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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62669 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62669)
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-Project Gutenberg's The Castle of Twilight, by Margaret Horton Potter
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Castle of Twilight
-
-Author: Margaret Horton Potter
-
-Illustrator: Ch. Weber
- Mabel Harlow
-
-Release Date: July 17, 2020 [EBook #62669]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CASTLE OF TWILIGHT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing, Mary Glenn Krause, Charlene
-Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
-Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- The Castle of Twilight
-
-
-[Illustration: Lenore]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- THE CASTLE OF TWILIGHT
-
-
- _By_ MARGARET HORTON POTTER
-
- _With six Illustrations by Ch. Weber_
-
-[Illustration]
-
- CHICAGO
- A. C. McCLURG & CO
- _1903_
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT
- A. C. MCCLURG & CO.
- 1903
-
- Published September 26, 1903
-
-
- DESIGNED, ARRANGED, AND PRINTED
- BY THE UNIVERSITY PRESS
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- G. M. McB.
-
- WHOSE MUSIC SUGGESTED THE STORY
-
- _This little volume is faithfully
- inscribed_
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Nocturne—Grieg: Opus 54, No. 4.
-]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- TABLE · OF CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- FOREWORD vii
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I. THE DESOLATION OF AGE 1
-
- II. THE SILENCE OF YOUTH 29
-
- III. FLAMMECŒUR 62
-
- IV. THE PASSION 94
-
- V. SHADOWS 121
-
- VI. A LOVE-STRAIN 154
-
- VII. THE LOST LENORE 177
-
- VIII. TO A TRUMPET-CALL 209
-
- IX. THE STORM 235
-
- X. FROM RENNES 260
-
- XI. THE WANDERER 286
-
- XII. LAURE 316
-
- XIII. LENORE 347
-
- XIV. ELEANORE 378
-
- XV. THE RISING TIDE 401
-
- XVI. THE MIDDLE OF THE VALLEY 423
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- LIST · OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Lenore _Frontispiece_
-
- _Page_
- The whole Castle had assembled to say God-speed to their
- departing lord 90
-
- Only one among them seemed not of their mood 180
-
- “Gerault—Gerault—my lord!” she whispered 276
-
- Mother and child were happy to sit all day in the
- flower-strewn meadow 336
-
- Hand in hand, by the murmurous sea, they walked 416
-
- * * * * *
-
- _The decorations for title-page, end-papers, and chapter initials are by
- Miss Mabel Harlow_
-
-
-
-
- _FOREWORD_
-
-
-_Wistfully I deliver up to you my simple story, knowing that the first
-suggestion of “historical novel” will bring before you an image of
-dreary woodenness and unceasing carnage. Yet if you will have the
-graciousness but to unlock my castle door you will find within only two
-or three quiet folk who will distress you with no battles nor strange
-oaths. Even in the days of rival Princes and never-ending wars there
-dwelt still a few who took no part in the moil of life, but lived with
-gentle pleasures and unvoiced sorrows, somewhat as you and I; wherefore,
-I pray you, cross the moat. The drawbridge is down for you, and will not
-be raised, if, after introduction to the Chatelaine, you desire speedily
-to retreat._
-
- _M. H. P._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- _The_ CASTLE _of_ TWILIGHT
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER ONE_
- THE DESOLATION OF AGE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-It was mid-April: a sunny afternoon. A flood of golden light, borne on
-gusts of sweet, chilly air, poured through the open windows of the
-Castle into a high-vaulted, massively furnished bedroom, hung with
-tapestries, and strewn with dry rushes. A heavy silence that was less a
-thing of the moment than a part of the general atmosphere hovered about
-the room; and it was not lessened by the unceasing murmur of ocean waves
-breaking upon the face of the cliff on which the Castle stood. This
-sound held in it a note of unutterable melancholy. Indeed, despite the
-sunlight, the sparkle of the waves, and the fragrance of the fresh
-spring air, this whole building, the culminating point of a long slope
-of landscape, seemed wrapped in an atmosphere of loneliness, of sadness,
-of lifelessness, that found full expression in the attitude of the
-black-robed woman who knelt alone in the high-vaulted bedroom.
-
-Eleanore was kneeling at her priedieu. Madame Eleanore knelt at her
-priedieu, and did not pray. Nay, the great grief, the unvoiced
-bitterness in her heart, killed prayer. For, henceforth, there was one
-near and unbearably dear to her who must be praying for evermore. And it
-was this thought and the vista of her future lonely years that denied
-her, even as she knelt, the consolation of religion.
-
-To the still solitude of her bedchamber, and always to the foot of her
-crucifix, the chatelaine of Le Crépuscule was accustomed to bring her
-griefs; and there had been many griefs and some very bitter ones in the
-thirty-four years that she had reigned as mistress over the Castle. But
-this last was one that, trained though she was in the ways of sorrow,
-defied all comfort, denied the right of consolation, and forbade even
-the relief of an appeal to the All-merciful. Laure, her daughter, the
-star of her solitude, the youth and the joy of her life, the object of
-all the blind devotion of which her mother-soul was capable, had this
-morning entered upon her novitiate at the convent of the Virgins of the
-Magdalen. Although Madame Eleanore’s family was celebrated for its
-piety, though many a generation of Lavals and Crépuscules had rendered a
-daughter to the eternal worship of God, there were still no records left
-in either family of a great mother-grief when the daughter left her
-home. But madame, Laval as she was, Crépuscule as she had learned to be,
-could not find it in her heart to praise God for the loss of her child.
-
-Once again, after many years, years that she could look back upon now as
-filled with broad content, she was alone. Not since, many, many years
-ago, she had come to the Castle as a girl-bride, wife of a military
-lord, had such utter desolation held her in its bonds,—such desolation
-as, after the coming of her two children, she had thought never to feel
-again. In the days after the Seigneur’s first early departure for
-Rennes, without her, she had felt as now. It came back very vividly to
-her memory, how he had ridden away for the capital, the city of war, of
-arms, of glittering shield and piercing lance, of tourney and laughter
-and song; how she had longed in silence to ride thither at his side; how
-she had wept when he was really gone; how she had watched bitterly, day
-after day, for his return up the steep road that came out of the forest
-on the edge of the sand-downs below. Clearly indeed did her youth return
-to Eleanore as she knelt here, in the barred sunlight, alone with her
-unheeding crucifix. And intertwined with this memory was the new sense
-of blinding sorrow, the loss of Laure.
-
-The reality, as it came to her, seemed even now vague and impossible.
-Laure, her girl, her strong, wild, adventurous, high-hearted, fearless
-girl, to become a nun! Laure, of whom, in her own way, Eleanore had been
-accustomed to think as she thought of the great white gulls that veered,
-through sunlight and storm, on straight-stretched pinions, along the
-rocky coast, as a creature of light, of air, above all of perfect,
-indestructible freedom! This, her Laure, to become a nun! Spite of what
-the Bishop of St. Nazaire had so earnestly told her, how, in all strong
-natures, there are strong antitheses and quiet, governing depths that no
-outer turbulence can disclose, Eleanore rebelled at the disposal that
-had been made of this nature. She knew herself too well to believe that
-her daughter could renounce all the joys of youth and of life without a
-single after-pang.
-
-After this early mother-thought for the child’s state, Eleanore’s
-self-grief returned again with redoubled force; and her brain conjured
-up a vision of the future,—that great, shadowy future, that wrapped her
-heart around in a cold and deadening despair.
-
-The April wind blew higher through the room, catching the tapestry
-curtains of the immense bed and waving them about like blue banners. The
-bars of sunlight mellowed and broadened over the shrunken rushes and the
-smooth stones of the floor. The surf boomed louder as the tide advanced.
-And Eleanore, still upon her knees, rocked her body in her helpless
-rebellion, and found it in her heart to question the righteous wisdom of
-her God. She did not, however, come quite to this; for which,
-afterwards, she found it expedient to give thanks to the same deity. Her
-solitude was unexpectedly broken. There came a knock upon the door,
-which immediately afterwards opened, and Gerault, her son, entered the
-room.
-
-This fourth Seigneur of Le Crépuscule, a dark-browed, lean, and rather
-handsome fellow, clad in half armor and carrying on his wrist a falcon,
-jessed and belled, was the first of Eleanore’s two children. She
-reverenced him as his father’s successor; she held affection for him
-because she had borne him; and she respected him and his wishes because
-he was a man that commanded respect. But perhaps it was this very
-respect, which had in it something of distance, that killed in her the
-overwhelming love which she had always felt for his sister Laure, her
-youngest and beloved.
-
-Gerault, seeing his mother’s attitude, stopped short in the doorway.
-“Madame, I crave pardon! I had not known you were at prayer,” he said.
-
-Eleanore rose from her knees a little hastily. “Nay, Gerault, I was not
-at prayer. ’Tis an old custom of mine to meditate in that place. Enter
-thou and sit with me for a little.”
-
-Gerault bowed silently and accepted her invitation by seating himself
-near one of the windows on a wooden settle. His silence seemed to demand
-speech from his mother. But Eleanore, once on her feet, had begun slowly
-to pace the floor of her room, at the same time losing herself again in
-her own thoughts.
-
-Without speaking and without any discomfort at the continued silence,
-Gerault watched his mother—contemplated her, rather—as she walked. Often
-he had felt a pride—a pride that suggested patronage—in that walk of
-madame’s. Never, in any woman, had he seen such a carriage, such
-conscious poise, such dignity, such command. In his heart her son,
-somewhat given to irreverent observation and analysis of those about
-him, had named her the “Quiet-Browed,” and the very fact that he could
-have seen somewhat below the surface and yet named her thus, was
-evidence enough of her powers of self-control. It was he who finally
-broke the silence between them.
-
-“Well, madame, the change in our house hath taken place. Laure’s new
-life is safely begun; and she hath given what she could to the honor of
-our race. Now that it is done, I return to Rennes, to the side of my
-Lord Duke.”
-
-Eleanore made no pause in her walk, nor did she betray by the slightest
-gesture her feeling at the announcement. Too many times before had she
-experienced this same sensation. After a few seconds she asked quietly:
-“When do you go?”
-
-In spite of her self-control, her voice had been a strain off the key,
-and now Gerault looked at her keenly, asking: “There is a reason why I
-should not ride to Rennes? I have not thy permission to go?”
-
-Eleanore paused in her walk to turn and look at him. There was just a
-suggestion of scorn in her attitude. “Reason! Permission! Was ever a
-reason why a Crépuscule might not fare forth to Rennes, or one that
-asked permission of a woman ere he went?”
-
-Again Gerault looked at her, this time in that dignified disapproval
-that man uses to cover an unlooked-for mortification. And the Seigneur
-was decidedly lofty as he said: “I have given thee pain, madame, though
-of how, or wherefore, I am wofully ignorant.”
-
-“Pain, Gerault? Pain?” Eleanore repressed herself again and immediately
-resumed her walk. In a few seconds the calm, quiet dignity returned, her
-mask was replaced, every vestige of her feeling hidden, and she had
-become once more the châtelaine of unvoiced loneliness. Then she went on
-speaking: “Pain, Gerault? Surely not. Know I not enough of Rennes that I
-should not be well content to have thee in that lordly place, with thy
-rightful companions, men of thy blood? Shall I not send thee gayly forth
-again to that trysting-place of knightly arms?”
-
-“And yet, madame, I did but now surprise in thy face a look of sorrow,
-of some unhappiness, that is new to it.”
-
-“Well, even so?”
-
-“Ah, yes! It is Laure’s departure. Yet that must not be too much
-mourned. Laure’s wild ways had come to be a source of uneasiness to both
-of us at times. ’Tis true that there is lost an alliance that might have
-brought much honor to Le Crépuscule. By the favor of my Lord Duke, Laure
-might have wed with Grantmesnil, Senlis, Angers itself, perhaps; and
-there was ever Laval.—Yet—”
-
-He paused musingly, not seeing the look that had come back into the face
-of madame. Only when she stopped again and turned to him did he utter a
-soft exclamation, half surprise and half helpless apology. But Eleanore,
-smiling at him sadly, began, in that voice that had long been tuned to
-the stillness of the Castle: “If I could but make thee understand,
-Gerault! If I could make thee look upon my hours of loneliness here—and
-see—Gerault, it is not a matter of alliance, or of honor, or of
-dishonor, with Laure. It is that she was my child, my daughter, my
-companion—how adored!—here, in this—this great Castle of Twilight.
-Neither thou nor any man can know what our lives are.—But think,
-Gerault—think of me and of the Castle after thou art gone. What is there
-for me here? The tasks that I invent to fill the hours are useless to
-deaden thought. They are not changed from the occupations of thirty
-years ago. Nor, methinks, have women known aught else than spinning,
-weaving, sewing, spinning again, since the days of the earliest
-kings,—the Kings of Jerusalem.—And day after day through the long years
-I dwell here in this barren spot—dependent on others for what happiness
-I am to get in my life. And now—now the Church, in which always my hope
-of another, better life hath lain, taketh my child from me. Let then the
-Church give me something in place of her! Let the Church pay back
-something of its debt. And thou also, my son,—give me some help to live
-through the unending days of thy absence in Rennes.”
-
-“I, madame!—the Church!—What art thou saying?”
-
-“Hast thou not heard me?”
-
-“I have heard. But what shall I do, my mother?”
-
-“Listen, Gerault. The Church hath taken a daughter from me. Thou, by the
-aid of the Church, canst give me another. Gerault, thou must marry.
-Marry, my son. Bring thy wife home to me!”
-
-Gerault sprang to his feet with an expression on his face that his
-mother had never before called there. For a moment he looked at her, his
-eyes saying what his lips would not. Then, gradually, the fire in his
-face died down, and he reseated himself slowly on the settle, while the
-bird on his wrist, a wild _hagard_, fluttered its wings, and dug its
-talons painfully into the knight’s flesh.
-
-“Marry!” said Gerault, at length, in a voice that sounded strange to his
-own ears. “Marry! Hast thou forgotten?”
-
-“Nay, I have not forgotten; nor has anyone in the Castle. But thou,
-Gerault, must forget. It is now five years since, and thou art more than
-come to man’s estate. Even then thou wast not young.—Nay, Gerault, I do
-not forget that cruel thing. Yet we must all go.—And ere I die I must
-see thee wed. ’Tis not only for myself, child. It is for the house, and
-the line of Crépuscule. Shall it be lost in four generations?”
-
-Frowning, Gerault rose. “Well, madame, not as yet have I seen in
-Brittany the maid that I would wed, barring always—” He shook himself to
-dissipate the memory that was on him. “To-morrow I and Courtoise ride
-forth to Rennes. Let me now leave thee once more to thy meditations.”
-
-Gerault went to the door, opened it, turned to look once at his mother,
-whose face he could not see, and then, with an audible sigh, went
-quietly away. Each was ignorant of the other’s feelings. As Eleanore
-moved over toward the open windows that looked off upon the sea, her
-eyes, tear-blinded, saw nothing of the broad plain of blue and sparkling
-gold that stretched infinitely away before her. Nor did she dream of the
-spirit of reawakened bitterness and desolation that her words had
-conjured up in Gerault’s heart. But the Seigneur’s calm and unruffled
-expression concealed a very storm of reawakened misery as he descended
-the great stone staircase of the Castle, passed through the empty lower
-hall, and so out into the courtyard.
-
-This courtyard was always the liveliest spot about the chateau. Le
-Crépuscule itself was very large, and its adjacent buildings were on a
-corresponding scale. Like all the feudal fortress-castles of its time,
-it was almost a little city in itself. It dated from the year 1203, and
-had been built by the first lord of the name, Bernard, a left-handed
-scion of Coucy, who had been called Crépuscule from his colors, two
-contrasting shades of gray. Since his time, each of its lords had added
-to its strength or its convenience, till now, in the year 1380, it was
-the strongest chateau on the South Breton coast. One side was built on
-the very edge of an immense cliff against which the Atlantic surf had
-beaten unceasingly through the ages. The other three sides were well
-protected, first by a heavy wall that surrounded the whole courtyard
-with its various buildings, beyond which came a broad strip of garden
-land and pasturage, bounded on the far side by the second, or lower
-wall, and a dry moat. The keep was of a size proportionate to the
-Castle; and the number of men-at-arms that were kept in it taxed the
-coffers of the rather meagre estate to the utmost for food and pay.
-
-When Gerault entered the courtyard a girl stood drawing water from the
-round, stone well. Two or three henchmen lolled in the doorway of the
-keep, chaffing a peasant who had come up the hill from one of the manor
-farms carrying eggs in a big basket. Just outside the stables, which
-occupied the whole east side of the courtyard, a boy stood rubbing down
-a sleek, white palfrey. All of these people respectfully saluted their
-lord, who returned them rather a curt recognition as he passed round the
-west tower on his way to a little narrow building just in front of the
-north gate, in which his falcons were housed through the winter. Gerault
-had a great passion for hawking, and his birds were always objects of
-solicitude with him. He and Courtoise, his squire, were accustomed to
-spend much time together in this little building, and in the open-air
-falconry on the terrace outside the north gate, where young birds or
-newly captured ones were trained.
-
-Just now Gerault stood in the doorway of the falcon-house, looking
-around him for Courtoise, whom he had thought to find within. He was
-speaking to the bird on his wrist, his mind still occupied with the
-recent talk with his mother, when, through the gate, came a burst of
-laughter and song, and he raised his eyes to see a giddy company swaying
-toward him in the measure of a “carole”[1] led by Courtoise and Laure’s
-foster-sister, Alixe la Rieuse. Moving a little out of their way he
-stood and watched the group go by,—the demoiselles and the squires of
-the Castle household, retained by his mother as company for herself,
-also to be trained in etiquette according to their several stations. And
-a pretty enough company of youth and gayety they were: Berthe, Yseult,
-Isabelle, Viviane, daughters all of noble houses; with Roland of St.
-Bertaux, Louis of Florence, Robert Meloc, and Guy d’Armenonville, called
-“le Trouvé.” But, of them all, Alixe, surnamed the Laughing One, was the
-brightest of eye, the warmest of color, and the lightest of foot.
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- A “carole” was originally a dance to which the dancers sang their own
- accompaniment.
-
-As they went by, Gerault signalled to his squire, Courtoise, and the
-young fellow would have disengaged himself immediately from his
-companions, but that Alixe suddenly broke her step, dropped the hand of
-Robert Meloc, who was behind her, and leaving the company, ran to
-Gerault’s side, dragging Courtoise with her. The dance ceased while the
-young people stood still, staring at their erstwhile leaders. Alixe,
-however, impatiently motioned them on.
-
-“Go back to the Castle with your ‘Roi qui ne ment pas.’[2] I will come
-soon.”
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- An old-time game.
-
-Obedient to her command, the little company resumed their quaint song,
-and, with steps that lagged a little, passed into the Castle, leaving
-their arbitrary leader behind them, with the Seigneur and his squire.
-
-Gerault was silent till the young people had gone. Then he turned to
-Alixe, but, before he had time to speak, she broke in hastily:
-
-“Let me go with you to the falcons. You must see Bec-Hardi sit upon my
-wrist, and attack his _pât_ on the rope.”
-
-“Diable!—Bec-Hardi!—Thou hast a genius with the birds, Alixe. The
-_hagard_ will not move for me.” Gerault was all attention to her now.
-
-Alixe did not answer his praise, but started quickly forward toward the
-gate through which she had just come, beyond which was the strip of turf
-where the falcons lived in summer. Gerault and Courtoise followed her at
-a slower pace, and she caught some disjointed words spoken by the
-Seigneur behind her:—“Rennes”—“to-morrow”—“horses.”
-
-As these came to her ears, Alixe’s steps grew laggard, for she had put
-the thoughts together, and instantly her mood changed from golden
-irresponsibility to dull and dreary melancholy. For a long time she had
-concealed in her heart the deep sorrow that she felt at the prospective
-loss of her life-playmate, Laure, now actually gone, and gone forever.
-She had resigned herself to the thought of solitary adventures on moor
-and cliff, and lonely sails on the breezy, treacherous bay, in a more
-than treacherous boat,—such wild and risky amusements as she and the
-daughter of Le Crépuscule had loved to indulge together. Laure was gone,
-and she had kept herself from tears. But now—now, at these words of
-Gerault’s, there suddenly rose before her a vivid picture of life in the
-Castle without either brother or sister. Toward Gerault she had no such
-feeling as that which she had held for Laure. He was a man to her, and
-the fact made a vast difference. At times she entertained for him a
-violent enthusiasm; at other times she treated him with infinite scorn.
-But till now she had never confessed, even to herself, how much interest
-he had added to the monotonous Castle life. Considering her wayward
-nature, it was certainly anomalous that, in her first rush of
-displeasure, there came to her the thought of Eleanore, the mother now
-doubly bereft. And for madame she felt a sympathy that was entirely new.
-
-Gerault and his squire reached the outdoor falconry before Alixe, whom
-they perceived to have fallen into one of her sudden reveries.
-Accustomed to her rapid changes of mood, neither man took much heed of
-her slow steps and bent head. And when she reached the falconry and saw
-the birds, her interest in them brought over her again a wave of
-animation.
-
-The outdoor falconry was a long strip of turf that lay between the
-flower-terrace and the kitchen-garden. Into this turf had been driven
-about twenty heavy stakes, to which were nailed wooden cross-pieces. On
-nearly every one of these a falcon perched, and a strong cord, tied
-about one leg, fastened each to his own stake. At sight of their master,
-whom they knew perfectly well, all the birds set up a peculiar, harsh
-cry, at the same time eagerly flapping their wings, appealing, as best
-they could, for an hour or two of freedom. Alixe ran at once down to the
-end of the second row of stakes, where sat a half-grown bird, striking
-viciously at his perch with his iron beak.
-
-Courtoise and Gerault ceased their conversation when Alixe went up to
-this bird and addressed it in a curious jargon of Latin and
-Breton-French. Courtoise betrayed an admiring interest when she stooped
-to lay her hand on the bird’s feathers; and Gerault called
-involuntarily,—
-
-“Have a care, Alixe!”
-
-The girl, however, had her way with the creature. At sound of her voice
-it became attentive. At the touch of her hand it half raised its wings,
-the motion indicating expectant delight. In a moment more it had hopped
-upon the girl’s wrist, and sat there, swaying and preening contentedly.
-
-“Sang Dieu, Alixe, thou hast done that well! Thou sayest he will also
-attack the _pât_ from your hand?”
-
-Alixe merely nodded. To all appearances, she was wholly engrossed with
-the bird, which she continued to handle. Gerault and Courtoise had come
-close to her side, though the falcon betrayed its displeasure at their
-approach. All three of them had been silent for some seconds, when Alixe
-turned her green eyes upon the Seigneur, and, looking at him with a
-glance that carried discomfort with it, said in a very precise and
-cutting tone:
-
-“So you leave Le Crépuscule to-morrow, Gerault? And for how long?”
-
-“That I cannot tell,” answered Gerault, exhibiting no annoyance. “For as
-long a time as Duke Jean will accept my services.”
-
-“Ah! then there will be fighting. I had not heard of a war. Tell me of
-it.”
-
-Gerault became suddenly embarrassed and correspondingly displeased. “Of
-what import can it be to you, a woman, whether there is war or peace?”
-he inquired.
-
-“Oh, there is great import.”
-
-“Prithee, what may it be?”
-
-“This: that an there were indeed a war thou mightest be forgiven thy
-great selfishness in going forth to pleasure, leaving thy mother here in
-her loneliness and sorrow; whereas—”
-
-“Silence, Alixe! Thine insolence merits the whip,” cried Courtoise.
-
-“Peace, boy!” said Gerault, shortly, and forthwith turned again to the
-demoiselle. “And is not my mother long accustomed to this life, and well
-content with it? Is she not lady of a great castle, mistress of enviable
-estates? Hath she not a position to be proud of? From her speech and
-thine one might think—” he snapped his fingers impatiently.—“Come you
-with me, Alixe. Let us walk here together on the turf, while I say to
-you certain things. Thou, Courtoise, return to the Castle if thou wilt.”
-
-The squire, however, chose to remain in the field, and stood leaning
-against the wall, watching the falcons at his feet, and whistling under
-his breath for his own amusement. Alixe replaced Bec-Hardi, screaming
-angrily and flapping its wings, and moved off beside Gerault, her long
-red houppelande and mantle trailing upon the grass round her feet, the
-veil from her filet flowing behind her nearly to the ground. Long time
-these two, Lord of Le Crépuscule and his almost sister, walked together
-in the sunny light of the late afternoon. And long Courtoise the squire
-watched them as they went. Although Gerault had said, somewhat in ire,
-that he had a matter to speak of with her, it was Alixe that talked the
-most, and from his manner it could be seen that Gerault was fallen very
-much under the influence of her peculiar insistence. What it was they
-spoke of, Courtoise could only guess—and fear. For, though he might hold
-in his heart some sympathy with madame in her loneliness, yet the squire
-was a man, and young; and his young thoughts drew with delight the
-picture of Rennes’ gayeties in the summer-time, when no war was toward
-and the court alive with merriment. Indeed, it was not very wonderful
-that he prayed to be off on the morrow; but the occasional glimpse that
-he got of his lord’s face carried doubt into his heart.
-
-As the squire stood there by the wall, musing, Madame Eleanore herself
-came out of the courtyard into the field. Her rosary hung from her
-waist, and in her hand was a little volume of Latin prayers. In some
-way, of which she was probably unconscious, the placid manner of her as
-she came into the field for her evening walk caused Courtoise’s idle
-dreams of gayety to vanish away, and the present, so tinged with the
-spirit of sweet melancholy, to become the only reality. The squire at
-once advanced toward his lady, while, ere he reached her, Alixe and
-Gerault had halted at her side.
-
-“Indeed, my mother, thou art well come hither at this time. Prithee join
-us in our walk. For some time past Alixe and I have been speaking of
-thee. See, the air is sweet, for it comes off the fields to-night.”
-
-“Indeed, ’tis sweet—sweeter than summer,” said Eleanore, smiling as she
-joined the twain. “But mayhap I shall break your pleasure by coming with
-you, for you are gay and young, and I—”
-
-They moved on without having noticed him, and Courtoise lost the rest of
-Eleanore’s speech. But the squire remained in the field, watching the
-three move back and forth in the deepening dusk. When they came toward
-him for the last time, and passed through the gate in the north wall,
-returning to the Castle, all three faces were as calm as madame’s, and
-Courtoise permitted himself only one sigh for the lost summer at Rennes.
-
-Oddly enough, the squire’s regrets proved to be premature, for
-immediately after the evening meal he was summoned by Gerault to the
-Seigneur’s room, to make ready for the journey. Gerault did not deign to
-inform his squire of the substance of his talk in the fields, but from
-the tranquillity of his manner Courtoise could not but perceive that
-everything had gone well. It was a late hour when all the necessary
-preparations had been made; and then the two, lord and squire, went
-together to the chapel and were there confessed by Anselm, the
-steward-priest; after which they bade each other a good-night, and
-sought their rest.
-
-By sunrise, next morning, the whole Castle had assembled at the
-drawbridge, to say God-speed to their departing lord. Madame Eleanore,
-in bliault, houppelande, mantle, and coif all of black and white, held
-Gerault’s stirrup-cup, and smiled as she spoke with him. There was a
-chorus of chattering demoiselles and a boyish clattering of swords and
-little armor-pieces from the young squires, as Gerault buckled on his
-shield, whereon was wrought the motto and device of Crépuscule.
-Courtoise had already fastened to his lord the golden spurs. And now the
-two were mounted and ready, Gerault with lance in rest and white reins
-gathered on his horse’s neck; Courtoise, brimming with delight, now and
-then giving his steed a heel in flank that caused him to rear and curvet
-with graceful spirit. For the last time Gerault bent to his mother’s
-lips, and for the last time he looked vainly over the company for a
-glimpse of Alixe, his recent mentor. Finally his spurs went home. The
-drawbridge was down before him, the portcullis raised. Amid a chorus of
-farewell cries, he and Courtoise swept away together, over the bridge
-and down the long, gentle hill, and out upon the Rennes road, which, at
-some twelve miles from Le Crépuscule, passed the priory-convent of Les
-Vierges de la Madeleine.
-
-When the twain were gone, and the group prepared to disperse,—the
-squires-at-arms to their sword-practice under the captain of the keep,
-the sighing demoiselles to their long morning of weaving and
-embroidery,—Alixe suddenly appeared from the watch-tower close at hand,
-inquiring for Madame Eleanore.
-
-“Methinks she hath retreated to her room, to say her prayers for the
-Seigneur’s safe journey,” Berthe told her. And Alixe, with a nod of
-thanks, ran to the Castle, and ascended to madame’s room.
-
-The door was open, for madame was not at prayer. She stood at the open
-window, looking out upon the sea. Alixe could not see her face, but from
-the line of her shoulders she read much of her lady’s heart.
-
-“Madame,” she said, in a half-whisper.
-
-Eleanore turned quickly. “Alixe!”
-
-“Madame Eleanore—mother—”
-
-A terrible sob broke from the older woman’s throat, and suddenly she
-fell upon her knees beside a wooden settle, and, burying her face in her
-hands, finally gave way to her desolation. Alixe, who had opened her
-heart, now comforted her as best she could, soothing her, caressing her,
-whispering to her in a magnetic, gentle voice, till madame’s grief had
-been nearly washed away. Then the young girl said, softly, in her ear:
-
-“Think, madame! ’tis now but eleven days till thou mayest ride out to
-Laure at the priory. And there thou canst talk with her alone, and for
-as long as thou wilt. Also, when her novitiate is at an end, she may
-come here to thee, once in a fortnight, for so the Mother-prioress hath
-said.”
-
-Eleanore held Alixe’s hand close to her breast, and while she stroked
-it, a little convulsively, she said, with returning self-control: “I
-thank thee—I thank thee—Alixe, for thy good comfort.” Then, in a
-different tone, she added, with a little sigh: “Eleven days—eleven
-ages—how many others have I still to spend—alone?”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER TWO_
- THE SILENCE OF YOUTH
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The priory-convent of the Virgins of the Magdalen was as old as any
-nunnery in Brittany of its repute. It had been founded in the early days
-of the tenth Louis of France and his good lady of Burgundy, long before
-the death of the last of the Dreux lords of the dukedom. It was
-celebrated for more than its age, however; for through three centuries
-it had held in ecclesiastic Brittany, for its wealth, its exclusiveness,
-and, above either of these things, its unswerving chastity, a place as
-unique as it was gratifying. In the year 1381 no breath of scandal had
-ever disturbed its fragrant atmosphere. Moreover, though this was a fact
-not much regarded by people in authority, it was a remarkably
-comfortable little house, of excellent architecture and ample room for
-the practice of any amount of worship. Its situation, however, was
-lonely. It stood nearly at the end of the Rennes coast road, on the
-outskirts of a thick forest, twenty miles from the town of St.
-Nazaire-by-the-sea, and twelve from the Chateau of Le Crépuscule. And it
-was here, in this pleasant if austere retreat, that many a noble lady of
-Laval and Crépuscule had ended her youth and worn her life away in the
-endeavor to attain undying sanctity.
-
-On a certain afternoon in this mid-spring of 1381, the very day, indeed,
-that Lord Gerault took to the Rennes road to ease his ennui, a little
-company of nuns sat out in the convent garden, embroidering away their
-recreation time. The day was exquisite: sunny, a little chilly, its
-breeze laden with the rare perfume of awakening summer. The garden, at
-this season of the year, was a place of wondrous beauty, redolent of
-rich, pregnant soil, and all shimmering with the misty green of tender
-grass and countless leaf-buds, from the midst of which a few flowers,
-pale primroses and crocuses and a hyacinth or two, peered forth,
-starring the new-planted beds with the first fruits of this new union of
-earth and sky.
-
-The spirit of the spring ruled supreme over all natural things. Only the
-creatures of God, the self-consecrated nuns, sat in the midst of this
-wonder of the young world, untouched by it. Heedless to the uttermost of
-this greatest of worldly blessings, they sat plying their needles in and
-out of their bright-colored, ecclesiastical fabrics, listening, in their
-dull and dreamy way, to the voice of one of their number who was droning
-out to them for the thousandth time the old and long-familiar laws of
-their order, expressed in the “Rhymed Rule of St. Benedict.” One only
-among them seemed not of their mood. This was a young girl, white-robed
-like all the rest, her unveiled head proclaiming her novitiate. As
-became her station she bent decorously to her task, and it had taken a
-close observer to see and read all the little signs she gave of
-consciousness of the world around her, the green, growing things, and
-the liquid bird-songs that came trilling out of the forest near at hand.
-Probably not even the most skilled of readers could have recognized all
-the meaning in the long, slow looks, half wondrous and half probing,
-with which, every now and again, she traversed the circle of faces about
-her. Her self-restraint was very nearly flawless, and was successfully
-maintained throughout the long period of recreation; so that not one of
-her companions guessed the relief she felt when the first clang of the
-vesper-bell roused them from their trance-like dulness. But the young
-girl wondered a little at herself when she perceived that her brows were
-damp with the sweat of the constraint.
-
-At this time Laure of Le Crépuscule was sixteen years of age, and pretty
-as a flower to look upon. She was slim and white-faced, with immense,
-limpid brown eyes that were wont to move rather slowly, and burnished
-brown hair hanging in twists to her knees: an object for men to rave
-over, had any man worth so calling ever set eyes upon her. She was young
-enough and pure enough to be of unquestioning innocence; and, until now,
-the fiery life in her had found sufficient outlet in unlimited bodily
-exercise. She had seen nothing of real life, and never dreamed of the
-talent she possessed for it. It was from her own heart that the wish to
-consecrate herself to the eternal worship of God had come; for she
-believed that in this way she should find a haven for those terrible and
-fathomless mental storms of which she had weathered many in her young
-life, and of which her own mother never so much as dreamed. Utterly
-ignorant of her real self, she was yet a girl of strong intellect, of
-great versatility, of over-weening passions, and withal as feminine a
-creature as the Creator ever fashioned. Both her temperament and her
-appearance more resembled the dwellers of the far South—Provence or even
-Navarre—than the children of the rugged, chilly shores of northern
-Brittany; for her skin had the dark, creamy pallor of the South, and her
-eyes held none of the keen fire that glows in the North, while her hair
-grew low above her smooth, white brow.
-
-Laure’s temperament was dramatically mobile. She adapted herself almost
-unconsciously to any mode or situation of life, and this, though she did
-not know it, was all that she was doing now. It was with real, if
-subdued pleasure that she went through the services of the day. From
-matins, which, at this period of the year, began at the cheerless hour
-of four in the morning, till compline, at eight in the evening, when the
-church bell tolled the end of another day of prayer, Laure’s nature was
-under a kind of religious spell, which she and those about her had
-joyfully interpreted as a true vocation.
-
-The first eleven days of Laure’s convent life passed away in comparative
-calmness; and she found no weariness in them. On the twelfth, Madame
-Eleanore rode in from Le Crépuscule to see her daughter. She was
-admitted to the convent as speedily as if the little lay sister had
-known the devouring eagerness of the mother-heart; and because she was a
-lady of consequence, and because she was known to be very generous to
-the Church, and especially because the Bishop of St. Nazaire was her
-close friend, she was not left to wait in the reception-room, but
-conducted straight to the Prioress’ cell.
-
-Mère Piteuse received Madame Eleanore with anxious cordiality. After
-their greetings the guest seated herself, and was obliged to keep
-silence for a moment before she could ask quietly,—
-
-“And Laure, Reverend Mother,—how fares my child? Is she content with
-you?” Eleanore’s heart throbbed with unconfessed hope as she asked this
-question. For if Laure was _not_ content, she might return at will to
-the Castle, her home, and her mother’s heart.
-
-But the Prioress returned Eleanore’s look with a smile of satisfaction.
-“In a moment Laure will come hither. I have sent for her. Then thou
-shalt learn from her own lips how well her life goes. Never, I think,
-hath our priory received a new daughter that showed herself so happy in
-her vocation. We shall call her name Angelique at her consecration.”
-
-Eleanore felt her body grow cold, and her head swim. Her face, however,
-betrayed nothing. Her little girl, then, was really gone! Laure, the
-wild bird, was tamable. She—_could_ she become “Angelique”?
-
-Neither madame nor the Prioress spoke again till there was a sound of
-gentle footsteps in the corridor, followed by a light tap on the wooden
-door of the cell.
-
-“Enter!” cried the Prioress; and Laure came quietly in.
-
-First of all she bowed to Mère Piteuse. Then, as Eleanore involuntarily
-held out her arms, the girl went into them, and kissed her mother with a
-warmth and a sweetness that perhaps Eleanore had not known from her
-before. At the same moment the Prioress rose quietly, and left the room.
-The instant that she was gone, Eleanore seized the girl in a still
-closer embrace, and held her tightly and more tightly to her breast.
-
-“Laure, my darling! Laure, my sweet child! how hath my heart yearned for
-thee! How hath thy name lain ever on my lips while I slept, and been
-enshrined in my heart by day!”
-
-The young girl’s arms wound themselves about her mother’s neck, and she
-laid her head upon that shoulder where it had been wont to rest in her
-babyhood. And Laure sighed a little, not unhappily, but like a child
-tired of play.
-
-“Laure, wilt thou remain here in the convent? Art thou happy? Dost thou
-wish it, or wilt thou come home again to Crépuscule?”
-
-A sudden image of the gray Castle, with its vast hall, and the great
-fire blazing in the chimney-place within, and all the well-known figures
-assembled there for a meal,—Alixe, Gerault, the demoiselles and young
-squires headed by Courtoise, and the burly men-at-arms that had played
-with her and carried her about as a little child,—all the long-familiar,
-comfortable scenes of her old life came before the girl’s eye. And
-then—then she drew a little breath and answered her mother, unfaltering:
-“’Tis beautiful here, and sweet and holy withal. I am content, dear
-mother. I will remain.”
-
-“And hast thou, then, the vocation in thy heart, whereby some souls are
-claimed of God from birth to death, and find the utmost of their
-happiness in His communion?”
-
-Laure’s great eyes fixed themselves upon the mother’s sad face as she
-replied again, very softly: “Yea, my mother. That, from my heart, do I
-believe.”
-
-Eleanore sighed deeply, and then quickly smiled again. “Think not that I
-mourn, my daughter, for having yielded thee up to the Church. May this
-blessed spirit remain in thee, bringing thee everlasting peace.”
-
-Then, while Laure still clung to her, the mother herself put the closely
-clasped arms away from her neck, and drew the novice to her feet. “Now,
-my Laure, I must go. But my thoughts are still left with thee.”
-
-“But thou wilt come, mother?—In ten days’ time thou wilt come to me
-again?”
-
-“Yea, sith it is permitted by the rules that I see thee once more, I
-will surely come,” she answered quietly.
-
-“Laure will greatly rejoice at thy coming,” said the Prioress, gently,
-from the doorway.
-
-So Eleanore renewed her promise, and shortly after rode away from the
-priory gate, into the thick wood through which ran the road to
-Crépuscule.
-
-Her mother’s visit brought Laure two days of extremest homesickness and
-yearning. Then she regained her independence, and began to find a new
-delight in her surroundings. The perfect peace of it, the infinite,
-delightful detail of worship, with its multifarious candle-points, and
-its continual clouds of fragrant incense, all wrought together into a
-life of undeviating regularity, brought to the novice a sense of
-peculiar safety and freedom from vexation or care that was quite new to
-her, for all her youth. The day began with matins, repeated by each nun
-alone in her cell. Laure had been given a room in a corner of the
-priory, at the very end of the corridor of novices, and she gained
-therefrom an added sense of exclusiveness and seclusion. She had not
-once been late in her answer to the matins bell, and the mistress of
-novices, passing Laure’s cell on her first round of the day, had never
-failed to find her praying. Laure came of a pious house, and had known
-her prayers, all the forms of them, long before she entered the priory.
-They required no thought in the repetition, and therefore there was many
-a morning when she played the parrot at her desk, either too sleepy, or
-too much occupied with thoughts and dreams, to heed the familiar
-addresses to God. This was not entirely a fault, perhaps. The mornings
-came very early in these days, and there were wonderful things to be
-seen through her cell-window. She saw the dawn, golden-girdled, garbed
-in flowing rose-color, unlock the eastern portals of the sky. She saw
-stars and moon glimmer faintly and more faint, and finally sink to rest
-under the high, clear green of the morning heaven. Last of all, over the
-feathery line of trees that made a horizon for her at her cell-window,
-she could see the first dazzling ladder of the sun lifted up to lean
-against the east. And then Laure would long for the murmur of devotion
-to be stilled in the Abbey, for sun-mists were filling the Heavens, and
-from the forest the bird-chorus rose to a full-throated _tutti_, in its
-hymn of glorification to the new day.
-
-This morning benediction that she found, Laure kept to herself by day,
-and carried with her until dark. There was no one in the priory to whom
-she could have confided her pleasure, for there was none in the Abbey
-that had her love, or, indeed, any love at all, for the world that God
-had made for Himself and for mankind. The day-tasks also had their
-pleasures for the novice. She learned, in time, that she was not obliged
-to fill her recreation hours with embroidery; but that she might sleep,
-or pray, or work in the garden, or do whatever a quiet fancy should
-select. So she chose to befriend the soil, and played with it as if it
-were a tender companion. And after her exercise here, the rest of the
-day, nones, vespers, supper, confession, and compline, melted away
-almost unheeded, leaving her at last to the sweet-breathed night, and to
-a sleep as dreamless and as sound as that of any baby.
-
-In this most simple way, without any untoward happening, without her
-once leaving the priory, the days flowed on, spring melted into summer,
-and Laure found herself possessed of an infinite and ever-increasing
-content, the great secret of which probably lay in the fact that every
-waking hour had its occupation. She had entered her new life in the most
-beautiful time of the year, and, heedless of this, began, in her
-delusive happiness, to wonder why, long ago, the whole world had not
-taken to such existence. She had plenty of time to indulge in
-dreams,—vague and fragile dreams of the great world and the people
-dwelling therein, that she should never come to know. But the fact that
-she could never know them did not come home to her with the force of a
-deprivation. She did not feel herself to be a hopeless prisoner. She was
-not professed; and the fact that there still remained to her a free
-choice easily kept her from any over-vivid perception of the eternal
-dulness of convent life.
-
-Once in two weeks Madame Eleanore came to see her, and if these visits
-were bitter to the mother, Laure never guessed it. Also, from time to
-time, the professed nuns would leave the convent for a day or two at a
-time, on what errands the novices were not told. But Laure knew that
-similar privileges would be hers after her profession.
-
-The summer, in its fulness and beauty, passed away. Purple autumn came
-and went. And one day, in the first cold weather, Laure was summoned to
-the Mother-prioress’ room, where she was told a proud thing. It was
-that, if she chose profession at the end of her novitiate, which would
-come in the Christmas season, her consecration might take place at the
-same time, by special permission from the highest power; for, by
-ordinary ecclesiastic law, she was still many years too young for this
-consummation of the celibate life. But if she so chose, his Grace the
-Bishop of St. Nazaire would perform the ceremony of sanctification on
-the twenty-sixth of December, directly after the forty-eight-hour vigil
-of the birth of the Christ.
-
-Laure heard this news with every appearance and every expression of
-delight; and when she returned to the church for tierce and morning
-mass, she tried, all through the service, to bring herself face to face
-with herself, to appreciate, as she was conscious that she must, sooner
-or later, the intense gravity of her position. But for some reason, by
-some failure of concentrative force, she could not bring her mind to the
-point of understanding. Over and over again her thoughts slid around
-that one fact that she knew she must try to realize,—how, after the
-giving of her final pledge, there could be no turning back, there could
-be no escape, while she should live, from this life of prayer. She did
-not appreciate it at all. She only remembered that she had been very
-contented here, and that the days were never long.
-
-In the weeks that followed her talk with Mère Piteuse, Laure enacted
-this same scene of effort with herself many times, always futilely. As a
-matter of fact, it was too grave a responsibility to put upon the
-shoulders of a child in years and a less than child in experience. But
-this unfairness was one of the prerogatives of monasticism,
-unappreciated to this day.
-
-Christmas time drew near; and gradually Laure dropped her efforts toward
-understanding and fell into dreams of a varied and complex, if
-unimportant, nature. She was to be professed alone, on the day after
-Christmas. No novice had entered the convent within three months of her,
-and, moreover, her birth and position made it desirable that she should
-be surrounded by a little extra pomp; for, although Laure did not know
-it, she was much looked up to by the nuns of humbler birth, and
-universally regarded as a future prioress of the house. During the last
-days of her novitiate the young girl was treated with peculiar reverence
-and consideration, and she was given a good deal of time for solitary
-reflection and prayer. Every day she was summoned to the cell of the
-Prioress, who herself gave the girl good counsel and instruction upon
-the higher life; while so much general attention was paid her that Laure
-became a little astonished at her own importance.
-
-In the first three weeks of December Madame Eleanore did not come at all
-to see her daughter, and Laure grew lonely for her. She suspected
-nothing of her mother’s heart-sickness over the approaching ceremony
-that was to cut her child off from her forever; and, indeed, had Laure
-been told of the mother-feeling, she could not have understood it.
-
-On the afternoon of the twenty-third day of December the novice was
-kneeling in her cell, supposedly at prayer, in reality indulging in a
-rather forlorn and melancholy reverie. It was the hour of recreation;
-and the convent was very quiet, for most of the nuns were sleeping, in
-preparation for the strain of the forty-eight-hour Christmas service.
-The stillness brought a chill to Laure’s heart, and she was near to
-tears, when her door was suddenly pushed open, and some one halted
-there. Laure turned quickly enough to see the white-robed Prioress
-disappear, closing the door behind a figure that remained motionless
-inside the threshold.
-
-“My mother!” cried Laure, springing to her feet.
-
-“Laure,” was the quivering response, as Eleanore held out her arms.
-
-The dreamer, suddenly become a little child, went into the mother-clasp,
-her pristine home, and was half carried over to the only seat in the
-room,—a wooden tabouret, large enough for only one. Upon this Eleanore
-seated herself, while Laure sank to the floor beside her, huddling close
-to the human warmth of her mother, her head lying in that mother’s lap,
-both hands held tightly in the larger, stronger, older ones.
-
-“Laure—my Laure—my little Laure!” was all that, at this time, madame
-could force her lips to say. And hearing it, the girl, suddenly
-overwrought and overswept with repressed yearning for home love, all at
-once burst into a convulsive flood of tears.
-
-Some moments passed, and the sobs, instead of diminishing, began to
-increase in violence, till Eleanore became alarmed. Certain unexpressed
-fears took possession of her. She made no effort to bring them into
-definite order in her mind. They merely joined themselves to a shadow
-that had long since come upon her in the form of a question: What, in
-bare reality, was this vast monster called “the Church”? Why had it a
-right to step thus between mother and child? How could such a thing be
-called holy? Filled with this idea, and realizing to the full how
-desperately short was her chance, Eleanore set herself to work, through
-every means known to her, to quiet Laure, to stop her tears, and to gain
-her earnest attention.
-
-Under madame’s determined calm, it was not long before Laure was brought
-back to self-control. And when she was quiet, the mother, sitting very
-straight in her place, drew the girl to her feet, and, holding her fast
-by the hand, while she looked steadily into the clear, brown eyes, she
-asked, slowly, with an emphasis born of her desperation,—
-
-“Laure, is it indeed in thy heart to remain, of thy free will and
-desire, forever in this house, forsaking all that was dear to thee of
-youth and love, and freedom, in thy home, Le Crépuscule?”
-
-Laure, while she looked at her mother, gave a sudden sigh, and her face
-became staring pale. Eleanore strove to fathom her daughter’s look, but
-could know nothing of the flood of natural desire and youth that was
-oversweeping the girl. Laure’s resistance against it was silence. She
-sat still, cowed and bent, while the noise of the waters filled her ears
-and her heart was near to bursting with suffocation and yearning. Before
-this silence, however, these passionate moments gradually ebbed away.
-The wave retreated, and her heart shut tight. Words and phrases from
-Holy Scriptures, books of prayer, and St. Benedict’s Rule, came crowding
-to her, and she considered to herself how she might show her mother the
-sin of her suggestion. But, as she had kept silence one way, so now she
-practised it in the other. After the long pause her voice found itself
-in three words only,—
-
-“My mother!—madame!”
-
-Eleanore’s eyes fell. Her hope was gone. For the thousandth time her
-religion rose to shame her, before her child, for the absorbing love of
-her motherhood. Presently Laure, standing before her, more like her
-judge than like the disconsolate creature she had so lately comforted,
-spoke again,—
-
-“Madame, here in this place have I found contentment. There is no sorrow
-and no desire when one lives but to pray and sleep, and wake and pray
-again. God lives here continually in our hearts and He begets in us the
-love that we bear for each other. Moreover, after my profession and
-consecration, much freedom will be added to my life. I shall have no
-more long hours of instruction, nor shall I be called on to do the
-bidding of any one save perhaps that of the Reverend Mother. And whereas
-thou ridest hither to me each fortnight, I, after my vow, may go instead
-to thee, to see thee and mine ancient home.—Nay, mother, forgive me that
-I rebuke thy words; but thou must not urge me thus, for my spirit is not
-as yet very strong or very much tried, and is like to break under
-temptation.”
-
-Dry-eyed and straight-lipped, Eleanore rose from her place and kissed
-her daughter, saying,—
-
-“This is farewell, dear child, till thou shalt come home to me for the
-first time after thy wedding with Heaven. My humble and earthly blessing
-be upon thee,—and mayst thou find thy spirit strong, my Laure, when thou
-shalt have need of it; as, in God’s time, thou surely wilt.”
-
-Once again the mother kissed her girl—kissed her in final renunciation.
-Laure felt a burning upon her brow long after madame had left the room.
-Eleanore’s last words also somewhat affected the novice,—brought her a
-dim sense of uneasiness and foreboding. But it was in silence that she
-saw the black-robed figure leave the cell, and in silence she remained
-for a long time after she was left alone, thinking over what had passed.
-
-Laure had acted in such perfect sincerity that the wound she inflicted
-on her mother, and the mortification she put upon her, were neither of
-them realized. It was not wonderful that the impulses of the girl’s
-heart had been stilled by the unceasing precept of the past months. Her
-years were naturally powerless to fathom her mother’s heart, the heart
-of her who sees herself completely separated in every interest from the
-one that has always been nearest and dearest. And so the argument that
-she conducted within herself after her mother’s going was not one of
-justification of her own act, but—oh, ye gods!—an attempted
-justification of Eleanore’s impiety.
-
-Laure passed the next two days in an odor of extreme sanctity, and
-hailed with deep inward joy the beginning of the long vigil of the birth
-of the Saviour, on Christmas Eve. She was excused from keeping steadily
-in church through this protracted service, for the reason that she would
-be obliged, according to the Rule, to spend the night after her
-consecration alone in the church, at prayer. Throughout Christmas Day
-Laure was in a state of repressed nervous excitement. Was not to-morrow
-to be her wedding-day? Was she not to become what the first Magdalen had
-never been,—the bride of Christ? Her prayers throughout this day were
-mingled with thoughts of the highest purity, the most refined spiritual
-ecstasy, the most shining, uplifted innocence. Tears of joy and of proud
-humility flowed readily from her eyes, while her mouth was filled with
-heavenly praises that welled up from her heart.
-
-In the afternoon she was sent away to rest; for the Mother-prioress was
-considerate of her strength. Laure did not, however, lie down. Instead,
-she stood for more than an hour at the window of her cell, looking out
-over the world, and watching the fine feathery snowflakes float down
-through the clear blue air. The earth was wrapped in a mantle whiter
-than her consecration robe and veil. Perhaps it was a shroud. Laure
-shivered at the thought, while she contemplated the unutterable
-stillness of all things. Not a sound disturbed this vast scene of death.
-The tree-boughs bent low under the weight of their pure burden; and when
-the early evening fell, and vespers chimed out over the valley, the
-tiny, frozen tears of Heaven still floated through the dark with
-ever-increasing softness.
-
-It was seven o’clock when Sœur Celeste, the chaplain, came to summon the
-bride-elect to confession and interrogation with Monseigneur the Bishop
-of St. Nazaire. As the two women passed together down the long corridor
-of novices, through the cold cloister and empty refectory and along the
-passage leading to the chapter, Laure’s heart was struck with a chill of
-fear. How terribly empty the convent was! No one in the refectory, the
-corridors scarcely lighted, the whole convent utterly silent; for the
-drone of prayers in the church was inaudible here. She wondered how the
-terrible vigil progressed, how many nuns had fainted in their fatigue.
-She thought of anything but the matter before her, and was still
-unprepared when the chaplain left her alone at the door of the chapter.
-
-The Bishop of St. Nazaire was alone in this room, and at Laure’s
-appearance he rose and went to her, taking her by the hand, and not
-amazed to find her icy cold.
-
-“My daughter!” he said gently; and Laure, looking into his face, was
-suddenly filled with an ineffable comfort.
-
-She had known the Bishop all her life, for he was her mother’s close
-friend and a constant visitor at Le Crépuscule. But never before had she
-seen him in this fulness of his office, so replete with magnetic
-spirituality. If the unswervingly narrow tenets of his creed made St.
-Nazaire too arbitrary where his religion was concerned, and if the
-geniality of his own nature had, at times, brought upon him in his own
-home reactions that afterwards rendered necessary the severest penances,
-at least these two extremes of his life had brought him to a remarkable
-intermediate balance. Irrespective of his state, he could be defined as
-a man of the world, of large sympathies, having a broad understanding of
-human frailty, because of the unconquerable weaknesses of his own
-nature. His ethical code was one of high severity and strict purity; and
-he strove with all the power of his spirit to follow it himself, never
-failing, the while, to excuse the eternal failures of others. And now,
-as Laure looked up into his large, smooth-shaven face, framed in long
-fair hair, and lighted by a pair of bright blue eyes that generally
-regarded the world with a surprising air of trustful innocence, the
-young novice lost all her sense of desolation, and felt herself suddenly
-introduced into a secure and unhoped-for haven.
-
-St. Nazaire himself, examining the young girl’s face, and searching her
-soul therein, knew that at this moment he was nearer to the inmost being
-of the daughter of Le Crépuscule than he should ever be again; and he
-felt that no one ever yet had been in a position to probe the depths of
-her nature as he was going to probe them now. She gave herself up to him
-as completely as Eleanore had given her once long ago, when, as a
-new-born infant, she had wailed in his arms at her baptism before the
-altar in the chapel of the Twilight Castle.
-
-With this strong feeling of mutual confidence, Laure and the Bishop
-seated themselves in the chapter of the convent. Confession and
-stereotyped interrogation were gone through with dutifully, and then
-followed what Laure had begun to wish for at the first moment of their
-meeting,—a long and intimate talk upon the life that she should lead as
-a professed nun. It was a life with which St. Nazaire was as fully
-conversant as a man could ever be, and he pictured it to Laure as
-faithfully as he was accustomed to picture Heaven—a heaven of flying men
-and women carrying in their hands small golden harps—to those that
-received the last sacrament at his hands. Laure had a vision of long
-years filled ever fuller of transcendent joy and peace, in which she
-should never know a wish that her life could not fill, nor a desire
-beyond more earnest prayers, or a fast a little longer and more rigorous
-than heretofore. And so skilful was the Bishop in the manipulation of
-his sombre material, that he got from it remarkable beauties which,
-impossible as it seems, were as convincing to him as to Laure.
-
-It was late in the evening when the young girl received the episcopal
-blessing and retired through the still nunnery to her cell. But her mind
-was at perfect rest that night; and she went to sleep to dream of
-nothing but the happiness and beauty of a consecrated life.
-
-At ten o’clock on the morning of the twenty-sixth day of December, the
-whole convent assembled in church for high mass, which was to be
-celebrated by the Bishop of St. Nazaire. To-day the novices were
-separated from the professed nuns, and the two companies knelt on
-opposite sides of the church, leaving a broad space between them. The
-choir was in its place. In the lower choir-stalls sat the
-Mother-prioress, the sub-prioress, the chaplain and the deacons; while
-his Grace was in the great chair of honor used by none but him. The only
-member of the nunnery not present was Laure, who made her appearance
-just as the bell began to ring for the opening of the mass. She came in
-from the chapter-house at the far end of the church, and moved slowly up
-the aisle. Her white robe and full mantle hid her figure and trailed
-around her on the floor, and her head was crowned with the bridal veil,
-which covered her face and fell to the ground all around her. In one
-hand she carried a parchment scroll on which her vow was inscribed; and
-in the other hand she bore the wedding ring.
-
-As she advanced toward the altar every head was turned toward her, and
-it was seen that she was white as death. But she was also very calm.
-Indeed she was acting quite mechanically, like one under a hypnotic
-spell; and there was no expression whatever on her face as she made her
-genuflection to the cross, and then turned aside and knelt among the
-company of novices. She took her usual part in the mass that followed,
-making no slip in the service, and joining as usual in the singing, with
-her full contralto voice.
-
-When the benediction had been pronounced from the chancel, there was a
-pause. No one in the church moved from her knees, and the Bishop
-remained before the company with his right hand uplifted. Laure raised
-her eyes, and her body trembled slightly, for her heart was palpitating
-like running water. When the silence had lasted a seemingly unbearable
-while, St. Nazaire turned his face to Laure, who rose and went up to
-him, kneeling again in the chancel. And now, as she spoke, her quiet,
-impressive voice was heard by every nun in the church,—
-
-“_Suscipe me, Domine, secundum eloquium tuum et vivam. Et non confundas
-me in expectatione mea._”
-
-As she finished, Laure’s throat contracted, and she gasped convulsively.
-Her head swam in a mist, but she knew that the Bishop was questioning
-her from the catechism,—knew that she was answering him; and then,
-afterwards, she heard, as from a great distance, the voice of the Bishop
-praying. At the Amen, St. Nazaire signed to her again, and she rose and
-stepped forward to his side. Then, turning till she faced the church,
-she said quite distinctly, though in a low tone,—
-
-“I, Sister Angelique, promise steadfastness, virginity, continuance in
-virtue, and obedience before God and all His saints, in accordance with
-the Rule of St. Benedict, in this Priory of Holy Madeleine, in the
-presence of the Reverend Father Charles, Lord Bishop of St. Nazaire, of
-the Duchy of Brittany, Lord under the most Christian Duke, Jean de
-Montfort.”
-
-Thereafter she went up to the altar, and there signed her scroll with
-her new name and the sign of the cross. And there the ring of Heaven was
-placed upon her finger, and she was declared a bride. For the last time
-she knelt before the father, who lifted up his hands and consecrated
-her, after the ancient formula, to the love of her Saviour, the blessing
-of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost. And then Laure, a
-professed nun, came down from the holy place, and was received among her
-sisters and reverently saluted by them.
-
-The ceremony over, all the convent adjourned to the refectory, where a
-little feast of rejoicing was held in honor of the newly consecrated
-one. And after this, at an early hour of the afternoon, Laure was
-conducted to her cell, and her ten days of retirement began. All that
-afternoon, overcome with the strain of the past few days, the young girl
-slept. She woke only when the Sœur Eloise, a stout and stupid little
-nun, but a few weeks since made a lay sister, came up to her with bread
-and milk. When she had eaten and was alone again, she sat for a long
-time in her dark cell, looking out upon the starry night, and wondering
-vaguely over her long future. Presently the bell for the end of
-confession rang out, and, knowing that it was time, she rose and went
-through the convent, and into the vast church. The last of the nuns had
-left it and gone to seek her rest. Only the sub-prioress remained,
-waiting for Laure. Seeing her come, the older nun saluted her silently,
-and then moved away toward the dimly lighted chapter. In the doorway of
-this room she turned to look back at the white figure standing in the
-dimly lighted, incense-reeking aisle; and then, with a faint sigh of
-memory, she extinguished all the chapter lights, bowed to the little
-crucifix hanging in that room, and went her way to bed.
-
-Laure was left alone in the great, dusky House of God. Where she knelt,
-before the shrine of St. Joseph, two candles burned. All around her was
-darkness—silence—solitude. Awed and wide-eyed, she forced herself to
-kneel upon the stones, and her mind vaguely sought a prayer. But
-thoughts of Heaven refused to come. Her Bridegroom was very far away.
-She felt a cold weight settling slowly down upon her heart, and she
-trembled, and her brows grew damp with chilly dew. Many thoughts came
-and went. She remembered afterwards to have had a very distinct vision
-of Alixe, standing alone upon a great cliff a mile from Le Crépuscule,
-with a wild sea-wind blowing her hair and her mantle, and white gulls
-veering about her head. For an instant, a wild longing flamed up through
-her soul. Setting her lips, she tried to force her mind back again to
-God. One—two—three faltering, reverent words were uttered by her. Then
-Laure du Crépuscule started wildly to her feet.
-
-“God! Oh, God! I am imprisoned! I am captive! I am captive forever! God!
-Oh, God!”
-
-As these wild cries echoed through the vaulted roof, she threw herself
-passionately to the floor and lay there helpless, while the wave of
-merciless realization swept over her. Then her hands wandered along the
-stones of the floor, and her cheek followed them, and she clutched at
-the cold, damp granite, in a vain, vague search for her mother’s breast.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER THREE_
- FLAMMECŒUR
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The New Year had come: a time of highest festival in Brittany, when the
-land was alive with merriment and gifts and legends and grewsome tales.
-It was St. Sylvester’s Eve, when, as all men knew, the waves of the
-Atlantic for once defied their barriers and struggled up the towering
-cliffs, eager to meet, halfway, the descending dolmens, permitted once
-in the year to leave unguarded the deep earth-treasures, that they might
-quench their furious thirst in the sea. And on that night half the
-peasants of Brittany lay awake, speculating on the vast wealth that
-might be theirs if they were but to arise and seek out some monster
-dolmen and wait beside it till the immense rock rolled away from its
-hole, leaving a pit of gold and gems open to the clutching hands of the
-world-man. But fear of the demoniac return of these same rolling rocks
-kept most of the dreamers safe within their beds during the fateful
-midnight hour, though of the luck of the few daring ones, there were,
-nay, still are, many veracious tales.
-
-Le Crépuscule, no less than the surrounding countryside, participated in
-the interest of these supernatural matters; but the old Chateau had real
-affairs of feast and frolic to occupy it also. The great New Year’s
-dinner was the most lavish that the Castle gave in the twelve-month, and
-this year, in spite of its depleted household, there was no exception
-made to the general rule. The great tables were set in the central hall
-and loaded with every sort of food and drink, while kitchen fires roared
-about their juicy meats, and in the chimney-piece of the hall an ox was
-roasted whole before the flames. Ordinarily the dinner hour at the
-Castle was half-past eleven in the morning; but on feast days it was
-changed to four in the afternoon, and the merriment was then kept up
-till the last woman had retired, and the last man found a pillow on the
-rushes that strewed the floor.
-
-On this New Year’s eve there were, as usual, two great tables set; for
-to-night not only all the retainers of the Castle, but also half a
-hundred of the tenantry from the estates, claimed the privilege of their
-fealty and came to eat at the house of their lord, sitting below his
-salt, breaking his bread, supping his beer, and talking and laughing and
-drinking each till he could no more.
-
-Madame Eleanore was always present at this feast, as a matter of duty
-and of graciousness. She sat to-night at the head of the board, with an
-empty place beside her for Gerault. Alixe was upon her right hand, and
-one of the young squires-at-arms upon her left; and in the general
-hubbub of the feast none of the peasant boors noticed how persistent a
-silence reigned at that end of the table, nor how wearily sad was the
-expression of their lady’s face.
-
-This was the first feast in many years at which the Bishop of St.
-Nazaire had not been present; but he had not come to Le Crépuscule since
-Laure’s consecration, and madame had given up hoping for his arrival.
-Darkness had fallen some time since, and the hour was growing late. This
-could be told from the increased noise at the table. Puddings and
-crumcakes had been finished, and the men of the company were turning
-their attention exclusively to the liquor—beer and wine—which had been
-brought up to the hall in great casks, from which each might help
-himself. David le petit, the jester, ran up and down on the table,
-waving a black wand and shouting verses at the company. There was a
-universal clamor and howling of laughter and song, which madame heard
-with ever-increasing weariness and displeasure, though the demoiselles
-showed no such signs of fatigue.
-
-Suddenly, through the tumult, madame caught a sound that made her lift
-her head and half rise from her chair, listening intently. There had
-been a sound of horses’ hoofs on the courtyard stones.
-
-“’Tis St. Nazaire at last,” she whispered to Alixe. “Now we shall hear
-of—Go thou thyself, Alixe, and fetch hither fresh meat and a pasty and a
-flagon of the best wine. Monseigneur must be weary. He shall sit here at
-my side—”
-
-Alixe rose obediently and hurried away on her errand; and while she was
-gone there came a clamor at the door. A burly henchman sprang up and
-lurched forward to open it, peering out into the darkness. Those in the
-room heard a little ejaculation, and then there entered a new-comer with
-some one else beside him. Neither was the Bishop of St. Nazaire. Both of
-them were young,—one, indeed, no more than a boy, wearing an esquire’s
-jerkin, hosen, cap, and mantle, and carrying only a short dirk in his
-belt. The other, who came forward into the full light of the lamps and
-torches, was a young man of six and twenty or thereabouts, lean and tall
-and graceful, clad in half armor, but clean-shaved, like a woman. His
-face had the look of the South in it, his eyes were piercingly dark, and
-his waving hair as black as the night. In their first glance at the
-new-comer, most in the room took notice that his spurs were not gilt;
-but soon a maid spied out that the little squire carried on his back a
-lute, strung on a ribbon, and then the stranger’s profession was plain.
-
-This general examination lasted but the matter of a few seconds. Then
-Madame Eleanore rose, and the stranger saluted her with a grace that
-became him well, and began to speak in a mellow voice,—
-
-“Madame la Châtelaine, give thee God’s greeting! I hight Bertrand
-Flammecœur, singer of Provence, the land of the trouvère; and now find
-myself a most weary traveller through this chilly land. Here—”
-indicating his follower with two slim fingers—“is my squire, Yvain. We
-come to-day from the Castle of Laval, in the South, where, in the high
-hospitality of its lord, we have sojourned for some weeks. There,
-indeed, I sang in half a score of tenzons with one Le Fleurie, an able
-singer. But now, to-night, inasmuch as we are weary with long riding,
-empty for food, numb with cold, and have found the drawbridge of this
-Castle down, we make bold to crave shelter for the night, and a manchet
-of bread to comfort our stomachs withal,” and the trouvère bent his body
-in a graceful obeisance; while Eleanore, smiling her hospitality,
-stepped forward a little from where she stood.
-
-“It is the Breton custom, Sir Trouvère, to leave the drawbridge down
-during the holy weeks of Christmas and Easter; and in those days any may
-obtain food and shelter among us. Thou and thy squire, however, are
-doubly welcome, coming as ye do from our cousins of Laval, in which
-house I, Eleanore du Crépuscule, was born. In the name of my son, the
-Seigneur Gerault, I return you God’s greeting, and pray you to make this
-Chateau your home. Now, sith ye are well weary and anhungered, let your
-boy rest him there among my squires, while you come here and sit and
-eat.”
-
-Thereupon little Yvain, after a bow, ran eagerly to the place indicated
-to him; and Flammecœur, smiling, went forward at madame’s invitation
-toward the place at her side. Ere he reached it, Alixe, who had been in
-the kitchens and thus missed the stranger’s entrance, came into the
-hall, bearing with her a wooden tray containing food and red wine. At
-sight of the stranger she halted suddenly, and as suddenly he paused to
-make her reverence; for by her dress he knew her to be no serving-wench.
-In the instant that their glances met, her green and brilliant eyes
-flashed a flame of fire into his dark ones; and curiously enough, a
-color rose in the pale cheeks of the man ere Alixe had thought to catch
-the flush of maiden modesty. Perhaps no one in the room had noted the
-contretemps. At any rate, Flammecœur, taking a quick glance to see,
-found none looking at him in more than ordinary curiosity; whereupon his
-debonair self-possession flew back to him, and, turning again to Madame
-Eleanore, he presently sat down to table and began his meal. While he
-ate, and his appetite was excellent, he found space to converse with
-every one about him; and had a smile for all, from madame to the shyest
-of the demoiselles. Out of courtesy for their hospitality, he gave a
-somewhat careless and rambling but nevertheless highly entertaining
-account of some of his wanderings, and was amused to see how the young
-demoiselles hung on his words. Only upon Alixe did he waste his efforts,
-for she paid scant attention to him, listening just enough to escape the
-charge of rudeness. And Flammecœur was man enough and vain enough to get
-himself into something of a pique about her in this first hour of his
-coming to Le Crépuscule.
-
-When the stranger had had his say, and proved himself sufficiently
-“trouvère,” the general after-feast of song and story began. Both tale
-and song were of that day,—broad enough for modern ears, but of their
-time unusually mild, and of the character that was to be heard from
-ladies’ lips. Burliest henchman and slenderest squire alike tuned his
-verse for the ears of Madame Eleanore to hear; and the wanderer,
-Flammecœur, noted this fact astutely, and so much approved of it that,
-while dwarf David’s fairy tale went on, he took a quick resolve that he
-would make a temporary home for himself in this Castle.
-
-In the course of time Flammecœur was asked for a song. Yvain brought his
-lute to him, and he tuned the instrument while he pleaded excuse from a
-long chanson. When he began, however, his voice showed small sign of
-fatigue. He sang a low, swinging melody of his own composing, fitted to
-words once used in a Court of Love in the south,—a delicate bit of
-versification dealing with dreams. And so delicately did he perform his
-task that perfect silence followed its close.
-
-A moment later there was a sharp round of applause; for these Bretons
-had never heard such a chansonette in all their cold-country lives.
-Before anything more could be demanded, Flammecœur, satisfied with the
-impression already made, sprang to his feet, and turned to Eleanore,
-saying: “Lady, I crave permission for me and my squire to seek our rest.
-We have ridden many leagues to-day, and at early dawn must be up and off
-again.”
-
-Eleanore rose and gave him her hand to kiss. “Sieur Flammecœur, we
-render thee thanks for our pleasure, and give ye God’s sleep. Hither,
-Foulque! Light the Sieur Trouvère and his boy to thy room, and sleep
-thou this night with Robert Meloc.”
-
-The young squire bowed and fetched a torch from the wall. Yvain came
-running to his master’s side; and presently, to the deep regret of all
-the demoiselles, the three disappeared into the “long room,” from which
-a hallway led to the squires’ rooms.
-
-In spite of Bertrand’s words about his early departure on the following
-morning, he and Yvain did not go that day. Neither did they depart on
-the next, nor within that week. On the morning after his arrival the
-minstrel confessed, readily enough, though with seeming reluctance, that
-he had no particular objective point in his journeying; that he but
-travelled for adventure, for love of his lady, and that it was his mind
-to linger around St. Nazaire or the coast till spring should give an
-opening into Normandy. Madame Eleanore would not hear of it that he
-should seek lodgings in St. Nazaire. There was strong tradition of
-hospitality in Le Crépuscule,—ordinarily a lonely place enough; and its
-châtelaine eagerly besought the Flaming-heart to lodge with her till
-spring—and longer if he would. And after that she put him, forsooth,
-into the Bishop’s chamber on the ground-floor, gave Yvain an adjoining
-closet, and would take no refusal that he go hawking in the early
-afternoon with all the young squires of the Castle.
-
-Bertrand took to his life at the Twilight Castle with a grace, an ease,
-and, withal, a tact that won him every heart within the first three days
-of his residence there. He was a man of the broad world, such an one as
-these simple Breton folk had not known before; for Seigneur Gerault did
-not travel like this fellow, and had none of his manner for setting
-forth tales. The young squires, the men-at-arms, the henchmen, the very
-cooks and scullions, listened open-mouthed and open-eyed at the stories
-he told of adventure and love, of distant countries, of kings and courts
-and mighty wars. Besides this, he could manage a horse or a sword like
-any warrior knight; he was deep learned in falconry; he could track a
-hare or a fox through the most impossible furze; and he could read like
-a monk and write like a scribe. As for his accomplishments with the
-other sex, they were too many to mention. Before evening of the second
-day every woman in the Castle from Madame Eleanore down, save, for some
-mysterious reason, Alixe, was at his feet, confessing her utter
-subjection. His soft Southern speech, the exquisite Langue d’Oc, used in
-Brittany as French was used in England; his clean, dark, fine-featured
-face; his glowing eyes; his love-laden manner, that ever dared and never
-presumed; finally, what, in all ages, has seemed to prove most
-attractive to women in men, a suggestion of past libertinism,—all these
-things combined to make him utterly irresistible to the feminine heart.
-
-Such a life of never-ending adulation, of universal admiration, was a
-paradise to the troubadour, in whom inordinate vanity was the strongest
-and most carefully concealed characteristic. So long as he should be the
-centre of interest, he was never bored. But when he was not the central
-object, there were just two people in all the Castle that did not bore
-him unendurably. One of these was Madame Eleanore, in liking whom he
-betrayed exceptional taste; the other was Alixe, who had piqued him into
-attention. His admiration for madame was not wholly unnatural; for
-Bertrand Flammecœur, love-child as he was, and filled with unholy
-passions, was, nevertheless, as his singing showed, a man of refinement
-and gentle blood. His feeling for Alixe was keen, because it was
-unsatisfactory. She was at no pains to conceal her dislike for him, and
-it was her greatest pleasure to whip a pretty speech of his to rags with
-irony. He plied her with every art he knew, tried every mood upon her,
-and to Alixe’s glory be it said, she never betrayed, by look or word,
-that she had anything for him more than, at best, contemptuous
-indifference. And after a week of effort the minstrel was obliged to
-confess to himself that never before, in all his adventures, had he met
-with so complete a rebuff from any woman.
-
-He did not, even then, entirely relax his efforts. One morning, ten days
-after his arrival, he was passing the chapel, a small octagonal room
-opening off the great hall just beside the stairs, when he perceived
-Alixe within. She was alone; and as he turned into the doorway she was
-just rising from her knees. Unconscious of his presence, she remained
-standing before the altar looking upon the crucifix, her hands fervently
-clasped before her. After watching her for a moment in silence,
-Flammecœur began to move noiselessly across the little room, and was at
-her very shoulder before he said softly,—
-
-“A fair good morn to thee, my demoiselle.”
-
-Alixe wheeled about. “A prayerful one to thee, Sir Minstrel!” she said
-sharply, and would have left him but that, smiling, he held her back.
-
-“Nay, ma mie, nay, be pleased to remain for a moment’s love-look.” Alixe
-merely shrugged at his teasing mockery, whereupon he became serious.
-“Listen, mademoiselle, and explain this matter to me. Is all this Castle
-under a vow of unceasing prayer? Piety beseems a damsel well enow; yet
-never have I seen a household so devout. Madame Châtelaine repeats her
-prayers five times a day; and the step before the altar here is ever
-weighted by some ardent maid or squire. Ohé! Love in the south; prayer
-in the north. Rose of Langue d’Oc,—snows of Langue d’Oïl. Tell me, Dame
-Alixe, which likes thy heart the most, customs of my land or of thine?”
-
-“This is all the land I know. And as for thee—well, if thou’rt a true
-man of the south, methinks I would remain here,” she retorted
-discourteously, giving him eye for eye.
-
-“I do not my country so much despite to say its men are all like me,”
-returned the Flame-hearted, smoothly, in an inward rage. “Yet I could
-tell thee tales of thy cold Normandy that are not all of ice. Methinks
-this cheerless Breton coast is the mother of melancholy; for shine the
-sun never so brightly, it cannot melt the soul that hath been frozen
-under its past winter’s sky. But, Demoiselle Alixe,”—Flammecœur dropped
-his anger, and took on a sudden tone of exceeding interest,—“Demoiselle
-Alixe, I hold in my heart a great curiosity concerning thee. I see thee
-here living as a daughter of the house; yet art thou called Rieuse. Now,
-wast thou born in Crépuscule?”
-
-Alixe regarded him with half-closed eyes. Never had she resented
-anything in him half so much as this question. Yet she replied to him in
-a tone as smooth as his own: “Yea, truly I am of Le Crépuscule, by heart
-and love. But I am not of the Twilight blood. I was born on the Castle
-lands. I am the foster-sister of the Demoiselle Laure.”
-
-“Laure?”
-
-“Sooth, hast thou not heard of Laure, the daughter of madame?”
-
-“Nay. Is she dead, this maid?”
-
-“She is a nun.”
-
-“Ah! ’Tis the same.”
-
-“Not for us here. Thou must know she is but newly consecrated; and she
-is to be permitted to come home, here, to the Castle, once in a
-fortnight, to see madame her mother. On the morrow she will come for the
-first time since her novitiate began, nine months agone.”
-
-“Sang Dieu! Now know I why the Castle breathes with prayer. Madame would
-make all things holy enough to receive her. She cannot be old, this
-Laure, sith she is thy foster-sister?”
-
-“I am older than she. Also, an I remain longer from the tapestry, I
-shall be caused to make you do half my daily task as a punishment for
-keeping me tardy. Give ye God-den, fair sir, and pleasant prayers!” And
-with a flutter and an unholy laugh, Alixe had whirled past him and was
-gone out of the chapel.
-
-Flammecœur looked after her, but for the first time felt no inclination
-for pursuit. Perhaps this was because, for the first time, Alixe had
-given him something besides herself to think about. This daughter of
-Madame Eleanore and her peculiar vocation interested him extremely. It
-was quite surprising to find how interested one could become in little
-matters, after a few days in Le Crépuscule. So Flammecœur presently
-marched off to the armory in search of Yvain, and, finding him, he
-questioned the little squire minutely as to the gossip of the keep
-concerning the Demoiselle Laure. Was she mis-shapen? This was the only
-excuse for entering a nunnery that occurred to the Flame-hearted. Yvain
-had not heard that she was deformed. Was she crossed in love? Mayhap;
-but Yvain had not heard it. Flammecœur shrugged his shoulders. The
-enigma was not solved. It mattered little enough, anyway. Alixe had
-jilted him again. Heigho! He ordered his horse, and went to seek a
-falcon. While in the falcon-house he remembered that this nun was coming
-to the Castle on the morrow, and he decided that he would have a sight
-of her when she arrived.
-
-Not unnaturally Bertrand Flammecœur had taken on the state of mind of
-the whole Castle. Mademoiselle was coming home on the morrow. Every one
-knew it, for a message had arrived on the previous day from Monseigneur
-the Bishop of St. Nazaire, and Le Crépuscule was in a state of unwonted
-excitement. The word came to madame as less of a surprise than as an
-overwhelming relief, and a joy that had some bitterness in it. It had
-rested with St. Nazaire whether her child should come home to see her
-twice in the month! Ah, well, she was coming; she would lie in her
-mother’s arms; the Castle would echo again to the music of her voice!
-Thus through the whole day madame sat dreaming of the morrow, nor
-noticed the tardy arrival of Alixe in the spinning-room, nor how, all
-morning, Isabelle and Viviane whispered and smiled and idled over their
-tasks.
-
-Now, if Madame Eleanore’s heart and brain were full to overflowing with
-the dreams of Laure, how feverish with longing came the thought of home,
-home though for one little hour, to the prisoner herself! On the night
-before her going, as, indeed, on many nights of late, Laure could not
-sleep. Her eyes stared wide open into the night, while her mind traced
-outlines of Le Crépuscule in the soft darkness. Ah! the dearly loved
-halls and their blessed company, all that she had not seen for nearly
-nine months, and on the morrow should see again! Her brain burned with
-impatience. She tossed and tumbled on her hard and narrow bed. Finally,
-long ere the hour for matins, she rose and went to sit at the window of
-her cell, looking out upon the clear and frosty winter’s night. How the
-hours passed till prime she scarcely knew. But at a quarter to five,
-when matins were over, she went down into the church for first service,
-wearing short riding-shoes under her white robe, with her hair bound
-tight beneath her coif and veil, for galloping. During the simple
-prayer-service, she got twenty penitential Aves for inattention, and
-read added reproof in the eyes of Mère Piteuse. At length, however, it
-came to be the hour for the breaking of the fast, and Laure found
-opportunity to speak to the Sœur Eloise, who was to follow her as
-attendant and protectress on the road to Crépuscule. Stupid, stolid,
-faithful, low of birth and therefore much in awe of Laure, was this
-little nun; and had the Mother-prioress been worldly wise, it had not
-been she that followed Laure into the world this bright and bitter
-January morning.
-
-At a quarter to eight o’clock the two young women mounted their palfreys
-at the convent gate, and were off into the snow-filled forest, while
-behind them echoed gentle admonitions to unceasing prayer. Feeling a
-saddle under her once again, and a strong white horse bearing her along
-over a well-beaten road, Laure drew a breath that seemed to have no end.
-And as her lungs filled with God’s free air, she pressed one hand to her
-throat to ease the terrible ache of rising tears. How long it was since
-she had felt free to move her limbs! How long since she had traversed
-this shaded road! Eloise did not trouble her. The lay sister was too
-occupied in clinging to the mane of her horse to venture speech; and she
-looked at her high-born companion with mingled awe and admiration as she
-saw her urge her beast into a trot. The convent animal had an easy gait,
-and appeared to possess possibilities in the way of speed. Laure touched
-him a little with her spur. The creature responded well. A moment later
-Eloise turned pale with fright to see her lady strike the spur home in
-earnest, and go flying wildly down the road till she was presently lost
-among the thick snow-laden trees.
-
-Laure was happy now. She found herself not much encumbered with her
-dress, which had been “modified” in obedience to the law for conduct
-outside the convent. Her gown and mantle were of the usual cut, and she
-was girdled by her rosary; but her head was covered with a close-fitting
-black hood from which fell a short white veil, two edges of which were
-pinned beneath her chin, giving her, though she did not know it, a
-delightfully softened expression. After she had left Eloise behind, she
-continued to increase the speed of her animal till she had all but lost
-control of him. Fifteen minutes later she was out of the forest and
-running along a heavily packed road, bordered on either side with a thin
-line of trees, beyond which stretched broad fields and moorlands, among
-which, somewhere, the priory estate ended and that of Le Crépuscule
-began. Eloise was now a mile behind; but Laure had no thought for her.
-Her breath was coming short no less with emotion than with the exercise;
-for the image of her mother was before her eyes. She let her mind search
-where it would, through sweet and yearning depths; and her heart was
-filled with thanksgiving for this hour of freedom. She was nearing that
-place where the Rennes highway joined that of St. Nazaire, both of them
-uniting at the Castle road, which led to the Chateau by a long and
-winding ascent. Presently the Chateau became visible; and Laure, looking
-on it with all her soul in her eyes, took no heed of the slow-moving
-horseman ahead of her, on whom she was rapidly gaining. Indeed, neither
-was aware of the presence of the other, till Laure’s horse, scenting
-company, made a short dash of a hundred yards, and then came into a
-sudden walk beside the animal bestrode by Bertrand Flammecœur of
-Provence. The suddenness of the horse’s stop caused Laure to jerk
-heavily forward. Flammecœur leaned over and caught her bridle. At that
-moment their eyes met.
-
-A flush of vivid pink overspread Laure’s lily face. She shrank quickly
-away from the look in Flammecœur’s eyes. Then her hand went up to her
-dishevelled hair; and she tried confusedly to straighten it back.
-
-“Take not such pains, reverend lady. By the glory of the saints, thou
-couldst not make thyself as lovely as God’s world hath made
-thee!—Prithee, heed me not!”
-
-Laure gave a little gasp at the man’s daring; yet such was Flammecœur’s
-manner that she did not find herself offended. Presently she had the
-impulse to give him a sideways glance; and then, all untutored as she
-was, she read the lively admiration that was written in his face. After
-that her hands came down from her head, and she took up her bridle
-again, by the act causing him to relinquish it. “The Sœur Eloise is
-behind me. I fear that I did much outdistance her,” she said, with a
-demureness through which a smile was very near to breaking.
-
-Flammecœur looked at her with a peculiar pleasure, a pleasure that he
-had not often experienced. His immediate impulse was to put a still
-greater distance between them and Eloise; but prudence came happily to
-his aid. “Let us stop here till thine attendant comes, while thy horse
-breathes,” he said, bringing his animal to a gentle halt.
