The Complete Celebrated Crimes by Alexandre Dumas (ebook reader below 3000 .txt) ๐
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Joan turned a tearful look upon her lover.
โGod, my God!โ she cried, clasping her hands in desperation, โam I to hear for ever this awful cry of death! You too, Bertrand, you too say the word, like Robert of Cabane, like Charles of Duras? Wretched man, why would you raise this bloody spectre between us, to check with icy hand our adulterous kisses? Enough of such crimes; if his wretched ambition makes him long to reign, let him be king: what matters his power to me, if he leaves me with your love?โ
โIt is not so sure that our love will last much longer.โ
โWhat is this, Bertrand? You rejoice in this merciless torture.โ
โI tell you, madam, that the King of Naples has a black flag ready, and on the day of his coronation it will be carried before him.โ
โAnd you believe,โ said Joan, pale as a corpse in its shroud,โโyou believe that this flag is a threat?โ
โAy, and the threat begins to be put in execution.โ
The queen staggered, and leaned against a table to save herself from falling.
โTell me all,โ she cried in a choking voice; โfear not to shock me; see, I am not trembling. O Bertrand, I entreat you!โ
โThe traitors have begun with the man you most esteemed, the wisest counsellor of the crown, the best of magistrates, the noblest-hearted, most rigidly virtuousโโโ
โAndrea of Isernia!โ
โMadam, he is no more.โ
Joan uttered a cry, as though the noble old man had been slain before her eyes: she respected him as a father; then, sinking back, she remained profoundly silent.
โHow did they kill him?โ she asked at last, fixing her great eyes in terror on the count.
โYesterday evening, as he left this castle, on the way to his own home, a man suddenly sprang out upon him before the Porta Petruccia: it was one of Andreโs favourites, Conrad of Gottis chosen no doubt because he had a grievance against the incorruptible magistrate on account of some sentence passed against him, and the murder would therefore be put down to motives of private revenge. The cowardly wretch gave a sign to two or three companions, who surrounded the victim and robbed him of all means of escape. The poor old man looked fixedly,โat his assassin, and asked him what he wanted. โI want you to lose your life at my hands, as I lost my case at yours!โ cried the murderer; and leaving him no time to answer, he ran him through with his sword. Then the rest fell upon the poor man, who did not even try to call for help, and his body was riddled with wounds and horribly mutilated, and then left bathed in its blood.โ
โTerrible!โ murmured the queen, covering her face.
โIt was only their first effort: the proscription lists are already full: Andre must needs have blood to celebrate his accession to the throne of Naples. And do you know, Joan, whose name stands first in the doomed list?โ
โWhose?โ cried the queen, shuddering from head to foot.
โMine,โ said the count calmly.
โYours!โ cried Joan, drawing herself up to her full height; โare you to be killed next! Oh, be careful, Andre; you have pronounced your own death-sentence. Long have I turned aside the dagger pointing to your breast, but you put an end to all my patience. Woe to you, Prince of Hungary! the blood which you have spilt shall fall on your own head.โ
As she spoke she had lost her pallor: her lovely face was fired with revenge, her eyes flashed lightning. This child of sixteen was terrible to behold: she pressed her loverโs hand with convulsive tenderness, and clung to him as if she would screen him with her own body.
โYour anger is awakened too late,โ said he gently and sadly; for at this moment Joan seemed so lovely that he could reproach her with nothing. โYou โdo not know that his mother has left him a talisman preserving him from sword and poison?โ
โHe will die,โ said Joan firmly: the smile that lighted up her face was so unnatural that the count was dismayed, and dropped his eyes.
The next day the young Queen of Naples, lovelier, more smiling than ever, sitting carelessly in a graceful attitude beside a window which looked out on the magnificent view of the bay, was busy weaving a cord of silk and gold. The sun had run nearly two-thirds of his fiery course, and was gradually sinking his rays in the clear blue waters where Posilippoโs head is reflected with its green and flowery crown. A warm, balmy breeze that had passed over the orange trees of Sorrento and Amalfi felt deliciously refreshing to the inhabitants of the capital, who had succumbed to torpor in the enervating softness of the day. The whole town was waking from a long siesta, breathing freely after a sleepy interval: the Molo was covered with a crowd of eager people dressed out in the brightest colours; the many cries of a festival, joyous songs, love ditties sounded from all quarters of the vast amphitheatre, which is one of the chief marvels of creation: they came to the ears of Joan, and she listened as she bent over her work, absorbed in deep thought. Suddenly, when she seemed most busily occupied, the indefinable feeling of someone near at hand, and the touch of something on her shoulder, made her start: she turned as though waked from a dream by contact with a serpent, and perceived her husband, magnificently dressed, carelessly leaning against the back of her chair. For a long time past the prince had not come to his wife in this familiar fashion, and to the queen the pretence of affection and careless behaviour augured ill. Andre did not appear to notice the look of hatred and terror that had escaped Joan in spite of herself, and assuming the best expression of gentleness as that his straight hard features could contrive to put on in such circumstances as these, he smilingly askedโ
โWhy are you making this pretty cord, dear dutiful wife?โ
โTo hang you with, my lord,โ replied the queen, with a smile.
