spectators of some pageant arranged in honor of the princess, your wife, sir,” she said carelessly. “I had twice the fortune to see the Lady Rebekah passing through the streets.”
“Not in the streets only,” he said courteously. “I remember now: ‘t was at my lord bishop’s dinner. A very courtly company it was. You were laughing with my Lord Rich. You wore pearls in your hair” —
She met his gaze fully and boldly. “Memory plays us strange tricks at times,” she told him in a clear, slightly raised voice, “and it hath been three years since Master Rolfe and his Indian princess were in London. His memory hath played him false.”
She took her seat in the great chair which stood