“Very lusty mice, my desire! Call them pole-cats.”
“Pole-cats may serve as well as leopards. Be careful of that window in the tower; Barnabo has quick eyes. Go up now and see how the game goes.”
Peter of Savoy and the chaplain still had the chess-board between them when Gaillard went up to the room in the tower. The window, widely splayed, had painted medallions in its frames. A song book and a lute lay on a red cushion, with a gaze-hound curled on the seat.
The third game was nearly at an end, and Peter of Savoy was rubbing his pointed beard, and chuckling inwardly as he hung over the board. Barnabo brooded, his puzzled, hesitating hands flattering the strategy of his lord and opponent. Gaillard sat down on the window seat to wait. Peter of Savoy was to triumph. Therefore the world went well.
A resigned sigh from Barnabo, the tap of a piece on the board, a shuffling of Count Peter’s feet, and the end came.
The great man sat back, laughed in his chaplain’s face, and turned a sharp and self-satisfied profile to Gaillard.
“So you are back, my Gascon. All our games have gone well, have they? See—I am about to steal his lady.”
Gaillard leant forward to watch.
“Since he is a priest, sire, you are saving him from great temptation.”
Peter of Savoy laughed, but for some reason Barnabo looked up at the Gascon sharply.