Part 10 (1/2)

Lysbeth H. Rider Haggard 122220K 2022-07-22

”I will tell you presently,” she answered; ”I cannot talk in the street,” and she touched her lips with her finger. ”These are my friends, the van Broekhovens, under whose escort I have travelled from The Hague. They wish to go on to the house of their relations, the other Broekhovens, if some one will show them the way.”

Then followed greetings and brief explanations. After these the Broekhovens departed to the house of their relatives, under the care of Martin, while, its saddle having been removed and carried into the house at Elsa's express request, Adrian led the mule round to the stable.

When Dirk had kissed and welcomed his young cousin he ushered her, still accompanied by the saddle, into the room where his wife and Foy were at supper, and with them the Pastor Arentz, that clergyman who had preached to them on the previous night. Here he found Lysbeth, who had risen from the table anxiously awaiting his return. So dreadful were the times that a knocking on the door at an unaccustomed hour was enough to throw those within into a paroxysm of fear, especially if at the moment they chanced to be harbouring a pastor of the New Faith, a crime punishable with death. That sound might mean nothing more than a visit from a neighbour, or it might be the trump of doom to every soul within the house, signifying the approach of the familiars of the Inquisition and of a martyr's crown. Therefore Lysbeth uttered a sigh of joy when her husband appeared, followed only by a girl.

”Wife,” he said, ”here is our cousin, Elsa Brant, come to visit us from The Hague, though why I know not as yet. You remember Elsa, the little Elsa, with whom we used to play so many years ago.”

”Yes, indeed,” answered Lysbeth, as she put her arms about her and embraced her, saying, ”welcome, child, though,” she added, glancing at her, ”you should no longer be called child who have grown into so fair a maid. But look, here is the Pastor Arentz, of whom you may have heard, for he is the friend of your father and of us all.”

”In truth, yes,” answered Elsa curtseying, a salute which Arentz acknowledged by saying gravely, ”Daughter, I greet you in the name of the Lord, who has brought you to this house safely, for which give thanks.”

”Truly, Pastor, I have need to do so since-” and suddenly she stopped, for her eyes met those of Foy, who was gazing at her with such wonder and admiration stamped upon his open face that Elsa coloured at the sight. Then, recovering herself, she held out her hand, saying, ”Surely you are my cousin Foy; I should have known you again anywhere by your hair and eyes.”

”I am glad,” he answered simply, for it flattered him to think that this beautiful young lady remembered her old playmate, whom she had not seen for at least eleven years, adding, ”but I do not think I should have known you.”

”Why?” she asked, ”have I changed so much?”

”Yes,” Foy answered bluntly, ”you used to be a thin little girl with red arms, and now you are the most lovely maiden I ever saw.”

At this speech everybody laughed, including the Pastor, while Elsa, reddening still more, replied, ”Cousin, I remember that you used to be rude, but now you have learned to flatter, which is worse. Nay, I beg of you, spare me,” for Foy showed signs of wis.h.i.+ng to argue the point. Then turning from him she slipped off her cloak and sat down on the chair which Dirk had placed for her at the table, reflecting in her heart that she wished it had been Foy who rescued her from the wood thieves, and not the more polished Adrian.

Afterwards as the meal went on she told the tale of their adventure. Scarcely was it done when Adrian entered the room. The first thing he noticed was that Elsa and Foy were seated side by side, engaged in animated talk, and the second, that there was no cover for him at the table.

”Have I your permission to sit down, mother?” he asked in a loud voice, for no one had seen him come in.

”Certainly, son, why not?” answered Lysbeth, kindly. Adrian's voice warned her that his temper was ruffled.

”Because there is no place for me, mother, that is all, though doubtless it is more worthily filled by the Rev. Pastor Arentz. Still, after a man has been fighting for his life with armed thieves, well-a bit of food and a place to eat it in would have been welcome.”

”Fighting for your life, son!” said Lysbeth astonished. ”Why, from what Elsa has just been telling us, I gathered that the rascals ran away at the first blow which you struck with your staff.”

”Indeed, mother; well, doubtless if the lady says that, it was so. I took no great note; at the least they ran and she was saved, with the others; a small service not worth mentioning, still useful in its way.”

”Oh! take my chair, Adrian,” said Foy rising, ”and don't make such a stir about a couple of cowardly footpads and an old hag. You don't want us to think you a hero because you didn't turn tail and leave Elsa and her companions in their hands, do you?”

”What you think, or do not think, is a matter of indifference to me,” replied Adrian, seating himself with an injured air.

”Whatever my cousin Foy may think, Heer Adrian,” broke in Elsa anxiously, ”I am sure I thank G.o.d who sent so brave a gentleman to help us. Yes, yes, I mean it, for it makes me sick to remember what might have happened if you had not rushed at those wicked men like-like--”

”Like David on the Philistines,” suggested Foy.

”You should study your Bible, lad,” put in Arentz with a grave smile. ”It was Samson who slew the Philistines; David conquered the giant Goliath, though it is true that he also was a Philistine.”

”Like Samson-I mean David-on Goliath,” continued Elsa confusedly. ”Oh! please, cousin Foy, do not laugh; I believe that you would have left me at the mercy of that dreadful man with a flat face and the bald head, who was trying to steal my father's letter. By the way, cousin Dirk, I have not given it to you yet, but it is quite safe, sewn up in the lining of the saddle, and I was to tell you that you must read it by the old cypher.”