Andre shrugged his shoulders, seeing in the threat so incredibly rash nothing more than a pleasantry in rather bad taste. But when he saw that Joan resumed her work, he tried to renew the conversation.
โI admit,โ he said, in a perfectly calm voice, โthat my question is quite unnecessary: from your eagerness to finish this handsome piece of work, I ought to suspect that it is destined for some fine knight of yours whom you propose to send on a dangerous enterprise wearing your colours. If so, my fair queen, I claim to receive my orders from your lips: appoint the time and place for the trial, and I am sure beforehand of carrying off a prize that I shall dispute with all your adorers.โ
โThat is not so certain,โ said Joan, โif you are as valiant in war as in love.โ And she cast on her husband a look at once seductive and scornful, beneath which the young man blushed up to his eyes.
โI hope,โ said Andre, repressing his feelings, โI hope soon to give you such proofs of my affection that you will never doubt it again.โ
โAnd what makes you fancy that, my lord?โ
โI would tell you, if you would listen seriously.โ
โI am listening.โ
โWell, it is a dream I had last night that gives me such confidence in the future.โ
โA dream! You surely ought to explain that.โ
โI dreamed that there was a grand fete in the town: an immense crowd filled the streets like an overflowing torrent, and the heavens were ringing with their shouts of joy; the gloomy granite facades were hidden by hangings of silk and festoons of flowers, the churches were decorated as though for some grand ceremony. I was riding side by side with you.โ Joan made a haughty movement: โForgive me, madam, it was only a dream: I was on your right, riding a fine white horse, magnificently caparisoned, and the chief-justice of the kingdom carried before me a flag unfolded in sign of honour. After riding in triumph through the main thoroughfares of the city, we arrived, to the sound of trumpets and clarions, at the royal church of Saint Clara, where your grandfather and my uncle are buried, and there, before the high altar, the popeโs ambassador laid your hand in mine and pronounced a long discourse, and then on our two heads in turn placed the crown of Jerusalem and Sicily; after which the nobles and the people shouted in one voice, โLong live the King and Queen of Naples!โ And I, wishing to perpetuate the memory of so glorious a day, proceeded to create knights among the most zealous in our court.โ
โAnd do you not remember the names of the chosen persons whom you judged worthy of your royal favours?โ
โAssuredly, madam: Bertrand, Count of Artoisโ
โEnough, my lord; I excuse you from naming the rest: I always supposed you were loyal and generous, but you give me fresh proof of it by showing favour to men whom I most honour and trust. I cannot tell if your wishes are likely soon to be realised, but in any case feel sure of my perpetual gratitude.โ
Joanโs voice did not betray the slightest emotion; her look had became kind, and the sweetest smile was on her lips. But in her heart Andreโs death was from that moment decided upon. The prince, too much preoccupied with his own projects of vengeance, and too confident in his all-powerful talisman and his personal valour, had no suspicion that his plans could be anticipated. He conversed a long time with his wife in a chatting, friendly way, trying to spy out her secret, and exposing his own by his interrupted phrases and mysterious reserves. When he fancied that every cloud of former resentment, even the lightest, had disappeared from Joanโs brow, he begged her to go with her suite on a magnificent hunting expedition that he was organising for the 20th of August, adding that such a kindness on her part would be for him a sure pledge of their reconciliation and complete forgetfulness of the past. Joan promised with a charming grace, and the prince retired fully satisfied with the interview, carrying with him the conviction that he had only to threaten to strike a blow at the queenโs favourite to ensure her obedience, perhaps even her love.
But on the eve of the 20th of August a strange and terrible scene was being enacted in the basement storey of one of the lateral towers of Castel Nuovo. Charles of Durazzo, who had never ceased to brood secretly over his infernal plans, had been informed by the notary whom he had charged to spy upon the conspirators, that on that particular evening they were about to hold a decisive meeting, and therefore, wrapped in a black cloak, he glided into the underground corridor and hid himself behind a pillar, there to await the issue of the conference. After two dreadful hours of suspense, every second marked out by the beating of his heart, Charles fancied he heard the sound of a door very carefully opened; the feeble ray of a lantern in the vault scarcely served to dispel the darkness, but a man coining away from the wall approached him walking like a living statue. Charles gave a slight cough, the sign agreed upon. The
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