Part 61 (1/2)
”You are sure that you will not run into any danger!” said Anna anxiously. She remembered a certain precariousness of tenure among some of her previous--mental reservations. There was Fritz Wunch, who had laughed at the red beard of a Prussian baron; Wilhelm of Bautzen, who went once too often on a foray with his uncle, Fighting Max of Castelnau----
For answer the staunch war-captain kissed her, and the girl clung to her lover, this time in real tears. Martha's candle had gone out, and the two had perforce to go down the stair in the dark. They reached the foot at last.
”None of them were quite like him,” she owned that night to her sister.
”He takes you up as if he would break you in his arms. And he could, too. It is good to feel!”
”Jorian also is just like that--so satisfactory!” answered Martha. Which shows the use Jorian must have made of his time at the stairhead, and why Martha Pappenheim's light went out.
”He swears he has never loved any woman before.”
”Jorian does just the same.”
”I suppose we must never tell them----”
”Marthe--if you should dare, I will---- Besides, you were just as bad!”
”Anna, as if I would dream of such a thing!”
And the two innocents fell into each other's arms and embraced after the manner of women, each in her own heart thinking how much she preferred ”the way of a man with a maid”--at least that form of it cultivated by stout war-captains of Pla.s.senburg.
Without, Boris and Jorian trampled along through a furious gusting of Baltic rain, which came in driving sheets from the north and splashed its thumb-board drops equally upon the red roofs of Courtland, the tented Muscovites drinking victory, and upon the dead men lying afield.
Worse still, it fell on many wounded, and to such even the thrust of the thievish camp-follower's tolle-knife was merciful. Never could monks more fitly have chanted, ”Blessed are the dead!” than concerning those who lay stiff and unconscious on the field where they had fought, to whose ears the Alla sang in vain.
Attired in her cloak of blue, with the hood pulled low over her face, Theresa von Lynar was waiting for Boris and Jorian at the door of the market-hospital.
”I thank you for your fidelity,” she said quickly. ”I have sore need of you. I put a great secret into your hands. I could not ask one of the followers of Prince Conrad, nor yet a soldier of the d.u.c.h.ess Joan, lest when that is done which shall be done to-night the Prince or the d.u.c.h.ess should be held blameworthy, having most to gain or lose thereto. But you are of Pla.s.senburg and will bear me witness!”
Boris and Jorian silently signified their obedience and readiness to serve her. Then she gave them their instructions.
”You will conduct me past the city guards, out through the gates, and take me towards the camp of the Prince of Muscovy. There you will leave me, and I shall be met by one who in like manner will lead me through the enemy's posts.”
”And when will you return, my Lady Theresa? We shall wait for you!”
”Thank you, gentlemen. You need not wait. I shall not return!”
”Not return?” cried Jorian and Boris together, greatly astonished.
”No,” said Theresa very slowly and quietly, her eyes set on the darkness. ”Hear ye, Captains of Pla.s.senburg--I will give you my mind.
You are trusty men, and can, as I have proved, hold your own counsel.”
Boris and Jorian nodded. There was no difficulty about that.
”Good!” they said together as of old.
As they grew older it became more and more easy to be silent. Silence had always been easier to them than speech, and the habit clave to them even when they were in love.
”Listen, then,” Theresa went on. ”You know, and I know, that unless quick succour come, the city is doomed. You are men and soldiers, and whether ye make an end amid the din of battle, or escape for this time, is a matter wherewith ye do not trouble your minds till the time comes.
But for me, be it known to you that I am the widow of Henry the Lion of Kernsberg. My son Maurice is the true heir to the Dukedom. Yet, being bound by an oath sworn to the man who made me his wife, I have never claimed the throne for him. But now Joan his sister knows, and out of her great heart she swears that she will give up the Duchy to him. If, therefore, the city is taken, the Muscovite will slay my son, slay him by their h.e.l.lish tortures, as they have sworn to do for the despite he put upon Prince Ivan. And his wife, the Princess Margaret, will die of grief when they carry her to Moscow to make a bride out of a widow. Joan will be a prisoner, Conrad either dead or a priest, and Kernsberg, the heritage of Henry the Lion, a fief of the Czar. There is no help in any.
Your Prince would succour, but it takes time to raise the country, and long ere he can cross the frontier the Russian will have worked his will in Courtland. Now I see a way--a woman's way. And if I fall in the doing of it, well--I but go to meet him for the sake of whose children I freely give my life. In this bear me witness.”