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<h2> CHAPTER 28 </h2>
<p>It was not until more than three weeks after the King had left Devlen
Castle that Lord George and his company of knights and archers were ready
for the expedition to France. Two weeks of that time Myles spent at
Crosbey-Dale with his father and mother. It was the first time that he had
seen them since, four years ago, he had quitted the low, narrow,
white-walled farmhouse for the castle of the great Earl of Mackworth. He
had never appreciated before how low and narrow and poor the farm-house
was. Now, with his eyes trained to the bigness of Devlen Castle, he looked
around him with wonder and pity at his father's humble surroundings. He
realized as he never else could have realized how great was the fall in
fortune that had cast the house of Falworth down from its rightful station
to such a level as that upon which it now rested. And at the same time
that he thus recognized how poor was their lot, how dependent upon the
charity of others, he also recognized how generous was the friendship of
Prior Edward, who perilled his own safety so greatly in affording the
family of the attainted Lord an asylum in its bitter hour of need and
peril.</p>
<p>Myles paid many visits to the gentle old priest during those two weeks'
visit, and had many long and serious talks with him. One warm bright
afternoon, as he and the old man walked together in the priory garden,
after a game or two of draughts, the young knight talked more freely and
openly of his plans, his hopes, his ambitions, than perhaps he had ever
done. He told the old man all that the Earl had disclosed to him
concerning the fallen fortunes of his father's house, and of how all who
knew those circumstances looked to him to set the family in its old place
once more. Prior Edward added many things to those which Myles already
knew—things of which the Earl either did not know, or did not choose
to speak. He told the young man, among other matters, the reason of the
bitter and lasting enmity that the King felt for the blind nobleman: that
Lord Falworth had been one of King Richard's council in times past; that
it was not a little owing to him that King Henry, when Earl of Derby, had
been banished from England, and that though he was then living in the
retirement of private life, he bitterly and steadfastly opposed King
Richard's abdication. He told Myles that at the time when Sir John Dale
found shelter at Falworth Castle, vengeance was ready to fall upon his
father at any moment, and it needed only such a pretext as that of
sheltering so prominent a conspirator as Sir John to complete his ruin.</p>
<p>Myles, as he listened intently, could not but confess in his own mind that
the King had many rational, perhaps just, grounds for grievance against
such an ardent opponent as the blind Lord had shown himself to be. "But,
sir," said he, after a little space of silence, when Prior Edward had
ended, "to hold enmity and to breed treason are very different matters.
Haply my father was Bolingbroke's enemy, but, sure, thou dost not believe
he is justly and rightfully tainted with treason?"</p>
<p>"Nay," answered the priest, "how canst thou ask me such a thing? Did I
believe thy father a traitor, thinkest thou I would thus tell his son
thereof? Nay, Myles, I do know thy father well, and have known him for
many years, and this of him, that few men are so honorable in heart and
soul as he. But I have told thee all these things to show that the King is
not without some reason to be thy father's unfriend. Neither, haply, is
the Earl of Alban without cause of enmity against him. So thou, upon thy
part, shouldst not feel bitter rancor against the King for what hath
happed to thy house, nor even against William Brookhurst—I mean the
Earl of Alban—for, I tell thee, the worst of our enemies and the
worst of men believe themselves always to have right and justice upon
their side, even when they most wish evil to others."</p>
<p>So spoke the gentle old priest, who looked from his peaceful haven with
dreamy eyes upon the sweat and tussle of the world's battle. Had he
instead been in the thick of the fight, it might have been harder for him
to believe that his enemies ever had right upon their side.</p>
<p>"But tell me this," said Myles, presently, "dost thou, then, think that I
do evil in seeking to do a battle of life or death with this wicked Earl
of Alban, who hath so ruined my father in body and fortune?"</p>
<p>"Nay," said Prior Edward, thoughtfully, "I say not that thou doest evil.
