Prosper le Gai--all Morgraunt before him--rose from his bed before the

Countess had turned in hers; and long before the Abbot could get alone

with Dom Galors he was sighing for his breakfast. He had, indeed, seen

the dawn come in, caught the first shiver of the trees, the first

tentative chirp of the birds, watched the slow filling of the shadowy

pools and creeks with the grey tide of light. From brake to brake he

struggled, out of the shade into the dark, thence into what seemed a

broad lake of daylight. He met no living thing; or ever the sun kissed

the tree-tops he was hungry. He was well within Morgraunt now, though

only, as it might be, upon the hem of its green robe; the adventurous

place opened slowly to him like some great epic whose majesty and

force dawns upon you by degrees not to be marked. It was still

twilight in the place where he was when he heard the battling of

birds' wings, the screaming of one bird's grief, and the angry purr of

another, or of others. He peered through the bush as the sound

swelled. Presently he saw a white bird come fluttering with a dropt

wing, two hen-harriers in close pursuit. They were over her, upon her,

there was a wrangle of wings--brown and white--even while he watched;

then the white got clear again, and he could see that she bled in the

breast. The sound of her screaming, which was to him like a girl

crying, moved him strangely. He jumped from his saddle, ran to the

entangled birds and cuffed the two hawks off; but seeing that they

came on again, hunger-bold no doubt, he strangled them and freed the

white pigeon. He took her up in his hands to look at her; she was too

far gone for fear; she bled freely, but he judged she would recover.

So she did, after he had washed out the wound; sufficiently at least

to hop and flutter into covert. Prosper took to his horse and journey

with her voice still ringing in his head.

In another hour's travel he reached a clearing in the wood, hedged all

about with yew-trees and holm oaks very old; and in the midst of it

saw a little stone altar with the figure of a woman upon it. He was

not too hungry to be curious, so he dismounted and went to examine.

The saint was Saint Lucy the Martyr, he saw; the altar, hoary as it

was with lichen and green moss, had a slab upon it well-polished, with

crosses let into the four corners and into the middle of the stone;

there were sockets for tapers, and marks of grease new and thick.

Before he approached it a hind and her calf had been cropping the

grass between the cracks of the altar-steps; all else was very still,

yet had a feeling of habitancy and familiar use.




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