Part 6 (1/2)
The two young girls, one of whom was br.i.m.m.i.n.g over with happiness while the other staggered under the weight of her grief, stepped into the Queen's apartment. The Jew humbly bowed before Brunhild, left by the same door that he had entered, and closed behind him the leather curtain that masked the issue to the spiral staircase.
Brunhild and her confidante were left alone.
CHAPTER II.
QUEEN AND CONFIDANTE.
”Madam,” said Chrotechilde to Brunhild, ”for whom do you intend the one of the two female slaves whom you expect to buy?”
”You really ask me?”
”Yes, madam--”
”Chrotechilde, age seems to dull your powers of penetration--perhaps I may have to look for some other confidante.”
”Madam, please explain yourself--”
”I mean to test how far the present dullness that seems to have come over you may go.”
”Truly, madam, I am at a loss to understand you--”
”Tell me, Chrotechilde, did not my son Childebert, when he died a.s.sa.s.sinated by Fredegonde, leave me the guardians.h.i.+p of his two sons, my grandchildren, Thierry and Theudebert?”
”Yes--madam--but I was speaking of the two female slaves--and not of your children.”
”At what age was my grandson Theudebert a father?”
”At thirteen--at that age he had a son from Bilichilde, the dark-complexioned slave with green eyes, for whom you paid a big price.
I still see her wild looks, as uncommon as her style of beauty. For the rest, she had a nymph's waist, and wavy and jet-black hair that reached the floor. I never in my life saw such hair. But why do you look so somber?”
”The vile slave! Did not that miserable Bilichilde gain a fatal ascendency over my grandson Theudebert, despite the many other concubines that we furnished him?”
”Indeed, madam! So fatal was the ascendency that she gained over him, that she caused us to be driven out of Metz, both you and me, and led prisoners as far as Arcis-on-the-Aube, the boundary of Burgundy, the kingdom of your other grandson, Thierry. But all that is an old story, madam, that is dead and should be forgotten, together with the princ.i.p.al actors in it. Bilichilde is no more; she was last year strangled to death by your grandson, the savage idiot Theudebert himself, who pa.s.sed from love to hatred; afterwards, beaten at the battle of Tolbiac by his brother, whom you hurled at his head, he was himself shorn of his hair and stabbed to death; finally, his five-year-old son had his skull broken against a stone. Accordingly, that score was thoroughly settled.
Were you not amply revenged?”
”No; with me, hatred survives vengeance, it survives death itself, as the dagger survives the murder. No; my vengeance is not yet complete.”
”You are not reasonable. To hate beyond the grave is childish at your age.”
”And is your mind not yet enlightened by what we have just said?”
”With regard to the two handsome slaves?”
”Yes, with regard to the two pretty girls.”
”No, madam, I cannot yet fathom your thoughts.”
”Let us, then, proceed, seeing that you have become so obtuse. Tell me, what was the nature of Theudebert, before we gave him Bilichilde for companion?”