‘Kill the King of England? Kill my lord’ Montferrat? Eh, they cannot kill him! Oh, oh, oh!’—she moaned shudderingly—’I would that they could! Then perhaps I should sleep o’ nights.’ Her strained eyes pierced him for an answer. What answer could he give?
’My news is authentic, Madame. I came at once, as my duty was, to your Grace, as to the proper person—’ Here she sat right up in her bed, wide-eyed, all alight.
’Yes, yes, I am the proper person. I will do it, if no other can. Virgin Mary!’—she stretched her arms out, like one crucified—’Look at me. Am I worthy of this?’ If she addressed the Virgin Mary her invitation was pointedly to the abbot, a less proper spectator. He did look, however, and pitied her deeply; at her lips dry with hatred, which should have been freshly kissed, at her drawn cheeks, into her amazed young heart: eh, God, he knew her loveworthy once, and now most pitiful. He had nothing to say; she went on breathless, gathering speed.
’He has spurned me whom he chose. He has left me on my wedding day. I have never seen him alone—do you heed me? never, never once. Ah, now, he has chosen for his minion: let her save him if she can. What have I to do with him? I am the daughter of a king; and what is he to me, who treats me so? If I am not to be mother of England, I am still daughter of Navarre. Let him die, let them kill him: what else can serve me now?’ She fell back, and lay staring up at him. In every word she said there was sickening justice: what could Milo do? In his private mind he confirmed a suspicion—being still loyal to his King—that one and the same thing may be at one and the same time all black and all white. He did his best to put this strange case.
‘Madame,’ he said, ’I cannot excuse our lord the King, nor will I; but I can defend that noble lady whose only faults are her beauty and strong heart.’ Mentioning Jehane’s beauty, he saw the Queen look quickly at him, her first intelligent look. ’Yes, Madame, her beauty, and the love she has been taught to give our lord. The King married her, uncanonically, it is true; but who was she to hold up church law before his face? Well, then she, by her own pure act, caused herself to be put away by the King, abjuring thus his kingly seat. Hey, but it is so, that by her own prayers, her proper pleading, her proper tears, she worked against her proper honour, and against the child in her womb. What more could she do? What more could any wife, any mother, than that? Ah, say that you hate her without stint, would you have her die? Why, no! for what pain can be worse than to live as she lives? My lady, she prevailed against the King; but she could not prevail against her own holy nature working upon the King’s great heart. No! When the King found out that she was to be mother of his child, he loved her so well that, though he must respect her prayers, he must needs respect her person also. The King