So said Isoult, kneeling and crying. Whatever else she may have

touched in her who listened, she touched her curiosity. The old woman

dropped the ring to look at the girl. True enough, below her left

breast there was a small red wound, and upon it a drop of fresh blood.

Mrs. Ursula took the wet face between her two chapped hands and

laughed at it, not unkindly.

"My bonny lass," said she, "if this be all thou hast to tell me it

will not stay my son Falve. Here in this forest we think little of the

giving of rings, but much of what should follow it. But thy wedding

stopped at the ringing, from what I can learn. That is no wedding at

all. Doubt not this knight of thine will never return; they never do

return, my lassie. Neither doubt but that Falve will wed thee faster

than any ring can do. And as for thy scratch and crying heart, my

child, trust Falve again to stanch the one and still the other. For

that is a man's way. And now get into bed, child; it grows late."

There was nothing for it but to obey. Her game had been played and had

failed. She got into bed and Ursula followed.

Then as she lay there quaking, crying quietly to herself, her heart's

message went on that bid her trust. Trust! What could she trust? The

thought shaped itself and grew clearer every minute; the answer pealed

in her brain. The token! she recalled her mother's words, the only

words she had spoken on her marriage night. "It shall not fail thee to

whomsoever thou shalt show it."

"Help, Saint Isidore!" she breathed, and sat up in the bed.

This made the old woman very cross.

"Drat the girl," she muttered, "why don't she sleep while she can?"

Isoult leaned over her and put the token in her hand. "Look also at

this token, mother, before we sleep," she said.

Mrs. Ursula, grumbling and only half awake, took the thing in one hand

and hoisted herself with the other. She sat up, peered at it in the

light of the cresset, dropped it to rub her eyes, fumbled for it

again, and peered again; she whispered prayers to herself and

adjurations, called on Christ and Christ's mother, vehemently crossed

herself many times, scrambled out of bed, and plumped down beside it

on her two knees.

"Mild Mary," she quavered, "mild Mary, that is enough! That I should

live to see this day. Oh, saints in glory! Let us look at it again."

Isoult drooped over the edge of the bed; Ursula looked and was

astounded, she wondered and prayed, she laughed and cried. Isoult grew

frightened.

"Wed her!" cried the old dame in ecstasy. "Wed the Queen of Sheba

next!" Then she grew mighty serious. She got up and dropped a curtesy.




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