Black Magic by Marjorie Bowen (good novels to read TXT) 📕
Dirk slightly smiled.
"Should I know more than you?"
The Margrave's son flushed.
"What you do know?--tell me."
Dirk's smile deepened.
"She was one Ursula, daughter of the Lord of Rooselaare, she was sent to the convent of the White Sisters in this town."
"So you know it all," said Balthasar. "Well, what else?"
"What else? I must tell you a familiar tale."
"Certes, more so to you than to me."
"Then, since you wish it, here is your story, sir."
Dirk spoke in an indifferent voice well suited to the peace of the chamber; he looked at neither of his listeners, but always out of the window.
"She was educated for a nun and, I think, desired to become one of the Order of the White Sisters. But when she was fifteen her brother died and she became her father's heiress. So many entered the lists for her hand--they contracted her to you."
Balthasar pulled at the orange tassels on his slee
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“Who is this?” whispered Sebastian; he caught Dirk’s bridle as if he
found protection in the youth’s near presence, and stared towards the
blank open gates.
A white horse appeared against the cold misty background of grey
Country; a woman was in the saddle: Jacobea of Martzburg.
She paused, peered up at the high little windows in the donjon, then
turned her gaze on the silent three.
“Now can the chatelaine speak for herself,” breathed Dirk.
Theirry gave a great sigh, his eyes fixed with a painful intensity on
the approaching lady, but she did not seem to see either of them.
“Sebastian,” she cried, and drew rein gazing at him, “where is your
wife?”
Her words rang on the cold, clear air like strokes on a bell.
“Sybilla died last night,” answered the steward, “but I did nought.
And you should not have come.”
Jacobea shaded her brows with her gloved hand and stared past the
speaker.
Theirry broke out in a trembling passion.
“In the name of the angels in whose company I ever placed you, what do
you know of this that has been done?”
“What is that on the ground?” cried Jacobea. “Sybilla—he has slain
Sybilla—but, sirs,”—she—looked round her distractedly—“ye must not
blame him—he saw my wish…” “From your own lips!” cried Theirry.
“Who are you who speak?” she demanded haughtily. “I sent him to slay
Sybilla…” She interrupted herself with a hideous shriek. “Sebastian,
ye are stepping in her blood!”
And, letting go of the reins, she sank from the saddle; the steward
caught her, and as she slipped from his hold to her knees her
unconscious head came near to the stiff white feet of the dead.
“Her yellow hair!” cried Dirk. “Let us leave her to her steward—you
and I have another way!” “May God curse her as He has me,” said
Theirry in an agony,—“for she has slain my hope of heaven!”
“You will not leave me?” called Sebastian. “What shall I say?—what
shall I do?”
“Lie and lie again!” answered Dirk with a wild air; “wed the dame and
damn her people—let fly your authority and break her heart as quickly
as you may—”
“Amen to that!” added Theirry.
“And now to Frankfort!” cried Dirk, exultant. They set their horses to
a furious pace and galloped out of Castle Martzburg.
HUGH OF ROOSELAARE
Dirk took off his riding-coat and listened with a smile to the quick
step of Theirry overhead; he was again in the long low chamber looking
out on the witch’s garden, and nothing was changed save that the roses
bloomed no longer on the bare thorny bushes.
“So you have brought him back,” said Nathalie, caressing the youth’s
soft sleeve; “pulled his saint out of her shrine and given her over to
the demons.”
Dirk turned his head; a beautiful look was in his eyes.
“Yea, I have brought him back,” he said musingly.
“You have done a foolish thing,” grumbled the witch, “he will ruin you
yet; beware, for even now you hold him against his will; I marked his
face as he went into his old chamber.” Dirk seated himself with a
sigh.
“In this matter I am not to be moved, and now some food, for I am so
weary that I can scarcely think. Nathalie, the toil it has been, the
rough roads, the delays, the long hours in the saddle—but it was
worth it!”
The witch set the table with a rich service of ivory and silver.
“Worth leaving your fortunes at the crisis? Ye left Frankfort the day
after the Emperor died, and have been away two months. Ysabeau thinks
you dead.”
Dirk frowned.
“No matter, to-morrow she shall know me living. Martzburg is far away
and the weather delayed us, but it had to be; now I am free to work my
own advancement.”
He drank eagerly of the wine put before him, and began to eat.
“Ye have heard,” asked Nathalie, “that Balthasar of Courtrai has been
elected Emperor?” “Yea,” smiled Dirk, “and is to marry Ysabeau within
the year; we knew it, did we not?” “Next spring they go to Rome to
receive the Imperial crown.”
“I shall be with them,” said Dirk. “Well, it is good to rest. What a
thick fool Balthasar is!” He smiled, and his eyes sparkled.
“The Empress is a clever woman,” answered the witch, “she came here
once to know whither you had gone. I told her, for the jest, that you
were dead. At that she must think her secret dead with you, yet she
gave no sign of joy nor relief, nor any hint of what her business
was.”
Dirk elegantly poured out more wine
“She is never betrayed by her puppet’s face—an iron-hearted fiend,
the Empress.” “They say, though, that she is a fool for Balthasar, a
dog at his heels.”
“Until she change.”
“Belike you will be her next fancy,” said Nathalie; “the crystals
always foretell a throne for you.”
Dirk laughed.
“I do not mean to share my honours with any—woman,” he answered;
“pile up the fire, Nathalie, certes, it is cold.”
