thought good to threaten me. I too will
+threaten you. I threaten you with the displeasure of the king when
+this thing comes to his ears; and I shall seek him now without
+delay, and tell him all I have suffered at your hands."
+
+
+
+Chapter X: From Peril To Safety.
+
+
+"My son, what hast thou done to thyself?"
+
+Edred was stumbling across the courtyard, supported by Julian, his
+face streaming with blood and muffled in a great kerchief. He was
+unable to speak himself, but Julian spoke eagerly for him.
+
+"I trow the fault is half mine. It was done in tilting. I was
+careless, and saw not that Edred's guard was down. I fear me I have
+something hurt him. I trust it is not the eye. Look to it quickly,
+sweet mother. It was a nasty blow."
+
+"It is not of serious nature," muttered Edred through his
+wrappings; "it will be well right quickly."
+
+The mother hurried the two boys into a small room of her own where
+she kept medicaments of various kinds, and where all wounds of a
+trifling character were washed and dressed. Julian hurried to fetch
+her all she needed; and just at that moment Sir Oliver came hastily
+in looking for his wife.
+
+"How now, Edred?" he exclaimed. "Hast thou been in the wars again?"
+for Edred was something famed for getting hard knocks and ugly
+scratches in his mimic encounters with his more skilled and
+dexterous brothers. "Why, boy, but this is a worse business than
+usual. I am sorry for it, for I had something purposed to take thee
+with me to Windsor on the next morrow, as well as Bertram, and show
+thee to the king, and give thee a glimpse of the world of court.
+But if thou be in such plight as this, thou wilt scarce be fit to
+go."
+
+"I must await another time," muttered Edred, in the same indistinct
+way, and Julian added with an air of chagrin:
+
+"It was a villainous mischance. I would I had been more careful. I
+am always having the ill luck to hurt Edred."
+
+"Nay, the fault is mine!" exclaimed the other boy.
+
+"And now thou wilt be hindered from seeing the king and his fine
+court."
+
+"Perchance thou wilt go in my stead."
+
+"Nay, that will I not. An thou stayest at home for fault of mine, I
+will stay to keep thee company.
+
+"Now, gentle mother, prithee see if he be much hurt. I cannot rest
+till I know."
+
+The lady was ready now to make her examination, and gently removed
+the rude wrappings the boys had made for themselves. Edred's face
+presented an ugly appearance as these were taken away. He had a
+great gash across his brow, which passed dangerously near to the
+eye, and had laid open the cheek almost as far as the mouth, and
+knocked out one back tooth. The knight looked concerned at the
+magnitude of the damage, and spoke rather sharply to Julian.
+
+"Thou must have a care with these weapons of thine, or thou wilt do
+thy brother a fatal mischief one of these days. See, boy, had that
+blow of thine swerved but the half of an inch, thy brother would
+have lost the sight of an eye forever--nay, he might have lost his
+life; for an injury to the eye oft penetrates to the brain, and
+then the skill of the leech is of no avail.
+
+"Good wife, is thy skill sufficient for these hurts? or shall we
+send to seek a surgeon's aid?"
+
+"Methinks I can do all that is needful. They are ugly scratches and
+painful, but not over deep. The lad will not be scarred, methinks,
+when the wound is well healed. See, it looks better already after
+the bathing.
+
+"Run, Julian, for the roll of lint and the strapping in yon
+cupboard.
+
+"The boy will be a sorry spectacle for a few short days, but after
+that I trow he will feel none the worse."
+
+"It is but a scratch," said Edred, speaking more freely now, though
+with a mumbling accent, as though his lips were swollen, which,
+indeed, one of them was. "I scarce feel it, now it is bathed. Do
+not look so grave anent the matter, my father."
+
+Sir Oliver, relieved to find matters no worse, went on his way; and
+Lady Chadgrove proceeded to bind up and plaster the bruised face
+with the skill and dexterity of which she was mistress. She had no
+attention to spare for Julian, or she might have been surprised to
+note that he secreted for himself a certain amount of the dressing
+she had used, and looked on very intently whilst she applied the
+remainder to his brother's face.
