The Maker of Rainbows Part 8
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The duke's own people alone remained with him, and, when all the rest had gone, the duke gave orders for the horses' heads to be turned homeward, to the green valley in which alone he cared to be a king.
"Back to the bees and the books and the kind country hearts," cried the duke to his friend.
"Back to the little church among the quiet trees," added the priest, who had cared as little for an archbishop's miter as the duke for a kingly crown.
Since then the duke had been left to hive his bees in peace, and it may be added that he has never been known to lose his temper again.
THE STOLEN DREAM
The sun was setting, and slanting long lanes of golden light through the trees, as an old man, borne done by a heavy pack, came wearily through the wood, and at last, as if worn out with the day's travel, unshouldered his burden and threw himself down to rest at the foot of a great oak-tree. He was very old, older far he seemed than the tree under whose gnarled boughs he was resting, though that looked as if it had been growing since the beginning of the world. His back was bent as with the weight of years, though really it had become so from the weight of the pack that he carried; his cheeks were furrowed like the bark of a tree, and far down upon his breast fell a beard as white as snow. But his deep-set eyes were still bright and keen, though sly and cruel, and his long nose was like the beak of a hawk. His hands were like roots strong and knotted, and his fingers ended in talon-like nails. In repose, even, they seemed to be clutching something, something they loved to touch, and would never let go. His clothes were in rags and his shoes scarce held to his feet. He seemed as abjectly poor as he was abjectly old.
Presently, when he had rested awhile, he turned to his pack, and, furtively glancing with his keen eyes up and down the wood, to make sure that he was alone, he drew from it a sack of leather which was evidently of great weight. Its mouth was fastened by sliding thongs, which he loosened with tremulous, eager hands. First he took from the bag a square of some purple silk stuff, which he spread out on the turf beside him, and then, his eyes gleaming with a wild light, he carefully poured out the contents of the bag on to the purple square, a torrent of gold and silver coins and precious stones flas.h.i.+ng like rainbows--a king's treasure. The setting sun flashed on the glittering heap, turning it into a dazzle of many-colored fire. The treasure seemed to light up the wood far and near, and the gaudy summer flowers, that a moment before had seemed so bright and splendid, fell into shadow before its radiance.
The old man bathed his claw-like hands in the treasure with a ghoulish ecstasy, and let the gold and silver pour through his fingers over and over again, streams of jeweled light gleaming and flas.h.i.+ng in the level rays of the sun. As he did so, he murmured inarticulately to himself, gloating and gurgling with a lonely, hideous joy.
Suddenly a look of fear came over his face; he seemed to hear voices coming up the wood, and, huddling his treasure swiftly back again into the leathern bag, and the bag into the folds of his pack, he rose and sought some bushes near by to hide himself from the sight of whomsoever it was that approached. But, as he shouldered his pack, he half staggered, for the pack was of great weight and he heaved a deep sigh.
"It grows heavier and heavier," he muttered. "I cannot carry it much longer. I shall never be able to carry it with me to the grave."
As he disappeared among the bushes, a young man and a young woman, with arms twined round each other, came slowly up the glade and presently sat down at the foot of the tree where the old man had been resting a moment or two before.
"Why, what is this?" presently exclaimed the young girl, picking up something bright out of the gra.s.s. It was a gold coin, which, in his haste, the old man had let slip through his fingers.
"Gold!" they both exclaimed together.
"It will buy you a new silk gown," said the lover. "Who ever heard of such luck?" And then he sighed.
"Ah! dear heart," he said, "if only we had more like that! Then we could fulfil our dream."
As the sun poured its last rays over them there at the foot of the oak, it was to be seen that they were very poor. Their clothes were old and weather-stained, and they had no shoes to their feet; but the white feet of the girl shone like ivory flowers in the gra.s.s, and her hair was a sheaf of ruddy gold. Nor was there a jewel in all the old man's treasure as blue as her eyes. And the young man, in his manly fas.h.i.+on, was no less brave and fair to look upon.
In a little while they turned to a poor wallet at the young man's side.
"Let us eat our supper," they said.
But there was little more than a crust or two, a few morsels of cheese, and a mouthful or two of sour wine. Still, they were accustomed to being hungry, and the thought of the gold coin cheered their hearts. So they grew content, and after a while they nestled close into each other's arms and fell asleep, while slowly and softly through the woods came the light of the moon.
Now all this time the old man had lain hidden, crouched down among the bushes, afraid almost to draw his breath, but from where he was he could hear and see all, and had overheard all that had been said. At length, after the lovers had been silent for a long time, he took courage to peer out from his hiding-place, and he saw that they were asleep. He would wait a little longer, though, till their sleep was sounder, and then he might be able perhaps to creep away unheard. So he waited on, and the moon grew brighter and brighter, and flooded the woods with its strange silver. And the lovers fell deeper and deeper asleep.
