Part 44 (1/2)
Springing up, she threw off her shawl and ran to s.n.a.t.c.h garments from drawers and closet to dress with haste. Thrusting her feet into shoes and taking her darkest cloak, she opened the bedroom door and listened. The house was still. Carefully she crept down to the bas.e.m.e.nt hall of the servants' quarters, where lanterns were kept in a cupboard. She dared not be arrested by the Night Watch for failing to carry a light. Silently she drew back the bolt of the door that the domestic staff used and slipped out by the minor exit under the main steps of the entrance into the street.
With the beam of her lantern dancing ahead of her she ran swiftly over a bridge, having quite a way to cover before she reached the militia headquarters. By rights she should have been terrified of being on her own by night, the snowy streets menacing in the darkness, but she had only one fear and it sped her feet. She was desperately afraid that Hans would not be waiting any longer at the only place where she could hope to find him. He had given up his lodgings, because his new commission was taking him away from Amsterdam, and he had not told her his destination. It was now well into her wedding day and far past the time he had set for the solving of the puzzle.
At last the militia building came into sight. There were plenty of lights glowing in the windows, for the Night Watch would be on duty in the city and here the guards changed regularly. Breathless and tired from the pace she had set herself, she reached the steps and stumbled up them into the hallway, where a guard was on duty and another sat at a desk. Both were immediately on the alert, supposing she had come to report some outbreak of trouble, which was not unusual.
”Your business, mejuffrouw?” the sergeant at the desk demanded.
”I'm Sybylla, daughter of the artist Hendrick Visser, who painted the new group portrait. Is anybody with it now?”
”No. The banqueting hall is not in use tonight. Did you wish to see one of the officers?”
”No! A young man named Hans Roemer, my father's a.s.sistant on the work. Is he here in the building?”
The sergeant looked down at an entry of names. ”He was here today, but visitors to the painting have to leave by six o'clock and n.o.body is allowed to view after that.”
She swayed with disappointment. He had gone! She had missed him! For once in her life she was beyond tears, overwhelmed by the intensity of her despair at having come too late. The sergeant was saying something to her about sitting down and she supposed he thought she was about to faint, but in reality she was being crushed by heartbreak as she had never known it before.
Then the icy air of the snowy outdoors suddenly swept into the warm hall and Hans had seized her by the arms to turn her to him. His face was stark, whether from the cold or from some pitch of emotion she did not know, but the snow on his hat and shoulders showed how long he had been waiting somewhere in the street nearby. She gave a sob of thankfulness and grabbed at his collar to hold herself to him.
”I've solved the puzzle!” she cried out.
”Not here!” he said warningly, putting an arm around her to bundle her swiftly out of the headquarters and the hearing of the two guards. In the street he pulled her with him into a doorway. ”Now tell me. Where is the mouse?”
”There and yet not there! What I thought originally to be a shadow where the standard-bearer's cloak touches the floor is, in reality, a mousehole. And one of those threadlike gleams of light is the mouse's tail as it escapes out of sight! Just as I have escaped!”
He gripped her by the arm. ”Do you mean that?” he demanded.
”With all my heart! Don't make me go back to the van Jansz house! Let me come away with you!”
”Do you realize what you are saying?”
”I do!”
”You'd be leaving your family and everything you've ever wanted.”
”Stop treating me as if I hadn't discovered that I love you above all else in the world!” she cried shamelessly.
His voice grew warm and tender. ”That's what I've wanted to hear you say for so long. I love you so much.”
They kissed, locked together, and snowflakes began drifting around them. After he had picked up her lantern, which she had dropped onto the snow for their embrace, he handed it back to her and collected a bundle of his belongings from where he had left it, slinging the strap that bound it over his shoulder. With his arm around her, he hurried her away with him through the falling snow as if pursuit were already on their trail.
FRANCESCA, KEEPING HER promise to go early to the van Jansz house, was waiting in the reception hall of her home for the sleigh, which Sybylla had said would come for her at nine o'clock. Francesca was in her finery for the day, her gown of tawny velvet and her hat dove gray with a golden plume. She was adjusting the brim in front of the Venetian mirror when she heard the sleigh draw up outside and a great hammering came on the door. She opened it and a wave of anxiety swept over her as she saw a stark-faced Adriaen, and not a van Jansz servant, at the stoop.
”What's happened?” she gasped, pressing a hand against her chest.