+
+When her ministrations were accomplished, Edred was greatly
+disguised. His face was almost entirely swathed in linen, and one
+eye was completely bandaged up. Julian laughed aloud as he saw the
+object presented by his brother; and Edred would have joined in the
+laugh if he had had free play with his facial muscles.
+
+The mother looked gently scandalized.
+
+"Sure, it is no laughing matter, Julian. I am not wont to make much
+of these boyish mischiefs. Lads must learn to give and to take hard
+blows as they grow to manhood. Yet I would that thou wert something
+more careful. Thou mightest have killed thy brother, or have caused
+him life-long injury, today."
+
+Julian looked grave enough then; but Edred caressed his mother
+gently, saying:
+
+"Nay, chide him not. He is the best of brothers. It was as much my
+fault as his."
+
+And then the pair went away together, and did not pause until they
+had reached their own room, when they suddenly seized each other by
+the hand and commenced cutting extraordinary capers, indicative of
+a secret understanding and triumph.
+
+"It could not have turned out better," said Edred, speaking stiffly
+with his bandaged face and swollen lips.
+
+"I fear me thou dost suffer somewhat."
+
+"It is naught. I scarce feel it, now mother has bound it up. And
+thy stroke was wondrous skilful, Julian--brow and eye and mouth all
+scratched."
+
+"The praise should be thine for standing thus rigid to let me thus
+mark thee. Hadst thou flinched, as many another would have done--as
+I should have done, I trow--it could not have been done a tithe as
+well. Wrapped and bandaged as thou must be these next days to come,
+not a creature could know thee. Everything can be carried out
+according to the plan. Not even our father will suspect aught. The
+only fear is lest thou shouldst take a fever or somewhat of that
+sort, so that they say thou must not ride forth a few miles with
+our father when he fares forth to Windsor at the dawning of the
+next morrow after tomorrow's dawn."
+
+"No fear of that," answered Edred boldly. "I am not wont to trouble
+a sickbed. I have had knocks and blows as hard as this before. Art
+sure thou hast enough of the linen and the strapping to serve the
+purpose? And dost think thou canst apply it rightly? It will be thy
+hands, not mine, that must do all that. I shall be far away when
+the moment comes. Art sure that thou canst do all as it should be
+done? Thou and Bertram will have all the last arrangements to carry
+through. How my heart will be in my mouth until I see thee and my
+double approaching in the gray light of the morning!"
+
+"I trow we shall not disappoint thee!" cried the boy excitedly;
+adding after a moment's pause, "Methinks in the matter of artifice
+both Bertram and I can beat thee, albeit thou art the best of us in
+other matters. What a boon that that fat, slothful, ignorant monk
+no longer shares this room! That might have been a rare trouble.
+But since he loves well the soft bed of the guest chamber in lieu
+of these hard pallets, he is not like to trouble us again. They put
+their trust in the spies around the house. Let their spies do their
+worst, I trow we shall outwit them yet."
+
+And the boys took hands again and renewed their impromptu triumph
+dance. Their hearts were brimming over with satisfaction and hope.
+They had had a tough problem to think out during the past days, but
+now it seemed in a fair way of solution.
+
+When the prior had left Chad after the banquet prepared for him, he
+professed himself perfectly satisfied that the missing Brother
+Emmanuel was not concealed upon the premises yet for all that,
+since the Lord of Mortimer had declared himself still dissatisfied,
+and because the escape of the monk was difficult to credit, nothing
+having been seen or heard of him abroad, he judged it wise still to
+keep his watch upon the place, that all might be satisfied that no
+precaution had been left untaken.
+
+Sir Oliver had briefly, and with a slight accent of scorn, agreed
+with all the prior said, and had professed himself perfectly
+agreeable to the arrangement. He had nothing to hide either in his
+own comings and goings or in those of any member of his household.