"It will be safe now," said the old man, half rising and looking out from his bushes. But this time, as he looked out, he saw something, something very strange and beautiful.
Hovering over the sleeping lovers was a floating, flickering shape that seemed made of moonbeams, with two great s.h.i.+ning stars for its eyes. It was the dream that came nightly to watch over the sleep of the lovers; and, as the miser gazed at it in wonder, a strange change came over his soul, and he saw that all the treasure he had h.o.a.rded so long--gathered by the cruel practices of years, and with carrying which about the world his back had grown bent--was as dross compared with this beautiful dream of two poor lovers, to whom but one of all his gold pieces had seemed like a fortune.
"What, after all, is it to me but a weary burden my shoulders grow too old to carry," he murmured, "and for the sake of which my life is in danger wherever I go, and to guard which I must hide away from the eyes of men?"
And the longer he gazed on the fair, s.h.i.+ning vision, the more the longing grew within him to possess it for himself.
"They shall have my treasure in exchange," he said to himself, approaching nearer to the sleepers, treading softly lest he should awaken them. But they slept on, lost in the profound slumber of innocent youth. As he drew near, the dream shrank from him, with fear in its starry eyes; but it seemed the more beautiful to the old man the closer he came to it and saw of what divine radiance it was made; and, with his desire, his confidence grew greater. So, softly placing his leather bag in the flowers by the side of the sleepers, he thrust out his talon-like fingers and s.n.a.t.c.hed the dream by the hand, and hurried away, dragging it after him down the wood, fearfully turning now and again to see that he was not pursued.
But the sleepers still slept on, and by morning the miser was far away, with the captive dream by his side.
As the earliest birds chimed through the wood, and the dawn glittered on the dewy flowers, the lovers awoke and kissed each other and laughed in the light of the new day.
"But what is this?" cried the girl, and her hands fell from the pretty task of coiling up the sunrise of her hair.
With a cry they both fell upon the leather bag, lying there so mysteriously among the wood-lilies in the gra.s.s. With eager fingers they drew apart the leather thongs, and went half-mad with wonder and joy as they poured out the glittering treasure in the morning sun.
"What can it all mean?" they cried. "The fairies must have been here in the night."
But the treasure seemed real enough. The jewels were not merely dewdrops turned to diamonds and rubies and amethysts by the magic beams of the sun, nor was the gold mere gold of faerie, but coins bearing the image of the king of the land. Here were real jewels, real gold and silver.
Like children, they dabbled their hands in the s.h.i.+ning heap, tossing them up and pouring them from one hand to the other, flas.h.i.+ng and s.h.i.+mmering in the morning light.
Then a fear came on them.
"But folk will say that we have stolen them," said the youth; "they will take them from us, and cast us into prison."
"No, I believe some G.o.d has heard our prayer," said the girl, "and sent them down from heaven in the night. He who sent them will see that we come to no harm."
And again they fell to pouring them through their fingers and babbling in their delight.
"Do you remember what we said last night when we found the gold piece?"
said the girl. "If only we had more of them! Surely our good angel heard us, and sent them in answer."
"It is true," said the young man. "They were sent to fulfil our dream."
"Our poor starved and tattered dream!" said the girl. "How splendidly we can clothe and feed it now! What a fine house we can build for it to live in! It shall eat from gold and silver plate, and it shall wear robes of wonderful silks and lawns like rainbows, and glitter with jewels, blue and yellow and ruby, jewels like fire fountains and the depths of the sea."
But, as they spoke, a sudden disquietude fell over them, and they looked at each other with a new fear.
"But where _is_ our dream?" said the girl, looking anxiously around. And they realized that their dream was nowhere to be seen.
"I seemed to miss it once in the night," answered the young man in alarm, "but I was too sleepy to heed. Where can it be?"
"It cannot be far away," said the girl. "Perhaps it has wandered off among the flowers."
But they were now thoroughly alarmed.
"Where can it have gone?" they both cried. And they rose up and ran to and fro through the wood, calling out aloud on their dream. But no voice came back in reply, nor, though they sought high and low in covert and brake, could they find a sign of it anywhere. Their dream was lost. Seek as they might, it was nowhere to be found.
And then they sat down by the treasure weeping, forgetting it all in this new sorrow.
"What shall we do?" they cried. "We have lost our dream."
For a while they sat on, inconsolable. Then a thought came to the girl.
"Some one must have stolen it from us. It would never have left us of its own accord," said she.
The Maker of Rainbows Part 8
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The Maker of Rainbows Part 8 summary
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