and she recognised the face of Richard—very
white and still, though not, as she supposed, with
the whiteness and stillness of a spectre, but with
the concentration of eagerness and watchful resolution.
The same moment she recognised Lady. She trembled
from head to foot. What could it mean but that
beyond a doubt they were both dead, slain in battle,
and that Richard had come to pay her a last visit
ere he left the world. On they came. Her
heart swelled up into her throat, and the effort to
queen it over herself, and neither shriek nor drop
on the floor, was like struggling to support a falling
wall. When the spectre reached the marble fountain,
he gave a little start, drew bridle, and seemed to
become aware that he had taken a wrong path, looked
keenly around him, and instead of continuing his advance
towards her window, turned in the direction of the
gate. One thing was clear, that whether ghostly
or mortal, whether already dead or only on the way
to death, the apparition was regardless of her presence.
A pang of disappointment shot through her bosom, and
for the moment quenched her sense of relief from terror.
With it sank the typhoon of her emotion, and she became
able to note how draggled and soiled his garments
were, how his hair clung about his temples, and that
for all accoutrement his mare had but a halter.
Yet Richard sat erect and proud, and Lady stepped like
a mare full of life and vigour. And there was
Marquis, not cowering or howling as dogs do in spectral
presence, but madly bounding and barking as if in
uncontrollable jubilation!
The acme of her bewilderment was reached when the
phantom came under the marquis’s study-window,
and she heard it call aloud, in a voice which undoubtedly
came from corporeal throat, and that throat Richard’s,
ringing of the morning and the sunrise and the wind
that shakes the wheat—anything rather than
of the tomb:
‘Ho, master Eccles!’ it cried; ’when?
when? Must my lord’s business cool while
thou rubbest thy sleepy eyes awake? What, I say!
When? —Yes, my lord, I will punctually
attend to your lordship’s orders. Expect
me back within the hour.’
The last words were uttered in a much lower tone,
with the respect due to him he seemed addressing,
but quite loud enough to be distinctly heard by Eccles
or any one else in the court.
Dorothy leaned from her window, and looked sideways
to the gate, expecting to see the marquis bending
over his window-sill, and talking to Richard.
But his window was close shut, nor was there any light
behind it.
A minute or two passed, during which she heard the
combined discords of the rising portcullis. Then
out came Eccles, slow and sleepy.
‘By St. George and St. Patrick!’ cried
Richard, ’why keep’st thou six legs here
standing idle? Is thy master’s business
nothing to thee?’
Eccles looked up at him. He was coming to his
senses.
‘Thou rides in strange graith on my lord’s
business,’ he said, as he put the key in the
lock.