The Brethren Part 48
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"In one of these," said the Sultan, "is that jewel known as the enchanted Star and the Luck of the House of Ha.s.san, which the prince presented to his conqueror on the day of Hattin, and for the desire of which my captain Abdullah became a traitor and was brought to death. In the other is a pebble of the same weight.
Come, my niece, take you these boxes and give them to your kinsmen, to each the box you will. The jewel that is called the Star of Ha.s.san is magical, and has virtue, so they say. Let it choose, therefore, which of these knights is ripe for death, and let him perish in whose box the Star is found."
"Now," muttered the imaum into the ear of his master, "now at length we shall learn which it is of these two men that the lady loves."
"That is what I seek to know," answered Saladin in the same low voice.
As she heard this decree Rosamund looked round wildly and pleaded:
"Oh! be not so cruel. I beseech you spare me this task. Let it be another hand that is chosen to deal death to one of those of my own blood with whom I have dwelt since childhood. Let me not be the blind sword of fate that frees his spirit, lest it should haunt my dreams and turn all my world to woe. Spare me, I beseech you."
But Saladin looked at her very sternly and answered:
"Princess, you know why I have brought you to the East and raised you to great honour here, why also I have made you my companion in these wars. It is for my dream's sake, the dream which told me that by some n.o.ble act of yours you should save the lives of thousands. Yet I am sure that you desire to escape, and plots are made to take you from me, though of these plots you say that you and your woman"--and he looked darkly at Masouda--"know nothing.
But these men know, and it is right that you, for whose sake if not by whose command the thing was done, should mete out its reward, and that the blood of him whom you appoint, which is spilt for you, should be on your and no other head. Now do my bidding."
For a moment Rosamund stared at the boxes, then suddenly she closed her eyes, and taking them up at hazard, stretched out her arms, leaning forward over the edge of the dais. Thereon, calmly enough the brethren took, each of them, the box that was nearest to him, that in Rosamund's left hand falling to G.o.dwin and that in her right to Wulf. Then she opened her eyes again, stood still, and watched.
"Cousin," said G.o.dwin, "before we break this cord that is our chain of doom, know well that, whatever chances, we blame you not at all. It is G.o.d Who acts through you, and you are as innocent of the death of either of us as of that plot whereof we stand accused."
Then he began to unknot the silk which was bound about his box.
Wulf, knowing that it would tell all the tale, did not trouble himself as yet, but looked around the room, thinking that, whether he lived or died, never would he see a stranger sight.
Every eye in it was fixed upon the box in G.o.dwin's hand; even Saladin stared as though it held his own destiny. No; not every one, for those of the old imaum were fixed upon the face of Rosamund, which was piteous to see, for all its beauty had left it, and even her parted lips were ashy. Masouda alone still stood upright and unmoved, as though she watched some play, but he noted that her rich-hued cheek grew pale and that beneath her robe her hand was pressed upon her heart. The silence also was intense, and broken only by the little grating noise of G.o.dwin's nails as, having no knife to cut it, he patiently untied the silk.
"Trouble enough about one man's life in a land where lives are cheap!" exclaimed Wulf, thinking aloud, and at the sound of his voice all men started, as though it had thundered suddenly in a summer sky. Then with a laugh he tore the silk about his box asunder with his strong fingers, and breaking the seal, shook out its contents. Lo! there on the floor before him, gleaming green and white with emerald and diamond, lay the enchanted Star of Ha.s.san.
Masouda saw, and the colour crept back to her cheek. Rosamund saw also, and nature was too strong for her, for in one bitter cry the truth broke from her lips at last:
"Not Wulf! Not Wulf!" she wailed, and sank back senseless into Masouda's arms.
"Now, sire," said the old imaum with a chuckle, "you know which of those two the lady loves. Being a woman, as usual she chooses badly, for the other has the finer spirit."
"Yes, I know now," said Saladin, "and I am glad to know, for the matter has vexed me much."
But Wulf, who had paled for a moment, flushed with joy as the truth came home to him, and he understood the end of all their doubts.
"This Star is well named 'The Luck,'" he said, as bending down he took it from the floor and fastened it to his cloak above his heart, "nor do I hold it dearly earned." Then he turned to his brother, who stood by him white and still, saying:
"Forgive me, G.o.dwin, but such is the fortune of love and war.
Grudge it not to me, for when I am sped tonight this Luck--and all that hangs to it--will be yours."
So that strange scene ended.
The afternoon drew towards evening, and G.o.dwin stood before Saladin in his private chamber.
"What seek you now?" said the Sultan sternly.
"A boon," answered G.o.dwin. "My brother is doomed to die before nightfall. I ask to die instead of him."
"Why, Sir G.o.dwin?"
