At sight of his flowing mane, powerful forequarters, and high stepping
action, Mora was irresistibly reminded of the scene in the courtyard at
the Nunnery, when the Bishop rode in on his favourite white palfrey,
she standing at the top of the steps to receive him. Never again would
she stand so, to receive the Bishop; never again would Icon proudly
carry him. The Bishop had given her to Hugh and Icon to her. A faint
sense of compunction stirred within her. Perhaps at that moment she
came near to realising something of what both gifts had cost the Bishop.
Bending her head, she looked across the courtyard and under the
gateway. The messengers were riding fast. Even as she looked, they
disappeared into the pine wood.
Her letter to Symon was well on its way. She remembered with comfort
and gladness certain things she had written in that letter.
Then--as the pine wood swallowed the messengers--with a joyous bound of
reaction her whole mind turned to Hugh.
Three steps below her, a page waited, holding a dagger which she had
been wont to wear, when riding in the forests. She had sent it out to
be sharpened. She took it from him, tested its point, slipped it into
the sheath at her belt, smiled upon the boy, descended the remaining
steps, and laid her hand upon Icon's mane.
Then it was that Mistress Deborah's agitated signals from within the
doorway, took effect upon old Zachary.
Coming forward, he bared his white head, and adventured a humble
expostulation.
"My lady," he said, "it is not safe nor well that you should ride
alone. A few moments' delay will suffice Beaumont to saddle a horse
and be ready to attend you."
She mounted before she made answer.
She kept her imperious temper well in hand, striving to remember that
to old Debbie and Zachary she seemed but the child they had loved and
watched over from infancy, of a sudden grown older. They had not known
the Prioress of the White Ladies.
Bending from the saddle, her hand on Icon's mane:
"I go to my husband, Zachary," she said, "and I choose to ride alone."
Then gathering up the reins, she turned Icon toward the gates and so
rode across the courtyard, looking, neither back to where Mistress
Deborah alternately wrung her hands and shook her fist at Zachary; nor
to right or left, where Mark and Beaumont, standing with doffed caps
waited till she should have passed, to yield to the full enjoyment of
Mistress Deborah's gestures, and of Maste
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