holding the horses, and looking silly enough, as is usual in cases where their assistance is not wanted.
Wayland and his charge paused, as if out of curiosity, and then gradually, without making any inquiries, or being asked any questions, they mingled with the group, as if they had always made part of it.
They had not stood there above five minutes, anxiously keeping as much to the side of the road as possible, so as to place the other travellers betwixt them and Varney, when Lord Leicester's master of the horse, followed by Lambourne, came riding fiercely down the hill, their horses' flanks and the rowels of their spurs showing bloody tokens of the rate at which they travelled. The appearance of the stationary group around the cottages, wearing their buckram suits in order to protect their masking dresses, having their light cart for transporting their scenery, and carrying various fantastic properties in their hands for the more easy conveyance, let the riders at once into the character and purpose of the company.
'You are revellers,' said Varney, 'designing for Kenilworth?'
'RECTE QUIDEM, DOMINE SPECTATISSIME,' answered one of the party.
'And why the devil stand you here?' said Varney, 'when your utmost dispatch will but bring you to Kenilworth in time? The Queen dines at Warwick to-morrow, and you loiter here, ye knaves.'
'I very truth, sir,' said a little, diminutive urchin, wearing a vizard with a couple of sprouting horns of an elegant scarlet hue, having, moreover, a black serge jerkin drawn close to his body by lacing, garnished with red stockings, and shoes so shaped as to resemble cloven feet—'in very truth, sir, and you are in the right on't. It is my father the Devil, who, being taken in labour, has delayed our present purpose, by increasing our company with an imp too many.'
'The devil he has!' answered Varney, whose laugh, however, never exceeded a sarcastic smile.
'It is even as the juvenal hath said,' added the masker who spoke first; 'Our major devil—for this is but our minor one—is even now at LUCINA, FER OPEM, within that very TUGURIUM.'
'By Saint George, or rather by the Dragon, who may be a kinsman of the fiend in the straw, a most comical chance!' said Varney. 'How sayest thou, Lambourne, wilt thou stand godfather for the nonce? If the devil were to choose a gossip, I know no one more fit for the office.'
'Saving always when my betters are in presence,' said Lambourne, with the civil impudence of a servant who knows his services to be so indispensable that his jest will be permitted to pass muster.
'And what is the name of this devil, or devil's dam, who has timed her turns so strangely?' said Varney. 'We can ill afford to spare any of our actors.'
'GAUDET NOMINE SIBYLLAE,' said the first speaker; 'she is called Sibyl Laneham, wife of Master Robert Laneham—'
'Clerk to the Council-chamber door,' said Varney; 'why, she is inexcusable, having had experience how to have ordered her matters better. But who were those, a man and a woman, I think, who rode so hastily up the hill before me even now? Do they belong to your company?'
Wayland was about to hazard a reply to this alarming inquiry, when the little diablotin again thrust in his oar.
'So please you,' he said, coming close up to Varney, and speaking so as not to be overheard by his companions, 'the man was our devil major, who has tricks enough to supply the lack of a hundred such as Dame Laneham; and the woman, if you please, is the sage person whose assistance is most particularly necessary to our distressed comrade.'
'Oh, what! you have got the wise woman, then?' said Varney. 'Why, truly, she rode like one bound to a place where she was needed. And you have a spare limb of Satan, besides, to supply the place of Mistress Laneham?'
'Ay, sir,' said the boy; 'they are not so scarce in this world as your honour's virtuous eminence would suppose. This master-fiend shall spit a few flashes of fire, and eruct a volume or two of smoke on the spot, if it will do you pleasure—you would think he had AEtna in his abdomen.'
'I lack time just now, most hopeful imp of darkness, to witness his performance,' said Varney; 'but here is something for you all to drink the lucky hour—and so, as the play says, 'God be with Your labour!''
Thus speaking, he struck his horse with the spurs, and rode on his way.
Lambourne tarried a moment or two behind his master, and rummaged his pouch for a piece of silver, which he bestowed on the communicative imp, as he said, for his encouragement on his path to the infernal regions, some sparks of whose fire, he said, he could discover flashing from him already. Then having received the boy's thanks for his generosity he also spurred his horse, and rode after his master as fast as the fire flashes from flint.
'And now,' said the wily imp, sidling close up to Wayland's horse, and cutting a gambol in the air which seemed to vindicate his title to relationship with the prince of that element, 'I have told them who YOU are, do you in return tell me who I am?'
'Either Flibbertigibbet,' answered Wayland Smith, 'or else an imp of the devil in good earnest.'
'Thou hast hit it,' answered Dickie Sludge. 'I am thine own Flibbertigibbet, man; and I have broken forth of bounds, along with my learned preceptor, as I told thee I would do, whether he would or not. But what lady hast thou got with thee? I saw thou wert at fault the first question was asked, and so I drew up for thy assistance. But I must know all who she is, dear Wayland.'
'Thou shalt know fifty finer things, my dear ingle,' said Wayland; 'but a truce to thine inquiries just now. And since you are bound for Kenilworth, thither will I too, even for the love of thy sweet face and waggish company.'
'Thou shouldst have said my waggish face and sweet company,' said Dickie; 'but how wilt thou travel with us—I mean in what character?'
'E'en in that thou hast assigned me, to be sure—as a juggler; thou knowest I am used to the craft,' answered Wayland.
'Ay, but the lady?' answered Flibbertigibbet. 'Credit me, I think she IS one and thou art in a sea of troubles about her at this moment, as I can perceive by thy fidgeting.'
'Oh, she, man!—she is a poor sister of mine,' said Wayland; 'she can sing and play o' the lute would win the fish out o' the stream.'
'Let me hear her instantly,' said the boy, 'I love the lute rarely; I love it of all things, though I never heard it.'
'Then how canst thou love it, Flibbertigibbet?' said Wayland.
'As knights love ladies in old tales,' answered Dickie—'on hearsay.'
'Then love it on hearsay a little longer, till my sister is recovered from the fatigue of her journey,' said Wayland; muttering afterwards betwixt his teeth, 'The devil take the imp's curiosity! I must keep fair weather with him, or we shall fare the worse.'
He then proceeded to state to Master Holiday his own talents as a juggler, with those of his sister as a musician. Some proof of his dexterity was demanded, which he gave in such a style of excellence, that, delighted at obtaining such an accession to their party, they readily acquiesced in the apology which he offered when a display of his sister's talents was required. The new-comers were invited to partake of the refreshments with which the party were provided; and it was with some difficulty that Wayland Smith obtained an opportunity of being apart with his supposed sister during the meal, of which interval he availed himself to entreat her to forget for the present both her rank and her sorrows, and condescend, as the most probable chance of remaining concealed, to mix in the society of those with whom she was to travel.
The Countess allowed the necessity of the case, and when they resumed their journey, endeavoured to comply with her guide's advice, by addressing herself to a female near her, and expressing her concern for the woman whom they were thus obliged to leave behind them.
'Oh, she is well attended, madam,' replied the dame whom she addressed, who, from her jolly and laughter-loving demeanour, might have been the very emblem of the Wife of Bath; 'and my gossip Laneham thinks as little of these matters as any one. By the ninth day, an the revels last so long, we shall have her with us at Kenilworth, even if she should travel with her bantling on her back.'
There was something in this speech which took away all desire on the Countess of Leicester's part to continue the conversation. But having broken the charm by speaking to her fellow-traveller first, the good dame, who was to play Rare Gillian of Croydon in one of the interludes, took care that silence did not again settle on the journey, but entertained her mute companion with a thousand anecdotes of revels, from the days of King Harry