The Forest Lovers - Page 8/206

"By the faith I have," Prosper replied, "I will help you all I can.

But when we have buried him you shall tell me how he came by his

death, and how it is that his grave is waiting for him."

"I can tell you that at once," she said quickly; "I have but just dug

it with a mattock I was so lucky as to find by a stopped earth on the

bank yonder. The rest I will gladly acquaint you with by and by. But

first let us be rid of him."

Prosper dismounted and went to take up his burden. First of all,

however, he deliberately removed the handkerchief and looked it in the

face. The dead man lay stiff and staring, with open eyes and a wry

mouth. Hands and face were livid, a light froth had gathered on his

lips. He looked to have suffered horribly--as much in mind as body:

the agony must have bitten deep into him for the final peace of death

never to have come. Now Prosper knew very little of death as yet, save

that he had an idea that he himself would never come to endure it; but

he knew enough to be sure that neither battle nor honour had had any

part here. The man had been well-dressed in brown and tawny velvet,

was probably handsome in a sharp, foreign sort. There was a ring upon

his finger, a torn badge upon his left breast, with traces of a device

in white threads which could not be well made out. Puzzling over it,

Prosper thought to read three white forms on it--water-bougets,

perhaps, or billets--he could not be sure. The whole affair seemed to

him to hold some shameful secret behind: he thought of poison, or the

just visitation of God; but then he thought of the handsome lady, and

was ashamed to see that such a conclusion must involve her in the

mess. Pitying, since he could not judge, he lifted the body in his

arms and followed the lady's lead through the brushwood. At the end of

some two hundred yards or more of battling with the boughs, she

stopped, and pointed to a pit, with a mattock lying on the heaped

earth close by. "There is the grave," she said.

"The grave is a shallow grave," said Prosper.

"It is deeper than he was," quoth the lady. There was a ring in this

rather ugly to hear, as all scorn is out of tune with a dead presence.

You might as well be contemptuous of a baby. But Prosper was no fool,

to think at the wrong time. He laid the body down in the grave, and

busied himself to compose it into some semblance of the rest there

should be in that bed at least. This was hard to be done, since it was

as stiff as a board, and took time. The lady grew impatient, fidgeted

about, walked up and down, could not stand for a moment: but she said

nothing. At last Prosper stood up by the side of the grave, having

done his best.