He looked sideways at the great lady as he spoke of this creature, and

saw that all was going exactly as he would wish it. He had not been

the Countess' confessor for nothing, nor had he learnt in vain the

story of her secret marriage with Fulk de Bréauté, and of the murder

of this youth on Spurnt Heath one blowy Bartlemy Eve. And for this

reason he had dared to bring the name of Isoult into his catalogue of

rogues, that he knew his woman, and all woman-kind; how they hate most

in their neighbours that which they are tenderest of in themselves.

Let there be no mistake here. The Countess had been no luxurious

liver, though a most unhappy one. The truth is that, beautiful woman

as she still was, she had been a yet more beautiful girl, Countess of

Hauterive in her own right, and as such betrothed to the great Earl

Roger of March and Bellesme. Earl Roger, who was more than double her

age, went out to fight; she stayed at home, in the nursery or near it,

and Fulk de Bréauté came to make eyes. These he made with such

efficacy that Isabel lost her heart first and her head afterwards,

wedded Fulk in secret, bore him a child, and was the indirect means of

his stabbing by the Earl's men as he was riding through the dark over

Spurnt Heath. The child was given to the Abbot's keeping (whence it

promptly and conveniently vanished), the Countess was married to the

Earl; then the Earl died. Whereupon she, still young, childless so far

as she could learn, and possessed of so much, founded her twin abbeys

in Morgraunt to secure peace for the soul of Fulk and her own

conscience. This will suffice to prove that the Abbot had some grounds

for his manoeuvring. The breaking of her troth to the Earl she held to

make her an adulteress; the stabbing of Fulk by the Earl to prove her

a murderess. There was neither mercy nor discernment in these

reproaches. She believed herself a wanton when she had been but a

lover. For no sin, therefore, had she so little charity as for that

which the Abbot had imputed to his candidate for the tumbril. Isoult

la Desirous it was who won the charter, as the Abbot had intended she

should, to serve his end and secure her own according to his liking.

For the charter was sealed and seisin delivered in the presence of Dom

Galors, almoner of the Abbey, of Master Porges, seneschal of High

March, and of one or two mesne lords of those parts. Then the Countess

went to bed; and at this time Prosper le Gai was also lying in the

fringes of Morgraunt, asleep on his shield with his red cloak over

him, having learned from a hind whom he met on the hill that at

Malbank Saint Thorn he would find hospitality, and that his course

must lie in such and such a direction.




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