Black Magic by Marjorie Bowen (good novels to read TXT) đź“•
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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him, so waited my chance, and the night we reached the city I betrayed
him for what he was, betrayed him to whom I had sworn
friendship…well, half the town came howling through the snow to
seize him, but we were too late, we found a flaming house…it burnt
to ashes, he with it…I had had my revenge, but it brought me no
peace. I left the West and went to the East, to India, Persia, to
Greece, I avoided both God and the Devil, I dreaded Hell and dared not
hope for Heaven, I tried to forget but could not, I tried to repent
but could not. Good and evil strove for me, until the Lord had
pity…I heard of you, and I have come to Rome to cast myself at your
feet, to ask your aid to help throw myself on God His mercy.”
He rose with his hands clasped on his breast and his wild eyes fixed
on the white face of Luigi Caprarola; thunder and lightning together
were rending the hot air; Theirry’s gorgeous dress glimmered in gold
and purple, his face was flushed and exalted.
“God wins, I think, this time,” he said in an unsteady voice. “I have
confessed my sins, I will do penance for them, and die at least in
peace—God and the angels win!”
The Cardinal rose; with one hand he held to the back of the ivory
chair, with the other he clasped the golden book to his breast; the
light shining on his red hair showed it in filmy brightness against
the wall of ebony and mother-of-pearl; his face and lips were very
pale above the vivid hue of his robe, his eyes, large and dark, stared
at Theirry.
Again the lightning flashed between the two, and seemed to sink into
the floor at the Cardinal’s feet.
He lifted his head proudly and listened to the following mighty roll;
when the echoes had quivered again into hot stillness he spoke.
“The Devil and his legions win, I think,” he said. “At least they have
served Dirk Renswoude well.”
Theirry fell back, and back, until he crouched against the gleaming
wall.
“Cardinal Caprarola!” he cried fearfully. “Cardinal Caprarola, speak
to me! even here I hear the fiends jibe!”
The Cardinal stepped from the ebony dais, his stiff robes making a
rustling as he walked; he laughed.
“Have I learned a mien so holy my old comrade knows me not? Have I
changed so, I who was dainty and pleasant to look upon, your friend
and your bane?”
He paused in the centre of the room; the open window, the dark beyond
it, the waving curtains, the fierce lightning made a terrific
background for his haughty figure.
But Theirry moaned and whispered in his throat. “Look at me,”
commanded the Cardinal, “look at me well, you who betrayed me, am I
not he who gilded a devil one August afternoon in a certain town in
Flanders?”
Theirry drew himself up and pressed his clenched hands to his temples.
“Betrayed!” he shrieked. “It is I who am betrayed. I sought God, and
have been delivered unto the Devil!”
The thunder crashed so that his words were lost in the great noise of
it, the blue and forked lightning darted between them.
“You know me now?” asked the Cardinal.
Theirry slipped to his knees, crying like a child.
“Where is God? where is God?”
The Cardinal smiled.
“He is not here,” he answered, “nor in any place where I have been.”
An awful stillness fell after the crash of thunder; Theirry hid his
face, cowering like a man who feels his back bared to the lash.
“Cannot you look at me?” asked the Cardinal in a half-mournful scorn;
“after all these years am I to meet you—thus? At my feet!”
Theirry sprang up, his features mask-like in their unnatural
distortion and lifeless hue.
“You do well to taunt me,” he answered, “for I am an accursed fool, I
have been seeking for what does not exist—God!—ay, now I know that
there is no God and no Heaven, therefore what matter for my
soul…what matter for any of it since the Devil owns us all!”
The storm was renewed with the ending of his speech, and he saw
through the open window the vineyards and gardens of the Janiculum
Hill blue for many seconds beneath the black sky.
“Your soul!” cried the Cardinal, as before. “Always have you thought
too much, and not enough, of that; you served too many masters and not
one faithfully; had you been a stronger man you had stayed with your
fallen saint, not spurned her, and then avenged her by my betrayal.”
He crossed to the window and closed it, the while the lightning picked
him out in a fierce flash, and waited until the after-crash had rocked
to silence, his eyes all the while not leaving the shrinking, horror-stricken figure of Theirry.
“Well, it is all a long while ago,” he said. “And I and you have
changed.”
“How did you escape that night?” asked Theirry hoarsely; hardly could
he believe that this man was Dirk Renswoude, yet his straining eyes
traced in the altered older face the once familiar features.
As the Cardinal moved slowly across the gleaming chamber Theirry
marked with a horrible fascination the likeness of the haughty priest
to the poor student in black magic.
The straight dark hair was now curled, bleached and stained a deep red
colour, after the manner of the women of the East; eyes and brows were
the same as they had ever been, the first as bright and keen, the last
as straight and heavy; his clear skin showed less pallor, his mouth
seemed fuller and more firmly set, the upper lip heavily shaded with a
dark down, the chin less prominent, but the line of the jaw was as
strong and clear as ever; a handsomer face than it had been, a
remarkable face, with an expression composed and imperious, with eyes
to tremble before.
