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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possession, from her guards to her nails; she shuddered with
suppressed wrath, and pressed her little clenched hands against the
wall.
Her Chamberlain entered.
“Write out a pardon for the Lord of Rooselaare,” commanded Dirk, “and
haste, as you love your place.”
When the man had gone, Ysabeau turned with an ill-concealed savagery.
“What will they think! What will Balthasar think!”
“That must be your business,” said Dirk wearily.
“And Hugh himself!” flashed the Empress. The youth coloured painfully.
“Let him be sent to his castle in Flanders,” he said, with averted
face. “He must not remain here.”
“So much you give in!” cried Ysabeau. “I do not understand you.”
He responded with a wild look.
“No one will ever understand me, Ysabeau.”
The Chamberlain returned, and in a shaking hand the Empress took the
parchment and the reed pen, while Dirk waved the man’s dismissal.
“Sign,” he cried to her.
Ysabeau set the parchment on the table and looked out at the gathering
clouds; the Lord of Rooselaare must have already left the prison.
She dallied with the pen; then took a little dagger from her hair and
sharpened it; Dirk read her purpose in her lovely evil eyes, and
snatched the lingering right hand into his own long fingers.
The Empress drew together and looked up at him bitterly and darkly,
but Dirk’s breath stirred the ringlets that touched her cheek, his
cool grip guided her reluctant pen; she shivered with fear and
defiance; she wrote her name.
Dirk flung her hand aside with a great sigh of relief.
“Do not try to foil me again, Marozia Porphyrogentris,” he cried, and
caught up the parchment, his hat and cloak.
She watched him leave the room; heard the heavy door close behind him,
and she writhed with rage, thrusting, with an uncontrollable gesture
of passion, the dagger into the table; it quivered in the wood, then
broke under her hand.
With an ugly cry she ran to the window, flung it open and cast the
handle out.
When it rattled on the cobbled yard Dirk was already there; he marked
it fall, knew the gold and red flash, and smiled.
Showing the parchment signed by the Empress, he had commanded the
swiftest horse in the stables. He cursed and shivered, waiting while
the seconds fled; his slight figure and fierce face awed into silence
the youngest in the courtyard as he paced up and down. At last—the
horse; one of the grooms gave him a whip; he put it under his left arm
and leapt to his seat; they opened the gate and watched him take the
wind-swept street.
The marketplace lay at the other end of the town; and the hour for
the execution was close at hand—but the white horse he rode was fresh
and strong.
The thick grey clouds had obscured the sunset and covered the sky; a
few trembling flakes of snow fell, a bitter wind blew between the high
narrow houses; here and there a light sparkling in a window emphasized
the colourless cold without.
Dirk urged the steed till he rocked in the saddle; curtains were
pulled aside and doors opened to see who rode by so furiously; the
streets were empty–but there would be people enough in the
marketplace.
He passed the high walls of the college, galloped over the bridge that
crossed the sullen waters of the Main, swept by the open doors of St.
Wolfram, then had to draw rein, for the narrow Street began to be
choked with people.
He pulled his hat over his eyes and flung his cloak across the lower
half of his face; with one hand he dragged on the bridle, with the
other waved the parchment.
“A pardon!” he cried. “A pardon! Make way!” They drew aside before the
plunging steed; some answered him—
“It is no pardon—he wears not the Empress’s livery.”
One seized his bridle; Dirk leant from the saddle and dashed the
parchment into the fellow’s face, the horse snorted, and plunging
cleared a way and gained the marketplace.
Here the press was enormous; men, women and children were gathered
close round the mounted soldiers who guarded the scaffold; the armour,
yellow and blue uniforms and bright feathers of the horsemen showed
vividly against the grey houses and greyer sky.
On the scaffold were two dark, graceful figures; a man kneeling, with
his long throat bare, and a man standing with a double-edged sword in
his hands.
“A pardon!” shrieked Dirk. “In the name of the Emperor!”
He was wedged in the crowd, who made bewildered movements but could
not give place to him; the soldiers did not or would not hear.
Dirk rose desperately in his stirrups; as he did so the hat and cloak
fell back and his head and shoulders were revealed clearly above the
swaying mass.
Hugh of Rooselaare heard the cry; he looked across the crowd and his
eyes met the eyes of Dirk Renswoude.
“A pardon!” cried Dirk hoarsely; he saw the condemned man’s lips move.
The sword fell…
“A woman screamed,” said the monk on the scaffold, “and proclaimed a
pardon.”
And he pointed to the commotion gathered about Dirk, while the
executioner displayed to the crowd the serene head of Hugh of
Rooselaare.
“Nay, it was not a woman,” one of the soldiers answered the monk,
“‘twas this youth.” Dirk forced to the foot of the scaffold.
“Let me through,” he said in a terrible voice; the guard parted; and
seeing the parchment in his hand, let him mount the steps.
“You bring a pardon?” whispered the monk.