-
-Laure acquiesced at once, and did not analyze her little momentary qualm
-as one of disappointment. Nevertheless, her face grew white again, and
-she said not a word through the ten minutes they had to wait till Eloise
-came riding heavily out of the wood. The other nun looked infinitely
-startled at the sight of Flammecœur, and was muttering a prayer while
-she stared from Laure to the trouvère. As soon, however, as she came,
-the others reined their horses about, and immediately, in the most
-remarkable silence that the Provençal had ever experienced, proceeded up
-the hill and into the Castle courtyard.
-
-In this wise they reached the Chateau, and Laure came to her own again.
-She found herself surrounded by every one and everything that she had so
-unspeakably yearned for; and—they made little impression on her. She
-walked among them like one in a dream, striving in vain to free her mind
-from its encompassing mists. When she was alone with her mother, in
-Eleanore’s familiar and beloved room, Laure felt in herself an
-inexplicable insincerity. She clung to madame, and wept, and kissed her,
-and expressed in eager, disjointed phrases the great joy she felt in
-being at home again; and all the while she scarce knew what she said, or
-wherefore she said it. And in the end she gave such an impression of
-hysteria that her mother became seriously distressed.
-
-At dinner Laure’s manner changed. She was quiet and silent, and kept her
-eyes fixed continually on her plate. Her cheeks were burning and she was
-in a tumult of inward emotion that displayed itself in the most unwonted
-stupidity. Her mother never dreamed the reason for her mood. Curiously
-enough, Alixe read Laure better, though she scarcely dared admit to
-herself that which she saw. No look of Flammecœur’s, nor quick flush of
-the young nun’s face escaped her eyes, yet neither then nor ever after
-did Alixe confess to any one what she read; for her own heart was too
-much wrought upon for speech.
-
-Dinner ended, and with that end came the hour for Laure’s return to the
-convent. The girl realized this with a chill at her heart, but accepted
-the inevitable resignedly. It was with a sense of desolation that she
-followed Eloise out of the Castle to the courtyard where their horses
-were waiting. Her parting with her mother was filled with grief of the
-sincerest kind. She wept and clung to Madame Eleanore, gasping out
-convulsive promises to return as soon as the rule permitted. She said
-good-bye to Alixe as tenderly as to her mother, for the two maidens were
-fast friends; she kissed all the demoiselles, was kissed by the young
-squires-at-arms; and it was a sudden relief to her, in this rush of
-home-feeling, that Flammecœur was nowhere to be seen, he and Yvain
-having disappeared immediately after dinner.
-
-Much to the satisfaction of Eloise, who endured a good deal of
-discomfort when she was in high places, Laure finally mounted her
-palfrey, and the two of them started away, waving good-byes all across
-the courtyard and drawbridge, and indeed until Eleanore, leaning heavily
-on Alixe’s arm, turned to re-enter the Castle.
-
-The nuns began their descent of the long hill at a slow, jogging trot;
-and presently Eloise remarked comfortably,—
-
-“Reverend Mother enjoined us to repeat the hours as we ride. But so
-didst thou gallop on the way hither, Sister Angelique, and so out of
-breath was I with trotting after, that I said no more than the first
-part of one Ave. Therefore let us return at a more seemly pace, that we
-may rightly tell our beads,” and the stolid sister settled her horse
-into a slower walk, and sighed comprehensively as she thought of the
-dinner she had eaten and the sweetmeats that were hidden in her tunic.
-
-Laure did not answer her. She fingered her rosary dutifully, and her
-lips mechanically repeated the prayers. But her thoughts were no more on
-what she said than they were upon food. Her face was drawn and whiter
-even than its wont, and she sat her horse with a weary air. She was
-making no struggle against the inevitable. In her soul she knew that she
-must be strong enough to endure her lot; but she could make no pretence
-to herself that that lot was pleasant.
-
-The two were a long time in their descent of the hill, and it was
-mid-afternoon when they reached the bend in the road that hid the
-Chateau from sight. Laure was not looking ahead; rather, when she
-looked, her eyes noticed nothing. But suddenly Eloise started from her
-prayers and uttered an exclamation: “Saints of God! There is that man
-again!”
-
-A quick, cold tremor passed over Laure, and she trembled violently.
-There in the road, fifty yards away, both of them on horseback, were
-Flammecœur and his page.
-
-Eloise began a series of weak and rapid expostulations. Laure sat like a
-statue in her saddle. Nothing was done till the two young women came
-abreast of the troubadour and his boy. Then, with a rapid and adroit
-movement, young Yvain wheeled his horse between Laure and Eloise, and
-presently fell back with Eloise’s animal beside him, while Bertrand
-Flammecœur drew up beside Laure. The man was white with nervousness, and
-he bent toward her and said in a low voice: “Sister of angels, grant me
-pardon for this act!”
-
-Laure had gone all aflame. Her heart was beating tremulously and her dry
-throat contracted so that she could not speak. But looking, for one
-fleeting instant, into his face, she smiled.
-
-Flammecœur could have laughed for joy, for he saw that his cause was
-won. And the ease of this conquest did not make him contemptuous of it;
-for however little he understood it, there was that in this childlike
-nun that made him hold his breath with reverence before her. The hour
-that followed their second meeting was almost as new to him as to her,
-in the stretch of emotions. They spoke very little. From behind them
-came the continual, droll chatter of Yvain and the answering giggles of
-Eloise. But Laure could not have laughed, and the trouvère knew it. As
-they entered the forest, however, at no great distance from the priory,
-he leaned far over and laid one of his gloved hands upon the tunic that
-covered her knee.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _The whole Castle had assembled to say
- God-speed to their departing lord.—Page 25_
-]
-
-“Let me have some gage,—some token of thee,” he said in a hoarse and
-unsteady tone.
-
-“I cannot! Oh, I cannot!”
-
-He did not urge, but resignedly drew his hand away; and as Laure’s body
-made the little, involuntary movement of following him, he contained his
-joy with an effort.
-
-Now the white priory was visible from afar, among the leafless trees;
-and so Laure, reining in her horse, turned to her companion: “Thou must
-leave us at once,” she whispered, trembling.
-
-He bent his head, and drew his horse to a standstill. At the same time
-Yvain and Eloise rode up, having just pledged themselves to eternal
-devotion. After a moment’s hesitation, Flammecœur leaned again toward
-Laure, asking, this time fearfully,—
-
-“Wilt thou tell me, lady, in what part of the convent is thy cell?”
-
-She looked at him, wondering, but answered what he wanted, and then
-waited, in silence, praying that he would ask another question. He sat,
-however, with his head bent over so that she could not see his face, and
-he said nothing more. Laure sighed, looked up into the wintry sky,
-looked down to the snow-covered earth, felt the pall of her frozen life
-closing around her once again, and then got a sudden, blind
-determination that that life should not smother the little, creeping
-flame that had to-day been lighted in her heart. Looking sidewise at
-Flammecœur, who sat bowed upon his horse, she whispered,—
-
-“Shall we—see—each other yet again?”
-
-“By all the saints—and God—we shall! We shall!”
-
-“Alas, Angelique, we are late for vespers! Haste!” cried Eloise, in the
-same moment.
-
-Laure sent the spur into her palfrey, which leaped forward like the
-stone from a sling. Eloise followed after her at a terrifying pace, and
-the troubadour and his page stood and watched them till they were lost
-among the trees. The two reached the priory gate almost together; and
-before they were admitted, Eloise, her face flushed and her eyes
-shining, whispered imploringly to Laure: “Confess it not! Confess it
-not! Else shall we never go again!”
-
-To this plea Laure had no time to make reply; but the other, seeing her
-manner, had, somehow, no fear that she would betray herself, and with
-her the delicious love-prattlings of Yvain.
-
-They found vespers just at an end, and were reproved for their tardy
-return. Eloise retreated to her cell at once, to repeat her penitential
-Aves of the morning, and Laure retired ostensibly for the same purpose.
-
-Once alone in her cell, the young girl took off her riding-garments,—the
-unusual cap and veil, boots, gloves, and spur,—and put them carefully
-away in her oaken chest. Afterwards she straightened her bliault and her
-hair, set her image of the Virgin straight upon its shelf, and moved the
-priedieu a little more accurately between the door and her bed. Then,
-standing up, she looked about her. There was nothing more to do. She was
-alone with her heart, and she could no longer escape from thinking. So
-she sat down on the bed, folded her hands upon her knees, and in this
-wise twisted out the meaning of her day, till she found in her secret
-soul that the unspeakable, the unholy, the most glorious, had come to
-her, to fill the great void of her empty life.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER FOUR_
- THE PASSION
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-In the evening of the day of that momentous visit, after compline was
-over, and she was in her bed in her cell, Laure yielded herself up to
-sleep only after a rebellious struggle; she wished intensely to lie
-awake with her wonderful thoughts. Sleep prevailed, however, and was
-sound and dreamless; for she was physically tired out.
-
-At two in the morning came the first boom of the church bell pulled by
-the sleep-laden sexton,—the beginning of the call to matins. The night
-was very black; and only after two or three minutes did Laure struggle
-up from her bed, trembling with that dead, numb feeling that results
-from being roused too suddenly from heavy unconsciousness. Mechanically
-the young girl felt about for her lantern and opened the door into the
-dimly lit corridor. There were half a dozen nuns and novices grouped
-about the stone lamp which burned all night on the wall, and from which
-the sisters were accustomed to light their cressets for matins. Laure
-waited her turn in a dazed manner, and when she had obtained the light,
-went back to her cell, left the door unclosed according to rule, and,
-placing the lantern on the small table, knelt at her priedieu.
-
-So far her every move had been mechanical. Her brain was not yet awake.
-But, with the first words of the Agnus Dei, the full memory of yesterday
-suddenly flashed upon her. She had been at home, and had found there
-Flammecœur!—Flammecœur! Her own heart flamed up, and the prayer died
-away from it. Her lips moved on, and the murmur of her voice continued
-to swell the low chorus that spread through the whole priory. But Laure
-was not speaking those words. Her whole mind and heart had turned
-irrevocably to another subject,—to another god, the little, rosy-winged
-boy that finds his way into the sternest places, and lights them with
-his magic presence till they are changed for their inhabitants beyond
-recognition. Strictly speaking, Laure was not thinking of the trouvère.
-Her thoughts refused to review him in the light of her knowledge of him.
-She would not think of his personality,—his face, eyes, form, or manner.
-Her heart shrank from anything so bold. She refused to question herself.
-Yet her mind was full of him, and the other subject in her thoughts was
-this: that in eleven days more, were God pitying to her, she should,
-perhaps—ever perhaps—see him again.
-
-When matins and lauds were over, the sisters returned to bed till the
-hour for dressing, a quarter to five. Laure was accustomed to sleep
-soundly through this period. But to-day she refused to close her eyes.
-Nay, it was ecstasy to her to lie dreaming of many old, vague things
-that had scarce any connection with her new heart, and yet would have
-had no place at all with her had they not carried as an undercurrent the
-image of that same new god.
-
-All day Laure went about with a song in her soul. Why she should have
-been glad, who can say? What possible hope for happiness there was for
-her, what idea of any finale save one of grief, resignation, or despair,
-she never thought to ask herself. She let her new happiness take
-possession of her without stopping to analyze it. And it was as well
-that she did no analyzing. For a logical process would inevitably have
-brought her to the beginning of these things, to the moment, the
-ineffable moment, when the hand of Flammecœur had first rested on her
-own.
-
-This first morning passed away. Dinner was eaten, and recreation time
-came. Now Eloise persistently sought Laure’s company; and Laure, with
-equal persistence and quite remarkable adroitness, avoided her. The
-young nun knew, from the face of Eloise, that there were a thousand
-silly thoughts ready to come out of her; and Laure could not bear to
-have her own delicate, rainbow dreams so crudely disturbed. And there
-was something more about the presence of Eloise that disturbed the
-daughter of Le Crépuscule; this was the understanding between them that
-they should not confess the real reason for their tardy arrival on the
-previous day. Laure had made up her mind, tacitly, to confess
-nothing—yet. But she did not like to be reminded of the fact.
-
-That night Laure successfully resisted the dictates of sleep, with the
-result that, all next day, she felt dull and weak. When dinner and sext
-were over, and recreation came, she obtained ready permission to retire
-to her cell instead of going to the garden or the court or the library
-with the other nuns. Once alone and safe from the attacks of Eloise, who
-was becoming importunate, she lay down on her bed and sank, almost at
-once, to rest. While she slept, the sun came out upon the outer world,
-and poured its beams over the chill valley beyond the priory. The gray,
-lowering clouds were broken up. The heavens shone blue, and the
-ice-crust shimmered with myriad, sparkling diamonds. No sunlight could
-enter the cell of sleep; for it was afternoon, and the single little
-window looked toward the east. But after nearly an hour of shining
-stillness, there came a sound from the frozen vale that was more
-beautiful than sunlight. It reached Laure’s ears, and woke her. She rose
-up, hearkening incredulously for a moment, and then, with a smothered
-cry of delight, threw herself forward again on the bed, and laughed and
-moaned together into the cold sheets.
-
-From below, just outside her window, rose a voice, a tenor voice, high
-and clear and mellow, singing a chanson of the south to the
-accompaniment of a six-stringed lute. After a few seconds Laure ventured
-to raise her head and listen. With a thrill of ecstasy she caught the
-words,—
-
- “_Ele ot plain le visage, si fu encolorez;
- Les iex vairs et riants, lonc et traités le nez;
- La bouche vermeillête, le menton forcelé;
- Le col plain et blanc plus que n’est flor de pré._”
-
-At this point in the familiar song, sung with a fervor she had never
-dreamed of, Laure rose involuntarily from the bed, and, redder than any
-flower, stole to the window. Timidly, her heart beating so that she was
-like to choke, she looked out into the snowy clearing. Just beneath her,
-in the shadow of the wall, so close that a whisper from him might easily
-have been heard, stood Flammecœur.
-
-He was scanning closely the row of cell windows above him, hoping
-against hope for a sight of Laure’s face. Ignorant as he was of convent
-hours, he knew that he had but the barest chance of making her hear; and
-that there was less than this chance of seeing her. Thus when Laure’s
-face, framed in its soft white veil, looked out to him, Flammecœur
-experienced a rush of emotion that was overpowering. She inspired him
-with a reverence that he had not known he could feel for any woman. Her
-face was so glorified in his eyes that she looked like an image of the
-Holy Virgin. Breaking off in the middle of the song, he fell upon his
-knees there in the snow, uttering incoherent and indistinguishable
-phrases of adoration.
-
-Flammecœur was theatrical enough; also he was hard, utterly
-unscrupulous, and a scoffer at holy things. His only idol was his love
-for beauty. This was his religion, and he had worshipped it consistently
-from boyhood. Now he had found its almost perfect embodiment in this
-girl, in whom innocence, purity, youth, and beauty were inextricably
-mingled. And Flammecœur strove to adjust his rather callous spirit to
-hers, feeling that he would sooner breathe his last than shock her
-delicacy—till he had attained his end.
-
-Now, in the dying sunlight, the two talked together; and in the light of
-his new reverence the young nun lost a little of her timidity and made
-open confession in her looks, though never in her words, of her delight
-in his presence.
-
-“Tell me, O Maiden of Angels,” he said, addressing her in a term that at
-once brought them both a sense of familiarity and of pleasure, “tell me,
-is this thy regular hour of solitude? Could I—might I hope—to see thee
-often here—hold speech with thee—without endangering thy devotions?”
-
-“Nay, verily!” whispered Laure, hastily. “Oh, thou must not come! Nay, I
-am supposed to be with the other sisters at this hour of recreation.
-Only to-day was I permitted—”
-
-“And didst thou think of me? Hopest thou I would come? Didst think—”
-
-“Monsieur!” Laure’s tone was reproachful and embarrassed.
-
-“Forgive me! Though verily I know not how I have offended thee!”
-
-Laure was about to utter her reproach when suddenly, around the corner
-of the wall, appeared the head of Flammecœur’s horse. All at once, at
-this apparition, the old spirit of freedom and the old love of liberty
-rushed over her. “Ah, would that I might leap down there into the snow,
-and mount with thee thy steed, and ride, and ride, and ride back to my
-home in Le Crépuscule!” she cried out, utterly forgetful of herself and
-of her position.
-
-Instantly Flammecœur seized her mood. “By all the saints, come on!” he
-cried. “I will catch thee in mine arms; and we will ride! We will ride
-and ride—not back—”
-
-“Alas! Now Heaven forgive me! What have I said? Farewell, monsieur!
-Indeed, farewell!”
-
-And ere Flammecœur could grasp her sudden revulsion of feeling, she was
-gone; the window above him was empty. He stayed where he was for some
-moments, meditating on what plea would be successful. Finally, deciding
-silence the surer part, he remounted his horse and turned slowly to the
-west, through the chill evening, doing battle with himself. He found
-that he was unable to cope with the flame that this pretty nun had
-kindled in his brain. His anger rose against her, to be once more
-overtopped by passion. And had he not been so occupied in trying to
-regain sufficient self-control to make some safe plan of action, he
-might have known himself for the knave he surely was.
-
-In the priory three days went prayerfully by; and at the end of that
-time Laure found herself sick with misery. Flammecœur had laid hold of
-her heart, and her struggles against the thought of him began to grow
-stronger; for she longed to escape from her present state of madness.
-Incredible as it may seem, she never had, in connection with him, one
-single tainted thought. Laure was a peculiarly innocent girl,—innocent
-even of any unshaped desire or longing. The force of her nature had
-always found relief in physical activity. In her home life all things
-had been clean and free before her. And in the convent the teaching that
-emotion was sin had been accepted by her without thought. Nevertheless,
-in her, all unwaked, there lay a broad, passionate nature that needed
-but a quickening touch to throw her into such depths as, were she taken
-unawares, would eventually drag her to her doom. Her ignorance was
-pitiable; and even now she had entered alone upon a dark stretch of
-road, the end of which she did not herself know, and which none could
-prophesy to her.
-
-Three days of unhappiness, of battle with herself, and of longing for a
-sight of Flammecœur, and then—he came. Again it was the recreation hour,
-and Laure was in the garden, walking in the cold with one or two of the
-sisters. Her thoughts had strayed from the general chatter, and her
-eyes, like her mind, looked afar off. Her companions, rather accustomed
-to Angelique’s vagaries, paid little attention to her, and she pursued
-her reverie uninterrupted. Suddenly, from out of the snowy stillness, a
-sound reached her ears. For an instant her heart ceased to beat; and she
-halted in her walk. Yes, Flammecœur was singing, somewhere near. It was
-the same chanson, and it came from the other side of the priory. He must
-be where he had been before. She looked at the faces of the nuns beside
-her. Did they not also hear? How dull, how intensely dull they were! She
-went on for a few steps undecidedly. Then she halted.
-
-“I had forgot,” she said quietly. “I must to my cell. I have five Aves
-to repeat for inattention at the reading of St. Elizabeth this morning.”
-
-“Methought they were to be said in chapter,” observed one of her
-companions, indifferently.
-
-“Nay; Reverend Mother gave permission,—in my cell,” answered Laure,
-rather weakly; for she saw that she should get into difficulty if any
-one mentioned this matter again. However, Flammecœur’s voice was singing
-still and, flinging care to the winds, she made a hasty escape.
-
-Fifteen minutes later she was in the church, kneeling at the shrine of
-St. Joseph. She said twenty Aves there before she rose, yet got no
-comfort from them. For twenty Aves is small salve to the conscience for
-the first guilty deceit of one’s life.
-
-That evening was not wholly a pleasant one; yet Laure underwent fierce
-gusts of happiness. She had seen him again; she had held speech with
-him, and had smiled when he looked at her. She felt his looks like
-caresses, and was half ashamed and half enamoured of them. Her night was
-filled with a tumult of dreams; and when day dawned again she was hot
-with the fever of unrest.
-
-Days went by, and then weeks, and finally two months, and March was on
-the world. Hints of spring were borne down the breeze. The deeply frozen
-earth began slowly, slowly to throw off its weight of ice, and to open
-its breast to the warm touches of the sun. The black, bare branches of
-the forest trees waved about uncannily, like gaunt arms, beckoning to
-the distant summer. And in all this time the situation of the little nun
-of Crépuscule had not changed. The troubadour still lingered at the
-Chateau, a welcome guest. And still he haunted the priory, unknown to
-any one save her whom he continually sought. As yet he had done nothing,
-said not one word that betrayed his intentions. He had waited patiently
-till the time should be ripe; and now that time approached. Laure had
-endured a life of secret torture, but had not succeeded in throwing off
-the shackles she had voluntarily put on. Nay, she confessed now to
-herself that, without his occasional coming, she could not have lived.
-She chafed at their restricted intercourse. She longed to meet him where
-she could put her hands into his, where she could listen to the sound of
-his voice without the terror of discovery. All this Flammecœur had read
-in her, but still he waited till of her own accord she should break her
-bonds.
-
-There came a day in March when the two, Laure and Flammecœur, with
-Eloise and her now very _bel ami_, Yvain, were riding from Crépuscule to
-the priory. As they went, the spring sun sent its beams aslant across
-the road; and birds, newly arrived from the far south, were site-hunting
-among the black trees. The air was filled with the chilly sweetness that
-made one dizzy with dreams of coming summer; and both Laure and the
-trouvère grew slowly intoxicated as they rode side by side, so close
-that his knee touched her palfrey’s flank. Behind them, Yvain and Eloise
-were still discussing their love-notions. The afternoon was misty with
-approaching sunset. In the radiant golden light, Laure’s heart grew big
-with unshed tears of life; and before the sobs came, Flammecœur, leaning
-far toward her, whispered thickly,—
-
-“Thou must come to me alone! I must have thee alone. I must know thy
-lips. ’Fore God, refuse me not, thou greatly beloved!”
-
-Laure drew a long, shivering breath and looked slowly into his face. Her
-eyes rested full upon his, and she did not speak, but he read her reply.
-
-“Where shall I come to-night?” he asked.
-
-“To-night!”
-
-“Assuredly. To-night. Dieu! Thinkest thou that I can stand aloof from
-thee forever? Thinkest thou my blood is water in my veins? To-night!”
-
-Laure mused a little, her eyes looking afar off, as if she dreamed. She
-brought them back to him with a start. “To-night—by starlight—in the
-convent garden. Canst thou climb the wall?”
-
-“Ah! thou shalt see!”
-
-Laure’s heart palpitated with the look he gave her, and she sat silent
-under it, while, bit by bit, all her training, all her year of precepts,
-all herself, her womanhood, her truth, her steadfastness to
-righteousness, slipped away from her under the spell of this most
-powerful of all emotions. And presently she turned to him again with
-such an expression of exaltation in her poor face, that his heart warmed
-to her with a tenderer feeling.
-
-“At what hour?” he whispered.
-
-“One hour after the last tolling of the bell at compline after
-confession.”
-
-“Confession!” the word slipped from him before he thought. He saw Laure
-turn first scarlet and then very white; and her lips trembled.
-
-“Ah, Laure, most beloved, heed it not! If there be any sin in loving as
-we love, lay it all on me. For on my soul, I would leave heaven itself
-gladly behind for thee! And since God created thee as lovely as thou
-art, wert thou not made to be beloved? Look, Laure! see the gray bird
-there among the trees! Behold, it is the bird of the Saint Esprit! It is
-an omen. It is our heavenly sign; therefore be not afraid.”
-
-And as Laure promised him, so she did. She understood so well how the
-Flaming-heart wanted to be alone with her: did she not also long for
-solitude with him? And if they were alone for one hour, God was above.
-He saw and He knew all things. Why, then, should she be afraid?
-
-Therefore Laure went to her cell that night with her soul unshriven, and
-a heavy weight upon it of mingled joy and pain. Lying fully dressed upon
-her bed, she heard the great bell boom out the close of another day of
-praise to God. And when the last vibration had died down the wind, and
-the sexton had wended her pious way to bed, Laure rose, and prepared
-herself to go out into the garden. All that she had to do was to wrap
-herself in her mantle and to cover her head with a hood and veil. But
-first, following an instinct of dormant conscience, she unwound the
-rosary from her waist and hung it on the rail of the priedieu, before
-which she had not prayed to-night. Then she sat down upon her bed and
-waited,—waited through centuries, through ages, till it seemed to her
-that dawn must be about to break. But she felt that should she reach the
-garden before the coming of Flammecœur, her heart would fail indeed.
-During this time she refused to allow herself to think, though she was
-very cold and continued to tremble. Finally, when her nerves would stay
-her no longer, she rose and left her cell. The convent was open before
-her. The nuns were all asleep. Her sandalled feet made no noise upon the
-stones, and she passed in safety through corridors and rooms till she
-reached the library, from which there was an open exit to the garden.
-
-In the doorway she paused and looked out upon the pale moonlit scene.
-Her heart was beating quite steadily now, and she was able to consider
-almost with calmness the possibility that she was early. The light from
-the half-moon fell upon her where she stood, and suddenly she beheld a
-dark-cloaked figure run out of the shrubbery by the northwestern wall
-and come hurrying toward her. At the same moment she herself started
-forward, half fearfully. A moment later she was caught in Flammecœur’s
-arms, and a rain of kisses beat down upon her face.
-
-Gasping, crimson, horrified, she tore herself away from the embrace with
-the strength of one outraged.
-
-“Stop! In God’s name, stop! Wouldst do me dishonor?” she cried out, in
-an anger that bordered upon tears.
-
-“Dishonor! Mon Dieu! wherefore, prithee, camest thou into this garden,
-then? Was it to stand here in this doorway and permit me to scream my
-devotion at thee from yonder wall?”
-
-In her nervousness Laure suddenly laughed. But she was forced back to
-gravity, as he went on with a sudden rush of passion,—
-
-“Laure, Laure, is it thy intent to drive me mad? Faith, what man would
-forbear as I have forborne with thee? Thinkest thou any one would wait
-for weeks, nay, months, as I have waited, and feel thee at last free and
-in his arms, to be instantly thrust away again? Nay, by my soul! Thou
-art here, and thou art mine, and I have much to ask of thee. Christ!
-Thine eyes! Thy hair! Laure, I shall bear thee away from this
-prison-house. I will have thee for all mine own. Thou must leave thy
-cell by night, and come to me here. Outside the wall Yvain will wait
-with horses; and we will ride away—ride like hounds—out of this land of
-tears, southward, into the country of freedom and roses and love! There
-we shall dwell together, thou and I—thou and I—Laure, Laure, my sweet!
-And who in all God’s earth before hath known such joy as we shall know!
-Answer me, Laure, answer me! Say thou’lt come!”
-
-Once again he took her in his arms, but more calmly now, the force of
-his passion having spent itself in words but half articulate. And now he
-perceived how she was all trembling and afraid; and so he soothed her
-with gentle phrases and tender caresses, for indeed Flammecœur loved
-this maid as truly as it was in him to love at all. And it seemed to him
-a joy to have the protecting of her.
-
-“Speak to me, answer me, greatly beloved,” he insisted, drawing her face
-up to his.
-
-Laure clung to him and wept, and did not speak. All that followed was
-but a confusion of kisses, of pleadings, of tears and restraints, to
-both of them; and presently Laure was struggling from his arms and
-crying to him that it was near matins, and she must go. Once again, and
-finally, Flammecœur demanded a reply to his plea. There was hesitation,
-doubting, evident desire, and very evident fear. Then, staking
-everything, he urged her thus,—
-
-“Listen, Laure. I would not have thee decide all things now in thy mind.
-In one week I will be here, as to-night, at the same hour, in this
-place; and all things will be prepared for our flight. If thou come to
-me before the matins bell rings out, all will be well, and we shall go
-forth together into heaven. If thou come not,—why, I have tarried far
-too long in this Bretagne, and Yvain and I will go on together into the
-world, and thou shalt see me no more forever. Fair choice and honorable
-I give thee, for that I love thee better than myself. Now fare thee
-well, lady of my heart’s delight. God in His sweet mercy give thee into
-my keeping!”
-
-With a final kiss he put her from him and saw her go; and then he threw
-himself over the wall, and set out on his return ride to the Castle by
-the sea.
-
-Laure descended to prime next morning, trembling for fear of unknown
-possibilities. But no one in the church saw her muddy sandals; and her
-skirts and mantle were not more soiled round the bottom than was
-customary with those nuns that took their recreation in the garden. By
-the time the breaking of the fast occurred, she was reassured, and felt
-herself safe from the consequences of her night. Then, and only then,
-did she turn her mind to the choice that she must make during the
-ensuing sennight.
-
-That week was one of terror by night and woe by day. Hourly she resolved
-to renounce forever all thoughts of the flesh, confess her sin, and
-remain true to the convent for life. For the first three days these
-renewals of faith made her strong and stronger. She wept and she prayed
-and she hoped for strength; and finally she began to believe that the
-Devil was beaten. And yet—and yet—she did not even now confess the story
-of her acquaintance with Flammecœur. She said to herself that she would
-win this last fight alone; but she did not seek to find if there was
-self-deception in that excuse. No one but the girl Eloise had any idea
-that there existed such a person as the trouvère; and Eloise was unaware
-that Sœur Angelique had ever seen that gallant gentleman save when she
-and Yvain were present. Moreover, the stupid one was becoming alarmed
-lest the sudden devotional fervor of Demoiselle Angelique should lead to
-the cessation of those meetings for which her vague soul so impiously
-thirsted. The rest of the sisters perceived Laure’s extra prayers and
-rigorous fasting with admiration and approval, and put them down to one
-of those sudden rushes of fervor to which young nuns were peculiarly
-subject.
-
-After three days of this devotional effort, the Devil widened his little
-wedge of temptation, and roused in her an overpowering desire to see her
-lover again. By now she had lost her shame at the first hot kiss ever
-laid upon her lips, and—alas, poor humanity!—was longing secretly for
-more. So long, however, as Flammecœur was still in Le Crépuscule, she
-believed that she could endure everything. But she knew that after four
-days he would be there no more; and if she let her chance go, it was the
-last she should ever have. Then her mind strayed to the after-picture of
-her life here in the nunnery; and at the thought her heart grew numb and
-cold. Yet still she fought and prayed, trusting to no one her weight of
-temptation, keeping steadfastly to that self-deceptive determination to
-finish the battle alone.
-
-The torturing week came slowly to an end. On the final night, after
-compline, she went to her cell feeling like a spirit condemned to
-eternal night. Once alone, face to face with her soul, she sat down upon
-a chair, bent her head upon her breast, and thought. She did not
-extinguish her light, neither did she make preparations for bed.
-Unconsciously she set herself to wait through the hour following
-compline, as if its finish would bring the end of her trial. The minutes
-were passing smoothly by, and there was a great, unuttered cry of terror
-in her heart. What should she do? Nay, at the last minute, what _would_
-she do? Here her mind broke. She could think no more. Her brain was a
-vacuum. Presently her muscles began to twitch. Her flesh became cold and
-damp, and the hot saliva poured into her mouth. Would that hour never
-end?
-
-It ended. By now Flammecœur was in the garden, three hundred feet away.
-Flammecœur was waiting for her. Horses were there, and garments for
-her,—other garments than these of sickening white wool. How long would
-the trouvère wait? Till matins, he had said. But if that were not true?
-If he should go before—if he were going _now_!
-
-Laure started to her feet, halted, hesitated, then sank slowly to her
-knees. The first words of a prayer came from her lips; but in the middle
-of the phrase she was silent. Prayer was suddenly nothing to her. She
-had prayed so much; she had prayed so long! The beauty of appeals to the
-Most High was lost just now. She felt all the weight of her
-never-satisfied religion upon her, and she revolted at it. For the
-moment love itself seemed desirable only in so much as it would get her
-away from this place of her hypocrisy. A sudden thought of her mother
-came to her. For one moment—two—five—she kept her mind fixed. Then she
-sobbed. Flammecœur was below, calling to her with every fibre of his
-being. She knew that. She could see him waiting there, her cloak over
-his arm. With a low wail she stretched out her arms to the mental image.
-Afterwards, scarcely knowing what she did, she knelt down before the
-bright-painted picture of the Madonna on the wall of her cell, and
-kissed the stones of the floor below it.
-
-Then she stood up, pressing her hands tightly to her throat to ease the
-pain there. She looked around her, and in that look saw everything in
-the little stone room that had for so long been her home. Then, removing
-from her head the coif, wimple, and veil, the symbols of her virginity,
-she extinguished her lantern, and walked, blindly and wearily, out of
-her cell. So she passed, without making any noise, through the convent,
-into the library, and out—out—out into the garden beyond.
-
-Instantly Flammecœur was at her side. “Laure!” cried he, half laughing
-in his triumph. “Laure! Now we shall go!”
-
-Over his arm he carried a voluminous black mantle and a close, dark
-hood. These he put upon her, getting small assistance in the matter, for
-Laure’s movements were wooden, her hands like ice.
-
-“Now—canst climb the wall with me?” he asked, gazing at her in her
-transformation, and noting how pure and white her skin showed in its
-dark frame.
-
-She gasped and bent her head. Thereupon he seized her in his arms and
-carried her to the wall. There she surpassed his hopes; for her old,
-tomboyish skill suddenly came back to her, and she scrambled up the
-rough stones more agilely than he. Once in the road outside the garden,
-Flammecœur gave a low whistle. Then, out of the shadow of the wood, on
-the north side of the road, came Yvain, riding one steed, and leading
-that of Flammecœur, on which were both saddle and pillion. Flammecœur
-leaped to his place, and, bending over, held out his hand to Laure.
-
-“Thou comest freely,” he whispered.
-
-Laure looked up into his eyes. “Freely,” she answered, surrendering her
-soul.
-
-He laughed again, softly, as she climbed up behind him, by the help of
-his feet and his hands. And then, in another moment, they were off, into
-the moonlit night. And what that night concealed from Laure, what future
-of fierce joy, of terror, of misery, and of unutterable heartbreak, how
-should she know, poor girl, whose only guide was God Inscrutable,
-working His mysterious way alone, in heaven on high?
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER FIVE_
- SHADOWS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-On the day after Laure’s flight, Madame Eleanore left the great
-dinner-table and went to her bedroom early in the afternoon. Once again,
-as a year ago, she was alone there, hovering over her priedieu. Only
-this day was not sunny, but cold and damp, and very gray. Eleanore was
-in her usual mood of lonely melancholy, but when Alixe tapped at the
-door she was admitted, and madame ceased her devotions and bade the girl
-come in and sit down to her embroidery frame beside the window. Latterly
-it had become a habit of Alixe’s to break in upon her foster-mother’s
-elected solitude, and to draw her, willy-nilly, out of her sadness. If
-madame perceived the kindly intention in these interruptions, she did
-not comment upon it, but accepted the maid’s devotion with growing
-affection.
-
-When Alixe entered, madame also seated herself near the window, yet did
-not take up any work, leaving the tambour frame and spinning-wheel both
-idle in their places. She regarded Alixe for a few moments in silence,
-wondering why the young girl did not speak, finally putting her dulness
-down to the fact that it was but yesterday morning they had bidden
-Flammecœur and his squire God-speed on their journey to Normandy. Their
-long sojourn at Crépuscule had brought a gayety to the Castle that made
-it doubly dull now that they were gone. Madame pondered for some time on
-the subject, and presently spoke of it.
-
-“Sieur Bertrand hath a dreary sky for his journey.”
-
-“But a promise of beauty in the land to which he goeth,” responded
-Alixe, with something of an effort.
-
-“Mayhap. I have not been in Normandy.”
-
-And here the conversation ended. They sat together, these two women,
-listening to the incessant beating of the heavy waves on the cliff far
-below, and to the tap, tap, of the rain upon the windows; but neither
-found it in her heart to speak again. Alixe was shading her bird from
-blue into green, and Eleanore sat with folded hands, her eyes looking
-far away, musing upon the nothingness of her life. Suddenly there came a
-clamor at the door. Somewhat startled, Eleanore called admittance, and
-immediately David the dwarf walked into the room, stepped to the right
-of the doorway, and ushered in his companion, announcing her gravely,—
-
-“Sœur Celeste from the Couvent des Madeleines.”
-
-The sub-prioress, her white cloak and veil damp and stringing with rain,
-came slowly into the room and courtesied, first to Eleanore, then to
-Alixe.
-
-Madame rose hastily, in some surprise, and went forward.
-
-“Give you God’s greeting, good sister,” she said.
-
-The nun returned the salutation, and then, with some hesitation,
-indicated the little dwarf in a gesture that showed her desire that he
-should leave the room. Madame accordingly motioned him away, and when he
-was gone, turned to the nun with a hint of anxiety on her face. The
-new-comer did not hesitate in her mission. Leaning over, she asked
-eagerly,—
-
-“Madame, is Angelique here, with you?”
-
-Eleanore looked at her blankly. “Laure?—Laure is with you. Laure is—What
-sayest thou, woman?”
-
-Sœur Celeste resignedly bent her head. For some seconds nothing was
-said. Alixe, her face grown ashen, her body changed to ice, rose, and
-moved to the side of madame. Then she asked softly, “What hath happened,
-good sister?”
-
-“Angelique—Laure—the demoiselle—is not in the convent. We have searched
-for her everywhere. Her veil and wimple were found in her cell upon the
-bed. Beyond this there is no trace of her. This morning she came not to
-the church for prime, and we thought she had overslept. She hath so much
-fasted and prayed of late that Reverend Mother granted indulgence, and
-bade us let her rest. At breaking of the fast Sœur Eloise was despatched
-to her cell, and returned with word that she was not there. Since that
-hour even the daily services have been suspended, while we sought for
-her. In the garden we found footprints,—those of a woman, and of a man.
-Perchance they were hers—yet—”
-
-“It is a lie! That is a lie!” burst from Eleanore’s white lips. “Woman,
-woman, unsay thy words! No man hath ever seen her,—my Laure!”
-
-“I said it not, Madame Eleanore; I but said mayhap,” ventured the gentle
-sister, timidly. But Eleanore did not hear her. White, rigid, her every
-muscle drawn tense, she stood there staring before her into space; while
-Alixe, feeling this scene to be too intimate even for her presence,
-glided slowly from the room.
-
-Immediately outside the closed door stood David the dwarf, moving
-restlessly from one spot to another, biting his thick lips, and working
-his heavy black brows with great nervousness. Seeing Alixe, he seized
-upon her at once.
-
-“I know what it is: Laure hath gone away, hath she not?”
-
-Alixe simply nodded.
-
-“Yea, I know it,—with that scoundrelly trouvère!”
-
-Alixe quivered as if she had been touched upon the raw; but David paid
-no attention to her movement of pain.
-
-“Come,” he jerked out nervously; “come away from this room. Come below.
-I will tell thee what I saw in the fellow.”
-
-The two of them walked silently across the broad upper hall and down the
-great staircase into the lower room, which was always deserted at this
-hour. Here Alixe and the dwarf seated themselves on tabourets at one of
-the long tables, and David began to talk. It seemed that he had watched
-Flammecœur closely, and had seen a good deal of his attentions to Laure;
-knew how he rode with her to and from the priory, guessed Laure’s all
-too apparent feeling for him, and was aware that most of the hours in
-which the troubadour had supposedly hunted, hawked, or gone to St.
-Nazaire, had really been spent in the neighborhood of the priory, though
-how much he had seen of the nun, David could not know.
-
-Alixe listened to him without much comment, and agreed in her heart with
-all that he said. But she was at a loss to comprehend her own bitterness
-of spirit at thought of what Flammecœur had done. She loved Laure truly;
-yet these sensations of hers were not for Laure, but for herself alone;
-and this girl, so acute at reading the minds of others, failed entirely
-to read her own; for had she not soundly hated Flammecœur? _Had_ she
-hated him?
-
-It was a heavy hour that these two, dwarf and peasant born, spent
-waiting for their lady to give some sign. At length, however, there were
-footsteps on the stairs, and both of them rose, as Eleanore, followed,
-not accompanied, by the white-robed nun, descended.
-
-Madame was very erect, very brilliant-eyed, very white and stiff, but
-she had perfect control over herself. As she swept toward the great
-door, David could plainly see her state, and Alixe read well her heart;
-yet neither of them could but admire her splendid self-possession. Out
-of the Castle and into the courtyard she went, the three others
-following her, on her way to the keep. In the open doorway of the rough
-stone tower, she halted; and the dozen lolling henchmen within instantly
-started to their feet.
-
-“My men,” she said, in a voice as steady and as commanding as that of a
-lord of Crépuscule, “my men, a great blow has fallen upon me, and a
-disgrace to all that dwell in this Castle. Laure, my daughter, your
-demoiselle, the lady of all our hearts, hath been stolen from the place
-of her consecration. She hath been abducted from the priory of the Holy
-Madeleine, by one that hath broken our bread, and received our
-hospitality. Bertrand Flammecœur, the troubadour, hath brought dishonor
-upon Le Crépuscule, and I ask you all to avenge your lord and me!”
-
-Here she was interrupted by a chorus begun in low murmurs of
-astonishment, and now risen to a roar of wrath. After a moment she
-raised her hand, and, in the silence that quickly ensued, began again,—
-
-“In the name of your lord, I bid you avenge us! Ride forth, every man of
-you, into the countryside, in pursuit of the flying hound. Go every man
-by a different road, nor halt by day or night till you bring me tidings
-of my child. And to him that shall find and bring her back to me, will I
-give honor and riches and great love, such as I would give to none that
-was not of noble blood. Go, nor stay to talk of it.—Go forth in the name
-of God—and bring me back my child!”
-
-The men needed no further urging to action. As she ceased to speak they
-sprang from their places, and began preparations for departure with a
-spirit that showed their devotion to madame and to Laure. Madame stayed
-in the courtyard till Sœur Celeste and the last henchman had ridden
-away; and then, when there was no more to see, she turned to Alixe, and,
-leaning heavily upon the young girl’s shoulder, slowly mounted to her
-darkening chamber and lay down upon her tapestried bed. Alixe moved
-gently about the room, bringing her lady such physical comforts as she
-could, though these were not many. Neither of them spoke, and neither
-wept. Eleanore lay motionless, staring out into the dusk. Alixe’s eyes
-closed every now and then, with a kind of deadly weariness that was not
-physical. But she did not leave madame.
-
-After a long time, when it had grown quite dark, Alixe asked suddenly,—
-
-“Wouldst have a message sent to Rennes, madame?”
-
-“To Gerault? No, it is too late. What could he do? Nay, I will not have
-the shame of his house published abroad in the Duke’s capital. Speak of
-it no more.” And, obediently, Alixe was silent.
-
-It was now long past the early supper hour, but neither of the women
-went downstairs. The thought of food did not occur to Eleanore. Alixe
-sat by the closed window, brooding deeply. Darkness had come over the
-sea, and with it clouds dispersed so that a few stars glimmered forth,
-and at times a moon showed through the ragged mists. Downstairs the
-young men and maidens had resorted to their usual evening amusements of
-games, but they played without spirit, and finally, one by one, heavy
-with unvoiced foreboding, crept off to rest. David the dwarf had not
-been among them at all to-night. Ever since the ending of supper he had
-sat outside the door of madame’s room, waiting, patiently, for some
-sound to come from within. Everything, however, was silent. From her bed
-the mother, tearless, bright-eyed, watched the broken moonlight creep
-along the floor, past the figure of Alixe. Her mind was filled with
-terrible things,—pictures of Laure, and of what the young girl was
-doubtless enduring. For a long time she contained herself under these
-thoughts, but finally, racked with unbearable misery, she started up,
-crying aloud,—
-
-“Alixe! Alixe! Methinks I shall go mad!”
-
-As she spoke, madame rose from the bed, stumbled across the floor, flung
-open one of the windows, and looked out upon the splendor of the
-tumbling, moonlit sea. After a moment or two she felt upon her arm a
-gentle touch, and she knew that Alixe was beside her.
-
-“Mad with thy thoughts, madame? Indeed, meseemeth Laure will not die.
-Doubtless the Sieur Trouvère loveth her—”
-
-She was interrupted by a long groan.
-
-“Madame?” she whispered, in soft deprecation.
-
-“Not die, Alixe? Not _die_? Dieu! It were now my one prayer for her that
-she might quickly die!”
-
-“Nay, what is there so terrible for her, save that she hath brought upon
-herself damnation an she die unrepentant? Wouldst thou not have her live
-to repent and be shriven?”
-
-Eleanore groaned again. “Thou art too young to understand, Alixe. Ah!
-her purity! her innocence! How she will suffer! There is no suffering
-like unto it.” Madame slipped to her knees, there by the window, and
-putting her arms upon the sill, buried her head in them, and drew two or
-three terrible breaths. Alixe, helpless, fighting to keep down her own
-secret woe in the face of this more bitter grief, felt herself useless.
-She remained perfectly still, looking out at the sea, but noting nothing
-of its beauty, till, all at once, madame began to speak again, in a
-muffled voice,—
-
-“I remember well my wedding with the Sieur du Crépuscule. I was of the
-age and of the innocence of Laure. Never was mortal so happy as I, upon
-the day of the ceremony at Laval. I loved my lord, and he had given all
-his honor into my keeping. But had the bitterness of guilt been on me
-when I was brought home to Le Crépuscule, alone and a stranger in his
-house, I know not if I could have lived through the shame and bitterness
-of my first days. Thou canst not know, Alixe; but the humiliation of
-that time is as fresh in my memory as ’twere but yesterday. Ah! leave me
-now, maiden. Leave me alone. Thou’st been good and faithful to me, but a
-mother’s grief she must bear alone. Go thou to bed, child, and, in the
-name of pity, pray for thy sister!”
-
-So she sent Alixe from the room, and made the door fast after her. After
-this she did not return to her place at the window, but began slowly to
-make ready for the night. When at length she was prepared, she wrapped
-herself closely in a warm woollen mantle, and went to her priedieu.
-Laure, from the priory, had ceased to accost Heaven. Therefore madame
-took her daughter’s place, and thence through the night ascended an
-unceasing, bitter, commanding prayer that Laure should be restored to
-her mother’s house, or else be mercifully received into the more
-accessible hereafter.
-
-When morning dawned, her great bed had not been slept in, but throughout
-that day Eleanore sought no rest. She spent the hours passing from the
-hall to the keep and thence to the tower at the drawbridge, waiting,
-hoping, praying for tidings. During the afternoon three or four henchmen
-rode in, exhausted. But none of them had found any trace of Laure. One,
-however, who had taken the St. Nazaire road and had reached that town
-during the night, had learned that Flammecœur and his page had been
-there on the afternoon of the day they left Crépuscule. And, upon
-further search, this man found a shop where the trouvère had bought a
-lady’s mantle and hood, both black. This was all the news that could be
-got; but it was enough to prove, without the least doubt, Flammecœur’s
-guilt.
-
-Late in the afternoon Alixe went to work among the falcons, changing
-some of them from their winter-house to the open falconry in the field.
-Madame, seeing her at work, went out and watched her for a time. Alixe
-answered her few remarks with respect, but would not talk herself. The
-girl was dark-browed to-day, and very silent, and madame, perceiving
-that something troubled her, shortly left her to herself, and began to
-pace the damp turf. Hither, presently, came David, with the news that
-Monseigneur de St. Nazaire had come.
-
-With a cry of sudden relief madame hurried back to the Castle, where the
-Bishop awaited her. He was gowned as usual in his violet, with round
-black cap, and gauntlet cut to show his ring. And as she came into the
-great hall, he advanced to her with both hands outstretched and a look
-of trouble in his clear eyes.
-
-“Eleanore, for the first time in many years I come to you in sorrow, to
-bring to you what comfort the Church can give,” he said gently, fixing
-his eyes upon her to read how she had taken her blow, and from it decide
-what his attitude toward her should be. For St. Nazaire had a great and
-affectionate respect for Eleanore, and he was accustomed to treat her
-with a consideration that he used toward no other woman. It was for this
-that he had come to her in her grief, at the first moment that he heard
-the news of Laure’s flight.
-
-“Come thou into this room, where we can be alone,” she said quickly,
-leading him into the round armory that opened off the great hall
-immediately opposite the chapel. Half closing the heavy door, she sat
-down on a wooden settle, motioning the Bishop to a tabouret near at
-hand.
-
-“Is there any news of her? What hast thou heard?” she asked eagerly,
-bending toward him.
-
-“I come but now from the priory, where I chanced to go to-day. This
-morning the girl Eloise, a lay sister, she that was accustomed to ride
-hither from the priory with Laure, confessed to many rides and
-love-passages between herself and Yvain the young squire, while Bertrand
-Flammecœur followed Laure.”
-
-Madame drew a sharp breath, and the Bishop continued: “The girl is now
-under heavy penance; yet is she a silly thing, and in my heart I find no
-great blame for her.”
-
-“Then there hath been no word—no news—of Laure? Left she no token in her
-cell?”
-
-“Nothing, Eleanore, nothing.”
-
-“Ah, St. Nazaire! St. Nazaire! how did we that cruel thing? How took we
-away from a young girl all her freedom, all her youth, all her love of
-life? Know I not enough of the woe of loneliness, that I should have
-sent her forth into that living death? Alas! alas! I am all to blame.”
-
-“Not wholly thou, madame. Perhaps the Church also,” said the Bishop,
-softly.
-
-Eleanore looked at him in something of amazement. It was the first time
-that he had ever suggested any criticism of the Church. But after these
-words had escaped him, the Bishop paused for a little and fixed upon
-Eleanore a look that she read aright. It told her many things that she
-had guessed before, many unuttered things that had drawn her closely to
-St. Nazaire; but it told her also that these things must never be
-discussed between them; that never again would the man be guilty of so
-heretical an utterance as that which he had just voiced.
-
-After this he began to speak again, still in the same tone of sympathy,
-but with a subtle difference in the general tenor of his views. He told
-her, in a manner eloquent with simplicity, of his talk with Laure on the
-eve of her consecration. He reminded Eleanore that Laure had entered of
-her own free will upon the life of a nun. He recalled the girl’s
-contentment throughout the period of her novitiate; and finally, seeing
-that he had succeeded in obliterating some of the self-reproach in this
-woman to whom he was so sincerely attached, he began to prepare her for
-the blow that he was about to deal, to tell her what words could not
-soften, to inflict a wound that time could not heal, but which,
-according to the law of the Roman Catholic Church, he was bound to
-administer.
-
-Eleanore listened to his plausibly logical phrases with close attention.
-She sat there before him, elbow on knee, her head resting on her hand,
-her eyes wandering over the armor-strewn walls. The Bishop talked around
-his subject, circling ever a little nearer to its climax; but he was
-still far from the end when madame, suddenly straightening up and
-looking full into his eyes, interrupted him to ask baldly: “Monseigneur,
-hast thou never, in thy heart, known the yearning for a woman’s love?”
-
-“Many a time and oft, madame, I have _felt_ love—a deeply reverent
-love—for woman; and I have rejoiced therein, and given thanks to God,”
-was the careful reply.
-
-But Eleanore had begun her attack, and she would not be repulsed in the
-first onslaught. “And has no woman, Reverend Father, known thy love?”
-she demanded.
-
-“Madame!” A pale flush overspread St. Nazaire’s face. “That question is
-not—kind,” he said haltingly, but without rebuke.
-
-“Nay. I am not kind now. Make me answer.”
-
-St. Nazaire looked at her thoughtfully, and weighed certain things in
-certain balances. Because of many years of the confessional and also of
-free confidence he knew Eleanore thoroughly,—knew how she had suffered
-every soul-torment; knew her unswerving virtue; sympathized with her
-intense loneliness. He prized her trust in him more than she was aware,
-and he feared to jeopardize that confidence now by whatever answer he
-should make. Ignorant of the purport of her questions, he yet saw that
-she was in terrible earnest in them. So finally he did the honest and
-straightforward thing. Answering her look, eye for eye, he said slowly:
-“Yea, Eleanore of Le Crépuscule, a woman hath known my love. What then?”
-
-“Then if thou, a good man and as strong as any the Church ever knew,
-found that to human nature a loveless life is an impossibility, how
-shouldst thou blame a maid, high-strung, full of youth, vitality,
-emotions that she has not tried, for yielding to the same temptation
-before which thou didst fall? How is it right that the Church—that
-God—should demand so much?—should ask more than His creatures can give?”
-
-“Eleanore! Eleanore! thou shalt not question God!”
-
-“I do not question Him. It is—it is—” untried in this exercise, she
-groped for words. “It is what ye say He saith. It is what ye declare His
-will to be that I question.”
-
-“What, Eleanore, have I declared His will to be? Have I yet blamed or
-chid the waywardness of Laure, whom indeed I loved as a dear daughter,—a
-child of purity and faith?”
-
-“Then, then,” Eleanore bent over eagerly, and her voice shook,—“then, an
-_thou_ blamest her not, St. Nazaire, thou wilt not—” she clasped her
-hands in an agony of pleading, “thou wilt not put upon her the terrible
-ban? Thou wilt not excommunicate her?”
-
-It was only then that the Bishop realized how skilfully she had led up
-to her point. He had not realized that he was dealing with perception
-engendered by an agony of grief and fear. As she reached her climax, he
-sprang to his feet, and began to pace the room, hands clasped behind
-him, brows much contracted, head far bent upon his breast. Eleanore,
-meantime, had slid to her knees and watched him as he moved.
-
-“If thou wilt spare her, ask what thou wilt of me. I will do her
-penance, whatever thou shalt decree. I will give money; I will give all
-that remains to me of my dower, freely and with light heart, to the
-Church. I will aid whomsoever thou wilt of thy poor, I—”
-
-“Cease, Eleanore! These things cannot avail against the Church. Thou
-must not tempt, thou must not question; thou canst not understand _the
-Law_! I am but an instrument of that Law, and am commanded by it. Laure,
-the bride of Heaven, hath forsaken her chosen life. She must endure her
-punishment, being guilty of—thou knowest the sin. Next Sunday the ban
-must be put upon her. In doing so, I but obey a higher power. Eleanore,
-Eleanore, rise from thy knees! Thou art tearing at my heart! Peace,
-woman! Peace, and let me go!”
-
-Eleanore, in her agony of despair, had crept to him and clasped his
-knees, mutely imploring the pity that he dared not show. Logic and
-reason he had put from him, holding fast to the tenets of that Church
-that had made him what he was. In all his career he had not been so
-tried, so tempted, to slip his duty. But, through the crucial moment, he
-did not speak; and after that he was safe from attack.
-
-After many minutes the mother loosed her clasp of him, and ceased to
-moan, and let him go; for she saw that he could not help her. And as he
-passed slowly out of the room, she rose to her feet and looked after him
-blindly. Then she groped her way to the door, crossed the great hall,
-and, with her burden, ascended the stairs and went to her own room. Next
-morning, when the Bishop said mass in the chapel, madame, for the first
-time in thirty years on such an occasion, was not present. Nor did
-monseigneur seem astonished at the fact, but left his sympathy for her
-before he rode away to St. Nazaire.
-
-All that afternoon and night, indeed, till after dawn of the next day,
-weary henchmen of the keep came straggling in on spent horses, fruitless
-returned from a fruitless quest. And when they were all back again, and
-the hope of seeing Laure was gone, the shadow of loneliness settled a
-little lower over the great pile of stone, and the silence within the
-Castle grew more and more intense to the aching heart within.
-
-In the general desolation of Castle life Alixe, the unnatural child of
-peasant blood, came very close to the heart of Eleanore. Through the
-long, budding spring madame fought a terrible battle with herself
-against an overpowering desire for an end of life, for the peace of
-death. And in these times Alixe often drew her away from herself by
-getting her to hunt and to hawk,—two amusements in which madame had been
-wont to indulge eagerly in her youth, and which she found were still
-possible for her, though she had grown to what she thought
-old-womanhood. Besides this, she and Alixe took the long walks that
-Laure had formerly delighted in; and the two ventured into many a deep
-cave in the sea-cliffs, and explored many crevices that no native of the
-coast would enter. In these places they found fair treasures of the sea,
-but were never accosted by any of the supernatural beings said to
-inhabit such spots. Nor, though they listened many times for it at
-twilight, did either of them hear, a single time, the long, low, wailing
-cries of the spirit of the lost Lenore.
-
-In this way some pleasures entered unawares into the life of Eleanore.
-Perhaps there were other pleasures also, so simple and so familiar that
-she took no cognizance of them as such. Perhaps of a morning, in the
-spinning-room, when her fingers flew under some familiar, pretty task,
-and her ears were filled with the chatter of the demoiselles, who still
-strove after light-hearted joys amid their gray surroundings, she found
-forgetfulness of Laure’s bitter disgrace. Or better still, when, at the
-sunset hour, she paced the grassy falcon-field, watching the glories of
-the sea and sky, there came to her heart that benison of Nature that God
-has devised for all of us in our days of woe. But when she was alone, in
-early afternoon, or, most of all, through the silent night-watches, she
-was sometimes overcome with sheer terror of herself and of her solitude.
-At such times she fought the creeping horror with what weapons time had
-given her, battling so bravely that she never suffered utter rout.
-
-In a dim, quiet way the weeks sped on, leaving behind them no trace of
-what had been, nothing for memory to hang her lightest fabric on. In all
-the weeks that lay between Laure’s flight and the coming of July,
-Eleanore could remember distinctly just one talk beside the bitter one
-with St. Nazaire. And this other was with neither Alixe nor the Bishop,
-who, however, made it a point to come once in a fortnight to Le
-Crépuscule.
-
-On a fair morning in May, as the dawn crept up out of the east not many
-hours after midnight, Eleanore rose, in the early flush, and, clothing
-herself lightly, left her room with the intention of going into the
-fields to walk. No one was to be seen as she entered the lower hall;
-but, to her amazement, the great door stood half open, and through it
-poured a draught of morning air, rich with the perfume of blossoming
-trees and fertile fields. Wondering that Alixe should have risen so
-early, Eleanore left the Castle and hurried out of the courtyard into
-the strip of meadow lying between the wall and the dry moat. Here, near
-the north edge of the cliff, sitting cross-legged in the grass, sat
-David the dwarf, holding in his hand something to which he talked in a
-low, solemn tone. Advancing noiselessly toward him, Eleanore perceived
-that it was a dead butterfly that he had found, and to which he was
-pouring out his soul. Amazed at the first phrases that caught her ears,
-she halted a few steps behind him, and there learned something of the
-thoughts that lay hidden in his volatile brain.
-
-“White Butterfly, White Butterfly, thou frail and delicate child of
-summer, speak to me again! Say, hast thou found death as fair as life,
-thou White and Still? Came the messenger to thee unawares, or didst thou
-see his face and know it? Wast thou confessed, White Butterfly? Wentest
-thou forth absolved of all thy fluttering sins?
-
-“Say, wanderer, didst love thy life? Wast afraid or sorrowful to leave
-it, in its dawn? Or foundest thou comfort in the thought of eternal rest
-for thy battling wings?
-
-“And I, O living Thistledown, teach me my way! Shall I follow thee into
-the great world, to roam there seeking why men love to live? Or shall I
-also, like thee, leave it all? Shall I go, knowing nothing of the joy of
-life? Or, again, shall I practise a weary courtesy, and remain to bring
-echoes of laughter into that Twilight Castle, for the sake of the love I
-bear its Twilight Lady? Her life, my flutterer, hath been such a dream
-of tears as even thou and I, dead thing, have never known. Yea, many a
-time while I laughed and shouted at the light crew of damsels that sleep
-there now, my heart hath bled for her. O Ghost of the Morning, know you
-what Eleanore, our lady, thinks of me, the fool? And yet, yet I do so
-deeply pity her—”
-
-“Thou pityest me, David?” echoed Eleanore, advancing till she stood
-before him, forgetful of how her appearance must startle him.
-
-David looked up at her, winking slowly, like one that would bring
-himself out of a dream-world into reality. “Lady of Twilight, thou’rt a
-woman, lonely and mournful, forsaken of thy children. Therefore I grieve
-for thee,” he said slowly, gazing at her with his big eyes, but not
-rising from where he sat.
-
-“A woman,” said Eleanore, looking at him with a half-smile, and echoing
-his tone,—“a woman doubtless is always to be pitied; and yet what man
-deems it so? Master David, ye are all born of women, and ye are all
-reared by them. Afterwards, in youth, ye wed, use us as your playthings
-for an hour, and then leave us in your gray dwellings, while ye fare
-forth to more manly sports and exploits. There in solitude we bear and
-rear again, and later our maidens wed and our sons depart from us, and
-for the last time, in our age, we are left alone to die. Truly, David,
-thou mayest well pity!”
-
-David’s wide mouth curved in a bitter smile.
-
-“Even so, Madame Eleanore. And now, for fifteen years, I have lived as a
-woman lives. Mayhap by now I know her life better than other men—if,
-indeed, I am a man, being but little taller than the animals. And all
-these things said I to my dead friend here in my hand.”
-
-“’Tis now fifteen years since thou camest with my lord to Crépuscule?”
-
-“Ay, fifteen. I was then a boy of about such age. Fifteen years in Le
-Crépuscule by the sea! It is a lifetime.”
-
-Madame sighed. Then her face brightened again as she looked down at the
-dwarf. “What was the life of thy youth, David? ’Tis a tale I have never
-heard.”
-
-“’Tis but a little tale. Like my dead butterfly, I wandered. I come of a
-race of dwarfs,—all straight-backed, know you, and not ill to look upon.
-My father was a mountebank. My mother, who measured greater than was
-customary among us, cooked and sewed and travelled with us whithersoever
-we went in our wagon. When I was young,—at the age of five or
-thereabouts,—I began to assist my father in his entertainments. When I
-was fifteen we were in Rennes for the jousting season, and there thy
-lord saw me, bought me, and brought me back to you, lady, to be your
-merry jester. But indeed my laughter hath run low, of late. Long years I
-have bravely jested through; but now the Twilight spell is creeping over
-me, and merriment rises no more in my heart. Indeed, I question if I
-should not beg leave of thee to go forth into the world again for a
-little time, to learn once more the song of joy. Yet when thou art near,
-and I look out upon the sea, and behold the sun lifting his glory out of
-the eastern hills, I ever think I cannot go,—I cannot leave this gentle
-home of melancholy.”
-
-“Thou art free, David, if freedom is mine to bestow upon thee. Indeed, I
-could not ask that any one remain in this sad and quiet place, of any
-than his own will. Go thou forth into the world! Go forth to joy and
-life and laughter. Fill thy little heart again with jests. Forget the
-brooding silence of Le Crépuscule, and laugh through the broad world to
-thy heart’s content. Yet we shall miss thee sorely, little man.”
-
-Madame stopped speaking, and there was a pause. David seemed to have no
-response to make to her words. Instead he bent over the earth, digging a
-little hole in the sod. Into this he laid the dead form of his white
-butterfly. When he had covered it from sight with the black earth, and
-patted a little earthen mound over it, he rose to his feet with an
-exaggerated sigh.
-
-“So I bury my friend—and my freedom. My desire is dead, Madame Eleanore,
-with my freedom. I will remain here among you women-folk, and keep you
-sad company or merry as you demand. Look! The rim of the sun is pushing
-over the line of the distant trees!”
-
-“Yea, it is there—far away—in the land where Laure may be, deserted,
-mayhap, and a wanderer, cast out from every dwelling that she enters!”
-
-Eleanore whispered these words, more to herself than to David. They were
-an expression of her eternal thought. The dwarf heard them, and sought
-some comfort for her. But her expression forbade comfort; and, in the
-end, he did not speak at all. The two of them stood side by side and
-watched the sun come up the heavens. Presently the Castle awoke, and
-shortly Alixe came out to the field to feed the young _niais_ and the
-mother-birds in the falcon-nests. So Eleanore, when she had given the
-young girl greeting, returned to her solitude in the Castle, finding her
-heart in some part relieved of its immediate burden.
-
-One by one the lengthening days passed. June came into the world, and
-palpitated, and glowed with glory and fire, and then died. During this
-time not a word had come from distant Rennes to tell the Lady of
-Crépuscule how Gerault fared. The midsummer month came in, and the young
-men and maidens of the Castle grew gay with the heat, and made riotous
-expenditure of the riches of Nature. That year the whole earth seemed a
-tangle of flowers and rich meadow-grass, with which young demoiselles
-played havoc, while the squires and henchmen hawked and hunted and drank
-deep. These days stirred Eleanore’s heart once more to love of life, and
-woke the sleeping soul of Alixe to strange fits of passionate yearning
-after unattainable ideals. The living earth brought fire to every soul,
-and the pinched melancholy of winter was dead and forgotten.
-
-On the night of the seventh of July the Castle sat unusually late at
-meat, for the Bishop had arrived unexpectedly, and, being in a merry
-mood, deigned to entertain the whole Castle with tales and jests. Just
-in the middle of a story of Church militant in the war of the three
-Jeannes, there came the grating noise of the lowering drawbridge, a
-faint echo of shouts from the men-at-arms in the watch-tower, and the
-clatter of swift hoofs over the courtyard stones. Half a dozen henchmen
-ran to open the great door, while Eleanore rose with difficulty to her
-feet. Her heart had suddenly come into her throat, and she had turned
-deathly white with an unexpressed hope and an inarticulate fear. There
-was a little pause. The new-comer was dismounting. Then, after what had
-seemed a year of waiting, Courtoise walked into the hall, advanced to
-his liege lady, and bent the knee.
-
-“Courtoise!” gasped Eleanore, faintly. “Courtoise—thy message!”
-
-“Madame,” he cried, “I bring joyful tidings from my lord! He sends thee
-health, greeting, and duty, and prays you to prepare the Castle for a
-great feast; for in a week’s time he brings home his bride from Rennes!”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER SIX_
- A LOVE-STRAIN
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Late that night, when the little throng below had been as nearly
-satisfied with information concerning the great event as three poor
-hours of steady talking from Courtoise could make them, Eleanore sat in
-her own room alone with the messenger, there to learn those intimate
-details of Gerault’s wooing, that none but her had right to know. She
-questioned Courtoise eagerly, earnestly, repeatedly, with such yearning
-in her eyes that the young squire’s heart smote him to see what her
-loneliness had been.
-
-“Tell me again, Courtoise, yet once again! She is fair, this maid?”
-
-“As fair as a rose, madame; her skin composed of pink and white, so
-cunningly mingled that none can judge which hath most play upon it. And
-her eyes are blue like a midsummer sky; and she hath clouds of hair that
-glisten like meshes of sun-threads, crowning her.”
-
-“And she is small and delicately formed?”
-
-“She is slender and fragile; yet is she in no way sickly of body.”
-
-“And her name,” went on madame, musingly, “is Lenore! Is that not a
-strange thing, Courtoise? Is’t not strange that a second time this name
-should have entered so deeply into the life of thy lord? Was he glad
-that it so chanced, Courtoise; or did he hesitate to pronounce it
-again?”
-
-“I know not if it troubled him at first, madame. But this I know: that
-he is happy in her.”
-
-“Then the dear God be thanked! I ask no more. Ah! It seems that at last
-I can pray again with an open heart. ’Twill be the first time
-since—since—” Suddenly Eleanore began to tremble. “Courtoise,” she
-whispered, pale with dread, “hath thy lord heard—of—of Laure’s flight?”
-
-Courtoise bent his head, answering in a strained voice: “My lord had
-news of—of the flight late in the month of March. Monseigneur de St.
-Nazaire sent us the word of it, and for many weeks my lord hunted the
-country over for a trace of her. And when he found her not, nor any word
-of her, he forbore, in his grief, to write to thee, dear lady, lest he
-should cause thy tears to flow again.”
-
-“I thank the good God that he knows!” murmured Eleanore. “It had been
-more than I could bear that Gerault should come home to find his wedding
-feast blackened with a new-learned shame.”
-
-“Yea, Lady Eleanore.”
-
-“And so now, Courtoise, go thou to thy rest; for I have kept thee long,
-and thou’rt very weary. And on the morrow there must be a beginning of
-making the Castle bravely gay for the home-coming of its lord and its
-bride. Likewise, on the morrow thou must tell me more of the young
-Lenore, my daughter.”
-
-Courtoise smiled wearily, and then, with proper obeisance, hurried off
-to his own room, a little triangular closet opening into Gerault’s old
-bedroom on the first floor. When the squire was gone, his liege lady
-also laid her down; and for the first time in many months sank easily to
-sleep. For happiness is the best of doctors, and this that had come to
-her was a greater happiness than Eleanore had thought ever to know
-again.
-
-Through the next week the very dogs about the Castle caught the air of
-bustle and eager life that had laid hold of it. Never, since the days of
-the old lord and his crews of drinking barons, had Le Crépuscule shown
-such symptoms of gayety. Every scullion scampered about his pots and
-kettles as if an army of Brittany depended on him for nourishment. The
-henchmen hurried about, polishing their armor and their steel trappings
-till the keep glittered as with many mirrors, and they broke off from
-this labor now and then to see that the stable-boys were at work on the
-proper horses or to dissolve into thunderous roars of laughter at a
-neighbor’s jest. The young demoiselles were giddy with excitement. They
-pricked their fingers with spindles, they broke innumerable threads on
-the wheels, they stopped the loom to dance or sing in the middle of the
-morning; and while they were arranging the rooms where the train of the
-young bride were to lodge, they gossiped so ardently over possible
-future gayeties that their very tongues were like to drop off with
-weariness. As for the squires, all five of them, headed by Courtoise,
-were to ride out to Croitôt on the Rennes road, as an additional escort
-for Seigneur Gerault. And the parade they made over this matter was more
-than Montfort had for his coronation at Rennes when the great war ended.
-
-There were, however, three silent workers in the Castle who did more
-than all the rest together; and they were silent only because their
-hearts were too full for speech. These were madame, Alixe, and David the
-dwarf. While the little man worked at the decoration of the chapel, the
-women adorned the bridal chamber; and in all that week of preparation,
-not a soul save these two set foot over that sacred threshold. Madame
-had selected the room. It was not Gerault’s usual chamber, but one on
-the second floor, on the northwest corner of the Castle, separated from
-madame’s room only by the place in which Laure had slept of old, and
-which madame now kept closed to all save herself.
-
-For the adornment of Gerault’s and Lenore’s apartment, madame brought
-out the old historic tapestries, embroideries, and precious silken
-hangings that had been for years stowed away in great chests in the
-spinning-room. The bed was hung with curtains in which were woven
-illustrations of the “Romant of the Rose,” a poem that had once been
-much recited in Le Crépuscule. On the walls were great squares of
-tapestry representing the battles of the family of Montfort. On the
-floor were two or three strips of precious brocade, brought out of the
-East a century before by some crusading lord. Finished, the room looked
-very rich, but very sombre; and, this being the fashion of the times, it
-was satisfactory to all that saw it. Eleanore only, with eyes new-opened
-by the thought of approaching happiness, feared the room a little dark,
-a little heavy for the reception of so delicate a creature as the young
-Lenore. But every one else in the Castle was in such delight over its
-appearance that she left it as it was. Meantime the lower hall was hung
-with banners and scarred pennants and gay streamers; and then the
-pillars were wreathed with greenery and flowers till the still, gray
-place was all transformed, and resembled a triumphal hall awaiting the
-coming of a conqueror.
-
-Thus the week of waiting passed merrily and rapidly away, and the day of
-the departure of Courtoise and the squires for Croitôt speedily arrived.
-With them also went a picked half-dozen men-at-arms, who were bursting
-with pride at this honor done their brilliant steel and smooth-flanked
-horses. After their going, when everything in the Castle was in
-readiness for the reception, a little wave of reaction set in among
-those left at home. Eleanore retired to commune with her own happy mind.
-David sought solitude in which to arrange a programme of welcome. And
-Alixe, seized with a sudden mood of misery, fled away to a certain cave
-in the base of the Castle cliff, and here wept and raged by herself, for
-some undefined reason, till her tears cleared the mists from her soul,
-and she was herself again. Still, as she returned to the Castle, she
-knew that there remained a bitterness in her heart. Eleanore, who had
-long ago come to mean mother to her, had, in the last month or two, for
-the first time given her almost a mother-love, that had fed Alixe’s
-hungry heart as the body of the Lord had never fed her soul. And now
-this love was to be taken away again. A real daughter was coming into
-the household, a daughter by the marriage of the Seigneur; and this,
-Alixe knew, must be a closer tie than any of time or custom. She must go
-back to her old place, the place she had held in the days of Laure; but
-she could never hope to find in the stranger the beautiful friendship
-that had existed between her and her foster-sister.
-
-That evening was a quiet one in the Castle. Monseigneur of St. Nazaire
-had arrived in the afternoon; but he seemed wearier than his wont, and,
-out of consideration for him, Eleanore ordered the general retirement at
-an early hour.
-
-The next day, the great day, dawned over Le Crépuscule, red and clear
-and intensely hot. Every one was up before the sun; and when fast had
-been broken and prayer said in the chapel, every one went forth to the
-meadow, some even down to the moor, half a mile below the moat, to
-gather flowers to be scattered in the courtyard for the coming of the
-bride. The party was expected to arrive by noon at latest; and, as the
-morning waned, Eleanore found herself uncontrollably nervous. Alixe and
-David both stood in the watch-tower, looking for the first sign of
-horses and banners on the edge of the forest at the foot of the long
-hill. Noon passed, and the earliest hour of afternoon, and the Castle
-was on tiptoe with excitement. At two o’clock came a cry from Alixe, in
-the tower. Down the hill, round the sweep in the road, was the flutter
-of a blue and white pennant, presently flanked by a longer one of gray.
-There was a pause of two or three moments. Then the trumpeters dashed
-out from the keep, ranged up before their captain, and blew a quick,
-triumphal, if somewhat jerky, fanfare. There was an outpouring of
-retainers into the courtyard, and presently, from far away, came the
-faint sounds of an answering blast from Gerault’s heralds. As this died
-away, a great shout of excitement and delight arose from the waiting
-company, now massed about the flower-strewn drawbridge, and only at this
-time Madame Eleanore came out of the Castle.
-
-Many eyes were turned upon her as she crossed the courtyard, bearing
-herself as royally as a princess. She was garbed in flowing robes of
-damask, white, and olive green, silver-studded, and her head was dressed
-in those great horns so much in fashion at this time, but seldom
-affected by her, and now lending an unrivalled majesty to her
-appearance.
-
-Madame took her place at the right of the drawbridge, and, like all the
-throng, strained her eyes toward the approaching cavalcade that
-contained the future of Le Crépuscule. Apparently madame was very calm.
-In reality her heart beat so that it was like to suffocate her, for now
-Gerault’s form took on distinct shape before her eyes. The sun shot
-serpents of light around his helmet and his steel-encased arms, while
-over his body-pieces he wore the silken surcoat of pale gray,
-embroidered with the arms of his Castle. Gerault’s lance, held in rest,
-fluttered a pennant of azure and white, the colors of his lady; and
-Courtoise, who rode just behind his master, carried the gray streamer of
-Le Crépuscule.
-
-Amid a tumult of blaring trumpets, vigorous shouting, and eager choruses
-of welcome and greeting, the Lord of Crépuscule, with his bride on her
-white palfrey beside him, rode across the drawbridge of the Twilight
-Castle. Just inside the courtyard Gerault halted, leaped from his horse,
-and ran quickly to embrace his mother. When he had held her for a moment
-in his arms, he turned, lifted his lady from her horse, and, amid an
-embarrassing silence of curiosity, led the young girl up to madame.
-
-“In the name of Le Crépuscule and of its lord, I bid thee welcome to
-this Castle, my daughter! Good people, give greeting to your lady!”
-
-Men and maidens, serving-maids and henchmen, still gazing wide-eyed at
-the figure of the Seigneur’s wife, sent forth an inarticulate buzz of
-welcome and of admiration; and, when it had died away, Gerault took his
-bride by the hand, and, with Eleanore upon the other side, moved slowly
-across the courtyard toward the Castle doorway, where now stood the
-Bishop of St. Nazaire, waiting to add his welcome to the newly wed. Nor
-did the Bishop refrain from a little exclamation of pleasure at sight of
-the young wife, as she sank upon her knees before his mitre, to receive
-a blessing.
-
-A few moments later the whole company crowded into the brilliantly
-decorated hall and moved about, each selecting a desired place at the
-great horseshoe table ready prepared for the feast. Gerault was standing
-in the middle of the room, looking about him in surprise and pleasure at
-the preparations made to do him honor. Presently, however, he turned to
-his mother, who stood close at his elbow, and said, after a second’s
-hesitation: “I do not see Alixe, madame. Is she not here in the Castle?”
-
-Eleanore looked about her in some surprise. “Hast not seen her? Where
-hath she been? Ah, yes, there she stands, in yonder corner. Alixe!
-Hither!”
-
-“Alixe!” echoed Gerault; and strode to where she stood, half concealed,
-between the staircase and the chapel door, her head drooping, her eyes
-cast down.
-
-“Come, Alixe, and greet Lenore. She hath heard much of thee, and I would
-have you friends, for you are both young, and you must be good
-companions here together.” So he took her hand and kissed her, and led
-her out to where Eleanore and the young wife stood waiting.
-
-“Lenore, this is my foster-sister. La Rieuse have we called her, and she
-is well named. Give her greeting—” Gerault came to rather a halting
-pause; for the attitude of the two women nonplussed him.
-
-Lenore stood motionless, suddenly putting on a little dress of dignity,
-and looking steadfastly into the dark face of the other girl. Alixe,
-anything but laughing now, was absorbing, detail by detail, the delicate
-and exquisite personality of Gerault’s bride. More fairy-like than human
-she seemed, with her slender, beautifully curved child’s figure, her
-face neither white nor pink, but of a transparent, pearly tint
-indescribably ethereal, in which were set great eyes of violet hue, and
-all around which floated her hair,—that wonderful hair that was, indeed,
-a captive sun-ray. The curve of Lenore’s lips, the turn of her nostril,
-the poise of her head, and the delicacy of her hands and feet, all
-proclaimed her noble birth. The dress that she wore set off her beauty
-as pure gold makes a gem more brilliant. She wore a loosely fitting
-bliault of greenish blue, embroidered in long, silver vines, while her
-undersleeves and yoke were of frosty cloth of silver. Her head was
-crowned with a simple circlet of gold, far less lustrous than her hair;
-and from it, at the back, fell a veil of silver tissue that touched the
-hem of her robe. All this dress was disordered and dusty with long
-riding; but the carelessness of it seemed to become her the better. In
-the rich heat of the July sun she had seemed a little too colorless, a
-little too pale and misty, for beauty; but here, in the cool shadows of
-the great stone hall, she was brighter than any angel.
-
-Alixe examined her long and carefully, to the confusion of the girl,
-whose feeling of strangeness and embarrassment continually increased. In
-the face of “La Rieuse” it was easy to read the struggle between
-jealousy and admiration. Alixe was, secretly, a worshipper of beauty;
-and beauty such as this of Lenore’s she had never seen before. In the
-end it triumphed. Alixe’s eyes grew brighter and brighter as she gazed;
-and presently, when the strain of silence was not much longer to be
-endured, there burst from her the involuntary exclamation,—
-
-“God of dreams! How art thou fair!”
-
-And from that moment the allegiance of Alixe was fixed. She was on her
-knees to Lenore, this fair usurper of her place, this Gerault’s bride.
-
-Presently the moving company resolved itself into order, and each sought
-his place at the table, where the Seigneur and St. Nazaire now stood
-side by side, at the head, with Lenore upon Gerault’s left hand, madame
-on St. Nazaire’s right, and Alixe next madame and opposite Courtoise,
-who was placed beside the bride. There was a long Latin grace from the
-Bishop, and then the feast began. It was like all the feasts of the day,
-a matter of stuffing till one could hold no more, and then of drinking
-till one knew no more; for, to the commoner folk, and those below the
-salt, this was the greatest pleasure in life. To those for whom the
-feast was given, and to the rest of the little group at the head of the
-table, the whole business was sufficiently tedious: not to say, however,
-that monseigneur and even Gerault showed no symptoms of fondness for a
-morsel of peacock’s breast, or a calf’s head stuffed with the brains,
-pounded suet, and raisins, over which was poured a good brown gravy.
-Courtoise and Alixe also displayed healthy appetites. But madame and
-Lenore, whether from excitement or other causes, sat for the most part
-playing with what was put before them, and eating nothing.
-
-After half an hour at the table Madame Eleanore found herself watching,
-with rather unexpected interest, the attitude of Gerault toward his
-wife. And she perceived, with a kind of dull surprise, that his
-attentions savored of perfunctoriness. The Seigneur failed in no way to
-do his lady courtesy; but that air of tender delight that the
-personality of the young girl would be expected to draw from a young
-husband, was not there. Whatever impression of indifference madame
-received, however, she admitted no such thing to herself. Her heart was
-too full of joy for Gerault, and for Le Crépuscule. For, great as had
-been her hopes of her son’s choice, her dreams had never pictured a
-being so rare and so lovely as this who was come to dwell at her side in
-the gray and ancient Castle.
-
-As for Lenore herself, she seemed to see nothing but devotion in
-Gerault’s attitude toward her. She sat with a smile upon her face,
-playing daintily with what she had to eat, answering any question or
-remark put to her with a straightforwardness that had in it no taint of
-self-consciousness, even addressing a sentence or two of her own to
-Courtoise on her right; but at the same time holding all heart and soul
-for Gerault. The Seigneur did not speak much with his wife, but answered
-her modest glances with an air of mild indulgence, taking small notice
-of anything that went on round him save the keen looks now and then shot
-from the scintillating green eyes of Alixe. Of all the tableful, Alixe
-was the only one that found any food for thought in the situation before
-her; and, surprisingly enough, the key to her reflections lay in the
-curious behavior of Courtoise, who, as time went on, became so uneasy,
-so fidgety, so restless, that Gerault finally leaned over the table and
-asked him rather sharply if he were ill.
-
-In the course of time, however, the last jack was emptied, the last song
-sung, the last questionable story told. Monseigneur de St. Nazaire rose
-and repeated the ending grace, and then the whole drowsy, witless
-company followed him into the glowing chapel, where a short mass was
-performed. Lenore and Gerault knelt side by side to the right of the
-altar, with Eleanore a little behind them, where she could watch the
-bright candle-rays vie with the radiance of Lenore’s golden hair, and
-see where the silvery bridal robe overlapped a little the edge of the
-gray surcoat of Le Crépuscule, that swept the floor beside it. The
-mother-eyes were all for the girlish form of the new daughter; and her
-heart went out again to Gerault, who had brought this fairy creature to
-Le Crépuscule, in place of her who had been so terribly mourned.
-
-Lenore listened to the repetition of the mass with a reverent air, but
-without much thinking of the familiar form. Her mind was busy with
-thoughts of these new surroundings and the faces of the new vassals and
-companions. Gerault, her beloved, was at her side; the great silver
-crucifix that hung over the altar gave her a sense of comfort and
-protection, and she found a restful pleasure in the tones of the
-Bishop’s voice. The bright candle-light that shone into her eyes
-produced in her a semi-hypnotic state, and she seemed to have knelt
-there at the altar but three or four minutes when the words of the
-benediction fell upon her ears, and presently the whole company was
-trooping out into the great hall, whence all signs of the feast had been
-removed.
-
-In the same dreamlike way, Lenore went with her husband and madame
-upstairs, to the room that had been prepared for her and Gerault. Here
-her two demoiselles were already unpacking the coffer which had come
-from Rennes with them. And here she removed her travel-stained garments,
-bathed the dust from her face and arms, was combed and perfumed like the
-great lady she had become, and lay down to rest for a little time in the
-twilight, with new ministers to her comfort all about her. Later, as it
-grew dark, she dressed again and descended to the great hall, where
-further merriment was in progress.
