Authors: Shirley McKay
âMust not see you have been brawling,' Lachlan interrupted. âFor all he is a patient man, you wear his patience thin. And he is another man, that hasna taken much to you. Let us get you off the street.'
âHow, brawling?' Hew objected. âClearly, this was a trap.'
âAs I understand it, you made the first cut,' Lachlan grinned. âAnd a pretty stroke it was. I had not hoped to see you fight so well.'
âMuch good did it do me,' Hew acknowledged sourly. âI missed the oldest trick, and did not watch my back.'
âAye, well, there were three of them,' Lachlan conceded graciously. âYou had little chance. Whisht, I hear the watch. Let's get you home.'
âWhat about him?' As he struggled to his feet, Hew caught sight of a body, slumped in the shadows. âJesu, is he dead?'
âGood point.' Lachlan turned the body over with a kick, leaving Hew to wince as the figure stirred and groaned. âNot killed,' he called out cheerfully. He kicked the man again, and pulled him to his knees. âOpen up your coat.' Robert Lachlan lifted up Hew's sword, and the man screamed in terror, as Hew shouted, âNo!'
âDinna be a fool!' Robert snorted. He wiped Hew's bloody blade across his victim's shirt and sent him sprawling back into the dust. âClean and tidy,' he approved, as he returned the sword to Hew. âNow we shall see you home. And you may thank your stars that you have not offended Annet.'
They returned to the inn, where Annet helped to smuggle them in through the back, bringing fresh towels and water to the room. Lachlan sat Hew on the bed. âTake off your shirt!'
âI thank you, but I do not think . . .' said Hew.
âWhisht, you silly beggar, and do what you're telt,' instructed Robert Lachlan. Robert stripped the shirt from Hew's back, using it to wipe the blood from his head and face.
âThat's a good shirt!' Hew complained.
âNot so good now.' Lachlan peered at the cut on his head. âYou will feel it in the morning.'
âI feel it now,' said Hew. âAnd I should like to go to sleep.'
âI do not doubt it,' Robert answered grimly. âNonetheless, we must go to the bar. You must not appear to have been fighting. For do not doubt that Hacket's men will come.' Lachlan pressed a towel against Hew's head. âHold hard, and stop the bleeding. Else I will have to stitch it, and I have no wish to hear you whimper like a girl.'
âYou are so very sure,' objected Hew, âI cannot take a stitch.'
âTrue enough,' Lachlan said, âthat though you speak like a lass, you fight like a man. No offence.'
âThough you fight like a man, you talk like a limmar,' snorted Hew. âNone taken.'
âYou have a fair few bruises there.' Lachlan examined Hew. âAnd a low hit to the back. Next time you pass water, look for blood.'
âAnd if there is blood?' pursued Hew.
Lachlan shrugged. âMebbe, you might die,' he guessed.
âJesu, thank you. Is it too much, to hope for a surgeon?' grumbled Hew.
âFor certain, it is too much. Did I not tell you? We must cover up the fight.' He rummaged through Hew's saddle bags. âClean clothes! Then what it is to be a gentleman! Put on another shirt and coat, and come downstairs. Annet will swear blind we were not out tonight. Pull your cap well down, to hide the bandages.'
âI thank you,' Hew said awkwardly, holding out his purse.
Lachlan shook his head. âI do not want your money.'
âI thought it was for money that you fought,' objected Hew.
âYou mock me, sir. And I have saved your life; that does not mark a gentleman,' Lachlan answered quietly.
âIn truth, I know that, Robert, and it is not meant,' said Hew. âTis simply that I do not understand. Why should you save my life? For as you said yourself, it is for money that you fight.'
âThat's true enough. And yet there is another cause â not yet faith or honour, that you rate so high â why a man might fight,' Lachlan mused.
âAye? Then what is that?'
âPleasure!'
Lachlan burst out laughing at the horror on Hew's face, leaning forward to take up the purse. âNo, you are right. Money is the main cause. Money's good. We shall spend this spoil together, on French wine.'
Hew protested, âBe my guest, but only, let me sleep!'
âJesu, you are slow. Did I not tell you, that you must be seen?'
Lachlan helped to dress him in another suit of clothes and rammed the clean cap smartly on Hew's aching head.
