"It is fortunate you have other hues to choose from," said the

Countess with a smile, "or otherwise you would be no falconer. But

your story is very strange. Have you ever consulted about it?"

"I have said very little about it," Prosper replied, remembering as he

spoke the forest Mass which he had heard, and that he had discoursed

upon this adventure with Alice of the Hermitage.

"The hawk pecked at the girl's heart," said the lady.

"It did not get so far as that, Countess."

"You speak prose, my friend."

"I am no troubadour, but speak what I know."

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"The heart means nothing to you, Prosper!"

"The heart? Dear lady, I assure you the girl was not hurt. She is a

young woman by now, probably wife to a clown and mother of half-a-

dozen."

"Prosper, you disappoint me. Let us ride on. I am sick of these

shivering grey fields."

The Countess was vexed, for the life of him he could not tell why. He

made peace at last, but she would not tell him the cause of her

morning's irritation.

That was not the only reminder he had that day--in fact, it was but

the first. In the evening came another.

He was in the Countess's chamber after supper. She was embroidering a

banner, and he had been singing to her as she worked. After his music

the Countess took the lute from him, saying that she would sing. And

so she did, but in a voice so low and constrained that it seemed more

to comfort herself than any other.

Prosper sat by the table idly turning over a roll of blazonry--the

coats of all the knights and gentlemen who had ever been in the

service of High March. It was a roll carefully kept by the pursuivant,

very fine work. He saw that his own was already tricked in its place,

and recognized many more familiar faces. Suddenly he gave a start, and

sat up stiff as a bar. He looked no further, but at the end of the

Countess's song said abruptly-"Tell me, Countess, whose are these arms?"

She looked at the coat--sable, three wicket-gates argent. "There is a

story about that," she said.

"I beg you to tell it to me," said Prosper; "story for story."

"That is only fair," she laughed, having quite recovered her easy

manner with him. "Come and sit by the fire, and you shall hear it. The

arms," she began, "are those which were assumed by a young knight

after a very bold exploit in my service. He came to me as Salomon de

Born, and I think he was but eighteen--a mere boy."

Prosper, from the heights of his three-and-twenty years, nodded

benignly.

"So much so," said the Countess, "that I fear I must have wounded his

vanity by laughing away what he asked of me. This was no less than to

lead a troop of my men against Renny of Coldscaur, an enemy and

slanderer of mine, but none the less as great a lord as he was rascal.

However, he begged so persistently that I gave in, finding other

things about him--a mystery of his birth and upbringing, a

steadfastness also and gravity far beyond his years--which drew me to

put him to the proof of what he dared. He went, therefore, with a

company of light horse, some fifty men. He was away eight weeks, and

then came back--with but six men, it is true; but youth is prodigal of

life, knowing so little of it."




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