He pushed back his chair with a half sigh on his lips, and turned
contented eyes on the glowing hearth Nathalie replenished.
“And none has thought evil of Melchoir’s death?” he asked curiously.
The witch returned to her little stool and rubbed her hands together;
the leaping firelight cast a false colour over her face.
“Ay, there was Hugh of Rooselaare.”
Dirk sat up.
“The Lord of Rooselaare?”
“Certes, the night Melchoir died he flung ‘Murderess!’ in the
Empress’s face.”
Dirk showed a grave, alert face.
“I never heard of that.”
“Nay,” answered the witch with some malice, “ye were too well engaged
in parting that boy from his love—it is a pretty jest—certainly, she
is a clever woman, she enlists Balthasar as her champion—he becomes
enraged, furious, and Hugh is cast into the dungeons for his pains.”
The witch laughed softly. “He would not retract, his case swayed to
and fro, but Balthasar and the Empress always hated him, he had never
a chance.”
Dirk rose and pressed his clasped hand to his temple.
“What do you say? never a chance?”
Nathalie stared at him.
“Why, you seem moved.”
“Tell me of Hugh of Rooselaare,” Dirk in an intense voice.
“He is to die tonight at sunset.”
Dirk uttered a hoarse exclamation.
“Old witch!” he cried bitterly, “why tell me this before? I lose time,
time.”
He snatched his cloak from the wall and flung on his hat.
“What is Hugh of Rooselaare to you?” asked Nathalie, and she crept
across the room and clung to the young man’s garments.
He shook her off fiercely.
“He must not die—he, on the scaffold! I, as you say, I was following
that boy and his love while this was happening!”
The witch fell back against the wall, while overhead the restless
tread of Theirry sounded. Dirk dashed from the room and out into the
quiet street.
For a second he paused; it was late afternoon, he had perhaps an hour
or an hour and a half. Clenching his hands, he drew a deep breath, and
turned in the direction of the palace at a steady run.
By reason of the snow clouds and the bitter cold there were few abroad
to notice the slim figure running swiftly and lightly; those who were
about made their way in the direction of the marketplace, where the
Lord of Rooselaare was presently to meet his death.
Dirk arrived at the palace one hand over his heart, stinging him with
the pain of his great speed; he demanded the Empress.
None among the guards knew either him or his name, but, at his
imperious insistence, ‘they sent word by a page to Ysabeau that the
young doctor Constantine had a desire to see her.
The boy returned, and Dirk was admitted instantly, smiling gloomily to
think with what feelings Ysabeau would look on him.
So far all had been swiftly accomplished; he was conducted to her
private chamber and brought face to face with her while he still
panted from his running.
She stood against a high arched window that showed the heavy
threatening winter clouds without; her purple, green and gold
draperies shone warmly in the glitter of the fire; a tray of incense
stood on the hearth after the manner of the East, and the hazy clouds
of it rose before her.
Until the page had gone neither spoke, then Dirk said quickly–“I
returned to Frankfort to—day.”
Ysabeau was agitated to fear by his sudden appearance.
“Where have you been?” she asked. “I thought you dead.”
Dirk, pale and grave, gave her a penetrating glance.
“I have no time for speech with you now—you owe me something, do you
not? Well, I am here to ask part payment.”
The Empress winced.
“Well—what? I had no wish to be ungrateful, ‘twas you avoided me.”
She crossed to the hearth and fixed her superb eyes intently on the
youth.
“Hugh of Rooselaare is to die this evening,” he said.
“Yea,” answered Ysabeau, and her childish loveliness darkened.
For a while Dirk was silent; he showed suddenly frail and ill; on his
face was an expression of emotion, mastered and held back.
“He must not die,” he said at last and lifted his eyes, shadowed with
fatigue. “That is what I demand of you, his pardon, now, and at once—
we have but little time.”
Ysabeau surveyed him curiously and fearfully.
“You ask too much,” she replied in a low voice; “do you know why this
man is to die?” “For speaking the truth,” he said, with a sudden
sneer.
The Empress flushed, and clutched the embroidery on her bodice.
“You of all men should know why he must be silenced,” she retorted
bitterly. “What is your reason for asking his life?”
Dirk’s mouth took on an ugly curl
“My reason is no matter—it is my will.”
Ysabeau beat her foot on the edge of the Carpet.
“Have I made you so much my master?” she muttered.
The young man answered impatiently.
“You will give me his pardon, and make haste, for I must ride with it
to the marketplace.” She answered with a lowering glance.
“I think I will not; I am not so afraid of you, and I hate this man—
my secret is your secret after all.”
Dirk gave a wan smile.
“I can blast you as I blasted Melchoir of Brabant, Ysabeau, and do you
think I have any fear of what you can say? But”—he leaned towards
her—“suppose I go with what I know to Balthasar?” The name humbled
the Empress like a whip held over her.
“So, I am helpless,” she muttered, loathing him.
“The pardon,” insisted Dirk; “sound the bell and write me a pardon.”
Still she hesitated; it was a hard thing to lose her vengeance against
a dangerous enemy. “Choose another reward,” she pleaded. “Of what
value can this man’s life be to you?”
“You seek to put me off until it be too late,” cried Dirk hoarsely—he
stepped forward and seized the hand-bell on the table—“now an’ you
show yourself obstinate, I go straight from here to Balthasar and tell
him of the poisoning of Melchoir.”
Instinct and desire
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