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showed bleeding fingers.

โ€˜Ay, for meddling with a royal falcon,โ€™ broke in Jean. โ€˜โ€™Tis thou, false loon, whose craig should be raxed.โ€™

Happily this was an unknown tongue to the foresters, and Sir Patrick gravely silenced her.

โ€˜Whist, lady, brawls consort not with your rank. Gang back doucely to my leddy.โ€™

โ€˜But Skywing! he has her jesses,โ€™ said the girl, but in a lower tone, as though rebuked.

โ€˜Sir ranger,โ€™ said Sir Patrick courteously, โ€˜I trust you will let the young demoiselle have her hawk. It was loosed in ignorance and heedlessness, no doubt, but I trow it is the rule in England, as elsewhere, that ladies of the blood royal are not bound by forest laws.โ€™

โ€˜Sir, if we had known,โ€™ said the ranger, who was evidently of gentle blood, as he took his foot off the jesses, and Jean now allowed David to remount her.

โ€˜But my Lord Duke is very heedful of his bustards, and when Roger there went to seize the bird, my young lady was over-ready with her knife.โ€™

โ€˜Who would not be for thee, my bird?โ€™ murmured Jean.

โ€˜And yonder big fellow came plunging down and up with his swordโ€”so as he was nigh on being the death of poor Roger again for doing his duty. If such be the ways of you Scots, sir, they be not English ways under my Lord Duke, that is to say, and if I let the lady and her hawk go, forest law must have its due on the young man thereโ€”I must have him up to Fotheringay to abide the Dukeโ€™s pleasure.โ€™

โ€˜Heed me not, Sir Patrick!โ€™ exclaimed Geordie. โ€˜I would not have those of your meinie brought into jeopardy for my cause.โ€™

David was plucking his fatherโ€™s mantle to suggest who George was, which in fact Sir Patrick might suspect enough to be conscious of the full awkwardness of the position, and to abandon the youth was impossible. Though it was not likely that the Duke of York would hang him if aware of his rank, he might be detained as a hostage or put to heavy ransom, or he might never be brought to the Dukeโ€™s presence at all, but be put to death by some truculent underling, incredulous of a Scotsmanโ€™s tale, if indeed he were not too proud to tell it. Anyway, Sir Patrick felt bound to stand by him.

โ€˜Good sir,โ€™ said he to the forester, โ€˜will it content thee if we all go with thee to thy Duke? The two Scottish princesses are of his kin, and near of blood to King Henry, whom they are about to visit at Windsor. I am on a mission thither on affairs of state, but I shall be willing to make my excuses to him for any misdemeanour committed on his lands by my followers.โ€™

The forester was consenting, when George criedโ€”

โ€˜Iโ€™ll have no hindrance to your journey on my account, Sir Patrick. Let me answer for myself.โ€™

โ€˜Foolish laddie,โ€™ said the knight. โ€˜Father Romuald and I were only now conferring as to paying the Duke a visit on our way. Sir forester, we shall be beholden to you for guiding us.โ€™

He further inquired into the rangerโ€™s hurts, and salved them with a piece of gold, while David thought proper to observe to Georgeโ€”

โ€˜So much for thy devoir to thy princess! It was for Skywingโ€™s craig she cared, never thine.โ€™

George turned a deaf ear to the insinuation. He was allowed free hands and his own horse, which was perhaps well for the Englishmen, for Ringan Raefoot, running by his stirrup, showed him a long knife, and said with a grinโ€”

โ€˜Ready for the first who daurs to lay hands on the Master! Gin I could have come up in time, the loon had never risen from the ground.โ€™

George endeavoured in vain to represent how much worse this would have made their condition.

Sir Patrick, joining the ladies, informed them of the necessity of turning aside to Fotheringay, which he had done not very willingly, being ignorant of the character of the Duke of York, except as one of the war party against France and Scotland, whereas the Beauforts were for peace. As a vigorous governor of Normandy, he had not commended him self to one whose sympathies were French. Lady Drummond, however, remembered that his wife, Cicely Nevil, the Rose of Raby, was younger sister to that Ralf Nevil who had married the friend of her youth, Alice Montagu, now Countess of Salisbury in her own right.

Sir Patrick did not let Jean escape a rebuke.

โ€˜So, lady, you see what perils to brave men you maids can cause by a little heedlessness.โ€™

โ€˜I never asked Geordie to put his finger in,โ€™ returned Jean saucily. โ€˜I could have brought off Skywing for myself without such a clamjamfrie after me.โ€™

But Eleanor and Annis agreed that it was as good as a ballad, and ought to be sung in one, only Jean would have to figure as the โ€˜dour lassie.โ€™ For she continued to aver, by turns, that Geordie need never have meddled, and that of course it was his bounden duty to stand by his Kingโ€™s sister, and that she owed him no thanks. If he were hanged for it he had run his craig into the noose.

So she tossed her proud head, and toyed with her falcon, as all rode on their way to Fotheringay, with Geordie in the midst of the rangers.

It was so many years since there had been serious war in England, that the castles of the interior were far less of fortresses than of magnificent abodes for the baronage, who had just then attained their fullest splendour. It may be observed that the Wars of the Roses were for the most part fought out in battles, not by sieges. Thus Fotheringay had spread out into a huge pile, which crowned the hill above, with a strong inner court and lofty donjon tower indeed, and with mighty walls, but with buildings for retainers all round, reaching down to the beautiful newly-built octagon-towered church; and with a great park stretching for miles, for all kinds of sport.

โ€˜All this enclosed! Yet they make sic a wark about their bustards, as they caโ€™ them,โ€™ muttered Jean.

The forester had sent a messenger forward to inform the Duke of York of his capture. The consequence was that the cavalcade had no sooner crossed the first drawbridge under the great gateway of the castle, where the banner of Plantagenet was displayed, than before it were seen a goodly company, in the glittering and gorgeous robes of the fifteenth century.

There was no doubt of welcome. Foremost was a graceful, slenderly-made gentleman about thirty years old, in rich azure and gold, who doffed his cap of maintenance, turned up with fur, and with long ends, and, bowing low, declared himself delighted that the princesses of Scotland, his good cousins, should honour his poor dwelling.

He gave his hand to assist Jean to alight, and an equally gorgeous but much younger gentleman in the same manner waited on Eleanor. A tall, grizzled, sunburnt figure received Lady Drummond with recognition on both

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