“Mayn’t I kiss a brave man?” she asked.
Grimbald threw up his head and laughed.
“Who said you ‘nay’?” he retorted; “you women are in such a hurry.”
“Then I shall kiss you, Father!”
“Will you!” quoth he grimly.
Goldspur manor house was still a mute gathering of charred posts, though some of the lodges and the barn had been rebuilt. Aymery was taken that day to the priest’s house that stood on the edge of a glimmering birch wood, whose boles rose like silver pillars above the brown wattle fence about the church. Grimbald carried him in in his arms, and laid him on his own bed. There was no focaria or servant, and Marpasse was soon as busy as any hearth-ward. She found the aumbry where Grimbald kept his oil and wine, gathered sticks from the wood lodge, lit a fire, and hung the iron pot on the hook. Grimbald was stripping Aymery of his harness, unfastening the gorget and greaves, peeling the heavy hauberk off him with much trouble, and unlacing the gambeson beneath. Marpasse came in with the wine and the water-pot, for Grimbald had his bed in the little room at the end of the great hall. She began to covet and handle some of the parish priest’s vestments that hung on pegs along the wall. Marpasse’s brown hands made a white alb scream into strips for bandages. Grimbald glanced round at her with philosophic consent.
“I shall never get such another,” he said.
“Shall I put up an oath for you, Father?”
“Quiet, fool! His mother gave it me—five years ago.”
“It has washed well,” said Marpasse.