+So long as his movements were not interfered with or his liberties
+infringed, the whole forest might be alive with spies for all that
+he cared. He had not known of the first watch set upon his house,
+and he was indifferent to the second. He should be soon leaving
+home to seek the king, and all he demanded was that the sanctity of
+his house should be duly regarded in his absence. Of course the
+prior fully agreed to that. Indeed, after the rigorous and
+exhaustive search that had been already made, there was no reason
+why any further entrance should be made into Chad.
+
+But although Sir Oliver had heard this mandate with indifference
+and contempt, it had filled the hearts of the boys with dismay. In
+a week's time the vessel would sail that was to carry Brother
+Emmanuel away to foreign soil, and out of the clutches of his
+present enemies; and if this guard around the house were to be
+maintained all that while, what chance had they of smuggling their
+fugitive away and down to the coast, as they had set their hearts
+on doing?
+
+But inasmuch as necessity has ever been the mother of invention,
+and the lads were not only bold and fearless but ready of resource,
+they had laid their heads together with some good effect, and now
+the first and one of the most important steps of the little drama
+had been carried to a successful conclusion.
+
+The next day was a busy and bustling one at Chad. Upon the morrow
+its lord and master rode forth to Windsor with his eldest son and
+the best of his followers. There was a great burnishing of arms and
+grooming and feeding of steeds. Every man was looking up his best
+riding dress and putting it into spic-and-span order, and the whole
+place rang with the sound of cheery voices and the clash of steel.
+
+In and out and backwards and forwards throughout the day passed the
+three boys, watching everything, asking eager questions of all, and
+expressing keen interest in the whole expedition.
+
+Edred was of course a great figure. His face was all swathed up.
+One side was completely concealed by the wrappings, and as he found
+the light trying to even the other eye, his plumed hat was drawn
+low down over his brow, so that no one would have guessed who he
+was but for the fact that his mishap was well known by this time to
+all the household.
+
+Even after supper the restless boys could not keep still. Edred and
+Julian had won their father's consent to riding some few miles with
+him on the morrow towards Windsor, and they ran off as soon as the
+meal was concluded to visit their steeds and see that their saddles
+were in order. After they had done this, they sallied out by one of
+the smaller gates to take an evening stroll in the wood, calling
+out to the custodian of the portal that they should return by the
+great gate.
+
+They wandered away some distance into the wood; but when they
+returned it was only Bertram and Julian who entered the gate and
+went up to their sleeping room. However, as nobody at the larger
+entrance had seen the three sally forth, no remark was occasioned
+by the return of only two; and it was supposed that Edred would
+have retired early, since he was in somewhat battered plight, and
+had to recover strength for the early start upon the morrow.
+
+When they reached their room that night, Bertram and Julian
+carefully locked the door behind them--a precaution they did not
+often take; and when they took from the great chest their own best
+riding suits, they also took out Edred's and looked it well over.
+
+"It will fit him to a nicety," said Bertram. "He and Edred are
+almost of a height, and both slim and slightly built. His pale
+face, so much as may be seen beneath the white linen, will look
+mightily like Edred's in the gray light of the early morn. This hat
+has a mighty wide brim--well that Edred affects such headgear.
+Pulled over his eyes, as he wore it yesterday, there be scarce a
+feature to be seen. We have but to say he is something late, take
+him his breakfast to eat up here, and get him on to horseback
+whilst all the bustle is going on, and not even our father will
+know him. He may ride past the spies with head erect and fearless
+mien, for there is not one of them but saw Edred this day, and will
+know at a glance who rides betwixt us twain with the white linen
+about his head!"
+
+Sir Oliver had decided rather late in the day to take his lady with
+him. She was in great favour always with the queen, and of late
+they had heard that the health of that gracious lady was something
+failing. It would be a graceful attention on the part of the
+mistress of Chad to visit her and learn of her welfare, and it was
+known that the queen had considerable influence with the king, and
+he might well give more favourable notice to Sir Oliver's plea were
+his wife to urge it upon him in response to what the lady might
+tell to her of their recent troubles with their haughty neighbour.