-
-The demoiselles and squires of the Castle were now holding high revel,
-and their games caused the old stone walls to echo with laughter and
-shrieks of delight. In one corner of the room madame and the Bishop sat
-together over a game of chess. Gerault was near them, where he could
-watch the battle; but his eyes were often to be seen following the light
-figure of Lenore through the mazes of the dances and games in which she
-so eagerly joined. The sports in which these maidens and young men grown
-indulged, were commonly played by older folk throughout France, and have
-descended almost intact to the children of a more advanced and less
-light-hearted age. Lenore entered into the play with a pleasure too
-unconscious not to be genuine. She laughed and sang and chattered, and
-put herself at home with every one. She was soon the leading spirit of
-the company, as she had been wont to be in her own home. The games were
-innumerable: _Pantouffle_, _Pince-Mérille_, _Bric_, _Qui Féry_, _Le Roi
-qui ne Ment pas_, and a dozen others. And were there a forfeit to be
-paid in the shape of a kiss, she instantly deserted Courtoise and David,
-who, enraptured with her youth and gayety, kept close on either side of
-her, and delivered it with shy delight to Gerault, who scarcely appeared
-to appreciate the gifts he got.
-
-In the course of time a “Ribbon Dance” was ordered, and madame and
-monseigneur actually left their game to lead it, drawing Gerault with
-them into the sport. Obediently he gave one hand to Lenore, the other to
-Alixe, and went through the dance with apathetic grace, bringing by his
-half unconscious manner the first chill upon Lenore’s happy evening.
-This was, however, the end of the amusement; and when the flushed and
-panting company finally halted, Gerault at once drew his wife to
-madame’s side, himself saluted his mother, and then followed Lenore up
-the torchlit stairs. In ten minutes the whole company had dispersed, and
-Eleanore remained alone in the great hall.
-
-When she had extinguished all the lights below, madame passed up the
-stairs, putting out the smoking torches as she went, and, reaching the
-upper hall, went immediately to her own bedroom. Here she slipped off
-the heavy mantle and the modified “cote-hardi.” Then, clad only in a
-long, light, damask tunic, she went over to one of the wide-open west
-windows, and, leaning across its sill, looked out upon the vasty,
-murmurous, summer sea. Low on the horizon, among a group of faint
-clustering stars, swung the crescent moon, which was reflected in the
-smooth surface of a distant wave. A great, fresh, salt breath came up
-like a tonic through the wilted air. The voice of the sea was infinitely
-soothing. Eleanore listened to it eagerly, her lips parted, her eyes
-wandering along that distant wave-line; her thoughts almost as far away.
-Presently the door of her room opened, softly; and some one paused upon
-the threshold. Instinctively she knew who it was that entered. Half
-turning, she said gently,—
-
-“Thou’rt come here, Gerault?”
-
-Her son came forward slowly, halted a few steps away, and held out one
-hand to her. She went to him and took it, wondering a little at his
-manner, but not questioning him. Quietly she drew the young man to the
-window where she had been; and both stood there and looked out upon the
-scene. They were silent for a long time. It was intensely difficult for
-Gerault to speak; and madame knew not how to help him. At length, in a
-voice that sounded slightly strained, he asked: “Thou’rt pleased with
-her? Thou’rt satisfied, my mother?”
-
-“Oh, Gerault! Gerault! She is so fair, so delicate, so like some faery
-child! I almost fear to see her beauty fade in the shadow of these gray
-walls.”
-
-“And will she—Lenore—help thee, in a way, to forget thy grief in Laure?”
-
-Eleanore gave a sudden, involuntary sob; for none had pronounced that
-name to her since the early spring. The sob was answer enough to
-Gerault’s question. But in a moment she said, in a voice that was
-perfectly controlled: “Methinks I love her, thy lady, already. Ah, my
-son, she is very sweet! Very, very sweet and fair!”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER SEVEN_
- THE LOST LENORE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-When Gerault left her to go to his mother’s room, on that first evening
-in the Castle that was to be her home, Lenore was still fully dressed.
-As soon as she was alone, however, she made herself ready for the night;
-and then, wrapping herself about in her long day-mantle, went to a
-window overlooking the sea, and sat there waiting for her lord’s return.
-Now that the excitement of the day, of the arrival, of meeting so many
-new people, all eager to make her welcome, was over, Lenore began to
-feel herself very weary, a little homesick, a little wistful, and
-tremulously eager for Gerault’s speedy return. She clung to the thought
-of him and her newly risen love, with pathetic anxiety. Was it not
-lawful and right that she should love him? Was it not equally lawful and
-therefore equally certain that he must love her? She knew little enough
-of love and of men, young Lenore; yet this idea came to her
-instinctively, and it seemed impossible that it could be otherwise. It
-was so recently that she had been a little girl in all her thoughts and
-pleasures and habits, that this sudden transition to the dignified
-estate of wifehood had left her singularly helpless, singularly
-dependent on the man whom she had married out of duty and fallen in love
-with afterwards, on the way from Rennes. Gerault helped her, in his way.
-He was kind, he was gentle, was solicitous for her comfort, and required
-of her nothing but a quiet demeanor. But that he failed in some way to
-give her what was her due, the young girl rather felt than knew.
-
-While she waited here alone, looking out upon the lonely sea, that was
-so new and so wonderful a sight to her, the Lady Lenore bitterly
-regretted and took herself to task for her gayety of the evening. The
-silly games that she had once so loved to play—alas! he had not joined
-in them, doubtless thought them trivial and unbecoming in a woman grown
-and married! She had made herself a fool before him! He was older than
-she, and wiser, and a gallant knight. Lenore’s cheeks flushed with pride
-as she remembered how he could joust and tilt at the ring. She
-remembered when she had first seen him, from the gallery of the list at
-Rennes, when he unseated the Seigneur Geoffrey Cartel. This lordly sport
-was as simple to him as her games to her. Little wonder that she had
-exhausted his patience! And yet—if he would but come to her now! She was
-so sadly weary; and it grew so late. Her little body ached, her temples
-throbbed, her eyes burned with the past glare of the sun on the white
-dust, and the recent flickering light of the torches. If he would but
-come back, and forgive her her childishness, and kiss her before she
-slept, she would be very happy.
-
-In point of fact Gerault did come soon. Knowing that Lenore must be
-weary, he remained but a short time with his mother, and returned
-immediately to his wife. The moment that he entered the room, Lenore
-rose from her place, and ran to him with a faint cry of delight.
-
-“At last thou art come! Thou art come!” she said indistinctly, not
-wanting him to hear the words, yet unable to keep from saying them.
-
-“And didst thou sit up for me, child, and thou so weary? I went but to
-give my mother good-night, for thou knowest ’tis long since I saw her
-last. She sent thee her blessing and sweet rest; and my wish is fellow
-to hers. Come now, child.”
-
-Gerault lifted her up in his arms, and, carrying her to the bed, laid
-her down in it, mantle and all. In the carrying, Lenore had leaned her
-head upon his shoulder, and her two tired arms folded themselves around
-his neck. How it was that Gerault felt no thrill at this touch; that it
-was almost a relief to him when the hold loosened; and how, though he
-slept at her side that night, his dreams, freer replica of his
-day-thoughts, were filled with vague trouble, he himself could scarce
-have told; and yet it was so.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Only one among them seemed
- not of their mood.—Page 31_
-]
-
-Next morning, however, Gerault watched her waken, looking as rosy and
-fresh as a child, and smiling a child’s delighted welcome at the new
-day. Unquestionably she was a pleasure to him at such times. Before her
-marriage he had liked, in thinking of her, to accentuate her fairy-like
-ways, because through them he had brought himself to marry her. And now
-his treatment of her resembled most, perhaps, the treatment of something
-very fine and fair, something very rare and delicate and generally to be
-prized, but not really belonging to him, not essentially valued by him,
-or near at all to his human heart.
-
-When they were ready for the day, the two of them, Lenore and Gerault,
-did not linger together in their room, but descended immediately to the
-chapel, where morning prayers were just beginning. Every eye was turned
-upon them as they entered the holy room; and it was as sunshine greeting
-sunshine when Lenore faced the open window, through which poured the
-golden light of July. Madame’s heart swelled and beat fast, and that of
-Alixe all but stopped, as each beheld the morning’s bride; and they
-perceived, with a kind of dull surprise, that Gerault’s face was as
-dark-browed, as reserved, as melancholy as ever. It seemed impossible
-that he should not be moved to new life by the presence and possession
-of so fair a thing as this Lenore. Yet when the devotions were at an
-end, and the Castle household rose and moved out to where the tables
-were spread for the breaking of the fast, no one noted how the young
-girl’s blue eyes glanced once or twice a little wistfully, a little
-forlornly, up into the unmoved face of her husband, and that she got
-therefrom no answering smile.
-
-In celebration of the Seigneur’s wedding, a week’s holiday had been
-declared for every one in the Castle; and so, when the first meal of the
-day was at an end, the demoiselles, in high glee at escaping from the
-morning’s toil in the hot spinning-room, gayly proposed to their
-attendant squires that they repair at once to the open meadows, where
-there was glorious opportunity for games and caroles. Lenore’s eyes
-lighted with pleasure at this proposal; but she looked instinctively at
-Gerault, to see if his face approved the plan. She found his eyes upon
-her; and, as he caught her glance, he motioned her to his side, and drew
-her with him a little apart from the general group. Then he said to her
-kindly,—
-
-“Beloved, I shall see thee at noon meat. Courtoise and I go forth this
-morning together to try two of the new falcons that Alixe hath trained.
-Thou’lt fare gently here with all the demoiselles and the young squires;
-and see that thou weary not thyself at play in the heat. Till noon, my
-little one!”
-
-He bent and touched his lips to her hair,—that sunlit hair,—and then, as
-he strode away, followed, but half willingly, by Courtoise, Lenore’s
-head bent forward, and her eyes, that for one instant had brimmed full,
-were shut tight till the unbidden drops went back again. When she looked
-up once more, Alixe was at her side, and the expression on the face of
-La Rieuse was full of unlooked-for tenderness. Lenore, however, was too
-proud for pity, and in a moment she smiled, and said bravely:
-
-“My lord is going a-hawking with his squire. Shall we to the fields?
-Said they not that we should go to weave garlands in the fields?”
-
-“Yes! To the fields! To the fields! Hola, David! We are commanded to the
-fields by our Queen of Delight!” called Alixe, loudly, waving her hands
-above her head, and striving in every way to gain the attention of the
-company. But in spite of her efforts, Gerault’s departure was seen, and
-there was a general outcry of protest, which did not, however, reach the
-ears of the Seigneur. Then Lenore was forced to bear the comments of the
-company: their loudly expressed disappointment, and the unspoken but
-infinitely more painful astonishment plainly indicated in every glance.
-Nevertheless the young girl had in her the instincts of a fine race, and
-she bore everything with a heroic unconcern that won Alixe’s admiration,
-and so far deceived the thoughtless throng as to bring her a new
-accusation of indifference to Gerault’s absence.
-
-To the girl-bride that morning passed—somehow. It was perhaps the
-bitterest three hours she had ever endured; yet she would not confess
-her disappointment even to herself. Besides, was not Gerault coming home
-again? Had he not said that he would be back at noon? Had he not called
-her “beloved”? Her heart thrilled at the thought; and she forgot the
-fact that Gerault knew that she could ride with hawk on wrist and tell a
-fair quarry when she saw it. She forgot that at such times as this even
-hawking will generally give way to love; and that he is a sorry
-bridegroom that loves his horse better than his bride. Yet she forgave
-him for the time, and regained her smiles until the shadow of a new
-dread fell upon her. She could endure the morning; but the afternoon?
-Would he remain with her through the afternoon? Alas, here was the
-terrible pity of it! She could not tell.
-
-However, this last dread proved to be groundless. Gerault made no move
-to leave the Castle again that day. Perhaps he even felt a little guilty
-of neglect; or perhaps her greeting on his return betrayed to him how
-she had suffered through the morning. However it was, as soon as the
-long dinner was at an end, the Seigneur and his lady were observed to
-wander away into the armory, and they sat there together, on the same
-settle, until the shadows grew long in the courtyard and the afternoon
-was nearly worn away. What they said to one another, or how Gerault
-entertained his maid, no one knew; for, oddly enough, Courtoise had put
-himself on guard at the armory door, and would permit none to venture so
-much as a peep into the room on which his own back was religiously
-turned. So for that afternoon demoiselles and squires chose King and
-Queen of their revels from among their own number, and perhaps enjoyed
-their games the better for that fact.
-
-When the sun was leaning far toward the broad breast of the sea, all the
-Castle, mindful of their souls, repaired to the chapel for vespers, a
-service held only when the Bishop was at Le Crépuscule. Gerault and
-Lenore were the last to appear, and while the Seigneur’s expression was
-rather thoughtful than happy, it had in it, nevertheless, a suggestion
-of Lenore’s repressed joy, so that madame, seeing him, was satisfied for
-the first time since his home-coming.
-
-But alas for the thoughts and hopes that this afternoon had raised in
-the observing ones of Le Crépuscule, Lenore and her husband were not
-seen again to spend a single hour alone together. Gerault remained for
-the most part with the general company of the Castle, not seeking to
-escape to solitude with Courtoise, but holding his lady from him at
-arm’s length. His attitude toward her was uneasy. He did not avoid her,
-but, were they by chance left alone together for ten minutes, his manner
-changed till it was like that of a man guilty of some dishonorable
-thing. Oftentimes, when they were with a number of others, Gerault would
-be seen to watch Lenore closely, and his eyes would light with momentary
-pleasure at some one of her unconscious graces. But the light never
-stayed. Quickly his black brows would darken, the shadows re-cover his
-face, and he would be more unapproachable than before.
-
-In the course of a few days, Lenore began to grow morbidly sensitive
-over her husband’s attitude; and, out of sheer misery, she began to
-avoid him persistently. This brought a still more bitter blow to her,
-for she discovered that he was glad to be avoided. Lenore was desperate;
-but still she was brave, still she held to herself; and if at times she
-sought refuge with madame and Alixe, those two kindly and pitying souls
-met her with outstretched arms of silent sympathy, and never betrayed to
-her by so much as a glance how much they had observed of Gerault’s
-incomprehensible neglect.
-
-The holiday week passed, and with its end came a spirit of relief that
-it was over. Next morning the usual occupations were begun, and Lenore
-went up to the spinning-room with the rest of the women. This work-room
-was on the second floor, and ran almost the whole length of the south
-side of the Castle: a long, narrow room, with many windows looking out
-upon the courtyard, and only a sideways view of the hazy, turquoise sea.
-Here was every known mechanical contrivance for the making of cloth and
-tapestry, and their development out of the raw wool. The loom, just now
-half filled with a warp of pale green, stood at the east end of the
-room; the fixed combs, the half-dozen spinning-wheels, the
-tambour-frames for embroidery, and the great tapestry-border frame, were
-ranged in an orderly line down the remaining length, and each of the
-maidens had her particular task of the summer in some stage of
-completion. Since Lenore’s arrival a spinning-wheel had been set up here
-for her, and she sat down to it at once, while her demoiselles were
-directed by madame to begin work on the tapestry border, at which four
-could apply the needle at the same time. As the roomful settled quickly
-to work, under the general guidance of madame, Lenore began to tread her
-wheel and draw out thread with a hand practised enough to win the
-approval even of Eleanore. And as the morning wore along, Lenore found
-herself unaccountably soothed and comforted by her task and the kindly
-atmosphere of perseverance and attention to duty surrounding her.
-
-Nevertheless, it was not a comfortable day for such work. The heat was
-intense. Fingers grew constantly damp with sweat. Thread knotted and
-broke, silk drew, and little exclamations of anger and disgust were
-frequently to be heard. However, the labor was continued as usual for
-three hours, till eleven o’clock, the dinner hour, came, and the little
-company willingly left the spinning-room to another afternoon of
-silence, and went downstairs to meat. At the foot of the stairs stood
-Gerault, waiting for Lenore; and when she reached him he kissed her upon
-the brow before leading her to table. In that moment the girl’s heart
-sang, and she felt that her day had been fittingly crowned.
-
-In the early afternoon Lenore found that there were new occupations for
-all the Castle. The demoiselles were despatched to the long room on the
-first floor, which, though not dignified by the name of library, yet
-took that place, for instruction in certain things, mental and moral, by
-the friar-steward, Father Anselm. The young men were at sword practice
-in the keep. And Lenore, who could write her name and read a little from
-parchment manuscripts in both Latin and French, and whose education was
-therefore finished, was summoned by madame and taken over the whole
-Castle, receiving, at various stages, instruction in domestic duties and
-the management of the great building. She saw everything, from the
-linen-presses upstairs to the wine-cellars underground; and everywhere
-the hand of madame was visible in the scrupulous exactness and neatness
-with which the Castle was kept. Then in her heart Lenore determined that
-in time she would learn madame’s habits, and, if it could be done in no
-other way, win Gerault’s respect by her abilities as a housekeeper.
-
-The hours of late afternoon and early evening were devoted to
-recreation, which was entered into with new zest by every one. To be
-sure, Gerault sat all evening with his mother, playing draughts. But his
-eyes occasionally strayed to the figure of his wife; and later, when the
-Castle was still, and Lenore, in the great curtained bed, was wandering
-on the borderland of sleep, she felt that this day was the happiest she
-had yet spent in Le Crépuscule; and she knew in her heart that work and
-work only could now bring her peace. And thereafter, poor little
-dreamer, a smile hovered upon her face as she slept!
-
-On the tenth day of the new regime in Le Crépuscule, squire Courtoise
-sat in the armory, polishing the design engraved on his lord’s
-breastplate. Courtoise was moody. Ordinarily his cheerfulness in the
-face of insuperable dulness was something to be proud of. But latterly
-his faith, the one great faith in his heart,—not religion, but utter
-devotion to his lord—had been receiving a series of shocks that had
-shaken it to its foundation. Courtoise was by nature as gentle, genial,
-and kindly a fellow as ever held a lance; and in his heart he had for
-years blindly worshipped Gerault. His creed of devotion, indeed, had
-embraced the whole family of Le Crépuscule, because Gerault was its
-head. Till the time of their last going to Rennes, there had been for
-him no woman like madame, no such maid as Laure, and no man anywhere
-comparable to his master. Poor Laure had dealt him a grievous blow when
-she followed Flammecœur from the priory. But from the day of Gerault’s
-betrothal to little Lenore, the daughter of the Iron Chateau had held
-his heart in her hand, and might have done with it as she would. Loving
-the two of them as he did, and seeing each day fresh proof of Lenore’s
-affection for her lord and his, Courtoise naturally looked for a fitting
-return of this from the Seigneur. And here, all in a night, Courtoise’s
-first great doubt had entered in. They had been married three days, they
-were barely at Le Crépuscule, before Courtoise saw what made him sick
-with uneasiness. If the Seigneur had wedded this exquisite maiden with
-the sunlit hair, must he not love her? And yet—and yet—and yet—Courtoise
-sat in the armory and polished freely at the steel, and swore to himself
-under his breath, recklessly incurring whatever penance Anselm should
-see fit to give. For here it was mid-afternoon, and his little lady just
-freed from her hours of toil; and there was Gerault gone off by himself,
-without even his squire, forsooth, to hawk with the Iron-Beak over the
-moor!
-
-Courtoise had been indulging himself in ire for some time, when a shadow
-stole past the doorway of the armory. He looked up. The shadow had gone;
-but presently it returned and halted: “Courtoise!”
-
-The young fellow leaped to his feet, and the breastplate clattered to
-the floor. Lenore, looking very transparently pale, very humbly wistful,
-and having just a suspicion of red around her eyes, was regarding him
-tentatively from the doorway.
-
-“Ma dame, what service dost thou ask?”
-
-“None, Courtoise,” the voice sounded rather faint and tired. “None, save
-to tell me if thou hast lately seen my lord.”
-
-The expression on her face was so pathetic that Courtoise was suddenly
-struck to the heart, and he bit his tongue before he could reply quietly
-enough: “Ma Dame Lenore, Seigneur Gerault rode out long time since
-a-hawking; and methinks he will shortly now return. The hour for evening
-meat approaches. I—I—” he broke off, stammering; and Lenore without
-speaking bowed her head, and patiently turned away.
-
-Courtoise sat down again when she left him, and remained motionless, the
-steel on his knees, his hands idle, staring into space. Suddenly he
-leaped to his feet and hurled the breastplate to the floor with a
-smothered oath. “Gray of St. Gray!” he cried, “what devil hath seized
-the man I loved? Gerault, my lord, rides out and leaves this angel to
-weep after him! Gray of St. Gray! what desires he more fair than this
-his Lenore? What—what—what—” the muttered words died into thoughts as
-Courtoise clapped a cap on his head and strode away from the armory and
-out of the Castle.
-
-In the courtyard the first object that met his eyes was Gerault’s horse,
-standing in front of the keep, with a stable-boy holding him by the
-bridle. Gerault himself was in the doorway of the empty falcon-house,
-holding a _hagard_ on his wrist, while two dead pigeons swung from his
-girdle.
-
-“Courtoise! Behold our spoils! Hath not Talon-Fer done Alixe’s training
-honor?” cried Gerault, the note of pleasure keener than usual in his
-voice.
-
-Courtoise, flushed with rising anger, went over to him. “My lord, the
-Lady Lenore asks for thee!” he said a little hoarsely, paying no
-attention to the dead pigeons or the young falcon.
-
-Gerault very slightly raised his brows, more at Courtoise’s tone,
-perhaps, than at the words he spoke. “The Lady Lenore,” he said.
-
-“Even so—the Lady Lenore—thy wife!”
-
-“I understand thee, good Courtoise.”
-
-The veins in the younger man’s neck and temples stood out under the
-strain of repression. “Comes my lord?” he asked slowly.
-
-“In good time, Courtoise. The _hagard_ must be fed.” Gerault would have
-turned away, but Courtoise, with a burst of irritation, exclaimed,—
-
-“I will feed the creature!”
-
-Now Gerault turned to him again: “Hast thou some strange malady or
-frenzy, that thou shouldst use such tones to me, boy?”
-
-“Tones—tones, and yet again tones! Gerault—thou churl! Ay, I that have
-been faithful squire to thee these many years, I say it. Thou churl and
-worse, to have wedded with the sweetest lady ever sun shone upon, to
-bring her, a stranger, home to thy Castle, and then leave her there, day
-following day, while thou ridest over the moors to dally with some bird!
-All the Castle stares at the cruelty of thy neglect. Daily the
-demoiselles whisper together, wondering what distemper thy lady hath
-that thou seest her not by day—”
-
-“Hush, boy—hush! Thou’rt surely mad!” cried out Gerault, with a note in
-his voice that gave Courtoise pause.
-
-Then there fell between them a silence, heavy, and so binding that
-Courtoise could not move. He stood staring into his master’s face,
-watching the color grow from white to red and back again, and the
-expression change from angry amazement to something softer, something
-strange, something that Courtoise did not know in his lord’s face. And
-Gerault gnawed his lip, and bent low his head, and presently spoke, in a
-voice that was not his own, but was rather curiously muffled and
-unnatural.
-
-“Thou sayest well, Courtoise. ’Tis true I have neglected her, poor,
-frail, pretty child! Ah! I had never thought how I have neglected her”;
-and Gerault sat suddenly down upon the step of the falcon-house and laid
-his head in his hands, in an attitude of such dejection that Courtoise
-experienced a swift rush of repentance.
-
-For some time there was again silence between them. Courtoise,
-thoroughly mystified by the whole situation, had nothing whatever to
-say. Finally the Seigneur stood up, this time with his head high, and
-his self-control returned. He put the falcon, screaming, into his
-squire’s hands, and took the bodies of the pigeons from his belt.
-
-“So, Courtoise, I leave them all with you. Where is the Lady Lenore?”
-
-“Sooth, I know not; yet methinks when she left the armory where she had
-spoken to me, she passed into the chapel.”
-
-“I go to her. And I thank thee, Courtoise, for thy rebuke.”
-
-“My lord, my lord, forgive me!” Courtoise choked with a sudden new rush
-of devotion for his master. He would have fallen on his knees there on
-the courtyard stones, but that the Seigneur, with a faint smile at him,
-was gone, carrying alone the burden of his inexplicable sorrow.
-
-The Lady Lenore was in the chapel, half kneeling, half lying upon the
-altar-step. In the dim light of the shadowy place her golden hair and
-amber-colored garments glimmered faintly. She was not praying, yet
-neither was she weeping, now. The long, hot loneliness of the afternoon
-had thrown her into a state of apathy, in which she wished for nothing,
-and in which she refused to think. She had no desire for company; but
-had any one come—David, or Alixe, or Madame—she should not have cared.
-It was only Gerault that she would not have see her in this place and
-attitude. The thought of Gerault was continually with her, as something
-omnipresent; but at this especial hour she felt no wish to see the man
-himself. Yet now he came. She heard a tread on the stones that sent a
-tremor through her whole body. Then some one was kneeling beside her,
-and a quiet voice said gently in her ear,—
-
-“Lenore!—My child!—Why art thou lying here?”
-
-Lenore tried hard to speak; but her throat contracted convulsively, and
-she made no answer.
-
-“Child, art thou sick for thy home? Thou hast found sorrow here, and
-loneliness, in this new abode. Perhaps thou wouldst have had me oftener
-at thy side. Is it so, Lenore?”
-
-The girl’s golden head burrowed down into her arms, and she seemed to
-shake it, but she did not speak.
-
-Gerault looked about him a little helplessly. Then, taking new
-resolution, he put one arm about her, and, drawing her slight form close
-to him, he said in a halting and broken way: “Come, my wife—come with me
-for a little time. Let us walk out together to the cliff by the sea. The
-sun draws near the water—the afternoon grows rich with gold.—And thou
-and I will talk together.—Lenore, much might I tell thee of myself,
-whereby thou couldst understand many things that trouble thee now.
-Knowing them, and with them, me, thou shalt more justly judge me. Come,
-little one,—rise up!” He drew her to her feet beside him, and then, with
-his arms still around her, he stood and put his lips to her half-averted
-cheek. Under that kiss she grew cold and tremulous, but still preserved
-her silence. Then the two moved, side by side, out of the Castle,
-through the courtyard, and on to the outer terrace that ran along the
-very edge of the precipitous cliff against which, far below, the summer
-sea gently broke and plashed.
-
-Here, hand in hand, the Seigneur and his lady walked, looking off
-together at the glory of the mighty waters. The crimson sky was veiled
-in light clouds that caught a more and more splendid reflection of the
-fiery ball behind them; while the moving waves below were stained with
-pink and mellow gold. Lenore kept her eyes fixed fast upon this sight,
-while she listened to what Gerault was saying to her. He talked, in a
-fitful, chaotic way, of many things: of his boyhood here, of Laure his
-sister, and Alixe, and of “one other that was not as any of us,—our
-cousin, a daughter of Laval, whose dead mother had put her in the
-keeping of mine.”
-
-So much mention of this girl Gerault made, and then went on to other
-things, jumbling together many incidents and scenes of his boyhood and
-his youth, never guessing that Lenore, who continued so quietly to look
-off upon the sea, had seized upon this one little thing that he had
-said, and realized, with a woman’s intuition, that the story of his
-heart lay here. As Gerault rambled on, he came gradually to feel that he
-had lost her attention, and so, little by little, as the sunset light
-died away, he ceased to speak, and there crept in upon them, over them,
-through them, that terrible silence that both of them knew: the
-all-pervading, ghostly silence that haunted this spot; the silence that
-had brought the name upon the Castle,—the Chateau du Crépuscule. Lenore
-grew slowly cold with miserable foreboding, while Gerault, rebelling
-against himself, was struggling to break the bonds of his own nature.
-
-“Well named is this home of ours, Lenore,” he said sadly.
-
-“Yea, it is well named,” was the reply.
-
-“Wilt thou—be—lonely forever here? Art thou lonely now? Hast thou a
-sickness for thy home and for thy people?”
-
-For an instant Lenore hesitated. At Gerault’s words her heart had leaped
-up with a great cry of “Yes”; and yet now there was something in her
-that withheld her from saying it. When at last she answered him, her
-words were unaccountable to herself, yet she spoke them feelingly: “Nay,
-Gerault. Thou hast taken me to be one with thee. Thou hast brought me
-here to thy home, and it is also mine.”
-
-A light of pleasure came into Gerault’s face, and he took her into his
-arms with a freer and more open warmth than he had ever shown her
-before. “Indeed, thou art my wife—one with me—my sweet one—my sweet
-child Lenore! And this my home is also thine,—Chateau du Crépuscule!”
-
-Suddenly Lenore shivered in his clasp. That word “Crépuscule” sounded
-like a knell in her ears, and as she looked upon the gray walls looming
-out of the twilight mists, the very blood in her veins stood still.
-Whether Gerault felt her dread she did not know, but he did not loose
-his hold upon her for a long time. They stood, close-clasped, on the
-edge of the cliff, looking off upon the darkening sea, till, over the
-eastern horizon line, the great pink moon slipped up, giving promise of
-glory to the night. The cool evening breeze came off the waters. They
-heard the creaking and grating of the drawbridge, as it was raised. Then
-a flock of sea gulls floated up from the water below, and veered
-southward, along the shore, toward their home. Finally, in the deepening
-west, the evening star came out, hanging there like a diamond on an
-invisible thread. Then Gerault whispered in the ear of Lenore,—
-
-“Sweet child, it is late. The hour of evening meat is now long past. Let
-us go into the Castle.”
-
-Lenore yielded at once to the pressure of Gerault’s arm, and let herself
-be drawn away. But she carried forever after the memory of that quiet
-half-hour, in which the mighty hand of nature had been lifted over her
-to give her blessing.
-
-Courtoise the faithful had kept the two from a summons at the hour of
-supper; and on their return they found food left upon the table for
-them; but, what was unusual at this time, the great room was empty. Only
-Courtoise, who was again at work in the armory, knew how long they sat
-and ate and talked together, and only he saw them when they rose from
-table, passed immediately to the stairs, and ascended, side by side.
-Then the young squire knew that they would come down no more that night;
-and he guessed what was really true: that on that evening Lenore’s cup
-of happiness seemed full; for, as never before, Gerault claimed and took
-to himself the unselfish devotion that she was so ready to give. When
-she slept, a smile yet lingered round her lips; nor, in that sleep, did
-she feel the change that came upon her lord.
-
-Not many hours after she had sunk to rest, Lenore woke slowly, to find
-herself alone in the canopied bed. Gerault was not there. She put out
-her hand to him, and found his place empty. Opening her eyes with a
-little effort, she pushed the curtains back from the edge of the bed,
-and looked about her. It could not be more than twelve o’clock. The room
-was flooded with moonlight, till it looked like a fairy place. The three
-windows were wide open to the breath of the sea; and beside one of them
-knelt Gerault. He was wrapped in a full mantle that hid the lines of his
-figure; and Lenore could see only that his brow rested on the
-window-sill, that his shoulders were bent, and his hands clasped tight
-on the ledge beyond his head. Unutterable pain was expressed in the
-attitude.
-
-What was he doing there? Of what were his thoughts? Why had he left her
-side? Above all, what was his secret trouble? These questions passed
-quickly through Lenore’s brain, and her first impulse was to rise and go
-to him. Had she not the right to know his heart? Had he not given it to
-her this very night? She looked at him again, asking herself if he were
-really in pain; if he were not rather simply looking out upon the
-moonlit sea, and was now, perhaps, engaged in prayer, to which the
-beauty of the scene had lifted him. She would go to him and learn.
-
-She sat up in bed, pushed her golden hair out of her neck and back from
-her face. Then she drew the curtains still farther aside, preparatory to
-stepping out, when suddenly she saw Gerault lift his head as if he
-listened for something far away; and then she caught the whispered word,
-“Lenore!”
-
-For some reason, she could not have told why, Lenore did not move, but
-sat quite still, staring at him. She heard him say again, more loudly,
-“Lenore!” but he did not turn toward her bed. Rather, he was looking
-out, out of the window, and down the line of rocky shore that stretched
-away to the north.
-
-“Lenore! I hear thee! I hear thy voice!” he whispered, to himself,
-fearfully. “I hear thee speaking to me.—Oh, my God! My God! When wilt
-Thou remove this torture from my brain?” He rose to his feet and lifted
-his arms as if in supplication. “It is a curse upon me! It is a madness,
-that I cannot love this other maiden. Thou spirit of my lost
-Lenore!—Lenore!—Lenore!—Thou callest to me from the sea by day and
-night!—Only and forever beloved, come thou back to me, out of the
-sea!—Come back to me!—Come back!” His hands were clenched under such a
-stress of emotion as his girl-wife had never dreamed him capable of. Now
-he stood there without speaking, his breath coming in sobbing gasps that
-shook his whole frame. The beating of his heart seemed as if it would
-suffocate him, and his body swayed back and forward, under the force of
-his mental anguish. For the first time in all his years of silent grief,
-he gave way unreservedly to himself; let all the pent-up agony come
-forth as it would from him, as he stood there, looking off upon that
-wonderful, inscrutable, shimmering ocean, that had played such havoc
-with his changeless heart.
-
-From the bed where she sat, Lenore watched him, silent, motionless,
-afraid almost to breathe lest he should discover that she was awake. But
-Gerault wist nothing of her presence. He had known no joy in her, in the
-hallowed hours of the early night; else he could not now stand there at
-the window, calling, in tones of unutterable agony and tenderness, upon
-his dead,—
-
-“Lenore! Lenore! Come back!—O sea—thou mighty, cruel sea, deliver her up
-for one moment to my arms! Let me have but one look, a touch, a
-kiss.—Oh, my God!—Come back to me at last, or else I die!”
-
-He fell to his knees again, faint with the power of his emotion; and
-Lenore, the other, the unloved Lenore, sat behind him, in the great bed,
-watching.
-
-The moonlight crept slowly from that room, and passed, like a wraith,
-off the sea, and beyond, into the east. The stars shone brighter for the
-passing of the moon. There was no sound in the great stillness, save the
-rustling murmur of the outflowing tide. In the chilly darkness before
-the break of dawn, Gerault of the Twilight Castle crept back to the bed
-he had left, looking fixedly, through the gloom, at the white, passive
-face of his wife, who lay back, with closed eyes, on her pillow. And
-when at last he slept again, she did not move; yet she was not asleep.
-In that hour her youth was passing from her, and she, a woman at last,
-entered alone into that dim and quiet vale where those that lived about
-her had wandered so long, so patiently, and, at last, so wearily, alone.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER EIGHT_
- TO A TRUMPET-CALL
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-After the night of Gerault’s passion, twelve days ebbed and flowed away
-without any incident of moment in the Castle. How much bitter heart-life
-was enacted in that time, it had indeed been difficult to tell. Lenore
-wondered, constantly, as she looked into the faces about her and
-questioned them as she refused to question her own heart. If, beneath
-that cloak of lordly courtesy and calmness, Gerault could hide such a
-grief as she knew was buried in his soul; if she herself found it so
-easy to conceal her own knowledge of that bitterest of all facts, that
-she was a wife unloved,—what stories of mental anguish, of long-hidden
-torture, might not lie behind the impassive masks around her. There was
-Madame Eleanore, madame of the commanding presence and infinitely gentle
-manners. What was it that had generated the expression of her eyes?
-Lenore had scarcely heard the name of Laure, thought only that there had
-been a daughter in Crépuscule who had died long since; and so she wove a
-little history of her own to account for that haunted look so often to
-be found in madame’s dark orbs. Gerault she knew. Alixe puzzled her, but
-there also she found food for her morbidness. Courtoise and the
-demoiselles she did not consider; but David the dwarf held
-possibilities. The young woman’s new-sharpened glance quickly discovered
-that the jester suffered also from the devouring malady, and she
-wondered over and pitied him also.
-
-Indeed, at this time, Lenore was in an abnormal and unhealthy frame of
-mind. It seemed to her that all the world lived only to hide its
-sorrows. But her melancholy speculations concerning the nature of the
-griefs of others saved her from the disastrous effects of too much
-self-analysis. Her love for Gerault, to which she always clung, led her
-to pity him as he would not have believed she could have pitied any one;
-and, unnatural as it seemed, she brooded as much over his sorrow as over
-her own. Melancholy she was, indeed, and older by many years than when
-she had first come to Le Crépuscule. Sometimes the fact that Gerault did
-not know how much she knew brought her a measure of comfort, but it made
-her uneasy, also, for she was not sure that she was not wrongfully
-deceiving him. She could not bring herself to confess to Father Anselm
-what she felt no one should know; and neither did she find it in her
-heart to tell Gerault himself of her inadvertent discovery, though had
-she but done this last, all might have come right in the end. But from
-day to day she put away from her the thought of speaking, and from day
-to day she drew closer into herself, till she was shut to all thought of
-confiding in him who had the right to know the reason of her
-unhappiness.
-
-Gerault, however, was not unobserving, and he noticed the change in her
-very early in its existence. It was an intangible thing, elusive,
-changeable, varying in degree. All this he realized; but, man-like,
-never guessed the reason for it, never knew that Lenore herself was
-unconscious of it. Did she desire to coquet with him, render him
-uneasily jealous of every one on whom she turned her eyes? If so, it was
-useless, for the knight believed himself incapable of jealousy in regard
-to her. He had married her for the sake of his mother, and for Le
-Crépuscule,—much as the fact did him dishonor. In the very hour of their
-highest love, his thoughts had been all for another; and when she slept
-he had left her side to cry into the night and the silence, unto that
-other, of whom this young Lenore had never heard. Despite these
-confessed things, the Seigneur Gerault felt in some way hurt when the
-timid shadow of his wife no longer haunted him by day, nor stretched to
-his protecting arm by night. She had withdrawn from him into herself,
-and even his occasional half-hours of devotion failed to bring any light
-into her eyes, though she treated him always with half-tender courtesy.
-Her lord was not a little puzzled by her new manner, but he took it in
-his own way; and there was presently a stiffness of demeanor between the
-two that would have been almost laughable had it not been so
-pathetically cruel to Lenore.
-
-The month of July passed away, and August came into the land. Brittany,
-long blazing with sunlight, lay parching for want of rain. The moors
-grew brown and dusty, and the meadow flowers bloomed no more. But the
-blue sea shimmered radiantly day by day, and the sunsets were ever more
-glorious and more red.
-
-On a day in the first week of the last summer month, when Anselm had
-found the temperature too great for the casting of choice paragraphs of
-Cicero before the unheeding demoiselles, when the Castle reeked with the
-smell of cooking, and the air outside was heavy with the odor of
-hard-baked earth, Gerault sat in the long room alone, reading Seneca
-from an illuminated text. A heretical document this, and not to be found
-in a monastery or holy place; yet there were in it such scraps of homely
-wisdom and comfort as the Seigneur—something of a scholar in his idle
-hours—had failed to find in Holy Scripture.
-
-In its dimly lighted silence the long room was, at this hour, a soothing
-place. The row of small casement windows were open to the sea, and two
-or three swallows, coming up from the water below, flitted through the
-room, and once even a sleek and well-fed gull came to sit upon a sill
-and flap his wings over the flavor of his last fish.
-
-Gerault’s back was turned to the light; yet he knew these little
-incidents of the birds, and took pleasure in them. A portion of his mind
-rejoiced lazily in the quiet and solitude; the rest was fixed upon the
-Latin words that he translated still with some lordly difficulty. He
-found himself in the mood to consider the thoughts of men long dead, and
-was indulging in the unsurpassed delight of the philosopher when, to his
-vast annoyance, Courtoise pushed aside the curtains of the door, and
-came into the room followed by another man. Gerault looked up testily;
-but as he uttered his first word of reproach, his eye caught the dress
-of his squire’s companion, and he broke off with an exclamation: “Dame!
-Thou, Favriole?”
-
-“May it please thee, Seigneur du Crépuscule,” was the reply, as the
-new-comer advanced, bowing. He was elaborately and significantly dressed
-in a parti-colored surcoat of blue and white silk, emblazoned behind and
-before with the coronet and arms of Duke Jean of Brittany. His hosen
-were also parti-colored, yellow and blue, and the round cap that he held
-in his hand was of blue felt with a white feather. At his side hung the
-instrument of his calling, a silver trumpet on a tasselled cord; for he
-was a ducal herald, and, before he spoke, Gerault knew his errand.
-
-“Welcome, welcome, Favriole!” he said kindly. “What is thy message now?
-Surely not war?”
-
-“Nay, Seigneur Gerault! A merrier message than that!” Lifting his
-trumpet to his lips, he blew upon it a clear, silvery blast, and, after
-the rather absurd formality, began: “Oyez! Oyez! Oyez! Be it known to
-all princes, barons, knights, and gentlemen of the Duchy of Brittany and
-the dependency of Normandy, and to the knights of Christian countries,
-if they be not enemies to the Duke our Sire,—to whom God give long
-life,—that in the ducal lists of Rennes in Brittany, upon the fifteenth
-day of this month of August in this year of grace 1381, and thereafter
-till the twentieth day of that month, there will be a great pardon of
-arms and very noble tourney fought after the ancient customs, at which
-tourney the chiefs will be the most illustrious Duke of Brittany,
-appellant, and the very valiant Hugo de Laci, Lord in vassalage to his
-Grace of England, of the Castle Andelin in Normandy, defendant. And
-hereby are invited all knights of Christian countries not at variance
-with our Lord Duke, to take part in the said tourney for the glory of
-Knighthood and the fame of their Ladies.”
-
-Favriole finished, smiling and important, and from behind him rose a
-little buzz of interest. For, at sound of the trumpet, almost all the
-Castle company had hurried from their various retreats to learn the
-meaning of the untoward sound. In this group, not foremost, standing
-rather a little back from the rest, was Lenore, gravely regarding
-Gerault, where he sat with the parchment before him. She had recognized
-Favriole, the herald, for a familiar figure in the lists at that
-long-past tournament where she had first thought of being lady of her
-lord; and she grew a little white under the memories that the herald
-brought her. Gerault had seen her at the first moment of her coming,
-and, as soon as Favriole finished his announcement, beckoned her to his
-side. She came forward to him quietly, and took her place, acknowledging
-the pleased salute of the visitor with the slightest inclination of her
-golden head. When she was seated at the table, Gerault, who had risen at
-her coming, spoke:
-
-“Our thanks to you, Sir Herald, for your message, which you have come a
-long and weary way to bear to the one spurred knight in this house. And
-devotion to our Lord, Duke Jean, who—” Gerault paused. His mother had
-just come to the room and halted on the threshold, a little in front of
-the general group, her eyes travelling swiftly from Favriole’s face to
-that of Lenore. Gerault, his thought broken, hesitated for an instant,
-and turned also to look at his wife. Instantly Lenore rose, and advanced
-a step or two to his side. Then she said in a curiously pleading tone,—
-
-“I do humbly entreat my lord that he will not refuse to enter this
-tournament; but that he will at once set out for Rennes, there to fight
-for—for ‘the glory of his Knighthood, and the—the fame of his—Ladies’!”
-
-When Lenore had spoken she found the whole room staring at her in open
-amazement. Gerault gave his wife a glance that brought her a moment’s
-bitter satisfaction,—a look filled with astonishment and discomfort.
-Long he gazed at her, but could find no softening curve in her white,
-set face. Every line in her figure bade him go. At length, then, he
-turned back to Favriole, with something that resembled a sigh, and
-continued his speech.
-
-“Sir Herald, carry my name for the lists; and my word that on the
-fifteenth day of this month I shall be in Rennes, armed and horsed for
-the tourney. My challenge shall be sent anon.—Courtoise! Take thine
-ancient comrade to the keep, and find him refreshment ere he proceeds
-upon his way.”
-
-Courtoise bowed, wearing an expression of mingled pleasure and
-disapproval, and presently he and the herald left the room together,
-followed by all the young esquires. After their disappearance the
-demoiselles also wandered off to their pursuits, and presently Gerault,
-Eleanore, and Lenore were left alone in the long room. Eleanore stood
-still, just where she was, and looked once, searchingly, from the face
-of her son to that of his wife. Then she addressed Gerault: “See that
-thou come to me to-night, when I am alone in my chamber. I would talk
-with thee, Gerault.” And with another look that had in it a suggestion
-of disdain, madame turned and went out of the room.
-
-When she was gone the knight drew a long sigh, and then, with an air of
-apprehensive inquiry, faced Lenore. At once she rose and, with a very
-humble courtesy, started also to depart. But Gerault, whose bewilderment
-at the situation was changing to anxiety, said sharply: “Stay, Lenore!
-Thou shalt not go till we have spoken together.”
-
-Immediately she returned to her place and sat down. She gave him one
-swift glance from under her lashes, and then remained in silence, her
-eyes fixed upon the floor.
-
-At the same time the Seigneur got to his feet and began to pace unevenly
-up and down the room. His step was sufficient evidence of his agitation;
-but it was many minutes before he suddenly halted, turning to his wife
-and saying in a tone of command: “Tell me, Lenore, why thou biddest me
-go forth into this tournament.”
-
-“Ah, my lord—do not—I—” she paused, and, from flushing vividly, her face
-grew white again: “Thou wilt be happier in Rennes, my lord.”
-
-“How say you that? Were I not happier at home here with my bride?”
-
-“Asks my lord wherefore?” answered Lenore, in a tone containing
-something that Gerault could not understand.
-
-“Nay, then, I ask thee naught but this: wouldst thou, all for thyself,
-of thine own will, have me go? Dost thou in thy heart desire it?”
-
-Lenore drew her head a little high, and looked him full in the face:
-“For myself, for mine own selfish desires, of mine own will, I entreat
-thee by that which through thy life thou hast held most dear, to go!”
-
-Gerault stared at her, some vague distrust that was entering his mind
-continually foiled by the open-eyed clearness of her look. Finally,
-then, he shrugged his shoulders, and, as he turned away from her, he
-said: “Be satisfied, madame. I do your bidding. I give you what pleasure
-I can. In ten days’ time I shall set off; and thou wilt be unfettered in
-this Crépuscule!”
-
-And with this last ungenerous and angry taunt, the Seigneur, his brain
-seething with some emotion that he could not define, strode from the
-room. Lenore rose as he left her, and followed him, unsteadily, halfway
-to the door. He went out of the Castle without once looking back, and
-when he was quite gone, the young girl felt her way blindly to the chair
-where she had sat, and crouching down in it, burst into a flood of
-repressed and desperate tears.
-
-When Gerault left Lenore’s side, he was no whit happier than she. After
-the herald had made his announcement of the tourney, and Gerault had
-begun his reply, it was his intent to refuse to go, though in his secret
-heart he longed eagerly to be off to that city of gay forgetfulness. But
-when his wife, Lenore, the clinging child, besought him, with every
-appearance of sincerity, to leave her, he heard her with less of
-satisfaction than with surprised disappointment. Now he fought with
-himself; now he questioned her motive; again he longed for Rennes and
-the tourney. Finally, there rushed over him the detestable deceit in his
-own attitude; and he began to curse himself for what, sometimes, he
-was,—the most intolerant and the most selfish of tyrants. In these
-varying moods Gerault rode, for the rest of the afternoon, over the dry
-moors, hawk on wrist, but finding his own thoughts, unhappy as they
-were, more engrossing than possible quarries. He returned late—when the
-evening meal was nearly at an end; and he perceived, with dull
-disappointment, that Lenore was not at table. Madame presently informed
-him that she lay in bed, sick of a headache; and this was all the
-conversation in which he indulged while he ate his hurried meal. But as
-soon as grace was said and the company had risen, Gerault started to the
-stairs. Instantly his mother caught his sleeve and held him back,
-saying,—
-
-“Go not to thy room. She has perchance fallen asleep by now; and she
-should not be wakened, for she hath been very ill. Seek thou rather my
-bedchamber, and there presently I will come to thee; for I have somewhat
-that I would say to thee, Gerault.”
-
-Feeling as he had sometimes felt when, in his early boyhood, he had
-waited punishment for some boyish misdeed, the Seigneur obeyed his
-mother, and went up to her room, which was now wrapped in
-close-gathering shadows. Here, a few moments later, Eleanore found him,
-pacing up and down, his arms folded, his head bent upon his breast, a
-dark frown upon his brows. The windows were open to the evening, and,
-like some witchcraft spell, its sweetness entered into Gerault,
-penetrating to his brain, and once again turning his thoughts to the
-spirit that haunted all Le Crépuscule for him.
-
-Madame came into the room, drawing the iron-bound door shut behind her,
-and pushing the tapestry curtain over it. Then, without speaking, she
-crossed the room, seated herself on her settle beside the window, and
-fixed her eyes on the moving form of her son. Under her look Gerault
-grew more restless still; and he was about to break the silence when
-presently she said, in a low, rather grating tone: “Know, Gerault, that
-I am grieved with thee.”
-
-He turned to her at once with a little gesture of deprecation; but she
-went on speaking:
-
-“Thou hast brought home from Rennes a wife: a fair maid and a gentle as
-any that hath ever lived; and moreover one that loves thee but too well.
-In her little time of dwelling here she hath, by her quiet, lovely ways,
-crept close into my heart, that was erstwhile so bitterly empty. And
-having her here, and seeing her growing devotion to thee, her continual
-striving to please thee in thine every desire, methought that thou, a
-knight sworn to chivalry, must needs treat her with more than
-tenderness. Yet that hast thou not, Gerault. Dieu! Thou’rt all but cruel
-with her! God knows thy father came to be not over-thoughtful in his
-love of me. Yet had he neglected and spurned me in our early marriage as
-thou hast this bride of thine, I had surely made end of myself or ever
-thou camest into the world. Shame it is to thee and to all mankind how—”
-
-“Madame! Madame!—Forbear!”
-
-At his tone, Eleanore held her peace, while Gerault, after a deep pause,
-in which he regained his self-control, began,—
-
-“Canst thou remember, my mother, a talk that we—thou and I together in
-this room—held one afternoon more than a year agone? ’Twas in this room,
-the day before I went last to Rennes. Thou didst entreat me to bring
-thee back a wife to be thy daughter in the place of Laure.
-
-“At that hour the idea was impossible to me. Thou knowest—’fore God thou
-knowest—the suffering that time has never eased for me. A thousand times
-I had vowed then, a hundred times I swore thereafter, that the image of
-mine own Lenore should never be replaced within my heart; and it holds
-there to-day as fair and clear as if it were but yesterday she went.
-
-“Many months passed away, madame, and I saw this golden-haired maiden
-about Rennes,—in the Ladies’ Gallery in the lists, and at feasts in the
-Castle; yet I had never a thought in my heart of wedding with her.
-Then—late in the spring—St. Nazaire sent me message of Laure’s disgrace,
-her excommunication; and my heart bled for thee. I sent out many men to
-search my sister, but not one ever gathered trace of her. Then, when
-there was no further hope of restoring her to thee, the idea of marriage
-came to me for the first time as a duty—toward thee. My whole soul cried
-out against it. Lenore de Laval reproached me from the heaven where she
-dwells. And yet—in the end—for _thy_ sake, madame, I brought home with
-me the gentle child men call my wife.
-
-“I confess it to thee only: I do not love her. Yet indeed none can say
-that I have used her ill, save as I could not bring myself falsely to
-act the ardent lover. If she hath been unhappy, then am I greatly
-grieved. Yet what hath she not that women do desire in life? What lacks
-there of honor or of pleasure in her estate? Moreover, if she has lost
-her own mother, hath she not gained thee, dear lady of mine? Mon Dieu,
-madame,—think not so ill of me. I swear that for me she yearns not at
-all. Even this afternoon, when all of you had departed from the long
-room, she did implore me, with sincerest speech, that I depart at early
-date for Rennes. How likes you that? And moreover, to all my
-questioning, she did stoutly deny that my going would be for aught but
-her own pleasure, and would in no way grieve her heart.” And Gerault
-stared upon his mother with the assured and exasperated look of a doubly
-injured man.
-
-Madame Eleanore drew herself together and set her lips in the firm
-resolve still to treat her son with consideration. When she began to
-speak, her manner was calm and her voice low and quiet; yet in her eyes
-there gleamed a fire that was not born of patience. “So, Gerault!
-Doubtless all thou sayest is sooth to thee; yet I would tell thee this:
-when thou left’st her alone, I came upon her still sitting in the long
-room, leaning her head upon the table where thou hadst sat, weeping as
-if her heart was like to break. And when her sobs were still I brought
-her up to her room and caused her to remove her garments and to seek her
-bed, though all the while she shook with inward grief, till Alixe
-brought her a posset, and bathed her head in elder-flower water, and
-then, at last, she slept.”
-
-“And gave she no name to thee as cause for her malady?”
-
-“Art thou indeed so ignorant of us? Or is it heartlessness? Wilt thou go
-to Rennes?”
-
-“Hath she not required me to go? Good Heavens, madame! what wouldst have
-me do?” he answered with weary impatience.
-
-“Gerault, Gerault, if I could by prayer or anger make thee to understand
-for one instant only! Ah, ’tis the same tale that every woman has to
-tell. It was so with me. In my early youth I was brought from bright
-Laval, where I was a queen of gayety and life, to rule alone over this
-great Twilight Castle. Thy grandam was dead; and there was no other
-woman of my station here. In a few months after my home-coming as a
-bride, thy father rode away to join the army of Montfort in the East.
-From that time I saw my lord but a few weeks in every year; for the war
-lasted till I had reached the age of four-and-thirty. Thou camest to
-cheer my loneliness; and then, long after, Laure. And at last, when
-Laure was in her first babyhood, seventeen years agone, the long
-struggle ended at Auray; and then my lord, sore wounded in his last
-fight, came home. Alas! I was no happier for his coming. He had suffered
-much, and he was no longer young. We two, so long separated, were almost
-as strangers one to the other. Thou wast his great pride; dost remember
-how he loved to have thee near him? And many a time it cut me to the
-heart to hear the bloody, valorous tales he poured into thine ears; for
-I knew by them that he meant thee to do what he had done. It was not
-till he lay in his mortal sickness that we came back one to the other;
-but he died in my arms, whispering to me such words as I had never had
-from him before. That last is a sweet memory, Gerault; but the tale is
-none the less grievous of my young life here. And there is the more pity
-of it that mine is not the only story of such things. Many and many is
-the weary life led by some high-born lady in her castle, while her lord
-fights or jousts or drinks his life out in his own selfishness. Through
-those long years of the war of the Three Jeannes, I suffered not alone
-of women; and how I suffered, thou canst never know. Do thou not
-likewise with thy frail Lenore. Stay with her here a little while, and
-make her life what it might be made with love.”
-
-Gerault listened in non-committal silence. When she finished he turned
-and faced her squarely: “Hast made this prate of my father and thee to
-Lenore?” he asked severely.
-
-“Gerault!” The exclamation escaped involuntarily; when it was out
-Eleanore bit her lip and drew herself up haughtily. “Thou’rt insolent,”
-she said in a tone that she would have used to an inferior.
-
-In that moment her son found something in her to admire, but the man and
-master in him was all alive. “Madame, we will waste no further words. I
-crave the honor to wish you a good-night.” And with a profound and
-ironical bow, he turned from the room, leaving Eleanore alone to the
-darkness, and to what was a defeat as bitter as any she had ever known.
-
-Through the watches of the night this woman did not pray, but sat and
-meditated on the immense question that she had herself raised, and to
-which she had not the courage to give the true answer. Through her
-nearest and dearest she had learned the natures of men, knew full well
-their only aims and interest: prowess in arms, hunting, hawking,
-drinking, and, when they were weary, dalliance with their women. But was
-this _all_? Was this all there was for any woman in the mind of the man
-that loved her? The idea of rebellion against the scorn of men was not
-at all in her mind. She only wondered sadly how she and others of her
-sex came to be born so keenly sentient, so open to heart-wounds as they
-were. And she divined that her question burned no less in the brain of
-the young Lenore than in her own, though neither of them ever spoke of
-it together. Nor did either make any roundabout inquiries as to
-Gerault’s intentions with regard to Rennes. Not so, however, the
-demoiselles of the Castle. Courtoise was under a hot fire of inquisition
-throughout most of the following two days; but for once he himself was
-uncertain of his lord’s move, and presently there was a little air of
-joy creeping over the place in the shape of a hope that the Seigneur was
-going to remain in Crépuscule. This, indeed, was the secret idea of
-Courtoise; and only David the dwarf refused to entertain a suspicion
-that Gerault would not ride to Rennes for the tourney.
-
-David judged well; for Gerault went to Rennes. Lenore knew on the tenth
-of the month that he would go. Madame remained in doubt till the day
-before the departure.
-
-On the morning of the twelfth the whole Castle was astir by dawn.
-Gerault and his squire, bravely arrayed, came into the great hall at
-five o’clock, and sat down to their early meal. On the right hand of the
-Seigneur was Lenore, not eating, only looking about her on the fresh
-morning light, and again into Gerault’s face. She was not under any
-stress of emotion. She was, rather, very dull and heavy-eyed. Yet down
-in her heart lay a smothered pain that she felt must come forth before
-long, in what form she could not tell. She and Gerault did not talk much
-together. There was a little strain between them that was none the less
-certain because it was indefinable, and it was a relief to the young
-wife when madame finally appeared. Lenore saw Eleanore’s face with
-something of surprise. Never had it been so cold, so expressionless, so
-like a piece of chiselled marble; and looking upon her son, it grew yet
-harder, yet colder. But when madame, after some little parley with
-Courtoise, turned finally to Lenore, the child-wife found something in
-that face that came dangerously near to melting her apathy, and freeing
-the flood of grief that lay deep in her heart.
-
-Half an hour later the knight and his squire were in the courtyard,
-where their horses stood ready for the mount. The little company of the
-Castle gathered close about their master, watching him as they might
-have watched some mythical god. Indeed, he was a brave sight, as he
-stood there in the early sunshine, flashing with armor, a gray plume
-floating from his helmet, and one of Lenore’s small gloves fastened over
-his visor as a gage. Lenore beheld this with infinite, gentle pride, as
-she stood fixing his great lance in its socket. Presently two of the
-squires helped him to mount to the saddle; and when he was seated, he
-lifted Lenore up to him to give her good-bye. A few tears ran from her
-eyes, and rolled silently down his breastplate, on which they gleamed
-like clustered diamonds. But Lenore wiped them away with her hair, that
-they might not tarnish the metal of his trappings; and by that act,
-perhaps, Gerault lost a blessing.
-
-The last kiss that he gave her was a long one, and his last words almost
-tender. Then, putting her to the ground again, he saluted his mother,
-though her coldness struck him to the heart; and, after a final farewell
-to the assembled company, he turned and gave the sign of departure to
-Courtoise.
-
-Spur struck flank. At the same instant, the two horses darted forward to
-the drawbridge, across which they had presently clattered. Alixe, who
-had been a silent spectator of the scene of departure, was standing near
-Lenore; and now she leaned over and would have whispered in the young
-wife’s ear; but Lenore could not have heard her had she spoken. The
-child stood like a statue, blind to everything save to the blaze of
-passing armor, deaf to all but the echo of flying hoofs. Here she stood,
-in the centre of the courtyard, alone with her strange little life,
-watching the swift-running steed carry from her all her power of joy.
-With straining eyes she saw the two figures disappear down the long,
-winding hill; and when they had gone, and only a lazily rising
-dust-cloud remained to mark their path, she stayed there still. But
-presently Eleanore came to her side and took her cold hand in a hot
-pressure. And then, as the two bereft women looked into each other’s
-eyes, the frozen grief melted at last, and the flood burst upon them in
-all its overwhelming fury.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER NINE_
- THE STORM
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-For ten days after Gerault’s departure, Lenore led a disastrous mental
-existence, which she expressed neither by words nor by deeds. In that
-time no one in the Castle knew how she was rent and torn with anguish,
-with yearning that had never been satisfied, and with useless regret for
-a bygone happiness that had not been happy. The silent progress of her
-grief led her into dark valleys of despair; yet none dreamed in what
-depths she wandered. She, the woman chaste and pure, dared not try to
-comprehend all that went on within her. She dared not picture to herself
-what it was she really longed for so bitterly. The cataclysms that rent
-her mind in twain were unholy things, and, had she been normal, she
-might have refused to acknowledge them. The changes in her life had come
-upon her with such overwhelming swiftness that she had hitherto had no
-time for analysis; and now that she found herself with a long leisure in
-which to think, the chaos of her mind seemed hopeless; she despaired of
-coming again into understanding with herself.
-
-During all these days Madame Eleanore watched her closely, but to little
-purpose. The calm outward demeanor of the young woman baffled every
-suspicion of her inward state. Day after day Lenore sat at work in the
-whirring, noisy spinning-room, toiling upon her tapestry with a
-diligence and a persistent silence that defied encroachment. Hour after
-hour her eyes would rest upon the dim, blue sea; for that sea was the
-only thing that seemed to possess the power of stilling her inward
-rebellion. Forgetting how the winds could sometimes drive its sparkling
-surface into a furious stretch of tumbling waters, she dreamed of making
-her own spirit as placid and as quiet as the ocean. The thought was
-inarticulate; but it grew, even in the midst of her inward tumult, till
-in the end it brought her something of the quiet she so sorely needed.
-
-By day and by night, through every hour, in every place, the figure of
-her husband was always before her. How unspeakably she wanted him, she
-herself could not have put into words. She knew well that he had
-promised to come back—“soon.” But when every hour is replete with hidden
-anguish, can a day be short? Can ten days be less than an eternity? a
-possible month of delay less than unutterable?
-
-One little oasis Lenore found for herself in this waste of time. Every
-day she had been accustomed to pray upon her rosary, which was composed
-of sixty-two white beads. Now, when she had said her morning prayer, she
-tied a little red string above the first bead. On the second morning it
-was moved up over the second bead; and so the sacred chain became a
-still more sacred calendar. How many times did she halt in her prayers
-to find the thirtieth bead! and how her heart sank when she saw it still
-so very far from the little line of red!
-
-At the end of the first week of the Seigneur’s absence, it came to
-Madame Eleanore with a start that Lenore was growing paler and more wan.
-Then a suspicion of what the young wife was suffering came to the older
-woman, and she racked her brains to think of possible diversions for the
-forlorn girl. A hawking party was arranged, which Madame Eleanore
-herself led, on her good gray horse. And in this every one discovered
-with some surprise that Lenore could sit a horse as easily as the young
-squires, and that she managed her bird as well as any man. Alixe, who
-had always been the one woman in the Castle to make a practice of riding
-after the dogs, or with hawk on wrist, was filled with delight to find
-this unexpected companion for her sports; and she decided that
-henceforth Lenore should take the place of her old companion, Laure, in
-her life.
-
-The hawking party accomplished part of its purpose, at least; for Lenore
-returned from the ride with some color in her face and a sparkle in her
-eyes. She was obliged, however, to take to her bed shortly after
-reaching the Castle, prostrated by a fatigue that was not natural.
-Madame hovered over her anxiously all through the night, though she
-slept more than in any night of late, and rose next morning at the usual
-hour, much refreshed. That afternoon, when the work was through, madame
-saw no harm in her riding out with Alixe for an hour, to give a lesson
-to two young _mués_ that were jessed and belled for the first time. And
-during this ride the young women made great strides in companionship.
-
-What with new interest in an old pastime thus awakened, and a subject of
-common delight between her and Alixe, Lenore found the next nine days
-pass more quickly than the first. On the morning of the thirty-first of
-the month, however, Lenore had a serious fainting-spell in the
-spinning-room. She had been at work at her frame for an hour or more,
-when suddenly it seemed to her that a steel had pierced her heart, and
-she fell backward in her chair with a cry. The women hurried to her, and
-after some moments of chafing her hands and temples, and forcing
-cordials down her throat, she was brought back to consciousness. Her
-first words were: “Gerault! Gerault!” and then in a still fainter voice:
-“Save him, Courtoise! He falls!”
-
-Thinking her out of her mind, madame carried her to her bedroom, and,
-admitting only Alixe with her, quickly undressed the slender body, and
-laid Lenore in the great bed. Presently she opened her blue eyes, and,
-looking up into madame’s face, said, in a voice shaking with weakness,—
-
-“It was a dream—a vision—a terrible vision! I saw Gerault—_killed_! My
-God!” she put her hands to the sides of her head, in the attitude that a
-terrified woman will take. “I saw him— Ah! But it is gone, now. It is
-gone. Tell me ’twas a dream!”
-
-Madame and Alixe soothed her, smoothing the hair back from her brow,
-patting her hands, and giving her all the comfort that they knew.
-Presently Lenore was calm again, and asked to rise. Madame, however,
-forbade this, insisting that she should keep to her bed all day; and
-through the afternoon either she or Alixe remained in the room, sewing,
-and talking fitfully with Lenore. The young wife, however, seemed
-inclined to silence. A shadow of melancholy had stolen upon her, and
-there was a cold clutch at her heart that she did not understand.
-Eleanore had her own theory in regard to the illness, and Alixe,
-whatever she might have noticed, had nothing to say about it.
-
-Next morning, the morning of the first of September, Lenore rose to go
-about her usual tasks, seeming no worse for the attack of the day
-before, except that her melancholy continued. Work in the spinning-room
-that day, however, was cut short on account of the heat, which was more
-oppressive than it had been at any time during the summer. Though the
-sky was clear and the sun red and luminous, the air was heavy with
-moisture; the birds flew close to the ground; spiders were busy spinning
-heavy webs; worms and insects sought the underside of leaves; and all
-things pointed to a coming storm. At noon two mendicant monks came to
-the Castle, asking dinner as alms; and when the meal was over, they did
-not proceed upon their way. The bright blue of the sky was beginning to
-be obscured by fragments of gathering cloud, and in the infinite
-distance could be heard low and portentous murmurs. The sense of
-oppression and of apprehension that comes with the approach of any
-disturbance of nature was strong in the Castle. At four in the
-afternoon, madame had prayers said in the chapel, and there was a short
-mass for safety during the coming storm. After this service, Lenore,
-with Alixe and Roland de Bertaux, went out to walk upon the terrace that
-overlooked the water. The sight before them was impressive. The whole
-sea, from shore to far horizon, lay gray and glassy, flattened by the
-weight of air that overhung it, heavy and hot with moisture. The sun was
-gone, and the heart of the sky palpitated with purple. Flocks of gulls
-wheeled round the Castle towers, screaming, now and then, with some
-uneasy dread for their safety. The air grew more and more heavy, till
-one was obliged to breathe in gasps, and the sweat ran down the body
-like rain. The moments grew longer and quieter. The whole world seemed
-to stop moving; and the birds, veering along the cliffs, moved not a
-feather of their wings.
-
-After that it came. The sky, from zenith to water-line, was cut with a
-lightning sword, that hissed through the water-logged gray like molten
-gold. Then followed the cry of pain from the wound,—such a roar as might
-have come from the throats of all the hell-hounds at once. There was a
-quick second crash, while at the same instant a fire-ball dropped from
-heaven into the ocean, curdling the waters where it fell. Then, fury on
-fury, came the storm,—wind and rain and fiercer flashes, the line of the
-shower on the sea chased eastward by a toppling mass of rushing foam.
-With a scream the flock of gulls dashed out into the mist to meet it,
-and were seen no more; for now the world was black, and everything out
-of shelter was in a whirling chaos of spray and rain.
-
-Inside the Castle holy candles had been lighted in every room, and
-beside them were placed manchets of blessed bread, considered to be of
-great efficacy in warding off lightning-strokes. The two monks,
-sincerely grateful for their shelter from this outburst, knelt together
-in the chapel, and called down upon themselves the frightened blessings
-of the company by praying incessantly, though their voices were
-inaudible in the tumult of the storm. The wind shrieked around the
-Castle towers. Flashes of white light, instantly followed by long rolls
-of thunder, succeeded each other with startling rapidity. And, as a
-fierce, indeterminate undertone to all other sounds, came the roaring of
-the sea, which an incoming tide was bringing every minute higher and
-closer around the base of the cliff below.
-
-An hour went by, and yet another, and instead of diminishing in fury,
-the wind seemed only to increase. None in the Castle, not madame
-herself, could remember a summer storm of such duration. Every momentary
-lull brought after it a still more violent attack, and the longer it
-lasted, the greater grew the nervousness of the Castle inmates; for to
-them this meant the anger of God for the sins of His children. The
-evening meal was eaten amid repeated prayers for mercy and protection;
-and shortly thereafter, the little company dispersed and crept away to
-bed,—not because of any hope of sleep, but because there would be a
-certain comfort in crouching down in a warm shelter and drawing the
-blankets close overhead. The demoiselles, for the most part, and
-possibly the squires too, huddled two or three in a room. The monks were
-lodged together in the servants’ quarters; and of all that castleful,
-only the women for whom it was kept were unafraid to be alone. Eleanore,
-Lenore, and Alixe sought each her bed; but of them madame only closed
-her eyes in sleep.
-
-Lenore found herself terribly restless; and the foreboding in her mind
-seemed not all the effect of the storm. Her thoughts moved through
-terrifying shadows. It seemed to her that some great, unknown evil hung
-over her; but her apprehension was as elusive as it was unreasonable.
-For some hours she forced herself to keep in bed, tossing and twisting
-about, but letting no sound escape her. It seemed at last as if the fury
-of the wind had diminished, though the lightning-flashes continued
-incessantly, and the whole sky was still alive with muttering thunder. A
-little after midnight, urged by a restlessness that she was powerless to
-control, Lenore rose, threw a loose bliault around her, took down the
-iron lantern that hung, dimly burning, on a hook in a corner of the
-room, and, lighting her way with this, went out into the silent upper
-hall of the Castle.
-
-Gray and ghostly enough everything looked, in the dim, flickering
-lantern-light. There was in the air a smell of pitchy smoke from
-burnt-out torches, and it seemed to Lenore as if spirits were passing
-through this mist. Yet she felt no fear of anything in the spirit world.
-Her heart was full of something else,—a vague, indefinable, more
-terrible dread, an oppression that she could not reason away. Clad in
-her voluminous purple mantle, with her hair unbound and flowing over her
-shoulders, where it sparkled faintly in the lantern-light, she went down
-the stairs, across the shadowy, pillared spaces of the great lower hall,
-and so into the long room where Gerault had sat on the day when the
-herald had come to call him to Rennes. She had a vision of him sitting
-there at the table, bent upon his manuscript philosophy, never looking
-up, as again and again she passed the door. It was a ghostly hour for
-her to be abroad and occupied in such a way; yet she had no thought of
-present danger. A useless sob choked her as she turned away from this
-place of sorrowful memories and went to the chapel. Here half a dozen
-candles on the altar were still burning to the god of the storm; and
-Lenore, finding comfort in the sight of the cross, knelt before it and
-offered up a prayer for peace of mind. Then, rising, she moved back
-again into the hall; and, dreading to return to her lonely room, where
-the roar of waves and the soughing of the wind round the towers made a
-din too great for sleep, she sat down on a bench that stood beside a
-pillar directly opposite the great, locked door. Sitting here, her
-lantern at her feet, elbow on knee, chin on hand, she fell into a
-strange reverie. The bitterest of all memories came back to her without
-bitterness; and she tried to picture to herself that woman of Gerault’s
-secret heart. What had she been? How had she died? Or was she dead? In
-what relation had she really stood to Gerault? Was she that cousin of
-Laval—or some other? These thoughts, which, always before, Lenore had
-refused to work into definite shape, came to her now and were not
-repelled. Her musing was deepest when, suddenly, she was startled by the
-sound of light footsteps in the hall above. Some one came to the
-staircase; some one came gliding sinuously down. Lenore half rose, and
-looked up, cold with fear. Then she saw that it was Alixe, and,
-strangely enough, her fear did not lessen; for never had she seen Alixe
-like this.
-
-Lenore looked at her long before she was noticed; and the strangeness of
-the peasant-born’s appearance did not lessen on close examination. She
-was dressed in garments of pale green. And in these, and in her floating
-hair, her greenish eyes, her arms, her neck, Lenore fancied that she saw
-twists and coils and lissome curves and the green and golden fire of
-innumerable snakes. In the shadowy light everything was indistinct; but
-there seemed to be a phosphorescent glow about Alixe’s garments that
-illumined her, till she stood out, the brightest thing in the
-surrounding darkness. Striving bravely to ward off her sense of creeping
-fear, Lenore raised her lantern high, and looked at the other, who had
-now reached the foot of the stairs. Yes—no—_was_ this Alixe? Lenore took
-two or three frightened steps backward, and instantly Alixe turned
-toward her.
-
-“Lenore! Thou!” she cried.
-
-“Alixe!” Lenore stared, wondering at herself. Surely she had suffered a
-hallucination. Alixe was as ever, save that her eyes were a little
-wider, her skin a little paler, than usual.
-
-“What dost thou here, at this hour, alone, Lenore? Did aught frighten
-thee?”
-
-“I could not sleep, and so, long since, I rose, to wander about till the
-noise of the storm should fall. I have sat here for but a
-moment—thinking. But thou, Alixe,—whither goest thou?”
-
-“I? I also could not sleep. The storm is in my blood. I turned and
-tossed and strove to lose my thoughts. But they burn forever. Alas! I am
-seared by them. My eyes refuse to close.”
-
-“What are those thoughts of thine, Alixe? Perchance they were of the
-same woof as mine.”
-
-“Nay, nay, Lenore! Thou hast no ancient memories of this place.”
-
-“That may be; yet my thoughts were of this place, and of a woman. Tell
-me, Alixe, hast thou known in thy life one of the same name as mine own:
-a maid whom—whom my lord knew well, and who hath gone far away?”
-
-“Lenore! Mon Dieu! Who told thee of her?”
-
-“It matters not. I know. Prithee, Alixe, talk to me of her, an thou
-wouldst still the torture of my soul!”
-
-“What shall I tell thee, madame?” Alixe stared at the young woman with
-slow, questioning surprise. “Knowest thou of her life here among us?—or
-wouldst hear of her death?”
-
-“Of all—of her life and death—tell me all!” Lenore drew her mantle close
-around her, for she was shivering with something that was not cold. She
-kept her head slightly bent, so that Alixe could not see the working of
-her face, as the two of them went together to the settle by the pillar.
-
-Lenore sat very still, listening absently to the muffled sound of wind
-and rain and beating waves, while her mind drank in the narrative that
-Alixe poured into her ears; and so did the one thing interweave itself
-with the other in her consciousness, that, in after time, the spirit of
-the lost Lenore walked forever in her mind amid the terrible grandeur of
-a mighty storm, lightning crowning her head, her hair and garments
-dripping with rain and blown about by the increasing wind. An eerie
-thing it was for these two young and tender women, lightly clad, to sit
-at this midnight hour in the gray fastnesses of the Twilight Castle,
-and, while the whirlwind howled without, to turn over in their thoughts
-the story of a young life so tragically cut off in the midst of its
-happiness and beauty. Alixe’s changeable eyes shone in the semi-darkness
-with a phosphorescent gleam, and her voice rose and fell and trembled
-with emotion as she poured into Lenore’s burning heart the tale of
-Gerault’s sorrow.
-
-“Five years agone, when I was but a maid of twelve, Seigneur Gerault was
-of the age of twenty-three. At that time this Castle, I mind me, was a
-merry place enow. Madame Eleanore had a great train of squires and
-demoiselles in those days, and thy lord kept a young following of his
-own—though he held Courtoise ever the favorite. At that time Gerault
-rode not to tournaments in Rennes, but bided at home with madame, his
-mother, and Laure, and the young demoiselle Lenore de Laval, niece to
-madame, a maid as young as thou art now. This maiden had come to
-Crépuscule when she was but a little girl, her own mother being dead,
-and madame loving her as a daughter. Gerault’s love for her was not that
-of a brother; yet because of their blood-relationship, there was little
-talk of their wedding. For all that, they two were ever together in
-company, and alone as much as madame permitted. They hawked, they
-hunted, and, above all, they sailed out on the sea. The Seigneur had a
-sailing-boat, and Madame Eleanore never knew, methinks, how many hours
-they spent on the waters of the bay. Child as I was, I envied them their
-happiness; and, though I went with them but seldom, I knew always how
-long they were together each day; and methinks I understood how precious
-each moment seemed.
-
-“On this day I am to tell thee of—oh, Mother of God, that it would leave
-my memory!—I sat alone by the little gate in the wall behind the
-falconry, weeping because Laure had deserted our game and run to her
-mother in the Castle. So, while I sat there, wailing like the little
-fool I was, came the Seigneur and the demoiselle Lenore out by the gate
-on their way over the moat and to the beach by the steps that still lead
-thither down the cliff. The demoiselle paused in her going to comfort
-me, and presently, more, methinks, to tease the Seigneur than for mine
-own sake, insisted that I go sailing with them in their boat. I can
-remember how I screamed out with delight at the thought; for I loved to
-sail better than I loved to eat; and though Gerault somewhat protested,
-Lenore had her way, and presently we had come down the cliff and were on
-the beach by the inlet where the boat was kept.
-
-“’Twas the early afternoon of an April day: warm, the sun covered over
-with a gray mist that was like smoke, and but little wind for our
-pleasure. Howbeit, as we put off into the full tide, a breath caught our
-sail and we started out toward an island near the coast, round the north
-point of the bay, which from here thou canst not see. I lay down in the
-bottom of the boat, near to the mast, and listened to the gurgling sound
-of the water as it passed underneath the planks, and later grew drowsy
-with the rocking. I ween I slept; for I remember naught of that sail
-till we were suddenly in the midst of a fog so thick that where I lay I
-could scarce see the figure of my lord sitting in the stern. There was
-no wind at all, for the sail flapped against the mast; and I was a
-little frightened with the silence of everything; so I rose and went to
-the demoiselle Lenore, who laid her hand on my shoulder, and patted me.
-She and Sieur Gerault were not talking together, for I think both were a
-little nervous of the fog. All at once, in the midst of the calm, a
-streak of wind caught us, and the little boat heeled over under it.
-Gerault caught at the tiller, swearing an oath that was born more from
-uneasiness than from anger. Reading his mind, Lenore moved a little out
-of his way, and began to sing. Ah, that voice and its sweetness! I mind
-it very well—and also her chansonette. Since that day I have not heard
-it sung, yet the words are fresh in my mind. Dost know it, madame? It
-beginneth,—
-
- “‘Assez i a reson porqoi
- L’eu doit fame chière tenir—’
-
-“Ah, I remember it all so terribly! While Lenore sang, there came yet
-another gust of wind, and in it one of the ropes of the sail went loose,
-and the Seigneur must go to fix it. I sat between him and his lady, and
-as he jumped up, he put the tiller against my shoulder, and bade me not
-move till he came back. Lenore sat no more than four feet from me, on
-that side of the boat that was low in the wind. While she sang she had
-been playing with a ring that she had drawn from her finger. Just as
-monsieur sprang forward to the rope, Lenore dropped this ring, which
-methinks rolled into the water. I know that she gave a cry and threw
-herself far over the side and stretched out her hand for something. As
-she leaned, I followed her movement, and the tiller slipped its place.
-Ah, madame—madame—I remember not all the horror of the next moment! The
-boat went far over before a wave. Lenore lost her hold, and was in the
-water without a sound. The Seigneur, in a rage at me for letting the
-rudder slip, leaped back, and in an instant righted the boat, I
-screaming and crying, the while, in my woe. I know not how it was, but
-it seemed that, till we were started on our way again, Gerault never
-knew that—that his lady was gone.
-
-“Then what a scene! We turned the boat into the wind, the Seigneur
-saying not one word, but sitting stiff and still and white as death in
-the stern. The path of the wind had made a long rift in the fog, and
-through this we sailed, I calling till my voice was gone, the Seigneur
-leaning over, straining his eyes into that fathomless mist that walled
-us in on both sides. After that he drew off his doublet and boots, and
-would have leaped into the waves, but that I—_I_, madame—held him from
-it. I caught him round the arms till we were both forced to the tiller
-again, and I cried and commanded and shrieked at him till I made him see
-that his madness would bring no help. I could not guide the boat alone
-in the storm, nor could he have saved Lenore from the power of the
-water.
-
-“For hours and hours we sailed the bay. The wind drove the fog before it
-until the air was clear, and I think that the sight of that waste of
-tumbling seas was more cruel than the veiling mist from which we ever
-looked for Lenore to come back to us. Ah, I cannot picture that time to
-thee—or to myself. At last, madame, we went back to the Castle. We left
-her there, the glory of our Seigneur’s life, alone with the pitiless
-sea. It was I that had done it; that I knew in my heart. That I have
-always known, and shall never forget. Yet Gerault never spoke a word of
-blame to me. Mayhap he never knew how it came about. For many months
-thereafter he was as a man crazed; and since that time he hath not been
-the same. All that long summer he stayed alone in his room, shut away
-from us all, seeing only Courtoise, who served him, and his mother, who
-gave him what comfort she could. Twice, too, he asked for me, and
-treated me with such kindness that it went near to breaking my heart.
-Ah, then it was that the Castle began to bear out its name! It seems as
-if none had ever really lived here since that time.
-
-“But Lenore, thou wouldst say. We never saw her again; though ’tis said
-that many weeks afterwards a woman’s body was cast up on the shore near
-St. Nazaire, and was burned there by the fisher-folk, as is their custom
-with those dead at sea. And they say that now, by night, her voice is
-heard to cry out along the shore near the inlet where Gerault’s boat
-once lay.
-
-“Many years are passed since these things happened; yet they have not
-faded from my memory, nor have they from that of my lord. Up to the time
-of thy coming, madame, he mourned for her always; nor did he abstain
-from asking forgiveness of Heaven for her end.”
-
-“Ah, Alixe, he hath not yet ceased to mourn for her. Alas! I cannot fill
-her place for him. He is uncomforted. How sad, how terrible her end,
-within the very sight of him she loved! Tell me, Alixe, was she very
-fair?”
-
-“Not, methinks, so fair as thou, madame. Yet she was beautiful to look
-on, with her dark hair and her pale, clear skin, and her mouth redder
-than a rose in June. Her eyes were dark—like shadowy stars. And her ways
-were gentle—gay—tender—anything to fit her mood. Ah! I am wounding
-thee!”
-
-Poor Lenore’s head was bent a little farther down, and by her shoulders
-her companion knew that she wept. Alixe would have given much to bring
-some comfort for the pain she had unintentionally roused. But in the
-presence of the unhappy wife, she sat uneasy and abashed, powerless to
-bring solace to that tortured heart.
-
-While the two sat there, in this silence, the storm, which had lulled a
-little, broke out afresh with such a flash and roar as caused even Alixe
-to cower back where she was. There was a fierce tumult of new rain and
-howling wind, and in the midst of it a sudden great clamoring at the
-Castle door, and the faint sound of a horse neighing outside. Alixe
-sprang up, and, thinking only of giving shelter to some storm-driven
-stranger, unbarred the door. As it flew open before the storm, a man was
-hurled into the room, in a furious gush of water; and when the
-lantern-light fell upon his haggard face, Lenore gave a cry that was
-half a sob, and rushed upon him, clasping his arms,—
-
-“Courtoise! Courtoise! How fares my lord?”
-
-Courtoise gazed down upon her, and did not speak. In his face was such a
-look of suffering as none had ever seen before upon it.
-
-“Courtoise!” she cried again, this time with a new note in her voice.
-“Courtoise!—my lord!—speak to me! speak—how fares my lord?”
-
-But still, though she clung to him, Courtoise made no reply.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER TEN_
- FROM RENNES
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Lenore’s two hands went up in an agony of entreaty. Courtoise maintained
-his silence. There was in the great hall a stillness that the rushing of
-the storm could not affect. Alixe moved back to the door, and barred it
-once more against the attacks of the wind. At the same time another
-figure appeared on the stairs. Madame Eleanore, fully dressed, her hair
-bound round with a metal filet, came rapidly down and joined the little
-group. Lenore was as one groping through a mist. She knew, vaguely, when
-madame came; but it meant nothing to her. Now she repeated, in the
-pleading tone of a child that begs for some sweet withheld from it by
-its elder,—
-
-“Thou bringest a packet from my lord, Courtoise? Sweet Courtoise,
-deliver it to my hand. My lord sendeth me a letter, is it not so?”
-
-A low cry, inarticulate, heart-broken, came from the lips of the
-esquire; and therewith he fell upon his knees before the young Lenore
-and held up his two hands as if to ward off from her the blow that he
-should deal. “Madame!” he said; and, for some reason, Lenore cowered
-before him.
-
-Then Eleanore came up to them, her face milk-white, her eyes burning;
-and, laying her hand upon the young man’s shoulder, she said softly:
-“Speak, Courtoise! Tell us what is come to thy lord. In pity for us,
-delay no more.”
-
-Courtoise looked up to her, and saw how deeply haggard her face seemed.