”Man with a flat face,” said Dirk anxiously, as he slit away at the st.i.tches of the saddle to find the letter; ”tell me about him. What was he like, and what makes you think he wished to take the paper from you?”

So Elsa described the appearance of the man and of the black-eyed hag, his companion, and repeated also the words that the Heer van Broekhoven had heard the woman utter before the attack took place.

”That sounds like the spy, Hague Simon, him whom they call the Butcher, and his wife, Black Meg,” said Dirk. ”Adrian, you must have seen these people, was it they?”

For a moment Adrian considered whether he should tell the truth; then, for certain reasons of his own, decided that he would not. Black Meg, it may be explained, in the intervals of graver business was not averse to serving as an emissary of Venus. In short, she arranged a.s.signations, and Adrian was fond of a.s.signations. Hence his reticence.

”How should I know?” he answered, after a pause; ”the place was gloomy, and I have only set eyes upon Hague Simon and his wife about twice in my life.”

”Softly, brother,” said Foy, ”and stick to the truth, however gloomy the wood may have been. You know Black Meg pretty well at any rate, for I have often seen you-” and he stopped suddenly, as though sorry that the words had slipped from his tongue.

”Adrian, is this so?” asked Dirk in the silence which followed.

”No, stepfather,” answered Adrian.

”You hear,” said Dirk addressing Foy. ”In future, son, I trust that you will be more careful with your words. It is no charge to bring lightly against a man that he has been seen in the fellows.h.i.+p of one of the most infamous wretches in Leyden, a creature whose hands are stained red with the blood of innocent men and women, and who, as your mother knows, once brought me near to the scaffold.”

Suddenly the laughing boyish look pa.s.sed out of the face of Foy, and it grew stern.

”I am sorry for my words,” he said, ”since Black Meg does other things besides spying, and Adrian may have had business of his own with her which is no affair of mine. But, as they are spoke, I can't eat them, so you must decide which of us is-not truthful.”

”Nay, Foy, nay,” interposed Arentz, ”do not put it thus. Doubtless there is some mistake, and have I not told you before that you are over rash of tongue?”

”Yes, and a great many other things,” answered Foy, ”every one of them true, for I am a miserable sinner. Well, all right, there is a mistake, and it is,” he added, with an air of radiant innocency that somehow was scarcely calculated to deceive, ”that I was merely poking a stick into Adrian's temper. I never saw him talking to Black Meg. Now, are you satisfied?”

Then the storm broke, as Elsa, who had been watching the face of Adrian while he listened to Foy's artless but somewhat fatuous explanation, saw that it must break.

”There is a conspiracy against me,” said Adrian, who had grown white with rage; ”yes, everything has conspired against me to-day. First the ragam.u.f.fins in the street make a mock of me, and then my hawk is killed. Next it chances that I rescue this lady and her companions from robbers in the wood. But, do I get any thanks for this? No, I come home to find that I am so much forgotten that no place is even laid for me at table; more, to be jeered at for the humble services that I have done. Lastly, I have the lie given to me, and without reproach, by my brother, who, were he not my brother, should answer for it at the sword's point.”

”Oh! Adrian, Adrian,” broke in Foy, ”don't be a fool; stop before you say something you will be sorry for.”

”That isn't all,” went on Adrian, taking no heed. ”Whom do I find at this table? The worthy Heer Arentz, a minister of the New Religion. Well, I protest. I belong to the New Religion myself, having been brought up in that faith, but it must be well known that the presence of a pastor here in our house exposes everybody to the risk of death. If my stepfather and Foy choose to take that risk, well and good, but I maintain that they have no right to lay its consequences upon my mother, whose eldest son I am, nor even upon myself.”

Now Dirk rose and tapped Adrian on the shoulder. ”Young man,” he said coldly and with glittering eyes, ”listen to me. The risks which I and my son, Foy, and my wife, your mother, take, we run for conscience sake. You have nothing to do with them, it is our affair. But since you have raised the question, if your faith is not strong enough to support you I acknowledge that I have no right to bring you into danger. Look you, Adrian, you are no son of mine; in you I have neither part nor lot, yet I have cared for you and supported you since you were born under very strange and unhappy circ.u.mstances. Yes, you have shared whatever I had to give with my own son, without preference or favour, and should have shared it even after my death. And now, if these are your opinions, I am tempted to say to you that the world is wide and that, instead of idling here upon my bounty, you would do well to win your own way through it as far from Leyden as may please you.”

”You throw your benefits in my teeth, and reproach me with my birth,” broke in Adrian, who by now was almost raving with pa.s.sion, ”as though it were a crime in me to have other blood running in my veins than that of Netherlander tradesfolk. Well, if so, it would seem that the crime was my mother's, and not mine, who--”

”Adrian, Adrian!” cried Foy, in warning, but the madman heeded not.

”Who,” he went on furiously, ”was content to be the companion, for I understand that she was never really married to him, of some n.o.ble Spaniard before she became the wife of a Leyden artisan.”

He ceased, and at this moment there broke from Lysbeth's lips a low wail of such bitter anguish that it chilled even his mad rage to silence.

”Shame on thee, my son,” said the wail, ”who art not ashamed to speak thus of the mother that bore thee.”

”Ay,” echoed Dirk, in the stillness that followed, ”shame on thee! Once thou wast warned, but now I warn no more.”

Then he stepped to the door, opened it, and called, ”Martin, come hither.”