+
+So that there was even more stir and excitement than usually
+attended an early morning's start. The sun was not yet up, and the
+gray dimness of the coming summer's day enshrouded the great
+courtyard as Bertram and Julian descended to it with a slim figure
+between them clad in a riding dress similar to their own, the
+slouched hat drawn over the face, which face was well wrapped and
+muffled in white linen, as Edred's had been the previous day.
+
+The lady of the house came out with a look of preoccupation upon
+her face. She noted that the boys were already in the saddle, and
+smiled.
+
+"Always in such haste," she said, as her own palfrey was led up.
+"But, Edred my son, why didst thou not come to me to have thy hurts
+looked to this morn? I was expecting thee."
+
+"Sweet mother, I bound them for him today!" cried Julian eagerly.
+"Methought I must learn to be his leech since thou wast going with
+our father, and we knew that thou wouldst have much to do and to
+think of. Methinks I have not done amiss. It scarce looks as neat
+as though thy skilful fingers had had the care of it; but he says
+it feels not amiss, and that is a great thing."
+
+"Ay, verily; and I am glad thou hast skill enough for his needs.
+
+"Be cautious, Edred my son, that the cold gets not to the hurts.
+Draw up the collar of thy mantle well over that left cheek of
+thine, and do not talk whilst the air bites so keenly. When the sun
+is up all will be well; but be cautious in the first chill of the
+dawn."
+
+The brothers went towards their companion, and rearranged the
+collar of his riding cloak so as still more to conceal his face.
+The hands of the younger lad were trembling somewhat; there was a
+quivering of the muscles of the face which betokened some repressed
+emotion. The muffled rider did not speak or make much movement. He
+obeyed the injunction of the lady of Chad to the letter.
+
+Sir Oliver now appeared, and lifted his wife upon her palfrey. He
+gave a look to see that his sons were mounted, and his servants
+standing ready to follow his example when he sprang to the saddle.
+
+Then his charger was led up, and he mounted and gave the word, and
+the little cavalcade moved out through the gate and into the still,
+dim forest track, watched intently by more than one pair of keen,
+sharp, suspicious eyes.
+
+"I trust when I come back," remarked the knight to his lady, "that
+yon spies will have grown weary of their bootless watch, and will
+have taken themselves off. It is but the malice and suspicion of
+the Lord of Mortimer which causes the prior to act so. Alone he
+would never trouble himself. He knows that Brother Emmanuel is not
+at Chad, and has not been these many days. Wherever he be, he has
+escaped the malice of his foes this time. Heaven send that he may
+long escape! He was a godly and a saintly man, and no more heretic
+than thou or I. If the Church will persist in warring thus against
+her own truest sons, then indeed will she provoke some great
+judgment upon her own head. A house divided against itself can
+never stand, and she above all others should know that."
+
+The spies had been some time passed before Sir Oliver spoke these
+words, and when he did so they were only loud enough to reach the
+ears of his wife and of his sons, who rode immediately behind him.
+Two of these turned their heads for a moment to look at him who
+rode between them, but his face was far too well concealed for its
+expression to be seen.
+
+A few miles further on and a pause was made. Julian suggested that
+he and Edred should be turning back; whilst the mother, who thought
+that Edred was scarce fit for the saddle yet, seconded the idea
+with approbation.
+
+They were passing through a very dark part of the forest, where the
+trees grew dense, and where on one side the sandstone rose up in a
+wall, quite keeping out the level rays of the rising sun. It was
+almost as dim as night in this overgrown spot.
+
+Julian sprang to his feet, and went and dutifully kissed the hand
+both of father and mother, and the bandaged lad with the concealed
+face followed his example, touching both hands reverently and
+gratefully, and murmuring some words of farewell that were only
+indistinctly heard in the champing of bits and stamping of
+impatient horse hoofs. Then whilst the mother still laid many
+charges upon Julian to be careful of his brother, and bent a few
+anxious regards upon the injured lad himself, Sir Oliver gave the
+signal for riding on again, as they had a long day's journey before
+them; and the little cavalcade vanished quickly into the forest,
+leaving the two companions and their respective steeds standing
+alone in that dim place.