“I am too late,” said Dirk; he stood among the hurrying blood that
stained the platform, and his face was hard.
“Dogs! was this an end for a lord of Rooselaare!” he cried, and
clasped his hand on a straining breast. “Could you not have waited a
little—but a few moments more?”
The snow was falling fast; it lay on Dirk’s shoulders and on his
smooth hair; the monk drew the parchment from his passive hand and
read it in a whisper to the officer; they both looked askance at the
young man.
“Give me his head,” said Dirk.
The executioner had placed it at a corner of the scaffold; he left off
wiping his sword and brought it forward.
Dirk watched without fear or repulsion, and took Hugh’s head in his
slim fair hands. “How heavy it is,” he whispered.
The quick distortion of death had left the proud features; Dirk held
the face close to his own, with no heed to the blood that trickled
down his doublet.
Priest and captain standing apart, noticed a horrible likeness between
the dead and the living, but would not speak of it.
“Churl,” said Dirk, gazing into the half-closed grey eyes that
resembled so his own. “He spoke—as he saw me; what did he say?”
The headsman polished the mighty blade.
“Nought to do with you, or with any,” he answered, “the words had no
meaning, certes.” “What were they?” whispered the youth.
“Have you come for me, Ursula?’ then he said again, ‘Ursula.’”
A quiver ran through Dirk’s frame.
“She shall repent this, the Eastern witch!” he said wildly. “May the
Devil snatch you all to bitter judgment!”
He turned to the captain, with the head held against his breast.
“What are you going to do with this?”
“His wife has asked for his head and his body that he may be buried
befitting his estate.” “His wife!” echoed Dirk; then slowly, “Ay, he
had a wife—and a son, sir?”
“The child is dead.”
Dirk set the head down gently by the body.
“And his lands?” he asked.
“They go, sir, by favour of the Empress, to Balthasar of Courtrai, who
married, as you may know, this lord’s heiress, Ursula, dead now many
years.”
The snow had scattered the crowd; the soldiers were impatient to
begone; the blood stiffened and froze about their feet; Dirk looked
down at the dead man with an anguished and hopeless expression.
“Sir,” said the officer, “will you return with me to the palace, and
we will tell the Empress how this mischance arose, how you came too
late.”
“Nay,” replied Dirk fiercely. “Take that good news alone.”
He turned and descended the scaffold steps in a proud, gloomy manner.
One of the soldiers held his horse; he mounted in silence and rode
away; they who watched saw the thick snowflakes blot out the solitary
figure, and shuddered with no cause they understood.
BETRAYED
Nathalie stood at the door with a lantern in her hand.
Dirk was returning; the witch held up the light to catch a glimpse of
his face, then, whispering and crying under her breath, followed into
the house.
“There is blood on your shoes and on your breast,” she whispered, when
they reached the long chamber at the back.
Dirk flung himself on a chair and moaned; the snow lay still on his
hair and his shoulders; he buried his face in the bend of his arm.
“Zerdusht and his master have forsaken us,” whimpered the witch. “I
could work no spells tonight, and the mirror was blank.”
Dirk spoke in a muffled voice, without raising his head.
“Of what use magic to me? I should have stayed in Frankfort.”
Nathalie drew his wet cloak from his shoulders. “Have I not warned
you? has not the brass head warned you that the young scholar will be
your ruin, bringing you to woe and misery and shame?”
Dirk rose with a sob, and turned to the fire; the one dim lamp alone
dispelled the cold darkness of the room, and the thin flames on the
hearth fell into ashes before their eyes.
“Look at his blood on me!” cried Dirk, “his blood! Balthasar and
Ysabeau make merry with his lands, but my hate shall mean something to
them yet—I should not have left Frankfort.”
He rested his head against one of the supports of the chimney-piece,
and Nathalie, peering into his face, saw that his eyes were wet.
“Alas! who was this man?”
“I did all I could,” whispered Dirk…“the Empress shall burn in
hell.”
The sickly creeping flames illuminated his pallid face and his small
hand, hanging clenched by his side.
“This is an evil day for us,” moaned the witch, “the spirits will not
answer, the flames will not burn…some horrible misfortune
threatens.”
Dirk turned his gaze into the half-dark room.
“Where is Theirry?”
“Gone.” Nathalie rocked to and fro on her stool.
“Gone!” shivered Dirk, “gone where?”
“Soon after you left he crept from his chamber, and his face was
evil—he went into the street.” Dirk paced up and down with uneven
steps.
“He will come back, he must come back! Ah, my heart! You say Zerdusht
will not speak tonight?”
The witch moaned and trembled over the fire.
“Nay, nor will the spirits come.”
Dirk shook his clenched fist in the air.
“They shall answer me.”
He went to the window, opened it and looked out into blackness.
“Bring the lamp.”
Nathalie obeyed; the faint light showed the hastening snowflakes, no
more.
“Maybe they will listen to me, nay, as I say, they shall.”
The witch followed with the swinging lamp in her hand, while they made
their way in
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