-Then the world grew great and black; and out of the surrounding darkness
-came his voice, “The Seigneur is dead. Lord Gerault is killed of a
-spear-thrust that he got in the lists at Rennes. They bear him homeward
-now.”
-
-A deep groan, born of this, her final world-wound, came from Eleanore’s
-gray lips. Alixe gave a long scream, and then fell forward upon her
-knees and began to mutter senseless words of prayer. Courtoise huddled
-himself up on the floor, and let fatigue and grief strive for the
-mastery over him. Only Lenore uttered no sound. She, the youngest of
-them there, and the most bereaved, stood perfectly still. One of her
-hands was pressed hard against her forehead; and she looked as if she
-were trying to recall some forgotten thing. Presently she whispered to
-herself a few indistinguishable words, and a faint smile hovered round
-her lips. Finally, seeing the piteous plight of Courtoise, she laid one
-hand upon his lowered head and said gently,—
-
-“Courtoise, thou art weary, and wet, and spent with riding. Rise, dear
-squire, and seek thy bed, and rest. ’Tis very late—and thou’rt so weary.
-Go to thy rest.”
-
-Eleanore looked at her, the frail girl, in amazement. Then she came
-round and took Lenore’s hand, and said: “Thou sayest well; ’tis very
-late, Lenore, and thou art also lightly clad. Come thou to thy bed, and
-let Alixe to hers. Come, my girl.”
-
-Lenore made no resistance, and went with madame toward the stairs; Alixe
-stared after them as if they had both been mad, for she had never known
-a blow that stuns the brain. Lenore suffered herself to be led quietly
-up the stairs, and, reaching her own room, which was dark save for the
-light that came through from madame’s open door, she dropped off her
-wide bliault, and lay down, shivering slightly, in the cold bed. She was
-numb and drowsy. Madame, bending over her, watched and saw the eyelids
-slowly close over her great blue eyes, till they were fast shut; and the
-young Lenore slept—slept as sweetly as a babe.
-
-Of the night, however, that madame spent, who dares to speak in
-unexpressive words? What the slow-passing, dark-robed hours brought her,
-who shall say? Her last loss broke her spirit; and she felt that
-underneath the heavy, all-powerful hand of the Creator-Destroyer, none
-might stand upright and hope to live. Gerault had suffered, as now he
-gave, great sorrow. Eleanore had never felt herself close to his heart,
-as she had once been close to the heart of that daughter whom she had
-sacrificed to an unwilling God. But now, in the knowledge of his death,
-the memory of Gerault’s coldness and of his elected solitude went from
-her, and she recalled only the justice, the strength, the self-reliance
-of him. Gradually her memory drew her back through his manhood, through
-his youth and his boyhood, to the time of his infancy, when the little,
-helpless, dark-eyed babe had come to bless the loneliness of her own
-young life. And with this memory, at last, came tears,—those divine
-tears that can wash the direst grief free of its bitterness.
-
-As the dawn showed in the east, and rose triumphant over the dying
-storm, madame crept to her bed, and laid her weary body on the kindly
-resting-place, and slept.
-
-At half-past six the sun lifted above the eastern hills, and looked
-forth from a clear, green sky, over a land freshly washed, glittering
-with dew, and new-colored with brighter green and gold and red for the
-glorification of the September day. The sea, bringing great breakers in
-from the pathless west, was spread with a carpet of high-rolling gold,
-designed to cover all the new-stolen treasures gathered by night and
-stored within its treacherous, malignant depths. But the world poured
-fragrant incense to the sun, and the sun showered gold on the sea, and
-in this sacrificial worship Nature expiated her dire passion of the
-night.
-
-It was fair daylight when Lenore opened her eyes and sat up in her bed
-to greet the morning. She was glad indeed to escape from the fetters of
-sleep, for her dreams had been feverish things. In them she had wandered
-abroad over the gray battlements, and through the grim chambers of dimly
-lighted Crépuscule, and had seen and heard terrible things. Lenore
-smiled to herself at the thought that all were past. And then, creeping
-over her, came the black shadow of reality, of memory. There was the
-storm—her sleeplessness—Alixe—the story of the lost Lenore—were these
-dreams? And then—finally—God!—the coming of Courtoise—and—
-
-With a sharp cry Lenore sprang from the bed, flung her purple mantle
-upon her, and ran wildly through the adjoining room into that of madame.
-Eleanore, roused from her light sleep by that cry, had risen and met her
-daughter near the door. Lenore needed but one glance into madame’s
-colorless face. Then she knew that she had not dreamed in the past
-night. Her horrible visions were true.
-
-Physical refreshment brought her a terrible power: the power of
-suffering. There could not now be any numb acceptance of facts. Eleanore
-herself was shocked at the change that a few seconds wrought in the
-young face. Yet still Lenore shed no tears, made no exhibition of her
-grief. Quietly, with the stillness of death about her movements, she
-returned to her room and began to dress herself. Before she had finished
-her toilet, Alixe crept in, white-faced and red-eyed, to ask if there
-were any service she might do. Lenore tremulously bade her wait till her
-hair was bound; and then she said: “Let Courtoise be brought in to me,
-here.”
-
-“Wilt thou not first eat—but a morsel of bread—nay, a sup of wine?”
-pleaded Alixe.
-
-Lenore looked at her. “How should I eat or drink? Let Courtoise be
-brought to me.”
-
-Obediently Alixe went and found Courtoise loitering about the foot of
-the stairs in the hall below. He ascended eagerly when Alixe gave him
-her message, and entered alone into the room where sat Lenore.
-
-Through two long hours Alixe and the demoiselles and young esquires, a
-stricken, silent company, huddled together at the table in the long
-room, sat and waited the coming of Courtoise. There was nothing to be
-done in the Castle save to wait; and it seemed to them all that they
-would rather work like slaves than sit thus, inert and silent, and with
-naught to do but think of what had come upon Le Crépuscule. They knew
-that the body of Gerault was on its way home. A henchman had long since
-started off for St. Nazaire to acquaint the Bishop with the news and
-bring him back to the Castle. Also, Anselm and the captain of the keep
-had lifted the great stone in the floor of the chapel, that led into the
-vault below. This was all there was to be done now, until the last
-home-coming of their lord.
-
-At ten o’clock Courtoise appeared on the threshold of the long room, and
-his face bore a light as of transfiguration. As he went in and halted
-near the doorway, the little company rose reverently, and waited for him
-to speak. He turned to Alixe, but it was a moment or two before he could
-get his voice and control it to speak.
-
-“Alixe—Alixe—Madame Lenore hath asked for you—asks that you come to
-her.”
-
-Alixe rose at once, and the two went out together into the hall. There,
-however, Courtoise halted, saying, in a low, almost reverent tone: “She
-is in her chamber. I am to remain here below.”
-
-Alixe turned her white face and her bright green eyes upon him
-questioningly. “How doth she bear herself? Doth she yet weep?” she asked
-in a half-whisper.
-
-“She doth not weep. Ah, God! the Seigneur married an angel out of
-heaven, Alixe, and never knew it; and now can never know!”
-
-“He was our lord, Courtoise. Reproach not the dead.”
-
-Courtoise bent his head without speaking, and Alixe went on, up to
-Lenore’s chamber, the door of which stood half open. Alixe went softly
-in, and found Lenore sitting alone by the window, where madame had just
-left her. Silently the widowed girl put out both hands to Alixe, and, as
-Alixe went over to her, the tears began to run from her eyes. It was
-this sight of tears that first broke through Lenore’s wonderful
-self-control. Springing to her feet, with a choking, hysterical cry she
-flung both arms around Alixe’s neck, and wailed out, in that breathless
-monotone that children sometimes use: “Alixe! Alixe! Why is it that I
-cannot die? O Alixe! Alixe! Pray God to let me die!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-At four o’clock in the afternoon Monseigneur de St. Nazaire arrived at
-the Castle. The body of the fallen knight had not yet come. Watchers had
-been placed in every tower to catch the first sight of the funeral
-train; but all day long they had strained their eyes in vain. At last,
-when the sun was near the horizon, and the golden shadows were long over
-the land, and the sky was haloed with a saintly glow, up, out of the
-cool depths of the forest, on the winding, barren road that rose toward
-the Castle on the cliff, came a wearily moving company of men and
-horses. There were six riders, who, with lances reversed, rode three on
-a side of a broad, heavy cart, of which the burden was covered with a
-great, black cloth, embroidered in one corner with the ducal arms of
-Brittany.
-
-The drawbridge was already lowered. In the courtyard an orderly company
-of henchmen and servants stood waiting to see the funeral car drive in.
-The Castle doors were open, and in their space stood the Bishop, with a
-priest at his right hand and, on his left, Courtoise, black-clothed, and
-white and calm. In front of the doorway the cart halted, and immediately
-the six gentlemen of Rennes, who had drawn Gerault from the fatal lists
-and had of their own desire brought him home, dismounted, and, after
-reverently saluting the Bishop, went to the cart and lifted out the
-stretcher. This, its burden still covered with the black cloth, they
-carried into the Castle and deposited in the chapel on the high, black
-bier made ready for it.
-
-Madame Eleanore, Alixe, and the demoiselles, but not Lenore, were in the
-chapel waiting. When the burden of the litter had been placed, and the
-black cloth drawn close over the dead body, Eleanore, who till this time
-had been upon her knees before the altar, came forward to greet the six
-knightly gentlemen, and all of them, as they returned her sad salute,
-were struck with her impenetrable dignity. Her salutation at once
-thanked them, greeted them, and dismissed them from the chapel; and
-indeed they had no thought of staying to watch this first meeting of the
-living with the dead; but, returning obeisance to the mother of their
-comrade, they left the holy room and found Courtoise outside, waiting to
-conduct them to the refreshment that had been prepared.
-
-So was Eleanore left alone before her dead. Behind her, near the altar,
-knelt the maidens, weeping while they prayed. The tall candles around
-the bier were yet unlighted; but through one of the high windows came a
-last ray of sunlight, to bar the mourning-cloth with royal gold.
-
-For a moment, clasping both hands before her, in her silent strain,
-Eleanore stood still before the bier. Then, moving forward, she lifted
-the edge of the covering, and drew it away from the head and shoulders
-of her son.
-
-There was he,—Gerault. There was he, scarcely whiter or more still than
-she had seen him many times in life; yet he was dead: transparent and
-pinched and ineffably still, and dead! The head was bare of any cap or
-helmet, and the black locks and beard were smoothly combed. The broad,
-fair brow was calm and unwrinkled. The mouth, scarce concealed by the
-mustache, was curved into an expression of great peace.
-
-Madame took the cover again, and drew it slowly down till the whole form
-lay before her. His armor had been removed, and he was clothed in silken
-vestments that hid all trace of his wound. The hands were folded fair
-across his breast; his feet were cased in long velvet shoes,
-fur-bordered. From the peacefulness of his attitude it was difficult to
-imagine the scene by which he had met his end: the great flashing and
-clashing of arms, the blare of trumpets, the shouting applause of
-thousands of fair onlookers, gayly clothed ladies, who, after their
-shouting, saw him fall.
-
-Long Eleanore stood there, looking upon him as he lay, untroubled now by
-any human thing. And as she looked, many world-thoughts rose up within
-her as to his life, his griefs, and the manner of his going. She had had
-him always: had borne, and reared, and watched, and loved him; and he
-had loved her, she knew, though he had seldom shown it, and had lived
-much within himself. She yearned—ah, _how_ she yearned!—to take him now
-into her arms again, and croon over him, and soothe him, as a mother
-soothes her children. Alas, that he did not need it of her! Her breast
-heaved twice or thrice, with deep, suppressed sobs. Then she fell upon
-her knees, and leaned her forehead over upon an edge of his robe while
-she prayed. And as she knelt there, twilight gathered over the sunset
-glow, and the chapel grew dim and gray with coming darkness.
-
-After a long while madame rose and turned to Alixe, who stood near,
-looking at her and weeping. And madame said gently: “Alixe, let her be
-summoned—little Lenore—his wife. She should be here.”
-
-Alixe bowed silently, and went away out of the room. Eleanore remained
-in her place, and the demoiselles still knelt under the crucifix. Then
-came footboys, with tapers, to light the candles. Presently the bier was
-haloed with yellow flames, and the marble altar blazed with lights. The
-hour for the mass was near, and the people of the Castle, and a few
-country folk, clothed in their best, began to come softly into the
-chapel, by twos and threes. All, after bowing to the cross and pausing
-for a few seconds to look upon Gerault, passed over to the far side of
-the room, and knelt there, absorbed in prayer. The little room was more
-than half filled, when Courtoise, pale and wide-eyed, appeared upon the
-threshold, and, holding up his hand, whispered to the throng,—
-
-“Madame Lenore is here! Peace, and be still! Madame Lenore comes in!”
-
-Immediately Lenore walked into the room, and men held their breath at
-sight of her. She was dressed as for a bridal, in robes of stiff, white
-damask, her mantle fastened at her throat with a silver pin, and her
-silver-woven wedding-veil falling over her from the filet that confined
-it. White as death itself she was, and staring straight before her,
-seeing nothing of the throng of onlookers. For a moment her eyes were
-blinded by the blaze of light. Then she started forward, to the body of
-her lord.
-
-When she entered, her two hands had been tightly clenched, and she had
-thought to restrain herself from any outbreak of grief before the
-people. But the living were forgotten now. Here before her was the face
-that she had loved so wofully, that she had hungered for so unspeakably.
-Here was he, the giver of her one brief hour of unutterable happiness;
-the cause of so many days and nights of tremulous woe. Here he lay,
-waiting not for her nor for anything, with no power to give her greeting
-when she came. Yet it was he; it was his face.
-
-“Gerault—Gerault—my lord!” she whispered softly, as if he slept:
-“Gerault!” She was beside him, and had taken one of the rigid hands in
-both her warm, living ones. “My lord, my beloved, wilt not turn thy face
-to me? I have waited long for thy kiss. Prithee, give but a little of
-thy love; _seem_ but to notice me, and I will be well content. Nay, but
-thou surely wilt! Surely, surely, beloved, thou wilt not pass me by!”
-
-She had been covering the hand she held with kisses, but now she put it
-from her, and looked down upon the passive body, her eyes wide and hurt,
-and her mouth tremulous with his repulse. The spectators watched this
-pitiable scene with fascinated awe; and it seemed not to occur to one of
-them to prevent what followed. None there realized that Lenore was
-unbalanced: that to her, Gerault was still alive. She bent over, and put
-her lips to his. Then, burned and tortured by the unresponsiveness of
-the clay, she laid herself down upon the bier and put her head in the
-hollow of Gerault’s neck, where it had been wont to rest.
-
-Now, at last, two of that watching company started forward to prevent a
-continuance of the scene. Courtoise and the Bishop went to her with one
-impulse; took her—monseigneur by the hands, Courtoise about the body;
-loosened her clasp upon the form of her dead husband, and drew her
-gently away from the bier. She, spent and shaken with her grief, made no
-resistance, but lay quietly back in their arms, trembling and weak.
-Thereupon both men looked helplessly toward Madame Eleanore, to know
-what should be done. She, strained almost to the point of breaking, came
-and stood over the form of Lenore and said to Courtoise,—
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _“Gerault—Gerault—my
- lord!” she whispered.—Page 275_
-]
-
-“She cannot remain here. ’Tis too terrible for her. Carry her up to her
-room, whither Alixe shall follow her. But I must remain here till the
-mass is said.”
-
-Both of the men would gladly have acted upon this suggestion; but madame
-had not finished speaking when Lenore began to struggle in their arms,
-crying piteously the while:
-
-“Nay! Let me stay! In the name of mercy, let me not be sent from him. I
-will not seek again to disturb his rest. I will be very quiet—very
-still. I will not even weep. I will but kneel here upon the stones, and
-will not speak through all the mass, so that you take me not out of his
-sight. Methinks he might care to have me here; it might be his wish that
-I should remain unto the end. Have pity, gentle Courtoise! Pity,
-monseigneur!”
-
-At once they granted her request, and released her; for indeed her plea
-was more than any of the three could well endure. The Bishop was beyond
-speech, and the tears were streaming from Courtoise’s eyes as he left
-her side. Lenore kept her word. She knelt down upon the stones, two or
-three feet from the bier; and, with head bent low and hands clasped upon
-her breast, strove to force her thoughts to God and high heaven. St.
-Nazaire at once began the mass for the dead, and never had any man more
-reverence done him or more tears shed for him than the stern and silent
-Lord of Crépuscule, who, it seemed, had formed a light of life for
-Lenore the golden-haired. After the beginning of the service, she was
-left unnoticed where she had placed herself; and, as the minutes passed,
-her strained figure settled nearer and nearer to the floor; the
-candle-light played more joyously with her glorious hair; and finally,
-as the mass neared its end, she sank quietly down upon the stones,
-unconscious and released from tears at last.
-
-A few moments later, Courtoise and Alixe bore her gently up the great
-stairs, and laid her, in her white bridal robes, upon her lonely bed. It
-was thus that she left Gerault; thus that her youth and her love met
-their end, and her long twilight of widowhood began.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another morning dawned, in tender primrose tints, and saluted the sea
-through a low-clinging September haze. The Castle rose at the usual
-hour, and dressed, and descended to the morning meal, scarce able to
-understand that there was any change in the usual quiet existence. It
-was impossible, indeed, to realize that, in two little days of sun and
-storm, the life of the Castle had died, its mainstay had broken, and
-that henceforth it must exist only in memories. On this day two of the
-squires made their adieux to madame, and hied them forth to seek a lord
-by whom to be trained yet more thoroughly for knighthood; and mayhap to
-get themselves a little more familiar with its third article.[3] But
-Courtoise, all heart-broken as he was, and Roland de St. Bertaux, and
-Guy le Trouvé, being all of gentle blood, but without other home to
-seek, came to their lady and kissed her hand, and swore her eternal
-allegiance and service. And the demoiselles, who had, indeed, no need of
-a lord in the Castle, renewed their duty to their mistress, and also
-tried to give her what little comfort they knew, in the shape of certain
-of Anselm’s Latin texts, and a few less pithy but warmer phrases of
-their own making. The six knights that had brought Gerault home, rode
-off again, sadly bearing with them Eleanore’s brave messages of loyalty
-and thanks to Duke Jean in Rennes. The Bishop of St. Nazaire sent his
-assistant priest home; but he himself elected to remain for a day or
-two, knowing that, should Lenore become seriously ill, he would be a
-stay for Madame Eleanore. Of Eleanore herself there were no fears. She
-was too strong to cause any one anxiety for her health. Indeed, it was
-generally thought that she had put Gerault too much away. How that may
-be is not certain; but there was nothing now in the Castle to speak of
-him. The chapel was empty; the mouth of the great vault had closed once
-more, this time to hide under its grim weight the last of the line of
-Crépuscule.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- “He shall uphold the rights of the weaker, such as orphans, damsels,
- and widows.”
-
-On the second day after the funeral, Eleanore, knowing by bitter
-experience how excellent a cure for melancholy is hard work, betook
-herself and the demoiselles up to the spinning-room as usual. Lenore
-only, of the company, was missing. She, by madame’s own bidding, still
-kept her bed,—lying there silent, patient, asking no attendance from any
-one; listening hour by hour to the soft sound of the sea as it broke
-upon the cliffs far below her window. Of what was in her heart, what
-things she saw in her day dreams, neither Alixe nor madame sought to
-learn. But there was something in her face, thin, wan, transparent as it
-had grown, that sent a great fear to Eleanore’s heart, and caused her to
-watch over Lenore with deep anxiety; and it seemed as if the effort of
-walking would break the last vestige of strength in that frail body.
-
-Through the first day of return to the old routine, madame was fully
-occupied in making a pretence at cheerfulness and in inducing those
-around her to hide their sadness. But afterwards, when chatter and
-smiles began to come naturally back to the young lips, and the gayety of
-youth to shine from their eyes again, she suddenly relaxed her strain,
-and let her mind sink into what depths it would. How dim with misery was
-the September air! Hope had gone out of her life; and the thought of joy
-was a mockery. Throughout her whole world there was not a single spot of
-brightness on which to feast her tired eyes. Even imagination had fled,
-and there remained to her only a vista of unending, monotonous days, the
-one so like the other that she should soon forget the passage of time.
-And this future was inevitable. Le Crépuscule was here, and she must
-keep to it. She had no other refuge save a nunnery; and that merest
-suggestion was terrible to her. Gerault’s widow, the young Lenore, was
-left; yet she would be infinitely happier to go back to the home of her
-youth. There was a cry of despair in Eleanore’s heart at this
-realization, and she fought with herself for a long time before finally
-she was wrought to the point of going to Lenore and counselling her
-return to her father’s roof. Yet Eleanore brought herself to this; for
-she felt that this last sacrifice was one of duty: that she had no right
-forever to shut the youth and beauty of the young life into the grim
-shadows of Le Crépuscule.
-
-On the evening of the third day of her new struggle Eleanore went, with
-woe in her heart, to the door of Lenore’s room. The apartment was
-flooded with the light of sunset, so that Lenore, lying in the very
-midst of it, seemed to be resting in a sea of glowing gold. When
-Eleanore entered, the young girl turned, with a little smile of
-pleasure, and said,—
-
-“Thou’rt very kind to come to me here while I lie thus in idlesse.
-Indeed, I see not how thou shouldst bear with me that I do nothing when
-all the Castle is at work.”
-
-“Bear with thee! My child, thou hast given us nothing to bear. Thou hast
-rather brought into the Castle a light that will burn always in our
-hearts. And, in thy great grief, thou shalt get what comfort may be for
-thee from whatever thou canst find. Now, indeed, dear child, I am come
-to make a pleading that breaketh my heart; yet we have done so much
-wrong to thy fair young life, that it is not in me further to blight
-it.” She went over to the bedside, and Lenore, sitting up, took one of
-the strong white hands in her own delicate fingers and pressed it to her
-lips. Then, while Eleanore bent close over her, she said softly,—
-
-“What is this thing that pains thee? Surely thou’lt not think that I
-could do aught to hurt thee?”
-
-“Yes, for this will bring happiness back into thy heart.”
-
-“Happiness!”
-
-“Yes, Lenore, happiness. That word sounds strange in thine ears from me;
-yet listen while I speak. Gerault, my dead son, brought thee out of a
-life of sunshine and gayety and fair youth into this grim Twilight
-Castle; and now thou hast entered, with all of us, from twilight into
-blackest night. But thou hast in thee what is lacking in me, and in
-those that dwell here as part of our race; thou’rt young, and thou hast
-had a joyous youth. Thou knowest what I long since forgot: that, in this
-world, there is a country of happiness. Now it is I, Gerault’s mother,
-that bids thee leave these shades of ours and return to thy real home. I
-bid thee go back again into thy youth, to thy father’s house, whither,
-if thou wilt, I will myself in all love convey thee; and I will tell thy
-father how thou hast been unto me all that—more than—a daughter should
-be; that I love thee as one of my own blood; that I am sore to give thee
-up—”
-
-“Madame! Madame Eleanore! Thou must not give me up! Surely thou wilt
-not!” Lenore turned a quivering face up to the other; and madame read
-her expression with deep amazement.
-
-“Give thee up! Do I not tell thee that at the thought my heart is like
-to break? Nay, thou’rt my daughter always; and when thou wilt, this is
-thy home. Yet for the sake of thy youth—”
-
-“Madame—” Lenore sat up straighter, and looked suddenly off to the
-windows of her room, her face by turns gone deathly white and rosy red:
-“madame, this Twilight Castle is my double home. Here dwelt Gerault, my
-beloved lord, and—and here shall dwell his child—the child that is to be
-born to me—the new Lord of Le Crépuscule.”
-
-“Lenore!—Lenore!”
-
-“My mother!”
-
-Then, as the sunset died from the distant west, these two women, united
-as never before, sat together upon Gerault’s bed, clasping each other
-close and mingling their tears and their laughter in a joy that neither
-had thought to know again.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER ELEVEN_
- THE WANDERER
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The utterly unexpected revelation that Lenore had made to madame drew
-the two women into a tender intimacy that brought a holy joy to both of
-them. That most beautiful, most priceless flowering of Lenore’s life
-gave to her nature an added sweetness, and to her soul a new depth that
-rendered her incomparably beautiful in the eyes of every one around her.
-The secret remained a secret between her and her new-made mother, and
-for this reason the happiness of the two was as inexplicable as it was
-joyous for the rest of the Castle. Alixe, standing jealously without the
-gate of this golden citadel, into which she had frequent glimpses,
-wondered at its brightness as much as she wondered at its existence at
-all. Day by day Lenore grew beautiful, and day by day the look of
-content upon her face became more marked, until it was marvelled at how
-she had forgotten her bereavement. And Eleanore—Madame Eleanore—found
-herself growing young again in the youth of Gerault’s bride; and in her
-love for the beautiful, tranquil girl she learned a lesson in patience
-that fifty years of trial and sorrow had never brought her.
-
-When Lenore finally rose from her bed she did not return to the mornings
-in the spinning-room; and, since madame must perforce be there to
-oversee the work, Alixe took her frame or her wheel to Lenore’s chamber,
-and sat there through the morning hours. Save for the fact that Alixe
-could not be addressed on the subject nearest her heart, Lenore probably
-enjoyed these periods of the younger woman’s company quite as much as
-those graver times with madame. Both of them were young, and Alixe,
-having a nature the individuality of which nothing could suppress, knew
-more of the gayeties of youth than one could have thought possible,
-considering her opportunities. This jumped well with Lenore’s
-disposition, for her own sunny nature would have shone through any
-cloud-thickness, provided there was some one to catch the beam and
-reflect it back to her. The two talked on every conceivable subject, but
-generally reverted to one common interest before many hours had gone.
-This was Nature: of which Lenore had been vaguely, but none the less
-passionately fond; and of which Alixe, in her lonely life, had made a
-beautiful and minute study. The two of them together watched the death
-of the summer, and saw autumn weave its full woof, from the rich colors
-of golden harvest and purple vine to the melancholy brown and gray of
-dead moorland and leafless branch. And when the dreariness of November
-came upon the land, there remained, to their keen eyes, the sea—the sea
-that is never twice the same—the sea whose beauties cannot die.
-
-This sea, which Lenore had never looked on till she came a bride to
-Crépuscule, held for her a deep fascination. She watched it as an
-astronomer watches his stars. And its vasty, changing surface came to
-exercise a peculiar influence over her quiet life. The night of the
-great storm brought it into double conjunction with the bitterest grief
-in her life; and, with the knowledge of its cruel power, awe was added
-to her interest and her admiration. She and Alixe were accustomed to
-talk daily of the lost Lenore, Lenore herself always introducing the
-topic with irresistible eagerness, and Alixe answering her innumerable
-questions with an interest born of curiosity regarding the young widow’s
-motive. In the presence of Alixe, Lenore never betrayed the tiniest
-tremor of sensitiveness; and it would have been impossible for Alixe to
-surmise how keen was the secret bitterness that lay hidden in her heart.
-What suffering it brought she endured alone, by night, and indeed she
-kept herself for the most part well shielded from it.
-
-From the first night after Gerault’s burial, Lenore had insisted upon
-sleeping alone. To every suggestion of company she replied that solitude
-was precious to her, and that she could not sleep with another in the
-room. Eleanore understood her feeling, and, while she left an easy
-access from her room to Lenore’s, never once ventured to enter Lenore’s
-chamber after nightfall. For this, indeed, the young woman was grateful,
-not because of any joy she found in being alone in the darkness, but
-because, after she had gone to bed, she felt that her veil of
-appearances had fallen, and that she might let her mind take what temper
-it would. It was by night that she knew the terrible yearning for the
-dead that all women have in time, and from which they suffer keenest
-agony. It was by night that she pictured Gerault not as he had been, but
-as she had wished him to be toward her; and gradually Gerault dead came
-to be vested with every perfect quality, till her loss became endurable
-to her through the hours of her dreaming. By night, also, her childhood
-returned to her; and she recalled and gently regretted all the simple
-pleasures she had known, the rides and games and caroles that she had
-been wont to indulge in, in her father’s house. Sometimes, too, in hours
-of distorted vision, she came to feel that her great blessing was rather
-a burden; and she would weep at the thought of the little thing that
-must be born to the interminable shadows of this grim Castle, and felt
-that she alone would be responsible for the sadness of the young life.
-Yet there might be fair things devised for him. It could not be but a
-boy,—her child; and in his early youth she planned that he should ride
-to some distant, gay chateau, to be esquired to a gallant knight; and in
-time he should come riding home to her, himself golden-spurred; and
-then, later, he should bring a lady to the Castle whom he should love as
-a man loves once; and the two of them would bring the light of the sun
-to Crépuscule, and banish its shadows forever away. So dreamed Lenore
-for this unborn babe of hers.
-
-And then again, sometimes, by night, she would leave her bed and sit for
-hours together at that window where, long ago, Gerault had knelt in the
-hour of his passion. And Lenore would watch the quiet moon sail serenely
-through the sky, till it sank, at early dawn, under the other sea. And
-this vision of the setting moon never failed to bring peace to her
-heart. Sometimes, after Gerault’s example, but not in his tone, she
-would call down from her height upon the spirit of the lost Lenore that
-was supposed to walk the rocky shore at the base of the Castle cliff.
-But no answering cry ever reached her ears, and this was well; for what
-such a thing would have brought to her already morbid mind, it were sad
-to surmise. Nevertheless, in the nights thus spent, this gentle ghost
-came to have a personality for her, in which she rather rejoiced, for
-she felt that here must be some one in whom she could expect
-understanding of her secret grief. Lenore at night, living with the
-creatures of her fancy, was a strange little being, no more resembling
-the Lenore of daylight than a gnome resembles some bright fairy. And so
-well did she hide her midnight moods that no one in the Castle ever so
-much as suspected them.
-
-It was not till the middle of November that Alixe learned of the hope of
-Crépuscule; but when she did know, her tenderness for Lenore became
-something beautiful to see, and she partook both of Eleanore’s deep joy
-and of Lenore’s quiet content. Three or four days after the knowledge
-had come to her, Alixe was pacing up and down the terrace in front of
-the Castle, side by side with Lenore. It was a blustering, chilly day,
-and both young women drew their heavy mantles close around them as they
-watched the great flocks of gulls wheel and dip to the sea, looking like
-flurries of snowflakes against the sombre background of the sky. Far out
-in the bay one or two of the crude fishing-boats from St. Nazaire were
-beating their way southward toward their harbor, and then Lenore watched
-with eyes that dilated more and more with interest and desire.
-
-“Alixe,” she said suddenly, “canst thou sail a boat?”
-
-“Why dost thou ask?”
-
-“Certes, for that I would know.”
-
-Alixe laughed. “’Tis a reason,” she said.
-
-“Tell me, Alixe! Make me answer!”
-
-“Knowest thou not that, after the drowning of the demoiselle Lenore, it
-was forbidden any one in Crépuscule to put out upon the sea in any boat,
-though he might be able to walk the water like Our Lord?”
-
-“Hush, Alixe! But yet—thou’st not replied to me.”
-
-“Well, then, if thou wouldst know, I can sail a boat, and withal
-skilfully. In the olden days, Laure—’twas Gerault’s sister—and I have
-gone out in secret an hundred times in a fisherman’s boat anchored a
-mile down the shore, in front of some of the peasants’ huts. Laure and I
-paid the fisherman money to let us take the boat; for she loved it as
-well as I. Indeed, I have been lonely for it since her going.”
-
-“Ah! Since her going thou’st not known the sea?”
-
-“Not often. Alone, with a heavy boat, there is danger.”
-
-“Alixe, take me with thee sometime! Soon! To-day! My soul is athirst to
-feel the tremor of the boiling waves!”
-
-“Madame!” murmured Alixe, not relishing what she considered an
-ill-advised jest.
-
-“Nay! Look not like that upon me! I would truly go. Can we not set
-forth? There is yet time ere dark.”
-
-From sheer nervousness Alixe laughed. Then she said solemnly: “Madame
-Lenore, right willingly, hadst thou need of it, I would yield up my life
-to you; but venture forth with you upon those waters will I not; nor
-thou nor any other that were not mad, would ask it.”
-
-Lenore frowned at these words, but she said nothing more, either on that
-subject or another; and presently the two went back into the Castle. But
-a strange desire had been born in Lenore, and she brooded upon it
-continually. Day by day she hungered for the sea; and, though she did
-not again suggest her wish, there were times when the roar of the waves
-on the cliffs, and the cold puffs of air strong with the odor of the
-salt tide, came near unbalancing her mind, and drove uncanny thoughts of
-watery deaths through her heart. But through that long winter she
-betrayed only occasional evidences of the effect that illness,
-loneliness, and long brooding were having upon her mind; and perhaps it
-was only the dread of betrayal that in the end saved her from actual
-insanity.
-
-December came in and advanced in the midst of arctic gales and
-continually swirling snow, till Brittany was wrapped deep under a pure,
-fleecy blanket. It was the season of warmth and idleness indoors, when
-the poorest peasant got out his chestnut-bag, and merrily roasted this
-staple article of his diet before the fire by night. The Christmas
-spirit was on all men; and this in Brittany was tempered and tinctured
-with the quaintest fairy-lore relating to the season, and as real to
-every Breton as the story of their Christ. The Christmas mass was no
-more devoutly enjoyed than was the great feast, held a week later, on
-the night known throughout Brittany not as the New Year, but as St.
-Sylvester’s Eve, when all elfdom was abroad to guard the treasures left
-uncovered by the thirsty dolmens. And this, and an infinite number of
-other tales, of witch and gnome, sprite and fay, sleeping princess and
-hero-king, of Viviane and her wondrous forest of Broecilande, were told
-anew, each year, behind locked doors, before the crackling fires that
-burned from dusk to enchanted midnight.
-
-To Lenore, the holy week from Christmas to New Year’s was replete with
-interest; for in her own home, near Rennes, she had known nothing like
-it. Christmas morning saw all the peasantry of the estates of Crépuscule
-come to the Castle for mass; after which there was a great distribution
-of alms.
-
-From Christmas Day, throughout that week, according to ecclesiastic law,
-the Castle drawbridge was never raised; no watchers were posted on the
-battlements, and monk and knight, outlaw and criminal, high lord and
-lady, found welcome and food and shelter within the great gray walls.
-This open hospitality was made safe by the fact that, during this time,
-no matter what war might be in progress, or what family feud in height,
-no man was allowed to lift a hand against his neighbor, and the knight
-that dared to use his sword during those seven days was branded caitiff
-throughout his life. This law prevailed throughout the length and
-breadth of France; but its observance belonged more peculiarly to the
-far coast regions, where towns were scarce, and feudal fortresses
-offered the only hope of shelter to the traveller. And during this week
-there was scarcely an hour in the day that did not see its wanderer, of
-whatever degree, appealing for safe housing from the bitter cold.
-
-The week was the merriest and the busiest that Lenore had known since
-coming to the Castle; and the arrival of the Bishop of St. Nazaire, on
-the day before New Year’s, brought all Le Crépuscule to the highest
-state of satisfaction. For many years it had been monseigneur’s custom
-to spend St. Sylvester’s Day in the Castle,—formerly as the guest of the
-old Seigneur, latterly as that of Madame Eleanore; and though the
-Twilight Castle always delighted to honor his coming, on such occasions
-it was a double pleasure; for upon this one day he carried with him a
-spirit of bonhomie, of general, rollicking gayety, that roused every one
-to the same pitch of happiness, and made the Saint’s feast what it was.
-
-Since the last home-coming of Gerault, St. Nazaire had spent a good deal
-of time at the Castle, had played many a well-fought game of chess with
-Madame Eleanore, and had exerted himself to lift little Lenore, for whom
-he entertained almost a veneration, out of her quiet melancholy. None in
-the Castle, from Alixe to the scullions, but would have done him any
-service; and his arrival assured the feast of something of its one-time
-merriment.
-
-On this great day the time for midday meat was set forward two hours, it
-being just one o’clock when the company sat down at the immense
-horseshoe table, that nearly encircled the great hall; for the ordinary
-Castle retinue was increased by a rabble of peasants, and a dozen or
-more of travellers that had claimed their privilege of hospitality.
-
-As Madame Eleanore, handed by the Bishop, took her place at the head of
-the table, the band of musicians in the stone gallery overhead sent out
-a noisy blast of trumpets, and everybody sought a place. Beside madame,
-supported by Courtoise, came Lenore; and again by her were Alixe, with
-Anselm the steward. When these were all standing behind their tabourets,
-monseigneur repeated the grace, in Latin. Immediately upon the amen, the
-trumpets rang out again, and there was a great rustling as everybody sat
-down and, in the same breath, began to talk. After a wait of not less
-than ten seconds, there appeared four pages, bearing high in their hands
-four huge platters, on each of which reposed a stuffed boar’s head,
-steaming fragrantly. Two more boys followed these first, carrying
-immense baskets of bread,—white to go above the salt, black for those
-below. Then came Grichot, the cellarer, rolling into the room a cask of
-beer, which was set up in the space between the two ends of the curved
-table, and tapped. Instantly this was surrounded by a throng of
-struggling henchmen, friars, and peasants, each with his horn in his
-hand, eager to be among the first to drink allegiance to their lady.
-Madame and her little party in the centre of the table were served with
-wine of every description known to the north; besides mead or punches
-for whosoever should call for them.
-
-Lenore was seated between Courtoise and monseigneur; and for her alone
-of all the company, apparently, the feast held less of merriment than of
-sadness. When every one was seated, and the clatter of tongues had
-begun, she looked about her, vaguely wondering how many times she
-should, by this feast, measure a year passed in the grim Castle. Looking
-along the table either way, at the double rows of men and women, Lenore
-saw every mouth working greedily upon food already served, and every
-hand outstretched for more, as rapidly as the various dishes could be
-brought in. She saw burly men, roaring with the laughter of animal
-satisfaction, drinking down flagon after flagon of bitter beer. She
-caught echoes and fragments of coarse jokes and coarser suggestions; and
-her delicate nature revolted at the scene. She turned to look toward the
-mistress of the Castle, wondering how madame, who was of a fibre as fine
-as her own, could endure such sights and sounds. Eleanore sat calmly
-listening to monseigneur, her eyes lifted a little above the level of
-the scene, her lips smiling, her air pleasantly animated, though she was
-scarcely eating, and only a cup of milk stood before her place. As for
-the Bishop, he was unfeignedly enjoying himself. A generous portion of
-roast peacock was on his plate, and a bottle of red wine stood close at
-his elbow. His wit was at its best, and he was entertaining all his
-immediate neighborhood with such stories and reminiscences as he alone
-could relate. Lenore found relief in the sight of him and madame, and,
-pulling herself together, turned to the young squire on her right hand,
-and began to talk to him gently. Roland listened to her with the
-reverent adoration entertained for her by every man about the Castle;
-but his replies were a little inadequate, and presently Lenore was again
-sitting silent, her burning eyes staring straight in front of her, her
-white face, framed in its shining hair, looking very set, her white
-robes gleaming frostily in the candle-light, her whole bearing stiffly
-unapproachable. She was nervous and uneasy, and she longed intensely to
-escape to her own quiet room. But there was madame talking serenely on,
-apparently unconscious of the gluttony around her; there was Alixe the
-Scornful, merrily jesting with Anselm, who had forgotten his frowns and
-his Latin together. Here was a great company of varied people, variously
-making merry, among whom there was not one that could have understood or
-excused her displeasure with the scene. Therefore she was fain to sit
-on, disconsolate, enduring as best she might her weariness and her
-contempt.
-
-“En passant!” cried the Bishop, presently, “where is David le petit? Is
-the dwarf lying sick?”
-
-“Why, indeed, I do not know,” answered Eleanore, looking around her.
-“David! Is David not among us?” she cried.
-
-At this moment there was a commotion at one end of the room, and
-presently the table began to shake. Dishes and flagons clattered
-together, and a little ripple of laughter rose and flowed along from
-mouth to mouth, following the progress of David himself, who was darting
-rapidly down the table, picking his way easily between clumps of holly
-and tall candles, and dishes and plates and flagons, as he moved around
-toward Madame Eleanore and her little party. His costume added
-materially to the effect of his appearance, for he was dressed like an
-elf, in scarlet hose, pointed brown shoes, tight jerkin of brown slashed
-with red, and peaked, parti-colored cap. In this garb his tiny figure
-showed off straight and slender, and his ruddy face and glittering eyes
-gave him proper animation for the role he had chosen to play.
-
-Flying down the table till he came to a halt in front of madame and the
-Bishop, he jerked the cap from his head, whirled lightly round on his
-toes, twice or thrice, and then, with a quaint gesture of introduction,
-he sang, in a sing-song tone, these verses:—
-
- “From elf-land I—
- Gnome or troll—
- Leaped from the cave
- Whence dolmens roll
- Down from on high
- To the tumbling wave!
-
- “In darkness I live;
- In darkness I love.
- Yet there’s one thing
- To mortals I give.
- From treasure-trove
- Jewels I bring!”
-
-With the last words he drew, from a fat pouch at his side, a handful of
-bright bits of quartz-crystal, and, tossing them high in the air, let
-them fall over him and down upon the table in a glittering shower. There
-was a quick scramble for them; and then, with an uncanny laugh, David
-pirouetted down the table, backward, guiding himself miraculously among
-the articles that loaded the board, flinging about him, at every other
-step, more of his “jewels,” and now and then singing more extemporaneous
-verses concerning his mysterious country. All the table paused in its
-eating and drinking to watch him, for, when he chose, he was a
-remarkably clever and magnetic actor. To-day he was making an unusual
-effort, and presently even Lenore leaned forward a little to catch his
-words; and, in a swift glance, he perceived that some color had come
-into her cheeks, and a faint light into her eyes.
-
-It made a pleasant interlude in the feasting; and when at length the
-little man, with a hop and a spring, left the table, and came round to
-the place where he was accustomed to sit, he was followed by a burst of
-enthusiastic applause.
-
-The gayety that he had excited by his rhymes and his pebble shower did
-not die away for some time. By now, however, the eating was at an end,
-and a lighter tone of conversation spread through the room, as the
-footboys brought in two extra casks of beer and some dozens of bottles
-of red wine. This was the wished-for stage of the day’s entertainment,
-and if there was any one present that should be unminded for what was to
-come, this was the signal for departure. Madame Lenore was the only one
-in the room to go; but she rose the moment that the table had been
-cleared of food, and, with a slight bow to madame and monseigneur,
-slipped quietly to the stairs and passed up to her room with a relief in
-her heart that the day was over.
-
-The last white fold of Lenore’s drapery had scarcely disappeared round
-the bend in the stairway, when there came a knocking upon the outer door
-of the great hall, which was presently thrust open, before one of the
-henchmen could reach it, to let in a beggar from the bitter cold
-outside. It was the last day of the week of hospitality, and perhaps
-this wanderer was the more readily admitted for that fact. It was a
-woman, ragged, unkempt, and purple with cold. Madame Eleanore just
-glanced at her, and then signed to those at the lower end of the table
-to give her place with them, and bring her food. But the new-comer
-seemed not to notice the invitations of those near by. She stood still,
-gazing intently toward Madame Eleanore, till presently one of the
-henchmen, somewhat affected with liquor, sprang from his place with the
-intention of pulling her to a seat. In this act he got a view of her
-face with the light from a torch falling full across it. Instantly he
-started back with a loud exclamation,—
-
-“Mademoiselle!”
-
-Then all at once the woman, holding out both her arms toward madame’s
-chair, swayed forward to her knees with a low wailing cry that brought
-the whole company to their feet. There was one moment of terrible
-silence, and then a woman’s scream rang through the room, as Madame
-Eleanore staggered to her feet and started forward to the side of the
-wanderer.
-
-“Laure! Laure! O God! my Laure!”
-
-As the two women—madame now on her knees beside her daughter—intertwined
-their arms, and the older woman felt again the living flesh of her
-flesh, the throng at the table moved slowly together and drew closer and
-closer to these central figures. Nearest of all stood Alixe and
-Courtoise, white-faced, tremulous, but with great joy written in their
-eyes. They had recognized Laure simultaneously an instant before madame,
-but they had restrained themselves from rushing upon her, leaving the
-first place to the mother.
-
-Eleanore was fondling Laure in her arms, murmuring over her inarticulate
-things, while tears streamed from her eyes, and her strained throat
-palpitated with sobs. What Laure did or felt, none knew. She lay back,
-half-fainting, in the warm clasp; but presently she struggled a little
-away, and sat straight. Pushing the tangled hair out of her eyes,—those
-black, brilliant eyes that were still undimmed,—and seeing the universal
-gaze upon her, she shrank within herself, and whispered to her mother:
-“In the name of God, madame, I prithee let me be alone with thee!”
-
-Then Eleanore bethought herself, and rose, lifting Laure also to her
-feet. For a moment she looked about her, and then with a mere lifting of
-her hand dispersed the crowd. They melted away like snow in rain, till
-only three were left there in the great hall: Courtoise, Alixe, and
-lastly monseigneur, who during the whole scene had stood apart from the
-throng, the law of excommunication heavy upon him. Forbid a mother,
-starved by nearly a year of denial of her child, to satisfy herself now
-that that child was at last returned to her? Not he, the man of flesh
-and blood and human passions!
-
-Madame stood still for an instant in the centre of the disordered room,
-supporting Laure with one arm. Then she turned to Alixe.
-
-“Go thou, Alixe, and get food,—milk, and meat, and bread,—and bring it
-in the space of a few moments to my room. But let no other seek to
-disturb us in our solitude. Now, my girl!”
-
-Madame led her daughter across the hall and up the stairs, and to the
-door of her bedroom, into which Laure passed first. Madame followed her
-in, and closed and fastened the door after her. Then she turned to her
-child.
-
-At last they were alone, where no human eyes could perceive them, no
-human ear hear what words they spoke. And now Eleanore’s arms dropped to
-her sides, and she stood a little off, face to face with Laure. With
-Laure? Yes, it was she,—there could be but one woman like her,—with her
-tall, lithe, straight form, terribly wasted now by hardship and
-suffering: with those firm features, and the unrivalled hair that hung,
-brown and unkempt, to her knees. And again, it was not the Laure that
-the mother had known. In her eyes—the great, doubting, haunted, shifting
-eyes—lay plainly written the story of the iron that had entered into her
-soul. And there was that in her manner, in her bearing, that something
-of defiant recklessness, that pierced her mother like a knife. It was
-not the rags and the dirt of her body; it was the rags and dirt of her
-defiled soul.
-
-The girl looked straight before her into space; but she saw her mother’s
-head suddenly lowered, and she saw her mother’s hands go up before her
-face.
-
-Then came Alixe’s knock at the door; and Laure went and opened it, took
-in the food, set it down on the bed, shut and fastened the door again,
-and returned to her mother, who was sitting now beside the shuttered
-window, her head lying on her arms, which rested on a table in front of
-her.
-
-There was a silence. Laure’s hand crept up to her throat and held it
-tight, to keep the strain of repressed sobs from bursting her very
-flesh. Her eyes roved round the old, familiar, twilight room; but just
-now she did not see. Her brain was reeling under its weight of agonized
-weariness. What was she to say or do? What was there for her here? Her
-mother sat yonder, bent under the weight of her sin. Was there any
-excuse for her to make? Should she try to give reasons? Worst of all,
-should she ask forgiveness? Never! Laure had the pride of despair left
-in her still. She had come home dreaming that the gates of heaven might
-still be open to her. She found them barred; and the password she could
-not speak. Hell alone, it seemed, remained.
-
-“Madame,” she said in a hard, quiet voice, “I have come wrongfully home,
-thinking thou couldst give me succor here. But I perceive that I do but
-pain thee. I will go forth again. ’Tis all I ask.”
-
-At the mere suggestion that Laure should go again, madame’s heart melted
-and ran in tears within her. “Ah, Laure! my baby—my girl—thou couldst
-not leave me again?” she cried in a kind of wail.
-
-“Mother! First of all, I came to thee!” said the girl, in a whisper that
-was very near a sob.
-
-But, unexpectedly, Eleanore rose again, with a gleam of anger coming
-anew into her eyes. “Nay; thou didst _not_ first of all come to me! If
-thou hadst—if thou hadst—ere thou wast stolen away by the cowardly
-dastard that hath ruined thee—!”
-
-Laure trembled violently, and her voice was faint with pleading: “Speak
-no ill of him, madame! I was not stolen away. Freely, willingly, I went
-with him. Freely—” she drew herself up and held her head high—“freely
-and willingly, though with the curse of Heaven on my head, would I go
-with him still, were it in the same way!”
-
-“God of God! why hast thou left him, then?”
-
-A black shadow spread itself out before Laure’s eyes, and in her
-unpitying wilderness her woman’s soul reeled, blindly. Her voice shook
-and her body grew rigid, as she answered: “I—did not—leave him.”
-
-“He is dead?” Eleanore’s tone was softer.
-
-“No; he is not dead!” Laure’s face contorted terribly, as there suddenly
-rushed over her the memory of the last three months; and as it swept
-upon her, she sank to her knees, and held out her hands again in
-supplication: “Ah, pity me! pity me! As thou’rt a woman, pity me, and
-ask me not what’s gone! I loved him. God in Heaven! How did I love him!
-And he hath gone from me. Mine no more, he left me to wander over the
-face of the earth. He left me to weep and mourn through all the years of
-mine empty life. Flammecœur! Flammecœur! How wast thou dearer than God!
-more merciless than Him.” Here her words became so rapid and so
-incoherent that all meaning was lost, and the deserted woman, exhausted,
-overcome with her torn emotions, presently fell heavily forward to the
-floor, in a faint.
-
-In this scene Eleanore had forgotten every scruple, every resentment,
-everything save her own motherhood and Laure’s need. Putting aside all
-thought of the girl’s shame, her abandonment, her rejection, she went to
-her and lifted her up in her strong and tender arms, and, with the art
-known only to the big-souled women of her type, poured comfort upon the
-bruised and broken body of the wanderer, and words of cheer and
-encouragement into her more cruelly bruised and broken mind. In a few
-moments Laure had recovered consciousness, had grown calm, and was
-weeping quietly in her mother’s arms.
-
-Then madame began to make her fit for the Castle again. She took off the
-soiled and ragged garments, that hung upon the skin and bone of her
-wasted body. She bathed the poor flesh with hot water, and with her own
-tears. She combed and coiled the wonderful, tangled hair. And lastly,
-wrapping her, for warmth, in a huge woollen mantle, she led Laure over
-to her bed, drew back the heavy curtains, and laid the weary woman-child
-in it, to rest.
-
-When Laure felt this soft comfort; when she realized where, indeed, she
-was and who was bending over her; when she knew what land of love and of
-tenderness she had finally reached after her months of anguished
-wandering,—it seemed that she could bear no more of mingled joy and
-pain. She let her tears flow as freely as they would. She clung to her
-mother’s hand, smoothing it, kissing it, pressing it to her cheek; and
-finally, lulled by the sound of her mother’s voice crooning an old
-familiar lullaby, her mind slipped gradually out of reality, and she
-went to sleep.
-
-Long and long and long she slept, with the sleep of one that is leaving
-an old life behind, and entering slowly into the new. And for many hours
-her mother watched her, in the gathering darkness, till after Alixe had
-come softly in, and lit a torch near by the bed. And later the mother,
-unwilling to leave her child for a single moment, laid herself down,
-dressed as she was, and, drawing Laure’s passive form close to her,
-finally closed her eyes, and, worn out with emotion and with joy, lost
-herself in the mists of sleep.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER TWELVE_
- LAURE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Through the long, chilly night, mother and daughter slept together, each
-with peace in her heart. At dawn, however, madame slipped quietly out of
-Laure’s unconscious embrace, and rose and prepared herself for the day.
-And presently she left the room, while Laure still slept. It was some
-time afterwards before there crept upon the blank of the girl’s mind a
-dim, fluttering shadow telling her that light had come again over the
-world. How long it was before this first sense became a double
-consciousness, no one knows. Laure’s stupor had been so heavy, she had
-been so utterly dead in her weariness, that it required a powerful
-subconscious effort to throw off the bonds of sleep. But when the two
-heavy eyes at last fell open, she gasped, and sat suddenly up in her
-bed.
-
-“Holy Mother! it is an angel!”
-
-The face that she looked on smiled sunnily.
-
-“No. I am Lenore.” And she would have come round to the side of the bed,
-but that Laure held up a hand to stay her.
-
-“Prithee, prithee, do not move, thou spirit of Lenore! Am I, then, come
-into thy land? Is’t heaven—for me?”
-
-For an instant, at the easily explainable illusion about that other, the
-new Lenore’s head drooped, and she sighed. How full of the dead maiden
-was every member of this Twilight Castle! But again, shaking off the
-momentary melancholy, she lifted her eyes, and answered Laure’s fixed
-look. So these two young women, whose histories had been so utterly
-different, and yet in their way so pitiably alike, learned, in this one
-long glance, to know each other. Into Laure’s deeply burning eyes,
-Lenore gazed till she was as one under a hypnotic spell. Her senses were
-all but swimming before the other turned her look, and then she asked
-dreamily: “Thou art Lenore. Tell me, who is Lenore?”
-
-The other hesitated for a moment. She had learned from Alixe, on the
-previous evening, the history of the strange home-coming, and all that
-any one knew of what had gone before it; and she realized that any
-question that Laure might ask must be fully answered. Yet it cost her a
-strong mental effort before she could say: “I was the wife of thy
-brother.”
-
-“Ah! Gerault! Where is he?” Laure paused for an instant.
-“Thou—_wast_—his wife, thou sayest?”
-
-Lenore gazed at her sadly, wondering if the wanderer must so soon be
-confronted with new sorrow. Laure sat there, bewildered, but questioning
-with her eyes, a suggestion of fear beginning to show in her face.
-Lenore realized how madame must shrink from telling the story of
-Gerault’s death; so, presently, lifting her eyes to Laure’s again, she
-said in a low voice,—
-
-“Gerault’s wife was I, because—since September, thy brother—sleeps—in
-the chapel—by his father.”
-
-Laure listened with wide eyes to these words; and, having heard, she
-neither moved nor spoke. A few tears gathered slowly, and fell down her
-face to her woollen robe, and then she bowed her head till it rested on
-the hands clasped on her knee. Lenore stood where she was, looking on,
-knowing not whether to go or stay; realizing instinctively that there
-are natures that desire to find their own comfort.
-
-While Lenore was still debating the point, Madame Eleanore and Alixe
-came together into the room; and as soon as madame beheld Lenore, she
-knew that her daughter had learned all that she was to know of sorrow:
-that what she herself most dreaded, had mercifully come to pass. And
-going to the bed, she took Laure into her arms.
-
-Their embrace was as close as the first of yesterday had been. Laure
-clung to her mother, getting comfort from the mere contact; and, in her
-child’s grief for the dead, Eleanore felt the touch of that sympathy for
-which she had hungered in silence through the first shock of her loss.
-For Laure was of her own blood and of Gerault’s; had known the Seigneur
-as brother, companion, and equal, and had looked up to him even as he
-had looked up to his mother. Thus, bitterly poignant as were these
-moments of fresh grief, there was in them also a great consolation,—the
-consolation of companionship. And when finally madame raised her head,
-there was written in her face what none had seen there since the time of
-Laure’s departure for her novitiate at La Madeleine. Then she reminded
-Laure of Alixe’s presence, and Laure, looking up, smiled through her
-tears, and held out both hands.
-
-“Alixe! Alixe! my sister! Art thou glad I am come home?”
-
-“So glad, Laure! There have been many hours empty for want of thee since
-thy going. And art thou—” she hesitated a little—“art thou to stay with
-us now?”
-
-Accidentally, inadvertently, had come the question that had lain hidden
-both in Laure’s heart and in her mother’s since almost the first moment
-of the return. Laure herself dared not answer Alixe; but she looked
-fearfully at her mother, her eyes filled with mute pleading. And
-Eleanore, seeing the look, made a sudden decision in her heart,—
-
-“Yea! Laure shall stay with us now! There shall be no doubting of it.
-Laure is my child; and I shall keep her with me, an all Christendom
-forbid!”
-
-The last sentence flew out in answer to madame’s secret fears; and she
-did not realize how much meaning it might hold for other ears. Her
-speech was followed by an intense silence. Laure did not dare ask aloud
-the questions that reason answered for her; and Lenore and Alixe both
-felt that it was not their place to speak. In the end, then, Eleanore
-herself had to break the strain, which she did by saying, with a brisk
-air,—
-
-“Come, come, Laure! Rise, and go into thine own room here. I have laid
-out one of the old-time gowns, with shoes, chemise, bliault, and
-under-tunic complete, and also a wimple and head-veil. Make thyself
-ready for the day, while we go down to break our fast. When thou’rt
-dressed I will have food brought thee here; and after thou’st eaten,
-monseigneur will come up to thee. Hasten, for ’tis rarely cold!”
-
-Laure jumped from the bed eager to see her childhood’s room again; eager
-for her meal; most of all eager, in spite of her apprehensiveness, to
-know what St. Nazaire had to say to her. As she paused to gather her
-mantle close about her, and to push the hair out of her eyes, her gaze
-chanced to meet that of Lenore. There was between them no spoken word;
-but in that instant was born a sudden affection which, while they lived
-together, saw not the end of its growth.
-
-As Eleanore and the two young women left madame’s room on their way
-downstairs, Laure entered alone into the room of her youth and her
-innocence. It was exactly as it had been on the day she last saw it. The
-small, curtained bed was ready for occupancy. The chairs, the table, the
-round steel mirror, the carved wooden chest for clothes, lastly, the
-small priedieu, were just where they had always stood. The wooden
-shutters were open, and the half-transparent glass was all aflame with
-the reflection of sunlight on the sea; for the cold, clear morning was
-advancing. Across a narrow settle, beside one of the windows, lay the
-clothes that the mother had selected,—the girlhood clothes that she had
-worn in those years of her other life. Like one that dimly dreams, Laure
-took these garments up, one by one, and examined them, handling them
-with the same ruminative tenderness of touch that she might have used
-for some one that had been very dear to her, but had died long since,—so
-long that the bitterness of death had gone from memory.
-
-When she had looked at them for a long time, Laure began slowly to don
-her clothes. She performed her toilet with all the precision of her
-maidenhood, coiling her hair with a care that suggested vanity, and
-adjusting her filet and veil with the same touch that they had known so
-many times before. Her outer tunic was of green _saie_; and even though
-her whole form had grown deplorably thin, she found it a little snug in
-bust and hip. Finally, when she was quite dressed, she sat down at one
-of the windows to wait for some one to bring food to her. To her
-surprise, it was Lenore who carried up the tray of bread and milk; and
-she found herself a little relieved that no former member of the Castle
-was to see her yet in the familiar dress of long ago. When she took the
-tray from the frail white hands of her sister-in-law, she murmured
-gratefully: “I thank thee that thou hast deigned to wait on me, madame.”
-
-Lenore’s big blue eyes opened wide, as she smiled and answered:
-“Prithee, say not ‘madame.’ Rather, if thou canst, I would have thee
-call me ‘sister,’ for such I should wish to be to thee.”
-
-“My sister!” Laure’s voice was choked as she raised both arms and threw
-them about the slender body of the other girl with such abandon that
-Lenore was obliged to put her off a little. Finally, however, Laure sat
-down to the table on which she had placed her simple breakfast, and as
-she carried the first bite to her lips, Lenore moved softly toward the
-door. Before going out, however, she turned and said quietly: “Thou’lt
-not be long alone. The Bishop is coming to thee at once.”
-
-Laure’s spoon fell suddenly into her bowl, and she looked quickly round;
-but, to her chagrin, Lenore had already slipped away.
-
-Left to herself, Laure could not eat. Hungry as she was, her anxiety and
-her suspense were greater than her appetite. Why was it that Lenore had
-so suddenly escaped from her? Why was it that she had seen no members of
-the Castle company save three women since her home-coming? Why was she
-forced thus to eat alone? Above all, why should the Bishop come to her
-here, instead of receiving her, as had been his custom, in the chapel?
-Laure remembered the last serious talk she had had with St. Nazaire, and
-shuddered. In her own mind she realized perfectly the spiritual enormity
-of her sin; and, however persistently she might refuse to confess it to
-herself, she knew also what the penalty of that sin must be. It was many
-minutes before she could force herself to recommence her meal; and she
-had taken little when there was a tap on the door. She had not time to
-do more than rise when the door opened, and her mother, followed by St.
-Nazaire, entered the room.
-
-Madame dropped behind as the Bishop advanced, and Laure bowed before
-him.
-
-“My child, I trust thou art found well in body?” said St. Nazaire, more
-solemnly than she had ever heard him speak.
-
-“Yes, monseigneur,” was the subdued reply.
-
-Now madame came up, and indicated a chair to the Bishop, who, after
-seeing her seated, sat down himself, while Laure remained on her feet in
-front of them. Then followed a pause, uncomfortable to all, terrifying
-to Laure, who was becoming hysterically nervous with dread. She dared
-not, however, break the silence; and with a convulsive sigh she folded
-her arms across her breast, and stood waiting for whatever was to come.
-Monseigneur regarded her closely and steadily, as if he were reading
-something that he wished to know of her, but at the same time he did not
-make her shrink from him. On the contrary, his expression brought the
-assurance that he had lost nothing of his old-time sympathy with human
-nature. His first question was unhesitatingly direct.
-
-“Laure,” he said very quietly, “art thou bound by the marriage tie to
-this Bertrand Flammecœur?”
-
-At the sound of the name Laure trembled, and her white face grew whiter
-still. “No,” she answered in a half-whisper, at the same time clenching
-her two hands till the nails pierced her flesh.
-
-“And thou hast lived with him, under his name, since thy departure from
-the priory of the Holy Madeleine?”
-
-Laure paused for a moment to steady her voice, and then answered
-huskily: “Until two months past.”
-
-“And in that two months?”
-
-“I have begged my way from where we were—hither.”
-
-“Thou hast in this time known none but the man Flammecœur?”
-
-Laure crimsoned and put up her hand in protest. Then she said quietly,
-“None.”
-
-Monseigneur bowed his head and remained silent for a moment. When he
-looked at her again it was with a gentler expression. “Laure,” said he,
-in a very kindly voice, “but a little time after thy flight from the
-priory, I placed upon thee, and upon the man that abducted thee, the ban
-of excommunication, for violating the holiest laws of the Holy Church.
-That ban is not yet raised, and by it, as well thou knowest, all that
-come in voluntary contact with thee are defiled.”
-
-For a moment Laure dropped her head to her breast. When she lifted it
-again, her face had not changed; and she asked, “Can that ban ever be
-lifted?”
-
-“Yes. By me.”
-
-Laure fell upon her knees before him. “What must I do? Tell me the
-penance! I would give anything—even to my life—yet—nay! There is one
-thing I will not do.”
-
-St. Nazaire frowned. “What is that?” he asked.
-
-“Father, I will not go back into the priory. I will never return alive
-into that living death. Rather would I cast myself from the top of the
-Castle cliff into the sea below, and trust—”
-
-“Laure! Laure! Be silent!” cried Eleanore, sharply.
-
-Laure stopped and stood motionless, her eyes aflame, her face deathly
-white, her fingers twining and intertwining among themselves, as she
-waited for St. Nazaire to speak again. His hands were folded upon his
-knee, and he appeared lost in thought. Only after an unendurable
-suspense did he look again into the girl’s eyes, saying slowly, in a
-tone lower than was habitual to him,—
-
-“Thou tookest once the vows of the nun. These, it is true, thou hast
-broken continually, and hast abused and violated till their chain of
-virtue binds thee no more. Yet the words of those vows passed thy lips
-scarce more than a year agone; and for that reason thou art not free.
-Ere thou canst be absolved of duty to the priory, thou must go to the
-Mother-prioress and ask her humbly if she will again receive thee into
-the convent. An she refuse, thou wilt be freed from the bond.”
-
-“Monseigneur—will she set me free?” asked Laure, in a low tone.
-
-“Yea, Laure; for methinks I shall counsel her so to do. Thou hast not
-the vocation of a nun. Thy spirit is too much thine own, too
-freedom-loving, to accept the suppression of that secluded life. If I
-will, I can see to it that thou’rt freed from the priory. But that being
-accomplished—what then, Demoiselle Laure?”
-
-“Ah—after that—may not the ban be removed? Can I obtain no absolution?
-Can I not be made free to dwell here in my home in my beloved Castle,—my
-fitting Crépuscule?—Mother! Shall I not be received here? Have I no
-home?”
-
-“This is thy home, and I thy mother always. Though my soul be condemned
-to eternal fire, Laure, thou art my child, the flesh of my flesh and the
-blood of my blood; and I will not give thee up.”
-
-“Eleanore!” The Bishop spoke sharply, and his face grew severe.
-“Eleanore, deceive not thyself. Nor yet thou, thou child of wilfulness!
-Laure hath sinned not only against the rules of her Church and her God,
-but against the laws of mankind. Her sin has been great and very ugly.
-Think not that, by brave words of motherhood, or many tears and
-pleadings of sudden repentance, she can regain her old position. The
-stain of this bygone year will remain upon her forever. She is under a
-heavy ban, and she must go through a rigorous penance ere she can be
-received again among the undefiled. Art ready, Laure, to place thy sick
-soul in my hands?”
-
-Laure bent her head.
-
-“Then I prescribe for thee this penance: Thou shalt go alone, on foot,
-to Holy Madeleine, and there seek of the Reverend Mother thy freedom
-from the priory. If it be granted, thou mayest return hither to this
-same room and remain shut up in utter solitude, to pray and fast as
-rigorously as thy body will admit, for the space of fourteen days. If,
-by that time, thou art come to see truly the magnitude of thy offence,
-and if thy mind be purified of evil thoughts and thy heart opened to the
-abounding mercy of God, I will absolve thee of thy sin, and lift away
-the ban of Heaven. For meseemeth, my daughter, that thy sin found thee
-out or ever thou hadst reached this house of safety. There is the mark
-of suffering upon thy brow, and, seeing it, I bow before the power of
-God, that holdeth over us whithersoever we may go. But see that in thy
-lonely hours thou find true repentance for thy evil deed. For if that
-come not, then truly shalt thou be an outcast on the face of the earth.
-I will go to-day to the priory to talk with the Mère Piteuse, if thy
-heart accepteth my word.”
-
-Laure fell upon her knees before the Bishop and kissed his hand in token
-of submission. St. Nazaire suffered her for a few moments to humble
-herself, and then, lifting her up, he rose himself and quickly left the
-room.
-
-Eleanore remained a few moments longer with her daughter, and then went
-away, leaving Laure alone again, to dread the ordeal that was before
-her, the facing of the assemblage of nuns in that place that she
-remembered as her heart’s prison.
-
-By order of the Bishop, Laure was left alone all day, and this
-twenty-four hours was the most wretched that she had to spend after her
-return to Le Crépuscule. On the following day she went alone to the
-priory,—not on foot, as the Bishop had at first commanded; for the snow
-was too deep, and Laure too much exhausted by her privations of the last
-two months, for her safely to endure the fatigue of such a walk. She
-rode thither on horseback; and possibly extracted more soul’s good out
-of the ride than she would have got afoot, for the whole way was laden
-with bitter memories and grief and shame. The Bishop himself met her at
-the priory gate, and he remained at her side throughout the time that
-she was there. The ordeal was not terrible. Mère Piteuse bore out her
-name, and Laure thought that the spirit of the Saviour had surely
-descended upon the reverend woman. As an unheard-of concession, the
-penitent was permitted to recant her vows before only the eight officers
-of the priory assembled in the chapter-house, instead of before the
-whole company of nuns in the great church; and thus Laure did not see at
-all her former companion and abettor, Sœur Eloise, a meeting with whom
-she had dreaded more than anything else. And when, in the afternoon,
-Laure finally rode away from the priory gate, it was with a heart
-throbbing with devotion for St. Nazaire and his goodness to her. Swiftly
-and eagerly, in the falling twilight, she traversed the road leading
-back to the Castle, and, when she reached home, night had fallen. Her
-mother, who had spent the day in the deepest anxiety, was waiting for
-her in the great hall, and, the moment that Laure entered, weary with
-the now unusual exercise, she cried out, “It is well? Thou art
-dismissed?”
-
-And as Laure began to answer the question with a full description of the
-day, her mother drew her slowly up the stairs, across the hall, and
-finally into her own narrow room, which was to be the chamber of
-penance. When they entered there, Laure became suddenly silent; for the
-little place was dark and chill, and the thought of what was before her
-struck an added tremor to her heart. Madame read her thoughts and said
-gently,—
-
-“Be not so sad, dear child. When thou thinkest of the fair, pure, loving
-life that lies before us, in this Castle of thy youth, surely fourteen
-little days of peaceful solitude cannot fright thee? Think always that
-God is on high, and that around thee are those that love thee well; and
-thus thou canst not be very miserable. Lights and food shall be brought;
-and then—I bid thee make much of thy solitude, my child; for there is no
-more healing balm for wounded souls. Now, commending thee to the mercy
-of the All-merciful, I leave thee.”
-
-In the darkness, Laure clung to her mother as if it were their last
-embrace, and madame had to put the girl’s hands away before she would
-bear to be left alone. But at last the door was closed and bolted on the
-outside; and Laure, within, knew that her imprisonment was begun.
-Feeling her way to a chair, she seated herself thereon, and laid her
-head in her hands. Burning and incoherent thoughts hurried through her
-brain, and she was still lost in these when there was a soft tap at her
-door, and the outer bolt was drawn. She rose and stumbled hurriedly to
-open it, but there was no one outside. On the floor was a burning
-candle, and a tray on which stood a jug of water and a loaf of bread. As
-she took them in, Laure experienced a wave of desolation. However, she
-set the food and drink down on her table, lighted the torch on the wall
-at the candle-flame, and finally sat herself down to eat. No grace to
-God passed her lips as she took her first bite from the loaf; for her
-heart was bitter in its weariness. But after she had eaten and drunk she
-lost the inclination to brood; and, overcome with weariness and the
-emotions of the day, she hurriedly disrobed, extinguished both her
-lights, and crept, with her first sense of comfort, into the warmly
-covered bed. For a long time she lay there, chilly and a little nervous,
-but thinking of nothing. Then gradually her spirit grew calmer; some of
-the weariness was done away, and she fell asleep.
-
-When next she woke it was daylight,—a gray, January morning,—and Laure
-realized, rather disconsolately, that she could sleep no more for the
-time. Therefore she left her bed, threw a mantle around her, and went to
-the door, to see if there might be food without. Somewhat to her dismay,
-she found the door locked fast, and, having no means of knowing what the
-hour might be, she thought that possibly she had overslept, and that she
-should have nothing to eat throughout the morning. The heaviness of her
-head told her that she had slept too long; and, not daring to get back
-to bed again, she began resignedly to dress. She was in the midst of her
-toilet when there came a tap at the door, and she flew to open it.
-Outside stood a kitchen-boy, who handed her a tray containing fresh
-bread and water, and asked her with formal respect for the stale food of
-the night before. This she gave him; and immediately the door was shut
-and rebolted.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Mother and child were happy to sit all
- day in the flower-strewn meadow.—Page 402_
-]
-
-With grim precision Laure finished dressing and broke her fast, meantime
-keeping her thoughts fixed on the most trivial subjects. But when her
-meal was over, and she knew how long the day must be, and realized that
-there was no escape from herself, she sat down in the largest chair in
-the room, let her eyes wander over the familiar objects, and allowed her
-thoughts to take what form they would. The terrible fatigue of her
-lonely journey was quite gone now. Nor was there in her own person
-anything to remind her of her recent suffering. Her body was clean,
-well-clothed, and warm, and, in her youth, the memory of the past
-terrible two months grew dim, and instead there rose up before her
-mental vision a very different picture,—an image,—the image of the idol
-and the ruin of her life: her joy, her shame, her ecstasy, and her
-despair; Bertrand Flammecœur, the troubadour, in his matchless,
-irresponsible untrustworthiness, his incomparable beauty, his fiery
-enthusiasm. For, strange as it may be, all the bitterness, all the
-suffering that this man had brought her, had not killed her love for him
-nor blackened his image in her heart. There being nothing to check her
-fancy, Laure went mentally back to the hour of her flight with the
-troubadour, and passed slowly over the whole period of their life
-together,—from the first days of physical agony and mental shame through
-the period of increasing delight, to the culmination of her happiness in
-him and the beginning of its end. Once more she reviewed their journey
-out of Brittany up the north coast to Calais, whence, in the fair spring
-weather, they had taken passage to Dover, in England, thence making
-their way by slow stages to London. Here, in the train of the Duke of
-Gloucester, uncle of the young Richard, the most powerful man in the
-kingdom, the two had passed their summer. To Laure it was a summer of
-fairyland. Flammecœur had become her god, and she saw him ascend height
-after height of popularity and favor. His nationality and his profession
-won for him instant recognition, for trouvères from Provence were
-Persian nightingales to the England of that day. And after his first
-introduction into high places, his breeding, his dress, and his graceful
-personality brought him an enviable position, especially among the women
-of the court. Laure passed always as his wife, and was adroitly
-exploited among the court gallants. She was still too single-minded to
-receive the slightest taint from this life. She was found to be as
-incorruptible as she was pretty, and by this unusual fact her own
-reputation went up, and her popularity rivalled that of the troubadour.
-If this manner of life sometimes weighed on her and brought her
-something of remorse, she found her consolation in the fact that
-Flammecœur never wavered in his fidelity. For the time being he was
-thoroughly infatuated with her; and in their stolen hours of golden
-solitude both of them found their reward for the ofttimes wearisome
-round of pleasures that, with them, constituted work.
-
-Now, alone, in her solitary prison-room, Laure of Le Crépuscule reviewed
-her high and holy noon of love, forgetting its subsequence, brooding
-only over its supreme forgetfulness, till the madness of it was tingling
-in her every vein, and there rushed over her again, in a tumultuous
-wave, all that fierce longing, all that hopeless desire, that she
-thought herself to have endured for the last time. In their early days
-Flammecœur had been so much her companion, so devoted to her in little,
-pretty, telling ways, so constant to her and to her alone, that the
-thought of any life other than the one with him would have been to her
-like a promise of eternal death. It was not more their hours of delirium
-than those of silent communion that they had held together, which
-brought her now the tears of hopeless yearning. All that she desired
-without him, was death. All that she had loved or cared for was with
-him.
-
-At this time came to her the thought of Lenore; and she had an
-instinctive feeling that, had God seen fit to give her that most
-precious of all gifts, motherhood, this penitential cell had not been
-the end for her.
-
-Three days and three nights did Laure spend in this state of bitter
-rebellion against her lot; and then, from over-wishing, came a change.
-Up to this time, in her new flood of grief for the separation from
-Flammecœur, she had driven from her mind every creeping memory of the
-day of his change toward her. Another woman had come upon the horizon of
-his life: a young and noble Englishwoman, of high station. And soon he
-was pursuing her with the ardor that he no longer spent on Laure. This
-lady was one of the first that they had met in England, and Laure had
-liked her before Flammecœur’s new passion began to develop. But with her
-first real fears, the poor girl’s jealousy was born, and soon it became
-the moving spirit of her life. Many times in the ensuing weeks—those
-bitter weeks of early autumn—did angry words pass between her and her
-protector, her only shield from the world in this strange land. Once, in
-a fit of uncontrollable grief and passion, she had left him, and for two
-days wandered about the streets of London till starvation drove her back
-to the lodgings of the Flaming-heart. Her reception—of quiet
-indifference—on her return showed her that her world was in a state of
-dissolution. For a week she dwelt among its ruins, and then, when she
-demanded it, he told her that she was no longer dear to him, and he
-begged her to take what money he had and to set out whither she would,
-assuring her that she would find no difficulty in securing some
-excellent abiding-place in this adopted land. Laure took her dismissal
-heroically. She knew him too well to be horrified at his suggestions as
-to her procedure; and, refusing his gifts of money, she sold the clothes
-and ornaments that he had given her in a happier day, and with the
-proceeds started on her return to Crépuscule. Her little store gave out
-when she had scarce more than reached France; and the last half of the
-journey had been accomplished by literally begging her way from hut to
-hut, never giving up the idea of at last reaching the only refuge she
-could trust,—the place where now she sat dreaming out her woe.
-
-Through the bitter hours when her old jealousy took possession of her
-again and seared her with its hot flames, Laure found herself, more than
-once, gazing fixedly at the little priedieu in the corner of the room,
-where, as a child, she had been wont to kneel each night and morning.
-Since the hour she had left the priory, a prayer had scarcely passed her
-lips; and now, in the time of reactive sorrow, she felt a pride about
-kneeling in supplication to Him whose laws she had so freely broken. In
-the course of time, for so doth solitude work changes in the hearts of
-the most stubborn, the spirit of real repentance of her sin came over
-her; and then, for the first time in her young life, she wept unselfish
-tears. It was only inch by inch that she crept back toward the place of
-heart’s peace. But at length, on the tenth day of her penance, she went
-to her God; and, throwing herself at the feet of the crucifix, claimed
-her own from the All-merciful.
-
-Never in her life of prayers had Laure prayed as she prayed now. Now at
-last God was a living Being, and she was come home to Him for
-forgiveness and for comfort. Her words sprang from her deepest heart.
-Tears of joy, not pain, welled up within her; and it seemed as if she
-felt her purity coming back to her again. She believed that she was
-received before the throne, and listened to; and no absolution of a
-consecrated bishop had brought her such confidence as this, her first
-unlettered prayer.
-
-When she rose from her knees it was as if she had been bathed in spirit.
-Her old joy of youth was again alive within her and shone forth from her
-eyes with a radiant softness. A strange quiet took possession of her; a
-new peace was hidden in her heart; tranquillity reigned about her, and
-the four days of solitude that remained were all too short. She was
-learning herself anew; but she dreaded that time when others should look
-into her face and think to find there what she knew was gone from her
-forever. After her first prayer she did not often resume the accepted
-attitude of communication with the Most High; yet she prayed almost
-continually, with a dreamy fervor peculiar to her state. She still
-thought of Flammecœur, but no longer with desire; only with a gentle
-regret for the fever of his soul and that he could never know such peace
-as hers. She also felt remorse for the part she had played in his life;
-and this remorse was now her only pain. She suffered under it; but it
-was easier to endure than the terrible, restless longing that had once
-consumed her. Indeed, at this time, Laure’s spirituality was
-exaggerated; for solitude is apt to breed exaggeration in whatever mood
-the recluse happens to be. But this state was also bound to know its
-reaction; and, upon the whole, it was as well that the penitential
-fortnight was near its end.
-
-On the afternoon of the fourteenth day, Laure dressed herself in the
-somberest robe to be found in her chest,—a loose tunic of rusty black,
-with mantle of the same, and a rosary around her waist by way of belt.
-She braided her hair into two long plaits, and bound these round and
-round her head like a heavy filet. This was all of her coiffure. When
-she was dressed, she stood in front of her mirror and looked at herself
-by the smoky light of a torch. Her vanity was not flattered by the
-reflection; but steel is deceitful sometimes, and Laure did not know how
-much younger she had grown in the two weeks of her penance. As the hour
-of liberty approached, she became not a little excited. The thought of
-being surrounded with such a throng of familiar faces set her aflame
-with eagerness; and she waited, literally counting the seconds, till she
-should be set free.
-
-Punctually at the hour in which, two weeks before, Laure had been left
-alone, her door was opened, and Eleanore and Lenore came together into
-the room, to lead the prisoner down to the chapel. Madame clasped her
-warmly by the hand, and looked searchingly into her face: but that was
-all the salutation that was given, for the ban of excommunication was
-still upon her. And so, without a word, the three moved quickly to the
-stairs, and, descending, passed at once into the lighted chapel.
-
-Of all the ceremonies that had been performed in that little room since
-it was built, more than two centuries before, the one that now took
-place was perhaps the most impressive, certainly the most unique. Laure,
-in her penitential garb, presented a curious contrast to the gayly robed
-Castle company, and to St. Nazaire, in his most gorgeous of canonicals.
-Yet Laure’s face was more interesting to study than anything else in the
-crowded room. St. Nazaire, while he confessed and absolved her, watched
-her with an interest that he had never felt for her before; and he
-realized that probably never again would he hear such a confession as
-hers. She told him the whole story of her life after her flight from the
-priory, with neither break, hesitation, tremor, nor tear. She took her
-absolution in uplifted silence. And when the ban of excommunication was
-raised from her, neither the Bishop nor her mother could guess, from her
-face, what her feeling was.
-
-When she had been blessed, and the general benediction pronounced, all
-the company came crowding to her to give her welcome. After that
-followed a great feast, at which Laure ate not a mouthful, and drank
-nothing but a cup of milk. And finally, when all the merrymaking was
-through, the young woman returned alone to her room, and, this time with
-her door bolted from within, lay down upon her bed and wept as if her
-heart had finally dissolved in tears.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER THIRTEEN_
- LENORE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-On the morning of the sixteenth of January, Laure went into the
-spinning-room with the other women, to begin the old, familiar work. The
-sight of that room brought back to her a peculiar sensation.
-Long-forgotten memories of her girlhood’s yearnings and restless
-discontents, half-formed plans and desires, picture after picture of
-what she had once imagined convent life to be, crowded thick upon her,
-and caused her to shudder, knowing what these vague dreams had led her
-to. Here was the room, with its row of wheels and tambour-frames, and,
-at the end, the big, wooden loom, filled with red warp. Everywhere were
-little disorderly heaps of flax and uncarded wool, bits of thread and
-silk, and long woollen remnants clipped from uneven tapestry borders. In
-a moment this place would be alive with the droning buzz of wheels, the
-clack-clack of the loom, and the bright chatter of feminine voices.
-Laure heard it all in the first glance down the room, and in the same
-instant she lived a lifetime here. Before her eyes was an endless vista
-of mornings spent in this place upon work that could never keep her
-thoughts from paths where they should not stray. Alas! with Flammecœur
-she had neither toiled nor spun.
-
-In neither face nor manner did Laure betray any suggestion of her
-feeling; and she found herself presently seated at a wheel, between
-Alixe, who was at the tapestry frame, and Lenore, who had come to the
-room for the first time in many weeks, and was engaged in fashioning a
-delicate little garment of white _saie_. Madame, at the head of the
-room, was embroidering a square of linen and overseeing the work of
-every one else; and she glanced, every now and then, rather searchingly
-into her daughter’s face, finding in it, however, nothing that could
-cause her anxiety; for Laure was ashamed of her own sensations, and
-strove bravely to conceal them.
-
-Possibly this scene might have held out promise of reward to the
-thinker, the psychologist, or the humanitarian. Of all these quiet, busy
-women, was there one whose dull, passionless exterior did not cover an
-intricate and tumultuous heart-history? The rebellious thought-life of
-Alixe was no less interesting, despite her inactivity, than the
-deadening sorrow through which Lenore had passed. Nor had the early life
-of Eleanore, with its doubtful joys and its bitter periods of
-loneliness, left any stronger traces in her face than had the long
-after-years of rigid self-suppression. She had nearly overcome her once
-devastating habit of self-analysis, by forcing herself to take an
-unselfish interest in those around her. But the marks of her later and
-nobler struggles with grief lay as plainly in her face as those of her
-younger life. Only, the influence of her youth, with its rebellions and
-its solitudes, was to be found bodily transferred into the character of
-Laure, who had, in her infancy, absorbed her mother into herself. These
-four women, by reason either of years or station, had experienced much
-in the ways of joy and sorrow. But to what depths of unhappiness all the
-other pathetically colorless lives of the uninstructed and unloved women
-of that day had sunk, cannot be surmised by any one who has seen what
-strange courses loneliness and solitude will take. Who knows how great a
-self-struggle may result only in a pallid, vacant face and a negative
-personality? And what had they, all these neglected women of the
-chivalric age, to give them life, color, or force? Men did battle and
-feats of arms, expecting their ladies to sit at home, to toil and spin
-and bear them heirs, and, when their time came, haply die. So much we
-all know. But how much these same women, having something of both soul
-and brain, may have tried to use them in their small way, who has cared
-to surmise?