War and bloodshed seem hard and cruel matters to me; but God hath given
that they be in the world, and may He forbid that such a poor worm as I
should say that they be all wrong and evil. Meseems even an evil thing is
sometimes passing good when rightfully used."</p>
<p>Myles did not fully understand what the old man meant, but this much he
gathered, that his spiritual father did not think ill of his fighting the
Earl of Alban for his temporal father's sake.</p>
<p>So Myles went to France in Lord George's company, a soldier of fortune, as
his Captain was. He was there for only six months, but those six months
wrought a great change in his life. In the fierce factional battles that
raged around the walls of Paris; in the evil life which he saw at the
Burgundian court in Paris itself after the truce—a court brilliant
and wicked, witty and cruel—the wonderful liquor of youth had
evaporated rapidly, and his character had crystallized as rapidly into the
hardness of manhood. The warfare, the blood, the evil pleasures which he
had seen had been a fiery, crucible test to his soul, and I love my hero
that he should have come forth from it so well. He was no longer the
innocent Sir Galahad who had walked in pure white up the Long Hall to be
knighted by the King, but his soul was of that grim, sterling, rugged sort
that looked out calmly from his gray eyes upon the wickedness and
debauchery around him, and loved it not.</p>
<p>Then one day a courier came, bringing a packet. It was a letter from the
Earl, bidding Myles return straightway to England and to Mackworth House
upon the Strand, nigh to London, without delay, and Myles knew that his
time had come.</p>
<p>It was a bright day in April when he and Gascoyne rode clattering out
through Temple Bar, leaving behind them quaint old London town, its blank
stone wall, its crooked, dirty streets, its high-gabled wooden houses,
over which rose the sharp spire of St. Paul's, towering high into the
golden air. Before them stretched the straight, broad highway of the
Strand, on one side the great houses and palaces of princely priests and
powerful nobles; on the other the Covent Garden, (or the Convent Garden,
as it was then called), and the rolling country, where great stone
windmills swung their slow-moving arms in the damp, soft April breeze, and
away in the distance the Scottish Palace, the White Hall, and Westminster.</p>
<p>It was the first time that Myles had seen famous London town. In that dim
and distant time of his boyhood, six months before, he would have been
wild with delight and enthusiasm. Now he jogged along with Gascoyne,
gazing about him with calm interest at open shops and booths and tall,
gabled houses; at the busy throng of merchants and craftsmen, jostling and
elbowing one another; at townsfolk—men and dames—picking their
way along the muddy kennel of a sidewalk. He had seen so much of the world
that he had lost somewhat of interest in new things. So he did not care to
tarry, but rode, with a mind heavy with graver matters, through the
streets and out through the Temple Bar direct for Mackworth House, near
the Savoy Palace.</p>
<p>It was with a great deal of interest that Myles and his patron regarded
one another when they met for the first time after that half-year which
the young soldier had spent in France. To Myles it seemed somehow very
strange that his Lordship's familiar face and figure should look so
exactly the same. To Lord Mackworth, perhaps, it seemed even more strange
that six short months should have wrought so great a change in the young
man. The rugged exposure in camp and field during the hard winter that had
passed had roughened the smooth bloom of his boyish complexion and bronzed
his fair skin almost as much as a midsummer's sun could have done. His
beard and mustache had grown again, (now heavier and more mannish from
having been shaved), and the white seam of a scar over the right temple
gave, if not a stern, at least a determined look to the strong,
square-jawed young face. So the two stood for a while regarding one
another. Myles was the first to break the silence.</p>
<p>"My Lord," said he, "thou didst send for me to come back to England;
behold, here am I."</p>
<p>"When didst thou land, Sir Myles?" said the Earl.</p>
<p>"I and my squire landed at Dover upon Tuesday last," answered the young
man.</p>
<p>The Earl of Mackworth stroked his beard softly. "Thou art marvellous
changed," said he. "I would not have thought it possible."</p>
<p>Myles smiled somewhat grimly. "I have seen such things, my Lord, in France
and in Paris," said he, quietly, "as, mayhap, may make a lad a man before
his time."</p>
