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<h2> CHAPTER 5 </h2>
<p>THE EARL of Mackworth, as was customary among the great lords in those
days, maintained a small army of knights, gentlemen, men-at-arms, and
retainers, who were expected to serve him upon all occasions of need, and
from whom were supplied his quota of recruits to fill such levies as might
be made upon him by the King in time of war.</p>
<p>The knights and gentlemen of this little army of horse and foot soldiers
were largely recruited from the company of squires and bachelors, as the
young novitiate soldiers of the castle were called.</p>
<p>This company of esquires consisted of from eighty to ninety lads, ranging
in age from eight to twenty years. Those under fourteen years were termed
pages, and served chiefly the Countess and her waiting gentlewomen, in
whose company they acquired the graces and polish of the times, such as
they were. After reaching the age of fourteen the lads were entitled to
the name of esquire or squire.</p>
<p>In most of the great houses of the time the esquires were the especial
attendants upon the Lord and Lady of the house, holding such positions as
body-squires, cup-bearers, carvers, and sometimes the office of
chamberlain. But Devlen, like some other of the princely castles of the
greatest nobles, was more like a military post or a fortress than an
ordinary household. Only comparatively few of the esquires could be used
in personal attendance upon the Earl; the others were trained more
strictly in arms, and served rather in the capacity of a sort of
body-guard than as ordinary squires. For, as the Earl rose in power and
influence, and as it so became well worth while for the lower nobility and
gentry to enter their sons in his family, the body of squires became
almost cumbersomely large. Accordingly, that part which comprised the
squires proper, as separate from the younger pages, was divided into three
classes—first, squires of the body, who were those just past
pagehood, and who waited upon the Earl in personal service; second,
squires of the household, who, having regular hours assigned for exercise
in the manual of arms, were relieved from personal service excepting upon
especial occasions; and thirdly and lastly, at the head of the whole body
of lads, a class called bachelors—young men ranging from eighteen to
twenty years of age. This class was supposed to exercise a sort of
government over the other and younger squires—to keep them in order
as much as possible, to marshal them upon occasions of importance, to see
that their arms and equipments were kept in good order, to call the roll
for chapel in the morning, and to see that those not upon duty in the
house were present at the daily exercise at arms. Orders to the squires
were generally transmitted through the bachelors, and the head of that
body was expected to make weekly reports of affairs in their quarters to
the chief captain of the body.</p>
<p>From this overlordship of the bachelors there had gradually risen a system
of fagging, such as is or was practised in the great English public
schools—enforced services exacted from the younger lads—which
at the time Myles came to Devlen had, in the five or six years it had been
in practice, grown to be an absolute though unwritten law of the body—a
law supported by all the prestige of long-continued usage. At that time
the bachelors numbered but thirteen, yet they exercised over the rest of
the sixty-four squires and pages a rule of iron, and were taskmasters,
hard, exacting, and oftentimes cruel.</p>
<p>The whole company of squires and pages was under the supreme command of a
certain one-eyed knight, by name Sir James Lee; a soldier seasoned by the
fire of a dozen battles, bearing a score of wounds won in fight and
tourney, and withered by hardship and labor to a leather-like toughness.
He had fought upon the King's side in all the late wars, and had at
Shrewsbury received a wound that unfitted him for active service, so that
now he was fallen to the post of Captain of Esquires at Devlen Castle—a
man disappointed in life, and with a temper imbittered by that failure as
well as by cankering pain.</p>
<p>Yet Perhaps no one could have been better fitted for the place he held
than Sir James Lee. The lads under his charge were a rude, rough, unruly
set, quick, like their elders, to quarrel, and to quarrel fiercely, even
to the drawing of sword or dagger. But there was a cold, iron sternness
about the grim old man that quelled them, as the trainer with a lash of
steel might quell a den of young wolves. The apartments in which he was
lodged, with his clerk, were next in the dormitory of the lads, and even
in the midst of the most excited brawlings the distant sound of his harsh
voice, "Silence, messieurs!" would bring an instant hush to the loudest
uproar.</p>
<p>It was into his grim presence that Myles was introduced by Gascoyne. Sir
James was in his office, a room bare of ornament or adornment or
superfluous comfort of any sort—without even so much as a mat of
rushes upon the cold stone pavement to make it less cheerless. The old
one-eyed knight sat gnawing his bristling mustaches. To anyone who knew
him it would have been apparent that, as the castle phrase went, "the
devil sat astride of his neck," which meant that some one of his blind
wounds was aching more sorely than usual.</p>
<p>His clerk sat beside him, with account-books and parchment spread upon the
table, and the head squire, Walter Blunt, a lad some three or four years
older than Myles, and half a head taller, black-browed, powerfully built,
and with cheek and chin darkened by the soft budding of his adolescent
beard, stood making his report.</p>
<p>Sir James listened in grim silence while Gascoyne told his errand.</p>
<p>"So, then, pardee, I am bid to take another one of ye, am I?" he snarled.
"As though ye caused me not trouble enow; and this one a cub, looking a
very boor in carriage and breeding. Mayhap the Earl thinketh I am to train
boys to his dilly-dally household service as well as to use of arms."</p>
<p>"Sir," said Gascoyne, timidly, "my Lord sayeth he would have this one
entered direct as a squire of the body, so that he need not serve in the
household."</p>
<p>"Sayest so?" cried Sir James, harshly. "Then take thou my message back
again to thy Lord. Not for Mackworth—no, nor a better man than he—will
I make any changes in my government. An I be set to rule a pack of boys, I
will rule them as I list, and not according to any man's bidding. Tell
him, sirrah, that I will enter no lad as squire of the body without first
testing an he be fit at arms to hold that place." He sat for a while
glowering at Myles and gnawing his mustaches, and for the time no one
dared to break the grim silence. "What is thy name?" said he, suddenly.