“I thought you burnt,” faltered Theirry.
“The master I serve is powerful,” smiled the Cardinal. “He saved me
then and set me where I am now, the greatest man in Rome—so great a
man that did you wish a second time to betray me you might shout the
truth in the streets and find no one to believe you.”
The lightning darted in vain at the closed window, and the thunder
rolled more faintly in the distance.
“Betray you!” cried Theirry, wild-eyed. “No, I bow the knee to the
greatest thing I have met, and kiss your hand, your Eminence!”
The Cardinal turned and looked at him over his shoulder.
“I never broke my vows,” he said softly, “the vows of comradeship I
made to you; just now you said you thought I loved you, then, I mean,
in the old days…”—he paused and his delicate hand crept over his
heart—“well, I…loved you…and it ruined me, as the devils
promised. Last night I was warned that you would come to-day and that
you would be my bane…well, I do not care since you are come, for,
sir, I love you still.”
“Dirk!” cried Theirry.
The Cardinal gazed on him with ardent eyes.
“Do you suppose it matters to me that you are weak, foolish, or that
you betrayed me? You are the one thing in all the world I care for…
Love! what was your love when you left her at Sebastian’s feet?—had
she been my lady I had stayed and laughed at all of it…”
“It is not the Devil who has taught you to be so faithful,” said
Theirry.
For the first time a look of trouble, almost of despair, came into the
Cardinal’s eyes; he turned his head away.
“You shame me,” continued Theirry; “I have no constancy in me;
thinking of my own soul, almost have I forgotten Jacobea of
Martzburg—and yet—”
“And yet you loved her.”
“Maybe I did—it is long ago.”
A bitter little smile curved the Cardinal’s lips.
“Is that the way men care for women?” he said. “Certes, not in that
manner had I wooed and remembered, had I been a—a—lover.”
“Strange that we, meeting here like this, should talk of love!” cried
Theirry, his heart heaving, his eyes dilating, “strange that I, driven
round the world by fear of God, that I, coming here to one of God’s
own saints, should find myself in the Devil’s net again; come, he has
done much for you, what will he do for me?”
The Cardinal smiled sadly.
“Neither God nor Devil will do anything for you, for you are not
single-hearted, neither constant to good nor evil; but I—will risk
everything to serve your desires.”
Theirry laughed.
“Heaven has cast the world away and we are mad! You, you famous as a
holy man—did you murder the young Blaise? I will back to India, to
the East, and die an idol-worshipper. See yonder crucifix, it hangs
upon your walls, but the Christ does not rise to smite you; you handle
the Holy Mysteries in the Church and no angel slays you on the altar
steps–let me away from Rome!”
He turned to the gilt door, but the Cardinal caught his sleeve.
“Stay,” he said, “stay, and all I promised you in the old days shall
come true—do you doubt me? Look about you, see what I have won for
myself…”
Theirry’s beautiful face was flushed and wild. “Nay, let me go…”
The last rumble of the thunder crossed their speech.
“Stay, and I will make you Emperor.”
“Oh devil!” cried Theirry, “can you do that?”
“We will rule the world between us; yea, I will make you Emperor, if
you will stay in Rome and serve me; I will snatch the diadem from
Balthasar’s head and cast his Empress out as I ever meant to do, and
you shall bear the sceptre of the C�sars, oh, my friend, my friend!”
He held out his right hand as he spoke; Theirry caught it, crushed the
fingers in his hot grasp and kissed the brilliant rings; the Cardinal
flushed and dropped his lids over sparkling eyes.
“You will stay?” he breathed.
“Yea, my sweet fiend, I am yours, and wholly yours; lo! were not
rewards such as these better worth crossing the world for than a
pardon from God?”
He laughed and staggered back against the wall, his look dazed and
reckless; the Cardinal withdrew his hand and crossed to the ivory
seat.
“Now, farewell,” he said, “the audience has been over-long; I know
where to find you, and in a while I shall send for you; farewell, oh
Theirry of Dendermonde!”
He spoke the name with a great tenderness, and his eyes grew soft and
misty.
Theirry drew himself together.
“Farewell, oh disciple of Sathanas! I, your humble follower, shall
look for fulfilment of your promises.”
The Cardinal touched the bell; when the fair youth appeared, he bade
him see Theirry from the palace.
Without another word they parted, Theirry with the look of madness on
him…
When Luigi Caprarola was alone he put his hand over his eyes and
swayed backwards as if about to fall, while his breath came in tearing
pants…with an effort he steadied himself, and, clenching his hands
now over his heart, paced up and down the room, his Cardinal’s robe
trailing after him, his golden rosary glittering against his knee.
As he struggled for control the gilt door was opened and Paolo Orsini
bowed himself into his
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