-
-The January morning wore along, and by and by the fitful chatter became
-more fitful: the pauses grew longer; for every one was weary with work,
-and with the incessant noise of loom and wheel. Laure, who through the
-morning had been covertly watching Lenore at her task, saw that the
-young woman had grown paler than was her wont, and that the shadows
-under her eyes had deepened till their effect against her pallor was
-startling. Gradually Lenore’s hands moved more slowly. She would pause
-for a moment, and then, with a slight start, return to her work with so
-conscious an effort that Laure was more than once on the point of crying
-to her to stop. Presently, however, Lenore herself looked toward
-madame’s chair with an appeal in her eyes and a faintly murmured word on
-her lips.
-
-Eleanore glanced at her, and then rose at once and went over to her
-side. “Why didst thou not speak sooner? Go quickly to thy room and lie
-down. Shall I send Alixe with thee?”
-
-“Nay! Let me rather be alone!” And Lenore, hastily gathering her work
-into her arms, slipped from her place and was gone from the room.
-
-The little scene caused no comment. Only Laure, who was not accustomed
-to the sight of Lenore’s transparent skin and almost startling frailty,
-sat thinking about her after she was gone. How forlorn must be her poor
-existence! If she had greatly loved Gerault,—and surely any maiden would
-have loved him,—how gray her world must have become! how without hope
-her life! Laure lost herself completely in a revery of Lenore’s sorrows,
-and forgot, for the time, how weary she herself was: how her foot ached
-with treading the wheel, and how irritated were her finger-tips with the
-long unaccustomed manipulation of thread. But it came as an intense
-relief when she heard her mother say softly,—
-
-“Go thou, Laure, to thy sister’s room. Make her comfortable, if thou
-canst. Take the wheel also with thee and finish thy skein there.”
-
-“Nay, madame. The whirl of the wheel is distressing to Lenore; I saw it
-while she sat here. I will finish after noon if thou wilt, but Lenore
-must not be disturbed.”
-
-Madame nodded to her, and Laure slipped away, not noticing how Alixe’s
-eyes followed her, or what disappointment was written in her face. For
-hitherto this ministering to Lenore had fallen to Alixe’s share, and it
-had been the proudest pleasure of her life.
-
-Lenore was lying upon her bed, which, some weeks previously, had been
-moved over close beside the windows of her room, that she might always
-have a view of the sea. When Laure entered, she scarcely moved, and her
-great eyes continued to rove round the room. The new-comer paused in the
-doorway and gazed at her a moment or two before she asked: “May I enter?
-May I come and sit beside you?”
-
-Lenore smiled slightly; but there was no actual welcome in her face as
-she said, in her usual, gentle tone: “Certes. As ever, I was idle and
-unthinking. Come thou in, Laure, and sit where thou canst gaze out upon
-the sea. Look, there is a glint of sun on it, even through the folds of
-the clouds.”
-
-Laure looked to where she pointed, and then came silently over and
-seated herself in a large chair that stood between the bed and the
-window, in a little jut in the wall. Her eyes were turned not to the
-many-paned glass, however, but rather upon the figure of Lenore, who was
-now looking off through a half-opened pane, through which blew fitful
-gusts of icy wind. The two young women remained here in silence for some
-moments, each in her own position, thinking silently. Suddenly, however,
-Laure shivered, and then sprang to her feet, saying: “Thou’lt surely
-freeze here! Let me cover thee.” She took up a thick coverlet that lay
-over the foot of the bed and placed it, folded double, upon Lenore’s
-form. Then, glancing down into the milk-white face, she said again: “Let
-me bring thee something—a little food—some wine. Thou’rt so pale—so
-ill!”
-
-“Peace, Laure! I am comfortable. I lie thus for hours every day. Ah! for
-how many hours in the past months—”
-
-She looked up into Laure’s face, and the eyes of the two women met, in
-an unfathomable gaze. Then Laure went slowly back to her place, wishing
-that she might close the window, but not daring to interfere with her
-sister’s desired sight of the sea. After she had sat down, Lenore once
-more lost herself in a reverie, which, however, her companion did not
-respect.
-
-“Lenore,” she said in a low, rather melancholy voice, “how is it that
-thou canst endure this life of thine,—thou, young and bright and gay and
-all unused to this dim dwelling; how hath such existence not already
-killed thee? Tell me, how hast thou fared since Gerault went?”
-
-Lenore turned her eyes from the sea and fixed them on Laure’s face. She
-wondered a little why she did not resent the question, not realizing
-that it was the first throb of natural understanding that had come to
-her out of Le Crépuscule. Lenore’s first impulse of affection toward her
-new sister had altered a little in the past two weeks. Since she had
-heard and understood the story of Laure’s last months, the white-souled
-girl had shrunk from contact with her whose career lay shrouded in so
-black a depth. Yet now Laure’s tone, as she spoke, and, more than that,
-the expression in her eyes, touched a key in Lenore’s nature that had
-long been unsounded, and which brought a tremor of unwonted feeling to
-her heart. Quickly repressing the impulse toward tears, she gave a
-moment’s pause, and then answered in a dreamy, reflective way, as if she
-were for the first time examining the array of her own emotions,—
-
-“Meseemeth that, since the day of Gerault’s death, a part of me hath
-been asleep. Save when, on the night of his home-coming, I lay beside
-his body and touched again his hair and his eyes—”
-
-“Holy God! Thou couldst lie beside the dead!”
-
-“Ah, was it not Gerault come home to me—seeming as if he slept? Since
-that time, and the night that followed it, I say, I have not wept for
-him. Mine eyes are dry. There is sometimes a fire in them; but the tears
-never come. And my heart ofttimes burns, and yet I do not very bitterly
-grieve. I know not why, but my sorrow hath not been all that I should
-have made it. I have been soothed with shadows. I have found great
-comfort in yon rolling sea. And then there is also the child,—Gerault’s
-son,—the Lord of Crépuscule.”
-
-“Yes, the child! Oh, I know how thou lovest him—I know!”
-
-“Thou knowest? How?”
-
-“Methinks, Lenore, I understand the mother-love. How should I have
-praised God had he deemed me also worthy of it! But I was not. I know
-well ’twas a vain desire. But, oh, to hold in mine arms a little one, a
-babe, and to know it for mine own! Wouldst not deliver up thy soul for
-that, Lenore?”
-
-Lenore looked at her with a vague little smile. “Perhaps; I do not know.
-My babe must carry on his father’s name, and so I love him. Yea, I will
-bear any suffering so that he come into the world; for Gerault said to
-me long since that such must be my duty and my great joy. He spake
-somewhat as you do. Yet I know not that eagerness thou speakest of.”
-
-Laure examined the ethereal figure lying before her with new curiosity;
-and under the gaze of the calm, deep-hued eyes her own were kindled with
-a brighter gleam. “Hast thou not loved, Lenore?” she asked. “Knowest
-thou nothing of the joy of living, the two in one, united by divine
-fire? Dost thou not worship God for the reason that there is now in thee
-a double soul? Wake! Wake from thy dream-life! Suffer! For out of
-suffering, great joy will come upon thee!”
-
-As she met Laure’s look, a new light burned in Lenore’s eyes, and the
-other saw her quiver under those words. Finally, freeing her gaze, she
-said very softly: “I would not wake. How, indeed, should I live, if I
-roused myself? Life and love and the world are hidden away behind the
-far hills of Rennes. Here I must dwell forever in the twilight. So let
-me dream! Ah, Laure, thou too, thou too wilt come to it. The fever may
-burn within thee still, but time will cool it. Tell me, Laure,” she
-added, smitten with a sudden curiosity that was foreign to her usual
-self, “tell me, Laure, how didst thou find courage to run out from thy
-dreams in the priory into life with Flammecœur, the trouvère?”
-
-At sound of the name, Laure flushed scarlet, and then turned pale again.
-“Flammecœur! Flammecœur!” she murmured to herself. Then, suddenly, she
-shook the spell away. “Ah, how did I fall from heaven to hell and find
-heaven in hell? I cannot tell thee more than thou thyself hast said. I
-was buried while I was yet alive; and so I arose from mine own tomb and
-escaped back to the world of living things. I was among sleepers, yet
-could not myself sleep. After a time fire, not blood, began to run in my
-veins. And so, in the end, I rode away with the Flaming-heart. And I
-loved him! _how_ I loved him! God be merciful to me! Ah, Lenore, how do
-they put us poor, long-haired things into the fair world, giving us
-hearts and brains and souls, and thereon bid us all only to spin—to
-spin, and weave, and so, perchance, kiss, once, and then go back to spin
-again?”
-
-Laure was half hysterical, but wholly in earnest,—so much in earnest
-that she had forgotten her companion; and when she looked at her again,
-she found Lenore lying back on her pillows, her breath coming more
-rapidly than usual, but her face rigidly calm, her blue eyes wandering
-through space, and Laure perceived that she had rejected the passionate
-words and kept herself still in the dream state.
-
-It was well that at this moment there came a tap at the door. Laure
-cried entrance, and as Alixe came in from the hall, Madame Eleanore
-appeared from the other door that led to Laure’s room, and thence
-through to madame’s own chamber. Evidently the work hours were over, and
-it was time for the noon meal.
-
-Lenore did not care to descend to meat, and she asked Alixe to bring a
-glass of wine and water and a manchet of bread to her room. This request
-Alixe joyfully promised to fulfil, and then Laure and her mother
-together left the room, Laure in the throes of a painful reaction from
-strong feeling, and with a sense, moreover, that Lenore was relieved to
-have her go.
-
-In this last conjecture, or rather, sense, Laure was right. But it was
-not through dislike of her sister that Lenore was glad to be alone
-again. It was rather because the young widow had been powerfully moved
-by Laure’s words, and she wanted time and solitude to readjust herself
-from the new and disquieting ideas that had been put into her mind.
-Alixe believed her to be fatigued, and perhaps suffering; and,
-understanding her nature much better than Laure did, she brought the
-invalid everything that she wanted in the way of food, and then left
-her, believing that she could sleep.
-
-It was afternoon in the Castle. Dinner was at an end. Madame had betaken
-herself to her own room, for prayer and meditation. The damsels were all
-scattered, some to their own small rooms, some to the courtyard and the
-snow. Laure was in the chapel, before the altar, struggling with her
-newly roused demon of unrest. In the long room, off the great hall, was
-Courtoise, seated in Gerault’s old place, before a reading-desk, with an
-illuminated parchment before him. It was part of “The Romant de la
-Rose,” and he was reading the passage descriptive of the garden of
-_Déduit_. Although nothing, perhaps, could be found in the literature of
-that day better fitted to appeal to a dweller of Le Crépuscule, the mind
-of the dark-browed Courtoise was not very securely fixed upon his book.
-His eyes rested steadily on one word; his forehead was puckered, and
-there was an expression on his face which, had he been a maid, would
-likely have portended tears. Courtoise was not a man to weep; but he had
-lately fallen recklessly into the habit of his former lord, of coming
-here to sit with a parchment before him, as an excuse for brooding
-hopelessly on the trouble in his soul. His head was now so far bent that
-he did not see a woman’s figure glide into the room. Not till she stood
-over his very desk did he look up with a little start: “Thou, Alixe!” he
-said half impatiently.
-
-“Yea, Alixe, Master Courtoise. Thine eyes, it seems, can make out great
-shapes very well, but halt an untold time over one curly letter.”
-
-“What sayest thou? Thy words, Alixe, are like the quips of the dwarf;
-but thou hast not his license to say them.”
-
-“Ahimé, Courtoise,” she came lazily round the table till she stood
-beside his chair, “seek to quarrel with me if thou wilt. A quarrel would
-be a merry thing in this Castle. For I am dull—dull—piteously dull, good
-master!”
-
-Courtoise looked at her rather grimly. “Art thou dull indeed, Mistress
-Alixe? What thinkest thou, then, of all of us?”
-
-“Thou also, quiet one? Well, I had guessed it. Yet methought—” she
-paused, with mischief in her eyes; and Courtoise, who knew some of her
-moods, was wise enough not to let her finish the sentence. Rising from
-his place, he went and got a tabouret from a corner of the room, and,
-placing it beside the chair at the desk, sat down on it, motioning Alixe
-to the seat beside him.
-
-Alixe refused the offer. “Nay, nay, Master Courtoise. Thou shalt sit in
-the brawny chair, for thou’rt to be my adviser. Sit, I prithee, and let
-me take the little place, and then list to me carefully while I do talk
-on a matter of grave importance.”
-
-“Name of Heaven! Is there something of importance in this house of
-shadows?”
-
-“There is Madame Lenore,” she said soberly.
-
-“Lenore! Ah, ’tis of her thou wouldst speak,” he cried, his whole face
-lighting.
-
-Suddenly Alixe broke into a rippling mockery of laughter. “There,
-Courtoise, thou art betrayed! Nay, I will be still about it, for I also
-love her. Now, to be cruel, my talk is not to be of her, but of myself,
-even me,—Alixe No-name. Thou, Courtoise, art in something the same
-position in Le Crépuscule as I, save that thou hast a binding tie of
-interest here. Then canst thou not offer me a moment’s thought, a
-moment’s sympathy? For, in very truth, I need them both.”
-
-With Alixe’s first words, Courtoise had flushed an angry scarlet; but
-with her last, his ordinary color came back to him, and he looked at her
-in friendly fashion as he answered: “What time and thought I have are
-thine, Alixe. But thou must show me thy need of sympathy.”
-
-“Why, let it be just for dwelling in Le Crépuscule. And—if thou wouldst
-have more—for holding no certain place here. There was a time, after
-Laure had gone away, and when the Seigneur was in Rennes, that I was
-really wanted. I brought comfort to madame, and I know she loved me
-well. And also, since Madame Lenore was widowed, I have been sometimes a
-companion to her. But now there are two daughters here. Madame’s life is
-full with them; and my place in Le Crépuscule is only one of tolerance.
-Therefore—lend thine ear closely, Courtoise—I would go away, I, Alixe
-No-name, out into the world, to see if there be not a fortune hidden for
-me beyond the eastern hills. I would go to Rennes, or even farther, to
-try what city life might be; yet I would not have the trouble of
-explanation and protests and insistence, and finally of farewell, with
-the dwellers here. Rather, I would just steal away, some night, nor
-return again hither evermore. What say you, Courtoise? Think you that
-that wish is all ingratitude?”
-
-It was some moments before Courtoise replied. His face was a little
-turned from Alixe, but she could see that his brow was knit in thought.
-At length he answered her: “Nay, Alixe, thy wish is not ingratitude.
-Rather, indeed, I have sometimes thought that Madame Eleanore showed
-something of ingratitude toward thee; for thou wast a daughter to her in
-her sorrow; and since the return of mademoiselle, I have seen thee many
-a time set aside.
-
-“If thou wouldst fare forth into the world—well, Alixe, the world is a
-wide place, and many dangers lurk therein. Yet thou art stout of heart,
-and strong enow in body, and methinks there are few like thee that would
-of choice dwell in such a place as this. I myself, were it only not for—
-Ah, well, if thou wouldst go forth and make thy way at once to Rennes,
-depart not now in the winter season. Thou’dst freeze on thy way. Wait
-till the spring is upon us, and the woods are light at night. And then—”
-
-“Then thou’lt help me? Wilt thou, Courtoise? Wilt thou tell madame when
-I am gone wherefore it was I went? Wilt thou give her messages of
-faithful love? Wilt—”
-
-“Wait, wait! Ask no more than that,” he said, smiling thoughtfully.
-“When the days are warmer and the spring is in the leaf, when the blood
-flows fast through the veins, and the head burns with new life—” he drew
-a sudden, quick breath, and Alixe, looking upon him with new interest,
-said quickly and softly:
-
-“Then come thou, also, Courtoise, out into the wide world! Let us
-together go forth to seek our fortunes. Thou’lt find me not too weak a
-comrade, I promise.”
-
-Courtoise’s smile vanished, and he shook his head, a look of sadness
-stealing into his eyes: “Think you, Alixe, that after the death of my
-well-loved lord I should have stayed in this Castle to grow gray and
-mouldy ere my time, had it not held for me a trust so sacred that I
-could not give it up?”
-
-“Lenore,” murmured Alixe, gently.
-
-“Thou knowest it. Since the first day that she came home with the
-Seigneur, I knew that here she would sadly need a friend; and indeed she
-hath been my very saint. I have worshipped her more as an angel than as
-a woman, in her purity; and my heart hath all but broken for the great
-sadness of her life here. And if by remaining I can serve her in any
-way, in thought or in deed; if it giveth her comfort to have me in the
-Castle, I would sooner cut off my hand than leave her here alone. I feel
-also that my lord knoweth that I am faithful to the trust he left with
-me; and I would not forfeit his dead thanks. Therefore, Alixe, ask me
-not to return into the world with thee or with another.”
-
-While he spoke, Alixe had watched him fixedly, and had seen no suspicion
-either in tone or in face of a deeper feeling for Lenore than he had
-confessed. Now she sighed quietly, and said in a gentle voice:
-“Courtoise, I think thou shouldst not mourn that thou’rt to dwell here;
-for thou hast thy trust, and thou hast some one to serve, always.
-Therefore fear nothing, and give thanks to God; for with Lenore in thy
-world—”
-
-“Alas, alas, Alixe, there is that fear in me! Should Lenore be
-lost—should Lenore die—ah!”
-
-Low as was his voice, the agony in it was unmistakable; and now Alixe
-was sure of all his secret: that he also loved Lenore as man sometimes
-loves woman,—purely. And she could find no words to say to him when the
-usually self-contained and tranquil man laid his head down on the table
-before him and did not try to hide his grief.
-
-It was at this inopportune moment that Laure, tired of prayers, and
-still consumed by her restless fever, rushed in upon the two in the long
-room. Her old-time wild gayety was upon her, and she did not pause
-before the position of Courtoise, who, however, quickly straightened up.
-Laure scarcely saw it. She knew only that here were the companions of
-her youth, and as she entered she cried out to them,—
-
-“Alixe! Courtoise! Up and out with me! Burn ye not? Stifle ye not in
-this dim hole? Courtoise, is our old sailing-boat still in its mooring?
-Let us fare forth, all three, and set out upon the wintry sea! Let us
-feel this January wind pull and strain at the ropes! Let us watch the
-foamy waves pile up before and behind us—”
-
-“Mon Dieu!”
-
-“Mademoiselle, it is impossible. The boat lies on the beach; two days’
-work would not fit her for the water.”
-
-Laure stamped angrily on the floor. “Something, then, something! I will
-get out into the cold, into the snow; I will move, I will feel, I will
-breathe again!”
-
-It was so much the wild, free Laure, it had in it so much her old-time
-magnetism of comradeship, so much the spirit of the dead Gerault,
-desirous of action, that Alixe and Courtoise were drawn irresistibly
-into her mood. Both of them moved forward, while Alixe cried gayly: “The
-hawks! Come, we will ride!”
-
-“The hawks!” echoed Laure. “Run, Courtoise, and get the horses, while
-Alixe and I go don our riding-garb and jess the birds!”
-
-Without a moment’s hesitation, rather with a throb of pleasure,
-Courtoise ran obediently away toward the stables, while the young women
-hurried to their rooms. In twenty minutes the wild trio were dashing
-across the lowered drawbridge, all well mounted, hawk on wrist, spur at
-heel, with Laure in the lead. Down the road for the space of a mile they
-went, and then struck off to the snowy moor. They rode long and they
-rode hard, finding scarce a single quarry, but letting their pent-up
-spirits out in this free and healthful exercise. When they came in again
-to the Castle courtyard, it was in starry darkness; and not one of the
-three but felt a new strength to resist the dead life of the Castle.
-
-Perhaps, had Courtoise known how Lenore had quietly wept away the
-afternoon in her solitude and loneliness, he had not appeared at evening
-meat with air so vigorous, eye so bright, and appetite so ready. Lenore,
-however, was never known to make a plaint; and she came to table with
-her cheeks hardly paler than usual, though her downcast eyes were
-shrunken with tears, and their lids were tinged with feverish red.
-
-Men say that it is one of the irrevocable blessings that Time should
-move as surely as he does. But when the hours, nay, the minutes, lag
-away as drearily as they did in Le Crépuscule that winter, one feels no
-gratitude to Time; but rather a resentment that his immortality should
-be so dead-alive. Yet winter did pass, however slowly. In March the
-frozen chains of the prisoned earth were riven. Streams began to flow
-fast and full. The snow melted and soaked into the rich, black soil,
-making it ready for the seed. The doors of the peasants’ huts were
-opened to the sun and rain. Flocks of storks began to fly northward on
-their return from the Nile to their unsettled fatherland. Spring caught
-the earth in a tender embrace; and wherever her warm breath touched the
-soil, a flower appeared, to mark the kiss.
-
-To Lenore the spring warmth was as heaven to a soul newly freed from
-earth-sorrow and suffering. Now the windows of her room could all be
-thrown wide open to the outer air. The whole sea lay before her, strewn
-with sunlight, and frosted with white foam. She saw the fishing-fleet
-from St. Nazaire go up past the bay, on its way to the herring
-fisheries; and then she was suddenly inspired again with an
-uncontrollable desire for the sea. That afternoon she sent one of her
-damsels to find Courtoise. He came to her room breathless, and eager to
-learn her will; and to him, without delay, she made known her imperative
-wish to be upon the sea.
-
-Courtoise found himself in a dilemma. He knew that there was a boat at
-her disposal, for he and Laure and Alixe had now been sailing every day
-for a fortnight. He believed Lenore to be aware of this, though as a
-matter of fact she was not; nevertheless he at first refused her request
-point-blank. After that, because she wept, he temporized. Finally, in
-despair, he went and consulted madame, who was horrified at the idea.
-Lenore still insisted, appealed to every one in the Castle, from Alixe
-and Laure to the very scullions. Finding herself repulsed on every hand
-and powerless to act of her own accord, she became, all at once, utterly
-irresponsible, and made a scene that threatened to end everything with
-her. Half unbalanced by months of illness and lonely brooding, and
-tortured by this morbid and unreasonable fancy, she wept and screamed
-and raved, and threw herself about her bed, till she was in a state of
-complete exhaustion, and every one in the Castle awaited the result of
-her paroxysm with unconcealed distress.
-
-After this time she did not leave her bed. She was very weak, and she
-seemed to have lost all ambition and all desire to move or even to
-speak. Her days she spent in silent moodiness, her nights in tossing
-feverishly about the bed. She seemed to take no notice of the little
-attentions so tenderly showered upon her by every one; except that she
-was pleased to see the little spring flowers, tender pink bells and
-anemones, that David and Courtoise spent hours in gathering at the edge
-of the forest on the St. Nazaire road. Upon these she smiled, and for
-many days kept a bouquet of them at her side, carrying them often to her
-lips. But after a little while she grew impatient of these simple
-flowers, and began to plead for violets, which no one in the world could
-find in Brittany before May. Courtoise brooded for two days over his
-inability to supply her want, and every one condoled her. Indeed, her
-own condition was not more pathetic than that of the Castle household in
-their eagerness for her welfare and her happiness, and for the welfare
-of that other precious soul that was in her keeping. Madame prayed night
-and morning for the heir of Le Crépuscule. Laure sewed for him, talked
-of him, dreamed of him, and bitterly envied Lenore. And now there was no
-whisper in the Castle that was not understood to pertain to “the little
-lord.”
-
-At last there came an April twilight when the glow of the sunset was
-growing dim beneath the lowering veil of night. Lenore had passed an
-unusually quiet day, and was now lying in her bed, quite still and
-tranquil. That afternoon David had been admitted to her presence, and
-had amused her with tales from the fairy-lore of Brittany, which she
-dearly loved. Now he was gone, and Madame Eleanore sat in her room
-beside the bed. The two had been silent for some time when Lenore’s eyes
-opened, and she said softly,—
-
-“Madame, hast ever thought that there might be a daughter of Le
-Crépuscule? That is what I believe.”
-
-“God forbid!” exclaimed Eleanore, involuntarily. Then, as Lenore turned
-a white, half-resentful face toward her, madame went on hurriedly:
-“There must be no more daughters of this house, Lenore. ’Tis what I
-could scarcely bear,—to see another maiden grow up in this endless
-twilight—” Her voice trailed off into silence, and then, for a long
-time, the women were still together, thinking.
-
-A tear or two stole from Lenore’s eyes and meandered down her cheek to
-the folds of her white gown; but her weeping was noiseless. The evening
-darkened. A sweet, rich breath of spring blew softly in from off the
-sea. Finally, one by one, the jewels of night began to gleam out from
-the sky. Each woman, unknown to the other, was offering up a prayer. And
-it was in the midst of this quiet scene that Lenore started suddenly up,
-knowing that her agony had begun.
-
-No one in Le Crépuscule slept that night. Laure was called to help her
-mother; and the three women were alone in the bedroom of dead Gerault.
-The demoiselles, all dressed, had assembled in the spinning-room, and
-clustered there in the torchlight, whispering nervously together, and
-listening with strained ears for any sounds coming from Madame Lenore’s
-bedchamber. In the hall below were a company of servants, women and men,
-and a half-dozen henchmen, who quaffed occasional flagons of beer, but
-spoke not a word through the hours. David and Alixe sat in a corner
-playing at chess together; and a wondrous game it was, for neither knew
-when the other was in check, nor paid attention to a queen in jeopardy.
-Lastly, Courtoise was there, pacing up and down the hall, his hands
-clenched behind him, and the beads of sweat rolling off his face. And
-how many miles he walked that night, he never knew.
-
-The hours passed solemnly away, and there was no sign from the holy room
-above. Time dragged by, slowly and yet more slowly, till the hours
-became as years; and it seemed that ages had gone when finally the dawn
-came creeping from beyond the distant hills, and a pale light glimmered
-across the moving waters. By the time the torches were flaring high in
-their mingling with the daybreak, there came, from above, the sound of a
-door softly opening and then closing again. In the hall below, no one
-breathed. Courtoise paused beside a table, and trembled and shook with
-cold. Alixe, very pale and white, moved slowly toward the stairs. There
-was a faint sound of rustling garments across the stones of the upper
-hall, and then, descending step by step in the wavering light, came
-Laure, great-eyed and deathly white, after the night’s terrible toil.
-She came alone, carrying nothing in her arms; and on the fifth step from
-the floor she stopped still, and looked down upon the motionless
-company. Once she tried to speak, and her throat failed her.
-
-“Mademoiselle—in the name of God!” pleaded Courtoise, hoarsely.
-
-Laure trembled a little. “Good friends,” she said, “Madame Lenore is
-safely delivered; and there is—a new daughter in Le Crépuscule.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER FOURTEEN_
- ELEANORE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-When Laure, her message given, started back upstairs again, Alixe was at
-her side. At Lenore’s door they both stopped, till madame opened it.
-Laure entered the room at once, but Eleanore shook her head at the
-maiden, and bade her seek her rest. Then Alixe, disappointed, but too
-weary for speech, followed the chattering demoiselles down the corridor
-where were all their rooms, and, saying not a word to one of them, shut
-herself into her own chamber. Once there, she disrobed with speed, but
-when she had crept into her bed and pulled the coverings up above her,
-she found that sleep was an impossibility. There was a dull weight at
-her heart, which for the moment she could not analyze. It was as if some
-great misfortune had befallen her. Yet Lenore lived—was remarkably well.
-And the child—ah, the child! It was the first, almost, that Alixe had
-thought of the child. A girl, another girl, in Le Crépuscule! a thing of
-inaction, of resignation, of quiescence; the sport of Fate; the jest of
-the age! Alas, alas! A girl! To grow up alone, here in this wilderness,
-companionless, without hope of escape! Thus, dully, inarticulately,
-every one in Le Crépuscule was meditating with Alixe, till at last, one
-by one, they fell asleep, each in his late bed.
-
-The morning was far spent, and an April sun streamed brightly across her
-coverlet, when Alixe finally awoke. Her sleep had done her good, and
-there was no trace of melancholy in her air as she rose and made herself
-ready for the day. She was healthfully hungry, but there was another
-interest, greater than hunger, that had caused her so speedily to dress.
-Hurrying out and down the hall, she stopped at the door to Lenore’s
-room, and tapped there softly.
-
-Laure opened it at once, and smiled a good-morning to her. “Come thou
-in,” she whispered. “Lenore would have thee see the child.”
-
-Alixe entered softly, and halted near the bed, transfixed by the sight
-of Lenore. Never, even in the early days of her bridal, had Gerault’s
-lady been so beautiful. The mysterious spell of her holy estate was on
-her, was clearly visible in her brilliant eyes, in the rosy flush of her
-cheeks, in the coiling, burning gold of her wondrous hair, in the
-smiling, gentle languor of her manner. There was something newly born in
-her, some still ecstasy, that had come to her together with the tiny
-bundle at her side.
-
-“Come thou, Alixe, and look at her,” she said, in a weak voice, smiling
-happily, and casting tender love-looks at the little thing.
-
-Alixe went over, and, with Laure’s aid, unwrapped enough of the small
-creature for her to see its tiny, red face and feeble, fluttering hands.
-As she gently touched one of the cheeks, the wide, blue, baby eyes
-stared up at her, unwinking in their new wonder at the world; while
-Lenore watched them, eagerly, hungrily. Neither she nor Alixe noticed
-that Laure had moved off to a distance, and was staring dully out of a
-window. When Alixe had stood for some moments over the baby, wondering
-in her heart what to say to Lenore, the mother looked up at her with
-those newly unfathomable eyes, and said softly,—
-
-“Put her into my arms, Alixe.”
-
-Alixe did so, laying the infant carefully across the mother’s breast.
-Lenore’s arms closed around it, and her eyes fell shut while a smile of
-unutterable peace lighted up her gentle face.
-
-Alixe knew that it was time for her to go, and, moved as she had never
-been moved before in her young life, she started toward the door,
-glancing as she went at Laure, who followed her.
-
-“How beautiful she is!” whispered Alixe, as they stood together on the
-threshold.
-
-Laure nodded, but there was no sign of joy in her face. “Alas for them
-both!” she said quietly. “There have been enough daughters in Le
-Crépuscule.”
-
-To this Alixe could find no reply, and so, with a slight nod, she left
-the room and went down to the morning meal. Madame Eleanore was not
-there. After the strain of the past night, she had gone to her room a
-little after sunrise, leaving Laure to care for the young mother. At
-breakfast, then, Courtoise and Alixe sat nearest the head of the table,
-but they did not talk together. In fact, no one said very much during
-the course of the meal. Instead of the joyful gayety that might have
-been expected, now that their dead lord’s lady was safely through her
-trial, a dull gloom seemed to overhang everything, to weigh every one
-down: Courtoise ate in silence, heavy-browed and brooding, his head bent
-far over; David, in no humor for wit, scarcely spoke; even Alixe, whose
-heart had been somewhat lightened by the sight of Lenore and her
-happiness, presently succumbed to the atmosphere, and began to reflect
-that the last hope of the Castle was gone, that the line of Crépuscule
-had died forever. And neither she nor any one else paused to think that,
-if the little Twilight baby asleep upstairs had understood the true
-nature of her welcome into the world, she might readily have been
-persuaded to escape again, as rapidly as possible, into her blue ether,
-where pain and unwelcome were things unknown.
-
-When Alixe had eaten, she returned to the sick-room and, madame being
-still asleep, insisted upon taking Laure’s place till the weary girl had
-eaten and slept. Lenore had already taken some nourishment, and the baby
-had been fed; and, while the noon sunshine poured a flood of gold over
-the world, the mother and child drowsed happily together in their bed.
-
-Alixe, having set the room as much to rights as was possible, seated
-herself by one of the open windows, and straightway began to dream. Her
-thoughts were of her own life, of the new life that she should now soon
-enter upon, and of what would befall her when she should really reach
-the vast world that lay behind the barrier of eastern hills,—that world
-that Laure had found, but could not stay in; that world from which
-Lenore had come, and whither Gerault had betaken himself to die. Alixe
-mused for a long time, and, in her untaught way, philosophized over the
-sad stories of those in the Castle, and the prospect of a real history
-that there might be for her when she should leave Le Crépuscule; and it
-was in the midst of this reverie that the door from Laure’s room opened
-softly, and madame came in.
-
-Near the threshold she paused, looking intently at the sleeping mother
-and child, so that she did not at first perceive Alixe, who sat
-motionless, transfixed by the change which, since yesterday, had come
-upon madame. If there were gloom throughout the Castle, because of a
-disappointment in the sex of Lenore’s child, that gloom was epitomized
-in the face of Madame Eleanore. She was paler and older than Alixe had
-ever seen her before. The white in her hair was more marked than the
-dark. Every line in her face had deepened. Her eyes, tearless as they
-were, seemed somehow faded, and her manner bespoke an unutterable
-weariness. She looked haggard and old and worn. And yet, as she gazed at
-the unconscious picture of youth and tender love, the joy of the world,
-and the life of her race asleep there before her, her face softened, and
-her mouth lost a little of its hardness.
-
-After some moments of this gazing, seeing that still she had not moved,
-Alixe went to her.
-
-“Laure was weary, madame, and so I took her place while Lenore and the
-baby slept,” she said.
-
-Eleanore nodded, and Alixe wondered uneasily if she should leave the
-room. After a second or two, however, madame shook away her
-preoccupation and turned to the girl.
-
-“Alixe,” she said, “none hath as yet been despatched for Monseigneur de
-St. Nazaire; and I will not have Anselm baptize the child. Go thou and
-tell Courtoise to ride and fetch the Bishop as soon as may be, to
-perform one last ceremony for this house. Give him my good greeting.
-Tell him Lenore is well—and the babe—a girl. Mon Dieu! a girl!—Haste
-thee, Alixe. And thou needst not return. I will sit here while Lenore
-sleeps.”
-
-Alixe bowed, but still stood hesitating, near the door, till madame
-looked up at her impatiently.
-
-“When I have given Courtoise his message, let me bring thee food and
-wine, madame. Thou’lt be ill, an thou eat not.”
-
-“Nay. Begone, Alixe! Bring nothing to me. Why should I eat? Why should I
-eat, when after me there will be none of mine to eat in Crépuscule?” And
-it was with a kind of groan that madame moved slowly across to the
-bedside. When Alixe left the room she was still standing there, gazing
-down upon Lenore, who, if awake, could hardly have borne the look with
-which madame regarded her.
-
-An hour later, Courtoise was on his way to St. Nazaire; but he did not
-return with Monseigneur till evensong of the next day. Arrived at the
-Castle, the Bishop was given chance for food and rest after his ride,
-before he was summoned to Lenore’s room, where madame received him. From
-Courtoise, on their way, St. Nazaire had learned of the disappointment
-of the Castle; so that he was prepared for what he found. He read
-Eleanore’s mind from her face, and was not surprised at it, but from his
-own manner no one could have told that he felt anything but the utmost
-delight with the whole affair. He was full of congratulations and
-felicitations of every kind; he was witty, he was gay, he was more
-talkative than any one had ever seen him before; and he took the baby
-and handled it, cried to it, cooed to it, with the air of an experienced
-old beldame. Lenore, still radiant with her happiness of motherhood,
-brightened yet more under the cheer of his presence; and in her
-unexpected joy the Bishop found some consolation for the cloud of misery
-that shrouded madame. Indeed, he watched Lenore with unaffected delight,
-seeing with amazement the miracle that had been worked in her, and
-knowing her now for the first time as what she had been before her
-marriage, when there was, in her nature, none of the melancholy, the
-morbidness, the pain of loneliness, that had for so long clouded her
-life.
-
-Lenore was not strong enough to endure even his cheerful presence very
-long; and when Laure presently stole in, he seized the opportunity that
-he had been waiting for, and, on some light excuse, drew madame with him
-out of the room.
-
-The moment that they were alone together, his gay manner dropped from
-him like a cloak, and he looked upon the woman before him with piercing
-eyes.
-
-“Eleanore,” he said severely, “it were well an thou came with me for a
-little time before God. There is written on thy face the tale of that
-old-time inward rebellion that hath been so long asleep that I had hoped
-it dead.”
-
-Madame looked at him with something of defiance, displeasure very
-plainly to be read in her brilliant eyes. “My lord,” she said coldly,
-“thou’rt wearied with thy ride. It were well an thou soughtest rest.”
-
-“I have already rested. Where wouldst thou rather be,—in thine own room,
-or in the chapel?”
-
-“Charles!” madame spoke with angry impetuosity. “Think you I am to be
-treated as a child?”
-
-“There are times when all of us are children, Eleanore,—times when we
-need the Father-hand, the Father-guidance. I would not be harsh with
-thee were there another way; nevertheless, thou must do my bidding.”
-
-She led him in silence to her own room, and they entered it together,
-St. Nazaire closing the door behind him. Madame seated herself at once
-in a broad chair near a window, and the Bishop paced up and down before
-her. The room was warm, for the night air was soft, and a half-dead fire
-gleamed upon the stone hearth. A torch upon the wall had been lighted,
-and two candles burned on the table near by. By this light St. Nazaire
-could watch Eleanore’s face as he walked. It was some moments before he
-spoke, and when he began, his voice had changed again, and was as gentle
-as a woman’s,—
-
-“This birth of a girl child hath been a grievous disappointment to thee,
-dear friend?”
-
-Eleanore replied only by a look; but what words could have expressed
-half so much?
-
-“Art thou angry with me, Eleanore! Am I to blame for it? Is there fault
-in any one for what is come? Sex is no matter of choice with the world.
-Were it so, methinks thou hadst not now been grieving.”
-
-“Thou sayest truly, it is no matter of choice with the world. But hast
-not ever taught that there is One who may choose always as He will?
-There is a fault, and it is the fault of God! God of God, Charles, have
-I not had enough to bear? Could I not, now that the end cannot be far
-away, have known a little content in mine old age? What hath there been
-for me, these thirty years, save sorrow? With the death of Gerault, I
-believed that the world held no further woe for me; but in the following
-months hope, which I had thought forever gone, came on me again, combat
-its coming as I would. Yet the thought that an heir might be born to
-Crépuscule, the thought that the line might yet be carried on to
-something better than this eternal sadness, came to be so strong with me
-that I gave way, fool that I was, to joy. And now, by the merciless
-wrath of God, Fate makes sport of me again. God alone would have been so
-pitiless. And am I, a mortal, to forgive the Almighty for all the woes
-that He recklessly putteth on me?”
-
-In this speech Eleanore’s low voice had risen above its usual pitch, and
-rang out in tones of deep-seated, passionate anger. St. Nazaire paused
-in his walk to look at her as she spoke; and never had he felt himself
-in a more difficult position. Sincere as was his belief, there were,
-indeed, things in the divine order that his creed could not explain
-away. He dreaded to take the only orthodox stand,—resignation and
-continued praise of the Lord, for in Eleanore’s present state of mind
-this would be worse than mockery; and yet in this he was obliged at
-length to take his refuge.
-
-“Eleanore, when Laure, the infant, was first put into thy arms, wast
-thou grieved that she was not a man child?”
-
-“I had Gerault—”
-
-“Hast thou not loved Laure and cared for her throughout thy life because
-she was thy child, flesh of thy flesh, blood of thy blood, conceived of
-great love, and born of suffering?”
-
-“Yea, verily.”
-
-“And, despite her months of grievous wandering from thy sight, still
-hath she not given thee all the joy that Gerault gave?”
-
-“More, methinks; in that she hath ever been more mine own.”
-
-“Then, Eleanore,” and there was joy in the man’s tone, “take this child
-of thy son to thy heart and love her. Let her young innocence bring thee
-peace. Hold her close to thy life, and give and receive comfort through
-thy love. Seek not woe because she is not what she cannot be. Assume not
-a knowledge greater than that of God. Trouble not thyself about the
-future; but, rather, take what is given thee, and know that it is good.
-Shall not a young voice cause these walls to echo again to the sound of
-laughter? Will not a child bring light into thy life? Why shouldst thou
-grieve because, in the years after thy death, Le Crépuscule may fall
-into other hands than those of thy race? Thinkest thou thou wilt be here
-to see it? For shame, Eleanore! Forget thy bitterness, and find the joy
-that Gerault’s widow already knows!”
-
-Though she would not have acknowledged it, Eleanore was influenced by
-the Bishop’s words; and the change in her was already visible in her
-face. Judging wisely, then, St. Nazaire let his plea rest where it was,
-and blessing her, said good-night and left her to sleep or to pray—he
-could not tell which. And in truth Eleanore slept; but in her sleep,
-love and pity entered into her heart. She woke in the early dawn, and,
-hardly thinking what she did, stole into Lenore’s room, creeping softly
-to the bed where the sleeping mother and infant lay. At sight of them a
-wave of feeling overswept her. She knew again the crowning joy of
-woman’s life: she felt again the glory of youth; and when she returned
-to her solitude, it was to weep away the greater part of her bitterness,
-and to take into her inmost heart the helpless baby of Gerault.
-
-On the following morning, in the presence of an imposing company, the
-Lord Bishop officiating, the little girl was baptized. Laure and
-Courtoise were the godparents; Laure feeling that, in being trusted with
-this holy office, she stood once more honorably in the eyes of the
-world. According to her mother’s wish, the babe was christened Lenore,
-and Alixe guessed wrong when she thought the little one called after
-another of that name. When the ceremony was over, and the baptismal
-feast lay ready spread, madame took the child into her arms to carry it
-back to the mother; and St. Nazaire, seeing the kiss that she pressed
-upon the tiny cheek, realized that the cause was won.
-
-Madame Eleanore’s lead was quickly followed by every one in the Castle;
-and the disappointment at the baby’s sex wore away so rapidly that in a
-month probably no one would have admitted that there had ever been any
-chagrin at all. Perhaps no royal heir had ever known more abject homage
-than was paid to that wee, bright-eyed, grave-faced, helpless creature,
-who was perfectly contented only when she lay in her mother’s arms.
-
-Lenore regained her strength slowly. Her long winter of idleness and
-grieving had ill-fitted her to bear the strain of what she had endured;
-and it was many weeks before she tried to leave her room. Thus, bit by
-bit, the whole life of the Castle came to gravitate around her chamber.
-It was like a court of which the young mother was queen, and where at
-certain hours of the day, all the women-folk of Crépuscule were wont to
-congregate. It was on an afternoon in the middle of May, when summer
-first hovered over the land, that Lenore was dressed for the first time.
-She sat in a semi-reclining position by the window, whence she could
-look off upon the sea, the baby at her side, and Alixe the only other
-person in the room. For nearly an hour Lenore had been silent, one hand
-gently caressing the baby’s little cheek, her big eyes wandering along
-the far horizon line. Alixe was bent over a parchment manuscript, which
-Anselm had taught her how to read, and she scarcely raised her eyes from
-it to look at anything in the room. Her passage had become complicated,
-and, at the same time, interesting, when Lenore’s voice suddenly broke
-in upon her,—
-
-“Alixe, ’tis long time now since I saw Courtoise. Thinkest thou he is
-near and would come and talk to me?”
-
-Alixe let her poetry go, and jumped hastily up. “I will seek him. An he
-be about the Castle, he will surely come.”
-
-Lenore smiled with pleasure. “Thank thee, maiden. Let him come now, at
-once.”
-
-Alixe, hugging Courtoise’s secret to her heart, hurriedly left the room,
-and ran downstairs, straight upon Courtoise, who stood in the hall
-below. He was booted and spurred, and his horse waited for him in the
-doorway. Making a hasty apology to Alixe, he was going on, when she
-cried to him: “Courtoise, stay! Madame Lenore seeks thy presence. She
-would have thee go to her and talk with her for an hour this afternoon.
-Shall I tell her thou’rt ridden hawking?”
-
-“Holy Mary! Say that—say that I come instantly. She hath asked for me?
-Hurry, Alixe! Say that I come at once!”
-
-Courtoise retreated to his room, trembling like a girl. He had forgotten
-his horse, which Alixe considerately caused to be taken back to the
-stable, and while he removed his spurs and fussily rearranged his dress
-and hair, he tried in vain to recover his equanimity. Then, when he
-could no longer torture himself with delay, he hurried away to the door
-of her room and there paused again, remembering how many times since her
-illness he had stood there, both by night and by day, listening, not
-always vainly, for the sound of her voice, or for the little wailing cry
-of the hungry babe. And now—now he was to enter that sacred room, holier
-to him than any consecrated church of God. Now he was to look at her, to
-touch her hand, to feast his eyes upon her exquisite face. He drew a
-long breath and was about to tap on the door, when it suddenly opened,
-and Alixe, finding herself face to face with him, gave a little
-exclamation,—
-
-“Holy saints! I was just coming to seek thee again. Hadst forgotten that
-madame waits for thee? There—go in!”
-
-Courtoise never noticed the mischief of Alixe’s tone, but went straight
-into the room, and saw Lenore sitting by the window with the baby on her
-lap. She turned toward him, smiling, and holding out her hand. He went
-over, looking at her thirstily, but not so that she could read what was
-in his heart. Then he realized vaguely that Alixe had left the room, and
-that he was alone with Lenore.
-
-“’Tis very long, Courtoise, very long, since we have seen each other.
-Why hast thou not come ere now?”
-
-“Madame! Had I but thought thou’dst have had me! Thrice every day during
-thy illness came I to thy door to ask after thee and the babe; and since
-then—often—I have stood and listened, to hear if thou wast speaking here
-within. But I did not know—”
-
-“Enough, Courtoise! I thank thee. Thou’rt very good. Thou knowest
-thou’rt all that I have left of Gerault, and I would fain have thee
-oftener near me. Wilt take the babe? Little one! She feels the strength
-of a man’s arms but seldom. Sit there yonder with her. So!”
-
-She put the tiny bundle into his strong arms, and laughed to see the
-half-terrified air with which the young fellow bore it over to the
-settle which she indicated. But when he had sat down, he laid the baby
-on his knees, and then, retaining careful hold of it, turned his whole
-look upon Lenore.
-
-She smiled at him, supremely unconscious of the electric thrills that
-were making the man’s whole body quiver and tremble with emotion.
-Indeed, it would have been difficult enough to read his feeling in his
-matter-of-fact manner. For a long time they sat there, talking upon many
-subjects, but most of all about Gerault, whose name had scarcely crossed
-Lenore’s lips since the time of his death. To Courtoise it was an acute
-pain to hear her refer to the various incidents of her courtship in
-Rennes; but back of her words there was no suggestion of either grief or
-bitterness. She recalled her first acquaintance with Gerault fully,
-incident by incident, and caused Courtoise to take an unwilling part in
-the reminiscences. He hoped continually to get her away from the
-subject, to matters now nearer both of them; but time sped on, and, as
-the sun began to near the sea, the baby woke from sleep with a little
-cry that Courtoise recognized with a pang. His hour was over; and he had
-gained little hope from it. Yet, as he returned the baby to its mother’s
-arms, there was a smile for him in Lenore’s calm eyes, and he retreated
-with a beating heart as Madame Eleanore and Laure came together into the
-room, to spend their usual evening hour with the mother and child.
-
-This hour of the day, the twilight time, the time of yearning for things
-long gone, had of late weeks been drawing these three women of the
-Twilight Castle very close together. Laure, Lenore, and Eleanore, these
-three, with Alixe ofttimes a shadow in the background, were accustomed
-to sit together, watching the sunset die over the great waters, and
-waiting for the appearance of the evening star upon the fading glow. And
-in this time of silent companionship each felt within her a new growth,
-a new, half-sorrowful love for the life in this lonely habitation. The
-spell of solitude was weaving about them a slow, strong bond, which in
-after years none of the three felt any wish to break. Many
-dream-shadows, the ghosts of forgotten lives, rose up for each out of
-the darkening waste of the sea; and with these spirits of memory or
-imagination, each one was making a life as real and as strong as the
-lives of those that dwelt out in the great world, for which, at one time
-or another, all of them had so deeply yearned. Each felt, in her heart,
-that her active life was over; and, as time passed, and thoughts began
-adequately to take the place of realities, none of them cared to keep
-alive the sharp stings of bitterness or of unavailing regret. They knew
-themselves dead to the great, outer life that each, in her way, had
-known. Nor did they mourn themselves. What fire of life remained with
-them had been transformed into secret dreams and ambitions for the
-future of that little creature swathed so carefully from the world, now
-lying peacefully asleep upon the mother-breast of Gerault’s widow.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER FIFTEEN_
- THE RISING TIDE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Summer was on the world again, and with its coming, melancholy was
-banished for a season from Le Crépuscule. With the first northward
-flight of storks, a new air, a breath of hidden life and gayety, crept
-into the Castle household, and, in the early days of June, broke forth
-in a riot of pleasures,—caroles, garland-weaving parties, and hunting.
-As in former times, Laure was now the moving spirit in every sport, and,
-to the general amazement, madame, who in her younger days had been
-celebrated at the chase, herself headed one of the rabbit-hunts,—in that
-day a favorite pastime with women.
-
-The country around Le Crépuscule was as beautiful in summer as it was
-desolate in winter; for the moorlands were one gay tangle of
-many-colored wild-flowers. The cultivated land around the peasants’
-homes was thick with various crops, and the cool, green depths of the
-forest hid beauties surpassing all those of the open country. The
-stables of Le Crépuscule were well supplied with horses, for the family,
-both women and men, had always been persistent riders. In these June
-days the women-folk, Madame and Laure and the demoiselles, rode early
-and late, deserting wheel, loom, and tambour frame to revel in a
-much-needed rest and change of occupation. Only Lenore refused to take
-part in the sports, finding pleasure enough at home with the child, who
-was growing to be a fine lusty infant, with a smile as ready as if she
-had been born in Rennes. And the mother and child were happy enough to
-sit all day in the flower-strewn meadow, between the north wall and the
-dry moat, playing together with bright posies, watching the movements of
-the birds in the open falconry, and sometimes taking part in quieter
-revels with the others. Ere June was gone, the demoiselles were scarcely
-to be recognized for the pale, heavy-eyed, pallid things that had been
-wont to assemble in the great hall after supper on winter evenings to
-listen to the stories told round the fire. Now their laughter was ever
-ready, their feet light for the dance, their cheeks brown, and their
-eyes bright with the continual riot in sunlight and sea-winds. Winter
-lay behind, like the shadow of an ugly dream, and now, of a sudden,
-God’s world, and with it Le Crépuscule, became beautiful for man.
-
-In the first week of July, however, the period of gayety was checked by
-the loss of four members of the household. Two of the demoiselles of
-noble family, whom madame had taken to train as gentlewomen of rank,
-Berthe de Montfort and Isabelle de Joinville, had now been in Le
-Crépuscule the customary time for the acquirement of etiquette and the
-arts of needlework, and escorts arrived from their homes to convoy them
-away. After their departure, the squires Louis of Florence and Robert
-Meloc resigned their places and rode out into the world, to seek a life
-of action.
-
-There were now left in Le Crépuscule the demoiselles whom Lenore had
-brought with her from Rennes a year ago, and two others who had come to
-madame many years ago, and who must perforce stay on, having no other
-home than this, living as they did upon madame’s bounty. And there were
-also two young squires, who had sworn fealty to madame, but hoped some
-day to ride to Rennes and win their spurs in the lists of their Lord
-Duke. For the present they were content to remain out on the lonely
-coast, where Courtoise taught them the articles of knighthood, and where
-twenty stout henchmen could look up to them as superiors. These, with
-David le petit, Anselm the steward, Alixe, Courtoise, and a young
-peasant woman, who had come to foster the infant of Madame Lenore,
-comprised the attendants of the three ladies of Crépuscule. It was a
-well-knit little company, and one so accustomed to the quiet life, that
-none of them save only one desired better things.
-
-Of the mood of Alixe during these summer months, much might be said.
-Throughout the spring she had been in a state of hot desire for what was
-not in Le Crépuscule. She was filled with unrest; but her plans were too
-vague, too indefinite, for immediate action. Strong as was the will that
-would have carried her through any difficulty that lay not in the
-condition of her heart, she was still, after nearly six months of
-dreaming and debating, in Le Crépuscule. Still she labored through the
-long, dull mornings; and still, through the afternoons, she drifted
-about through moving seas of doubt and yearning. She longed for the
-world, but she could not give up Le Crépuscule, and those whom it held.
-Here was her problem,—which way to turn. She felt that another such
-winter as she had just passed would drive her senses from her; but she
-knew that anywhere outside Le Crépuscule the visions of three faces, the
-fair, sad faces of her ladies, would haunt her by day and by night till
-she should return to them at last. She carried her struggle always with
-her, and at length it drove her to seek an old-time solitude. She began
-to spend her afternoons in a cave in the great cliff north of that on
-which the Castle stood. This cave had been formed by the action of the
-water, and it stretched in cavernous darkness far into the wall of
-rock,—much farther than Alixe had ever dared to go. Near the entrance,
-four or five feet above the tide-washed floor, was a little ledge where
-she was accustomed to sit till the rising water drove her to the upper
-shore. Tides, in Brittany, are proverbially high; and at full tide the
-top of the cave’s opening was scarcely visible above the water; so it
-behooved Alixe to restrain herself from sleep while she lay therein,
-meditating on her other life.
-
-On the 19th of July the tide was at low ebb at half-past two in the
-afternoon; and at three o’clock Alixe entered the cave, and climbed,
-dry-shod, up to her ledge of rock. Here, as she knew, she was safe for
-two hours, if she chose to stay so long.
-
-The interior of this cave was by no means an uninteresting place, though
-Alixe had never yet explored it beyond the space of twenty feet, where
-it was bright with the daylight that poured in through its jagged
-entrance. After that it wound a darker way into the cliff, and the far
-recesses were lost in utter blackness. A spoken word directed toward the
-inner passage-way would reverberate along that mysterious interior till
-one could not but be a little awed at the vast extent of the lost
-passage. The visible floor of the cavern was a thing of interest and
-beauty, for at low tide it was like a little park, where pools of clear
-sea-water alternated with groves of filmy plants, small ridges of
-pebbles and rocks, and patches of delicately ribbed sand, where every
-species of shell-fish dwelt. At times Alixe spent hours in studying
-sea-life in these places; and certainly, on hot summer afternoons, no
-pleasanter occupation could have been found. Probably others than Alixe
-would have taken to it, were it not for the fact that the cave was the
-scene of one of the weirdest legends of the coast, and was held in
-avoidance as much by Castle folk as by the peasantry. Alixe, however,
-had long been held to possess some uncanny power over the people of the
-supernatural world, for she would venture fearlessly into the most
-unholy spots, emerging unharmed and undisturbed; nor could any one ever
-learn from her whether or not she had actually held intercourse with the
-creatures whom they devoutly believed in, and so devoutly dreaded.
-
-To-day, certainly, there was no suggestion of the uncanny about her as
-she lay upon her ledge of rock, looking off upon the sparkling waters
-that danced up to the very edge of her retreat. With one hand she shaded
-her eyes from the golden glare, and her head was pillowed on her other
-arm. Her usually smooth brow was puckered into a frown for which the sun
-was not responsible; nor yet was Alixe’s mind upon any subject that
-might be supposed to anger or distress her. For the moment she had
-dropped her inward debate, and was lazily watching the sea. The warmth
-of the afternoon had made her drowsy, and now the shadowy coolness of
-the cave soothed her till her vivid mental images had become a little
-blurred, and the sparkle of the water and its crispy rustle, as it
-advanced and retreated over the sand outside, was luring her mind into
-the faery wastes of dreamland. She wondered a little whether she were
-awake or asleep; but, in point of fact, her eyes were not actually shut,
-when a slender figure came round a corner of the entrance, and slipped
-lightly into the cave.
-
-Alixe started, and sat up straight, while a high tenor voice cried out:
-“Ho, Mistress Alixe, ’tis thou, then? Is’t I that discover thee in thy
-retreat, or thou that hast invaded mine?”
-
-“Ohé, David, thou’st startled me! Meseemeth I all but slept.”
-
-“’Tis a day for sleep, but this is not the place. Is there room there on
-the ledge? Wilt let me up? ’Tis wet enough, below here.”
-
-“Yea; thy feet slop i’ the sand, and thou’st frightened two crabs. Canst
-climb hither?”
-
-He laughed merrily, and scrambled up beside her, his light body seeming
-but a feather in weight. She made room beside her, and he sat down
-there, cocking one parti-colored knee upon the other, and beginning
-lightly: “Thus bravely, then, thou comest into the cave of the water
-goblin. Art thou, perchance, courted here by some sly water sprite?”
-
-The maiden, responding to his mood, laughed also. “Not unless thou’lt
-play the sprite, Master David. Say—wilt court me?”
-
-“Nay, sister. Thou and I, and all i’ the Castle up above, know each
-other in a way that admits no love-foolery. Heigho!” The little man’s
-tone had changed to one of whimsical earnestness. Alixe made no
-immediate reply to his speech, and so, to entertain himself, he took
-from his open bag two pebbles, and began to toss them lightly into the
-air, one after the other.
-
-For a few seconds Alixe watched him absently. Then she said: “Those
-pebbles, David, are like thee and me. Watch now which will be the first
-to fall from thy hand. Thou’rt the mottled; I the gray.”
-
-“And I, damsel,” said he, as he began to handle them a little less
-carelessly, “I, who sit here forever, for my amusement tossing into the
-air two light souls, catching them when they come back to me, and
-flinging them again away—who am I, I ask?”
-
-“Thou, David?” Alixe’s face took on a little, bitter smile. “Why, thou
-art that inexorable thing that men call God. Wilt never drop thy stones
-from their wearisome sphere, Almighty One?”
-
-“They will not fall. They return to me evermore,” he answered; and,
-after another toss or two, he let them both remain in his hand while he
-looked at them for a moment. After that he put them back into his bag
-again, with a curious smile. “That, then, is our end,” he remarked, at
-last.
-
-“_Is_ it our end? David, David! Shall I not leave Le Crépuscule, to fare
-forth into the world? I dream, and dream, and vow unto myself that I
-shall surely go; and then—I still remain.”
-
-“Ay. There are things that keep thee here—and me too. There is the baby,
-now, and its angel-faced mother. And then madame—how is one to leave
-her, when she is a little more alive than formerly? I, too, Alixe, have
-dreamed dreams. The fever of my boyhood, with its wanderings, its life,
-its continual change, comes upon me strong sometimes. Here, in this
-place, my wit lies buried, my soul grows gray within me, my eyes have
-forgot the look of the world’s bright colors. And yet I stay on—I stay
-on forever.”
-
-“How if we two went out together, David, thou and I? Think you the world
-might hold a place for us? I would be a good comrade, I promise thee. I
-would march stoutly at thy side, nor complain when weariness overcame
-me. We should not have always to beg for food, for I have a little bag—”
-
-“See, Alixe, look! There below, on the sand, by that sharp-pointed
-stone,—there is a gray-white crab. He must be hurt. See how he fumbles
-and struggles, without avail, to reach the little pool ten inches from
-him. Watch him; he makes no progress. Now that were thou and I, thrown
-upon the world. Oh, this place is full of omens! I have found them here
-before. ’Tis the witchery of the cave.”
-
-Alixe failed to smile. This last augury, though it confirmed the one
-that she herself had made, did not please her. She sat silent on the
-ledge, her feet hanging, her elbows on her knees, her head on her hand,
-watching intently all the little dramas taking place below her among the
-sea-creatures. Nor was David in a mood to make conversation. So the two
-of them sat silent for a long time—how long a time neither of them knew.
-The water was growing more brightly golden under the beams of the
-fast-descending sun, and Alixe noted the fact, but held her peace. It
-was David who, after a little while, suddenly exclaimed,—
-
-“Diable, Alixe! See how the tide hath risen! We shall be wet enough
-getting out and back to the upper cliff. Come quickly!” As he spoke, he
-slid from the ledge, landing in water that was up to his ankles.
-“Quickly, Alixe! I will steady thee. Come, thou’lt but be the wetter if
-thou stayest.”
-
-Alixe sat motionless upon the ledge above, and looked calmly down upon
-the dwarf.
-
-“Reflect, David, how easy it were not to wet my ankles thus. How easy
-’twould be just to sit here—until the stone should drop for the last
-time into the hand of God.”
-
-David stood looking up at her, wide-eyed. The idea was slow to pierce
-his brain. “Why, yes,” said he, “’twere easy enow, easy enow. Yet when I
-go, ’t must be from mine own room, and by a clean dagger-stroke. I care
-not to choke myself to death in a goblin’s cave. Come, Alixe, the water
-riseth.”
-
-“Go thou on, David. I can come down when I will; for I have traversed
-the way often.”
-
-“Come down!”
-
-“Nay, David.”
-
-“Come down.”
-
-“Nay.”
-
-The water was deeper by four inches than it had been when he first
-reached the bottom of the cave. The dwarf looked up at the girl, who sat
-smiling at him, and his face reddened slightly. Then, without more ado,
-he climbed back upon the ledge, and sat down beside Alixe, hanging his
-dripping feet toward the water, which now covered the tallest of the
-stones on the floor of the cave.
-
-“David, thou must go. Climb down, and save thyself quickly. Thy slender
-body cannot much longer breast the tide.”
-
-David crossed his knees and clasped his hands around them. “If thou
-stayest, I also will remain.”
-
-“I beg of thee, go, ere it is too late!”
-
-“Not without thee.”
-
-“In the name of God I ask it.”
-
-“We two were together in God’s hand.”
-
-“Then so be it, David. Sit thou here beside me. We will wait together.”
-
-The little man did not reply to her this time, and Alixe felt no more
-need for speech. They sat there, occupied with their own thoughts, both
-watching, under the spell of a peculiar fascination, how the green water
-was mounting, mounting toward them. The cave was filled with blinding
-light from the setting sun. The roar of the ocean, a voice mighty and
-ineffable, filled all their consciousness. White-crested breakers rolled
-in and broke below them, and their faces were wet with chill salt spray.
-The water in the cave was waist-deep.
-
-Alixe was growing cold. A deadly intoxication stole upon her senses, and
-she bent far over the ledge to look into the swirling, foamy green below
-her.
-
-“By the Almighty God, His creation is wondrous! This is a scene worthy
-of the end!” cried David, suddenly, in a hoarse, emotional tone.
-
-Alixe started violently. The sound of a human voice, breaking in upon
-the universal murmur of the infinite waters, sent a sudden stab to her
-heart. In a quick flash, she beheld Lenore’s baby holding out its feeble
-hands to her. Near it stood Laure, the penitent; and, on the other hand,
-madame, with her great, grave, sorrowful eyes fixed full upon herself,
-Alixe.
-
-“David!” cried the girl, suddenly, wildly, above the roar of the tide:
-“David! We must escape!—Quickly! Quickly! Quickly!”
-
-As she spoke, she left the ledge, to find herself swaying almost
-shoulder deep in the fierce, swelling water. “Come!” she cried, her face
-livid with her new-born terror.
-
-For an instant, David looked down upon her with something resembling a
-smile. Then he followed her, and would have been carried off his feet in
-the water, had not Alixe steadied him with one hand, while, with the
-other, she clung to the rock above her head. The sudden chill woke
-David’s senses, and he said sharply: “We must hurry, Alixe! There is no
-time to lose.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Hand in hand, by the murmurous
- sea, they walked.—Page 427_
-]
-
-Then the two of them began their work of getting out of the cave. David,
-with his small, lithe body clad in tight-fitting hosen and jerkin,
-started to swim lightly through the water, diving headforemost into the
-beating breakers, and rounding toward the shore with rather a sense of
-pleasurable skill than anything else. But with Alixe, the case was
-different. Her long skirts were soaked with water, and clung
-disastrously about her feet. The idea of her swimming was vain; and she
-grimly gave thanks for her height. But she found that the matter of
-walking had its dangers too. The bottom of the cave and the outer
-stretch that lay between her and safety was very uneven. She stumbled
-over rocks and sank into sudden hollows, continually hampered by her
-clinging skirts. Presently she fell, and a great breaker came tumbling
-over her. In it she lost her self-control, and was presently rolling
-helpless in the tide, gasping in sea-water with every terrified breath,
-and unable to get her limbs free from their binding, clinging robe.
-Alixe was very near death in earnest, now, and she knew it. Presently,
-where a sweeping wave left her head for a moment above water, she sent
-one hoarse, guttural shriek toward David, who had regained the land; and
-he turned, horrified, to look at her. She heard his cry of amazement and
-distress, and then she was rolled upon her face, and knew nothing more
-till she found herself lying on the sand, with David bending over her,
-whiter than death, and trembling like a woman.
-
-She was dizzy and weak and sick, and her lungs ached furiously; yet with
-it all, she saw David’s distress, and managed to keep herself conscious
-by staring at him fixedly.
-
-“Up, Alixe! Up!” he muttered. “Thou _must_ get up to the Castle. I
-cannot carry thee there, and here thou’lt perish. Up, I say! Here, hold
-to my belt. See, the water is upon us again.”
-
-With an effort that seemed to her to be superhuman, Alixe struggled to
-her feet. He held her dripping skirts away from her, so that she could
-walk as little hampered as possible; and though she staggered and reeled
-at every step, they still made progress, and were halfway up the cliff
-before she collapsed again, utterly exhausted. Happily, at that moment,
-David spied the figure of Laure at the top of the cliff, and he cried to
-her with all the strength that was left him to come down. In a moment
-she was beside them, staring in silent astonishment at their plight.
-
-“The demoiselle Alixe had a fancy for bathing. She hath bathed,”
-observed David.
-
-Alixe did not speak. But suddenly her eyes met Laure’s, and she burst
-into hysterical laughter. Laure, being a woman, realized that she was
-strained to the point of collapse. So she bade David go on before them
-and take all precautions to recover from his bath; and then, as soon as
-Alixe signified her ability to go on again, Laure put one of her strong,
-young arms about the dripping body, and, sustaining more than half her
-weight, succeeded in getting her to the Castle. Alixe demurred faintly
-about going in, for she dreaded questions. But it was that hour of the
-day when the open rooms of the Castle were deserted, when all the world
-was asleep or at play, and, as the two crossed the courtyard and went
-through the lower hall, they met no one but a pair of henchmen who were
-too respectful of Laure to voice their curiosity. As the young women
-went through the upper hall, on their way to Alixe’s room, there came,
-from behind Lenore’s closed door, the gurgling crow of the baby. At this
-sound Alixe shuddered, and through her heart shot a pang of horrified
-remorse at the crime she had so nearly committed.
-
-A few moments later the exhausted girl lay in her bed, wrapped round
-with blankets, her dripping garments stripped away, and her body glowing
-again with the warmth of vigorous friction, while her wet hair was
-fastened high on her head, away from her face. When Laure had removed,
-as far as possible, every evidence of the escapade, she bent for a
-moment over the pillow of her foster-sister, and then stole quietly
-away. Alixe made no sign at her departure. She lay back in the bed, her
-eyes closed, her face set like marble, her mind wandering vaguely over
-the events of the afternoon. Gradually her world grew full of misty,
-creeping shadows, and she was on the borderland of sleep, when some one
-again bent over her, and the fragrant breath of hot wine came to her
-nostrils. With an effort she shook her eyes open, to find Laure’s kindly
-face above her, and Laure’s hand holding out to her a silver cup.
-
-“Drink, Alixe. ’Twill give thee strength.”
-
-Obediently, Alixe drank; and the posset sent a new glow of warmth
-through her body.
-
-“Now, if thou canst, thou must sleep.”
-
-Alixe sent a thoughtful glance into her companion’s eyes, and there was
-something in her look that caused Laure to take both of the trembling
-hands in her own, and to wait for Alixe to speak.
-
-“Nay, Laure, nay; I cannot sleep till I have told thee. Some one I must
-tell,—some one that will understand. Let me confess to thee.”
-
-Laure seated herself on the edge of the bed, Alixe still retaining her
-hands. And Laure’s sad eyes looked down upon the drawn face of her
-foster-sister, while she spoke. “Alixe,” she said softly, “methinks I
-know thy confession. Thou hast tried to leave Le Crépuscule. Is it not
-so?”
-
-Alixe’s eyes suddenly filled with tears. “It is so. I tried—to leave Le
-Crépuscule.” The last she only whispered, faintly.
-
-“But it drew thee back again? The Castle would not loose its hold on
-thee? Even so was it with me. Methought I hated it, Alixe, with its
-loneliness and its shadows and its vast silences. Yet however far away I
-was, I found it always before my eyes, or hidden in my thoughts. Through
-my hours of highest happiness I yearned for it; and it drew me back to
-it at last.”
-
-“It is true! It is true! I know thou speakest truth.”
-
-“And thou wilt not try again to go away, my sister?”
-
-“Not again; oh, not again! I could see you all, you and madame and
-Madame Lenore, and your eyes called me back. It is my home, is’t not? I
-have a place here, have I not? Ah, Laure, thou’st been so good to me!
-Shall we not, thou and I, go back again into our childhood, and dream of
-naught better than dwelling here forever in this place? Both of us have
-sinned. And now we are come home into the shadow of the Castle of
-Twilight, for forgiveness’ sake.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- _CHAPTER SIXTEEN_
- THE MIDDLE OF THE VALLEY
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Alixe had faith enough in David to believe that he would keep silent
-about the affair of that afternoon, and her confidence was not
-misplaced. No one save Laure knew of the caprice and the projected sin
-that had led them into their dangerous plight. And to the dwarf’s credit
-be it said that he never attached any blame to Alixe for their
-adventure. Indeed, thereafter, his manner toward her was marked by
-unusual consideration, a little veiled interest and sympathy, sprung
-from a knowledge that their habits of mind had led them both in the same
-ways of thought and desire. During the remainder of the summer, however,
-neither of them ventured again into the Goblin’s Cave; and, from Alixe’s
-mind at least, every thought, every desire, to leave the Castle, had
-been washed away. Her dreams of another life were dead. And, as the
-golden days slipped by, the thought that Le Crépuscule must be her home
-forever, came to have no bitterness in it; for she had learned in a
-strange way how Le Crépuscule was rooted into her heart, and how
-impossible it would be that she should leave it till the great
-Inevitable should bid her say farewell.
-
-Indeed, the Castle had set its seal upon every one of its inmates. The
-little household had acquired the peculiar characteristics that
-generally grow up in a secluded community. Every dweller in the Twilight
-Land was unconsciously possessed of the same quiet manner, the same air
-of tranquil repose, the same habit of abstracted thought. And these
-things had stolen upon them so unawares that none was conscious of it in
-any other, and least of all in herself. It was a singularly beautiful
-atmosphere in which to bring up a little being fresh to the world. In
-this place a new soul might have dwelt forever untainted by any mark of
-worldliness, of passion, or of sin; for these things were foreign to the
-whole place. No one in the Castle but had, at some time, been through
-the depths of human experience, been swayed by the most powerful
-emotions, and known the passion that is inherent in every mortal. But
-from these things the Twilight folk had been purified by long stretches
-of vain longing, vain struggles in the midst of solitude, and that
-continued repression that alone can eradicate mortal tendencies toward
-sin. And now the women of this Castle had reached, in their progress,
-the neutral vale of tranquillity that lies between the gorgeous meadows
-of delight and the grim crags of grief and disappointment.
-
-There was no one in the Castle that did not at times reflect upon these
-things; but of them all, Eleanore saw most clearly whence they had all
-come, and where they now were. Whither they might be going—ah, that!
-that, who should say? But she could see and understand the quiet
-happiness that Lenore had reached through her child; and the increasing
-contentment, that was more than resignation, in Laure. And if she was
-ignorant of the route by which Courtoise, Alixe, and David had come into
-the kingdom of tranquillity, at least she knew that all had reached it,
-and was glad that it was so. To St. Nazaire, who was now her only
-connection with the outer world, she talked of all these things, and
-found in him not quite the spirit of her Castle, but yet a great
-understanding of human and spiritual matters.
-
-Summer wove out its web over the Castle by the sea, and at length its
-golden heat began to give way before the attacks of chilly nights and
-shortening days. The earth grew rich and red with autumn. Chestnut fires
-began to blaze upon peasants’ hearths, and the early morning air had in
-it that little sting that brings the blood to the cheek and fire to the
-eye. It was still too early for flights of storks toward the Nile, and
-the year, hovering on the edge of dissolution, was at the zenith of its
-glory. It was the time when the smoke from the forest fires lingers
-pungently over the land for days on end, like incense proffered to the
-beauty of Mother Earth. It was the time when the sun rises and sets in a
-veil of mist that transcends the splendor of its golden gleams, till,
-before the incomparable richness and purity of its glory, the human
-spectator can only stand back, aghast and trembling with awe. In fine,
-it was that time when, Nature having reached the full measure of her
-maturity, she was turning to look back upon her youth, in retrospect of
-all the loveliness that had been hers, before she should start toward
-the darker, colder, grayer regions that lay about her coming grave.
-
-It was late in the afternoon of such an autumn day that the three women
-of Le Crépuscule, Laure, Lenore, and Eleanore, each lightly wrapped
-about to protect her from the slight chill in the air, went out of the
-Castle to the terrace bordering the cliff, for their evening walk. In
-the hearts of all three lay that little wistful sadness that was part of
-the time of year, and in their surrounding solitude they involuntarily
-drew close each to the other. Yet their faces were not wholly sad. None
-of them wept at the thought of the long winter that was again upon them.
-Hand in hand, by the murmurous sea, they walked, looking off upon the
-broad plain of moving waters, each unconsciously seeking to read there
-the destiny of her remaining years.
-
-The hour was a holy one, and there came no sound from the living world
-to pierce its stillness. Nature knelt before the great marriage of the
-sun and sea. The altar of the west was hung with golden and purple
-tapestries; and the ministers of the sky poured out a libation of
-crimson-flowing wine before the Lord of Heaven. And when the sacrifice
-was made, all could behold how the great sun slipped gently from his car
-into the embrace of the sea, and the two of them were presently hidden
-underneath the golden locks and shimmering veil of the beautiful bride;
-and thereafter Twilight, the swift-footed handmaid, aided by all the
-ocean nymphs, quickly pulled the broad curtains of gray and crimson
-across the portals of the bridal room.
-
-The sweet dusk deepened, but it was not yet time for the rising of the
-moon. There was still a flush of red in the west, and still the breasts
-of the gulls that veered over the waters flashed white and luminous in
-the gathering gray. The silence was absolute, save for the silken swish
-of the tide rising gently along the shore. The spell of twilight, the
-great soul-twilight of the middle ages, hung heavy on the battlements of
-the Castle on the cliff. On the terrace the three women paused in their
-slow walk. Lenore, her white face uplifted, and a look in her face as if
-the gates of Heaven had opened a little before her eyes, said dreamily,—
-
-“How sweet it is,—and how beautiful,—our home!”
-
-The silence of the others throbbed assent to her whispered words.
-
-The gulls were sinking slowly toward their nests. The drawbridge over
-the moat was just lifting for the night. A lapwing or two floated round
-the high turrets of the Castle; and from the doorway there, Alixe was
-coming forth, bearing Lenore’s baby in her arms. The stillness grew more
-intense, and over the edge of the eastern trees slipped the round, pink
-harvest moon. Then, one by one, a few great stars came sparkling out
-into the sky.
-
-“See,” murmured Eleanore, very softly, “the east is clear around the
-rising moon.”
-
-And Laure replied to her: “Yes, very clear. How beautiful will be the
-morrow’s dawn!”
-
-
- THE END
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- MISS POTTER’S FIRST SUCCESS
-
- _Uncanonized_
-
- BY MARGARET HORTON POTTER
-
- _Author of “The Castle of Twilight”_
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A story of English monastic life in the thirteenth century during the
-momentous reign of King John. The leading character, Anthony
-Fitz-Hubert, is a brilliant young courtier, son of the Archbishop of
-Canterbury, who turns monk to insure the safety of his father’s soul.
-The interpretation of King John’s character and acts differs widely from
-the traditional view, but it is one which investigation is now beginning
-to present with confidence.
-
- One of the most powerful historical romances that has ever appeared
- over the name of an American writer.—PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER.
-
- In such romances we shall always delight, turning to them from much
- that is dull and inane in what passes for the realistic reflex of
- our present-day life.—HARPER’S MAGAZINE.
-
- It is a noteworthy book of its very attractive kind.—THE
- INDEPENDENT.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- SIXTH EDITION
-
- WITH FRONTISPIECE. 12mo. $1.50
-
- A. C. McCLURG & CO., _Publishers_
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- UNIFORM WITH “THE THRALL OF LEIF THE LUCKY”
-
- _The Ward of King Canute_
-
- A ROMANCE OF THE DANISH CONQUEST
-
- BY OTTILIE A. LILJENCRANTZ
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This book is for those who are weary of conventional romances and are
-searching for a story that does not give them the dusty and worn-out
-historic trappings with which they are over familiar. The story of
-Randalin, the beautiful Danish maiden who served King Canute disguised
-as a page, is spontaneous and unhackneyed, and has a mediæval atmosphere
-of the most inspiring kind. The reader forgets his practical
-twentieth-century point of view, and loses himself in the glamour of
-these brave old days of the Danish conquest.
-
- It is a romance of enthralling interest.... Written in plain,
- unadorned Anglo-Saxon, it is as pure and wholesome as the lovely
- maiden whose face smiles between the lines. It is one of the few
- novels that can be read a second time with increased enjoyment. Than
- this, what more can be said?—CHICAGO TRIBUNE.
-
- Readers of “The Thrall of Leif the Lucky” can understand without
- description the pleasure in store for them in Miss Liljencrantz’s
- latest tale. The volume is a remarkable example of bookmaking, the
- colored illustrations showing to what heights the art of book
- illustration may attain.—BOSTON TRANSCRIPT.
-
- A stalwart and beautiful tale—a fine, big thing, full of men’s
- strength and courage and a girl’s devotion, the atmosphere of great
- days and primitive human passions.—PHILADELPHIA LEDGER.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- THIRD EDITION
-
- WITH SIX FULL-PAGE PICTURES IN COLOR AND OTHER DECORATIONS BY THE
- KINNEYS. $1.50
-
- A. C. McCLURG & CO., PUBLISHERS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- A BOOK OF GREAT BEAUTY
-
- _The Thrall of Leif the Lucky_
-
- A STORY OF VIKING DAYS
-
- BY OTTILIE A. LILJENCRANTZ
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A remarkable book because it not only tells an unusual and fascinating
-story, with a novel and seldom used—and therefore interesting—historical
-background, but it was everywhere declared “the most beautiful book of
-fiction of 1902.” The striking appearance of the volume is due to the
-appropriate character of the type, initials, end-papers, etc., and to
-the wonderful pictures in color. It is the story of Alwin, the son of an
-English earl, and how he served the great Leif Ericsson on his famous
-voyage to the New World, and how he finally won his freedom and the
-beautiful Helga by his own high courage.
-
- Nearer to absolute novelty than any book published this spring.—NEW
- YORK WORLD.
-
- The most beautifully illustrated and artistically ornamented romance
- published this year.—NEW YORK JOURNAL.
-
- A tale which moves among stalwart men, and in the palaces of
- leaders.—NEW YORK MAIL AND EXPRESS.
-
- One of the best constructed historical romances that has appeared in
- America in some years.—BROOKLYN EAGLE.
-
- The atmosphere of the old days of fighting and adventure glows in
- the book.—SPRINGFIELD REPUBLICAN.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- SIXTH EDITION
-
- WITH SIX FULL-PAGE PICTURES IN COLOR, AND OTHER DECORATIONS BY THE
- KINNEYS. $1.50
-
- A. C. McCLURG & CO., PUBLISHERS
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
- 2. Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.
- 3. Footnotes were re-indexed using numbers.
- 4. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Castle of Twilight, by Margaret Horton Potter
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-
-
-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's The Castle of Twilight, by Margaret Horton Potter
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Castle of Twilight
-
-Author: Margaret Horton Potter
-
-Illustrator: Ch. Weber
- Mabel Harlow
-
-Release Date: July 17, 2020 [EBook #62669]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CASTLE OF TWILIGHT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing, Mary Glenn Krause, Charlene
-Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
-Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='ph1 section'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>The Castle of Twilight</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div id='Frontispiece' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_004.jpg' alt='Lenore' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_titlepage.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c002'>THE CASTLE OF TWILIGHT</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='large'><em>By</em> MARGARET HORTON POTTER</span></div>
- <div class='c004'><em>With six Illustrations by Ch. Weber</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_title.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>CHICAGO</div>
- <div>A. C. McCLURG &amp; CO</div>
- <div><em>1903</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Copyright</span></div>
- <div><span class='sc'>A. C. McClurg &amp; Co.</span></div>
- <div>1903</div>
- <div class='c004'>Published September 26, 1903</div>
- <div class='c003'>DESIGNED, ARRANGED, AND PRINTED</div>
- <div>BY THE UNIVERSITY PRESS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>TO</div>
- <div class='c004'>G. M. McB.</div>
- <div class='c004'>WHOSE MUSIC SUGGESTED THE STORY</div>
- <div class='c004'><em>This little volume is faithfully</em></div>
- <div><em>inscribed</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='click'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='color_red'>[Click on score for music playback.]</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_009.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><span class='sc'>Table · of contents</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='Table of contents'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c006'></th>
- <th class='c007'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c008'><span class='small'><span class='sc'>Page</span></span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Foreword</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_vii'>vii</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c006'><span class='sc'>Chapter</span></th>
- <th class='c007'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c008'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>I.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Desolation of Age</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>II.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Silence of Youth</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_29'>29</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>III.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Flammecœur</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_62'>62</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Passion</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_94'>94</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>V.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Shadows</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_121'>121</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>A Love-Strain</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_154'>154</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Lost Lenore</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_177'>177</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>To a Trumpet-Call</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_209'>209</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Storm</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_235'>235</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>X.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>From Rennes</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_260'>260</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Wanderer</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_286'>286</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Laure</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_316'>316</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Lenore</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_347'>347</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>XIV.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Eleanore</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_378'>378</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>XV.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Rising Tide</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_401'>401</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>XVI.</td>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Middle of the Valley</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_423'>423</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_011.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><span class='sc'>List · of illustrations</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='List of illustrations'>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>Lenore</td>
- <td class='c010'><em><a href='#Frontispiece'>Frontispiece</a></em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c009'></th>
- <th class='c010'><em>Page</em></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>The whole Castle had assembled to say God-speed to their departing lord</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_103'>90</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>Only one among them seemed not of their mood</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_195'>180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>“Gerault—Gerault—my lord!” she whispered</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_293'>276</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>Mother and child were happy to sit all day in the flower-strewn meadow</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_355'>336</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>Hand in hand, by the murmurous sea, they walked</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i_437'>416</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'><em>The decorations for title-page, end-papers, and chapter initials are by Miss Mabel Harlow</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>FOREWORD</em></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c012'><em>Wistfully I deliver up to you my
-simple story, knowing that the first suggestion
-of “historical novel” will bring before
-you an image of dreary woodenness and unceasing
-carnage. Yet if you will have the graciousness
-but to unlock my castle door you will find within
-only two or three quiet folk who will distress you
-with no battles nor strange oaths. Even in the
-days of rival Princes and never-ending wars there
-dwelt still a few who took no part in the moil of
-life, but lived with gentle pleasures and unvoiced
-sorrows, somewhat as you and I; wherefore, I
-pray you, cross the moat. The drawbridge is
-down for you, and will not be raised, if, after
-introduction to the Chatelaine, you desire speedily
-to retreat.</em></p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><em>M. H. P.</em></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='ph1 section'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><em>The</em> CASTLE <em>of</em> TWILIGHT</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_013b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER ONE</em><br /> <span class='large'>THE DESOLATION OF AGE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_013.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-It was mid-April: a sunny
-afternoon. A flood of golden
-light, borne on gusts of sweet,
-chilly air, poured through the
-open windows of the Castle
-into a high-vaulted, massively
-furnished bedroom, hung with tapestries, and
-strewn with dry rushes. A heavy silence that
-was less a thing of the moment than a part of
-the general atmosphere hovered about the room;
-and it was not lessened by the unceasing murmur
-of ocean waves breaking upon the face
-of the cliff on which the Castle stood. This
-sound held in it a note of unutterable melancholy.