And then, almost before Myles could answer, he asked the head squire
whether he could find a place to lodge him.</p>
<p>"There is Gillis Whitlock's cot empty," said Blunt. "He is in the
infirmary, and belike goeth home again when he cometh thence. The fever
hath gotten into his bones, and—"</p>
<p>"That will do," said the knight, interrupting him impatiently. "Let him
take that place, or any other that thou hast. And thou, Jerome," said he
to his clerk, "thou mayst enter him upon the roll, though whether it be as
page or squire or bachelor shall be as I please, and not as Mackworth
biddeth me. Now get ye gone."</p>
<p>"Old Bruin's wound smarteth him sore," Gascoyne observed, as the two lads
walked across the armory court. He had good-naturedly offered to show the
new-comer the many sights of interest around the castle, and in the hour
or so of ramble that followed, the two grew from acquaintances to friends
with a quickness that boyhood alone can bring about. They visited the
armory, the chapel, the stables, the great hall, the Painted Chamber, the
guard-house, the mess-room, and even the scullery and the kitchen, with
its great range of boilers and furnaces and ovens. Last of all Myles's new
friend introduced him to the armor-smithy.</p>
<p>"My Lord hath sent a piece of Milan armor thither to be repaired," said
he. "Belike thou would like to see it."</p>
<p>"Aye," said Myles, eagerly, "that would I."</p>
<p>The smith was a gruff, good-natured fellow, and showed the piece of armor
to Myles readily and willingly enough. It was a beautiful bascinet of
inlaid workmanship, and was edged with a rim of gold. Myles scarcely dared
touch it; he gazed at it with an unconcealed delight that warmed the
smith's honest heart.</p>
<p>"I have another piece of Milan here," said he. "Did I ever show thee my
dagger, Master Gascoyne?"</p>
<p>"Nay," said the squire.</p>
<p>The smith unlocked a great oaken chest in the corner of the shop, lifted
the lid, and brought thence a beautiful dagger with the handle of ebony
and silver-gilt, and a sheath of Spanish leather, embossed and gilt. The
keen, well-tempered blade was beautifully engraved and inlaid with
niello-work, representing a group of figures in a then popular subject—the
dance of Death. It was a weapon at once unique and beautiful, and even
Gascoyne showed an admiration scarcely less keen than Myles's
openly-expressed delight.</p>
<p>"To whom doth it belong?" said he, trying the point upon his thumb nail.</p>
<p>"There," said the smith, "is the jest of the whole, for it belongeth to
me. Sir William Beauclerk bade me order the weapon through Master
Gildersworthy, of London town, and by the time it came hither, lo! he had
died, and so it fell to my hands. No one here payeth the price for the
trinket, and so I must e'en keep it myself, though I be but a poor man."</p>
<p>"How much dost thou hold it for?" said Gascoyne.</p>
<p>"Seventeen shillings buyeth it," said the armorer, carelessly.</p>
<p>"Aye, aye," said Gascoyne, with a sigh; "so it is to be poor, and not be
able to have such things as one loveth and would fain possess. Seventeen
shillings is nigh as much by half again as all my yearly wage."</p>
<p>Then a sudden thought came to Myles, and as it came his cheeks glowed as
hot as fire "Master Gascoyne," said he, with gruff awkwardness, "thou hast
been a very good, true friend to me since I have come to this place, and
hast befriended me in all ways thou mightest do, and I, as well I know,
but a poor rustic clod. Now I have forty shillings by me which I may spend
as I list, and so I do beseech thee that thou wilt take yon dagger of me
as a love-gift, and have and hold it for thy very own."</p>
<p>Gascoyne stared open-mouthed at Myles. "Dost mean it?" said he, at last.</p>
<p>"Aye," said Myles, "I do mean it. Master Smith, give him the blade."</p>
<p>At first the smith grinned, thinking it all a jest; but he soon saw that
Myles was serious enough, and when the seventeen shillings were produced
and counted down upon the anvil, he took off his cap and made Myles a low
bow as he swept them into his pouch. "Now, by my faith and troth," quoth
he, "that I do call a true lordly gift. Is it not so, Master Gascoyne?"</p>
<p>"Aye," said Gascoyne, with a gulp, "it is, in soothly earnest." And
thereupon, to Myles's great wonderment, he suddenly flung his arms about
his neck, and, giving him a great hug, kissed him upon the cheek. "Dear
Myles," said he, "I tell thee truly and of a verity I did feel warm
towards thee from the very first time I saw thee sitting like a poor oaf
upon the bench up yonder in the anteroom, and now of a sooth I give thee
assurance that I do love thee as my own brother. Yea, I will take the
dagger, and will stand by thee as a true friend from this time forth.
Mayhap thou mayst need a true friend in this place ere thou livest long
with us, for some of us esquires be soothly rough, and knocks are more
plenty here than broad pennies, so that one new come is like to have a
hard time gaining a footing."</p>
<p>"I thank thee," said Myles, "for thy offer of love and friendship, and do
tell thee, upon my part, that I also of all the world would like best to
have thee for my friend."</p>
<p>Such was the manner In which Myles formed the first great friendship of
his life, a friendship that was destined to last him through many years to
come. As the two walked back across the great quadrangle, upon which
fronted the main buildings of the castle, their arms were wound across one
another's shoulders, after the manner, as a certain great writer says, of
boys and lovers.</p>
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