"Away hunting."
"Ha, what?"
"Madame, what do men hunt and burn for?"
"Sometimes a stag, a hare, a standard, a woman."
"Sometimes--a woman."
Balthasar, looking slantwise under half-closed lids, saw her eyes flash and her lips tighten.
"Which way?"
"The southern ride, towards Gilderoy."
Duessa shook her bridle, and threw one look into Balthasar"s eyes.
"Remember," she said, "remember, a woman loves a friend, a true friend, who can tell a lie, or keep a secret."
Balthasar watched her ride away. He stood and smiled to himself, while his long fingers played with the folds of his mantle. Red wine was bounding in his blood, and his imagination revelled. He was a poetic person, and a poet"s soul is often like tinder, safe enough till the spark falls.
"_Gloria_," he said to himself with a smirk, "here"s hunting with a vengeance. Two women and a man! The devil is loose. Soul of Masaccio, that woman has fine eyes."
That day, when the sky was growing red over the woods, Flavian and his troop drew close on the heels of Yeoland and the harper. The man, for all his heat, had kept his horse-flesh well in hand. Once out of Cambremont wood, they had met a charcoal-burner, who had seen Yeoland and her follower pa.s.s towards the west. They had hunted fast over fell and moor. While not two miles behind came Duessa of the Black Hair, biting her lips and giving her brute lash and spur with a woman"s viciousness.
Yeoland, halting on a slope above the pine woods, looked back and saw something that made her crane her neck and wax vigilant. Out of the wine-red east and the twilight gloom came the lightning of harness, the galloping gleam of armed men. Jaspar"s blear eyes were unequal to the girl"s. The men below were riding hard, half under the lea of the midnight pines, whose tops touched the sunset. A half-moon of steel, their crescent closed wood and moor. They had the lead in the west; they were mounting the slope behind.
Jaspar saw them at last. He was for galloping. Yeoland held him in.
"Fool, we are caught. Sit still. We shall gain nothing by bolting."
A knight was coming up the slope at a canter. Yeoland saw his shield, read it and his name. She went red under her hood, felt her heart beating, wondered at its noise.
Youth, aglitter in arms, splendid, triumphant! A face bare to the west, eyes radiant and tender, a great horse reined in on its haunches, a mailed hand that made the sign of the cross!
"Madame, your pardon."
He drew Balthasar"s picture from his bosom and held it before her eyes.
"My torch," he said, "that led me to see your face again."
The girl was silent. Her head was thrown back, her slim throat showing, her face turned heavenwards like the face of a woman who is kissed upon the lips.
"You have seen your home?"
"Yes, messire."
"G.o.d pardon me your sorrow. You see I am no hypocrite. I keep my vows."
"Yes, messire."
"Madame, let me be forgiven; you have trusted one man, trust another."
She turned her horse suddenly and began to ride towards the black maw of the forest. Her lips were tightly closed, and she looked neither to the right nor the left. Flavian, a tower of steel, was at her side. Armed men ranged in a circle about them. They opened ranks at a sign from their lord, and gave the woman pa.s.sage.
"Madame----"
"Messire----"
"Am I to be forgiven?"
She was mute a moment, as in thought. Then she spoke quietly enough.
"Yes, for a vow."
"Tell it me."
"If you will never see my face again."
He looked at her with a great smile, drew his sword, and held the point towards her.
"Then give me hate."
"Messire!"
"Hate, not forgiveness, hate, utter and divine, that I may fight and travail, labour and despair."
"Messire!"
"Hate me, hate me, with all the unreason of your heart. Hate me a hundred times, that I may but leap a hundred times into your life. Bar me out that I may storm your battlements again and again."
"Are you a fool?"
"A glorious, mad, inspired fool."
They were quite near the trees. Their black ma.s.ses threw a great shadow over the pair. Higher still the sky burnt.
"Madame, whither do you go?"
"Where you may not venture, messire."
"G.o.d, I know no such region."
She flashed round on him with sudden bitterness.
"Go back to your wife. Go back to your wife, messire; remember her honour."
It was a home-thrust, but it did not shame or weaken him. He sheathed his sword, and looked at her sadly out of his grey eyes.