angrily.
Tom heard the carpenter say in a terrified voice: âWeâll do that, my lord, thanking you very much.â
Wretched coward, Tom thought, but he was trembling himself. Nevertheless he forced himself to say: âIf you want to dismiss us, you must pay us, according to the custom. Your fatherâs house is two daysâ walk from here, and when we arrive he may not be there.â
âMen have died for less than this,â William said. His cheeks reddened with anger.
Out of the corner of his eye, Tom saw the squire drop his hand to the hilt of his sword. He knew he should give up now, and humble himself, but there was an obstinate knot of anger in his belly, and as scared as he was he could not bring himself to release the bridle. âPay us first, then kill me,â he said recklessly. âYou may hang for it, or you may not; but youâll die sooner or later, and then I will be in heaven and you will be in hell.â
The sneer froze on Williamâs face and he paled. Tom was surprised: what had frightened the boy? Not the mention of hanging, surely: it was not really likely that a lord would be hanged for the murder of a craftsman. Was he terrified of hell?
They stared at one another for a few moments. Tom watched with amazement and relief as Williamâs set expression of anger and contempt melted away, to be replaced by a panicky anxiety. At last William took a leather purse from his belt and tossed it to his squire, saying: âPay them.â
At that point Tom pushed his luck. When William pulled on the reins again, and the horse lifted its strong head and stepped sideways, Tom moved with the horse and held on to the bridle, and said: âA full weekâs wages on dismissal, that is the custom.â He heard a sharp intake of breath from Agnes, just behind him, and he knew she thought he was crazy to prolong the confrontation. But he plowed on. âThatâs sixpence for the laborer, twelve for the carpenter and each of the masons, and twenty-four pence for me. Sixty-six pence in all.â He could add pennies faster than anyone he knew.
The squire was looking inquiringly at his master. William said angrily: âVery well .â
Tom released the bridle and stepped back.
William turned the horse and kicked it hard, and it bounded forward onto the path through the wheat field.
Tom sat down suddenly on the woodpile. He wondered what had got into him. It had been mad to defy Lord William like that. He felt lucky to be alive.
The hoofbeats of Williamâs war-horse faded to a distant thunder, and his squire emptied the purse onto a board. Tom felt a surge of triumph as the silver pennies tumbled out into the sunshine. It had been mad, but it had worked: he had secured just payment for himself and the men working under him. âEven lords ought to follow the customs,â he said, half to himself.
Agnes heard him. âJust hope youâre never in want of work from Lord William,â she said sourly.
Tom smiled at her. He understood that she was churlish because she had been frightened. âDonât frown too much, or youâll have nothing but curdled milk in your breasts when that baby is born.â
âI wonât be able to feed any of us unless you find work for the winter.â
âThe winterâs a long way off,â said Tom.
II
They stayed at the village through the summer. Later, they came to regard this decision as a terrible mistake, but at the time it seemed sensible enough, for Tom and Agnes and Alfred could each earn a penny a day working in the fields during the harvest. When autumn came, and they had to move on, they had a heavy bag of silver pennies and a fat pig.
They spent the first night in the porch of a village church, but on the second they found a country priory and took advantage of monastic hospitality. On the third day they found themselves in the heart of the Chute Forest, a vast expanse of scrub and rough