The Forest Lovers - Page 110/206

For, notwithstanding all that Isoult could urge (which was very little

indeed), Prosper started next morning with a dozen men to scour the

district for Maulfry. He refused point blank to take the girl with

him, and after her rebuke and abasement of the night before, still

more after the reconciliation on knees, she dared not plead overmuch.

He was a man and a great lord; she could not suppose that she knew all

his designs--any of them, if it came to that. He must go his way--

which was man's way--and she must stop at High March nursing her

heart--which was woman's way--even if High March proved a second

Gracedieu and Isabel a more inexorable Maulfry. No act of her own, she

resolved, should henceforward lead her to disobey him. Ah! she

remembered with a hot flush of pain--ah! her disobedience at Gracedieu

had brought all the mischief, Vincent's death all the anguish. Of

course it had not; of course Maulfry had tricked her; but she was not

the girl to spare herself reproaches. Her loyalty to Prosper took her

easily the length of stultification.

So Prosper went; and it may be some consolation to reflect that his

going pleased fourteen people at least. First it pleased the men he

took with him; for Prosper, that born fighter, was never so humorous

as when at long odds with death. Fighting seemed a frolic with him for

captain; a frolic, at that, where the only danger was that in being

killed outright you would lose a taste of the certain win for your

side. For among the High March men there was already a tradition--God

knows how these things grow--that Prosper le Gai and the hooded hawk

could not be beaten. He was so cheerful, victory so light a thing.

Then his cry--Bide the time--could anything be more heartening?

Rung out in his shrill tones over the open field, during a night

attack, say, or called down the darkening alleys of the forest, when

the skirmishers were out of each other's sight and every man faced a

dim circle of possible hidden foes? Pest! it tied man to man, front to

rear. It tied the whole troop to the brain of a young demon, who was

never so cool as when the swords were flying, and most wary when

seeming mad. Blood was a drink, death your toast, at such a banquet.

And that accounts for twelve out of fourteen.

The thirteenth was Countess of Hauterive, Châtelaine of High March,

Lady of Morgraunt, etc. A very few days inhabitancy where Master Roy

was of the party, had assured this lady that the page must be ridded.

She wished him no ill: you do not wish ill to the earwig which you

brush out of the window. Certainly if a boy had needs be stabbed by an

Egyptian (who incontinent disappears and must be hunted) it were

simpler Roy had fallen than the other. But she had no thought of

amending the mistakes of Providence. Great ladies who are really great

do not go to work to have inconvenient lacqueys stabbed. This at least

was not the Countess of Hauterive's way. If Fulk de Bréauté had not

been her lover as well as her husband, if he had been (for instance)

only her husband, she would have despised Earl Roger fully as much for

the affair on Spurnt Heath. No. But she meant Roy to go, and here was

her chance.