+
+When the last of the horses had quite vanished, and the sound of
+their steps was no longer to be heard, Julian flung his cap
+suddenly into the air, and uttered a long and peculiar cry.
+
+Almost immediately that cry was answered from some place near at
+hand, and in a few minutes more a figure strangely like the one
+standing at Julian's side emerged from the sheltering underwood,
+leading by the rein a small forest pony, such as were much used in
+that part of the country. With bandaged face, hat drawn over the
+brows, and collar turned up to the ears, the newcomer was the very
+counterpart of the motionless figure in the path, save that the
+latter wore the better dress. Julian burst into a great laugh as
+the two stood facing each other; but for Edred the meeting was
+fraught with too much of thankful relief for him to be able to join
+in his brother's hilarity, and after standing very still for a
+moment, he suddenly bent his knee, and felt a hand laid upon his
+head in mute blessing.
+
+Then Brother Emmanuel removed the wrappings from his head, and
+looked from one brother to the other with a world of gratitude in
+his dark eyes. But it was a time for action, not words, and that
+mute, eloquent gaze was all that passed at present.
+
+"We have a servant's dress ready in the hut hard by," said Edred
+quickly; "and then we must to horse again and get to the coast as
+fast as may be. Yon sturdy little pony good Warbel has provided
+will serve us as well as any stouter nag, and look more in keeping
+with the humble part thou must play this day, Brother Emmanuel.
+Come, let us change our dress quickly. I love not to linger in this
+forest, even though we be five good miles from Chad."
+
+Julian took care of the three horses, whilst Edred and the
+disguised monk made their way through the thick growth of
+underwood.
+
+When they reappeared it seemed to the boy as though the monk was as
+greatly disguised now as he had been with the wrappings of linen
+about his face. Certainly none but a spy on the watch and on the
+right scent would recognize in this serving man the young
+ecclesiastic of a few weeks back.
+
+There was a stubble of beard upon his lips and chin which was in
+itself a marvellous disguise. He wore a loose riding dress, with a
+slouch hat and a high collar to the cloak which shaded and changed
+the outline of his features. There was nothing of the monk in his
+look, save perhaps in the steady glance of his eyes, where a bright
+intelligence and keen devotion beamed.
+
+Julian flung his cap into the air again as he cried joyously:
+
+"Why, not even the lord prior himself would know thee now. Sure,
+thou mightest almost have ridden past the spies themselves thus
+habited. We may push on in open daylight now, and none will heed
+thy presence."
+
+Edred had now put on the riding dress which Brother Emmanuel had
+hitherto worn, so that on their return the same pair might be seen
+to re-enter the house. The disguised monk mounted the forest pony
+and followed his young masters, who pushed on quietly to the coast,
+feeling a greater and greater security with every mile they put
+between themselves and their home.
+
+It was the day for the sailing of the sloop that would carry the
+monk away to a safe retreat. They were not afraid of losing the
+boat, for it was not to sail till nightfall; but their impatience
+acted like a spur, and drove them steadily forward; and save for
+the needful halts to refresh themselves and their beasts, they did
+not tarry or draw rein.
+
+It was growing towards the westering of the sun when they beheld
+the great sea lying before them far below, and Edred's eyes glowed
+with joy as he saw the white-winged shallops flitting hither and
+thither on the wide expanse of blue water, and pictured how soon
+Brother Emmanuel would be sailing away out of the reach of peril.
+Truly God had been very good in hearing and answering prayer. Edred
+had, by some instinct for which he could not account, addressed his
+prayers of late less to the blessed Virgin and more to the Son of
+God Himself--struck, perhaps, by the words he had heard from the
+lips of the heretic peddler about the "one Mediator, the man Christ
+Jesus." He now turned in his saddle and waited till Brother
+Emmanuel came up. It was too solitary a place for them to care to
+keep up the appearance of master and servant.
