In the weeping grey of an autumn morning, but in great spirits of his

own, Prosper left Gracedieu for High March. The satisfaction of having

braved the worst of an adventure was fairly his; to have made good

disposition of what threatened to fetter him by shutting off any

possible road from his advance; and to have done this (so far as he

could see) without in any sense withdrawing from Isoult the advantages

she could expect--this was tunable matter, which set him singing

before the larks were off the ground. He felt like a man who has

earned his pleasure; and pleasure, as he understood it, he meant to

have. The zest for it sparkled in his quick eyes as he rode briskly

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through the devious forest ways. Had Galors or any other dark-entry

man met him now and chanced a combat, he would have bad it with a

will, but he would have got off with a rough tumble and sting or two

from the flat of the sword. The youth was too pleased with himself for

killing or slicing.

However, there was nobody to fight. North Morgraunt was pretty

constantly patrolled by the Countess's riders at this time. A few

grimy colliers; some chair-turners amid their huts and white chips on

the edge of a hidden hamlet; drovers with forest ponies going for

Waisford or Market Basing; the hospitality and interminable devotions

of a hermit by a mossy crucifix on Two Manors Waste; one night alone

in a ruined chapel on the top of a down:--of such were the encounters

and events of his journey. He was no Don Quixote to make desperadoes

or feats of endurance out of such gear; on the contrary, he

persistently enjoyed himself. Sour beer wetted his lips dry with

talking; leaves made a capital bed; the hermit, in the intervals of

his prayers, remembered his own fighting days in the Markstake, and

knew what was done to make Maximilian the Second safely king.

Everything was as it should be.

On the third day he fell in with a troop of horse, whose spears

carried the red saltire of the house of Forz on their banneroles.

Since they were bound as he was for the Castle, he rode in their

company, and in due course saw before him on a height among dark pines

the towers of High March, with the flag of the Lady Paramount afloat

on the breeze. It was on a dusty afternoon of October and in a whirl

of flying leaves, that he rode up to the great gate of the outer

bailey, and blew a blast on the horn which hung there, that they might

let down the bridge.

When the Countess Isabel heard who and of what condition her visitor

was she made him very welcome. The Forz and the Gais were of the same

country and of nearly the same degree in it. She had been a Forz

before she married, and she counted herself so still, for the earldom

of Hauterive was hers in her own right; and though she was Earl

Roger's widow (and thus a double Countess Dowager) she could not but

remember it. So she did Prosper every honour of hospitality: she sent

some of her ladies to disarm him and lead him to the bath; she sent

him soft clothing to do on when he was ready for it; in a word, put

him at his ease. When he came into the hall it was the same thing she

got up from her chair of estate and walked down to meet him, while all

the company made a lane for the pair of them. Prosper would have knelt

to kiss her hand had she let him, but instead she gave it frankly into

his own.




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