"Nay, fair sir, I was at fault."
"If we stand here now within this castle, it is to you that I owe it. The King shall know of it, and Chandos also. Can I do aught else, Nigel, to prove to you the high esteem in which I hold you?"
The Squire flushed with pleasure. "Do you send a messenger home to England, fair sir, with news of these doings?"
"Surely, I must do so. But do not tell me, Nigel, that you would be that messenger. Ask me some other favor, for indeed I cannot let you go."
"Now God forbid!" cried Nigel. "By Saint Paul! I would not be so caitiff and so thrall as to leave you, when some small deed might still be done. But I would fain send a message by your messenger."
"To whom?"
"It is to the Lady Mary, daughter of old Sir John Buttesthorn who dwells near Guildford."
"But you will write the message, Nigel. Such greetings as a cavalier sends to his lady-love should be under seal."
"Nay, he can carry my message by word of mouth."
"Then I shall tell him for he goes this morning. What message, then, shall he say to the lady?"
"He will give her my very humble greeting, and he will say to her that for the second time Saint Catharine has been our friend."