"For two reasons, sire. As you learned to-day, at length the riddle is answered. It is Wulf who is beloved of the lady Rosamund, and therefore to kill him would be a crime. Further, it is I and not he whom the eunuch heard bargaining with the captain Abdullah in the tent--I swear it. Take your vengeance upon me, and let him go to fulfil his fate."
Saladin pulled at his beard, then answered:
"If this is to be so, time is short, Sir G.o.dwin. What farewells have you to make? You say that you would speak with my niece Rosamund? Nay, the princess you shall not see, and indeed cannot, for she lies swooning in her chamber. Do you desire to meet your brother for the last time?"
"No, sire, for then he might learn the truth and--"
"Refuse this sacrifice, Sir G.o.dwin, which perchance will be scarcely to his liking."
"I wish to say good-bye to Masouda, she who is waiting woman to the princess."
"That you cannot do, for, know, I mistrust this Masouda, and believe that she was at the bottom of your plot. I have dismissed her from the person of the princess and from my camp, which she is to leave--if she has not already left--with some Arabs who are her kin. Had it not been for her services in the land of the a.s.sa.s.sins and afterwards, I should have put her to death."
"Then," said G.o.dwin with a sigh, "I desire only to see Egbert the bishop, that he may shrive me according to our faith and make note of my last wishes."
"Good; he shall be sent to you. I accept your statement that you are the guilty man and not Sir Wulf, and take your life for his.
Leave me now, who have greater matters on my mind. The guard will seek you at the appointed time."
G.o.dwin bowed and walked away with a steady step while Saladin, looking after him, muttered:
"The world could ill spare so brave and good a man."
Two hours later guards summoned G.o.dwin from the place where he was prisoned, and, accompanied by the old bishop who had shriven him, he pa.s.sed its door with a happy countenance, such as a bridegroom might have worn. In a fas.h.i.+on, indeed, he was happy, whose troubles were done with, who had few sins to mourn, whose faith was the faith of a child, and who laid down his life for his friend and brother. They took him to a vault of the great house where Saladin was lodged--a large, rough place, lit with torches, in which waited the headsman and his a.s.sistants.
Presently Saladin entered, and, looking at him curiously, said:
"Are you still of the same mind, Sir G.o.dwin?"
"I am."
"Good. Yet I have changed mine. You shall say farewell to your cousin, as you desired. Let the princess of Baalbec be brought hither, sick or well, that she may see her work. Let her come alone."
"Sire," pleaded G.o.dwin, "spare her such a sight."
But he pleaded in vain, for Saladin answered only, "I have said."
A while pa.s.sed, and G.o.dwin, hearing the sweep of robes, looked up, and saw the tall shape of a veiled woman standing in the corner of the vault where the shadow was so deep that the torchlight only glimmered faintly upon her royal ornaments.
"They told me that you were sick, princess, sick with sorrow, as well you may be, because the man you love was about to die for you," said Saladin in a slow voice. "Now I have had pity on your grief, and his life has been bought with another life, that of the knight who stands yonder."
The veiled form started wildly, then sank back against the wall.
"Rosamund," broke in G.o.dwin, speaking in French, "I beseech you, be silent and do not unman me with words or tears. It is best thus, and you know that it is best. Wulf you love as he loves you, and I believe that in time you will be brought together. Me you do not love, save as a friend, and never have. Moreover, I tell you this that it may ease your pain and my conscience; I no longer seek you as my wife, whose bride is death. I pray you, give to Wulf my love and blessing, and to Masouda, that truest and most sweet woman, say, or write, that I offer her the homage of my heart; that I thought of her in my last moments, and that my prayer is we may meet again where all crooked paths are straightened. Rosamund, farewell; peace and joy go with you through many years, ay, and with your children's children. Of G.o.dwin I only ask you to remember this, that he lived serving you, and so died."
She heard and stretched out her arms, and, none forbidding him, G.o.dwin walked to where she stood. Without lifting her veil she bent forward and kissed him, first upon the brow and next upon the lips; then with a low, moaning cry, she turned and fled from that gloomy place, nor did Saladin seek to stay her. Only to himself the Sultan wondered how it came about that if it was Wulf whom Rosamund loved, she still kissed G.o.dwin thus upon the lips.
As he walked back to the death-place G.o.dwin wondered also, first that Rosamund should have spoken no single word, and secondly because she had kissed him thus, even in that hour. Why or wherefore he did not know, but there rose in his mind a memory of that wild ride down the mountain steeps at Beirut, and of lips which then had touched his cheek, and of the odour of hair that then was blown about his breast. With a sigh he thrust the thought aside, blus.h.i.+ng to think that such memories should come to him who had done with earth and its delights, knelt down before the headsman, and, turning to the bishop, said:
The Brethren Part 48
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The Brethren Part 48 summary
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