"You are perhaps not a lover of song, Sir Pallé?" answered Aagé; "that is unfortunate: the merry fellows wish to beguile the time for us on the road."
"If I hear aright," growled Pallé, "that song may perhaps shorten the road to heaven for both of them if it is not presently ended."
"Think you so?" answered Aagé carelessly. "If you will give us your company you must reconcile yourself to our merriment. Haste to sing the song to the end," he called to the huntsmen, "or Sir Pallé will be wroth;" and the huntsmen sang gaily,--
"In the town my true love shall ne'er hear it said
That I before her brothers have fled.
"Full boldly rode Helmer her brothers to meet,
His courage was equal to every feat.
"First Ové, then Lang, his eye did survey,
And then did his sword come quick into play."
"S'death!" shouted Sir Pallé, and his sword flew from the scabbard. "If ye will have the sword come into play, you shall feel it too." So saying, he turned his horse, and rushed like a madman upon the huntsmen, who had not time to prepare for defence, ere his sword had cut through their jerkins, and inflicted one or two wounds. But the huntsmen, enraged at this sudden onset, drew their long hunting-knives, and threatened a bloody revenge. Ulrica shrieked on hearing the affray, and the elder sister turned pale. "Stop, knaves!" cried Aagé, riding in between Pallé and his antagonists: "two against one is not fair play. I will decide this matter alone with Sir Pallé." The Drost had drawn his sword, and was expecting his opponent to turn towards him, but Sir Pallé's horse seemed to have become suddenly skittish and unruly: it galloped off, on the road to Esrom, with its enraged master, whose spurs stuck in its sides, while he swore and brandished his sword over his head. The huntsmen laughed loudly at this sight. Ulrica joined in the laugh; and as soon as the slight wounds of the huntsmen had been bound up, the party pursued their journey, though in a different direction from that in which they had set out.
"I must have been mistaken," said Drost Aagé to the huntsmen. "It could hardly have been to Kallundborg, but rather to Vordingborg, that the king commanded me to accompany these ladies; there he, and not Prince Christopher, is ruler. If there was other meaning in his words, I will be answerable for it." As they turned into a bye road, a tall man in a peasant's dress, mounted on a small peasant's horse, without a saddle, started out of the thicket by the road side, and suddenly disappeared again among the bushes. "Kaggé!" exclaimed Ulrica, with involuntary delight, and seized her sister's arm. Margaretha gave her a significant look, and she was silent, but often gazed restlessly around.
Drost Aagé had heard the exclamation, and started. The name of Kaggé was but too familiar to him. A squire of noble birth of this name had been among Eric Glipping's murderers at Finnerup; he had fled with the other outlaws to Norway, and was prohibited, on pain of death, from setting foot on Danish ground; had he, notwithstanding, been in the train of the captive maidens, their connection with so dangerous a traitor might operate greatly against them. This incident obliged the Drost to be on the watch over the security of his captives. Silent and anxious he pursued the journey.