turned weel out for the warden,’ continued Dan; ‘Redhough an’ his lads hae been as weel scrieving o’er law and dale as lying getting hard pelts round the stane wa’s o’ Roxburgh, an’ muckle mair gude has he done; for gin they dinna hunger them out o’ their hauddin, they’ll keep it. Ye’ll draw an Englishman by the gab easier than drive him wi’ an airn gaud. I wad ride fifty miles to see ony ane o’ the bonny dames that a’ this pelting an’ peching is about.’
‘Twa wanton glaikit gillies, I’ll uphaud,’ said Pate, looking at the restless hough; ‘o’er muckle marth i’ the back, an’ meldar i’ the brusket. Gin I had the heffing o’ them, I sude tak a staup out o’ their bickers––. Whisht, I thought I heard the clanking o’ horse heels––. Callant, clap the lid down on the pat; what hae they’t hinging geaving up there for?’
The clattering of the horses approached, but apparently with caution; and at length a voice called at the door in an English accent, ‘Hollo, who holds here?’ ‘Leel men, an’ for the Scots,’ answered Dan, starting to his feet, and laying his hand on his sword. ‘For the knight of Mountcomyn, the Scottish warden?’ – inquired the horse-man without. ‘For the same,’ was the answer. ‘It is toward his castle that we are bound. Can any of you direct us the way?’
‘Troth, that I can,’ said old Pate, groping to satisfy himself that the lid was close down on the pot, and then running to the door; ‘I can tell you every fit o’ the road, masters: You maun gang by the Fanesh, you see; it lies yon way, you see; an’ then up the Brown rig, as straight as a line through Philhope-head, an’ into Borthwick; then up Aitas-burn – round the Crib-law – an’ wheel to the right; then the burn that ye come to there, ye maun cross that, and three miles farther on you come to the castle of Mountcomyn––. Braw cheer there lads!’
‘I am afraid, friend,’ said the English trooper, ‘we will make nothing of this direction. Is it far to this same castle of the Scottish warden?’
‘O no, naething but a step, some three Scots miles.’
‘And how is the road?’
‘A prime road, man; no a step in’t a’ wad tak your horse to the brusket; only there’s nae track; ye maun just take an ettle. Keep an ee on the tail o’ Charlie’s wain, an’ ye’ll no gang far wrang.’
‘Our young lord and master is much fatigued,’ said the trooper; ‘I am afraid we shall scarcely make it out. Pray, sir, could you spare us a guide?’
Dan, who was listening behind, now stepped forward, and addressed them: ‘My masters, as the night is o’ darkness, I could hardly ride to Mountcomyn mysel, an’, far or near, I couldna win there afore day. Gin ye dought accept o’ my father’s humble cheer the night––’
‘The callant’s bewiddied, an’ waur than bewiddied,’ said Pate: ‘We haena cheer for oursels, let abe for a byking o’ English lords an’ squires!’
‘I would gladly accept of any accommodation,’ said a sweet delicate voice, like that of a boy; ‘for the path has been so dreadful that I am almost dead, and unable to proceed further. I have a safe-conduct to the Scottish court, signed by all the wardens of the marches, and every knight, yeoman, and vassal is obliged to give me furtherance.’
‘I dinna ken muckle about conducks an’ signatures,’ said Pate, ‘but I trow there winna be mony syllables in some o’ the names if a’ the wardens hae signed your libelt; for I ken weel there’s ane o’ them whase edication brak aff at the letter G, an’ never gat farrer. But I’m no ca’ing ye a leear, southron lord, ye may be a vera honest man; an’ as your errand may be something unco express, ye had better post on.’
‘It sal never be casten up to me neither in camp nor ha,’ said Dan, ‘that a stranger was cawed frae my auld father’s door at this time o’ the night. Light down, light down, southron lord, ye are a privileged man; an’, as I like to see the meaning o’ things, I’ll ride wi’ ye mysel the morn, fit for fit, to the castle o’ Mountcomyn.’