-Indeed, despite the sunlight, the sparkle
-of the waves, and the fragrance of the
-fresh spring air, this whole building, the culminating
-point of a long slope of landscape,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>seemed wrapped in an atmosphere of loneliness,
-of sadness, of lifelessness, that found full
-expression in the attitude of the black-robed
-woman who knelt alone in the high-vaulted
-bedroom.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore was kneeling at her priedieu. Madame
-Eleanore knelt at her priedieu, and did
-not pray. Nay, the great grief, the unvoiced
-bitterness in her heart, killed prayer. For,
-henceforth, there was one near and unbearably
-dear to her who must be praying for evermore.
-And it was this thought and the vista of her
-future lonely years that denied her, even as
-she knelt, the consolation of religion.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>To the still solitude of her bedchamber, and
-always to the foot of her crucifix, the chatelaine
-of <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Crépuscule</span> was accustomed to bring
-her griefs; and there had been many griefs
-and some very bitter ones in the thirty-four
-years that she had reigned as mistress over
-the Castle. But this last was one that, trained
-though she was in the ways of sorrow, defied
-all comfort, denied the right of consolation,
-and forbade even the relief of an appeal to
-the All-merciful. Laure, her daughter, the
-star of her solitude, the youth and the joy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>of her life, the object of all the blind devotion
-of which her mother-soul was capable,
-had this morning entered upon her novitiate
-at the convent of the Virgins of the Magdalen.
-Although Madame Eleanore’s family was celebrated
-for its piety, though many a generation
-of Lavals and <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Crépuscules</span> had rendered a
-daughter to the eternal worship of God, there
-were still no records left in either family of a
-great mother-grief when the daughter left her
-home. But madame, Laval as she was, Crépuscule
-as she had learned to be, could not
-find it in her heart to praise God for the loss
-of her child.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Once again, after many years, years that she
-could look back upon now as filled with broad
-content, she was alone. Not since, many,
-many years ago, she had come to the Castle
-as a girl-bride, wife of a military lord, had such
-utter desolation held her in its bonds,—such
-desolation as, after the coming of her two
-children, she had thought never to feel again.
-In the days after the Seigneur’s first early departure
-for Rennes, without her, she had felt
-as now. It came back very vividly to her
-memory, how he had ridden away for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>capital, the city of war, of arms, of glittering
-shield and piercing lance, of tourney and laughter
-and song; how she had longed in silence to
-ride thither at his side; how she had wept when
-he was really gone; how she had watched bitterly,
-day after day, for his return up the steep
-road that came out of the forest on the edge of
-the sand-downs below. Clearly indeed did her
-youth return to Eleanore as she knelt here, in
-the barred sunlight, alone with her unheeding
-crucifix. And intertwined with this memory
-was the new sense of blinding sorrow, the loss
-of Laure.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The reality, as it came to her, seemed even
-now vague and impossible. Laure, her girl,
-her strong, wild, adventurous, high-hearted,
-fearless girl, to become a nun! Laure, of
-whom, in her own way, Eleanore had been
-accustomed to think as she thought of the
-great white gulls that veered, through sunlight
-and storm, on straight-stretched pinions, along
-the rocky coast, as a creature of light, of air,
-above all of perfect, indestructible freedom!
-This, her Laure, to become a nun! Spite of
-what the Bishop of St. Nazaire had so earnestly
-told her, how, in all strong natures, there are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>strong antitheses and quiet, governing depths
-that no outer turbulence can disclose, Eleanore
-rebelled at the disposal that had been made of
-this nature. She knew herself too well to believe
-that her daughter could renounce all the
-joys of youth and of life without a single after-pang.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After this early mother-thought for the
-child’s state, Eleanore’s self-grief returned
-again with redoubled force; and her brain conjured
-up a vision of the future,—that great,
-shadowy future, that wrapped her heart around
-in a cold and deadening despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The April wind blew higher through the
-room, catching the tapestry curtains of the
-immense bed and waving them about like blue
-banners. The bars of sunlight mellowed and
-broadened over the shrunken rushes and the
-smooth stones of the floor. The surf boomed
-louder as the tide advanced. And Eleanore,
-still upon her knees, rocked her body in her
-helpless rebellion, and found it in her heart to
-question the righteous wisdom of her God.
-She did not, however, come quite to this; for
-which, afterwards, she found it expedient to
-give thanks to the same deity. Her solitude
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>was unexpectedly broken. There came a
-knock upon the door, which immediately afterwards
-opened, and Gerault, her son, entered
-the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This fourth Seigneur of Le Crépuscule, a
-dark-browed, lean, and rather handsome fellow,
-clad in half armor and carrying on his wrist
-a falcon, jessed and belled, was the first of
-Eleanore’s two children. She reverenced him
-as his father’s successor; she held affection for
-him because she had borne him; and she
-respected him and his wishes because he was
-a man that commanded respect. But perhaps
-it was this very respect, which had in it something
-of distance, that killed in her the overwhelming
-love which she had always felt for
-his sister Laure, her youngest and beloved.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault, seeing his mother’s attitude, stopped
-short in the doorway. “Madame, I crave pardon!
-I had not known you were at prayer,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore rose from her knees a little hastily.
-“Nay, Gerault, I was not at prayer. ’Tis an
-old custom of mine to meditate in that place.
-Enter thou and sit with me for a little.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault bowed silently and accepted her invitation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>by seating himself near one of the
-windows on a wooden settle. His silence
-seemed to demand speech from his mother.
-But Eleanore, once on her feet, had begun
-slowly to pace the floor of her room, at the
-same time losing herself again in her own
-thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Without speaking and without any discomfort
-at the continued silence, Gerault watched
-his mother—contemplated her, rather—as
-she walked. Often he had felt a pride—a
-pride that suggested patronage—in that walk
-of madame’s. Never, in any woman, had he
-seen such a carriage, such conscious poise, such
-dignity, such command. In his heart her son,
-somewhat given to irreverent observation and
-analysis of those about him, had named her
-the “Quiet-Browed,” and the very fact that
-he could have seen somewhat below the surface
-and yet named her thus, was evidence
-enough of her powers of self-control. It
-was he who finally broke the silence between
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Well, madame, the change in our house
-hath taken place. Laure’s new life is safely
-begun; and she hath given what she could to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>the honor of our race. Now that it is done,
-I return to Rennes, to the side of my Lord
-Duke.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore made no pause in her walk, nor
-did she betray by the slightest gesture her feeling
-at the announcement. Too many times before
-had she experienced this same sensation.
-After a few seconds she asked quietly: “When
-do you go?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In spite of her self-control, her voice had
-been a strain off the key, and now Gerault
-looked at her keenly, asking: “There is a
-reason why I should not ride to Rennes? I
-have not thy permission to go?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore paused in her walk to turn and
-look at him. There was just a suggestion of
-scorn in her attitude. “Reason! Permission!
-Was ever a reason why a Crépuscule
-might not fare forth to Rennes, or one that
-asked permission of a woman ere he went?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Again Gerault looked at her, this time in
-that dignified disapproval that man uses to
-cover an unlooked-for mortification. And the
-Seigneur was decidedly lofty as he said: “I
-have given thee pain, madame, though of how,
-or wherefore, I am wofully ignorant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>“Pain, Gerault? Pain?” Eleanore repressed
-herself again and immediately resumed
-her walk. In a few seconds the calm, quiet
-dignity returned, her mask was replaced, every
-vestige of her feeling hidden, and she had
-become once more the châtelaine of unvoiced
-loneliness. Then she went on speaking:
-“Pain, Gerault? Surely not. Know I not
-enough of Rennes that I should not be well
-content to have thee in that lordly place, with
-thy rightful companions, men of thy blood?
-Shall I not send thee gayly forth again to that
-trysting-place of knightly arms?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And yet, madame, I did but now surprise
-in thy face a look of sorrow, of some unhappiness,
-that is new to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Well, even so?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah, yes! It is Laure’s departure. Yet
-that must not be too much mourned. Laure’s
-wild ways had come to be a source of uneasiness
-to both of us at times. ’Tis true that
-there is lost an alliance that might have brought
-much honor to Le Crépuscule. By the favor
-of my Lord Duke, Laure might have wed
-with Grantmesnil, Senlis, Angers itself, perhaps;
-and there was ever Laval.—Yet—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>He paused musingly, not seeing the look
-that had come back into the face of madame.
-Only when she stopped again and turned to
-him did he utter a soft exclamation, half surprise
-and half helpless apology. But Eleanore,
-smiling at him sadly, began, in that voice that
-had long been tuned to the stillness of the
-Castle: “If I could but make thee understand,
-Gerault! If I could make thee look upon my
-hours of loneliness here—and see—Gerault,
-it is not a matter of alliance, or of honor, or
-of dishonor, with Laure. It is that she was my
-child, my daughter, my companion—how
-adored!—here, in this—this great Castle of
-Twilight. Neither thou nor any man can
-know what our lives are.—But think, Gerault—think
-of me and of the Castle after thou art
-gone. What is there for me here? The
-tasks that I invent to fill the hours are useless
-to deaden thought. They are not changed
-from the occupations of thirty years ago.
-Nor, methinks, have women known aught else
-than spinning, weaving, sewing, spinning again,
-since the days of the earliest kings,—the Kings
-of Jerusalem.—And day after day through the
-long years I dwell here in this barren spot—dependent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>on others for what happiness I am
-to get in my life. And now—now the
-Church, in which always my hope of another,
-better life hath lain, taketh my child from me.
-Let then the Church give me something in
-place of her! Let the Church pay back
-something of its debt. And thou also, my
-son,—give me some help to live through the
-unending days of thy absence in Rennes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I, madame!—the Church!—What art
-thou saying?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Hast thou not heard me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I have heard. But what shall I do, my
-mother?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Listen, Gerault. The Church hath taken
-a daughter from me. Thou, by the aid of
-the Church, canst give me another. Gerault,
-thou must marry. Marry, my son. Bring
-thy wife home to me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault sprang to his feet with an expression
-on his face that his mother had never before
-called there. For a moment he looked at her,
-his eyes saying what his lips would not. Then,
-gradually, the fire in his face died down, and he
-reseated himself slowly on the settle, while the
-bird on his wrist, a wild <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">hagard</span></i>, fluttered its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>wings, and dug its talons painfully into the
-knight’s flesh.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Marry!” said Gerault, at length, in a
-voice that sounded strange to his own ears.
-“Marry! Hast thou forgotten?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, I have not forgotten; nor has anyone
-in the Castle. But thou, Gerault, must
-forget. It is now five years since, and thou
-art more than come to man’s estate. Even
-then thou wast not young.—Nay, Gerault, I
-do not forget that cruel thing. Yet we must
-all go.—And ere I die I must see thee wed.
-’Tis not only for myself, child. It is for the
-house, and the line of Crépuscule. Shall it be
-lost in four generations?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Frowning, Gerault rose. “Well, madame,
-not as yet have I seen in Brittany the maid
-that I would wed, barring always—” He
-shook himself to dissipate the memory that
-was on him. “To-morrow I and Courtoise
-ride forth to Rennes. Let me now leave thee
-once more to thy meditations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault went to the door, opened it, turned
-to look once at his mother, whose face he could
-not see, and then, with an audible sigh, went
-quietly away. Each was ignorant of the other’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>feelings. As Eleanore moved over toward the
-open windows that looked off upon the sea,
-her eyes, tear-blinded, saw nothing of the broad
-plain of blue and sparkling gold that stretched
-infinitely away before her. Nor did she dream
-of the spirit of reawakened bitterness and desolation
-that her words had conjured up in
-Gerault’s heart. But the Seigneur’s calm and
-unruffled expression concealed a very storm of
-reawakened misery as he descended the great
-stone staircase of the Castle, passed through
-the empty lower hall, and so out into the
-courtyard.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This courtyard was always the liveliest spot
-about the chateau. Le Crépuscule itself was
-very large, and its adjacent buildings were on a
-corresponding scale. Like all the feudal fortress-castles
-of its time, it was almost a little
-city in itself. It dated from the year 1203,
-and had been built by the first lord of the
-name, Bernard, a left-handed scion of Coucy,
-who had been called Crépuscule from his colors,
-two contrasting shades of gray. Since his time,
-each of its lords had added to its strength or
-its convenience, till now, in the year 1380, it
-was the strongest chateau on the South Breton
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>coast. One side was built on the very edge of
-an immense cliff against which the Atlantic
-surf had beaten unceasingly through the ages.
-The other three sides were well protected, first
-by a heavy wall that surrounded the whole
-courtyard with its various buildings, beyond
-which came a broad strip of garden land and
-pasturage, bounded on the far side by the second,
-or lower wall, and a dry moat. The keep
-was of a size proportionate to the Castle; and
-the number of men-at-arms that were kept in
-it taxed the coffers of the rather meagre estate
-to the utmost for food and pay.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When Gerault entered the courtyard a girl
-stood drawing water from the round, stone
-well. Two or three henchmen lolled in the
-doorway of the keep, chaffing a peasant who
-had come up the hill from one of the manor
-farms carrying eggs in a big basket. Just outside
-the stables, which occupied the whole east
-side of the courtyard, a boy stood rubbing
-down a sleek, white palfrey. All of these
-people respectfully saluted their lord, who returned
-them rather a curt recognition as he
-passed round the west tower on his way to a
-little narrow building just in front of the north
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>gate, in which his falcons were housed through
-the winter. Gerault had a great passion for
-hawking, and his birds were always objects
-of solicitude with him. He and Courtoise,
-his squire, were accustomed to spend much
-time together in this little building, and in the
-open-air falconry on the terrace outside the
-north gate, where young birds or newly captured
-ones were trained.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Just now Gerault stood in the doorway of
-the falcon-house, looking around him for
-Courtoise, whom he had thought to find
-within. He was speaking to the bird on his
-wrist, his mind still occupied with the recent
-talk with his mother, when, through the gate,
-came a burst of laughter and song, and he
-raised his eyes to see a giddy company swaying
-toward him in the measure of a “carole”<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c015'><sup>[1]</sup></a>
-led by Courtoise and Laure’s foster-sister,
-Alixe la Rieuse. Moving a little out of their
-way he stood and watched the group go by,—the
-demoiselles and the squires of the Castle
-household, retained by his mother as company
-for herself, also to be trained in etiquette
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>according to their several stations. And a
-pretty enough company of youth and gayety
-they were: Berthe, Yseult, Isabelle, Viviane,
-daughters all of noble houses; with Roland of
-St. Bertaux, Louis of Florence, Robert Meloc,
-and Guy d’Armenonville, called “le Trouvé.”
-But, of them all, Alixe, surnamed the Laughing
-One, was the brightest of eye, the warmest
-of color, and the lightest of foot.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c014'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. A “carole” was originally a dance to which the dancers
-sang their own accompaniment.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>As they went by, Gerault signalled to his
-squire, Courtoise, and the young fellow would
-have disengaged himself immediately from his
-companions, but that Alixe suddenly broke
-her step, dropped the hand of Robert Meloc,
-who was behind her, and leaving the company,
-ran to Gerault’s side, dragging Courtoise
-with her. The dance ceased while the
-young people stood still, staring at their erstwhile
-leaders. Alixe, however, impatiently
-motioned them on.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Go back to the Castle with your ‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Roi
-qui ne ment pas</span>.’<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c015'><sup>[2]</sup></a> I will come soon.”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c014'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. An old-time game.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>Obedient to her command, the little company
-resumed their quaint song, and, with
-steps that lagged a little, passed into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>Castle, leaving their arbitrary leader behind
-them, with the Seigneur and his squire.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault was silent till the young people
-had gone. Then he turned to Alixe, but,
-before he had time to speak, she broke in
-hastily:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Let me go with you to the falcons. You
-must see Bec-Hardi sit upon my wrist, and
-attack his <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pât</span></i> on the rope.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Diable!—Bec-Hardi!—Thou hast a
-genius with the birds, Alixe. The <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">hagard</span></i> will
-not move for me.” Gerault was all attention
-to her now.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe did not answer his praise, but started
-quickly forward toward the gate through which
-she had just come, beyond which was the strip
-of turf where the falcons lived in summer.
-Gerault and Courtoise followed her at a
-slower pace, and she caught some disjointed
-words spoken by the Seigneur behind her:—“Rennes”—“to-morrow”—“horses.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As these came to her ears, Alixe’s steps
-grew laggard, for she had put the thoughts
-together, and instantly her mood changed
-from golden irresponsibility to dull and
-dreary melancholy. For a long time she had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>concealed in her heart the deep sorrow that
-she felt at the prospective loss of her life-playmate,
-Laure, now actually gone, and gone
-forever. She had resigned herself to the
-thought of solitary adventures on moor and
-cliff, and lonely sails on the breezy, treacherous
-bay, in a more than treacherous boat,—such
-wild and risky amusements as she and
-the daughter of Le Crépuscule had loved to
-indulge together. Laure was gone, and she
-had kept herself from tears. But now—now,
-at these words of Gerault’s, there suddenly
-rose before her a vivid picture of life in the
-Castle without either brother or sister. Toward
-Gerault she had no such feeling as that
-which she had held for Laure. He was a man
-to her, and the fact made a vast difference.
-At times she entertained for him a violent
-enthusiasm; at other times she treated him
-with infinite scorn. But till now she had
-never confessed, even to herself, how much
-interest he had added to the monotonous
-Castle life. Considering her wayward nature,
-it was certainly anomalous that, in her first
-rush of displeasure, there came to her the
-thought of Eleanore, the mother now doubly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>bereft. And for madame she felt a sympathy
-that was entirely new.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault and his squire reached the outdoor
-falconry before Alixe, whom they perceived to
-have fallen into one of her sudden reveries.
-Accustomed to her rapid changes of mood,
-neither man took much heed of her slow
-steps and bent head. And when she reached
-the falconry and saw the birds, her interest in
-them brought over her again a wave of animation.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The outdoor falconry was a long strip of
-turf that lay between the flower-terrace and the
-kitchen-garden. Into this turf had been driven
-about twenty heavy stakes, to which were nailed
-wooden cross-pieces. On nearly every one of
-these a falcon perched, and a strong cord, tied
-about one leg, fastened each to his own stake.
-At sight of their master, whom they knew perfectly
-well, all the birds set up a peculiar, harsh
-cry, at the same time eagerly flapping their
-wings, appealing, as best they could, for an
-hour or two of freedom. Alixe ran at once
-down to the end of the second row of stakes,
-where sat a half-grown bird, striking viciously
-at his perch with his iron beak.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>Courtoise and Gerault ceased their conversation
-when Alixe went up to this bird and
-addressed it in a curious jargon of Latin and
-Breton-French. Courtoise betrayed an admiring
-interest when she stooped to lay her
-hand on the bird’s feathers; and Gerault
-called involuntarily,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Have a care, Alixe!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The girl, however, had her way with the
-creature. At sound of her voice it became
-attentive. At the touch of her hand it half
-raised its wings, the motion indicating expectant
-delight. In a moment more it had
-hopped upon the girl’s wrist, and sat there,
-swaying and preening contentedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Sang Dieu, Alixe, thou hast done that well!
-Thou sayest he will also attack the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pât</span></i> from
-your hand?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe merely nodded. To all appearances,
-she was wholly engrossed with the bird, which
-she continued to handle. Gerault and Courtoise
-had come close to her side, though the
-falcon betrayed its displeasure at their approach.
-All three of them had been silent
-for some seconds, when Alixe turned her
-green eyes upon the Seigneur, and, looking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>at him with a glance that carried discomfort
-with it, said in a very precise and cutting
-tone:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“So you leave Le Crépuscule to-morrow,
-Gerault? And for how long?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“That I cannot tell,” answered Gerault, exhibiting
-no annoyance. “For as long a time
-as Duke Jean will accept my services.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah! then there will be fighting. I had
-not heard of a war. Tell me of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault became suddenly embarrassed and
-correspondingly displeased. “Of what import
-can it be to you, a woman, whether there is
-war or peace?” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Oh, there is great import.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Prithee, what may it be?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“This: that an there were indeed a war
-thou mightest be forgiven thy great selfishness
-in going forth to pleasure, leaving thy mother
-here in her loneliness and sorrow; whereas—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Silence, Alixe! Thine insolence merits
-the whip,” cried Courtoise.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Peace, boy!” said Gerault, shortly, and
-forthwith turned again to the demoiselle.
-“And is not my mother long accustomed to
-this life, and well content with it? Is she not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>lady of a great castle, mistress of enviable
-estates? Hath she not a position to be
-proud of? From her speech and thine one
-might think—” he snapped his fingers impatiently.—“Come
-you with me, Alixe.
-Let us walk here together on the turf, while
-I say to you certain things. Thou, Courtoise,
-return to the Castle if thou wilt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The squire, however, chose to remain in the
-field, and stood leaning against the wall, watching
-the falcons at his feet, and whistling under
-his breath for his own amusement. Alixe replaced
-Bec-Hardi, screaming angrily and flapping
-its wings, and moved off beside Gerault,
-her long red houppelande and mantle trailing
-upon the grass round her feet, the veil from
-her filet flowing behind her nearly to the
-ground. Long time these two, Lord of Le
-Crépuscule and his almost sister, walked
-together in the sunny light of the late afternoon.
-And long Courtoise the squire watched
-them as they went. Although Gerault had
-said, somewhat in ire, that he had a matter to
-speak of with her, it was Alixe that talked the
-most, and from his manner it could be seen
-that Gerault was fallen very much under the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>influence of her peculiar insistence. What it
-was they spoke of, Courtoise could only guess—and
-fear. For, though he might hold in
-his heart some sympathy with madame in
-her loneliness, yet the squire was a man, and
-young; and his young thoughts drew with
-delight the picture of Rennes’ gayeties in the
-summer-time, when no war was toward and the
-court alive with merriment. Indeed, it was not
-very wonderful that he prayed to be off on the
-morrow; but the occasional glimpse that he
-got of his lord’s face carried doubt into his
-heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As the squire stood there by the wall, musing,
-Madame Eleanore herself came out of the
-courtyard into the field. Her rosary hung
-from her waist, and in her hand was a little
-volume of Latin prayers. In some way, of
-which she was probably unconscious, the placid
-manner of her as she came into the field for her
-evening walk caused Courtoise’s idle dreams
-of gayety to vanish away, and the present, so
-tinged with the spirit of sweet melancholy, to
-become the only reality. The squire at once
-advanced toward his lady, while, ere he reached
-her, Alixe and Gerault had halted at her side.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>“Indeed, my mother, thou art well come
-hither at this time. Prithee join us in our
-walk. For some time past Alixe and I have
-been speaking of thee. See, the air is sweet,
-for it comes off the fields to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Indeed, ’tis sweet—sweeter than summer,”
-said Eleanore, smiling as she joined
-the twain. “But mayhap I shall break your
-pleasure by coming with you, for you are gay
-and young, and I—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>They moved on without having noticed him,
-and Courtoise lost the rest of Eleanore’s speech.
-But the squire remained in the field, watching
-the three move back and forth in the deepening
-dusk. When they came toward him for
-the last time, and passed through the gate in
-the north wall, returning to the Castle, all
-three faces were as calm as madame’s, and
-Courtoise permitted himself only one sigh for
-the lost summer at Rennes.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Oddly enough, the squire’s regrets proved
-to be premature, for immediately after the
-evening meal he was summoned by Gerault to
-the Seigneur’s room, to make ready for the
-journey. Gerault did not deign to inform his
-squire of the substance of his talk in the fields,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>but from the tranquillity of his manner Courtoise
-could not but perceive that everything
-had gone well. It was a late hour when all
-the necessary preparations had been made; and
-then the two, lord and squire, went together to
-the chapel and were there confessed by Anselm,
-the steward-priest; after which they bade each
-other a good-night, and sought their rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>By sunrise, next morning, the whole Castle
-had assembled at the drawbridge, to say God-speed
-to their departing lord. Madame Eleanore,
-in bliault, houppelande, mantle, and coif
-all of black and white, held Gerault’s stirrup-cup,
-and smiled as she spoke with him. There
-was a chorus of chattering demoiselles and a
-boyish clattering of swords and little armor-pieces
-from the young squires, as Gerault
-buckled on his shield, whereon was wrought the
-motto and device of Crépuscule. Courtoise
-had already fastened to his lord the golden
-spurs. And now the two were mounted and
-ready, Gerault with lance in rest and white
-reins gathered on his horse’s neck; Courtoise,
-brimming with delight, now and then giving
-his steed a heel in flank that caused him to rear
-and curvet with graceful spirit. For the last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>time Gerault bent to his mother’s lips, and
-for the last time he looked vainly over the
-company for a glimpse of Alixe, his recent
-mentor. Finally his spurs went home. The
-drawbridge was down before him, the portcullis
-raised. Amid a chorus of farewell
-cries, he and Courtoise swept away together,
-over the bridge and down the long, gentle
-hill, and out upon the Rennes road, which,
-at some twelve miles from Le Crépuscule,
-passed the priory-convent of Les Vierges de
-la Madeleine.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When the twain were gone, and the group
-prepared to disperse,—the squires-at-arms to
-their sword-practice under the captain of the
-keep, the sighing demoiselles to their long
-morning of weaving and embroidery,—Alixe
-suddenly appeared from the watch-tower close
-at hand, inquiring for Madame Eleanore.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Methinks she hath retreated to her room,
-to say her prayers for the Seigneur’s safe journey,”
-Berthe told her. And Alixe, with a nod
-of thanks, ran to the Castle, and ascended to
-madame’s room.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The door was open, for madame was not at
-prayer. She stood at the open window, looking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>out upon the sea. Alixe could not see her
-face, but from the line of her shoulders she
-read much of her lady’s heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame,” she said, in a half-whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore turned quickly. “Alixe!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame Eleanore—mother—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A terrible sob broke from the older woman’s
-throat, and suddenly she fell upon her knees
-beside a wooden settle, and, burying her face
-in her hands, finally gave way to her desolation.
-Alixe, who had opened her heart, now comforted
-her as best she could, soothing her,
-caressing her, whispering to her in a magnetic,
-gentle voice, till madame’s grief had been
-nearly washed away. Then the young girl
-said, softly, in her ear:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Think, madame! ’tis now but eleven days
-till thou mayest ride out to Laure at the priory.
-And there thou canst talk with her alone, and
-for as long as thou wilt. Also, when her novitiate
-is at an end, she may come here to thee,
-once in a fortnight, for so the Mother-prioress
-hath said.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore held Alixe’s hand close to her
-breast, and while she stroked it, a little convulsively,
-she said, with returning self-control:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>“I thank thee—I thank thee—Alixe, for thy
-good comfort.” Then, in a different tone, she
-added, with a little sigh: “Eleven days—eleven
-ages—how many others have I still
-to spend—alone?”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER TWO</em><br /> <span class='large'>THE SILENCE OF YOUTH</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_041.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-The priory-convent of the Virgins
-of the Magdalen was as
-old as any nunnery in Brittany
-of its repute. It had
-been founded in the early days
-of the tenth Louis of France
-and his good lady of Burgundy, long before
-the death of the last of the Dreux lords of
-the dukedom. It was celebrated for more
-than its age, however; for through three centuries
-it had held in ecclesiastic Brittany, for
-its wealth, its exclusiveness, and, above either
-of these things, its unswerving chastity, a place
-as unique as it was gratifying. In the year
-1381 no breath of scandal had ever disturbed
-its fragrant atmosphere. Moreover, though
-this was a fact not much regarded by people
-in authority, it was a remarkably comfortable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>little house, of excellent architecture and ample
-room for the practice of any amount of worship.
-Its situation, however, was lonely. It
-stood nearly at the end of the Rennes coast
-road, on the outskirts of a thick forest, twenty
-miles from the town of St. Nazaire-by-the-sea,
-and twelve from the Chateau of Le Crépuscule.
-And it was here, in this pleasant if austere
-retreat, that many a noble lady of Laval and
-Crépuscule had ended her youth and worn her
-life away in the endeavor to attain undying
-sanctity.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On a certain afternoon in this mid-spring
-of 1381, the very day, indeed, that Lord
-Gerault took to the Rennes road to ease his
-ennui, a little company of nuns sat out in the
-convent garden, embroidering away their recreation
-time. The day was exquisite: sunny, a
-little chilly, its breeze laden with the rare perfume
-of awakening summer. The garden, at
-this season of the year, was a place of wondrous
-beauty, redolent of rich, pregnant soil,
-and all shimmering with the misty green
-of tender grass and countless leaf-buds, from
-the midst of which a few flowers, pale primroses
-and crocuses and a hyacinth or two,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>peered forth, starring the new-planted beds
-with the first fruits of this new union of
-earth and sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The spirit of the spring ruled supreme over
-all natural things. Only the creatures of God,
-the self-consecrated nuns, sat in the midst of
-this wonder of the young world, untouched by
-it. Heedless to the uttermost of this greatest
-of worldly blessings, they sat plying their needles
-in and out of their bright-colored, ecclesiastical
-fabrics, listening, in their dull and dreamy way,
-to the voice of one of their number who was
-droning out to them for the thousandth time
-the old and long-familiar laws of their order,
-expressed in the “Rhymed Rule of St. Benedict.”
-One only among them seemed not
-of their mood. This was a young girl, white-robed
-like all the rest, her unveiled head proclaiming
-her novitiate. As became her station
-she bent decorously to her task, and it had
-taken a close observer to see and read all the
-little signs she gave of consciousness of the
-world around her, the green, growing things,
-and the liquid bird-songs that came trilling out
-of the forest near at hand. Probably not even
-the most skilled of readers could have recognized
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>all the meaning in the long, slow looks,
-half wondrous and half probing, with which,
-every now and again, she traversed the circle
-of faces about her. Her self-restraint was very
-nearly flawless, and was successfully maintained
-throughout the long period of recreation; so
-that not one of her companions guessed the
-relief she felt when the first clang of the vesper-bell
-roused them from their trance-like dulness.
-But the young girl wondered a little at herself
-when she perceived that her brows were damp
-with the sweat of the constraint.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At this time Laure of Le Crépuscule was
-sixteen years of age, and pretty as a flower to
-look upon. She was slim and white-faced,
-with immense, limpid brown eyes that were
-wont to move rather slowly, and burnished
-brown hair hanging in twists to her knees: an
-object for men to rave over, had any man
-worth so calling ever set eyes upon her. She
-was young enough and pure enough to be of
-unquestioning innocence; and, until now, the
-fiery life in her had found sufficient outlet
-in unlimited bodily exercise. She had seen
-nothing of real life, and never dreamed of the
-talent she possessed for it. It was from her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>own heart that the wish to consecrate herself
-to the eternal worship of God had come; for
-she believed that in this way she should find
-a haven for those terrible and fathomless mental
-storms of which she had weathered many
-in her young life, and of which her own
-mother never so much as dreamed. Utterly
-ignorant of her real self, she was yet a girl
-of strong intellect, of great versatility, of over-weening
-passions, and withal as feminine a
-creature as the Creator ever fashioned. Both
-her temperament and her appearance more
-resembled the dwellers of the far South—Provence
-or even Navarre—than the children
-of the rugged, chilly shores of northern Brittany;
-for her skin had the dark, creamy pallor
-of the South, and her eyes held none of the
-keen fire that glows in the North, while her
-hair grew low above her smooth, white brow.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure’s temperament was dramatically mobile.
-She adapted herself almost unconsciously
-to any mode or situation of life, and this,
-though she did not know it, was all that she
-was doing now. It was with real, if subdued
-pleasure that she went through the services of
-the day. From matins, which, at this period
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>of the year, began at the cheerless hour of four
-in the morning, till compline, at eight in the
-evening, when the church bell tolled the end
-of another day of prayer, Laure’s nature was
-under a kind of religious spell, which she and
-those about her had joyfully interpreted as a
-true vocation.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The first eleven days of Laure’s convent
-life passed away in comparative calmness; and
-she found no weariness in them. On the
-twelfth, Madame Eleanore rode in from Le
-Crépuscule to see her daughter. She was admitted
-to the convent as speedily as if the little
-lay sister had known the devouring eagerness
-of the mother-heart; and because she was a
-lady of consequence, and because she was
-known to be very generous to the Church, and
-especially because the Bishop of St. Nazaire
-was her close friend, she was not left to wait in
-the reception-room, but conducted straight to
-the Prioress’ cell.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Mère Piteuse received Madame Eleanore
-with anxious cordiality. After their greetings
-the guest seated herself, and was obliged to
-keep silence for a moment before she could
-ask quietly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>“And Laure, Reverend Mother,—how fares
-my child? Is she content with you?” Eleanore’s
-heart throbbed with unconfessed hope
-as she asked this question. For if Laure was
-<em>not</em> content, she might return at will to the
-Castle, her home, and her mother’s heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>But the Prioress returned Eleanore’s look
-with a smile of satisfaction. “In a moment
-Laure will come hither. I have sent for her.
-Then thou shalt learn from her own lips how
-well her life goes. Never, I think, hath our
-priory received a new daughter that showed
-herself so happy in her vocation. We shall
-call her name Angelique at her consecration.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore felt her body grow cold, and her
-head swim. Her face, however, betrayed
-nothing. Her little girl, then, was really
-gone! Laure, the wild bird, was tamable.
-She—<em>could</em> she become “Angelique”?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Neither madame nor the Prioress spoke
-again till there was a sound of gentle footsteps
-in the corridor, followed by a light tap on the
-wooden door of the cell.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Enter!” cried the Prioress; and Laure
-came quietly in.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>First of all she bowed to Mère Piteuse.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>Then, as Eleanore involuntarily held out her
-arms, the girl went into them, and kissed her
-mother with a warmth and a sweetness that
-perhaps Eleanore had not known from her
-before. At the same moment the Prioress
-rose quietly, and left the room. The instant
-that she was gone, Eleanore seized the girl in
-a still closer embrace, and held her tightly and
-more tightly to her breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure, my darling! Laure, my sweet
-child! how hath my heart yearned for thee!
-How hath thy name lain ever on my lips while
-I slept, and been enshrined in my heart by
-day!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The young girl’s arms wound themselves
-about her mother’s neck, and she laid her head
-upon that shoulder where it had been wont to
-rest in her babyhood. And Laure sighed a
-little, not unhappily, but like a child tired of
-play.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure, wilt thou remain here in the convent?
-Art thou happy? Dost thou wish it, or
-wilt thou come home again to Crépuscule?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A sudden image of the gray Castle, with its
-vast hall, and the great fire blazing in the
-chimney-place within, and all the well-known
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>figures assembled there for a meal,—Alixe,
-Gerault, the demoiselles and young squires
-headed by Courtoise, and the burly men-at-arms
-that had played with her and carried her
-about as a little child,—all the long-familiar,
-comfortable scenes of her old life came before
-the girl’s eye. And then—then she drew a
-little breath and answered her mother, unfaltering:
-“’Tis beautiful here, and sweet and
-holy withal. I am content, dear mother. I
-will remain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And hast thou, then, the vocation in thy
-heart, whereby some souls are claimed of God
-from birth to death, and find the utmost of
-their happiness in His communion?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure’s great eyes fixed themselves upon the
-mother’s sad face as she replied again, very
-softly: “Yea, my mother. That, from my
-heart, do I believe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore sighed deeply, and then quickly
-smiled again. “Think not that I mourn, my
-daughter, for having yielded thee up to the
-Church. May this blessed spirit remain in
-thee, bringing thee everlasting peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Then, while Laure still clung to her, the
-mother herself put the closely clasped arms
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>away from her neck, and drew the novice to
-her feet. “Now, my Laure, I must go. But
-my thoughts are still left with thee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“But thou wilt come, mother?—In ten
-days’ time thou wilt come to me again?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea, sith it is permitted by the rules that
-I see thee once more, I will surely come,” she
-answered quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure will greatly rejoice at thy coming,”
-said the Prioress, gently, from the doorway.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>So Eleanore renewed her promise, and
-shortly after rode away from the priory gate,
-into the thick wood through which ran the
-road to Crépuscule.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Her mother’s visit brought Laure two days
-of extremest homesickness and yearning. Then
-she regained her independence, and began to
-find a new delight in her surroundings. The
-perfect peace of it, the infinite, delightful detail
-of worship, with its multifarious candle-points,
-and its continual clouds of fragrant incense, all
-wrought together into a life of undeviating
-regularity, brought to the novice a sense of
-peculiar safety and freedom from vexation or
-care that was quite new to her, for all her
-youth. The day began with matins, repeated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>by each nun alone in her cell. Laure had
-been given a room in a corner of the priory, at
-the very end of the corridor of novices, and
-she gained therefrom an added sense of exclusiveness
-and seclusion. She had not once
-been late in her answer to the matins bell, and
-the mistress of novices, passing Laure’s cell on
-her first round of the day, had never failed to
-find her praying. Laure came of a pious house,
-and had known her prayers, all the forms of
-them, long before she entered the priory. They
-required no thought in the repetition, and
-therefore there was many a morning when she
-played the parrot at her desk, either too sleepy,
-or too much occupied with thoughts and dreams,
-to heed the familiar addresses to God. This
-was not entirely a fault, perhaps. The mornings
-came very early in these days, and there
-were wonderful things to be seen through her
-cell-window. She saw the dawn, golden-girdled,
-garbed in flowing rose-color, unlock the eastern
-portals of the sky. She saw stars and moon
-glimmer faintly and more faint, and finally sink
-to rest under the high, clear green of the morning
-heaven. Last of all, over the feathery line
-of trees that made a horizon for her at her cell-window,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>she could see the first dazzling ladder
-of the sun lifted up to lean against the east.
-And then Laure would long for the murmur
-of devotion to be stilled in the Abbey, for
-sun-mists were filling the Heavens, and from
-the forest the bird-chorus rose to a full-throated
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tutti</span></i>, in its hymn of glorification to the new
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This morning benediction that she found,
-Laure kept to herself by day, and carried with
-her until dark. There was no one in the
-priory to whom she could have confided her
-pleasure, for there was none in the Abbey
-that had her love, or, indeed, any love at
-all, for the world that God had made for
-Himself and for mankind. The day-tasks
-also had their pleasures for the novice. She
-learned, in time, that she was not obliged
-to fill her recreation hours with embroidery;
-but that she might sleep, or pray, or work
-in the garden, or do whatever a quiet fancy
-should select. So she chose to befriend the
-soil, and played with it as if it were a tender
-companion. And after her exercise here,
-the rest of the day, nones, vespers, supper,
-confession, and compline, melted away almost
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>unheeded, leaving her at last to the sweet-breathed
-night, and to a sleep as dreamless
-and as sound as that of any baby.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In this most simple way, without any untoward
-happening, without her once leaving
-the priory, the days flowed on, spring melted
-into summer, and Laure found herself possessed
-of an infinite and ever-increasing content,
-the great secret of which probably lay
-in the fact that every waking hour had its
-occupation. She had entered her new life in
-the most beautiful time of the year, and, heedless
-of this, began, in her delusive happiness,
-to wonder why, long ago, the whole world had
-not taken to such existence. She had plenty
-of time to indulge in dreams,—vague and fragile
-dreams of the great world and the people
-dwelling therein, that she should never come
-to know. But the fact that she could never
-know them did not come home to her with
-the force of a deprivation. She did not feel
-herself to be a hopeless prisoner. She was
-not professed; and the fact that there still
-remained to her a free choice easily kept her
-from any over-vivid perception of the eternal
-dulness of convent life.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>Once in two weeks Madame Eleanore came
-to see her, and if these visits were bitter to
-the mother, Laure never guessed it. Also,
-from time to time, the professed nuns would
-leave the convent for a day or two at a
-time, on what errands the novices were not
-told. But Laure knew that similar privileges
-would be hers after her profession.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The summer, in its fulness and beauty,
-passed away. Purple autumn came and went.
-And one day, in the first cold weather, Laure
-was summoned to the Mother-prioress’ room,
-where she was told a proud thing. It was
-that, if she chose profession at the end of
-her novitiate, which would come in the
-Christmas season, her consecration might take
-place at the same time, by special permission
-from the highest power; for, by ordinary
-ecclesiastic law, she was still many years too
-young for this consummation of the celibate
-life. But if she so chose, his Grace the Bishop
-of St. Nazaire would perform the ceremony
-of sanctification on the twenty-sixth of December,
-directly after the forty-eight-hour vigil
-of the birth of the Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure heard this news with every appearance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>and every expression of delight; and
-when she returned to the church for tierce
-and morning mass, she tried, all through
-the service, to bring herself face to face with
-herself, to appreciate, as she was conscious
-that she must, sooner or later, the intense
-gravity of her position. But for some reason,
-by some failure of concentrative force, she
-could not bring her mind to the point of
-understanding. Over and over again her
-thoughts slid around that one fact that she
-knew she must try to realize,—how, after
-the giving of her final pledge, there could
-be no turning back, there could be no escape,
-while she should live, from this life of
-prayer. She did not appreciate it at all.
-She only remembered that she had been very
-contented here, and that the days were never
-long.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the weeks that followed her talk with
-Mère Piteuse, Laure enacted this same scene
-of effort with herself many times, always
-futilely. As a matter of fact, it was too grave
-a responsibility to put upon the shoulders
-of a child in years and a less than child in
-experience. But this unfairness was one of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>the prerogatives of monasticism, unappreciated
-to this day.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Christmas time drew near; and gradually
-Laure dropped her efforts toward understanding
-and fell into dreams of a varied and complex,
-if unimportant, nature. She was to be
-professed alone, on the day after Christmas.
-No novice had entered the convent within
-three months of her, and, moreover, her birth
-and position made it desirable that she should
-be surrounded by a little extra pomp; for,
-although Laure did not know it, she was much
-looked up to by the nuns of humbler birth,
-and universally regarded as a future prioress
-of the house. During the last days of her
-novitiate the young girl was treated with
-peculiar reverence and consideration, and she
-was given a good deal of time for solitary reflection
-and prayer. Every day she was summoned
-to the cell of the Prioress, who herself
-gave the girl good counsel and instruction
-upon the higher life; while so much general
-attention was paid her that Laure became a
-little astonished at her own importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the first three weeks of December
-Madame Eleanore did not come at all to see
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>her daughter, and Laure grew lonely for her.
-She suspected nothing of her mother’s heart-sickness
-over the approaching ceremony that
-was to cut her child off from her forever; and,
-indeed, had Laure been told of the mother-feeling,
-she could not have understood it.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the afternoon of the twenty-third day of
-December the novice was kneeling in her cell,
-supposedly at prayer, in reality indulging in a
-rather forlorn and melancholy reverie. It was
-the hour of recreation; and the convent was
-very quiet, for most of the nuns were sleeping,
-in preparation for the strain of the forty-eight-hour
-Christmas service. The stillness
-brought a chill to Laure’s heart, and she was
-near to tears, when her door was suddenly
-pushed open, and some one halted there.
-Laure turned quickly enough to see the white-robed
-Prioress disappear, closing the door behind
-a figure that remained motionless inside
-the threshold.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“My mother!” cried Laure, springing to
-her feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure,” was the quivering response, as
-Eleanore held out her arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The dreamer, suddenly become a little child,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>went into the mother-clasp, her pristine home,
-and was half carried over to the only seat in
-the room,—a wooden tabouret, large enough
-for only one. Upon this Eleanore seated herself,
-while Laure sank to the floor beside her,
-huddling close to the human warmth of her
-mother, her head lying in that mother’s lap,
-both hands held tightly in the larger, stronger,
-older ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure—my Laure—my little Laure!”
-was all that, at this time, madame could force
-her lips to say. And hearing it, the girl, suddenly
-overwrought and overswept with repressed
-yearning for home love, all at once
-burst into a convulsive flood of tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Some moments passed, and the sobs, instead
-of diminishing, began to increase in violence,
-till Eleanore became alarmed. Certain unexpressed
-fears took possession of her. She
-made no effort to bring them into definite
-order in her mind. They merely joined themselves
-to a shadow that had long since come
-upon her in the form of a question: What,
-in bare reality, was this vast monster called
-“the Church”? Why had it a right to step
-thus between mother and child? How could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>such a thing be called holy? Filled with this
-idea, and realizing to the full how desperately
-short was her chance, Eleanore set herself to
-work, through every means known to her, to
-quiet Laure, to stop her tears, and to gain her
-earnest attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Under madame’s determined calm, it was
-not long before Laure was brought back to
-self-control. And when she was quiet, the
-mother, sitting very straight in her place, drew
-the girl to her feet, and, holding her fast by
-the hand, while she looked steadily into the
-clear, brown eyes, she asked, slowly, with an
-emphasis born of her desperation,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure, is it indeed in thy heart to remain,
-of thy free will and desire, forever in this
-house, forsaking all that was dear to thee of
-youth and love, and freedom, in thy home,
-Le Crépuscule?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure, while she looked at her mother, gave
-a sudden sigh, and her face became staring
-pale. Eleanore strove to fathom her daughter’s
-look, but could know nothing of the
-flood of natural desire and youth that was
-oversweeping the girl. Laure’s resistance
-against it was silence. She sat still, cowed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>and bent, while the noise of the waters filled
-her ears and her heart was near to bursting
-with suffocation and yearning. Before this
-silence, however, these passionate moments
-gradually ebbed away. The wave retreated,
-and her heart shut tight. Words and phrases
-from Holy Scriptures, books of prayer, and St.
-Benedict’s Rule, came crowding to her, and
-she considered to herself how she might show
-her mother the sin of her suggestion. But, as
-she had kept silence one way, so now she
-practised it in the other. After the long pause
-her voice found itself in three words only,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“My mother!—madame!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore’s eyes fell. Her hope was gone.
-For the thousandth time her religion rose to
-shame her, before her child, for the absorbing
-love of her motherhood. Presently Laure,
-standing before her, more like her judge than
-like the disconsolate creature she had so lately
-comforted, spoke again,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame, here in this place have I found
-contentment. There is no sorrow and no desire
-when one lives but to pray and sleep, and
-wake and pray again. God lives here continually
-in our hearts and He begets in us the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>love that we bear for each other. Moreover,
-after my profession and consecration, much
-freedom will be added to my life. I shall have
-no more long hours of instruction, nor shall
-I be called on to do the bidding of any one
-save perhaps that of the Reverend Mother.
-And whereas thou ridest hither to me each
-fortnight, I, after my vow, may go instead to
-thee, to see thee and mine ancient home.—Nay,
-mother, forgive me that I rebuke thy
-words; but thou must not urge me thus, for
-my spirit is not as yet very strong or very
-much tried, and is like to break under temptation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Dry-eyed and straight-lipped, Eleanore
-rose from her place and kissed her daughter,
-saying,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“This is farewell, dear child, till thou shalt
-come home to me for the first time after thy
-wedding with Heaven. My humble and earthly
-blessing be upon thee,—and mayst thou find
-thy spirit strong, my Laure, when thou shalt
-have need of it; as, in God’s time, thou surely
-wilt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Once again the mother kissed her girl—kissed
-her in final renunciation. Laure felt a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>burning upon her brow long after madame
-had left the room. Eleanore’s last words also
-somewhat affected the novice,—brought her
-a dim sense of uneasiness and foreboding. But
-it was in silence that she saw the black-robed
-figure leave the cell, and in silence she remained
-for a long time after she was left alone, thinking
-over what had passed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure had acted in such perfect sincerity
-that the wound she inflicted on her mother,
-and the mortification she put upon her, were
-neither of them realized. It was not wonderful
-that the impulses of the girl’s heart had
-been stilled by the unceasing precept of the
-past months. Her years were naturally powerless
-to fathom her mother’s heart, the heart
-of her who sees herself completely separated
-in every interest from the one that has always
-been nearest and dearest. And so the argument
-that she conducted within herself after
-her mother’s going was not one of justification
-of her own act, but—oh, ye gods!—an attempted
-justification of Eleanore’s impiety.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure passed the next two days in an odor
-of extreme sanctity, and hailed with deep inward
-joy the beginning of the long vigil of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>birth of the Saviour, on Christmas Eve. She
-was excused from keeping steadily in church
-through this protracted service, for the reason
-that she would be obliged, according to the
-Rule, to spend the night after her consecration
-alone in the church, at prayer. Throughout
-Christmas Day Laure was in a state of repressed
-nervous excitement. Was not to-morrow to
-be her wedding-day? Was she not to become
-what the first Magdalen had never been,—the
-bride of Christ? Her prayers throughout
-this day were mingled with thoughts of the
-highest purity, the most refined spiritual ecstasy,
-the most shining, uplifted innocence.
-Tears of joy and of proud humility flowed
-readily from her eyes, while her mouth was
-filled with heavenly praises that welled up
-from her heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the afternoon she was sent away to rest;
-for the Mother-prioress was considerate of her
-strength. Laure did not, however, lie down.
-Instead, she stood for more than an hour at
-the window of her cell, looking out over the
-world, and watching the fine feathery snowflakes
-float down through the clear blue air.
-The earth was wrapped in a mantle whiter than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>her consecration robe and veil. Perhaps it
-was a shroud. Laure shivered at the thought,
-while she contemplated the unutterable stillness
-of all things. Not a sound disturbed this vast
-scene of death. The tree-boughs bent low
-under the weight of their pure burden; and when
-the early evening fell, and vespers chimed out
-over the valley, the tiny, frozen tears of
-Heaven still floated through the dark with
-ever-increasing softness.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was seven o’clock when Sœur Celeste,
-the chaplain, came to summon the bride-elect
-to confession and interrogation with Monseigneur
-the Bishop of St. Nazaire. As the
-two women passed together down the long
-corridor of novices, through the cold cloister
-and empty refectory and along the passage
-leading to the chapter, Laure’s heart was
-struck with a chill of fear. How terribly
-empty the convent was! No one in the
-refectory, the corridors scarcely lighted, the
-whole convent utterly silent; for the drone
-of prayers in the church was inaudible here.
-She wondered how the terrible vigil progressed,
-how many nuns had fainted in their
-fatigue. She thought of anything but the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>matter before her, and was still unprepared
-when the chaplain left her alone at the door
-of the chapter.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The Bishop of St. Nazaire was alone in this
-room, and at Laure’s appearance he rose and
-went to her, taking her by the hand, and not
-amazed to find her icy cold.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“My daughter!” he said gently; and
-Laure, looking into his face, was suddenly
-filled with an ineffable comfort.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She had known the Bishop all her life, for
-he was her mother’s close friend and a constant
-visitor at Le Crépuscule. But never before had
-she seen him in this fulness of his office, so
-replete with magnetic spirituality. If the unswervingly
-narrow tenets of his creed made
-St. Nazaire too arbitrary where his religion
-was concerned, and if the geniality of his own
-nature had, at times, brought upon him in his
-own home reactions that afterwards rendered
-necessary the severest penances, at least these
-two extremes of his life had brought him to a
-remarkable intermediate balance. Irrespective
-of his state, he could be defined as a man of
-the world, of large sympathies, having a broad
-understanding of human frailty, because of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>unconquerable weaknesses of his own nature.
-His ethical code was one of high severity and
-strict purity; and he strove with all the power
-of his spirit to follow it himself, never failing,
-the while, to excuse the eternal failures of
-others. And now, as Laure looked up into
-his large, smooth-shaven face, framed in long
-fair hair, and lighted by a pair of bright blue
-eyes that generally regarded the world with a
-surprising air of trustful innocence, the young
-novice lost all her sense of desolation, and felt
-herself suddenly introduced into a secure and
-unhoped-for haven.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>St. Nazaire himself, examining the young
-girl’s face, and searching her soul therein, knew
-that at this moment he was nearer to the inmost
-being of the daughter of Le Crépuscule
-than he should ever be again; and he felt that
-no one ever yet had been in a position to probe
-the depths of her nature as he was going to
-probe them now. She gave herself up to him
-as completely as Eleanore had given her once
-long ago, when, as a new-born infant, she had
-wailed in his arms at her baptism before the
-altar in the chapel of the Twilight Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>With this strong feeling of mutual confidence,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>Laure and the Bishop seated themselves
-in the chapter of the convent. Confession and
-stereotyped interrogation were gone through
-with dutifully, and then followed what Laure
-had begun to wish for at the first moment of
-their meeting,—a long and intimate talk upon
-the life that she should lead as a professed nun.
-It was a life with which St. Nazaire was as
-fully conversant as a man could ever be, and
-he pictured it to Laure as faithfully as he was
-accustomed to picture Heaven—a heaven of
-flying men and women carrying in their hands
-small golden harps—to those that received the
-last sacrament at his hands. Laure had a vision
-of long years filled ever fuller of transcendent
-joy and peace, in which she should never know
-a wish that her life could not fill, nor a desire
-beyond more earnest prayers, or a fast a little
-longer and more rigorous than heretofore.
-And so skilful was the Bishop in the manipulation
-of his sombre material, that he got
-from it remarkable beauties which, impossible
-as it seems, were as convincing to him as to
-Laure.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was late in the evening when the young
-girl received the episcopal blessing and retired
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>through the still nunnery to her cell. But
-her mind was at perfect rest that night; and
-she went to sleep to dream of nothing but the
-happiness and beauty of a consecrated life.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At ten o’clock on the morning of the twenty-sixth
-day of December, the whole convent assembled
-in church for high mass, which was
-to be celebrated by the Bishop of St. Nazaire.
-To-day the novices were separated from the
-professed nuns, and the two companies knelt
-on opposite sides of the church, leaving a broad
-space between them. The choir was in its place.
-In the lower choir-stalls sat the Mother-prioress,
-the sub-prioress, the chaplain and the deacons;
-while his Grace was in the great chair of
-honor used by none but him. The only member
-of the nunnery not present was Laure, who
-made her appearance just as the bell began to
-ring for the opening of the mass. She came
-in from the chapter-house at the far end of
-the church, and moved slowly up the aisle.
-Her white robe and full mantle hid her figure
-and trailed around her on the floor, and her
-head was crowned with the bridal veil, which
-covered her face and fell to the ground all
-around her. In one hand she carried a parchment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>scroll on which her vow was inscribed;
-and in the other hand she bore the wedding
-ring.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As she advanced toward the altar every head
-was turned toward her, and it was seen that she
-was white as death. But she was also very
-calm. Indeed she was acting quite mechanically,
-like one under a hypnotic spell; and
-there was no expression whatever on her face
-as she made her genuflection to the cross, and
-then turned aside and knelt among the company
-of novices. She took her usual part in
-the mass that followed, making no slip in the
-service, and joining as usual in the singing,
-with her full contralto voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When the benediction had been pronounced
-from the chancel, there was a pause. No one
-in the church moved from her knees, and the
-Bishop remained before the company with his
-right hand uplifted. Laure raised her eyes,
-and her body trembled slightly, for her heart
-was palpitating like running water. When the
-silence had lasted a seemingly unbearable while,
-St. Nazaire turned his face to Laure, who rose
-and went up to him, kneeling again in the
-chancel. And now, as she spoke, her quiet,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>impressive voice was heard by every nun in
-the church,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Suscipe me, Domine, secundum eloquium tuum
-et vivam. Et non confundas me in expectatione
-mea.</span></i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As she finished, Laure’s throat contracted,
-and she gasped convulsively. Her head swam
-in a mist, but she knew that the Bishop was
-questioning her from the catechism,—knew
-that she was answering him; and then, afterwards,
-she heard, as from a great distance, the
-voice of the Bishop praying. At the Amen,
-St. Nazaire signed to her again, and she rose
-and stepped forward to his side. Then, turning
-till she faced the church, she said quite
-distinctly, though in a low tone,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I, Sister Angelique, promise steadfastness,
-virginity, continuance in virtue, and obedience
-before God and all His saints, in accordance
-with the Rule of St. Benedict, in this Priory of
-Holy Madeleine, in the presence of the Reverend
-Father Charles, Lord Bishop of St.
-Nazaire, of the Duchy of Brittany, Lord under
-the most Christian Duke, Jean de Montfort.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Thereafter she went up to the altar, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>there signed her scroll with her new name and
-the sign of the cross. And there the ring of
-Heaven was placed upon her finger, and she
-was declared a bride. For the last time she
-knelt before the father, who lifted up his hands
-and consecrated her, after the ancient formula,
-to the love of her Saviour, the blessing of God,
-and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost. And
-then Laure, a professed nun, came down from
-the holy place, and was received among her
-sisters and reverently saluted by them.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The ceremony over, all the convent adjourned
-to the refectory, where a little feast of
-rejoicing was held in honor of the newly consecrated
-one. And after this, at an early hour
-of the afternoon, Laure was conducted to her
-cell, and her ten days of retirement began. All
-that afternoon, overcome with the strain of
-the past few days, the young girl slept. She
-woke only when the Sœur Eloise, a stout and
-stupid little nun, but a few weeks since made a
-lay sister, came up to her with bread and milk.
-When she had eaten and was alone again, she
-sat for a long time in her dark cell, looking
-out upon the starry night, and wondering
-vaguely over her long future. Presently the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>bell for the end of confession rang out, and,
-knowing that it was time, she rose and went
-through the convent, and into the vast church.
-The last of the nuns had left it and gone to
-seek her rest. Only the sub-prioress remained,
-waiting for Laure. Seeing her come, the
-older nun saluted her silently, and then moved
-away toward the dimly lighted chapter. In
-the doorway of this room she turned to look
-back at the white figure standing in the dimly
-lighted, incense-reeking aisle; and then, with
-a faint sigh of memory, she extinguished all
-the chapter lights, bowed to the little crucifix
-hanging in that room, and went her way to
-bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure was left alone in the great, dusky
-House of God. Where she knelt, before the
-shrine of St. Joseph, two candles burned. All
-around her was darkness—silence—solitude.
-Awed and wide-eyed, she forced herself to
-kneel upon the stones, and her mind vaguely
-sought a prayer. But thoughts of Heaven refused
-to come. Her Bridegroom was very far
-away. She felt a cold weight settling slowly
-down upon her heart, and she trembled, and
-her brows grew damp with chilly dew. Many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>thoughts came and went. She remembered
-afterwards to have had a very distinct vision of
-Alixe, standing alone upon a great cliff a mile
-from Le Crépuscule, with a wild sea-wind blowing
-her hair and her mantle, and white gulls
-veering about her head. For an instant, a wild
-longing flamed up through her soul. Setting
-her lips, she tried to force her mind back again
-to God. One—two—three faltering, reverent
-words were uttered by her. Then Laure
-du Crépuscule started wildly to her feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“God! Oh, God! I am imprisoned! I
-am captive! I am captive forever! God!
-Oh, God!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As these wild cries echoed through the
-vaulted roof, she threw herself passionately to
-the floor and lay there helpless, while the
-wave of merciless realization swept over her.
-Then her hands wandered along the stones
-of the floor, and her cheek followed them,
-and she clutched at the cold, damp granite,
-in a vain, vague search for her mother’s
-breast.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER THREE</em><br /> <span class='large'>FLAMMECŒUR</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_074.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-The New Year had come: a
-time of highest festival in
-Brittany, when the land was
-alive with merriment and gifts
-and legends and grewsome
-tales. It was St. Sylvester’s
-Eve, when, as all men knew, the waves of
-the Atlantic for once defied their barriers
-and struggled up the towering cliffs, eager to
-meet, halfway, the descending dolmens, permitted
-once in the year to leave unguarded the
-deep earth-treasures, that they might quench
-their furious thirst in the sea. And on that
-night half the peasants of Brittany lay awake,
-speculating on the vast wealth that might be
-theirs if they were but to arise and seek out
-some monster dolmen and wait beside it till
-the immense rock rolled away from its hole,
-leaving a pit of gold and gems open to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>clutching hands of the world-man. But fear
-of the demoniac return of these same rolling
-rocks kept most of the dreamers safe within
-their beds during the fateful midnight hour,
-though of the luck of the few daring ones, there
-were, nay, still are, many veracious tales.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Le Crépuscule, no less than the surrounding
-countryside, participated in the interest of
-these supernatural matters; but the old Chateau
-had real affairs of feast and frolic to occupy
-it also. The great New Year’s dinner was the
-most lavish that the Castle gave in the twelve-month,
-and this year, in spite of its depleted
-household, there was no exception made to the
-general rule. The great tables were set in the
-central hall and loaded with every sort of food
-and drink, while kitchen fires roared about their
-juicy meats, and in the chimney-piece of the
-hall an ox was roasted whole before the flames.
-Ordinarily the dinner hour at the Castle was
-half-past eleven in the morning; but on feast
-days it was changed to four in the afternoon,
-and the merriment was then kept up till the
-last woman had retired, and the last man found
-a pillow on the rushes that strewed the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On this New Year’s eve there were, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>usual, two great tables set; for to-night not
-only all the retainers of the Castle, but also half
-a hundred of the tenantry from the estates,
-claimed the privilege of their fealty and came
-to eat at the house of their lord, sitting below
-his salt, breaking his bread, supping his beer,
-and talking and laughing and drinking each till
-he could no more.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame Eleanore was always present at this
-feast, as a matter of duty and of graciousness.
-She sat to-night at the head of the board, with
-an empty place beside her for Gerault. Alixe
-was upon her right hand, and one of the young
-squires-at-arms upon her left; and in the general
-hubbub of the feast none of the peasant
-boors noticed how persistent a silence reigned
-at that end of the table, nor how wearily sad
-was the expression of their lady’s face.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This was the first feast in many years at
-which the Bishop of St. Nazaire had not been
-present; but he had not come to Le Crépuscule
-since Laure’s consecration, and madame had
-given up hoping for his arrival. Darkness had
-fallen some time since, and the hour was growing
-late. This could be told from the increased
-noise at the table. Puddings and crumcakes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>had been finished, and the men of the company
-were turning their attention exclusively to
-the liquor—beer and wine—which had been
-brought up to the hall in great casks, from
-which each might help himself. David le
-petit, the jester, ran up and down on the table,
-waving a black wand and shouting verses at
-the company. There was a universal clamor
-and howling of laughter and song, which
-madame heard with ever-increasing weariness
-and displeasure, though the demoiselles showed
-no such signs of fatigue.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Suddenly, through the tumult, madame
-caught a sound that made her lift her head
-and half rise from her chair, listening intently.
-There had been a sound of horses’ hoofs on
-the courtyard stones.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“’Tis St. Nazaire at last,” she whispered to
-Alixe. “Now we shall hear of—Go thou
-thyself, Alixe, and fetch hither fresh meat and
-a pasty and a flagon of the best wine. Monseigneur
-must be weary. He shall sit here at
-my side—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe rose obediently and hurried away
-on her errand; and while she was gone there
-came a clamor at the door. A burly henchman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>sprang up and lurched forward to open it, peering
-out into the darkness. Those in the room
-heard a little ejaculation, and then there entered
-a new-comer with some one else beside him.
-Neither was the Bishop of St. Nazaire. Both
-of them were young,—one, indeed, no more
-than a boy, wearing an esquire’s jerkin, hosen,
-cap, and mantle, and carrying only a short dirk
-in his belt. The other, who came forward into
-the full light of the lamps and torches, was a
-young man of six and twenty or thereabouts,
-lean and tall and graceful, clad in half armor,
-but clean-shaved, like a woman. His face had
-the look of the South in it, his eyes were piercingly
-dark, and his waving hair as black as the
-night. In their first glance at the new-comer,
-most in the room took notice that his spurs
-were not gilt; but soon a maid spied out that
-the little squire carried on his back a lute,
-strung on a ribbon, and then the stranger’s
-profession was plain.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This general examination lasted but the
-matter of a few seconds. Then Madame Eleanore
-rose, and the stranger saluted her with a
-grace that became him well, and began to speak
-in a mellow voice,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>“Madame la Châtelaine, give thee God’s
-greeting! I hight Bertrand Flammecœur,
-singer of Provence, the land of the trouvère;
-and now find myself a most weary traveller
-through this chilly land. Here—” indicating
-his follower with two slim fingers—“is my
-squire, Yvain. We come to-day from the
-Castle of Laval, in the South, where, in the
-high hospitality of its lord, we have sojourned
-for some weeks. There, indeed, I sang in half
-a score of tenzons with one <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Fleurie</span>, an able
-singer. But now, to-night, inasmuch as we are
-weary with long riding, empty for food, numb
-with cold, and have found the drawbridge of
-this Castle down, we make bold to crave shelter
-for the night, and a manchet of bread to comfort
-our stomachs withal,” and the trouvère
-bent his body in a graceful obeisance; while
-Eleanore, smiling her hospitality, stepped forward
-a little from where she stood.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It is the Breton custom, Sir Trouvère, to
-leave the drawbridge down during the holy
-weeks of Christmas and Easter; and in those
-days any may obtain food and shelter among
-us. Thou and thy squire, however, are doubly
-welcome, coming as ye do from our cousins of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Laval, in which house I, Eleanore du Crépuscule,
-was born. In the name of my son, the
-Seigneur Gerault, I return you God’s greeting,
-and pray you to make this Chateau your home.
-Now, sith ye are well weary and anhungered,
-let your boy rest him there among my squires,
-while you come here and sit and eat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Thereupon little Yvain, after a bow, ran
-eagerly to the place indicated to him; and
-Flammecœur, smiling, went forward at madame’s
-invitation toward the place at her side.
-Ere he reached it, Alixe, who had been in
-the kitchens and thus missed the stranger’s
-entrance, came into the hall, bearing with her
-a wooden tray containing food and red wine.
-At sight of the stranger she halted suddenly,
-and as suddenly he paused to make her reverence;
-for by her dress he knew her to be
-no serving-wench. In the instant that their
-glances met, her green and brilliant eyes flashed
-a flame of fire into his dark ones; and curiously
-enough, a color rose in the pale cheeks of the
-man ere Alixe had thought to catch the flush
-of maiden modesty. Perhaps no one in the
-room had noted the contretemps. At any rate,
-Flammecœur, taking a quick glance to see,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>found none looking at him in more than
-ordinary curiosity; whereupon his debonair
-self-possession flew back to him, and, turning
-again to Madame Eleanore, he presently sat
-down to table and began his meal. While he
-ate, and his appetite was excellent, he found
-space to converse with every one about him;
-and had a smile for all, from madame to the
-shyest of the demoiselles. Out of courtesy
-for their hospitality, he gave a somewhat careless
-and rambling but nevertheless highly entertaining
-account of some of his wanderings,
-and was amused to see how the young demoiselles
-hung on his words. Only upon Alixe
-did he waste his efforts, for she paid scant attention
-to him, listening just enough to escape
-the charge of rudeness. And Flammecœur
-was man enough and vain enough to get himself
-into something of a pique about her in this
-first hour of his coming to Le Crépuscule.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When the stranger had had his say, and
-proved himself sufficiently “trouvère,” the
-general after-feast of song and story began.
-Both tale and song were of that day,—broad
-enough for modern ears, but of their time
-unusually mild, and of the character that was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>to be heard from ladies’ lips. Burliest henchman
-and slenderest squire alike tuned his verse
-for the ears of Madame Eleanore to hear; and
-the wanderer, Flammecœur, noted this fact
-astutely, and so much approved of it that,
-while dwarf David’s fairy tale went on, he
-took a quick resolve that he would make a
-temporary home for himself in this Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the course of time Flammecœur was
-asked for a song. Yvain brought his lute to
-him, and he tuned the instrument while he
-pleaded excuse from a long chanson. When
-he began, however, his voice showed small sign
-of fatigue. He sang a low, swinging melody
-of his own composing, fitted to words once
-used in a Court of Love in the south,—a delicate
-bit of versification dealing with dreams.
-And so delicately did he perform his task
-that perfect silence followed its close.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A moment later there was a sharp round of
-applause; for these Bretons had never heard
-such a chansonette in all their cold-country
-lives. Before anything more could be demanded,
-Flammecœur, satisfied with the impression
-already made, sprang to his feet, and
-turned to Eleanore, saying: “Lady, I crave
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>permission for me and my squire to seek our
-rest. We have ridden many leagues to-day,
-and at early dawn must be up and off again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore rose and gave him her hand to kiss.
-“Sieur Flammecœur, we render thee thanks
-for our pleasure, and give ye God’s sleep.
-Hither, Foulque! Light the Sieur Trouvère
-and his boy to thy room, and sleep thou this
-night with Robert Meloc.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The young squire bowed and fetched a
-torch from the wall. Yvain came running to
-his master’s side; and presently, to the deep
-regret of all the demoiselles, the three disappeared
-into the “long room,” from which a
-hallway led to the squires’ rooms.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In spite of Bertrand’s words about his early
-departure on the following morning, he and
-Yvain did not go that day. Neither did they
-depart on the next, nor within that week. On
-the morning after his arrival the minstrel confessed,
-readily enough, though with seeming
-reluctance, that he had no particular objective
-point in his journeying; that he but travelled
-for adventure, for love of his lady, and that it
-was his mind to linger around St. Nazaire or
-the coast till spring should give an opening
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>into Normandy. Madame Eleanore would
-not hear of it that he should seek lodgings in
-St. Nazaire. There was strong tradition of
-hospitality in Le Crépuscule,—ordinarily a
-lonely place enough; and its châtelaine eagerly
-besought the Flaming-heart to lodge with her
-till spring—and longer if he would. And
-after that she put him, forsooth, into the
-Bishop’s chamber on the ground-floor, gave
-Yvain an adjoining closet, and would take no
-refusal that he go hawking in the early afternoon
-with all the young squires of the Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Bertrand took to his life at the Twilight
-Castle with a grace, an ease, and, withal, a
-tact that won him every heart within the
-first three days of his residence there. He
-was a man of the broad world, such an one
-as these simple Breton folk had not known
-before; for Seigneur Gerault did not travel
-like this fellow, and had none of his manner
-for setting forth tales. The young squires, the
-men-at-arms, the henchmen, the very cooks
-and scullions, listened open-mouthed and open-eyed
-at the stories he told of adventure and
-love, of distant countries, of kings and courts
-and mighty wars. Besides this, he could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>manage a horse or a sword like any warrior
-knight; he was deep learned in falconry; he
-could track a hare or a fox through the
-most impossible furze; and he could read
-like a monk and write like a scribe. As
-for his accomplishments with the other sex,
-they were too many to mention. Before
-evening of the second day every woman in the
-Castle from Madame Eleanore down, save,
-for some mysterious reason, Alixe, was at
-his feet, confessing her utter subjection. His
-soft Southern speech, the exquisite Langue
-d’Oc, used in Brittany as French was used in
-England; his clean, dark, fine-featured face;
-his glowing eyes; his love-laden manner, that
-ever dared and never presumed; finally, what,
-in all ages, has seemed to prove most attractive
-to women in men, a suggestion of past
-libertinism,—all these things combined to
-make him utterly irresistible to the feminine
-heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Such a life of never-ending adulation, of
-universal admiration, was a paradise to the
-troubadour, in whom inordinate vanity was
-the strongest and most carefully concealed
-characteristic. So long as he should be the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>centre of interest, he was never bored. But
-when he was not the central object, there
-were just two people in all the Castle that
-did not bore him unendurably. One of these
-was Madame Eleanore, in liking whom he
-betrayed exceptional taste; the other was
-Alixe, who had piqued him into attention.
-His admiration for madame was not wholly
-unnatural; for Bertrand Flammecœur, love-child
-as he was, and filled with unholy passions,
-was, nevertheless, as his singing showed,
-a man of refinement and gentle blood. His
-feeling for Alixe was keen, because it was
-unsatisfactory. She was at no pains to conceal
-her dislike for him, and it was her greatest
-pleasure to whip a pretty speech of his
-to rags with irony. He plied her with every
-art he knew, tried every mood upon her,
-and to Alixe’s glory be it said, she never
-betrayed, by look or word, that she had
-anything for him more than, at best, contemptuous
-indifference. And after a week
-of effort the minstrel was obliged to confess
-to himself that never before, in all his adventures,
-had he met with so complete a rebuff
-from any woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>He did not, even then, entirely relax his
-efforts. One morning, ten days after his
-arrival, he was passing the chapel, a small
-octagonal room opening off the great hall
-just beside the stairs, when he perceived Alixe
-within. She was alone; and as he turned into
-the doorway she was just rising from her
-knees. Unconscious of his presence, she remained
-standing before the altar looking upon
-the crucifix, her hands fervently clasped before
-her. After watching her for a moment in
-silence, Flammecœur began to move noiselessly
-across the little room, and was at her very
-shoulder before he said softly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“A fair good morn to thee, my demoiselle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe wheeled about. “A prayerful one
-to thee, Sir Minstrel!” she said sharply,
-and would have left him but that, smiling,
-he held her back.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ma mie</span>, nay, be pleased to remain
-for a moment’s love-look.” Alixe merely
-shrugged at his teasing mockery, whereupon
-he became serious. “Listen, mademoiselle,
-and explain this matter to me. Is all this
-Castle under a vow of unceasing prayer?
-Piety beseems a damsel well enow; yet never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>have I seen a household so devout. Madame
-Châtelaine repeats her prayers five times a
-day; and the step before the altar here is
-ever weighted by some ardent maid or squire.
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ohé!</span> Love in the south; prayer in the
-north. Rose of Langue d’Oc,—snows of
-Langue d’Oïl. Tell me, Dame Alixe, which
-likes thy heart the most, customs of my land
-or of thine?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“This is all the land I know. And as for
-thee—well, if thou’rt a true man of the south,
-methinks I would remain here,” she retorted
-discourteously, giving him eye for eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I do not my country so much despite to
-say its men are all like me,” returned the
-Flame-hearted, smoothly, in an inward rage.
-“Yet I could tell thee tales of thy cold Normandy
-that are not all of ice. Methinks this
-cheerless Breton coast is the mother of melancholy;
-for shine the sun never so brightly, it
-cannot melt the soul that hath been frozen
-under its past winter’s sky. But, Demoiselle
-Alixe,”—Flammecœur dropped his anger,
-and took on a sudden tone of exceeding interest,—“Demoiselle
-Alixe, I hold in my
-heart a great curiosity concerning thee. I see
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>thee here living as a daughter of the house;
-yet art thou called Rieuse. Now, wast thou
-born in Crépuscule?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe regarded him with half-closed eyes.
-Never had she resented anything in him half
-so much as this question. Yet she replied to
-him in a tone as smooth as his own: “Yea,
-truly I am of Le Crépuscule, by heart and
-love. But I am not of the Twilight blood.
-I was born on the Castle lands. I am the
-foster-sister of the Demoiselle Laure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Sooth, hast thou not heard of Laure, the
-daughter of madame?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay. Is she dead, this maid?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“She is a nun.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah! ’Tis the same.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Not for us here. Thou must know she
-is but newly consecrated; and she is to be
-permitted to come home, here, to the Castle,
-once in a fortnight, to see madame her mother.
-On the morrow she will come for the first time
-since her novitiate began, nine months agone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Sang Dieu! Now know I why the Castle
-breathes with prayer. Madame would make
-all things holy enough to receive her. She
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>cannot be old, this Laure, sith she is thy
-foster-sister?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I am older than she. Also, an I remain
-longer from the tapestry, I shall be caused to
-make you do half my daily task as a punishment
-for keeping me tardy. Give ye God-den,
-fair sir, and pleasant prayers!” And
-with a flutter and an unholy laugh, Alixe had
-whirled past him and was gone out of the
-chapel.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Flammecœur looked after her, but for the
-first time felt no inclination for pursuit. Perhaps
-this was because, for the first time, Alixe
-had given him something besides herself to
-think about. This daughter of Madame
-Eleanore and her peculiar vocation interested
-him extremely. It was quite surprising
-to find how interested one could become
-in little matters, after a few days in Le Crépuscule.
-So Flammecœur presently marched
-off to the armory in search of Yvain, and,
-finding him, he questioned the little squire
-minutely as to the gossip of the keep concerning
-the Demoiselle Laure. Was she mis-shapen?
-This was the only excuse for entering
-a nunnery that occurred to the Flame-hearted.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>Yvain had not heard that she was deformed.
-Was she crossed in love? Mayhap; but Yvain
-had not heard it. Flammecœur shrugged his
-shoulders. The enigma was not solved. It
-mattered little enough, anyway. Alixe had
-jilted him again. Heigho! He ordered his
-horse, and went to seek a falcon. While in
-the falcon-house he remembered that this nun
-was coming to the Castle on the morrow, and
-he decided that he would have a sight of her
-when she arrived.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Not unnaturally Bertrand Flammecœur had
-taken on the state of mind of the whole Castle.
-Mademoiselle was coming home on the morrow.
-Every one knew it, for a message had
-arrived on the previous day from Monseigneur
-the Bishop of St. Nazaire, and Le Crépuscule
-was in a state of unwonted excitement.
-The word came to madame as less of a surprise
-than as an overwhelming relief, and a
-joy that had some bitterness in it. It had
-rested with St. Nazaire whether her child
-should come home to see her twice in the
-month! Ah, well, she was coming; she would
-lie in her mother’s arms; the Castle would echo
-again to the music of her voice! Thus through
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>the whole day madame sat dreaming of the
-morrow, nor noticed the tardy arrival of Alixe
-in the spinning-room, nor how, all morning,
-Isabelle and Viviane whispered and smiled and
-idled over their tasks.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Now, if Madame Eleanore’s heart and brain
-were full to overflowing with the dreams of
-Laure, how feverish with longing came the
-thought of home, home though for one little
-hour, to the prisoner herself! On the night
-before her going, as, indeed, on many nights
-of late, Laure could not sleep. Her eyes
-stared wide open into the night, while her
-mind traced outlines of Le Crépuscule in the
-soft darkness. Ah! the dearly loved halls
-and their blessed company, all that she had
-not seen for nearly nine months, and on the
-morrow should see again! Her brain burned
-with impatience. She tossed and tumbled on
-her hard and narrow bed. Finally, long ere the
-hour for matins, she rose and went to sit at the
-window of her cell, looking out upon the clear
-and frosty winter’s night. How the hours
-passed till prime she scarcely knew. But at
-a quarter to five, when matins were over, she
-went down into the church for first service,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>wearing short riding-shoes under her white
-robe, with her hair bound tight beneath her
-coif and veil, for galloping. During the simple
-prayer-service, she got twenty penitential
-Aves for inattention, and read added reproof
-in the eyes of Mère Piteuse. At length, however,
-it came to be the hour for the breaking
-of the fast, and Laure found opportunity to
-speak to the Sœur Eloise, who was to follow
-her as attendant and protectress on the road
-to Crépuscule. Stupid, stolid, faithful, low
-of birth and therefore much in awe of Laure,
-was this little nun; and had the Mother-prioress been worldly wise, it had not been
-she that followed Laure into the world this
-bright and bitter January morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At a quarter to eight o’clock the two young
-women mounted their palfreys at the convent
-gate, and were off into the snow-filled forest,
-while behind them echoed gentle admonitions
-to unceasing prayer. Feeling a saddle under
-her once again, and a strong white horse bearing
-her along over a well-beaten road, Laure
-drew a breath that seemed to have no end.
-And as her lungs filled with God’s free air,
-she pressed one hand to her throat to ease the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>terrible ache of rising tears. How long it was
-since she had felt free to move her limbs!
-How long since she had traversed this shaded
-road! Eloise did not trouble her. The lay
-sister was too occupied in clinging to the mane
-of her horse to venture speech; and she looked
-at her high-born companion with mingled awe
-and admiration as she saw her urge her beast
-into a trot. The convent animal had an easy
-gait, and appeared to possess possibilities in
-the way of speed. Laure touched him a little
-with her spur. The creature responded well.
-A moment later Eloise turned pale with fright
-to see her lady strike the spur home in earnest,
-and go flying wildly down the road till she was
-presently lost among the thick snow-laden trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure was happy now. She found herself
-not much encumbered with her dress, which
-had been “modified” in obedience to the law
-for conduct outside the convent. Her gown
-and mantle were of the usual cut, and she was
-girdled by her rosary; but her head was covered
-with a close-fitting black hood from which
-fell a short white veil, two edges of which were
-pinned beneath her chin, giving her, though
-she did not know it, a delightfully softened
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>expression. After she had left Eloise behind,
-she continued to increase the speed of her
-animal till she had all but lost control of him.
-Fifteen minutes later she was out of the forest
-and running along a heavily packed road, bordered
-on either side with a thin line of trees,
-beyond which stretched broad fields and moorlands,
-among which, somewhere, the priory
-estate ended and that of Le Crépuscule began.
-Eloise was now a mile behind; but Laure had
-no thought for her. Her breath was coming
-short no less with emotion than with the
-exercise; for the image of her mother was
-before her eyes. She let her mind search
-where it would, through sweet and yearning
-depths; and her heart was filled with thanksgiving
-for this hour of freedom. She was
-nearing that place where the Rennes highway
-joined that of St. Nazaire, both of them uniting
-at the Castle road, which led to the Chateau
-by a long and winding ascent. Presently the
-Chateau became visible; and Laure, looking on
-it with all her soul in her eyes, took no heed
-of the slow-moving horseman ahead of her,
-on whom she was rapidly gaining. Indeed,
-neither was aware of the presence of the other,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>till Laure’s horse, scenting company, made a
-short dash of a hundred yards, and then came
-into a sudden walk beside the animal bestrode
-by Bertrand Flammecœur of Provence. The
-suddenness of the horse’s stop caused Laure
-to jerk heavily forward. Flammecœur leaned
-over and caught her bridle. At that moment
-their eyes met.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A flush of vivid pink overspread Laure’s
-lily face. She shrank quickly away from the
-look in Flammecœur’s eyes. Then her hand
-went up to her dishevelled hair; and she tried
-confusedly to straighten it back.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Take not such pains, reverend lady. By
-the glory of the saints, thou couldst not make
-thyself as lovely as God’s world hath made
-thee!—Prithee, heed me not!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure gave a little gasp at the man’s daring;
-yet such was Flammecœur’s manner that she
-did not find herself offended. Presently she
-had the impulse to give him a sideways glance;
-and then, all untutored as she was, she read the
-lively admiration that was written in his face.
-After that her hands came down from her head,
-and she took up her bridle again, by the act
-causing him to relinquish it. “The Sœur
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Eloise is behind me. I fear that I did much
-outdistance her,” she said, with a demureness
-through which a smile was very near to
-breaking.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Flammecœur looked at her with a peculiar
-pleasure, a pleasure that he had not often experienced.
-His immediate impulse was to put
-a still greater distance between them and Eloise;
-but prudence came happily to his aid. “Let
-us stop here till thine attendant comes, while
-thy horse breathes,” he said, bringing his animal
-to a gentle halt.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure acquiesced at once, and did not analyze
-her little momentary qualm as one of
-disappointment. Nevertheless, her face grew
-white again, and she said not a word through
-the ten minutes they had to wait till Eloise
-came riding heavily out of the wood. The
-other nun looked infinitely startled at the sight
-of Flammecœur, and was muttering a prayer
-while she stared from Laure to the trouvère.
-As soon, however, as she came, the others
-reined their horses about, and immediately, in
-the most remarkable silence that the Provençal
-had ever experienced, proceeded up the hill
-and into the Castle courtyard.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>In this wise they reached the Chateau, and
-Laure came to her own again. She found herself
-surrounded by every one and everything
-that she had so unspeakably yearned for; and—they
-made little impression on her. She
-walked among them like one in a dream, striving
-in vain to free her mind from its encompassing
-mists. When she was alone with her
-mother, in Eleanore’s familiar and beloved
-room, Laure felt in herself an inexplicable insincerity.