âWe shall get you drunk, or at best, seeming drunk, that will explain why you are somewhat worse for wear. Do not wriggle like a bairn,' he scolded as Hew winced. âRemember that you are not hurt.'
âTis hard enough that, with every part hurting,' scowled Hew.
âCome then, let us drown the pain,' Lachlan said more kindly.
His strategy proved sound, for no sooner were they seated at the bar when the Conservator appeared, flanked by the town guard. âThere has been a brangling in the street, and the perpetrators fled. I wondered what you knew of it,' he inquired abruptly. Hew felt hot and dizzy, and the sticky patch of blood was sticking to his hat. He wondered if it had begun to seep through.
Lachlan answered for him. âMy master is a little worse for wear. He has drunk a good deal of the claret wine. Is that not true, Annet?'
Annet nodded. âHe has been at it all night.'
âWhat happened?' Hew questioned weakly, finding his voice through the fog.
âTwo of Archie Chandler's men were set on in the street. One cut through his hand, almost to the bone.'
âThat sounds,' said Hew, âlike a defensive wound.'
Hacket glared at him. âUnderstand, it will not do,' he answered heavily. We allow no fighting here.' Suddenly, he softened. âAye, you do look rough. Tis foolishness to drink so much; your belly will be raw still from the sea.'
âSo I have warned him,' Lachlan mentioned dryly. âHe is raw through and through, and he will not be told.'
Hacket started. âDo you let your servant speak so? Do you let him drink with you?' he asked Hew in astonishment.
âHe is not . . .' Hew checked himself. âHe is not accustomed to the service of a gentleman. I have yet to break him in.'
âAye? Well do it, soon,' the Conservator advised him. âAnd God speed you on your way.'
âAm I then your servant?' Lachlan demanded once Hacket had left.
âSo it would seem. God help us both,' muttered Hew. âTell me though, why should I trust you?'
âWhy should you not?'
âBecause you are a man for hire.'
âYou are a rare lawyer, sir,' Lachlan retorted, âthat won't stand for hire. And yet you take your pleasure in the fight.'
âYou mistake me,' Hew said softly. His bones ached, he felt dizzy, and a little sick. âFor I swear, I take no pleasure in the fight.'
âNo? I saw you draw your sword without a qualm. You would rather have cut off his hand, than relinquish your purse.'
âThat was instinct,' Hew protested. âI had no desire to hurt the man.'
âAye? A soldier's instinct. You have fought before. I saw the scars. Someone cut you with a knife. The wounds were stitched.'
âAye, it's true, that someone tried to kill me once.'
âI'll warrant, then,' said Lachlan shrewdly, â
someone
died.'
âAs it happens, someone did,' Hew stood up and sighed. âThough not in the way you suppose. Robert, you misjudge me. And I am prepared to admit, that I have misjudged you. You are not in any way what I expected of a servant. As servitude goes, you are not very good at it. I, for my part, dislike playing master. Nonetheless, you saved my life, and if you want it still, the place is yours. Tomorrow I shall leave for Ghent. Here is money; hire fresh horses. I will pay you by the day. Now, though, I am going to bed. And, for all the world, I would not be disturbed before the morrow. You are right about one thing.'
âWhat is that, sir?' Lachlan asked grinning.
âI am raw to the quick,' his new master groaned.
There were four or five inns in Ter Neuzen, each of them marked with its own painted sign â the
Bittern
, the
Heron
, the
Hart
, the
Blue Boar
â that gave hope of comfort and welcome to all. In Scotland, the taverns were shuttered and closed, and marked after dark by a few grudging lamps, where naming and signs were unknown. And yet the promise of a warmth and welcome free to all had soon worn thin, as they were turned away from every door.
âThey cannot all be full,' Hew grumbled, in the cobbled courtyard of the
Golden Orb
. It had seemed to him in any case a place of last resort, of dubious repute on the seedy side of town.
Robert Lachlan grinned. âI think it more than likely they are not. They dinna like the English much.'
âWe are not English,' Hew pointed out. He felt hungry, tired and cross, vexed by the charade that passed for hospitality among the lowland Dutch.
âOr, indeed, the Scots. They may have had some trouble,' Robert said evasively, âwith soldiers passing through the town.'
