There was a little while of restless, rustling silence, during
which the Constable took his place in the seat appointed for him
directly in front of and below the King's throne. A moment or two
when even the restlessness and the rustling were quieted, and
then the King leaned forward and spoke to the Constable, who
immediately called out, in a loud, clear voice.
"Let them go!" Then again, "Let them go!" Then, for the third and
last time, "Let them go and do their endeavor, in God's name!"
At this third command the combatants, each of whom had till that
moment been sitting as motionless as a statue of iron, tightened
rein, and rode slowly and deliberately forward without haste, yet
without hesitation, until they met in the very middle of the
lists.
In the battle which followed, Myles fought with the long sword,
the Earl with the hand-gisarm for which he had asked. The moment
they met, the combat was opened, and for a time nothing was heard
but the thunderous clashing and clamor of blows, now and then
beating intermittently, now and then pausing. Occasionally, as
the combatants spurred together, checked, wheeled, and recovered,
they would be hidden for a moment in a misty veil of dust, which,
again drifting down the wind, perhaps revealed them drawn a
little apart, resting their panting horses. Then, again, they
would spur together, striking as they passed, wheeling and
striking again.
Upon the scaffolding all was still, only now and then for the
buzz of muffled exclamations or applause of those who looked on.
Mostly the applause was from Myles's friends, for from the very
first he showed and steadily maintained his advantage over the
older man. "Hah! well struck! well recovered!" "Look ye! the
sword bit that time!" "Nay, look, saw ye him pass the point of
the gisarm?" Then, "Falworth! Falworth!" as some more than
usually skilful stroke or parry occurred.
Meantime Myles's father sat straining his sightless eyeballs, as
though to pierce his body's darkness with one ray of light that
would show him how his boy held his own in the fight, and Lord
Mackworth, leaning with his lips close to the blind man's ear,
told him point by point how the battle stood.
"Fear not, Gilbert," said he at each pause in the fight. "He
holdeth his own right well." Then, after a while: "God is with
us, Gilbert. Alban is twice wounded and his horse faileth. One
little while longer and the victory is ours!"
A longer and more continuous interval of combat followed this
last assurance, during which Myles drove the assault fiercely and
unrelentingly as though to overbear his enemy by the very power
and violence of the blows he delivered. The Earl defended himself
desperately, but was borne back, back, back, farther and farther.
Every nerve of those who looked on was stretched to breathless
tensity, when, almost as his enemy was against the barriers,
Myles paused and rested.
"Out upon it!" exclaimed the Earl of Mackworth, almost shrilly in
his excitement, as the sudden lull followed the crashing of
blows. "Why doth the boy spare him? That is thrice he hath given
him grace to recover; an he had pushed the battle that time he
had driven him back against the barriers."
It was as the Earl had said; Myles had three times given his
enemy grace when victory was almost in his very grasp. He had
three times spared him, in spite of all he and those dear to him
must suffer should his cruel and merciless enemy gain the
victory. It was a false and foolish generosity, partly the fault
of his impulsive youth--more largely of his romantic training in
the artificial code of French chivalry. He felt that the battle
was his, and so he gave his enemy these three chances to recover,
as some chevalier or knight- errant of romance might have done,
instead of pushing the combat to a mercifully speedy end-- and
his foolish generosity cost him dear.
In the momentary pause that had thus stirred the Earl of
Mackworth to a sudden outbreak, the Earl of Alban sat upon his
panting, sweating war- horse, facing his powerful young enemy at
about twelve paces distant. He sat as still as a rock, holding
his gisarm poised in front of him. He had, as the Earl of
Mackworth had said, been wounded twice, and each time with the
point of the sword, so much more dangerous than a direct cut with
the weapon. One wound was beneath his armor, and no one but he
knew how serious it might be; the other was under the overlapping
of the epauhere, and from it a finger's-breadth of blood ran
straight down his side and over the housings of his horse. From
without, the still motionless iron figure appeared calm and
expressionless; within, who knows what consuming blasts of hate,
rage, and despair swept his heart as with a fiery whirlwind.
As Myles looked at the motionless, bleeding figure, his breast
swelled with pity. "My Lord," said he, "thou art sore wounded and
the fight is against thee; wilt thou not yield thee?"
No one but that other heard the speech, and no one but Myles
heard the answer that came back, hollow, cavernous, "Never, thou
dog! Never!"
