Next day, as soon as the Countess had departed for High March, the

Abbot Richard called Dom Galors, his almoner, into the parlour and

treated him in a very friendly manner, making him sit down in his

presence, and putting fruit and wine before him. This Galors, who I

think merits some scrutiny, was a bullet-headed, low-browed fellow,

too burly for his monkish frock (which gave him the look of a big boy

in a pinafore), with the jowl of a master-butcher, and a sullen slack

mouth. His look at you, when he raised his eyes from the ground, had

the hint of brutality--as if he were naming a price--which women

mistake for mastery, and adore. But he very rarely crossed eyes with

any one; and with the Abbot he had gained a reputation for astuteness

by seldom opening his lips and never shutting his ears. He was

therefore a most valuable book of reference, which told nothing except

to his owner. With all this he was a great rider and loved hunting.

His Sursum Corda was like a view-holloa, and when he said,

Ite missa est, you would have sworn he was crying a stag's

death instead of his Saviour's. In matters of gallantry his reputation

was risky: it was certain that he had more than a monk, and suspected

that he had less than a gentleman should have. The women of Malbank

asseverated that venison was not his only game. That may or may not

have been. The man loved power, and may have warred against women for

lack of something more difficult of assault. He was hardly the man to

squander himself at the bidding of mere appetite; he was certainly no

glutton for anything but office. Still, he was not one to deny himself

the flutter of the caught bird in the hand. He had, like most men who

make themselves monks by calculation, a keen eye for a girl's shape,

carriage, turn of the head, and other allies of the game she loves and

always loses: such things tickled his fancy when they came over his

path; he stooped to take them, and let them dangle for remembrances,

as you string a coin on your chain to remind you at need of a

fortunate voyage. At this particular moment he was tempted, for

instance, to catch and let dangle. The chance light of some shy eye

had touched and then eluded him. I believe he loved the chase more

than the quarry. He knew he must go a-hunting from that moment in

which the light began to play will-o'-the-wisp; for action was his

meat and dominion what he breathed. If you wanted to make Galors

dangerous you had to set him on a vanishing trail. The girl had been a

fool to run, but how was she to know that?




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