”I must see Sybylla!” he demanded, striding in. ”I didn't realize how much it meant to her to be married from her childhood home!”
”Sybylla isn't here.”
”She must be. Her bed in my parents' house has been slept in and so she could only have returned here at dawn.”
”I'll go up to her room!” Francesca turned for the stairs, hoping that she would not find the bedchamber door locked and Sybylla too upset to open it. Yesterday her mood had been very strange, almost on the knife edge of hysteria, but she had become calmer by the time they had parted. Had something happened in the afternoon to cause her some unexpected distress?
To Francesca's relief the door gave at her touch, not even being closed. Then she stared in dismay at the state of the room. Clothes had been tumbled from drawers and chests. A stocking trailed across the floor and a glove dangled from a chair. Propped against the opened trinket box was a folded piece of paper. She saw it was addressed to herself. Full of dread, she read it.
I am running away with the man I really love. Break the news as gently as you can to Adriaen and say I regret hurting him. The same applies to Father. Tell him there was nothing I could do after all to save you from Ludolf. It will be up to Pieter now. Do not worry about me. I am happier than I have ever been in my life before. Your loving sister, Sybylla.
Francesca read it through a second time. At some hour in the night Sybylla, even if she had first slept for a while in her bed at the van Jansz house, must have crept in here, knowing where a spare key was always hidden, collected a few belongings and left again as stealthily as she had come. Who had been waiting for her? With a heavy sigh, Francesca folded the note and concealed it in the palm of her hand. The reference to Pieter could not be disclosed to anyone other than Hendrick.
When she came downstairs again Hendrick was talking solemnly with Adriaen and they both looked at her anxiously, her serious expression telling them instantly that something was very wrong.
”There will be no marriage today, Adriaen,” she said with compa.s.sion.
He stepped forward. ”Why? Is she ill?”
”She's not here.”
”But to whom else would she have gone?” He was bewildered, but irritated too.
Francesca moved to her father's side. Already his eyes showed fear, as if he knew that what she was about to say would strike him to the heart. ”Sybylla left a note for me. She has gone away. I don't know with whom. You are both better able to answer that question than I, who have been away from Amsterdam since the spring.” Her sympathetic gaze settled on the jilted young man. ”Sybylla is deeply sorry to cause you unhappiness, Adriaen, but she wrote that she is with the man she really loves.”
His lids narrowed in disbelief and he drew in a long breath. Then he reacted with thin-lipped, blazing-eyed fury. ”The little wh.o.r.e!”
Hendrick gave a roar. ”How dare you speak of my youngest daughter in such a manner!”
Adriaen regarded him with wrathful contempt. ”You penniless oaf! You seem to have forgotten to whom you are speaking. I thought Sybylla had eyes for me only, but I was wrong. I don't know and neither do I care whom she has left me for. You may keep her whenever she should return. I want no more of her!”
He slammed his way out of the house. In the dreadful silence that followed Hendrick turned to Francesca and rested his hands on her shoulders. ”It must be Hans Roemer whom she's gone away with. I can think of n.o.body else and he was leaving Amsterdam today. She was always talking about him and going over to the church to keep track of the painting's progress.”
”Oh, Father, you should have taken more care of her during the time of her betrothal!”
”I just presumed she was anxious that the painting should be finished as soon as possible, so I might receive payment for it before her wedding day. I never supposed for one moment there was anything serious in it.”
Francesca sighed deeply. ”Well, there was, but at least she hasn't gone thoughtlessly.” She revealed the note and gave it to him to read. ”I'd like you to explain what Sybylla meant about not being able to help me after all.”
He told her. She almost shook her head at the foolishness of her father and her sister in supposing that Ludolf would agree to being paid in installments, but there was no point in bringing that up now.
”It was well meant,” he concluded.
”I know it was and I appreciate her consideration. Have you any idea where Hans might be taking her?”
”No. All he said was that he had gained a commission that would mean leaving the city.”
Francesca felt slightly relieved. ”At least he has work, which means they won't starve. But we must try to find them!”
”How? They left here before dawn and could be anywhere by now. Do you think I wouldn't be out searching for them already if there was the slightest chance of discovering their whereabouts?”
”I shall let Pieter know. I'll ask him to watch out for them.”
Hendrick shrugged as if he had no hope at all and he wandered over to the small portrait of Anna, which had hung there for as long as Francesca could remember. ”What would your mama have said, Francesca,” he said, weary with sadness, ”if she had known I was to lose two of her daughters?”