+
+Riding thus side by side, Brother Emmanuel talked with the boys out
+of the fulness of his heart. His week of captivity had been spent
+in deep and earnest thought, and some of these thoughts were
+imparted to the boys in that last serious talk. He bid them hold in
+all reverence and godly fear that Church which was the body of
+Christ, and those ordinances which had been given at the beginning
+for the perfecting of the saints, and which were God's ways of
+dealing with man. But he warned them in solemn tones of the fearful
+disease which had attacked the body, and which threatened a fearful
+remedy before that body could be cleansed; he warned them also of
+the perils which beset the path of those who should live to see the
+coming struggle. There would be men who would vow that whatever the
+Church said and did must be right because the Church was the body
+of Christ, not knowing that even that body can become corrupt
+(though never the Head) if the will of man be put in the stead of
+the will of God; and these would cling to the corruptions as
+closely as to the ordinances of God, and become bitter persecutors
+of those who would arise and seek to cleanse and renew the body by
+God-given remedies. But again there would be men who would arise
+and deny that there was a body, would condemn the very name of the
+Church, and avow that what the Lord wanted was not a body, but a
+number of individuals each seeking light and salvation in his own
+fashion. That would be a fearful evil--an evil which would rend the
+body into a thousand schisms, and bring down at last the heavy
+wrath of God, who has from the beginning taught men that the body
+must be without spot or wrinkle or any such thing before it can be
+fit to be the bride of the Lamb.
+
+The young monk earnestly strove to show the perils of both these
+ways to the boys who rode beside him, and his words were earnestly
+listened to, and, by one at least, laid seriously to heart, to be
+remembered in after days almost as the words of prophecy, and
+destined to have a lasting effect upon his own future career.
+
+From that day Edred renounced all thought of the monastic life,
+feeling that such a life would but trammel his conscience and
+stultify his judgment. He resolved to live his life in the world,
+whilst seeking to be not of the world. How that resolve was kept
+there is no space in these pages to tell.
+
+Slowly and quietly the three friends jogged down into the little
+fishing and trading hamlet that lay at the base of the cliffs. In
+the small bay lay one or two sloops and frigates, and it was not
+hard to find the owner of the one which was to sail that night and
+carry Brother Emmanuel away. Julian found the man, and made all
+arrangements; whilst Edred saw that Brother Emmanuel made a
+sufficient meal, and sat talking with him to the very last,
+drinking in new thoughts and aspirations with every word, and
+striving, in the joy of knowing his beloved preceptor to be safe,
+to still the ache at heart which this parting involved.
+
+The sun was just setting as the boat bearing Brother Emmanuel to
+the sloop pushed off from shore. The skipper resolved to set sail
+forthwith, and the boys stood watching whilst she shook out her
+canvas to the favouring breeze, and glided like a white-winged sea
+bird out from the shelter of the bay and into the wide ocean.
+
+There were smarting tears in Edred's eyes despite his joy and
+relief. But Julian had room only for the latter feeling, and waved
+his cap with an air of exultant triumph as the sails expanded more
+and more and the little vessel went skimming its way over the
+shining sea.
+
+"He is safe, and we have saved him!" he cried with flashing eyes.
+"Let men say what they will, but he was no heretic. I fear not but
+that we have done right in the sight of God, even though we may not
+whisper in the confessional this deed, nor receive priestly
+absolution therefor."
+
+"God will give us His pardon if we have done amiss," said Edred
+thoughtfully. "But I have no fear that He regards this deed as a
+sin. It was done in His name, and as such will He receive it."
+
+"Yes, verily; though perchance it were better to leave such words
+unsaid. And now we must to horse and make all speed back to Chad.
+As it is we shall not reach it till after nightfall, and they will
+something wonder at our delay."