âWhat sort of trouble?' Hew inquired.
The soldier shrugged. âThe common sort. They brangle in the bar, and do not pay the bill, and such. I will try a little harder, at the next, to plead your case.'
And at the next, the
Rose
, he made a brave attempt, to win through shameless flirting with the lass behind the bar, who put up a fine-spirited defence. At last he left her, laughing, and reported back to Hew, âNo luck.'
âWhy not?' demanded Hew. The sky was growing dark, and he felt the pull of suppertime.
âHer mistress will not hear of it. The last Scottish soldiers who lodged here riddled her cheese with lead shot.'
Hew gaped at him. âWhy, in pity's name, would the soldiers shoot the cheese?'
âThey didna shoot it,' Robert explained patiently. âThey filled it up with shot. It is a common trick. The cheese is brought out to the table whole, on little carts. They weigh it first and after, and the customer is charged by weight for what he takes. The soldiers strive to limit the discrepancy, by making little riddles with their knives, that they fill up again with stones or musket shot. This last lot overreached themselves, and sent the cheese back heavier than when it came. Her mistress, says the lass, was not best pleased.'
Hew began to wonder whether Robert was a hindrance, rather than a help.
âPerhaps it might help more, if I spoke to them in French,' he sighed. âLet us try the next one, here, the
Swan
.'
âOr mebbe not the
Swan
,' Robert answered quickly.
âAnd why not the
Swan
? Have you brangled in the bar, or made riddles in the cheese?' demanded Hew.
âNeither, I do promise you. Yet there is a matter of the lass behind the bar. It is remotely possible that she has borne my child,' the soldier answered sheepishly.
âOf which you gave no warning when I took you as a guide,' Hew said with a groan. Have you any other secrets up your sleeve?'
Robert did not answer this. âI think, in view of all, we must venture out of town. According to the most obliging lassie in the
Swan
, there is another tavern on the Antwerp road, that is clean and comfortable. It is along a country track, and takes us from our way. I fear I cannot vouch for it.'
âIf you are not known there, then that is for the good,' Hew replied severely. âSince it is growing dark, then let us set our course for it, and once we have arrived there, see that you behave yourself.'
Robert fell in behind him, with a meek and quiet countenance Hew doubted would last long, and they took the low road west. The inn was four or five miles out, in deep flat swathes of countryside, with little else in sight. It stood beside an old, dilapidated barn, upon a piece of land that once had been a farm, where now a clutch of lonely chickens scratched. Beyond were fields of cabbages and rye, with a single wooden windmill on the other side, from which the inn, predictably, had taken both its name, and the picture etched crudely on its painted sign,
De Windmolen
. Hew suppressed a smile. How many inns and taverns bore that weary name, that bordered on canals and looked on quiet streets? Hundreds, he supposed. Robert stopped. âI dinna like it,' he said bluntly. âIt is too remote.'
Hew felt a wave of irritation. âWhat matters if it is remote? We shall be peaceful here.'
âToo peaceful,' murmured Robert. âYou forget, there is a war. And when there is a war, people never are at rest. We are too far from the town.'
âThen what do you suggest? We have exhausted Ter Neuzen and Sluis. And it is now too dark to go much further on.'
âAye, very well,' Robert said reluctantly, âbut do not drop your guard.'
In contrast to the inns in town, they were welcomed by the keeper and his wife, and their daughter of sixteen, a comely girl who wore a broad-brimmed hat, as though she had been working on the farm. They were shown a whitewashed room, which overlooked the fields. Since the outlines of the windmill sails were shadowed on the walls, the inn was aptly named. The room was plainly furnished, in a simple, country style, with two small lits de camps, two stools, and blankets of bright blue. An earthen jug and candlestick were set out on the window ledge, beneath the wooden shutters open to the moon. The evening air was chill. Hew nodded at the girl. âIt's very clean.'
âThe Dutch are always clean,' Robert said dismissively, as though
it were an irritant, that ought to be excused. âThere is no lock here, just a bolt. Do not leave anything of value in the room.'
âThere are no strangers here but us,' Hew pointed out. He unpacked his bag, and hung up his cloak, yet kept his purse and letters close inside his shirt. The soldier nodded, âWell and good. Do not take off your sword.'