Then in an instant, as quick as a flash, his enemy spurred
straight upon Myles, and as he spurred he struck a last
desperate, swinging blow, in which he threw in one final effort
all the strength of hate, of fury, and of despair. Myles whirled
his horse backward, warding the blow with his shield as he did
so. The blade glanced from the smooth face of the shield, and,
whether by mistake or not, fell straight and true, and with
almost undiminished force, upon the neck of Myles's war-horse,
and just behind the ears. The animal staggered forward, and then
fell upon its knees, and at the same instant the other, as though
by the impetus of the rush, dashed full upon it with all the
momentum lent by the weight of iron it carried. The shock was
irresistible, and the stunned and wounded horse was flung upon
the ground, rolling over and over. As his horse fell, Myles
wrenched one of his feet out of the stirrup; the other caught for
an instant, and he was flung headlong with stunning violence, his
armor crashing as he fell. In the cloud of dust that arose no one
could see just what happened, but that what was done was done
deliberately no one doubted. The earl, at once checking and
spurring his foaming charger, drove the iron-shod war-horse
directly over Myles's prostrate body. Then, checking him fiercely
with the curb, reined him back, the hoofs clashing and crashing,
over the figure beneath. So he had ridden over the father at
York, and so he rode over the son at Smithfield.
Myles, as he lay prostrate and half stunned by his fall, had seen
his enemy thus driving his rearing horse down upon him, but was
not able to defend himself. A fallen knight in full armor was
utterly powerless to rise without assistance; Myles lay helpless
in the clutch of the very iron that was his defence. He closed
his eyes involuntarily, and then horse and rider were upon him.
There was a deafening, sparkling crash, a glimmering faintness,
then another crash as the horse was reined furiously back again,
and then a humming stillness.
In a moment, upon the scaffolding all was a tumult of uproar and
confusion, shouting and gesticulation; only the King sat calm,
sullen, impassive. The Earl wheeled his horse and sat for a
moment or two as though to make quite sure that he knew the
King's mind. The blow that had been given was foul, unknightly,
but the King gave no sign either of acquiescence or rebuke; he
had willed that Myles was to die.
Then the Earl turned again, and rode deliberately up to his
prostrate enemy.
When Myles opened his eyes after that moment of stunning silence,
it was to see the other looming above him on his war-horse,
swinging his gisarm for one last mortal blow--pitiless,
merciless.
The sight of that looming peril brought back Myles's wandering
senses like a flash of lightning. He flung up his shield, and met
the blow even as it descended, turning it aside. It only
protracted the end.
Once more the Earl of Alban raised the gisarm, swinging it twice
around his head before he struck. This time, though the shield
glanced it, the blow fell upon the shoulder-piece, biting through
the steel plate and leathern jack beneath even to the bone. Then
Myles covered his head with his shield as a last protecting
chance for life.
For the third time the Earl swung the blade flashing, and then it
fell, straight and true, upon the defenceless body, just below
the left arm, biting deep through the armor plates. For an
instant the blade stuck fast, and that instant was Myles's
salvation. Under the agony of the blow he gave a muffled cry, and
almost instinctively grasped the shaft of the weapon with both
hands. Had the Earl let go his end of the weapon, he would have
won the battle at his leisure and most easily; as it was, he
struggled violently to wrench the gisarm away from Myles. In that
short, fierce struggle Myles was dragged to his knees, and then,
still holding the weapon with one hand, he clutched the trappings
of the Earl's horse with the other. The next moment he was upon
his feet. The other struggled to thrust him away, but Myles,
letting go the gisarm, which he held with his left hand, clutched
him tightly by the sword-belt in the intense, vise-like grip of
despair. In vain the Earl strove to beat him loose with the shaft
of the gisarm, in vain he spurred and reared his horse to shake
him off; Myles held him tight, in spite of all his struggles.
He felt neither the streaming blood nor the throbbing agony of
his wounds; every faculty of soul, mind, body, every power of
life, was centered in one intense, burning effort. He neither
felt, thought, nor reasoned, but clutching, with the blindness of
instinct, the heavy, spiked, iron- headed mace that hung at the
Earl's saddle-bow, he gave it one tremendous wrench that snapped
the plaited leathern thongs that held it as though they were
skeins of thread. Then, grinding his teeth as with a spasm, he
struck as he had never struck before--once, twice, thrice full
upon the front of the helmet. Crash! crash! And then, even as the
Earl toppled sidelong, crash! And the iron plates split and
crackled under the third blow. Myles had one flashing glimpse of
an awful face, and then the saddle was empty.
Then, as he held tight to the horse, panting, dizzy, sick to
death, he felt the hot blood gushing from his side, filling his
body armor, and staining the ground upon which he stood. Still he
held tightly to the saddle-bow of the fallen man's horse until,
through his glimmering sight, he saw the Marshal, the Lieutenant,
and the attendants gather around him. He heard the Marshal ask
him, in a voice that sounded faint and distant, if he was
dangerously wounded. He did not answer, and one of the
attendants, leaping from his horse, opened the umbril of his
helmet, disclosing the dull, hollow eyes, the ashy, colorless
lips, and the waxy forehead, upon which stood great beads of
sweat.
"Water! water!" he cried, hoarsely; "give me to drink!" Then,
quitting his hold upon the horse, he started blindly across the
lists towards the gate of the barrier. A shadow that chilled his
heart seemed to fall upon him. "It is death," he muttered; then
he stopped, then swayed for an instant, and then toppled
headlong, crashing as he fell.