-She clung to madame, and wept,
-and kissed her, and expressed in eager, disjointed
-phrases the great joy she felt in being at
-home again; and all the while she scarce knew
-what she said, or wherefore she said it. And in
-the end she gave such an impression of hysteria
-that her mother became seriously distressed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At dinner Laure’s manner changed. She
-was quiet and silent, and kept her eyes fixed
-continually on her plate. Her cheeks were
-burning and she was in a tumult of inward
-emotion that displayed itself in the most unwonted
-stupidity. Her mother never dreamed
-the reason for her mood. Curiously enough,
-Alixe read Laure better, though she scarcely
-dared admit to herself that which she saw.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>No look of Flammecœur’s, nor quick flush of
-the young nun’s face escaped her eyes, yet
-neither then nor ever after did Alixe confess to
-any one what she read; for her own heart was
-too much wrought upon for speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Dinner ended, and with that end came the
-hour for Laure’s return to the convent. The
-girl realized this with a chill at her heart, but
-accepted the inevitable resignedly. It was
-with a sense of desolation that she followed
-Eloise out of the Castle to the courtyard
-where their horses were waiting. Her parting
-with her mother was filled with grief of the sincerest
-kind. She wept and clung to Madame
-Eleanore, gasping out convulsive promises to
-return as soon as the rule permitted. She
-said good-bye to Alixe as tenderly as to her
-mother, for the two maidens were fast friends;
-she kissed all the demoiselles, was kissed by
-the young squires-at-arms; and it was a sudden
-relief to her, in this rush of home-feeling,
-that Flammecœur was nowhere to be seen, he
-and Yvain having disappeared immediately
-after dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Much to the satisfaction of Eloise, who endured
-a good deal of discomfort when she was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>in high places, Laure finally mounted her
-palfrey, and the two of them started away,
-waving good-byes all across the courtyard and
-drawbridge, and indeed until Eleanore, leaning
-heavily on Alixe’s arm, turned to re-enter the
-Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The nuns began their descent of the long
-hill at a slow, jogging trot; and presently
-Eloise remarked comfortably,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Reverend Mother enjoined us to repeat
-the hours as we ride. But so didst thou
-gallop on the way hither, Sister Angelique,
-and so out of breath was I with trotting after,
-that I said no more than the first part of
-one Ave. Therefore let us return at a more
-seemly pace, that we may rightly tell our
-beads,” and the stolid sister settled her horse
-into a slower walk, and sighed comprehensively
-as she thought of the dinner she had eaten and
-the sweetmeats that were hidden in her tunic.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure did not answer her. She fingered
-her rosary dutifully, and her lips mechanically
-repeated the prayers. But her thoughts were
-no more on what she said than they were upon
-food. Her face was drawn and whiter even
-than its wont, and she sat her horse with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>weary air. She was making no struggle against
-the inevitable. In her soul she knew that she
-must be strong enough to endure her lot; but
-she could make no pretence to herself that
-that lot was pleasant.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The two were a long time in their descent
-of the hill, and it was mid-afternoon when they
-reached the bend in the road that hid the
-Chateau from sight. Laure was not looking
-ahead; rather, when she looked, her eyes
-noticed nothing. But suddenly Eloise started
-from her prayers and uttered an exclamation:
-“Saints of God! There is that man again!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A quick, cold tremor passed over Laure,
-and she trembled violently. There in the
-road, fifty yards away, both of them on horseback,
-were Flammecœur and his page.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eloise began a series of weak and rapid expostulations.
-Laure sat like a statue in her
-saddle. Nothing was done till the two young
-women came abreast of the troubadour and
-his boy. Then, with a rapid and adroit movement,
-young Yvain wheeled his horse between
-Laure and Eloise, and presently fell back with
-Eloise’s animal beside him, while Bertrand
-Flammecœur drew up beside Laure. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>man was white with nervousness, and he bent
-toward her and said in a low voice: “Sister of
-angels, grant me pardon for this act!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure had gone all aflame. Her heart was
-beating tremulously and her dry throat contracted
-so that she could not speak. But
-looking, for one fleeting instant, into his face,
-she smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Flammecœur could have laughed for joy,
-for he saw that his cause was won. And the
-ease of this conquest did not make him contemptuous
-of it; for however little he understood
-it, there was that in this childlike nun
-that made him hold his breath with reverence
-before her. The hour that followed their
-second meeting was almost as new to him as to
-her, in the stretch of emotions. They spoke
-very little. From behind them came the continual,
-droll chatter of Yvain and the answering
-giggles of Eloise. But Laure could not
-have laughed, and the trouvère knew it. As
-they entered the forest, however, at no great
-distance from the priory, he leaned far over
-and laid one of his gloved hands upon the
-tunic that covered her knee.</p>
-
-<div id='i_103' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_103.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic005'>
-<p><em><span class='c016'>T</span>he whole Castle had assembled to say<br />God-speed to their departing lord.—Page <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></em></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>“Let me have some gage,—some token
-of thee,” he said in a hoarse and unsteady
-tone.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I cannot! Oh, I cannot!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He did not urge, but resignedly drew his
-hand away; and as Laure’s body made the
-little, involuntary movement of following him,
-he contained his joy with an effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Now the white priory was visible from afar,
-among the leafless trees; and so Laure, reining
-in her horse, turned to her companion:
-“Thou must leave us at once,” she whispered,
-trembling.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He bent his head, and drew his horse to
-a standstill. At the same time Yvain and
-Eloise rode up, having just pledged themselves
-to eternal devotion. After a moment’s hesitation,
-Flammecœur leaned again toward Laure,
-asking, this time fearfully,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Wilt thou tell me, lady, in what part of
-the convent is thy cell?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She looked at him, wondering, but answered
-what he wanted, and then waited, in silence,
-praying that he would ask another question.
-He sat, however, with his head bent over so
-that she could not see his face, and he said
-nothing more. Laure sighed, looked up into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>the wintry sky, looked down to the snow-covered
-earth, felt the pall of her frozen life
-closing around her once again, and then got
-a sudden, blind determination that that life
-should not smother the little, creeping flame
-that had to-day been lighted in her heart.
-Looking sidewise at Flammecœur, who sat
-bowed upon his horse, she whispered,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Shall we—see—each other yet again?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“By all the saints—and God—we shall!
-We shall!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alas, Angelique, we are late for vespers!
-Haste!” cried Eloise, in the same moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure sent the spur into her palfrey, which
-leaped forward like the stone from a sling.
-Eloise followed after her at a terrifying pace,
-and the troubadour and his page stood and
-watched them till they were lost among the
-trees. The two reached the priory gate almost
-together; and before they were admitted,
-Eloise, her face flushed and her eyes shining,
-whispered imploringly to Laure: “Confess it
-not! Confess it not! Else shall we never go
-again!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>To this plea Laure had no time to make
-reply; but the other, seeing her manner, had,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>somehow, no fear that she would betray herself,
-and with her the delicious love-prattlings
-of Yvain.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>They found vespers just at an end, and
-were reproved for their tardy return. Eloise
-retreated to her cell at once, to repeat her penitential
-Aves of the morning, and Laure retired
-ostensibly for the same purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Once alone in her cell, the young girl took
-off her riding-garments,—the unusual cap and
-veil, boots, gloves, and spur,—and put them
-carefully away in her oaken chest. Afterwards
-she straightened her bliault and her hair, set her
-image of the Virgin straight upon its shelf, and
-moved the priedieu a little more accurately
-between the door and her bed. Then, standing
-up, she looked about her. There was
-nothing more to do. She was alone with her
-heart, and she could no longer escape from
-thinking. So she sat down on the bed, folded
-her hands upon her knees, and in this wise
-twisted out the meaning of her day, till she
-found in her secret soul that the unspeakable,
-the unholy, the most glorious, had come to
-her, to fill the great void of her empty life.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER FOUR</em><br /> <span class='large'>THE PASSION</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_108.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-In the evening of the day of
-that momentous visit, after
-compline was over, and she
-was in her bed in her cell,
-Laure yielded herself up to
-sleep only after a rebellious
-struggle; she wished intensely to lie awake
-with her wonderful thoughts. Sleep prevailed,
-however, and was sound and dreamless; for
-she was physically tired out.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At two in the morning came the first boom
-of the church bell pulled by the sleep-laden
-sexton,—the beginning of the call to matins.
-The night was very black; and only after
-two or three minutes did Laure struggle up
-from her bed, trembling with that dead, numb
-feeling that results from being roused too suddenly
-from heavy unconsciousness. Mechanically
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>the young girl felt about for her lantern
-and opened the door into the dimly lit corridor.
-There were half a dozen nuns and novices
-grouped about the stone lamp which burned all
-night on the wall, and from which the sisters
-were accustomed to light their cressets for
-matins. Laure waited her turn in a dazed
-manner, and when she had obtained the light,
-went back to her cell, left the door unclosed
-according to rule, and, placing the lantern on
-the small table, knelt at her priedieu.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>So far her every move had been mechanical.
-Her brain was not yet awake. But, with
-the first words of the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Agnus Dei</span>, the full memory
-of yesterday suddenly flashed upon her.
-She had been at home, and had found there
-Flammecœur!—Flammecœur! Her own heart
-flamed up, and the prayer died away from it.
-Her lips moved on, and the murmur of her
-voice continued to swell the low chorus that
-spread through the whole priory. But Laure
-was not speaking those words. Her whole
-mind and heart had turned irrevocably to
-another subject,—to another god, the little,
-rosy-winged boy that finds his way into the
-sternest places, and lights them with his magic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>presence till they are changed for their inhabitants
-beyond recognition. Strictly speaking,
-Laure was not thinking of the trouvère. Her
-thoughts refused to review him in the light of
-her knowledge of him. She would not think
-of his personality,—his face, eyes, form, or
-manner. Her heart shrank from anything so
-bold. She refused to question herself. Yet
-her mind was full of him, and the other subject
-in her thoughts was this: that in eleven days
-more, were God pitying to her, she should,
-perhaps—ever perhaps—see him again.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When matins and lauds were over, the
-sisters returned to bed till the hour for dressing,
-a quarter to five. Laure was accustomed
-to sleep soundly through this period. But to-day
-she refused to close her eyes. Nay, it
-was ecstasy to her to lie dreaming of many old,
-vague things that had scarce any connection
-with her new heart, and yet would have had
-no place at all with her had they not carried
-as an undercurrent the image of that same
-new god.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>All day Laure went about with a song in
-her soul. Why she should have been glad,
-who can say? What possible hope for happiness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>there was for her, what idea of any
-finale save one of grief, resignation, or despair,
-she never thought to ask herself. She let her
-new happiness take possession of her without
-stopping to analyze it. And it was as well
-that she did no analyzing. For a logical process
-would inevitably have brought her to the
-beginning of these things, to the moment, the
-ineffable moment, when the hand of Flammecœur
-had first rested on her own.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This first morning passed away. Dinner
-was eaten, and recreation time came. Now
-Eloise persistently sought Laure’s company;
-and Laure, with equal persistence and quite
-remarkable adroitness, avoided her. The
-young nun knew, from the face of Eloise,
-that there were a thousand silly thoughts
-ready to come out of her; and Laure could
-not bear to have her own delicate, rainbow
-dreams so crudely disturbed. And there was
-something more about the presence of Eloise
-that disturbed the daughter of Le Crépuscule;
-this was the understanding between them that
-they should not confess the real reason for
-their tardy arrival on the previous day.
-Laure had made up her mind, tacitly, to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>confess nothing—yet. But she did not like
-to be reminded of the fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>That night Laure successfully resisted the
-dictates of sleep, with the result that, all
-next day, she felt dull and weak. When
-dinner and sext were over, and recreation
-came, she obtained ready permission to retire
-to her cell instead of going to the garden
-or the court or the library with the other
-nuns. Once alone and safe from the attacks
-of Eloise, who was becoming importunate, she
-lay down on her bed and sank, almost at
-once, to rest. While she slept, the sun
-came out upon the outer world, and poured
-its beams over the chill valley beyond the
-priory. The gray, lowering clouds were
-broken up. The heavens shone blue, and
-the ice-crust shimmered with myriad, sparkling
-diamonds. No sunlight could enter the
-cell of sleep; for it was afternoon, and the
-single little window looked toward the east.
-But after nearly an hour of shining stillness,
-there came a sound from the frozen vale that
-was more beautiful than sunlight. It reached
-Laure’s ears, and woke her. She rose up,
-hearkening incredulously for a moment, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>then, with a smothered cry of delight, threw
-herself forward again on the bed, and laughed
-and moaned together into the cold sheets.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>From below, just outside her window, rose
-a voice, a tenor voice, high and clear and
-mellow, singing a chanson of the south to
-the accompaniment of a six-stringed lute.
-After a few seconds Laure ventured to raise
-her head and listen. With a thrill of ecstasy
-she caught the words,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c017'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ele ot plain le visage, si fu encolorez;</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les iex vairs et riants, lonc et traités le nez;</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La bouche vermeillête, le menton forcelé;</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le col plain et blanc plus que n’est flor de pré.</span></i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>At this point in the familiar song, sung
-with a fervor she had never dreamed of,
-Laure rose involuntarily from the bed, and,
-redder than any flower, stole to the window.
-Timidly, her heart beating so that she was
-like to choke, she looked out into the snowy
-clearing. Just beneath her, in the shadow
-of the wall, so close that a whisper from
-him might easily have been heard, stood
-Flammecœur.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He was scanning closely the row of cell
-windows above him, hoping against hope for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>a sight of Laure’s face. Ignorant as he was
-of convent hours, he knew that he had but
-the barest chance of making her hear; and
-that there was less than this chance of seeing
-her. Thus when Laure’s face, framed in its
-soft white veil, looked out to him, Flammecœur
-experienced a rush of emotion that was
-overpowering. She inspired him with a reverence
-that he had not known he could feel for
-any woman. Her face was so glorified in his
-eyes that she looked like an image of the Holy
-Virgin. Breaking off in the middle of the
-song, he fell upon his knees there in the
-snow, uttering incoherent and indistinguishable
-phrases of adoration.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Flammecœur was theatrical enough; also
-he was hard, utterly unscrupulous, and a
-scoffer at holy things. His only idol was
-his love for beauty. This was his religion,
-and he had worshipped it consistently from
-boyhood. Now he had found its almost
-perfect embodiment in this girl, in whom
-innocence, purity, youth, and beauty were inextricably
-mingled. And Flammecœur strove
-to adjust his rather callous spirit to hers,
-feeling that he would sooner breathe his last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>than shock her delicacy—till he had attained
-his end.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Now, in the dying sunlight, the two talked
-together; and in the light of his new reverence
-the young nun lost a little of her timidity
-and made open confession in her looks,
-though never in her words, of her delight in
-his presence.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Tell me, O Maiden of Angels,” he said,
-addressing her in a term that at once brought
-them both a sense of familiarity and of pleasure,
-“tell me, is this thy regular hour of solitude?
-Could I—might I hope—to see thee
-often here—hold speech with thee—without
-endangering thy devotions?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, verily!” whispered Laure, hastily.
-“Oh, thou must not come! Nay, I am supposed
-to be with the other sisters at this
-hour of recreation. Only to-day was I permitted—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And didst thou think of me? Hopest
-thou I would come? Didst think—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Monsieur!” Laure’s tone was reproachful
-and embarrassed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Forgive me! Though verily I know not
-how I have offended thee!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>Laure was about to utter her reproach when
-suddenly, around the corner of the wall, appeared
-the head of Flammecœur’s horse. All
-at once, at this apparition, the old spirit of
-freedom and the old love of liberty rushed
-over her. “Ah, would that I might leap down
-there into the snow, and mount with thee thy
-steed, and ride, and ride, and ride back to my
-home in Le Crépuscule!” she cried out, utterly
-forgetful of herself and of her position.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Instantly Flammecœur seized her mood.
-“By all the saints, come on!” he cried. “I
-will catch thee in mine arms; and we will ride!
-We will ride and ride—not back—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alas! Now Heaven forgive me! What
-have I said? Farewell, monsieur! Indeed,
-farewell!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>And ere Flammecœur could grasp her sudden
-revulsion of feeling, she was gone; the
-window above him was empty. He stayed
-where he was for some moments, meditating
-on what plea would be successful. Finally,
-deciding silence the surer part, he remounted
-his horse and turned slowly to the west, through
-the chill evening, doing battle with himself.
-He found that he was unable to cope with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>flame that this pretty nun had kindled in his
-brain. His anger rose against her, to be once
-more overtopped by passion. And had he
-not been so occupied in trying to regain sufficient
-self-control to make some safe plan of
-action, he might have known himself for the
-knave he surely was.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the priory three days went prayerfully
-by; and at the end of that time Laure found
-herself sick with misery. Flammecœur had
-laid hold of her heart, and her struggles against
-the thought of him began to grow stronger;
-for she longed to escape from her present state
-of madness. Incredible as it may seem, she
-never had, in connection with him, one single
-tainted thought. Laure was a peculiarly innocent
-girl,—innocent even of any unshaped
-desire or longing. The force of her nature
-had always found relief in physical activity.
-In her home life all things had been clean and
-free before her. And in the convent the teaching
-that emotion was sin had been accepted by
-her without thought. Nevertheless, in her, all
-unwaked, there lay a broad, passionate nature
-that needed but a quickening touch to throw
-her into such depths as, were she taken unawares,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>would eventually drag her to her doom.
-Her ignorance was pitiable; and even now she
-had entered alone upon a dark stretch of road,
-the end of which she did not herself know,
-and which none could prophesy to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Three days of unhappiness, of battle with
-herself, and of longing for a sight of Flammecœur,
-and then—he came. Again it was the
-recreation hour, and Laure was in the garden,
-walking in the cold with one or two of the sisters.
-Her thoughts had strayed from the general
-chatter, and her eyes, like her mind, looked
-afar off. Her companions, rather accustomed
-to Angelique’s vagaries, paid little attention to
-her, and she pursued her reverie uninterrupted.
-Suddenly, from out of the snowy stillness, a
-sound reached her ears. For an instant her
-heart ceased to beat; and she halted in her walk.
-Yes, Flammecœur was singing, somewhere near.
-It was the same chanson, and it came from
-the other side of the priory. He must be
-where he had been before. She looked at the
-faces of the nuns beside her. Did they not
-also hear? How dull, how intensely dull they
-were! She went on for a few steps undecidedly.
-Then she halted.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>“I had forgot,” she said quietly. “I must
-to my cell. I have five Aves to repeat for inattention
-at the reading of St. Elizabeth this
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Methought they were to be said in chapter,”
-observed one of her companions, indifferently.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay; Reverend Mother gave permission,—in
-my cell,” answered Laure, rather
-weakly; for she saw that she should get into
-difficulty if any one mentioned this matter
-again. However, Flammecœur’s voice was
-singing still and, flinging care to the winds,
-she made a hasty escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Fifteen minutes later she was in the church,
-kneeling at the shrine of St. Joseph. She
-said twenty Aves there before she rose, yet got
-no comfort from them. For twenty Aves is
-small salve to the conscience for the first guilty
-deceit of one’s life.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>That evening was not wholly a pleasant one;
-yet Laure underwent fierce gusts of happiness.
-She had seen him again; she had held speech
-with him, and had smiled when he looked at
-her. She felt his looks like caresses, and was
-half ashamed and half enamoured of them.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>Her night was filled with a tumult of dreams;
-and when day dawned again she was hot with
-the fever of unrest.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Days went by, and then weeks, and finally
-two months, and March was on the world.
-Hints of spring were borne down the breeze.
-The deeply frozen earth began slowly, slowly
-to throw off its weight of ice, and to open its
-breast to the warm touches of the sun. The
-black, bare branches of the forest trees waved
-about uncannily, like gaunt arms, beckoning
-to the distant summer. And in all this time
-the situation of the little nun of Crépuscule
-had not changed. The troubadour still lingered
-at the Chateau, a welcome guest. And
-still he haunted the priory, unknown to any
-one save her whom he continually sought. As
-yet he had done nothing, said not one word
-that betrayed his intentions. He had waited
-patiently till the time should be ripe; and now
-that time approached. Laure had endured a
-life of secret torture, but had not succeeded in
-throwing off the shackles she had voluntarily
-put on. Nay, she confessed now to herself
-that, without his occasional coming, she could
-not have lived. She chafed at their restricted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>intercourse. She longed to meet him where she
-could put her hands into his, where she could
-listen to the sound of his voice without the
-terror of discovery. All this Flammecœur had
-read in her, but still he waited till of her own
-accord she should break her bonds.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>There came a day in March when the two,
-Laure and Flammecœur, with Eloise and her
-now very <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bel ami</span></i>, Yvain, were riding from
-Crépuscule to the priory. As they went, the
-spring sun sent its beams aslant across the road;
-and birds, newly arrived from the far south,
-were site-hunting among the black trees. The
-air was filled with the chilly sweetness that made
-one dizzy with dreams of coming summer; and
-both Laure and the trouvère grew slowly intoxicated
-as they rode side by side, so close
-that his knee touched her palfrey’s flank.
-Behind them, Yvain and Eloise were still
-discussing their love-notions. The afternoon
-was misty with approaching sunset. In the
-radiant golden light, Laure’s heart grew big
-with unshed tears of life; and before the sobs
-came, Flammecœur, leaning far toward her,
-whispered thickly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou must come to me alone! I must
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>have thee alone. I must know thy lips. ’Fore
-God, refuse me not, thou greatly beloved!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure drew a long, shivering breath and
-looked slowly into his face. Her eyes rested
-full upon his, and she did not speak, but he
-read her reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Where shall I come to-night?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“To-night!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Assuredly. To-night. Dieu! Thinkest
-thou that I can stand aloof from thee forever?
-Thinkest thou my blood is water in my veins?
-To-night!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure mused a little, her eyes looking afar
-off, as if she dreamed. She brought them back
-to him with a start. “To-night—by starlight—in
-the convent garden. Canst thou climb
-the wall?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah! thou shalt see!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure’s heart palpitated with the look he
-gave her, and she sat silent under it, while, bit
-by bit, all her training, all her year of precepts,
-all herself, her womanhood, her truth, her
-steadfastness to righteousness, slipped away
-from her under the spell of this most powerful
-of all emotions. And presently she turned to
-him again with such an expression of exaltation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>in her poor face, that his heart warmed
-to her with a tenderer feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“At what hour?” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“One hour after the last tolling of the bell
-at compline after confession.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Confession!” the word slipped from him
-before he thought. He saw Laure turn first
-scarlet and then very white; and her lips
-trembled.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah, Laure, most beloved, heed it not!
-If there be any sin in loving as we love, lay
-it all on me. For on my soul, I would leave
-heaven itself gladly behind for thee! And
-since God created thee as lovely as thou art,
-wert thou not made to be beloved? Look,
-Laure! see the gray bird there among the
-trees! Behold, it is the bird of the Saint
-Esprit! It is an omen. It is our heavenly
-sign; therefore be not afraid.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>And as Laure promised him, so she did.
-She understood so well how the Flaming-heart
-wanted to be alone with her: did she not also
-long for solitude with him? And if they were
-alone for one hour, God was above. He saw
-and He knew all things. Why, then, should
-she be afraid?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>Therefore Laure went to her cell that night
-with her soul unshriven, and a heavy weight
-upon it of mingled joy and pain. Lying fully
-dressed upon her bed, she heard the great bell
-boom out the close of another day of praise to
-God. And when the last vibration had died
-down the wind, and the sexton had wended her
-pious way to bed, Laure rose, and prepared herself
-to go out into the garden. All that she
-had to do was to wrap herself in her mantle
-and to cover her head with a hood and veil.
-But first, following an instinct of dormant conscience,
-she unwound the rosary from her waist
-and hung it on the rail of the priedieu, before
-which she had not prayed to-night. Then she
-sat down upon her bed and waited,—waited
-through centuries, through ages, till it seemed
-to her that dawn must be about to break. But
-she felt that should she reach the garden before
-the coming of Flammecœur, her heart would
-fail indeed. During this time she refused to
-allow herself to think, though she was very cold
-and continued to tremble. Finally, when her
-nerves would stay her no longer, she rose and
-left her cell. The convent was open before
-her. The nuns were all asleep. Her sandalled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>feet made no noise upon the stones, and she
-passed in safety through corridors and rooms
-till she reached the library, from which there
-was an open exit to the garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the doorway she paused and looked out
-upon the pale moonlit scene. Her heart was
-beating quite steadily now, and she was able to
-consider almost with calmness the possibility
-that she was early. The light from the half-moon
-fell upon her where she stood, and suddenly
-she beheld a dark-cloaked figure run
-out of the shrubbery by the northwestern wall
-and come hurrying toward her. At the same
-moment she herself started forward, half fearfully.
-A moment later she was caught in
-Flammecœur’s arms, and a rain of kisses beat
-down upon her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gasping, crimson, horrified, she tore herself
-away from the embrace with the strength of
-one outraged.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Stop! In God’s name, stop! Wouldst
-do me dishonor?” she cried out, in an anger
-that bordered upon tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Dishonor! Mon Dieu! wherefore, prithee,
-camest thou into this garden, then?
-Was it to stand here in this doorway and permit
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>me to scream my devotion at thee from
-yonder wall?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In her nervousness Laure suddenly laughed.
-But she was forced back to gravity, as he
-went on with a sudden rush of passion,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure, Laure, is it thy intent to drive me
-mad? Faith, what man would forbear as I
-have forborne with thee? Thinkest thou any
-one would wait for weeks, nay, months, as
-I have waited, and feel thee at last free and in
-his arms, to be instantly thrust away again?
-Nay, by my soul! Thou art here, and thou
-art mine, and I have much to ask of thee.
-Christ! Thine eyes! Thy hair! Laure,
-I shall bear thee away from this prison-house.
-I will have thee for all mine own. Thou must
-leave thy cell by night, and come to me here.
-Outside the wall Yvain will wait with horses;
-and we will ride away—ride like hounds—out
-of this land of tears, southward, into the
-country of freedom and roses and love! There
-we shall dwell together, thou and I—thou and
-I—Laure, Laure, my sweet! And who in
-all God’s earth before hath known such joy as
-we shall know! Answer me, Laure, answer
-me! Say thou’lt come!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>Once again he took her in his arms, but
-more calmly now, the force of his passion
-having spent itself in words but half articulate.
-And now he perceived how she was
-all trembling and afraid; and so he soothed
-her with gentle phrases and tender caresses,
-for indeed Flammecœur loved this maid as
-truly as it was in him to love at all. And
-it seemed to him a joy to have the protecting
-of her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Speak to me, answer me, greatly beloved,”
-he insisted, drawing her face up to his.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure clung to him and wept, and did not
-speak. All that followed was but a confusion
-of kisses, of pleadings, of tears and restraints,
-to both of them; and presently Laure was
-struggling from his arms and crying to him
-that it was near matins, and she must go.
-Once again, and finally, Flammecœur demanded
-a reply to his plea. There was hesitation,
-doubting, evident desire, and very evident
-fear. Then, staking everything, he urged her
-thus,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Listen, Laure. I would not have thee
-decide all things now in thy mind. In one
-week I will be here, as to-night, at the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>hour, in this place; and all things will be prepared
-for our flight. If thou come to me before
-the matins bell rings out, all will be well,
-and we shall go forth together into heaven.
-If thou come not,—why, I have tarried far
-too long in this Bretagne, and Yvain and I
-will go on together into the world, and thou
-shalt see me no more forever. Fair choice and
-honorable I give thee, for that I love thee better
-than myself. Now fare thee well, lady of
-my heart’s delight. God in His sweet mercy
-give thee into my keeping!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>With a final kiss he put her from him and
-saw her go; and then he threw himself over
-the wall, and set out on his return ride to the
-Castle by the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure descended to prime next morning,
-trembling for fear of unknown possibilities.
-But no one in the church saw her muddy sandals;
-and her skirts and mantle were not more
-soiled round the bottom than was customary
-with those nuns that took their recreation in
-the garden. By the time the breaking of the
-fast occurred, she was reassured, and felt herself
-safe from the consequences of her night.
-Then, and only then, did she turn her mind to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>the choice that she must make during the
-ensuing sennight.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>That week was one of terror by night and
-woe by day. Hourly she resolved to renounce
-forever all thoughts of the flesh, confess her
-sin, and remain true to the convent for life.
-For the first three days these renewals of faith
-made her strong and stronger. She wept and
-she prayed and she hoped for strength; and
-finally she began to believe that the Devil was
-beaten. And yet—and yet—she did not
-even now confess the story of her acquaintance
-with Flammecœur. She said to herself that
-she would win this last fight alone; but she
-did not seek to find if there was self-deception
-in that excuse. No one but the girl Eloise
-had any idea that there existed such a person
-as the trouvère; and Eloise was unaware that
-Sœur Angelique had ever seen that gallant gentleman
-save when she and Yvain were present.
-Moreover, the stupid one was becoming alarmed
-lest the sudden devotional fervor of Demoiselle
-Angelique should lead to the cessation of
-those meetings for which her vague soul so
-impiously thirsted. The rest of the sisters
-perceived Laure’s extra prayers and rigorous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>fasting with admiration and approval, and put
-them down to one of those sudden rushes of
-fervor to which young nuns were peculiarly
-subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After three days of this devotional effort, the
-Devil widened his little wedge of temptation, and
-roused in her an overpowering desire to see her
-lover again. By now she had lost her shame
-at the first hot kiss ever laid upon her lips, and—alas,
-poor humanity!—was longing secretly
-for more. So long, however, as Flammecœur
-was still in Le Crépuscule, she believed that she
-could endure everything. But she knew that
-after four days he would be there no more;
-and if she let her chance go, it was the last she
-should ever have. Then her mind strayed to
-the after-picture of her life here in the nunnery;
-and at the thought her heart grew numb and
-cold. Yet still she fought and prayed, trusting
-to no one her weight of temptation, keeping
-steadfastly to that self-deceptive determination
-to finish the battle alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The torturing week came slowly to an end.
-On the final night, after compline, she went to
-her cell feeling like a spirit condemned to eternal
-night. Once alone, face to face with her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>soul, she sat down upon a chair, bent her head
-upon her breast, and thought. She did not
-extinguish her light, neither did she make
-preparations for bed. Unconsciously she set
-herself to wait through the hour following compline,
-as if its finish would bring the end of
-her trial. The minutes were passing smoothly
-by, and there was a great, unuttered cry of
-terror in her heart. What should she do?
-Nay, at the last minute, what <em>would</em> she do?
-Here her mind broke. She could think no
-more. Her brain was a vacuum. Presently
-her muscles began to twitch. Her flesh became
-cold and damp, and the hot saliva poured
-into her mouth. Would that hour never end?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It ended. By now Flammecœur was in the
-garden, three hundred feet away. Flammecœur
-was waiting for her. Horses were there,
-and garments for her,—other garments than
-these of sickening white wool. How long
-would the trouvère wait? Till matins, he
-had said. But if that were not true? If he
-should go before—if he were going <em>now</em>!</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure started to her feet, halted, hesitated,
-then sank slowly to her knees. The first words
-of a prayer came from her lips; but in the middle
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>of the phrase she was silent. Prayer was
-suddenly nothing to her. She had prayed so
-much; she had prayed so long! The beauty
-of appeals to the Most High was lost just now.
-She felt all the weight of her never-satisfied
-religion upon her, and she revolted at it. For
-the moment love itself seemed desirable only in
-so much as it would get her away from this place
-of her hypocrisy. A sudden thought of her
-mother came to her. For one moment—two—five—she
-kept her mind fixed. Then she
-sobbed. Flammecœur was below, calling to her
-with every fibre of his being. She knew that.
-She could see him waiting there, her cloak
-over his arm. With a low wail she stretched
-out her arms to the mental image. Afterwards,
-scarcely knowing what she did, she knelt down
-before the bright-painted picture of the Madonna
-on the wall of her cell, and kissed the
-stones of the floor below it.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Then she stood up, pressing her hands
-tightly to her throat to ease the pain there.
-She looked around her, and in that look saw
-everything in the little stone room that had
-for so long been her home. Then, removing
-from her head the coif, wimple, and veil, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>symbols of her virginity, she extinguished her
-lantern, and walked, blindly and wearily, out
-of her cell. So she passed, without making
-any noise, through the convent, into the library,
-and out—out—out into the garden beyond.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Instantly Flammecœur was at her side.
-“Laure!” cried he, half laughing in his triumph.
-“Laure! Now we shall go!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Over his arm he carried a voluminous black
-mantle and a close, dark hood. These he put
-upon her, getting small assistance in the matter,
-for Laure’s movements were wooden, her hands
-like ice.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Now—canst climb the wall with me?” he
-asked, gazing at her in her transformation, and
-noting how pure and white her skin showed in
-its dark frame.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She gasped and bent her head. Thereupon
-he seized her in his arms and carried her to the
-wall. There she surpassed his hopes; for her
-old, tomboyish skill suddenly came back to
-her, and she scrambled up the rough stones
-more agilely than he. Once in the road outside
-the garden, Flammecœur gave a low
-whistle. Then, out of the shadow of the
-wood, on the north side of the road, came
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>Yvain, riding one steed, and leading that of
-Flammecœur, on which were both saddle and
-pillion. Flammecœur leaped to his place, and,
-bending over, held out his hand to Laure.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou comest freely,” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure looked up into his eyes. “Freely,”
-she answered, surrendering her soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He laughed again, softly, as she climbed up
-behind him, by the help of his feet and his
-hands. And then, in another moment, they
-were off, into the moonlit night. And what
-that night concealed from Laure, what future
-of fierce joy, of terror, of misery, and of unutterable
-heartbreak, how should she know,
-poor girl, whose only guide was God Inscrutable,
-working His mysterious way alone, in
-heaven on high?</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER FIVE</em><br /> <span class='large'>SHADOWS</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_135.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-On the day after Laure’s flight,
-Madame Eleanore left the
-great dinner-table and went
-to her bedroom early in the
-afternoon. Once again, as a
-year ago, she was alone there,
-hovering over her priedieu. Only this day
-was not sunny, but cold and damp, and very
-gray. Eleanore was in her usual mood of
-lonely melancholy, but when Alixe tapped at
-the door she was admitted, and madame ceased
-her devotions and bade the girl come in and
-sit down to her embroidery frame beside the
-window. Latterly it had become a habit of
-Alixe’s to break in upon her foster-mother’s
-elected solitude, and to draw her, willy-nilly,
-out of her sadness. If madame perceived the
-kindly intention in these interruptions, she did
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>not comment upon it, but accepted the maid’s
-devotion with growing affection.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When Alixe entered, madame also seated
-herself near the window, yet did not take up
-any work, leaving the tambour frame and
-spinning-wheel both idle in their places. She
-regarded Alixe for a few moments in silence,
-wondering why the young girl did not speak,
-finally putting her dulness down to the fact
-that it was but yesterday morning they had
-bidden Flammecœur and his squire God-speed
-on their journey to Normandy. Their long
-sojourn at Crépuscule had brought a gayety to
-the Castle that made it doubly dull now that
-they were gone. Madame pondered for some
-time on the subject, and presently spoke of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Sieur Bertrand hath a dreary sky for his
-journey.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“But a promise of beauty in the land to
-which he goeth,” responded Alixe, with something
-of an effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Mayhap. I have not been in Normandy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>And here the conversation ended. They
-sat together, these two women, listening to the
-incessant beating of the heavy waves on the
-cliff far below, and to the tap, tap, of the rain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>upon the windows; but neither found it in her
-heart to speak again. Alixe was shading her
-bird from blue into green, and Eleanore sat
-with folded hands, her eyes looking far away,
-musing upon the nothingness of her life. Suddenly
-there came a clamor at the door. Somewhat
-startled, Eleanore called admittance, and
-immediately David the dwarf walked into the
-room, stepped to the right of the doorway,
-and ushered in his companion, announcing her
-gravely,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Sœur Celeste from the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Couvent des
-Madeleines</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The sub-prioress, her white cloak and veil
-damp and stringing with rain, came slowly into
-the room and courtesied, first to Eleanore, then
-to Alixe.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame rose hastily, in some surprise, and
-went forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Give you God’s greeting, good sister,” she
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The nun returned the salutation, and then,
-with some hesitation, indicated the little dwarf
-in a gesture that showed her desire that he
-should leave the room. Madame accordingly
-motioned him away, and when he was gone,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>turned to the nun with a hint of anxiety on
-her face. The new-comer did not hesitate
-in her mission. Leaning over, she asked
-eagerly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame, is Angelique here, with you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore looked at her blankly. “Laure?—Laure
-is with you. Laure is—What
-sayest thou, woman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Sœur Celeste resignedly bent her head. For
-some seconds nothing was said. Alixe, her face
-grown ashen, her body changed to ice, rose, and
-moved to the side of madame. Then she asked
-softly, “What hath happened, good sister?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Angelique—Laure—the demoiselle—is
-not in the convent. We have searched for her
-everywhere. Her veil and wimple were found
-in her cell upon the bed. Beyond this there is
-no trace of her. This morning she came not
-to the church for prime, and we thought she
-had overslept. She hath so much fasted and
-prayed of late that Reverend Mother granted
-indulgence, and bade us let her rest. At breaking
-of the fast Sœur Eloise was despatched to
-her cell, and returned with word that she was
-not there. Since that hour even the daily services
-have been suspended, while we sought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>for her. In the garden we found footprints,—those
-of a woman, and of a man. Perchance
-they were hers—yet—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It is a lie! That is a lie!” burst from
-Eleanore’s white lips. “Woman, woman, unsay
-thy words! No man hath ever seen her,—my
-Laure!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I said it not, Madame Eleanore; I but said
-mayhap,” ventured the gentle sister, timidly.
-But Eleanore did not hear her. White, rigid,
-her every muscle drawn tense, she stood there
-staring before her into space; while Alixe,
-feeling this scene to be too intimate even for
-her presence, glided slowly from the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Immediately outside the closed door stood
-David the dwarf, moving restlessly from one
-spot to another, biting his thick lips, and
-working his heavy black brows with great nervousness.
-Seeing Alixe, he seized upon her
-at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I know what it is: Laure hath gone away,
-hath she not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe simply nodded.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea, I know it,—with that scoundrelly
-trouvère!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe quivered as if she had been touched
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>upon the raw; but David paid no attention to
-her movement of pain.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Come,” he jerked out nervously; “come
-away from this room. Come below. I will
-tell thee what I saw in the fellow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The two of them walked silently across the
-broad upper hall and down the great staircase
-into the lower room, which was always deserted
-at this hour. Here Alixe and the dwarf
-seated themselves on tabourets at one of the
-long tables, and David began to talk. It
-seemed that he had watched Flammecœur
-closely, and had seen a good deal of his attentions
-to Laure; knew how he rode with
-her to and from the priory, guessed Laure’s
-all too apparent feeling for him, and was
-aware that most of the hours in which the
-troubadour had supposedly hunted, hawked,
-or gone to St. Nazaire, had really been spent
-in the neighborhood of the priory, though
-how much he had seen of the nun, David
-could not know.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe listened to him without much comment,
-and agreed in her heart with all that he
-said. But she was at a loss to comprehend
-her own bitterness of spirit at thought of what
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>Flammecœur had done. She loved Laure
-truly; yet these sensations of hers were not
-for Laure, but for herself alone; and this girl,
-so acute at reading the minds of others, failed
-entirely to read her own; for had she not
-soundly hated Flammecœur? <em>Had</em> she hated
-him?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was a heavy hour that these two, dwarf
-and peasant born, spent waiting for their lady
-to give some sign. At length, however, there
-were footsteps on the stairs, and both of them
-rose, as Eleanore, followed, not accompanied,
-by the white-robed nun, descended.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame was very erect, very brilliant-eyed,
-very white and stiff, but she had perfect control
-over herself. As she swept toward the
-great door, David could plainly see her state,
-and Alixe read well her heart; yet neither of
-them could but admire her splendid self-possession.
-Out of the Castle and into the courtyard
-she went, the three others following her,
-on her way to the keep. In the open doorway
-of the rough stone tower, she halted; and the
-dozen lolling henchmen within instantly started
-to their feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“My men,” she said, in a voice as steady
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>and as commanding as that of a lord of Crépuscule,
-“my men, a great blow has fallen
-upon me, and a disgrace to all that dwell in
-this Castle. Laure, my daughter, your demoiselle,
-the lady of all our hearts, hath been
-stolen from the place of her consecration. She
-hath been abducted from the priory of the
-Holy Madeleine, by one that hath broken our
-bread, and received our hospitality. Bertrand
-Flammecœur, the troubadour, hath brought
-dishonor upon Le Crépuscule, and I ask you
-all to avenge your lord and me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Here she was interrupted by a chorus begun
-in low murmurs of astonishment, and now
-risen to a roar of wrath. After a moment she
-raised her hand, and, in the silence that quickly
-ensued, began again,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“In the name of your lord, I bid you avenge
-us! Ride forth, every man of you, into the
-countryside, in pursuit of the flying hound.
-Go every man by a different road, nor halt by
-day or night till you bring me tidings of my
-child. And to him that shall find and bring
-her back to me, will I give honor and riches
-and great love, such as I would give to none
-that was not of noble blood. Go, nor stay to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>talk of it.—Go forth in the name of God—and
-bring me back my child!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The men needed no further urging to action.
-As she ceased to speak they sprang from their
-places, and began preparations for departure
-with a spirit that showed their devotion to
-madame and to Laure. Madame stayed in
-the courtyard till Sœur Celeste and the last
-henchman had ridden away; and then, when
-there was no more to see, she turned to Alixe,
-and, leaning heavily upon the young girl’s
-shoulder, slowly mounted to her darkening
-chamber and lay down upon her tapestried
-bed. Alixe moved gently about the room,
-bringing her lady such physical comforts as she
-could, though these were not many. Neither
-of them spoke, and neither wept. Eleanore
-lay motionless, staring out into the dusk.
-Alixe’s eyes closed every now and then, with a
-kind of deadly weariness that was not physical.
-But she did not leave madame.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After a long time, when it had grown quite
-dark, Alixe asked suddenly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Wouldst have a message sent to Rennes,
-madame?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“To Gerault? No, it is too late. What
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>could he do? Nay, I will not have the
-shame of his house published abroad in the
-Duke’s capital. Speak of it no more.” And,
-obediently, Alixe was silent.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was now long past the early supper hour,
-but neither of the women went downstairs.
-The thought of food did not occur to Eleanore.
-Alixe sat by the closed window, brooding
-deeply. Darkness had come over the sea, and
-with it clouds dispersed so that a few stars
-glimmered forth, and at times a moon showed
-through the ragged mists. Downstairs the
-young men and maidens had resorted to their
-usual evening amusements of games, but they
-played without spirit, and finally, one by one,
-heavy with unvoiced foreboding, crept off to
-rest. David the dwarf had not been among
-them at all to-night. Ever since the ending
-of supper he had sat outside the door of
-madame’s room, waiting, patiently, for some
-sound to come from within. Everything, however,
-was silent. From her bed the mother,
-tearless, bright-eyed, watched the broken moonlight
-creep along the floor, past the figure of
-Alixe. Her mind was filled with terrible things,—pictures
-of Laure, and of what the young
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>girl was doubtless enduring. For a long time
-she contained herself under these thoughts,
-but finally, racked with unbearable misery, she
-started up, crying aloud,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe! Alixe! Methinks I shall go mad!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As she spoke, madame rose from the bed,
-stumbled across the floor, flung open one of
-the windows, and looked out upon the splendor
-of the tumbling, moonlit sea. After a moment
-or two she felt upon her arm a gentle touch,
-and she knew that Alixe was beside her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Mad with thy thoughts, madame? Indeed,
-meseemeth Laure will not die. Doubtless
-the Sieur Trouvère loveth her—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She was interrupted by a long groan.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame?” she whispered, in soft deprecation.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Not die, Alixe? Not <em>die</em>? Dieu! It
-were now my one prayer for her that she
-might quickly die!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, what is there so terrible for her, save
-that she hath brought upon herself damnation
-an she die unrepentant? Wouldst thou not
-have her live to repent and be shriven?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore groaned again. “Thou art too
-young to understand, Alixe. Ah! her purity!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>her innocence! How she will suffer!
-There is no suffering like unto it.” Madame
-slipped to her knees, there by the window, and
-putting her arms upon the sill, buried her head
-in them, and drew two or three terrible breaths.
-Alixe, helpless, fighting to keep down her own
-secret woe in the face of this more bitter grief,
-felt herself useless. She remained perfectly
-still, looking out at the sea, but noting nothing
-of its beauty, till, all at once, madame began
-to speak again, in a muffled voice,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I remember well my wedding with the
-Sieur du Crépuscule. I was of the age and of
-the innocence of Laure. Never was mortal so
-happy as I, upon the day of the ceremony at
-Laval. I loved my lord, and he had given all
-his honor into my keeping. But had the bitterness
-of guilt been on me when I was brought
-home to Le Crépuscule, alone and a stranger
-in his house, I know not if I could have lived
-through the shame and bitterness of my first
-days. Thou canst not know, Alixe; but the
-humiliation of that time is as fresh in my
-memory as ’twere but yesterday. Ah! leave
-me now, maiden. Leave me alone. Thou’st
-been good and faithful to me, but a mother’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>grief she must bear alone. Go thou to bed,
-child, and, in the name of pity, pray for thy
-sister!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>So she sent Alixe from the room, and made
-the door fast after her. After this she did not
-return to her place at the window, but began
-slowly to make ready for the night. When at
-length she was prepared, she wrapped herself
-closely in a warm woollen mantle, and went to
-her priedieu. Laure, from the priory, had
-ceased to accost Heaven. Therefore madame
-took her daughter’s place, and thence through
-the night ascended an unceasing, bitter, commanding
-prayer that Laure should be restored
-to her mother’s house, or else be mercifully
-received into the more accessible hereafter.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When morning dawned, her great bed had
-not been slept in, but throughout that day
-Eleanore sought no rest. She spent the hours
-passing from the hall to the keep and thence
-to the tower at the drawbridge, waiting, hoping,
-praying for tidings. During the afternoon
-three or four henchmen rode in, exhausted.
-But none of them had found any trace of Laure.
-One, however, who had taken the St. Nazaire
-road and had reached that town during the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>night, had learned that Flammecœur and his
-page had been there on the afternoon of the
-day they left Crépuscule. And, upon further
-search, this man found a shop where the trouvère
-had bought a lady’s mantle and hood,
-both black. This was all the news that could
-be got; but it was enough to prove, without
-the least doubt, Flammecœur’s guilt.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Late in the afternoon Alixe went to work
-among the falcons, changing some of them
-from their winter-house to the open falconry in
-the field. Madame, seeing her at work, went
-out and watched her for a time. Alixe answered
-her few remarks with respect, but
-would not talk herself. The girl was dark-browed
-to-day, and very silent, and madame,
-perceiving that something troubled her, shortly
-left her to herself, and began to pace the damp
-turf. Hither, presently, came David, with
-the news that Monseigneur de St. Nazaire
-had come.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>With a cry of sudden relief madame hurried
-back to the Castle, where the Bishop awaited
-her. He was gowned as usual in his violet,
-with round black cap, and gauntlet cut to show
-his ring. And as she came into the great hall,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>he advanced to her with both hands outstretched
-and a look of trouble in his clear eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Eleanore, for the first time in many years
-I come to you in sorrow, to bring to you what
-comfort the Church can give,” he said gently,
-fixing his eyes upon her to read how she had
-taken her blow, and from it decide what his
-attitude toward her should be. For St. Nazaire
-had a great and affectionate respect for
-Eleanore, and he was accustomed to treat her
-with a consideration that he used toward no
-other woman. It was for this that he had
-come to her in her grief, at the first moment
-that he heard the news of Laure’s flight.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Come thou into this room, where we can
-be alone,” she said quickly, leading him into
-the round armory that opened off the great
-hall immediately opposite the chapel. Half
-closing the heavy door, she sat down on a
-wooden settle, motioning the Bishop to a
-tabouret near at hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Is there any news of her? What hast
-thou heard?” she asked eagerly, bending
-toward him.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I come but now from the priory, where
-I chanced to go to-day. This morning the girl
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>Eloise, a lay sister, she that was accustomed
-to ride hither from the priory with Laure,
-confessed to many rides and love-passages between
-herself and Yvain the young squire,
-while Bertrand Flammecœur followed Laure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame drew a sharp breath, and the Bishop
-continued: “The girl is now under heavy
-penance; yet is she a silly thing, and in my
-heart I find no great blame for her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then there hath been no word—no news—of
-Laure? Left she no token in her cell?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nothing, Eleanore, nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah, St. Nazaire! St. Nazaire! how did
-we that cruel thing? How took we away from
-a young girl all her freedom, all her youth, all
-her love of life? Know I not enough of the
-woe of loneliness, that I should have sent her
-forth into that living death? Alas! alas! I
-am all to blame.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Not wholly thou, madame. Perhaps the
-Church also,” said the Bishop, softly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore looked at him in something of
-amazement. It was the first time that he had
-ever suggested any criticism of the Church.
-But after these words had escaped him, the
-Bishop paused for a little and fixed upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>Eleanore a look that she read aright. It
-told her many things that she had guessed
-before, many unuttered things that had drawn
-her closely to St. Nazaire; but it told her
-also that these things must never be discussed
-between them; that never again would the
-man be guilty of so heretical an utterance as
-that which he had just voiced.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After this he began to speak again, still in
-the same tone of sympathy, but with a subtle
-difference in the general tenor of his views.
-He told her, in a manner eloquent with simplicity,
-of his talk with Laure on the eve of
-her consecration. He reminded Eleanore that
-Laure had entered of her own free will upon
-the life of a nun. He recalled the girl’s contentment
-throughout the period of her novitiate;
-and finally, seeing that he had succeeded
-in obliterating some of the self-reproach in this
-woman to whom he was so sincerely attached,
-he began to prepare her for the blow that he
-was about to deal, to tell her what words could
-not soften, to inflict a wound that time could
-not heal, but which, according to the law of
-the Roman Catholic Church, he was bound to
-administer.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>Eleanore listened to his plausibly logical
-phrases with close attention. She sat there
-before him, elbow on knee, her head resting
-on her hand, her eyes wandering over the
-armor-strewn walls. The Bishop talked around
-his subject, circling ever a little nearer to its
-climax; but he was still far from the end when
-madame, suddenly straightening up and looking
-full into his eyes, interrupted him to ask
-baldly: “Monseigneur, hast thou never, in
-thy heart, known the yearning for a woman’s
-love?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Many a time and oft, madame, I have
-<em>felt</em> love—a deeply reverent love—for woman;
-and I have rejoiced therein, and given thanks
-to God,” was the careful reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>But Eleanore had begun her attack, and she
-would not be repulsed in the first onslaught.
-“And has no woman, Reverend Father, known
-thy love?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame!” A pale flush overspread St.
-Nazaire’s face. “That question is not—kind,”
-he said haltingly, but without rebuke.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay. I am not kind now. Make me
-answer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>St. Nazaire looked at her thoughtfully, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>weighed certain things in certain balances.
-Because of many years of the confessional and
-also of free confidence he knew Eleanore thoroughly,—knew
-how she had suffered every
-soul-torment; knew her unswerving virtue;
-sympathized with her intense loneliness. He
-prized her trust in him more than she was
-aware, and he feared to jeopardize that confidence
-now by whatever answer he should
-make. Ignorant of the purport of her questions,
-he yet saw that she was in terrible
-earnest in them. So finally he did the honest
-and straightforward thing. Answering her
-look, eye for eye, he said slowly: “Yea,
-Eleanore of Le Crépuscule, a woman hath
-known my love. What then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then if thou, a good man and as strong
-as any the Church ever knew, found that to
-human nature a loveless life is an impossibility,
-how shouldst thou blame a maid, high-strung,
-full of youth, vitality, emotions that she has
-not tried, for yielding to the same temptation
-before which thou didst fall? How is it right
-that the Church—that God—should demand
-so much?—should ask more than His creatures
-can give?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>“Eleanore! Eleanore! thou shalt not question
-God!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I do not question Him. It is—it is—”
-untried in this exercise, she groped for words.
-“It is what ye say He saith. It is what ye
-declare His will to be that I question.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“What, Eleanore, have I declared His will
-to be? Have I yet blamed or chid the waywardness
-of Laure, whom indeed I loved as a
-dear daughter,—a child of purity and faith?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then, then,” Eleanore bent over eagerly,
-and her voice shook,—“then, an <em>thou</em> blamest
-her not, St. Nazaire, thou wilt not—” she
-clasped her hands in an agony of pleading,
-“thou wilt not put upon her the terrible ban?
-Thou wilt not excommunicate her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was only then that the Bishop realized
-how skilfully she had led up to her point.
-He had not realized that he was dealing
-with perception engendered by an agony of
-grief and fear. As she reached her climax, he
-sprang to his feet, and began to pace the room,
-hands clasped behind him, brows much contracted,
-head far bent upon his breast. Eleanore,
-meantime, had slid to her knees and
-watched him as he moved.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>“If thou wilt spare her, ask what thou wilt
-of me. I will do her penance, whatever thou
-shalt decree. I will give money; I will give
-all that remains to me of my dower, freely and
-with light heart, to the Church. I will aid
-whomsoever thou wilt of thy poor, I—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Cease, Eleanore! These things cannot
-avail against the Church. Thou must not
-tempt, thou must not question; thou canst
-not understand <em>the Law</em>! I am but an instrument
-of that Law, and am commanded by it.
-Laure, the bride of Heaven, hath forsaken her
-chosen life. She must endure her punishment,
-being guilty of—thou knowest the sin.
-Next Sunday the ban must be put upon her.
-In doing so, I but obey a higher power. Eleanore,
-Eleanore, rise from thy knees! Thou
-art tearing at my heart! Peace, woman!
-Peace, and let me go!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore, in her agony of despair, had
-crept to him and clasped his knees, mutely
-imploring the pity that he dared not show.
-Logic and reason he had put from him, holding
-fast to the tenets of that Church that had
-made him what he was. In all his career he
-had not been so tried, so tempted, to slip his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>duty. But, through the crucial moment, he
-did not speak; and after that he was safe from
-attack.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After many minutes the mother loosed her
-clasp of him, and ceased to moan, and let him
-go; for she saw that he could not help her.
-And as he passed slowly out of the room, she
-rose to her feet and looked after him blindly.
-Then she groped her way to the door, crossed
-the great hall, and, with her burden, ascended
-the stairs and went to her own room. Next
-morning, when the Bishop said mass in the
-chapel, madame, for the first time in thirty
-years on such an occasion, was not present.
-Nor did monseigneur seem astonished at the
-fact, but left his sympathy for her before he
-rode away to St. Nazaire.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>All that afternoon and night, indeed, till after
-dawn of the next day, weary henchmen of the
-keep came straggling in on spent horses, fruitless
-returned from a fruitless quest. And when
-they were all back again, and the hope of seeing
-Laure was gone, the shadow of loneliness
-settled a little lower over the great pile of stone,
-and the silence within the Castle grew more and
-more intense to the aching heart within.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>In the general desolation of Castle life
-Alixe, the unnatural child of peasant blood,
-came very close to the heart of Eleanore.
-Through the long, budding spring madame
-fought a terrible battle with herself against an
-overpowering desire for an end of life, for the
-peace of death. And in these times Alixe
-often drew her away from herself by getting
-her to hunt and to hawk,—two amusements
-in which madame had been wont to indulge
-eagerly in her youth, and which she found were
-still possible for her, though she had grown to
-what she thought old-womanhood. Besides
-this, she and Alixe took the long walks that
-Laure had formerly delighted in; and the two
-ventured into many a deep cave in the sea-cliffs,
-and explored many crevices that no
-native of the coast would enter. In these
-places they found fair treasures of the sea,
-but were never accosted by any of the supernatural
-beings said to inhabit such spots.
-Nor, though they listened many times for it at
-twilight, did either of them hear, a single time,
-the long, low, wailing cries of the spirit of the
-lost Lenore.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In this way some pleasures entered unawares
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>into the life of Eleanore. Perhaps there were
-other pleasures also, so simple and so familiar
-that she took no cognizance of them as such.
-Perhaps of a morning, in the spinning-room,
-when her fingers flew under some familiar,
-pretty task, and her ears were filled with the
-chatter of the demoiselles, who still strove
-after light-hearted joys amid their gray surroundings,
-she found forgetfulness of Laure’s
-bitter disgrace. Or better still, when, at the
-sunset hour, she paced the grassy falcon-field,
-watching the glories of the sea and sky, there
-came to her heart that benison of Nature that
-God has devised for all of us in our days of
-woe. But when she was alone, in early afternoon,
-or, most of all, through the silent night-watches,
-she was sometimes overcome with
-sheer terror of herself and of her solitude. At
-such times she fought the creeping horror with
-what weapons time had given her, battling so
-bravely that she never suffered utter rout.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In a dim, quiet way the weeks sped on,
-leaving behind them no trace of what had
-been, nothing for memory to hang her lightest
-fabric on. In all the weeks that lay between
-Laure’s flight and the coming of July, Eleanore
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>could remember distinctly just one talk
-beside the bitter one with St. Nazaire. And
-this other was with neither Alixe nor the
-Bishop, who, however, made it a point to come
-once in a fortnight to Le Crépuscule.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On a fair morning in May, as the dawn crept
-up out of the east not many hours after midnight,
-Eleanore rose, in the early flush, and, clothing
-herself lightly, left her room with the intention
-of going into the fields to walk. No one was to
-be seen as she entered the lower hall; but, to
-her amazement, the great door stood half open,
-and through it poured a draught of morning
-air, rich with the perfume of blossoming
-trees and fertile fields. Wondering that Alixe
-should have risen so early, Eleanore left the
-Castle and hurried out of the courtyard into
-the strip of meadow lying between the wall
-and the dry moat. Here, near the north edge
-of the cliff, sitting cross-legged in the grass,
-sat David the dwarf, holding in his hand something
-to which he talked in a low, solemn tone.
-Advancing noiselessly toward him, Eleanore
-perceived that it was a dead butterfly that he
-had found, and to which he was pouring out
-his soul. Amazed at the first phrases that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>caught her ears, she halted a few steps behind
-him, and there learned something of the
-thoughts that lay hidden in his volatile brain.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“White Butterfly, White Butterfly, thou
-frail and delicate child of summer, speak to
-me again! Say, hast thou found death as
-fair as life, thou White and Still? Came the
-messenger to thee unawares, or didst thou see
-his face and know it? Wast thou confessed,
-White Butterfly? Wentest thou forth absolved
-of all thy fluttering sins?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Say, wanderer, didst love thy life? Wast
-afraid or sorrowful to leave it, in its dawn?
-Or foundest thou comfort in the thought of
-eternal rest for thy battling wings?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And I, O living Thistledown, teach me
-my way! Shall I follow thee into the great
-world, to roam there seeking why men love to
-live? Or shall I also, like thee, leave it all?
-Shall I go, knowing nothing of the joy of life?
-Or, again, shall I practise a weary courtesy,
-and remain to bring echoes of laughter into
-that Twilight Castle, for the sake of the love I
-bear its Twilight Lady? Her life, my flutterer,
-hath been such a dream of tears as even
-thou and I, dead thing, have never known.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>Yea, many a time while I laughed and shouted
-at the light crew of damsels that sleep there
-now, my heart hath bled for her. O Ghost
-of the Morning, know you what Eleanore, our
-lady, thinks of me, the fool? And yet, yet
-I do so deeply pity her—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou pityest me, David?” echoed Eleanore,
-advancing till she stood before him, forgetful
-of how her appearance must startle him.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>David looked up at her, winking slowly,
-like one that would bring himself out of a
-dream-world into reality. “Lady of Twilight,
-thou’rt a woman, lonely and mournful,
-forsaken of thy children. Therefore I grieve
-for thee,” he said slowly, gazing at her with
-his big eyes, but not rising from where he sat.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“A woman,” said Eleanore, looking at him
-with a half-smile, and echoing his tone,—“a
-woman doubtless is always to be pitied; and
-yet what man deems it so? Master David,
-ye are all born of women, and ye are all reared
-by them. Afterwards, in youth, ye wed, use
-us as your playthings for an hour, and then
-leave us in your gray dwellings, while ye fare
-forth to more manly sports and exploits.
-There in solitude we bear and rear again, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>later our maidens wed and our sons depart
-from us, and for the last time, in our age, we
-are left alone to die. Truly, David, thou
-mayest well pity!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>David’s wide mouth curved in a bitter smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Even so, Madame Eleanore. And now,
-for fifteen years, I have lived as a woman lives.
-Mayhap by now I know her life better than
-other men—if, indeed, I am a man, being but
-little taller than the animals. And all these
-things said I to my dead friend here in my
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“’Tis now fifteen years since thou camest
-with my lord to Crépuscule?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ay, fifteen. I was then a boy of about
-such age. Fifteen years in Le Crépuscule by
-the sea! It is a lifetime.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame sighed. Then her face brightened
-again as she looked down at the dwarf. “What
-was the life of thy youth, David? ’Tis a tale
-I have never heard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“’Tis but a little tale. Like my dead
-butterfly, I wandered. I come of a race of
-dwarfs,—all straight-backed, know you, and
-not ill to look upon. My father was a
-mountebank. My mother, who measured
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>greater than was customary among us, cooked
-and sewed and travelled with us whithersoever
-we went in our wagon. When I was young,—at
-the age of five or thereabouts,—I began
-to assist my father in his entertainments.
-When I was fifteen we were in Rennes for
-the jousting season, and there thy lord saw
-me, bought me, and brought me back to you,
-lady, to be your merry jester. But indeed my
-laughter hath run low, of late. Long years I
-have bravely jested through; but now the Twilight
-spell is creeping over me, and merriment
-rises no more in my heart. Indeed, I question
-if I should not beg leave of thee to go forth
-into the world again for a little time, to learn
-once more the song of joy. Yet when thou
-art near, and I look out upon the sea, and
-behold the sun lifting his glory out of the
-eastern hills, I ever think I cannot go,—I
-cannot leave this gentle home of melancholy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou art free, David, if freedom is mine
-to bestow upon thee. Indeed, I could not
-ask that any one remain in this sad and quiet
-place, of any than his own will. Go thou
-forth into the world! Go forth to joy and
-life and laughter. Fill thy little heart again
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>with jests. Forget the brooding silence of
-Le Crépuscule, and laugh through the broad
-world to thy heart’s content. Yet we shall
-miss thee sorely, little man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame stopped speaking, and there was
-a pause. David seemed to have no response
-to make to her words. Instead he bent over
-the earth, digging a little hole in the sod.
-Into this he laid the dead form of his white
-butterfly. When he had covered it from
-sight with the black earth, and patted a little
-earthen mound over it, he rose to his feet
-with an exaggerated sigh.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“So I bury my friend—and my freedom.
-My desire is dead, Madame Eleanore, with
-my freedom. I will remain here among you
-women-folk, and keep you sad company or
-merry as you demand. Look! The rim of
-the sun is pushing over the line of the distant
-trees!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea, it is there—far away—in the land
-where Laure may be, deserted, mayhap, and
-a wanderer, cast out from every dwelling that
-she enters!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore whispered these words, more to
-herself than to David. They were an expression
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>of her eternal thought. The dwarf
-heard them, and sought some comfort for
-her. But her expression forbade comfort;
-and, in the end, he did not speak at all.
-The two of them stood side by side and
-watched the sun come up the heavens. Presently
-the Castle awoke, and shortly Alixe came
-out to the field to feed the young <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">niais</span></i> and
-the mother-birds in the falcon-nests. So Eleanore,
-when she had given the young girl greeting,
-returned to her solitude in the Castle,
-finding her heart in some part relieved of its
-immediate burden.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>One by one the lengthening days passed.
-June came into the world, and palpitated, and
-glowed with glory and fire, and then died.
-During this time not a word had come from
-distant Rennes to tell the Lady of Crépuscule
-how Gerault fared. The midsummer month
-came in, and the young men and maidens of
-the Castle grew gay with the heat, and made
-riotous expenditure of the riches of Nature.
-That year the whole earth seemed a tangle
-of flowers and rich meadow-grass, with which
-young demoiselles played havoc, while the
-squires and henchmen hawked and hunted and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>drank deep. These days stirred Eleanore’s
-heart once more to love of life, and woke
-the sleeping soul of Alixe to strange fits of
-passionate yearning after unattainable ideals.
-The living earth brought fire to every soul,
-and the pinched melancholy of winter was
-dead and forgotten.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the night of the seventh of July the
-Castle sat unusually late at meat, for the
-Bishop had arrived unexpectedly, and, being
-in a merry mood, deigned to entertain the
-whole Castle with tales and jests. Just in
-the middle of a story of Church militant in
-the war of the three Jeannes, there came the
-grating noise of the lowering drawbridge, a
-faint echo of shouts from the men-at-arms in
-the watch-tower, and the clatter of swift hoofs
-over the courtyard stones. Half a dozen
-henchmen ran to open the great door, while
-Eleanore rose with difficulty to her feet. Her
-heart had suddenly come into her throat, and
-she had turned deathly white with an unexpressed
-hope and an inarticulate fear. There
-was a little pause. The new-comer was dismounting.
-Then, after what had seemed a
-year of waiting, Courtoise walked into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>hall, advanced to his liege lady, and bent
-the knee.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Courtoise!” gasped Eleanore, faintly.
-“Courtoise—thy message!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame,” he cried, “I bring joyful tidings
-from my lord! He sends thee health,
-greeting, and duty, and prays you to prepare
-the Castle for a great feast; for in a
-week’s time he brings home his bride from
-Rennes!”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER SIX</em><br /> <span class='large'>A LOVE-STRAIN</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_168.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-Late that night, when the
-little throng below had been
-as nearly satisfied with information
-concerning the great
-event as three poor hours of
-steady talking from Courtoise
-could make them, Eleanore sat in her own
-room alone with the messenger, there to learn
-those intimate details of Gerault’s wooing,
-that none but her had right to know. She
-questioned Courtoise eagerly, earnestly, repeatedly,
-with such yearning in her eyes that
-the young squire’s heart smote him to see what
-her loneliness had been.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Tell me again, Courtoise, yet once again!
-She is fair, this maid?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“As fair as a rose, madame; her skin composed
-of pink and white, so cunningly mingled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>that none can judge which hath most play
-upon it. And her eyes are blue like a midsummer
-sky; and she hath clouds of hair that
-glisten like meshes of sun-threads, crowning
-her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And she is small and delicately formed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“She is slender and fragile; yet is she in no
-way sickly of body.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And her name,” went on madame, musingly,
-“is Lenore! Is that not a strange thing,
-Courtoise? Is’t not strange that a second
-time this name should have entered so deeply
-into the life of thy lord? Was he glad that
-it so chanced, Courtoise; or did he hesitate to
-pronounce it again?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I know not if it troubled him at first,
-madame. But this I know: that he is happy
-in her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then the dear God be thanked! I ask no
-more. Ah! It seems that at last I can pray
-again with an open heart. ’Twill be the first
-time since—since—” Suddenly Eleanore began
-to tremble. “Courtoise,” she whispered,
-pale with dread, “hath thy lord heard—of—of
-Laure’s flight?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise bent his head, answering in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>strained voice: “My lord had news of—of
-the flight late in the month of March. Monseigneur
-de St. Nazaire sent us the word of it,
-and for many weeks my lord hunted the country
-over for a trace of her. And when he
-found her not, nor any word of her, he forbore,
-in his grief, to write to thee, dear lady,
-lest he should cause thy tears to flow again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I thank the good God that he knows!”
-murmured Eleanore. “It had been more than
-I could bear that Gerault should come home
-to find his wedding feast blackened with a new-learned
-shame.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea, Lady Eleanore.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And so now, Courtoise, go thou to thy
-rest; for I have kept thee long, and thou’rt
-very weary. And on the morrow there must
-be a beginning of making the Castle bravely
-gay for the home-coming of its lord and its
-bride. Likewise, on the morrow thou must
-tell me more of the young Lenore, my daughter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise smiled wearily, and then, with
-proper obeisance, hurried off to his own room,
-a little triangular closet opening into Gerault’s
-old bedroom on the first floor. When the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>squire was gone, his liege lady also laid her
-down; and for the first time in many months
-sank easily to sleep. For happiness is the best
-of doctors, and this that had come to her was
-a greater happiness than Eleanore had thought
-ever to know again.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Through the next week the very dogs about
-the Castle caught the air of bustle and eager
-life that had laid hold of it. Never, since
-the days of the old lord and his crews of drinking
-barons, had Le Crépuscule shown such
-symptoms of gayety. Every scullion scampered
-about his pots and kettles as if an army
-of Brittany depended on him for nourishment.
-The henchmen hurried about, polishing their
-armor and their steel trappings till the keep
-glittered as with many mirrors, and they broke
-off from this labor now and then to see that
-the stable-boys were at work on the proper
-horses or to dissolve into thunderous roars
-of laughter at a neighbor’s jest. The young
-demoiselles were giddy with excitement. They
-pricked their fingers with spindles, they broke
-innumerable threads on the wheels, they stopped
-the loom to dance or sing in the middle of the
-morning; and while they were arranging the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>rooms where the train of the young bride were
-to lodge, they gossiped so ardently over possible
-future gayeties that their very tongues were
-like to drop off with weariness. As for the
-squires, all five of them, headed by Courtoise,
-were to ride out to Croitôt on the Rennes
-road, as an additional escort for Seigneur
-Gerault. And the parade they made over this
-matter was more than Montfort had for his
-coronation at Rennes when the great war ended.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>There were, however, three silent workers
-in the Castle who did more than all the rest
-together; and they were silent only because
-their hearts were too full for speech. These
-were madame, Alixe, and David the dwarf.
-While the little man worked at the decoration
-of the chapel, the women adorned the bridal
-chamber; and in all that week of preparation,
-not a soul save these two set foot over that
-sacred threshold. Madame had selected the
-room. It was not Gerault’s usual chamber, but
-one on the second floor, on the northwest corner
-of the Castle, separated from madame’s
-room only by the place in which Laure had
-slept of old, and which madame now kept
-closed to all save herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>For the adornment of Gerault’s and Lenore’s
-apartment, madame brought out the old historic
-tapestries, embroideries, and precious silken
-hangings that had been for years stowed away
-in great chests in the spinning-room. The
-bed was hung with curtains in which were
-woven illustrations of the “Romant of the
-Rose,” a poem that had once been much recited
-in Le Crépuscule. On the walls were
-great squares of tapestry representing the
-battles of the family of Montfort. On the
-floor were two or three strips of precious
-brocade, brought out of the East a century
-before by some crusading lord. Finished, the
-room looked very rich, but very sombre; and,
-this being the fashion of the times, it was satisfactory
-to all that saw it. Eleanore only, with
-eyes new-opened by the thought of approaching
-happiness, feared the room a little dark,
-a little heavy for the reception of so delicate
-a creature as the young Lenore. But every
-one else in the Castle was in such delight over
-its appearance that she left it as it was. Meantime
-the lower hall was hung with banners and
-scarred pennants and gay streamers; and then
-the pillars were wreathed with greenery and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>flowers till the still, gray place was all transformed,
-and resembled a triumphal hall awaiting
-the coming of a conqueror.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Thus the week of waiting passed merrily and
-rapidly away, and the day of the departure of
-Courtoise and the squires for Croitôt speedily
-arrived. With them also went a picked half-dozen
-men-at-arms, who were bursting with
-pride at this honor done their brilliant steel
-and smooth-flanked horses. After their going,
-when everything in the Castle was in readiness
-for the reception, a little wave of reaction set
-in among those left at home. Eleanore retired
-to commune with her own happy mind.
-David sought solitude in which to arrange a
-programme of welcome. And Alixe, seized
-with a sudden mood of misery, fled away to
-a certain cave in the base of the Castle cliff,
-and here wept and raged by herself, for some
-undefined reason, till her tears cleared the
-mists from her soul, and she was herself again.
-Still, as she returned to the Castle, she knew
-that there remained a bitterness in her heart.
-Eleanore, who had long ago come to mean
-mother to her, had, in the last month or two,
-for the first time given her almost a mother-love,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>that had fed Alixe’s hungry heart as the
-body of the Lord had never fed her soul.
-And now this love was to be taken away
-again. A real daughter was coming into the
-household, a daughter by the marriage of the
-Seigneur; and this, Alixe knew, must be a
-closer tie than any of time or custom. She
-must go back to her old place, the place she
-had held in the days of Laure; but she could
-never hope to find in the stranger the beautiful
-friendship that had existed between her and
-her foster-sister.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>That evening was a quiet one in the Castle.
-Monseigneur of St. Nazaire had arrived in the
-afternoon; but he seemed wearier than his
-wont, and, out of consideration for him, Eleanore
-ordered the general retirement at an early
-hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The next day, the great day, dawned over
-Le Crépuscule, red and clear and intensely hot.
-Every one was up before the sun; and when
-fast had been broken and prayer said in the
-chapel, every one went forth to the meadow,
-some even down to the moor, half a mile
-below the moat, to gather flowers to be scattered
-in the courtyard for the coming of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>bride. The party was expected to arrive by
-noon at latest; and, as the morning waned,
-Eleanore found herself uncontrollably nervous.
-Alixe and David both stood in the watch-tower,
-looking for the first sign of horses and banners
-on the edge of the forest at the foot of the long
-hill. Noon passed, and the earliest hour of
-afternoon, and the Castle was on tiptoe with
-excitement. At two o’clock came a cry from
-Alixe, in the tower. Down the hill, round the
-sweep in the road, was the flutter of a blue and
-white pennant, presently flanked by a longer
-one of gray. There was a pause of two or
-three moments. Then the trumpeters dashed
-out from the keep, ranged up before their captain,
-and blew a quick, triumphal, if somewhat
-jerky, fanfare. There was an outpouring of
-retainers into the courtyard, and presently,
-from far away, came the faint sounds of an
-answering blast from Gerault’s heralds. As
-this died away, a great shout of excitement and
-delight arose from the waiting company, now
-massed about the flower-strewn drawbridge,
-and only at this time Madame Eleanore came
-out of the Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Many eyes were turned upon her as she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>crossed the courtyard, bearing herself as royally
-as a princess. She was garbed in flowing
-robes of damask, white, and olive green, silver-studded,
-and her head was dressed in those
-great horns so much in fashion at this time,
-but seldom affected by her, and now lending
-an unrivalled majesty to her appearance.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame took her place at the right of the
-drawbridge, and, like all the throng, strained
-her eyes toward the approaching cavalcade
-that contained the future of Le Crépuscule.
-Apparently madame was very calm. In reality
-her heart beat so that it was like to suffocate
-her, for now Gerault’s form took on distinct
-shape before her eyes. The sun shot serpents
-of light around his helmet and his steel-encased
-arms, while over his body-pieces he
-wore the silken surcoat of pale gray, embroidered
-with the arms of his Castle. Gerault’s
-lance, held in rest, fluttered a pennant of azure
-and white, the colors of his lady; and Courtoise,
-who rode just behind his master, carried
-the gray streamer of Le Crépuscule.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Amid a tumult of blaring trumpets, vigorous
-shouting, and eager choruses of welcome and
-greeting, the Lord of Crépuscule, with his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>bride on her white palfrey beside him, rode
-across the drawbridge of the Twilight Castle.
-Just inside the courtyard Gerault halted, leaped
-from his horse, and ran quickly to embrace his
-mother. When he had held her for a moment
-in his arms, he turned, lifted his lady from her
-horse, and, amid an embarrassing silence of
-curiosity, led the young girl up to madame.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“In the name of Le Crépuscule and of its
-lord, I bid thee welcome to this Castle, my
-daughter! Good people, give greeting to your
-lady!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Men and maidens, serving-maids and henchmen,
-still gazing wide-eyed at the figure of the
-Seigneur’s wife, sent forth an inarticulate buzz
-of welcome and of admiration; and, when it had
-died away, Gerault took his bride by the hand,
-and, with Eleanore upon the other side, moved
-slowly across the courtyard toward the Castle
-doorway, where now stood the Bishop of St.
-Nazaire, waiting to add his welcome to the
-newly wed. Nor did the Bishop refrain from
-a little exclamation of pleasure at sight of the
-young wife, as she sank upon her knees before
-his mitre, to receive a blessing.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A few moments later the whole company
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>crowded into the brilliantly decorated hall and
-moved about, each selecting a desired place at
-the great horseshoe table ready prepared for
-the feast. Gerault was standing in the middle
-of the room, looking about him in surprise
-and pleasure at the preparations made to do
-him honor. Presently, however, he turned to
-his mother, who stood close at his elbow, and
-said, after a second’s hesitation: “I do not
-see Alixe, madame. Is she not here in the
-Castle?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore looked about her in some surprise.
-“Hast not seen her? Where hath she been?
-Ah, yes, there she stands, in yonder corner.
-Alixe! Hither!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe!” echoed Gerault; and strode to
-where she stood, half concealed, between the
-staircase and the chapel door, her head drooping,
-her eyes cast down.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Come, Alixe, and greet Lenore. She hath
-heard much of thee, and I would have you
-friends, for you are both young, and you must
-be good companions here together.” So he
-took her hand and kissed her, and led her out
-to where Eleanore and the young wife stood
-waiting.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>“Lenore, this is my foster-sister. La Rieuse
-have we called her, and she is well named.
-Give her greeting—” Gerault came to rather
-a halting pause; for the attitude of the two
-women nonplussed him.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore stood motionless, suddenly putting
-on a little dress of dignity, and looking steadfastly
-into the dark face of the other girl.
-Alixe, anything but laughing now, was absorbing,
-detail by detail, the delicate and exquisite
-personality of Gerault’s bride. More fairy-like
-than human she seemed, with her slender,
-beautifully curved child’s figure, her face neither
-white nor pink, but of a transparent, pearly
-tint indescribably ethereal, in which were set
-great eyes of violet hue, and all around which
-floated her hair,—that wonderful hair that was,
-indeed, a captive sun-ray. The curve of Lenore’s
-lips, the turn of her nostril, the poise of
-her head, and the delicacy of her hands and
-feet, all proclaimed her noble birth. The dress
-that she wore set off her beauty as pure gold
-makes a gem more brilliant. She wore a loosely
-fitting bliault of greenish blue, embroidered in
-long, silver vines, while her undersleeves and
-yoke were of frosty cloth of silver. Her head
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>was crowned with a simple circlet of gold, far
-less lustrous than her hair; and from it, at the
-back, fell a veil of silver tissue that touched
-the hem of her robe. All this dress was disordered
-and dusty with long riding; but the
-carelessness of it seemed to become her the
-better. In the rich heat of the July sun she
-had seemed a little too colorless, a little too
-pale and misty, for beauty; but here, in the
-cool shadows of the great stone hall, she was
-brighter than any angel.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe examined her long and carefully, to the
-confusion of the girl, whose feeling of strangeness
-and embarrassment continually increased.
-In the face of “La Rieuse” it was easy to read
-the struggle between jealousy and admiration.
-Alixe was, secretly, a worshipper of beauty;
-and beauty such as this of Lenore’s she had
-never seen before. In the end it triumphed.
-Alixe’s eyes grew brighter and brighter as she
-gazed; and presently, when the strain of silence
-was not much longer to be endured, there burst
-from her the involuntary exclamation,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“God of dreams! How art thou fair!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>And from that moment the allegiance of
-Alixe was fixed. She was on her knees to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>Lenore, this fair usurper of her place, this
-Gerault’s bride.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Presently the moving company resolved itself
-into order, and each sought his place at the
-table, where the Seigneur and St. Nazaire now
-stood side by side, at the head, with Lenore
-upon Gerault’s left hand, madame on St.
-Nazaire’s right, and Alixe next madame and
-opposite Courtoise, who was placed beside the
-bride. There was a long Latin grace from the
-Bishop, and then the feast began. It was like
-all the feasts of the day, a matter of stuffing till
-one could hold no more, and then of drinking
-till one knew no more; for, to the commoner
-folk, and those below the salt, this was the
-greatest pleasure in life. To those for whom
-the feast was given, and to the rest of the little
-group at the head of the table, the whole business
-was sufficiently tedious: not to say, however,
-that monseigneur and even Gerault
-showed no symptoms of fondness for a morsel
-of peacock’s breast, or a calf’s head stuffed
-with the brains, pounded suet, and raisins, over
-which was poured a good brown gravy. Courtoise
-and Alixe also displayed healthy appetites.
-But madame and Lenore, whether from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>excitement or other causes, sat for the most
-part playing with what was put before them,
-and eating nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After half an hour at the table Madame
-Eleanore found herself watching, with rather
-unexpected interest, the attitude of Gerault
-toward his wife. And she perceived, with a
-kind of dull surprise, that his attentions
-savored of perfunctoriness. The Seigneur
-failed in no way to do his lady courtesy; but
-that air of tender delight that the personality
-of the young girl would be expected to draw
-from a young husband, was not there. Whatever
-impression of indifference madame received,
-however, she admitted no such thing
-to herself. Her heart was too full of joy for
-Gerault, and for Le Crépuscule. For, great as
-had been her hopes of her son’s choice, her
-dreams had never pictured a being so rare
-and so lovely as this who was come to dwell
-at her side in the gray and ancient Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As for Lenore herself, she seemed to see
-nothing but devotion in Gerault’s attitude
-toward her. She sat with a smile upon her
-face, playing daintily with what she had to
-eat, answering any question or remark put
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>to her with a straightforwardness that had in
-it no taint of self-consciousness, even addressing
-a sentence or two of her own to Courtoise
-on her right; but at the same time holding
-all heart and soul for Gerault. The Seigneur
-did not speak much with his wife, but answered
-her modest glances with an air of mild indulgence,
-taking small notice of anything that
-went on round him save the keen looks now
-and then shot from the scintillating green eyes
-of Alixe. Of all the tableful, Alixe was the
-only one that found any food for thought
-in the situation before her; and, surprisingly
-enough, the key to her reflections lay in the
-curious behavior of Courtoise, who, as time
-went on, became so uneasy, so fidgety, so restless,
-that Gerault finally leaned over the table
-and asked him rather sharply if he were ill.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the course of time, however, the last jack
-was emptied, the last song sung, the last
-questionable story told. Monseigneur de St.
-Nazaire rose and repeated the ending grace,
-and then the whole drowsy, witless company
-followed him into the glowing chapel, where
-a short mass was performed. Lenore and
-Gerault knelt side by side to the right of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>altar, with Eleanore a little behind them, where
-she could watch the bright candle-rays vie
-with the radiance of Lenore’s golden hair,
-and see where the silvery bridal robe overlapped
-a little the edge of the gray surcoat of
-Le Crépuscule, that swept the floor beside it.
-The mother-eyes were all for the girlish form
-of the new daughter; and her heart went out
-again to Gerault, who had brought this fairy
-creature to Le Crépuscule, in place of her who
-had been so terribly mourned.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore listened to the repetition of the
-mass with a reverent air, but without much
-thinking of the familiar form. Her mind was
-busy with thoughts of these new surroundings
-and the faces of the new vassals and
-companions. Gerault, her beloved, was at
-her side; the great silver crucifix that hung
-over the altar gave her a sense of comfort and
-protection, and she found a restful pleasure in
-the tones of the Bishop’s voice. The bright
-candle-light that shone into her eyes produced
-in her a semi-hypnotic state, and she seemed
-to have knelt there at the altar but three or
-four minutes when the words of the benediction
-fell upon her ears, and presently the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>whole company was trooping out into the
-great hall, whence all signs of the feast had
-been removed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the same dreamlike way, Lenore went
-with her husband and madame upstairs, to
-the room that had been prepared for her and
-Gerault. Here her two demoiselles were already
-unpacking the coffer which had come
-from Rennes with them. And here she removed
-her travel-stained garments, bathed the
-dust from her face and arms, was combed and
-perfumed like the great lady she had become,
-and lay down to rest for a little time in the
-twilight, with new ministers to her comfort all
-about her. Later, as it grew dark, she dressed
-again and descended to the great hall, where
-further merriment was in progress.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The demoiselles and squires of the Castle
-were now holding high revel, and their games
-caused the old stone walls to echo with laughter
-and shrieks of delight. In one corner of
-the room madame and the Bishop sat together
-over a game of chess. Gerault was near them,
-where he could watch the battle; but his eyes
-were often to be seen following the light figure
-of Lenore through the mazes of the dances and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>games in which she so eagerly joined. The
-sports in which these maidens and young men
-grown indulged, were commonly played by
-older folk throughout France, and have descended
-almost intact to the children of a more
-advanced and less light-hearted age. Lenore
-entered into the play with a pleasure too unconscious
-not to be genuine. She laughed and
-sang and chattered, and put herself at home
-with every one. She was soon the leading
-spirit of the company, as she had been wont
-to be in her own home. The games were innumerable:
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Pantouffle</span></i>, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Pince-Mérille</span></i>, <em>Bric</em>, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Qui
-Féry</span></i>, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Roi qui ne Ment pas</span></i>, and a dozen
-others. And were there a forfeit to be paid
-in the shape of a kiss, she instantly deserted
-Courtoise and David, who, enraptured with
-her youth and gayety, kept close on either
-side of her, and delivered it with shy delight
-to Gerault, who scarcely appeared to appreciate
-the gifts he got.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the course of time a “Ribbon Dance”
-was ordered, and madame and monseigneur
-actually left their game to lead it, drawing
-Gerault with them into the sport. Obediently
-he gave one hand to Lenore, the other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>to Alixe, and went through the dance with
-apathetic grace, bringing by his half unconscious
-manner the first chill upon Lenore’s
-happy evening. This was, however, the end
-of the amusement; and when the flushed and
-panting company finally halted, Gerault at once
-drew his wife to madame’s side, himself saluted
-his mother, and then followed Lenore up the
-torchlit stairs. In ten minutes the whole
-company had dispersed, and Eleanore remained
-alone in the great hall.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When she had extinguished all the lights
-below, madame passed up the stairs, putting
-out the smoking torches as she went, and,
-reaching the upper hall, went immediately to
-her own bedroom. Here she slipped off the
-heavy mantle and the modified “cote-hardi.”