+
+"They will but think we went far and rested long for thy sake. We
+have travelled leisurely today to keep the horses fresh. We can
+travel back in the cool right merrily. It is but twenty miles. We
+can take the most of it at a hand gallop."
+
+The boys and the horses were alike refreshed and ready for a gallop
+through the cool evening air, rushing on as fast as the nature of
+the road would let them, they reached Chad in three hours, and rode
+beneath the gateway just as the old seneschal was wondering how
+much longer he must wait before he closed the gate for the night.
+
+The spies saw them ride in, as they had (to their thinking) seen
+them ride out; and all unconscious that the prey had escaped their
+vigilance, continued their weary and fruitless watch with the
+pertinacity which in so many like cases had given them success at
+the last.
+
+One bright evening some three weeks later the bugle at the gate was
+loudly blown, and Edred and Julian came flying out to welcome their
+eldest brother, who had ridden hither with some dozen servants to
+bring news to his brothers at home.
+
+"We have had marvellous good hap. The king received us right
+graciously, and heard our story with kingly friendliness and
+goodwill. He is none of your bigoted, priest-ridden monarchs; and
+although he hates true heresy, and would destroy it root and
+branch, he cries shame that all enlightened men who would cleanse
+the Church from some of her corrupt practices should be branded by
+that evil term. The great and worthy Dean Colet was called in, and
+he knows well the pamphlet Brother Emmanuel wrote, and says it is a
+work which should be read and taken to heart by all. That such a
+man should be dubbed a heretic is vile and wicked; and right glad
+were all to hear that he had escaped the malice of his enemies, and
+fled where they could not reach him. I did not dare even then to
+tell all the tale, but I said how we had laid our heads together
+and had helped him to escape. The king and the queen themselves
+praised me for our courage, and called me a good lad and a brave
+one not even to trouble our father with the knowledge of a secret
+that might have made ill work for him.
+
+"My Lord of Mortimer had not been idle. He had been before us in
+seeking the king; but as good chance befell, he had a quarrel with
+young Henry, the king's fiery son; and the prince was mightily
+offended, and made his sire offended likewise. Wherefore Mortimer
+was something in disgrace even before we got there, and when our
+story was told he was called up before the king and prince. And all
+our old forest rights have been restored to us--nay, have been
+widened and increased, and that at the expense of Mortimer. Ye
+should have seen his face when that mandate was brought forth and
+duly signed and sealed with the royal seal and delivered to our
+father! And the prior has been warned to take his spies from Chad,
+and the prince has promised to come and visit us, and to enjoy a
+week's hunting in the forest."
+
+Bertram's breath gave out before he had well finished outpouring
+his story, and the pause was filled by a great huzza, led off by
+Julian, and taken up by all the company, who were hearing scraps of
+like information from the men-at-arms who had conducted home the
+heir.
+
+"Our parents are constrained to remain awhile longer at court; but
+I hungered to bring the news to Chad, and to hear the end of the
+story."
+
+Bertram here dismounted, and taking his brothers by the arm, led
+them up to their own room, which was always their favourite haunt.
+
+"I see that thy face is well-nigh recovered, Edred; but it stood us
+in marvellous good stead. Tell me, how fared you when you parted
+from us? All went well?"
+
+"Excellent well in all truth. Not a soul accosted us by the way. We
+saw him take boat to the sloop, and saw the sloop sail out of the
+bay. In truth, it seems like a dream now that it is all passed. But
+it was a fearful time whilst it lasted."
+
+"Yet it has led to good. We are higher in favour with the king than
+ever, and I trow it will be long ere our haughty neighbour dares to
+raise his crest against us."
+
+Bertram paused smiling, and laid his hand upon the masked door
+which had kept its secret so long.
+
+"And if it be that our gracious prince doth in very truth visit us
+here, methinks that to him and to him alone will we tell the whole
+of the strange story, and disclose to him the trick of the secret
+chamber at Chad!"
+
+The End.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Secret Chamber at Chad, by Evelyn Everett-Green
+
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