Arthur Conan Doyle Fullscreen White Squad (1891)

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Inn- keeper, here are ten gold pieces.

What is over and above your reckoning you may take off from your charges to the next needy knight who comes this way.

Come then, for it grows late and the horses are stamping in the roadway."

The Lady Tiphaine and her spouse sprang upon their steeds without setting feet to stirrup, and away they jingled down the white moonlit highway, with Sir Nigel at the lady's bridle-arm, and Ford a spear's length behind them.

Alleyne had lingered for an instant in the passage, and as he did so there came a wild outcry from a chamber upon the left, and out there ran Aylward and John, laughing together like two schoolboys who are bent upon a prank.

At sight of Alleyne they slunk past him with somewhat of a shame- faced air, and springing upon their horses galloped after their party.

The hubbub within the chamber did not cease, however, but rather increased, with yells of:

"A moi, mes amis!

A moi, camarades!

A moi, l'honorable champion de l'Eveque de Montaubon!

A la recouse de l'eglise sainte!"

So shrill was the outcry that both the inn-keeper and Alleyne, with every varlet within hearing, rushed wildly to the scene of the uproar.

It was indeed a singular scene which met their eyes.

The room was a long and lofty one, stone floored and bare, with a fire at the further end upon which a great pot was boiling.

A deal table ran down the centre, with a wooden wine-pitcher upon it and two horn cups.

Some way from it was a smaller table with a single beaker and a broken wine-bottle.

From the heavy wooden rafters which formed the roof there hung rows of hooks which held up sides of bacon, joints of smoked beef, and strings of onions for winter use. In the very centre of all these, upon the largest hook of all, there hung a fat little red-faced man with enormous whiskers, kicking madly in the air and clawing at rafters, hams, and all else that was within hand-grasp.

The huge steel hook had been passed through the collar of his leather jerkin, and there he hung like a fish on a line, writhing, twisting, and screaming, but utterly unable to free himself from his extraordinary position.

It was not until Alleyne and the landlord had mounted on the table that they were able to lift him down, when he sank gasping with rage into a seat, and rolled his eyes round in every direction.

"Has he gone?" quoth he.

"Gone?

Who?"

"He, the man with the red head, the giant man."

"Yes," said Alleyne, "he hath gone."

"And comes not back?"

"No."

"The better for him!" cried the little man, with a long sigh of relief.

"Mon Dieu!

What! am I not the champion of the Bishop of Montaubon?

Ah, could I have descended, could I have come down, ere he fled!

Then you would have seen.

You would have beheld a spectacle then.

There would have been one rascal the less upon earth.

Ma, foi, yes!" "Good master Pelligny," said the landlord, "these gentlemen have not gone very fast, and I have a horse in the stable at your disposal, for I would rather have such bloody doings as you threaten outside the four walls of mine auberge."

"I hurt my leg and cannot ride," quoth the bishop's champion. "I strained a sinew on the day that I slew the three men at Castelnau."

"God save you, master Pelligny!" cried the landlord.

"It must be an awesome thing to have so much blood upon one's soul.

And yet I do not wish to see so valiant a man mishandled, and so I will, for friendship's sake, ride after this Englishman and bring him back to you."

"You shall not stir," cried the champion, seizing the inn-keeper in a convulsive grasp. "I have a love for you, Gaston, and I would not bring your house into ill repute, nor do such scath to these walls and chattels as must befall if two such men as this Englishman and I fall to work here."

"Nay, think not of me!" cried the inn-keeper.

"What are my walls when set against the honor of Francois Poursuivant d'Amour Pelligny, champion of the Bishop of Montaubon.

My horse, Andre!"

"By the saints, no!

Gaston, I will not have it!

You have said truly that it is an awesome thing to have such rough work upon one's soul.

I am but a rude soldier, yet I have a mind.

Mon Dieu!

I reflect, I weigh, I balance.

Shall I not meet this man again?

Shall I not bear him in mind? Shall I not know him by his great paws and his red head?