Joan of the Sword Hand Part 26
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"Go down and bring a cup of wine!" commanded Joan as soon as he appeared. And Werner von Orseln, having glanced once at his mistress where she stood with the point of her sword to the ground and her elbow on the corner of the mantel, turned on his heel and departed without a word to do her bidding.
Meanwhile the Wordless Man had raised his mistress up from the ground.
Her eyes slowly opened and began to wander vaguely round the room, taking in the objects one by one. When they fell on Joan, standing erect by the fireplace, a spasm seemed to pa.s.s across her face and she strove fiercely but ineffectually to rise.
"Carry your mistress to that couch!" said the young d.u.c.h.ess, pointing to the tumbled bed from which a few minutes before she had so hastily launched herself.
The dumb man understood either the words or the significant action of Joan's hand, for he stooped and lifted Von Lynar's mother in his arms.
Whilst he was thus engaged Werner came in quickly with a silver cup in his hand.
Joan took it instantly and going forward she put it to the lips of the woman on the bed. Her hair had escaped from its gathered coils and now flowed in luxuriant ma.s.ses of red-gold over her shoulders and showered itself on either side of the pillow before falling in a s.h.i.+ning cataract to the floor.
Putting out her hands the woman took the cup and drank of it slowly, pausing between the draughts to draw long breaths.
"I must have strength," she said. "I have much to say. Then, Joan of Hohenstein, yourself shall judge between thee and me!"
The fluttering of the lightning at the window seemed to disturb her, for as Joan bowed her a.s.sent slightly and sternly, the tall woman kept looking towards the lattice as if the pulsing flame fretted her. Joan moved her hand slightly without taking her eyes away, and the chief captain, used to such silent orders from his mistress, strode over to the window and pulled the curtains close. The storm had by this time subsided to a rumble, and only round the edges of the arras could a faint occasional glow be seen, telling of the turmoil without. But a certain faint tremulousness pervaded all the house, which was the Baltic thundering on the pebbly beaches and shaking the walls to their sandy foundations.
The colour came slowly back to the woman's pale face, and, after a little, she raised herself on the pillows. Joan stood motionless and uncompromising by the great iron dogs of the chimney.
"You are waiting for me to speak, and I will speak," said the woman.
"You have a double right to know all. Shall it be told to yourself alone or in the presence of this man?"
She looked at Von Orseln as she spoke.
"I have no secrets in my life," said Joan; "there is nothing that I would hide from him. _Save one thing!_" She added the last words in her heart.
"I warn you that the matter concerns yourself very closely," answered the woman somewhat urgently.
"Werner von Orseln is my chief captain!" answered Joan.
"It concerns also your father's honour!"
"He was my father's chief captain before he was mine, and had charge of his honour on twenty fields."
Gratefully and silently Von Orseln lifted his mistress's hand to his lips. The tall woman on the bed smiled faintly.
"It is well that your Highness is so happy in her servants. I also have one who can hold his peace."
She pointed to the Wordless Man, who now stood with the candelabra in his hand, mute and immutable by his mistress's bedhead, as if watching that none should do her harm.
There was an interval of silence in the room, filled up by the hoa.r.s.e persistent booming of the storm without and the shuddering shocks of the wind on the lonely house. Then the woman spoke again in a low, distinct voice.
"Since it is your right to know my name, I am Theresa von Lynar--who have also a right to call myself 'of Hohenstein'--and your dead father's widow!"
In an instant the reserve of Joan's sternly equal mind was broken up.
She dropped her sword clattering on the floor and started angrily forward towards the bed.
"It is a lie most foul," she cried; "my father lived unwed for many years--nay, ever since my mother's death, who died in giving me life, he never so much as looked on woman. It is a thing well known in the Duchy!"
The woman did not answer directly.
"Max Ulrich, bring the silver casket," she said, taking from her neck a little silver key.
The Wordless Man, seeing her action, came forward and took the key. He went out of the room, and after an interval which seemed interminable he returned with a peculiarly shaped casket. It was formed like a heart, and upon it, curiously worked in gold and precious stones, Joan saw her father's motto and the armorial bearings of Hohenstein.
The woman touched a spring with well-practised hand, the silver heart divided, and a roll of parchment fell upon the bed. With a strange smile she gave it to Joan, beckoning her with an upward nod to approach.
"I give this precious doc.u.ment without fear into your hands. It is my very soul. But it is safe with the daughter of Henry the Lion."
Joan took the crackling parchment. It had three seals attached to it and the first part was in her father's own handwriting.