The strangers were soon all on their feet, and ushered into the family circle, for there was no fire-place in the house but that one. They consisted of five stout troopers, well armed, a page, and a young nobleman, having the appearance of a youth about seventeen or eighteen years of age. Every eye was instantly turned on him, there was something so extraordinary in his appearance. Instead of a steel helmet, he wore a velvet cap, shaped like a crown, striped with belts, bars, and crosses of gold wire, and manifestly more for ornament than use. His fair ringlets were peeping in curls out from below his cap, and his face and bright blue eyes were lovely as the dawn of a summer’s morning.
They were not well seated till a noise of the tread of horses was again heard.
‘The warld be a-wastle us!’ cried old Pate, ‘wha’s that now? I think fouk will be eaten up wi’ fouk, an’ naething for fouk’s pains but dry thanks; – thanks winna feed the cat––’
He was stopped in his regretful soliloquy by a rough voice at the door: ‘Ho, wha hauds the house?’ The same answer was given as to the former party, and in a minute the strangers entered without law or leave.
‘Ye travel unco late, maisters,’ said old Pate: ‘How far may ye be for the night?’
‘We meant to have reached the tower of Gorranberry tonight,’ said one of the strangers, ‘but we have been benighted, and were drawn hither by the light in your bole. I fear we must draw on your hospitality till day.’
‘Callant Peter, gang an’ stap a wisp i’ that bole,’ said Pate; ‘it seems to be the beacon light to a’ the clanjaumphry i’ the hale country. I tauld ye aye to big it up; but no ane o’ ye heeds what I say. I hae seen houses that some fouk whiles gaed by. But, my maisters, its nae gate ava to Gorranberry – a mere haut-stride-and-loup. I’ll send a guide to Bilhope-head wi’ ye; for troth we hae neither meat nor drink, house-room nor stabling, mair about the toun. We’re but poor yeomen, an’ haud our mailin for hard service. We hae tholed a foray the night already, an’ a double ane wad herrie us out o’ house an’ hauld. The warld be a’ wastle us! I think a’ the mosstroopers be abraid the night! Bairns, swee that bouking o’ claes aff the fire; ye’ll burn it i’ the boiling.’
The new comers paid little attention to this address of the old man; they saw that he was superannuated, and had all the narrow selfishness that too generally clings to that last miserable stage of human existence; but drawing nigh they began to eye the southron party with looks of dark suspicion, if not of fierceness.
‘I see what maks ye sae frightet at our entrance here,’ said the first Scots trooper, ‘ye hae some southron spies amang ye – Gudeman, ye sal answer to the king for this, an’ to the Douglas too, whilk ye’ll find a waur job.’
‘Ken where ye are, an’ wha ye’re speaking to,’ said Dan, stepping forward and browing the last speaker face to face: ‘If either the ae party or the ither be spies, or aught else but leel men, ye shall find, ere ye gang far, whase land ye are on, an’ whase kipples ye are under. That auld man’s my father, an,’ doitet as he is, the man amang ye that says a saucy word to him I’ll gar sleep in his shoon a fit shorter than he rase i’ the morning. Wha are ye, sir, or where do you travel by night on my master the warden’s bounds?’
‘Sir,’ answered another trooper, who seemed to be rather a more polished man, ‘I applaud your spirit, and will answer your demand. We go with our lord and master, Prince Alexander Stuart of Scotland, on a mission to a noble English family. Here is the king’s seal as well as a pass signed by the English warden. We are leel men and true.’
‘Where is the prince?’ said Dan: ‘A prince of Scotland i’ my father’s house? Which is he?’
A slender elegant stripling stept forward. ‘Here he is, brave yeoman,’ said the youth: ‘No ceremony – Regard me as your fellow and companion for this night.’
Dan whipped off his bonnet and clapped his foot upon it, and bowing low and awkwardly to his prince he expressed