<p>"From which I gather," said the Earl, "that many adventures have befallen
thee. Methought thou wouldst find troublesome times in the Dauphin's camp,
else I would not have sent thee to France."</p>
<p>A little space of silence followed, during which the Earl sat musingly,
half absently, regarding the tall, erect, powerful young figure standing
before him, awaiting his pleasure in motionless, patient, almost dogged
silence. The strong, sinewy hands were clasped and rested upon the long
heavy sword, around the scabbard of which the belt was loosely wrapped,
and the plates of mail caught and reflected in flashing, broken pieces,
the bright sunlight from the window behind.</p>
<p>"Sir Myles," said the Earl, suddenly, breaking the silence at last, "dost
thou know why I sent for thee hither?"</p>
<p>"Aye," said Myles, calmly, "how can I else? Thou wouldst not have called
me from Paris but for one thing. Methinks thou hast sent for me to fight
the Earl of Alban, and lo! I am here."</p>
<p>"Thou speakest very boldly," said the Earl. "I do hope that thy deeds be
as bold as thy words."</p>
<p>"That," said Myles, "thou must ask other men. Methinks no one may justly
call me coward."</p>
<p>"By my troth!" said the Earl, smiling, "looking upon thee—limbs and
girth, bone and sinew—I would not like to be the he that would dare
accuse thee of such a thing. As for thy surmise, I may tell thee plain
that thou art right, and that it was to fight the Earl of Alban I sent for
thee hither. The time is now nearly ripe, and I will straightway send for
thy father to come to London. Meantime it would not be safe either for
thee or for me to keep thee in my service. I have spoken to his Highness
the Prince of Wales, who, with other of the Princes, is upon our side in
this quarrel. He hath promised to take thee into his service until the
fitting time comes to bring thee and thine enemy together, and to-morrow I
shall take thee to Scotland Yard, where his Highness is now lodging."</p>
<p>As the Earl ended his speech, Myles bowed, but did not speak. The Earl
waited for a little while, as though to give him the opportunity to
answer.</p>
<p>"Well, sirrah," said he at last, with a shade of impatience, "hast thou
naught to say? Meseems thou takest all this with marvellous coolness."</p>
<p>"Have I then my Lord's permission to speak my mind?"</p>
<p>"Aye," said the Earl, "say thy say."</p>
<p>"Sir," said Myles, "I have thought and pondered this matter much while
abroad, and would now ask thee a plain question in all honest an I ha' thy
leave."</p>
<p>The Earl nodded his head.</p>
<p>"Sir, am I not right in believing that thou hast certain weighty purposes
and aims of thine own to gain an I win this battle against the Earl of
Alban?"</p>
<p>"Has my brother George been telling thee aught to such a purpose?" said
the Earl, after a moment or two of silence.</p>
<p>Myles did not answer.</p>
<p>"No matter," added Lord Mackworth. "I will not ask thee who told thee such
a thing. As for thy question—well, sin thou ask it frankly, I will
be frank with thee. Yea, I have certain ends to gain in having the Earl of
Alban overthrown."</p>
<p>Myles bowed. "Sir," said he, "haply thine ends are as much beyond aught
that I can comprehend as though I were a little child; only this I know,
that they must be very great. Thou knowest well that in any case I would
fight me this battle for my father's sake and for the honor of my house;
nevertheless, in return for all that it will so greatly advantage thee,
wilt thou not grant me a boon in return should I overcome mine enemy?"</p>
<p>"What is thy boon, Sir Myles?"</p>
<p>"That thou wilt grant me thy favor to seek the Lady Alice de Mowbray for
my wife."</p>
<p>The Earl of Mackworth started up from his seat. "Sir Myles Falworth"—he
began, violently, and then stopped short, drawing his bushy eyebrows
together into a frown stern, if not sinister.</p>
<p>Myles withstood his look calmly and impassively, and presently the Earl
turned on his heel, and strode to the open window. A long time passed in
silence while he stood there, gazing out of the window into the garden
beyond with his back to the young man.</p>
<p>Suddenly he swung around again. "Sir Myles," said he, "the family of
Falworth is as good as any in Derbyshire. Just now it is poor and fallen
in estate, but if it is again placed in credit and honor, thou, who art
the son of the house, shalt have thy suit weighed with as much respect and
consideration as though thou wert my peer in all things, Such is my
answer. Art thou satisfied?"</p>
<p>"I could ask no more," answered Myles.</p>
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