"_I declare by these presents that I have married, according to the customs of Hohenstein and the laws of the Empire, Theresa von Lynar, daughter of the Count von Lynar of Jutland. But this marriage shall not, by any of its occasions or consequents, affect the succession of my daughter Joanna to the Duchy of Hohenstein and the Princ.i.p.alities of Kernsberg and Marienfeld.
To which we subscribe our names as conjointly agreeing thereto in the presence of his High Eminence the Cardinal Adrian, Archbishop of Cologne and Elector of the Holy Roman Empire._"
Then followed the three signatures, and beneath, in another handwriting, Joan read the following:--
"_These persons, Henry Duke of Hohenstein and Theresa von Lynar, were married by me subject to the above conditions mutually agreed upon in the Church of Olsen near to the Kurische Haff, in the presence of Julius Count von Lynar and his sons Wolf and Mark, in the year 14--, the day being the eve of St.
John.--Adrian, Archiepiscop. et Elector._"
After her first shock of surprise was over Joan noted carefully the date. It was one year after her own birth, and therefore the like period after the death of her mother, the openly acknowledged d.u.c.h.ess of Hohenstein.
The quick eyes of the woman on the bed had followed hers as they read carefully down the parchment, eagerly and also apprehensively, like those of a mother who for some weighty reason has placed her child in peril.
Joan folded the parchment and handed it back. Then she stood silent waiting for an explanation.
The woman took up her parable calmly, like one who has long comprehended that such a crisis must one day arrive, and who knows her part thoroughly.
"I, who speak to you, am Theresa von Lynar. Your father saw me first at the coronation of our late sovereign, Christian, King of Denmark. And we loved one another. For this cause I moved my brother and his sons to build Castle Lynar on the sh.o.r.es of the Northern Sea. For this cause I accompanied him thither. For many years at Castle Lynar, and also at this place, called the Hermitage of the Dunes, Henry of Kernsberg and I dwelt in such happiness as mortals seldom know. I loved your father, obeyed him, adored him, lived only for him. But there came a spring when my brother, being like your father a hot and pa.s.sionate man, quarrelled with Duke Henry, threatening to go before the Diet of the Empire if I were not immediately acknowledged d.u.c.h.ess and my son Maurice von Lynar made the heir of Hohenstein. But I, being true to my oath and promise, left my brother and abode here alone with my husband when he could escape from his Dukedom, living like a simple squire and his dame. Those were happy days and made up for much. Then in an evil day I sent my son to my brother to train as his own son in arms and the arts of war. But he, being at enmity with my husband, made ready to carry the lad before the Diet of the Empire, that he might be declared heir to his father.
Then, in his anger, Henry the Lion rose and swept Castle Lynar with fire and sword, leaving none alive but this boy only, whom he meant to take back and train with his captains. But on the way home, even as he rode southward through the forest towards Kernsberg, he reeled in the saddle and pa.s.sed ere he could speak a word, even the name of those he loved.
So the boy remained a captive at Kernsberg, called by my brother's name, and knowing even to this day nothing of his father."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "I bid you slay me for the evil deed my heart was willing to do." [_Page 161_]]
And as the woman ceased speaking Werner von Orseln nodded gravely and sadly.
"This thing concerning my lord's death is true," he said; "I was present. These arms received him as he fell. He was dead ere we laid him on the ground!"
Theresa von Lynar raised herself. She had spoken thus far reclining on the bed from which Joan had risen. Now she sat up and for a little s.p.a.ce rested her hands on her lap ere she went on.
"Then my son, whom, not knowing, you had taken pity upon and raised to honour, and who is now your faithful servant, sent a secret messenger that you would come to abide secretly with me till a certain dark day had overpa.s.sed in Kernsberg. And then there sprang up in my heart a dreadful conceit that he loved you, knowing young blood and hearing the fame of your beauty, and I was afraid for the greatness of the sin--that one should love his sister."
Joan made a quick gesture of dissent, but the woman went on.
"I thought, being a woman alone, and one also, who had given all freely up for love's sake, that he would certainly love you even as I had loved. And when I saw you in my house, so cold and so proud, and when I thought within me that but for you my son would have been a mighty prince, a strange terrible anger and madness came over me, darkening my soul. For a moment I would have slain you. But I could not, because you were asleep. And, even as you stirred, I heard you speak the name of a man, as only one who loves can speak it. I know right well how that is, having listened to it with a glad heart in the night. The name was----"
"Hold!" cried Joan of the Sword Hand. "I believe you--I forgive you!"
"The name," continued Theresa von Lynar, "was _not that of my son_! And now," she went on, slowly rising from the couch to her height, "I am ready. I bid you slay me for the evil deed my heart was willing for a moment to do!"
Joan of the Sword Hand Part 26
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Joan of the Sword Hand Part 26 summary
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