-Then, clad only in a long, light, damask tunic,
-she went over to one of the wide-open west
-windows, and, leaning across its sill, looked
-out upon the vasty, murmurous, summer sea.
-Low on the horizon, among a group of faint
-clustering stars, swung the crescent moon, which
-was reflected in the smooth surface of a distant
-wave. A great, fresh, salt breath came up like
-a tonic through the wilted air. The voice of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>the sea was infinitely soothing. Eleanore listened
-to it eagerly, her lips parted, her eyes
-wandering along that distant wave-line; her
-thoughts almost as far away. Presently the
-door of her room opened, softly; and some
-one paused upon the threshold. Instinctively
-she knew who it was that entered. Half turning,
-she said gently,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou’rt come here, Gerault?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Her son came forward slowly, halted a few
-steps away, and held out one hand to her.
-She went to him and took it, wondering a
-little at his manner, but not questioning him.
-Quietly she drew the young man to the
-window where she had been; and both stood
-there and looked out upon the scene. They
-were silent for a long time. It was intensely
-difficult for Gerault to speak; and madame
-knew not how to help him. At length, in a
-voice that sounded slightly strained, he asked:
-“Thou’rt pleased with her? Thou’rt satisfied,
-my mother?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Oh, Gerault! Gerault! She is so fair, so
-delicate, so like some faery child! I almost
-fear to see her beauty fade in the shadow
-of these gray walls.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>“And will she—Lenore—help thee, in
-a way, to forget thy grief in Laure?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore gave a sudden, involuntary sob;
-for none had pronounced that name to her
-since the early spring. The sob was answer
-enough to Gerault’s question. But in a
-moment she said, in a voice that was perfectly
-controlled: “Methinks I love her, thy
-lady, already. Ah, my son, she is very sweet!
-Very, very sweet and fair!”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER SEVEN</em><br /> <span class='large'>THE LOST LENORE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_191.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-When Gerault left her to go
-to his mother’s room, on that
-first evening in the Castle that
-was to be her home, Lenore
-was still fully dressed. As
-soon as she was alone, however,
-she made herself ready for the night; and
-then, wrapping herself about in her long day-mantle,
-went to a window overlooking the sea,
-and sat there waiting for her lord’s return.
-Now that the excitement of the day, of the
-arrival, of meeting so many new people, all
-eager to make her welcome, was over, Lenore
-began to feel herself very weary, a little homesick,
-a little wistful, and tremulously eager for
-Gerault’s speedy return. She clung to the
-thought of him and her newly risen love, with
-pathetic anxiety. Was it not lawful and right
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>that she should love him? Was it not equally
-lawful and therefore equally certain that he
-must love her? She knew little enough of
-love and of men, young Lenore; yet this idea
-came to her instinctively, and it seemed impossible
-that it could be otherwise. It was so
-recently that she had been a little girl in all
-her thoughts and pleasures and habits, that
-this sudden transition to the dignified estate
-of wifehood had left her singularly helpless,
-singularly dependent on the man whom she
-had married out of duty and fallen in love
-with afterwards, on the way from Rennes.
-Gerault helped her, in his way. He was
-kind, he was gentle, was solicitous for her
-comfort, and required of her nothing but a
-quiet demeanor. But that he failed in some
-way to give her what was her due, the young
-girl rather felt than knew.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>While she waited here alone, looking out
-upon the lonely sea, that was so new and
-so wonderful a sight to her, the Lady Lenore
-bitterly regretted and took herself to task for
-her gayety of the evening. The silly games
-that she had once so loved to play—alas!
-he had not joined in them, doubtless thought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>them trivial and unbecoming in a woman
-grown and married! She had made herself
-a fool before him! He was older than she,
-and wiser, and a gallant knight. Lenore’s
-cheeks flushed with pride as she remembered
-how he could joust and tilt at the ring. She
-remembered when she had first seen him,
-from the gallery of the list at Rennes, when
-he unseated the Seigneur Geoffrey Cartel.
-This lordly sport was as simple to him as
-her games to her. Little wonder that she
-had exhausted his patience! And yet—if
-he would but come to her now! She was
-so sadly weary; and it grew so late. Her
-little body ached, her temples throbbed, her
-eyes burned with the past glare of the sun
-on the white dust, and the recent flickering
-light of the torches. If he would but come
-back, and forgive her her childishness, and
-kiss her before she slept, she would be very
-happy.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In point of fact Gerault did come soon.
-Knowing that Lenore must be weary, he remained
-but a short time with his mother,
-and returned immediately to his wife. The
-moment that he entered the room, Lenore
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>rose from her place, and ran to him with a
-faint cry of delight.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“At last thou art come! Thou art come!”
-she said indistinctly, not wanting him to hear
-the words, yet unable to keep from saying
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And didst thou sit up for me, child, and
-thou so weary? I went but to give my mother
-good-night, for thou knowest ’tis long since I
-saw her last. She sent thee her blessing and
-sweet rest; and my wish is fellow to hers.
-Come now, child.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault lifted her up in his arms, and, carrying
-her to the bed, laid her down in it, mantle
-and all. In the carrying, Lenore had leaned
-her head upon his shoulder, and her two tired
-arms folded themselves around his neck. How
-it was that Gerault felt no thrill at this touch;
-that it was almost a relief to him when the
-hold loosened; and how, though he slept at
-her side that night, his dreams, freer replica
-of his day-thoughts, were filled with vague
-trouble, he himself could scarce have told;
-and yet it was so.</p>
-
-<div id='i_195' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i_195.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic006'>
-<p><em><span class='c016'>O</span>nly one among them seemed<br />not of their mood.—Page <a href='#Page_31'>31</a></em></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>Next morning, however, Gerault watched her
-waken, looking as rosy and fresh as a child,
-and smiling a child’s delighted welcome at the
-new day. Unquestionably she was a pleasure
-to him at such times. Before her marriage he
-had liked, in thinking of her, to accentuate her
-fairy-like ways, because through them he had
-brought himself to marry her. And now his
-treatment of her resembled most, perhaps, the
-treatment of something very fine and fair,
-something very rare and delicate and generally
-to be prized, but not really belonging to him,
-not essentially valued by him, or near at all to
-his human heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When they were ready for the day, the two
-of them, Lenore and Gerault, did not linger
-together in their room, but descended immediately
-to the chapel, where morning prayers
-were just beginning. Every eye was turned
-upon them as they entered the holy room;
-and it was as sunshine greeting sunshine when
-Lenore faced the open window, through which
-poured the golden light of July. Madame’s
-heart swelled and beat fast, and that of Alixe
-all but stopped, as each beheld the morning’s
-bride; and they perceived, with a kind of dull
-surprise, that Gerault’s face was as dark-browed,
-as reserved, as melancholy as ever. It seemed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>impossible that he should not be moved to
-new life by the presence and possession of so
-fair a thing as this Lenore. Yet when the
-devotions were at an end, and the Castle household
-rose and moved out to where the tables
-were spread for the breaking of the fast, no one
-noted how the young girl’s blue eyes glanced
-once or twice a little wistfully, a little forlornly,
-up into the unmoved face of her husband, and
-that she got therefrom no answering smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In celebration of the Seigneur’s wedding, a
-week’s holiday had been declared for every
-one in the Castle; and so, when the first meal
-of the day was at an end, the demoiselles, in
-high glee at escaping from the morning’s toil
-in the hot spinning-room, gayly proposed to
-their attendant squires that they repair at once
-to the open meadows, where there was glorious
-opportunity for games and caroles. Lenore’s
-eyes lighted with pleasure at this proposal; but
-she looked instinctively at Gerault, to see if
-his face approved the plan. She found his
-eyes upon her; and, as he caught her glance,
-he motioned her to his side, and drew her
-with him a little apart from the general group.
-Then he said to her kindly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>“Beloved, I shall see thee at noon meat.
-Courtoise and I go forth this morning together
-to try two of the new falcons that Alixe
-hath trained. Thou’lt fare gently here with all
-the demoiselles and the young squires; and
-see that thou weary not thyself at play in the
-heat. Till noon, my little one!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He bent and touched his lips to her hair,—that
-sunlit hair,—and then, as he strode away,
-followed, but half willingly, by Courtoise, Lenore’s
-head bent forward, and her eyes, that
-for one instant had brimmed full, were shut
-tight till the unbidden drops went back again.
-When she looked up once more, Alixe was at
-her side, and the expression on the face of
-La Rieuse was full of unlooked-for tenderness.
-Lenore, however, was too proud for pity, and
-in a moment she smiled, and said bravely:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“My lord is going a-hawking with his
-squire. Shall we to the fields? Said they not
-that we should go to weave garlands in the
-fields?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yes! To the fields! To the fields! Hola,
-David! We are commanded to the fields by
-our Queen of Delight!” called Alixe, loudly,
-waving her hands above her head, and striving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>in every way to gain the attention of the company.
-But in spite of her efforts, Gerault’s
-departure was seen, and there was a general
-outcry of protest, which did not, however, reach
-the ears of the Seigneur. Then Lenore was
-forced to bear the comments of the company:
-their loudly expressed disappointment, and the
-unspoken but infinitely more painful astonishment
-plainly indicated in every glance. Nevertheless
-the young girl had in her the instincts
-of a fine race, and she bore everything with a
-heroic unconcern that won Alixe’s admiration,
-and so far deceived the thoughtless throng as
-to bring her a new accusation of indifference to
-Gerault’s absence.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>To the girl-bride that morning passed—somehow.
-It was perhaps the bitterest three
-hours she had ever endured; yet she would
-not confess her disappointment even to herself.
-Besides, was not Gerault coming home again?
-Had he not said that he would be back at noon?
-Had he not called her “beloved”? Her heart
-thrilled at the thought; and she forgot the
-fact that Gerault knew that she could ride with
-hawk on wrist and tell a fair quarry when she
-saw it. She forgot that at such times as this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>even hawking will generally give way to love;
-and that he is a sorry bridegroom that loves
-his horse better than his bride. Yet she forgave
-him for the time, and regained her smiles
-until the shadow of a new dread fell upon her.
-She could endure the morning; but the afternoon?
-Would he remain with her through
-the afternoon? Alas, here was the terrible
-pity of it! She could not tell.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>However, this last dread proved to be
-groundless. Gerault made no move to leave
-the Castle again that day. Perhaps he even felt
-a little guilty of neglect; or perhaps her greeting
-on his return betrayed to him how she had
-suffered through the morning. However it
-was, as soon as the long dinner was at an end,
-the Seigneur and his lady were observed to
-wander away into the armory, and they sat
-there together, on the same settle, until the
-shadows grew long in the courtyard and the
-afternoon was nearly worn away. What they
-said to one another, or how Gerault entertained
-his maid, no one knew; for, oddly enough,
-Courtoise had put himself on guard at the
-armory door, and would permit none to venture
-so much as a peep into the room on which his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>own back was religiously turned. So for that
-afternoon demoiselles and squires chose King
-and Queen of their revels from among their
-own number, and perhaps enjoyed their games
-the better for that fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When the sun was leaning far toward the
-broad breast of the sea, all the Castle, mindful
-of their souls, repaired to the chapel for vespers,
-a service held only when the Bishop
-was at Le Crépuscule. Gerault and Lenore
-were the last to appear, and while the Seigneur’s
-expression was rather thoughtful than
-happy, it had in it, nevertheless, a suggestion
-of Lenore’s repressed joy, so that madame,
-seeing him, was satisfied for the first time since
-his home-coming.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>But alas for the thoughts and hopes that
-this afternoon had raised in the observing ones
-of Le Crépuscule, Lenore and her husband
-were not seen again to spend a single hour
-alone together. Gerault remained for the most
-part with the general company of the Castle,
-not seeking to escape to solitude with Courtoise,
-but holding his lady from him at arm’s
-length. His attitude toward her was uneasy.
-He did not avoid her, but, were they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>by chance left alone together for ten minutes,
-his manner changed till it was like that
-of a man guilty of some dishonorable thing.
-Oftentimes, when they were with a number
-of others, Gerault would be seen to
-watch Lenore closely, and his eyes would light
-with momentary pleasure at some one of
-her unconscious graces. But the light never
-stayed. Quickly his black brows would
-darken, the shadows re-cover his face, and
-he would be more unapproachable than
-before.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the course of a few days, Lenore began
-to grow morbidly sensitive over her husband’s
-attitude; and, out of sheer misery, she began
-to avoid him persistently. This brought a
-still more bitter blow to her, for she discovered
-that he was glad to be avoided. Lenore was
-desperate; but still she was brave, still she
-held to herself; and if at times she sought
-refuge with madame and Alixe, those two
-kindly and pitying souls met her with outstretched
-arms of silent sympathy, and never
-betrayed to her by so much as a glance how
-much they had observed of Gerault’s incomprehensible
-neglect.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>The holiday week passed, and with its end
-came a spirit of relief that it was over. Next
-morning the usual occupations were begun,
-and Lenore went up to the spinning-room with
-the rest of the women. This work-room was
-on the second floor, and ran almost the whole
-length of the south side of the Castle: a long,
-narrow room, with many windows looking out
-upon the courtyard, and only a sideways view
-of the hazy, turquoise sea. Here was every
-known mechanical contrivance for the making
-of cloth and tapestry, and their development
-out of the raw wool. The loom, just now
-half filled with a warp of pale green, stood at
-the east end of the room; the fixed combs,
-the half-dozen spinning-wheels, the tambour-frames
-for embroidery, and the great tapestry-border
-frame, were ranged in an orderly line
-down the remaining length, and each of the
-maidens had her particular task of the summer
-in some stage of completion. Since Lenore’s
-arrival a spinning-wheel had been set up here
-for her, and she sat down to it at once, while
-her demoiselles were directed by madame to
-begin work on the tapestry border, at which
-four could apply the needle at the same time.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>As the roomful settled quickly to work,
-under the general guidance of madame, Lenore
-began to tread her wheel and draw out thread
-with a hand practised enough to win the approval
-even of Eleanore. And as the morning
-wore along, Lenore found herself unaccountably
-soothed and comforted by her task and
-the kindly atmosphere of perseverance and
-attention to duty surrounding her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Nevertheless, it was not a comfortable day
-for such work. The heat was intense. Fingers
-grew constantly damp with sweat. Thread
-knotted and broke, silk drew, and little exclamations
-of anger and disgust were frequently
-to be heard. However, the labor was
-continued as usual for three hours, till eleven
-o’clock, the dinner hour, came, and the little
-company willingly left the spinning-room to
-another afternoon of silence, and went downstairs
-to meat. At the foot of the stairs stood
-Gerault, waiting for Lenore; and when she
-reached him he kissed her upon the brow
-before leading her to table. In that moment
-the girl’s heart sang, and she felt that her
-day had been fittingly crowned.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the early afternoon Lenore found that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>there were new occupations for all the Castle.
-The demoiselles were despatched to the long
-room on the first floor, which, though not
-dignified by the name of library, yet took
-that place, for instruction in certain things,
-mental and moral, by the friar-steward, Father
-Anselm. The young men were at sword
-practice in the keep. And Lenore, who could
-write her name and read a little from parchment
-manuscripts in both Latin and French,
-and whose education was therefore finished,
-was summoned by madame and taken over
-the whole Castle, receiving, at various stages,
-instruction in domestic duties and the management
-of the great building. She saw everything,
-from the linen-presses upstairs to the
-wine-cellars underground; and everywhere the
-hand of madame was visible in the scrupulous
-exactness and neatness with which the Castle
-was kept. Then in her heart Lenore determined
-that in time she would learn madame’s
-habits, and, if it could be done in no other
-way, win Gerault’s respect by her abilities as a
-housekeeper.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The hours of late afternoon and early evening
-were devoted to recreation, which was entered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>into with new zest by every one. To be
-sure, Gerault sat all evening with his mother,
-playing draughts. But his eyes occasionally
-strayed to the figure of his wife; and later,
-when the Castle was still, and Lenore, in the
-great curtained bed, was wandering on the
-borderland of sleep, she felt that this day was
-the happiest she had yet spent in Le Crépuscule;
-and she knew in her heart that work and
-work only could now bring her peace. And
-thereafter, poor little dreamer, a smile hovered
-upon her face as she slept!</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the tenth day of the new regime in Le
-Crépuscule, squire Courtoise sat in the armory,
-polishing the design engraved on his lord’s
-breastplate. Courtoise was moody. Ordinarily
-his cheerfulness in the face of insuperable
-dulness was something to be proud of. But
-latterly his faith, the one great faith in his
-heart,—not religion, but utter devotion to
-his lord—had been receiving a series of
-shocks that had shaken it to its foundation.
-Courtoise was by nature as gentle, genial, and
-kindly a fellow as ever held a lance; and in
-his heart he had for years blindly worshipped
-Gerault. His creed of devotion, indeed, had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>embraced the whole family of Le Crépuscule,
-because Gerault was its head. Till the time
-of their last going to Rennes, there had been
-for him no woman like madame, no such maid
-as Laure, and no man anywhere comparable
-to his master. Poor Laure had dealt him a
-grievous blow when she followed Flammecœur
-from the priory. But from the day of Gerault’s
-betrothal to little Lenore, the daughter
-of the Iron Chateau had held his heart in
-her hand, and might have done with it as she
-would. Loving the two of them as he did,
-and seeing each day fresh proof of Lenore’s
-affection for her lord and his, Courtoise naturally
-looked for a fitting return of this from the
-Seigneur. And here, all in a night, Courtoise’s
-first great doubt had entered in. They had
-been married three days, they were barely at Le
-Crépuscule, before Courtoise saw what made
-him sick with uneasiness. If the Seigneur had
-wedded this exquisite maiden with the sunlit
-hair, must he not love her? And yet—and
-yet—and yet—Courtoise sat in the armory
-and polished freely at the steel, and swore to
-himself under his breath, recklessly incurring
-whatever penance Anselm should see fit to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>give. For here it was mid-afternoon, and his
-little lady just freed from her hours of toil;
-and there was Gerault gone off by himself,
-without even his squire, forsooth, to hawk with
-the Iron-Beak over the moor!</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise had been indulging himself in ire
-for some time, when a shadow stole past the
-doorway of the armory. He looked up. The
-shadow had gone; but presently it returned
-and halted: “Courtoise!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The young fellow leaped to his feet, and
-the breastplate clattered to the floor. Lenore,
-looking very transparently pale, very humbly
-wistful, and having just a suspicion of red
-around her eyes, was regarding him tentatively
-from the doorway.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ma dame, what service dost thou ask?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“None, Courtoise,” the voice sounded rather
-faint and tired. “None, save to tell me if
-thou hast lately seen my lord.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The expression on her face was so pathetic
-that Courtoise was suddenly struck to the
-heart, and he bit his tongue before he could
-reply quietly enough: “Ma Dame Lenore,
-Seigneur Gerault rode out long time since
-a-hawking; and methinks he will shortly now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>return. The hour for evening meat approaches.
-I—I—” he broke off, stammering;
-and Lenore without speaking bowed her
-head, and patiently turned away.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise sat down again when she left
-him, and remained motionless, the steel on
-his knees, his hands idle, staring into space.
-Suddenly he leaped to his feet and hurled the
-breastplate to the floor with a smothered oath.
-“Gray of St. Gray!” he cried, “what devil
-hath seized the man I loved? Gerault, my
-lord, rides out and leaves this angel to weep
-after him! Gray of St. Gray! what desires
-he more fair than this his Lenore? What—what—what—”
-the muttered words died into
-thoughts as Courtoise clapped a cap on his
-head and strode away from the armory and
-out of the Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the courtyard the first object that met his
-eyes was Gerault’s horse, standing in front of
-the keep, with a stable-boy holding him by the
-bridle. Gerault himself was in the doorway of
-the empty falcon-house, holding a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">hagard</span></i> on
-his wrist, while two dead pigeons swung from
-his girdle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Courtoise! Behold our spoils! Hath not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>Talon-Fer done Alixe’s training honor?” cried
-Gerault, the note of pleasure keener than usual
-in his voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise, flushed with rising anger, went
-over to him. “My lord, the Lady Lenore
-asks for thee!” he said a little hoarsely, paying
-no attention to the dead pigeons or the
-young falcon.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault very slightly raised his brows, more
-at Courtoise’s tone, perhaps, than at the words
-he spoke. “The Lady Lenore,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Even so—the Lady Lenore—thy wife!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I understand thee, good Courtoise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The veins in the younger man’s neck and
-temples stood out under the strain of repression.
-“Comes my lord?” he asked slowly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“In good time, Courtoise. The <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">hagard</span></i>
-must be fed.” Gerault would have turned
-away, but Courtoise, with a burst of irritation,
-exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I will feed the creature!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Now Gerault turned to him again: “Hast
-thou some strange malady or frenzy, that
-thou shouldst use such tones to me, boy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Tones—tones, and yet again tones! Gerault—thou
-churl! Ay, I that have been faithful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>squire to thee these many years, I say it.
-Thou churl and worse, to have wedded with
-the sweetest lady ever sun shone upon, to bring
-her, a stranger, home to thy Castle, and then
-leave her there, day following day, while thou
-ridest over the moors to dally with some bird!
-All the Castle stares at the cruelty of thy neglect.
-Daily the demoiselles whisper together,
-wondering what distemper thy lady hath that
-thou seest her not by day—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Hush, boy—hush! Thou’rt surely mad!”
-cried out Gerault, with a note in his voice that
-gave Courtoise pause.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Then there fell between them a silence,
-heavy, and so binding that Courtoise could
-not move. He stood staring into his master’s
-face, watching the color grow from white to
-red and back again, and the expression change
-from angry amazement to something softer,
-something strange, something that Courtoise
-did not know in his lord’s face. And Gerault
-gnawed his lip, and bent low his head, and
-presently spoke, in a voice that was not his
-own, but was rather curiously muffled and
-unnatural.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou sayest well, Courtoise. ’Tis true I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>have neglected her, poor, frail, pretty child!
-Ah! I had never thought how I have neglected
-her”; and Gerault sat suddenly down upon
-the step of the falcon-house and laid his head
-in his hands, in an attitude of such dejection
-that Courtoise experienced a swift rush of
-repentance.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>For some time there was again silence between
-them. Courtoise, thoroughly mystified
-by the whole situation, had nothing whatever
-to say. Finally the Seigneur stood up, this
-time with his head high, and his self-control
-returned. He put the falcon, screaming, into
-his squire’s hands, and took the bodies of the
-pigeons from his belt.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“So, Courtoise, I leave them all with you.
-Where is the Lady Lenore?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Sooth, I know not; yet methinks when
-she left the armory where she had spoken to
-me, she passed into the chapel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I go to her. And I thank thee, Courtoise,
-for thy rebuke.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“My lord, my lord, forgive me!” Courtoise
-choked with a sudden new rush of devotion
-for his master. He would have fallen on his
-knees there on the courtyard stones, but that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>the Seigneur, with a faint smile at him, was
-gone, carrying alone the burden of his inexplicable
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The Lady Lenore was in the chapel, half
-kneeling, half lying upon the altar-step. In
-the dim light of the shadowy place her golden
-hair and amber-colored garments glimmered
-faintly. She was not praying, yet neither was
-she weeping, now. The long, hot loneliness
-of the afternoon had thrown her into a state of
-apathy, in which she wished for nothing, and
-in which she refused to think. She had no
-desire for company; but had any one come—David,
-or Alixe, or Madame—she should not
-have cared. It was only Gerault that she
-would not have see her in this place and attitude.
-The thought of Gerault was continually
-with her, as something omnipresent; but at
-this especial hour she felt no wish to see the
-man himself. Yet now he came. She heard a
-tread on the stones that sent a tremor through
-her whole body. Then some one was kneeling
-beside her, and a quiet voice said gently in
-her ear,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Lenore!—My child!—Why art thou
-lying here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>Lenore tried hard to speak; but her throat
-contracted convulsively, and she made no
-answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Child, art thou sick for thy home? Thou
-hast found sorrow here, and loneliness, in this
-new abode. Perhaps thou wouldst have had
-me oftener at thy side. Is it so, Lenore?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The girl’s golden head burrowed down into
-her arms, and she seemed to shake it, but she
-did not speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault looked about him a little helplessly.
-Then, taking new resolution, he put one arm
-about her, and, drawing her slight form close
-to him, he said in a halting and broken way:
-“Come, my wife—come with me for a little
-time. Let us walk out together to the cliff
-by the sea. The sun draws near the water—the
-afternoon grows rich with gold.—And
-thou and I will talk together.—Lenore, much
-might I tell thee of myself, whereby thou couldst
-understand many things that trouble thee now.
-Knowing them, and with them, me, thou shalt
-more justly judge me. Come, little one,—rise
-up!” He drew her to her feet beside
-him, and then, with his arms still around her,
-he stood and put his lips to her half-averted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>cheek. Under that kiss she grew cold and
-tremulous, but still preserved her silence.
-Then the two moved, side by side, out of the
-Castle, through the courtyard, and on to the
-outer terrace that ran along the very edge of
-the precipitous cliff against which, far below,
-the summer sea gently broke and plashed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Here, hand in hand, the Seigneur and his
-lady walked, looking off together at the glory
-of the mighty waters. The crimson sky was
-veiled in light clouds that caught a more
-and more splendid reflection of the fiery ball
-behind them; while the moving waves below
-were stained with pink and mellow gold.
-Lenore kept her eyes fixed fast upon this
-sight, while she listened to what Gerault was
-saying to her. He talked, in a fitful, chaotic
-way, of many things: of his boyhood here, of
-Laure his sister, and Alixe, and of “one other
-that was not as any of us,—our cousin, a
-daughter of Laval, whose dead mother had
-put her in the keeping of mine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>So much mention of this girl Gerault made,
-and then went on to other things, jumbling
-together many incidents and scenes of his
-boyhood and his youth, never guessing that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>Lenore, who continued so quietly to look off
-upon the sea, had seized upon this one little
-thing that he had said, and realized, with
-a woman’s intuition, that the story of his
-heart lay here. As Gerault rambled on, he
-came gradually to feel that he had lost her
-attention, and so, little by little, as the sunset
-light died away, he ceased to speak, and there
-crept in upon them, over them, through them,
-that terrible silence that both of them knew:
-the all-pervading, ghostly silence that haunted
-this spot; the silence that had brought the
-name upon the Castle,—the Chateau du
-Crépuscule. Lenore grew slowly cold with
-miserable foreboding, while Gerault, rebelling
-against himself, was struggling to break the
-bonds of his own nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Well named is this home of ours, Lenore,”
-he said sadly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea, it is well named,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Wilt thou—be—lonely forever here?
-Art thou lonely now? Hast thou a sickness
-for thy home and for thy people?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>For an instant Lenore hesitated. At Gerault’s
-words her heart had leaped up with
-a great cry of “Yes”; and yet now there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>was something in her that withheld her from
-saying it. When at last she answered him,
-her words were unaccountable to herself, yet
-she spoke them feelingly: “Nay, Gerault.
-Thou hast taken me to be one with thee.
-Thou hast brought me here to thy home,
-and it is also mine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A light of pleasure came into Gerault’s face,
-and he took her into his arms with a freer
-and more open warmth than he had ever
-shown her before. “Indeed, thou art my
-wife—one with me—my sweet one—my
-sweet child Lenore! And this my home is
-also thine,—Chateau du Crépuscule!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Suddenly Lenore shivered in his clasp.
-That word “Crépuscule” sounded like a
-knell in her ears, and as she looked upon
-the gray walls looming out of the twilight
-mists, the very blood in her veins stood still.
-Whether Gerault felt her dread she did not
-know, but he did not loose his hold upon
-her for a long time. They stood, close-clasped,
-on the edge of the cliff, looking
-off upon the darkening sea, till, over the
-eastern horizon line, the great pink moon
-slipped up, giving promise of glory to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>night. The cool evening breeze came off
-the waters. They heard the creaking and
-grating of the drawbridge, as it was raised.
-Then a flock of sea gulls floated up from
-the water below, and veered southward, along
-the shore, toward their home. Finally, in the
-deepening west, the evening star came out,
-hanging there like a diamond on an invisible
-thread. Then Gerault whispered in the ear
-of Lenore,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Sweet child, it is late. The hour of evening
-meat is now long past. Let us go into
-the Castle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore yielded at once to the pressure of
-Gerault’s arm, and let herself be drawn away.
-But she carried forever after the memory of
-that quiet half-hour, in which the mighty
-hand of nature had been lifted over her to
-give her blessing.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise the faithful had kept the two from
-a summons at the hour of supper; and on
-their return they found food left upon the
-table for them; but, what was unusual at this
-time, the great room was empty. Only Courtoise,
-who was again at work in the armory,
-knew how long they sat and ate and talked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>together, and only he saw them when they
-rose from table, passed immediately to the
-stairs, and ascended, side by side. Then the
-young squire knew that they would come
-down no more that night; and he guessed
-what was really true: that on that evening
-Lenore’s cup of happiness seemed full; for,
-as never before, Gerault claimed and took to
-himself the unselfish devotion that she was
-so ready to give. When she slept, a smile
-yet lingered round her lips; nor, in that
-sleep, did she feel the change that came upon
-her lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Not many hours after she had sunk to rest,
-Lenore woke slowly, to find herself alone in
-the canopied bed. Gerault was not there.
-She put out her hand to him, and found his
-place empty. Opening her eyes with a little
-effort, she pushed the curtains back from the
-edge of the bed, and looked about her. It
-could not be more than twelve o’clock. The
-room was flooded with moonlight, till it looked
-like a fairy place. The three windows were
-wide open to the breath of the sea; and beside
-one of them knelt Gerault. He was wrapped
-in a full mantle that hid the lines of his figure;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>and Lenore could see only that his brow rested
-on the window-sill, that his shoulders were
-bent, and his hands clasped tight on the ledge
-beyond his head. Unutterable pain was expressed
-in the attitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>What was he doing there? Of what were
-his thoughts? Why had he left her side?
-Above all, what was his secret trouble? These
-questions passed quickly through Lenore’s
-brain, and her first impulse was to rise and go
-to him. Had she not the right to know his
-heart? Had he not given it to her this very
-night? She looked at him again, asking herself
-if he were really in pain; if he were not
-rather simply looking out upon the moonlit
-sea, and was now, perhaps, engaged in prayer,
-to which the beauty of the scene had lifted him.
-She would go to him and learn.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She sat up in bed, pushed her golden hair
-out of her neck and back from her face. Then
-she drew the curtains still farther aside, preparatory
-to stepping out, when suddenly she
-saw Gerault lift his head as if he listened for
-something far away; and then she caught the
-whispered word, “Lenore!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>For some reason, she could not have told
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>why, Lenore did not move, but sat quite still,
-staring at him. She heard him say again, more
-loudly, “Lenore!” but he did not turn toward
-her bed. Rather, he was looking out, out of
-the window, and down the line of rocky shore
-that stretched away to the north.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Lenore! I hear thee! I hear thy
-voice!” he whispered, to himself, fearfully. “I
-hear thee speaking to me.—Oh, my God!
-My God! When wilt Thou remove this torture
-from my brain?” He rose to his feet
-and lifted his arms as if in supplication. “It
-is a curse upon me! It is a madness, that I
-cannot love this other maiden. Thou spirit
-of my lost Lenore!—Lenore!—Lenore!—Thou
-callest to me from the sea by day
-and night!—Only and forever beloved, come
-thou back to me, out of the sea!—Come
-back to me!—Come back!” His hands were
-clenched under such a stress of emotion as his
-girl-wife had never dreamed him capable of.
-Now he stood there without speaking, his
-breath coming in sobbing gasps that shook his
-whole frame. The beating of his heart seemed
-as if it would suffocate him, and his body
-swayed back and forward, under the force of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>his mental anguish. For the first time in all
-his years of silent grief, he gave way unreservedly
-to himself; let all the pent-up agony
-come forth as it would from him, as he stood
-there, looking off upon that wonderful, inscrutable,
-shimmering ocean, that had played such
-havoc with his changeless heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>From the bed where she sat, Lenore watched
-him, silent, motionless, afraid almost to breathe
-lest he should discover that she was awake.
-But Gerault wist nothing of her presence.
-He had known no joy in her, in the hallowed
-hours of the early night; else he could not
-now stand there at the window, calling, in
-tones of unutterable agony and tenderness,
-upon his dead,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Lenore! Lenore! Come back!—O sea—thou
-mighty, cruel sea, deliver her up for
-one moment to my arms! Let me have but
-one look, a touch, a kiss.—Oh, my God!—Come
-back to me at last, or else I die!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He fell to his knees again, faint with the
-power of his emotion; and Lenore, the other,
-the unloved Lenore, sat behind him, in the
-great bed, watching.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The moonlight crept slowly from that room,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>and passed, like a wraith, off the sea, and beyond,
-into the east. The stars shone brighter
-for the passing of the moon. There was no
-sound in the great stillness, save the rustling
-murmur of the outflowing tide. In the chilly
-darkness before the break of dawn, Gerault of
-the Twilight Castle crept back to the bed he
-had left, looking fixedly, through the gloom,
-at the white, passive face of his wife, who lay
-back, with closed eyes, on her pillow. And
-when at last he slept again, she did not move;
-yet she was not asleep. In that hour her
-youth was passing from her, and she, a woman
-at last, entered alone into that dim and quiet
-vale where those that lived about her had wandered
-so long, so patiently, and, at last, so
-wearily, alone.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER EIGHT</em><br /> <span class='large'>TO A TRUMPET-CALL</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_225.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-After the night of Gerault’s
-passion, twelve days ebbed
-and flowed away without any
-incident of moment in the
-Castle. How much bitter
-heart-life was enacted in that
-time, it had indeed been difficult to tell.
-Lenore wondered, constantly, as she looked
-into the faces about her and questioned them
-as she refused to question her own heart. If,
-beneath that cloak of lordly courtesy and calmness,
-Gerault could hide such a grief as she
-knew was buried in his soul; if she herself
-found it so easy to conceal her own knowledge
-of that bitterest of all facts, that she was a wife
-unloved,—what stories of mental anguish, of
-long-hidden torture, might not lie behind the
-impassive masks around her. There was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>Madame Eleanore, madame of the commanding
-presence and infinitely gentle manners.
-What was it that had generated the expression
-of her eyes? Lenore had scarcely heard the
-name of Laure, thought only that there had
-been a daughter in Crépuscule who had died
-long since; and so she wove a little history
-of her own to account for that haunted look
-so often to be found in madame’s dark orbs.
-Gerault she knew. Alixe puzzled her, but
-there also she found food for her morbidness.
-Courtoise and the demoiselles she did not consider;
-but David the dwarf held possibilities.
-The young woman’s new-sharpened glance
-quickly discovered that the jester suffered
-also from the devouring malady, and she
-wondered over and pitied him also.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Indeed, at this time, Lenore was in an abnormal
-and unhealthy frame of mind. It
-seemed to her that all the world lived only to
-hide its sorrows. But her melancholy speculations
-concerning the nature of the griefs of
-others saved her from the disastrous effects of
-too much self-analysis. Her love for Gerault,
-to which she always clung, led her to pity him
-as he would not have believed she could have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>pitied any one; and, unnatural as it seemed, she
-brooded as much over his sorrow as over her
-own. Melancholy she was, indeed, and older
-by many years than when she had first come
-to Le Crépuscule. Sometimes the fact that
-Gerault did not know how much she knew
-brought her a measure of comfort, but it made
-her uneasy, also, for she was not sure that she
-was not wrongfully deceiving him. She could
-not bring herself to confess to Father Anselm
-what she felt no one should know; and neither
-did she find it in her heart to tell Gerault himself
-of her inadvertent discovery, though had
-she but done this last, all might have come
-right in the end. But from day to day she
-put away from her the thought of speaking,
-and from day to day she drew closer into herself,
-till she was shut to all thought of confiding
-in him who had the right to know the
-reason of her unhappiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault, however, was not unobserving, and
-he noticed the change in her very early in its
-existence. It was an intangible thing, elusive,
-changeable, varying in degree. All this he
-realized; but, man-like, never guessed the
-reason for it, never knew that Lenore herself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>was unconscious of it. Did she desire to coquet
-with him, render him uneasily jealous
-of every one on whom she turned her eyes?
-If so, it was useless, for the knight believed
-himself incapable of jealousy in regard to her.
-He had married her for the sake of his mother,
-and for Le Crépuscule,—much as the fact did
-him dishonor. In the very hour of their highest
-love, his thoughts had been all for another;
-and when she slept he had left her side to cry
-into the night and the silence, unto that other,
-of whom this young Lenore had never heard.
-Despite these confessed things, the Seigneur
-Gerault felt in some way hurt when the timid
-shadow of his wife no longer haunted him by
-day, nor stretched to his protecting arm by
-night. She had withdrawn from him into herself,
-and even his occasional half-hours of devotion
-failed to bring any light into her eyes,
-though she treated him always with half-tender
-courtesy. Her lord was not a little puzzled
-by her new manner, but he took it in his
-own way; and there was presently a stiffness
-of demeanor between the two that would have
-been almost laughable had it not been so
-pathetically cruel to Lenore.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>The month of July passed away, and August
-came into the land. Brittany, long blazing with
-sunlight, lay parching for want of rain. The
-moors grew brown and dusty, and the meadow
-flowers bloomed no more. But the blue sea
-shimmered radiantly day by day, and the
-sunsets were ever more glorious and more red.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On a day in the first week of the last summer
-month, when Anselm had found the temperature
-too great for the casting of choice
-paragraphs of Cicero before the unheeding
-demoiselles, when the Castle reeked with the
-smell of cooking, and the air outside was
-heavy with the odor of hard-baked earth,
-Gerault sat in the long room alone, reading
-Seneca from an illuminated text. A heretical
-document this, and not to be found in a monastery
-or holy place; yet there were in it such
-scraps of homely wisdom and comfort as the
-Seigneur—something of a scholar in his idle
-hours—had failed to find in Holy Scripture.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In its dimly lighted silence the long room
-was, at this hour, a soothing place. The row
-of small casement windows were open to the
-sea, and two or three swallows, coming up from
-the water below, flitted through the room, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>once even a sleek and well-fed gull came to sit
-upon a sill and flap his wings over the flavor
-of his last fish.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault’s back was turned to the light; yet
-he knew these little incidents of the birds, and
-took pleasure in them. A portion of his mind
-rejoiced lazily in the quiet and solitude; the rest
-was fixed upon the Latin words that he translated
-still with some lordly difficulty. He found
-himself in the mood to consider the thoughts
-of men long dead, and was indulging in the unsurpassed
-delight of the philosopher when, to
-his vast annoyance, Courtoise pushed aside the
-curtains of the door, and came into the room
-followed by another man. Gerault looked up
-testily; but as he uttered his first word of reproach,
-his eye caught the dress of his squire’s
-companion, and he broke off with an exclamation:
-“Dame! Thou, Favriole?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“May it please thee, Seigneur du Crépuscule,”
-was the reply, as the new-comer advanced,
-bowing. He was elaborately and
-significantly dressed in a parti-colored surcoat
-of blue and white silk, emblazoned behind
-and before with the coronet and arms of
-Duke Jean of Brittany. His hosen were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>also parti-colored, yellow and blue, and the
-round cap that he held in his hand was of
-blue felt with a white feather. At his side
-hung the instrument of his calling, a silver
-trumpet on a tasselled cord; for he was a
-ducal herald, and, before he spoke, Gerault
-knew his errand.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Welcome, welcome, Favriole!” he said
-kindly. “What is thy message now? Surely
-not war?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, Seigneur Gerault! A merrier message
-than that!” Lifting his trumpet to his
-lips, he blew upon it a clear, silvery blast,
-and, after the rather absurd formality, began:
-“Oyez! Oyez! Oyez! Be it known to all
-princes, barons, knights, and gentlemen of the
-Duchy of Brittany and the dependency of
-Normandy, and to the knights of Christian
-countries, if they be not enemies to the Duke
-our Sire,—to whom God give long life,—that
-in the ducal lists of Rennes in Brittany,
-upon the fifteenth day of this month of
-August in this year of grace 1381, and thereafter
-till the twentieth day of that month,
-there will be a great pardon of arms and very
-noble tourney fought after the ancient customs,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>at which tourney the chiefs will be the most
-illustrious Duke of Brittany, appellant, and the
-very valiant Hugo de Laci, Lord in vassalage
-to his Grace of England, of the Castle Andelin
-in Normandy, defendant. And hereby
-are invited all knights of Christian countries
-not at variance with our Lord Duke, to take
-part in the said tourney for the glory of
-Knighthood and the fame of their Ladies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Favriole finished, smiling and important, and
-from behind him rose a little buzz of interest.
-For, at sound of the trumpet, almost all the
-Castle company had hurried from their various
-retreats to learn the meaning of the untoward
-sound. In this group, not foremost,
-standing rather a little back from the rest, was
-Lenore, gravely regarding Gerault, where he
-sat with the parchment before him. She had
-recognized Favriole, the herald, for a familiar
-figure in the lists at that long-past tournament
-where she had first thought of being lady of
-her lord; and she grew a little white under
-the memories that the herald brought her.
-Gerault had seen her at the first moment of
-her coming, and, as soon as Favriole finished
-his announcement, beckoned her to his side.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>She came forward to him quietly, and took her
-place, acknowledging the pleased salute of the
-visitor with the slightest inclination of her golden
-head. When she was seated at the table,
-Gerault, who had risen at her coming, spoke:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Our thanks to you, Sir Herald, for your
-message, which you have come a long and
-weary way to bear to the one spurred knight
-in this house. And devotion to our Lord,
-Duke Jean, who—” Gerault paused. His
-mother had just come to the room and halted
-on the threshold, a little in front of the general
-group, her eyes travelling swiftly from
-Favriole’s face to that of Lenore. Gerault,
-his thought broken, hesitated for an instant,
-and turned also to look at his wife. Instantly
-Lenore rose, and advanced a step or two to
-his side. Then she said in a curiously pleading
-tone,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I do humbly entreat my lord that he will
-not refuse to enter this tournament; but that
-he will at once set out for Rennes, there to
-fight for—for ‘the glory of his Knighthood,
-and the—the fame of his—Ladies’!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When Lenore had spoken she found the
-whole room staring at her in open amazement.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>Gerault gave his wife a glance that brought her
-a moment’s bitter satisfaction,—a look filled
-with astonishment and discomfort. Long he
-gazed at her, but could find no softening
-curve in her white, set face. Every line in
-her figure bade him go. At length, then, he
-turned back to Favriole, with something that
-resembled a sigh, and continued his speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Sir Herald, carry my name for the lists;
-and my word that on the fifteenth day of this
-month I shall be in Rennes, armed and horsed
-for the tourney. My challenge shall be sent
-anon.—Courtoise! Take thine ancient comrade
-to the keep, and find him refreshment ere
-he proceeds upon his way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise bowed, wearing an expression of
-mingled pleasure and disapproval, and presently
-he and the herald left the room together,
-followed by all the young esquires.
-After their disappearance the demoiselles also
-wandered off to their pursuits, and presently
-Gerault, Eleanore, and Lenore were left alone
-in the long room. Eleanore stood still, just
-where she was, and looked once, searchingly,
-from the face of her son to that of his wife.
-Then she addressed Gerault: “See that thou
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>come to me to-night, when I am alone in my
-chamber. I would talk with thee, Gerault.”
-And with another look that had in it a suggestion
-of disdain, madame turned and went
-out of the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When she was gone the knight drew a long
-sigh, and then, with an air of apprehensive
-inquiry, faced Lenore. At once she rose and,
-with a very humble courtesy, started also to
-depart. But Gerault, whose bewilderment at
-the situation was changing to anxiety, said
-sharply: “Stay, Lenore! Thou shalt not go
-till we have spoken together.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Immediately she returned to her place and
-sat down. She gave him one swift glance from
-under her lashes, and then remained in silence,
-her eyes fixed upon the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At the same time the Seigneur got to his
-feet and began to pace unevenly up and down
-the room. His step was sufficient evidence of
-his agitation; but it was many minutes before
-he suddenly halted, turning to his wife and
-saying in a tone of command: “Tell me,
-Lenore, why thou biddest me go forth into
-this tournament.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah, my lord—do not—I—” she paused,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>and, from flushing vividly, her face grew white
-again: “Thou wilt be happier in Rennes, my
-lord.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“How say you that? Were I not happier
-at home here with my bride?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Asks my lord wherefore?” answered
-Lenore, in a tone containing something that
-Gerault could not understand.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, then, I ask thee naught but this:
-wouldst thou, all for thyself, of thine own will,
-have me go? Dost thou in thy heart desire
-it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore drew her head a little high, and
-looked him full in the face: “For myself, for
-mine own selfish desires, of mine own will, I
-entreat thee by that which through thy life
-thou hast held most dear, to go!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault stared at her, some vague distrust
-that was entering his mind continually foiled by
-the open-eyed clearness of her look. Finally,
-then, he shrugged his shoulders, and, as he
-turned away from her, he said: “Be satisfied,
-madame. I do your bidding. I give
-you what pleasure I can. In ten days’ time
-I shall set off; and thou wilt be unfettered in
-this Crépuscule!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>And with this last ungenerous and angry
-taunt, the Seigneur, his brain seething with
-some emotion that he could not define, strode
-from the room. Lenore rose as he left her,
-and followed him, unsteadily, halfway to the
-door. He went out of the Castle without
-once looking back, and when he was quite
-gone, the young girl felt her way blindly to
-the chair where she had sat, and crouching
-down in it, burst into a flood of repressed
-and desperate tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When Gerault left Lenore’s side, he was no
-whit happier than she. After the herald had
-made his announcement of the tourney, and
-Gerault had begun his reply, it was his intent
-to refuse to go, though in his secret heart he
-longed eagerly to be off to that city of gay
-forgetfulness. But when his wife, Lenore, the
-clinging child, besought him, with every appearance
-of sincerity, to leave her, he heard
-her with less of satisfaction than with surprised
-disappointment. Now he fought with himself;
-now he questioned her motive; again he longed
-for Rennes and the tourney. Finally, there
-rushed over him the detestable deceit in his
-own attitude; and he began to curse himself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>for what, sometimes, he was,—the most intolerant
-and the most selfish of tyrants. In these
-varying moods Gerault rode, for the rest of
-the afternoon, over the dry moors, hawk on
-wrist, but finding his own thoughts, unhappy
-as they were, more engrossing than possible
-quarries. He returned late—when the evening
-meal was nearly at an end; and he perceived,
-with dull disappointment, that Lenore
-was not at table. Madame presently informed
-him that she lay in bed, sick of a headache;
-and this was all the conversation in which he
-indulged while he ate his hurried meal. But
-as soon as grace was said and the company
-had risen, Gerault started to the stairs. Instantly
-his mother caught his sleeve and held
-him back, saying,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Go not to thy room. She has perchance
-fallen asleep by now; and she should not be
-wakened, for she hath been very ill. Seek
-thou rather my bedchamber, and there presently
-I will come to thee; for I have somewhat
-that I would say to thee, Gerault.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Feeling as he had sometimes felt when, in
-his early boyhood, he had waited punishment
-for some boyish misdeed, the Seigneur obeyed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>his mother, and went up to her room, which
-was now wrapped in close-gathering shadows.
-Here, a few moments later, Eleanore found
-him, pacing up and down, his arms folded,
-his head bent upon his breast, a dark frown
-upon his brows. The windows were open to
-the evening, and, like some witchcraft spell, its
-sweetness entered into Gerault, penetrating to
-his brain, and once again turning his thoughts
-to the spirit that haunted all Le Crépuscule
-for him.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame came into the room, drawing the
-iron-bound door shut behind her, and pushing
-the tapestry curtain over it. Then, without
-speaking, she crossed the room, seated herself
-on her settle beside the window, and fixed
-her eyes on the moving form of her son.
-Under her look Gerault grew more restless
-still; and he was about to break the silence
-when presently she said, in a low, rather
-grating tone: “Know, Gerault, that I am
-grieved with thee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He turned to her at once with a little gesture
-of deprecation; but she went on speaking:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou hast brought home from Rennes a
-wife: a fair maid and a gentle as any that hath
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>ever lived; and moreover one that loves thee
-but too well. In her little time of dwelling
-here she hath, by her quiet, lovely ways, crept
-close into my heart, that was erstwhile so bitterly
-empty. And having her here, and seeing
-her growing devotion to thee, her continual
-striving to please thee in thine every desire,
-methought that thou, a knight sworn to chivalry,
-must needs treat her with more than
-tenderness. Yet that hast thou not, Gerault.
-Dieu! Thou’rt all but cruel with her! God
-knows thy father came to be not over-thoughtful
-in his love of me. Yet had he neglected
-and spurned me in our early marriage as thou
-hast this bride of thine, I had surely made end
-of myself or ever thou camest into the world.
-Shame it is to thee and to all mankind how—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame! Madame!—Forbear!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At his tone, Eleanore held her peace, while
-Gerault, after a deep pause, in which he regained
-his self-control, began,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Canst thou remember, my mother, a talk
-that we—thou and I together in this room—held
-one afternoon more than a year agone?
-’Twas in this room, the day before I went
-last to Rennes. Thou didst entreat me to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>bring thee back a wife to be thy daughter in
-the place of Laure.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“At that hour the idea was impossible to
-me. Thou knowest—’fore God thou knowest—the
-suffering that time has never eased
-for me. A thousand times I had vowed then,
-a hundred times I swore thereafter, that the
-image of mine own Lenore should never be
-replaced within my heart; and it holds there
-to-day as fair and clear as if it were but yesterday
-she went.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Many months passed away, madame, and
-I saw this golden-haired maiden about Rennes,—in
-the Ladies’ Gallery in the lists, and at
-feasts in the Castle; yet I had never a thought
-in my heart of wedding with her. Then—late
-in the spring—St. Nazaire sent me message
-of Laure’s disgrace, her excommunication;
-and my heart bled for thee. I sent
-out many men to search my sister, but not
-one ever gathered trace of her. Then, when
-there was no further hope of restoring her
-to thee, the idea of marriage came to me for
-the first time as a duty—toward thee. My
-whole soul cried out against it. Lenore de
-Laval reproached me from the heaven where
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>she dwells. And yet—in the end—for <em>thy</em>
-sake, madame, I brought home with me the
-gentle child men call my wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I confess it to thee only: I do not love
-her. Yet indeed none can say that I have
-used her ill, save as I could not bring myself
-falsely to act the ardent lover. If she hath
-been unhappy, then am I greatly grieved.
-Yet what hath she not that women do desire
-in life? What lacks there of honor or of
-pleasure in her estate? Moreover, if she
-has lost her own mother, hath she not gained
-thee, dear lady of mine? Mon Dieu, madame,—think
-not so ill of me. I swear
-that for me she yearns not at all. Even this
-afternoon, when all of you had departed from
-the long room, she did implore me, with sincerest
-speech, that I depart at early date for
-Rennes. How likes you that? And moreover,
-to all my questioning, she did stoutly
-deny that my going would be for aught but
-her own pleasure, and would in no way grieve
-her heart.” And Gerault stared upon his
-mother with the assured and exasperated look
-of a doubly injured man.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame Eleanore drew herself together and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>set her lips in the firm resolve still to treat her
-son with consideration. When she began to
-speak, her manner was calm and her voice low
-and quiet; yet in her eyes there gleamed a fire
-that was not born of patience. “So, Gerault!
-Doubtless all thou sayest is sooth to thee;
-yet I would tell thee this: when thou left’st
-her alone, I came upon her still sitting in the
-long room, leaning her head upon the table
-where thou hadst sat, weeping as if her heart
-was like to break. And when her sobs were
-still I brought her up to her room and
-caused her to remove her garments and to
-seek her bed, though all the while she shook
-with inward grief, till Alixe brought her a
-posset, and bathed her head in elder-flower
-water, and then, at last, she slept.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And gave she no name to thee as cause
-for her malady?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Art thou indeed so ignorant of us? Or
-is it heartlessness? Wilt thou go to
-Rennes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Hath she not required me to go? Good
-Heavens, madame! what wouldst have me
-do?” he answered with weary impatience.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Gerault, Gerault, if I could by prayer or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>anger make thee to understand for one instant
-only! Ah, ’tis the same tale that every woman
-has to tell. It was so with me. In my
-early youth I was brought from bright Laval,
-where I was a queen of gayety and life, to rule
-alone over this great Twilight Castle. Thy
-grandam was dead; and there was no other
-woman of my station here. In a few months
-after my home-coming as a bride, thy father
-rode away to join the army of Montfort in the
-East. From that time I saw my lord but a
-few weeks in every year; for the war lasted
-till I had reached the age of four-and-thirty.
-Thou camest to cheer my loneliness; and then,
-long after, Laure. And at last, when Laure
-was in her first babyhood, seventeen years
-agone, the long struggle ended at Auray; and
-then my lord, sore wounded in his last fight,
-came home. Alas! I was no happier for his
-coming. He had suffered much, and he was
-no longer young. We two, so long separated,
-were almost as strangers one to the other.
-Thou wast his great pride; dost remember
-how he loved to have thee near him? And
-many a time it cut me to the heart to hear the
-bloody, valorous tales he poured into thine
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>ears; for I knew by them that he meant thee
-to do what he had done. It was not till he
-lay in his mortal sickness that we came back
-one to the other; but he died in my arms,
-whispering to me such words as I had never
-had from him before. That last is a sweet
-memory, Gerault; but the tale is none the less
-grievous of my young life here. And there is
-the more pity of it that mine is not the only
-story of such things. Many and many is the
-weary life led by some high-born lady in her
-castle, while her lord fights or jousts or drinks
-his life out in his own selfishness. Through
-those long years of the war of the Three
-Jeannes, I suffered not alone of women; and
-how I suffered, thou canst never know. Do
-thou not likewise with thy frail Lenore. Stay
-with her here a little while, and make her life
-what it might be made with love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gerault listened in non-committal silence.
-When she finished he turned and faced her
-squarely: “Hast made this prate of my father
-and thee to Lenore?” he asked severely.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Gerault!” The exclamation escaped involuntarily;
-when it was out Eleanore bit her
-lip and drew herself up haughtily. “Thou’rt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>insolent,” she said in a tone that she would
-have used to an inferior.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In that moment her son found something in
-her to admire, but the man and master in him
-was all alive. “Madame, we will waste no
-further words. I crave the honor to wish you
-a good-night.” And with a profound and
-ironical bow, he turned from the room, leaving
-Eleanore alone to the darkness, and to what
-was a defeat as bitter as any she had ever
-known.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Through the watches of the night this
-woman did not pray, but sat and meditated
-on the immense question that she had herself
-raised, and to which she had not the courage
-to give the true answer. Through her nearest
-and dearest she had learned the natures of men,
-knew full well their only aims and interest:
-prowess in arms, hunting, hawking, drinking,
-and, when they were weary, dalliance with their
-women. But was this <em>all</em>? Was this all there
-was for any woman in the mind of the man
-that loved her? The idea of rebellion against
-the scorn of men was not at all in her mind.
-She only wondered sadly how she and others
-of her sex came to be born so keenly sentient,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>so open to heart-wounds as they were. And
-she divined that her question burned no less
-in the brain of the young Lenore than in her
-own, though neither of them ever spoke of
-it together. Nor did either make any roundabout
-inquiries as to Gerault’s intentions with
-regard to Rennes. Not so, however, the
-demoiselles of the Castle. Courtoise was under
-a hot fire of inquisition throughout most
-of the following two days; but for once he
-himself was uncertain of his lord’s move, and
-presently there was a little air of joy creeping
-over the place in the shape of a hope that the
-Seigneur was going to remain in Crépuscule.
-This, indeed, was the secret idea of Courtoise;
-and only David the dwarf refused to entertain
-a suspicion that Gerault would not ride to
-Rennes for the tourney.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>David judged well; for Gerault went to
-Rennes. Lenore knew on the tenth of the
-month that he would go. Madame remained
-in doubt till the day before the departure.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the morning of the twelfth the whole
-Castle was astir by dawn. Gerault and his
-squire, bravely arrayed, came into the great
-hall at five o’clock, and sat down to their early
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>meal. On the right hand of the Seigneur was
-Lenore, not eating, only looking about her
-on the fresh morning light, and again into
-Gerault’s face. She was not under any stress
-of emotion. She was, rather, very dull and
-heavy-eyed. Yet down in her heart lay a
-smothered pain that she felt must come forth
-before long, in what form she could not tell.
-She and Gerault did not talk much together.
-There was a little strain between them that
-was none the less certain because it was indefinable,
-and it was a relief to the young wife
-when madame finally appeared. Lenore saw
-Eleanore’s face with something of surprise.
-Never had it been so cold, so expressionless,
-so like a piece of chiselled marble; and
-looking upon her son, it grew yet harder,
-yet colder. But when madame, after some
-little parley with Courtoise, turned finally to
-Lenore, the child-wife found something in that
-face that came dangerously near to melting her
-apathy, and freeing the flood of grief that lay
-deep in her heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Half an hour later the knight and his squire
-were in the courtyard, where their horses stood
-ready for the mount. The little company of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>the Castle gathered close about their master,
-watching him as they might have watched
-some mythical god. Indeed, he was a brave
-sight, as he stood there in the early sunshine,
-flashing with armor, a gray plume floating
-from his helmet, and one of Lenore’s small
-gloves fastened over his visor as a gage.
-Lenore beheld this with infinite, gentle pride,
-as she stood fixing his great lance in its
-socket. Presently two of the squires helped
-him to mount to the saddle; and when he
-was seated, he lifted Lenore up to him to
-give her good-bye. A few tears ran from her
-eyes, and rolled silently down his breastplate,
-on which they gleamed like clustered diamonds.
-But Lenore wiped them away with
-her hair, that they might not tarnish the metal
-of his trappings; and by that act, perhaps,
-Gerault lost a blessing.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The last kiss that he gave her was a long
-one, and his last words almost tender. Then,
-putting her to the ground again, he saluted
-his mother, though her coldness struck him
-to the heart; and, after a final farewell to the
-assembled company, he turned and gave the
-sign of departure to Courtoise.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>Spur struck flank. At the same instant, the
-two horses darted forward to the drawbridge,
-across which they had presently clattered.
-Alixe, who had been a silent spectator of the
-scene of departure, was standing near Lenore;
-and now she leaned over and would have whispered
-in the young wife’s ear; but Lenore could
-not have heard her had she spoken. The child
-stood like a statue, blind to everything save to
-the blaze of passing armor, deaf to all but the
-echo of flying hoofs. Here she stood, in the
-centre of the courtyard, alone with her strange
-little life, watching the swift-running steed carry
-from her all her power of joy. With straining
-eyes she saw the two figures disappear down
-the long, winding hill; and when they had
-gone, and only a lazily rising dust-cloud remained
-to mark their path, she stayed there
-still. But presently Eleanore came to her
-side and took her cold hand in a hot pressure.
-And then, as the two bereft women looked
-into each other’s eyes, the frozen grief melted
-at last, and the flood burst upon them in all
-its overwhelming fury.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER NINE</em><br /> <span class='large'>THE STORM</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_251.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-For ten days after Gerault’s
-departure, Lenore led a disastrous
-mental existence, which
-she expressed neither by words
-nor by deeds. In that time
-no one in the Castle knew how
-she was rent and torn with anguish, with yearning
-that had never been satisfied, and with useless
-regret for a bygone happiness that had not
-been happy. The silent progress of her grief
-led her into dark valleys of despair; yet none
-dreamed in what depths she wandered. She,
-the woman chaste and pure, dared not try to
-comprehend all that went on within her. She
-dared not picture to herself what it was she
-really longed for so bitterly. The cataclysms
-that rent her mind in twain were unholy things,
-and, had she been normal, she might have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>refused to acknowledge them. The changes
-in her life had come upon her with such overwhelming
-swiftness that she had hitherto had
-no time for analysis; and now that she found
-herself with a long leisure in which to think,
-the chaos of her mind seemed hopeless; she
-despaired of coming again into understanding
-with herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>During all these days Madame Eleanore
-watched her closely, but to little purpose. The
-calm outward demeanor of the young woman
-baffled every suspicion of her inward state.
-Day after day Lenore sat at work in the
-whirring, noisy spinning-room, toiling upon
-her tapestry with a diligence and a persistent
-silence that defied encroachment. Hour after
-hour her eyes would rest upon the dim, blue
-sea; for that sea was the only thing that
-seemed to possess the power of stilling her
-inward rebellion. Forgetting how the winds
-could sometimes drive its sparkling surface
-into a furious stretch of tumbling waters, she
-dreamed of making her own spirit as placid
-and as quiet as the ocean. The thought
-was inarticulate; but it grew, even in the
-midst of her inward tumult, till in the end
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>it brought her something of the quiet she so
-sorely needed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>By day and by night, through every hour,
-in every place, the figure of her husband was
-always before her. How unspeakably she
-wanted him, she herself could not have put
-into words. She knew well that he had promised
-to come back—“soon.” But when every
-hour is replete with hidden anguish, can a day
-be short? Can ten days be less than an eternity?
-a possible month of delay less than
-unutterable?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>One little oasis Lenore found for herself in
-this waste of time. Every day she had been
-accustomed to pray upon her rosary, which
-was composed of sixty-two white beads. Now,
-when she had said her morning prayer, she tied
-a little red string above the first bead. On the
-second morning it was moved up over the
-second bead; and so the sacred chain became
-a still more sacred calendar. How many times
-did she halt in her prayers to find the thirtieth
-bead! and how her heart sank when she saw it
-still so very far from the little line of red!</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At the end of the first week of the Seigneur’s
-absence, it came to Madame Eleanore with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>start that Lenore was growing paler and more
-wan. Then a suspicion of what the young
-wife was suffering came to the older woman,
-and she racked her brains to think of possible
-diversions for the forlorn girl. A hawking
-party was arranged, which Madame Eleanore
-herself led, on her good gray horse. And in
-this every one discovered with some surprise
-that Lenore could sit a horse as easily as the
-young squires, and that she managed her bird
-as well as any man. Alixe, who had always
-been the one woman in the Castle to make a
-practice of riding after the dogs, or with hawk
-on wrist, was filled with delight to find this
-unexpected companion for her sports; and she
-decided that henceforth Lenore should take the
-place of her old companion, Laure, in her life.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The hawking party accomplished part of
-its purpose, at least; for Lenore returned from
-the ride with some color in her face and a
-sparkle in her eyes. She was obliged, however,
-to take to her bed shortly after reaching the
-Castle, prostrated by a fatigue that was not
-natural. Madame hovered over her anxiously
-all through the night, though she slept more
-than in any night of late, and rose next morning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>at the usual hour, much refreshed. That
-afternoon, when the work was through, madame
-saw no harm in her riding out with Alixe for
-an hour, to give a lesson to two young <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mués</span></i>
-that were jessed and belled for the first time.
-And during this ride the young women made
-great strides in companionship.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>What with new interest in an old pastime
-thus awakened, and a subject of common
-delight between her and Alixe, Lenore found
-the next nine days pass more quickly than the
-first. On the morning of the thirty-first of the
-month, however, Lenore had a serious fainting-spell
-in the spinning-room. She had been at
-work at her frame for an hour or more, when
-suddenly it seemed to her that a steel had
-pierced her heart, and she fell backward in
-her chair with a cry. The women hurried to
-her, and after some moments of chafing her
-hands and temples, and forcing cordials down
-her throat, she was brought back to consciousness.
-Her first words were: “Gerault!
-Gerault!” and then in a still fainter voice:
-“Save him, Courtoise! He falls!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Thinking her out of her mind, madame
-carried her to her bedroom, and, admitting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>only Alixe with her, quickly undressed the
-slender body, and laid Lenore in the great
-bed. Presently she opened her blue eyes, and,
-looking up into madame’s face, said, in a voice
-shaking with weakness,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It was a dream—a vision—a terrible vision!
-I saw Gerault—<em>killed</em>! My God!” she
-put her hands to the sides of her head, in the
-attitude that a terrified woman will take. “I
-saw him— Ah! But it is gone, now. It is
-gone. Tell me ’twas a dream!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame and Alixe soothed her, smoothing
-the hair back from her brow, patting her hands,
-and giving her all the comfort that they knew.
-Presently Lenore was calm again, and asked to
-rise. Madame, however, forbade this, insisting
-that she should keep to her bed all day;
-and through the afternoon either she or Alixe
-remained in the room, sewing, and talking
-fitfully with Lenore. The young wife, however,
-seemed inclined to silence. A shadow
-of melancholy had stolen upon her, and there
-was a cold clutch at her heart that she did not
-understand. Eleanore had her own theory in
-regard to the illness, and Alixe, whatever she
-might have noticed, had nothing to say about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>Next morning, the morning of the first
-of September, Lenore rose to go about her
-usual tasks, seeming no worse for the attack of
-the day before, except that her melancholy continued.
-Work in the spinning-room that day,
-however, was cut short on account of the heat,
-which was more oppressive than it had been at
-any time during the summer. Though the
-sky was clear and the sun red and luminous,
-the air was heavy with moisture; the birds flew
-close to the ground; spiders were busy spinning
-heavy webs; worms and insects sought the
-underside of leaves; and all things pointed to
-a coming storm. At noon two mendicant
-monks came to the Castle, asking dinner as
-alms; and when the meal was over, they did
-not proceed upon their way. The bright blue
-of the sky was beginning to be obscured by
-fragments of gathering cloud, and in the infinite
-distance could be heard low and portentous
-murmurs. The sense of oppression and of
-apprehension that comes with the approach of
-any disturbance of nature was strong in the
-Castle. At four in the afternoon, madame had
-prayers said in the chapel, and there was a
-short mass for safety during the coming storm.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>After this service, Lenore, with Alixe and
-Roland de Bertaux, went out to walk upon
-the terrace that overlooked the water. The
-sight before them was impressive. The whole
-sea, from shore to far horizon, lay gray and
-glassy, flattened by the weight of air that
-overhung it, heavy and hot with moisture.
-The sun was gone, and the heart of the sky
-palpitated with purple. Flocks of gulls wheeled
-round the Castle towers, screaming, now and
-then, with some uneasy dread for their safety.
-The air grew more and more heavy, till one
-was obliged to breathe in gasps, and the sweat
-ran down the body like rain. The moments
-grew longer and quieter. The whole world
-seemed to stop moving; and the birds, veering
-along the cliffs, moved not a feather of their
-wings.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After that it came. The sky, from zenith
-to water-line, was cut with a lightning sword,
-that hissed through the water-logged gray like
-molten gold. Then followed the cry of pain
-from the wound,—such a roar as might have
-come from the throats of all the hell-hounds at
-once. There was a quick second crash, while
-at the same instant a fire-ball dropped from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>heaven into the ocean, curdling the waters
-where it fell. Then, fury on fury, came the
-storm,—wind and rain and fiercer flashes, the
-line of the shower on the sea chased eastward
-by a toppling mass of rushing foam. With
-a scream the flock of gulls dashed out into
-the mist to meet it, and were seen no more;
-for now the world was black, and everything
-out of shelter was in a whirling chaos of spray
-and rain.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Inside the Castle holy candles had been
-lighted in every room, and beside them were
-placed manchets of blessed bread, considered
-to be of great efficacy in warding off lightning-strokes.
-The two monks, sincerely grateful
-for their shelter from this outburst, knelt together
-in the chapel, and called down upon
-themselves the frightened blessings of the
-company by praying incessantly, though their
-voices were inaudible in the tumult of the
-storm. The wind shrieked around the Castle
-towers. Flashes of white light, instantly followed
-by long rolls of thunder, succeeded each
-other with startling rapidity. And, as a fierce,
-indeterminate undertone to all other sounds,
-came the roaring of the sea, which an incoming
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>tide was bringing every minute higher and
-closer around the base of the cliff below.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>An hour went by, and yet another, and
-instead of diminishing in fury, the wind seemed
-only to increase. None in the Castle, not
-madame herself, could remember a summer
-storm of such duration. Every momentary
-lull brought after it a still more violent attack,
-and the longer it lasted, the greater grew the
-nervousness of the Castle inmates; for to them
-this meant the anger of God for the sins of
-His children. The evening meal was eaten
-amid repeated prayers for mercy and protection;
-and shortly thereafter, the little company
-dispersed and crept away to bed,—not because
-of any hope of sleep, but because there would
-be a certain comfort in crouching down in a
-warm shelter and drawing the blankets close
-overhead. The demoiselles, for the most
-part, and possibly the squires too, huddled two
-or three in a room. The monks were lodged
-together in the servants’ quarters; and of all
-that castleful, only the women for whom it was
-kept were unafraid to be alone. Eleanore,
-Lenore, and Alixe sought each her bed; but of
-them madame only closed her eyes in sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>Lenore found herself terribly restless; and
-the foreboding in her mind seemed not all
-the effect of the storm. Her thoughts moved
-through terrifying shadows. It seemed to
-her that some great, unknown evil hung over
-her; but her apprehension was as elusive as
-it was unreasonable. For some hours she
-forced herself to keep in bed, tossing and twisting
-about, but letting no sound escape her. It
-seemed at last as if the fury of the wind had
-diminished, though the lightning-flashes continued
-incessantly, and the whole sky was still
-alive with muttering thunder. A little after
-midnight, urged by a restlessness that she was
-powerless to control, Lenore rose, threw a
-loose bliault around her, took down the iron
-lantern that hung, dimly burning, on a hook
-in a corner of the room, and, lighting her way
-with this, went out into the silent upper hall
-of the Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Gray and ghostly enough everything looked,
-in the dim, flickering lantern-light. There
-was in the air a smell of pitchy smoke from
-burnt-out torches, and it seemed to Lenore as
-if spirits were passing through this mist. Yet
-she felt no fear of anything in the spirit world.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>Her heart was full of something else,—a
-vague, indefinable, more terrible dread, an
-oppression that she could not reason away.
-Clad in her voluminous purple mantle, with her
-hair unbound and flowing over her shoulders,
-where it sparkled faintly in the lantern-light,
-she went down the stairs, across the shadowy,
-pillared spaces of the great lower hall, and so
-into the long room where Gerault had sat on
-the day when the herald had come to call him
-to Rennes. She had a vision of him sitting
-there at the table, bent upon his manuscript
-philosophy, never looking up, as again and
-again she passed the door. It was a ghostly
-hour for her to be abroad and occupied in such
-a way; yet she had no thought of present
-danger. A useless sob choked her as she
-turned away from this place of sorrowful
-memories and went to the chapel. Here half a dozen
-candles on the altar were still burning
-to the god of the storm; and Lenore, finding
-comfort in the sight of the cross, knelt
-before it and offered up a prayer for peace of
-mind. Then, rising, she moved back again
-into the hall; and, dreading to return to her
-lonely room, where the roar of waves and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>soughing of the wind round the towers made
-a din too great for sleep, she sat down on a
-bench that stood beside a pillar directly opposite
-the great, locked door. Sitting here,
-her lantern at her feet, elbow on knee, chin on
-hand, she fell into a strange reverie. The bitterest
-of all memories came back to her without
-bitterness; and she tried to picture to
-herself that woman of Gerault’s secret heart.
-What had she been? How had she died?
-Or was she dead? In what relation had she
-really stood to Gerault? Was she that cousin
-of Laval—or some other? These thoughts,
-which, always before, Lenore had refused to
-work into definite shape, came to her now and
-were not repelled. Her musing was deepest
-when, suddenly, she was startled by the sound
-of light footsteps in the hall above. Some one
-came to the staircase; some one came gliding
-sinuously down. Lenore half rose, and looked
-up, cold with fear. Then she saw that it was
-Alixe, and, strangely enough, her fear did not
-lessen; for never had she seen Alixe like this.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore looked at her long before she was
-noticed; and the strangeness of the peasant-born’s
-appearance did not lessen on close examination.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>She was dressed in garments of
-pale green. And in these, and in her floating
-hair, her greenish eyes, her arms, her neck,
-Lenore fancied that she saw twists and coils
-and lissome curves and the green and golden
-fire of innumerable snakes. In the shadowy
-light everything was indistinct; but there
-seemed to be a phosphorescent glow about
-Alixe’s garments that illumined her, till she
-stood out, the brightest thing in the surrounding
-darkness. Striving bravely to ward off
-her sense of creeping fear, Lenore raised her
-lantern high, and looked at the other, who had
-now reached the foot of the stairs. Yes—no—<em>was</em>
-this Alixe? Lenore took two or
-three frightened steps backward, and instantly
-Alixe turned toward her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Lenore! Thou!” she cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe!” Lenore stared, wondering at herself.
-Surely she had suffered a hallucination.
-Alixe was as ever, save that her eyes were a
-little wider, her skin a little paler, than usual.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“What dost thou here, at this hour, alone,
-Lenore? Did aught frighten thee?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I could not sleep, and so, long since, I
-rose, to wander about till the noise of the storm
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>should fall. I have sat here for but a moment—thinking.
-But thou, Alixe,—whither goest
-thou?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I? I also could not sleep. The storm
-is in my blood. I turned and tossed and
-strove to lose my thoughts. But they burn
-forever. Alas! I am seared by them. My
-eyes refuse to close.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“What are those thoughts of thine, Alixe?
-Perchance they were of the same woof as
-mine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, nay, Lenore! Thou hast no ancient
-memories of this place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“That may be; yet my thoughts were of
-this place, and of a woman. Tell me, Alixe,
-hast thou known in thy life one of the same
-name as mine own: a maid whom—whom
-my lord knew well, and who hath gone far
-away?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Lenore! Mon Dieu! Who told thee of
-her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It matters not. I know. Prithee, Alixe,
-talk to me of her, an thou wouldst still the
-torture of my soul!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“What shall I tell thee, madame?” Alixe
-stared at the young woman with slow, questioning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>surprise. “Knowest thou of her life
-here among us?—or wouldst hear of her
-death?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Of all—of her life and death—tell me
-all!” Lenore drew her mantle close around
-her, for she was shivering with something that
-was not cold. She kept her head slightly bent,
-so that Alixe could not see the working of her
-face, as the two of them went together to the
-settle by the pillar.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore sat very still, listening absently to
-the muffled sound of wind and rain and beating
-waves, while her mind drank in the narrative
-that Alixe poured into her ears; and so did
-the one thing interweave itself with the other
-in her consciousness, that, in after time, the
-spirit of the lost Lenore walked forever in her
-mind amid the terrible grandeur of a mighty
-storm, lightning crowning her head, her hair
-and garments dripping with rain and blown
-about by the increasing wind. An eerie thing
-it was for these two young and tender women,
-lightly clad, to sit at this midnight hour in the
-gray fastnesses of the Twilight Castle, and,
-while the whirlwind howled without, to turn
-over in their thoughts the story of a young
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>life so tragically cut off in the midst of its
-happiness and beauty. Alixe’s changeable
-eyes shone in the semi-darkness with a phosphorescent
-gleam, and her voice rose and fell
-and trembled with emotion as she poured into
-Lenore’s burning heart the tale of Gerault’s
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Five years agone, when I was but a maid
-of twelve, Seigneur Gerault was of the age of
-twenty-three. At that time this Castle, I mind
-me, was a merry place enow. Madame
-Eleanore had a great train of squires and
-demoiselles in those days, and thy lord kept
-a young following of his own—though he
-held Courtoise ever the favorite. At that time
-Gerault rode not to tournaments in Rennes,
-but bided at home with madame, his mother,
-and Laure, and the young demoiselle Lenore
-de Laval, niece to madame, a maid as young
-as thou art now. This maiden had come to
-Crépuscule when she was but a little girl, her
-own mother being dead, and madame loving
-her as a daughter. Gerault’s love for her was
-not that of a brother; yet because of their
-blood-relationship, there was little talk of their
-wedding. For all that, they two were ever
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>together in company, and alone as much
-as madame permitted. They hawked, they
-hunted, and, above all, they sailed out on
-the sea. The Seigneur had a sailing-boat,
-and Madame Eleanore never knew, methinks,
-how many hours they spent on the waters of
-the bay. Child as I was, I envied them their
-happiness; and, though I went with them but
-seldom, I knew always how long they were
-together each day; and methinks I understood
-how precious each moment seemed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“On this day I am to tell thee of—oh,
-Mother of God, that it would leave my memory!—I
-sat alone by the little gate in the wall
-behind the falconry, weeping because Laure
-had deserted our game and run to her mother
-in the Castle. So, while I sat there, wailing
-like the little fool I was, came the Seigneur
-and the demoiselle Lenore out by the gate on
-their way over the moat and to the beach by
-the steps that still lead thither down the cliff.
-The demoiselle paused in her going to comfort
-me, and presently, more, methinks, to tease
-the Seigneur than for mine own sake, insisted
-that I go sailing with them in their boat. I
-can remember how I screamed out with delight
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>at the thought; for I loved to sail better
-than I loved to eat; and though Gerault
-somewhat protested, Lenore had her way,
-and presently we had come down the cliff
-and were on the beach by the inlet where the
-boat was kept.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“’Twas the early afternoon of an April
-day: warm, the sun covered over with a gray
-mist that was like smoke, and but little wind for
-our pleasure. Howbeit, as we put off into the
-full tide, a breath caught our sail and we
-started out toward an island near the coast,
-round the north point of the bay, which from
-here thou canst not see. I lay down in the
-bottom of the boat, near to the mast, and
-listened to the gurgling sound of the water as
-it passed underneath the planks, and later
-grew drowsy with the rocking. I ween I slept;
-for I remember naught of that sail till we
-were suddenly in the midst of a fog so thick
-that where I lay I could scarce see the figure
-of my lord sitting in the stern. There was no
-wind at all, for the sail flapped against the
-mast; and I was a little frightened with the
-silence of everything; so I rose and went to
-the demoiselle Lenore, who laid her hand on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>my shoulder, and patted me. She and Sieur
-Gerault were not talking together, for I think
-both were a little nervous of the fog. All at
-once, in the midst of the calm, a streak of wind
-caught us, and the little boat heeled over under
-it. Gerault caught at the tiller, swearing an
-oath that was born more from uneasiness than
-from anger. Reading his mind, Lenore moved
-a little out of his way, and began to sing. Ah,
-that voice and its sweetness! I mind it very
-well—and also her chansonette. Since that
-day I have not heard it sung, yet the words
-are fresh in my mind. Dost know it, madame?
-It beginneth,—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c017'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">‘Assez i a reson porqoi</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">L’eu doit fame chière tenir—</span>’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah, I remember it all so terribly! While
-Lenore sang, there came yet another gust of
-wind, and in it one of the ropes of the sail
-went loose, and the Seigneur must go to fix
-it. I sat between him and his lady, and as
-he jumped up, he put the tiller against my
-shoulder, and bade me not move till he came
-back. Lenore sat no more than four feet from
-me, on that side of the boat that was low in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>the wind. While she sang she had been playing
-with a ring that she had drawn from her
-finger. Just as monsieur sprang forward to
-the rope, Lenore dropped this ring, which methinks
-rolled into the water. I know that she
-gave a cry and threw herself far over the side
-and stretched out her hand for something.
-As she leaned, I followed her movement, and
-the tiller slipped its place. Ah, madame—madame—I
-remember not all the horror of
-the next moment! The boat went far over
-before a wave. Lenore lost her hold, and was
-in the water without a sound. The Seigneur,
-in a rage at me for letting the rudder slip,
-leaped back, and in an instant righted the boat,
-I screaming and crying, the while, in my woe.
-I know not how it was, but it seemed that,
-till we were started on our way again, Gerault
-never knew that—that his lady was gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then what a scene! We turned the boat
-into the wind, the Seigneur saying not one
-word, but sitting stiff and still and white as
-death in the stern. The path of the wind had
-made a long rift in the fog, and through this
-we sailed, I calling till my voice was gone, the
-Seigneur leaning over, straining his eyes into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>that fathomless mist that walled us in on both
-sides. After that he drew off his doublet and
-boots, and would have leaped into the waves,
-but that I—<em>I</em>, madame—held him from it.
-I caught him round the arms till we were both
-forced to the tiller again, and I cried and commanded
-and shrieked at him till I made him
-see that his madness would bring no help. I
-could not guide the boat alone in the storm,
-nor could he have saved Lenore from the
-power of the water.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“For hours and hours we sailed the bay.
-The wind drove the fog before it until the air
-was clear, and I think that the sight of that
-waste of tumbling seas was more cruel than
-the veiling mist from which we ever looked for
-Lenore to come back to us. Ah, I cannot
-picture that time to thee—or to myself. At
-last, madame, we went back to the Castle. We
-left her there, the glory of our Seigneur’s life,
-alone with the pitiless sea. It was I that had
-done it; that I knew in my heart. That I
-have always known, and shall never forget.
-Yet Gerault never spoke a word of blame to
-me. Mayhap he never knew how it came
-about. For many months thereafter he was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>as a man crazed; and since that time he hath
-not been the same. All that long summer he
-stayed alone in his room, shut away from us
-all, seeing only Courtoise, who served him, and
-his mother, who gave him what comfort she
-could. Twice, too, he asked for me, and
-treated me with such kindness that it went
-near to breaking my heart. Ah, then it was
-that the Castle began to bear out its name!
-It seems as if none had ever really lived here
-since that time.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“But Lenore, thou wouldst say. We never
-saw her again; though ’tis said that many
-weeks afterwards a woman’s body was cast up
-on the shore near St. Nazaire, and was burned
-there by the fisher-folk, as is their custom
-with those dead at sea. And they say that
-now, by night, her voice is heard to cry out
-along the shore near the inlet where Gerault’s
-boat once lay.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Many years are passed since these things
-happened; yet they have not faded from my
-memory, nor have they from that of my lord.
-Up to the time of thy coming, madame, he
-mourned for her always; nor did he abstain
-from asking forgiveness of Heaven for her end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>“Ah, Alixe, he hath not yet ceased to
-mourn for her. Alas! I cannot fill her place
-for him. He is uncomforted. How sad,
-how terrible her end, within the very sight of
-him she loved! Tell me, Alixe, was she very
-fair?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Not, methinks, so fair as thou, madame.
-Yet she was beautiful to look on, with her
-dark hair and her pale, clear skin, and her
-mouth redder than a rose in June. Her eyes
-were dark—like shadowy stars. And her
-ways were gentle—gay—tender—anything
-to fit her mood. Ah! I am wounding thee!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Poor Lenore’s head was bent a little farther
-down, and by her shoulders her companion
-knew that she wept. Alixe would have given
-much to bring some comfort for the pain
-she had unintentionally roused. But in the
-presence of the unhappy wife, she sat uneasy
-and abashed, powerless to bring solace to that
-tortured heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>While the two sat there, in this silence, the
-storm, which had lulled a little, broke out
-afresh with such a flash and roar as caused
-even Alixe to cower back where she was.
-There was a fierce tumult of new rain and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>howling wind, and in the midst of it a sudden
-great clamoring at the Castle door, and the
-faint sound of a horse neighing outside. Alixe
-sprang up, and, thinking only of giving shelter
-to some storm-driven stranger, unbarred the
-door. As it flew open before the storm, a
-man was hurled into the room, in a furious
-gush of water; and when the lantern-light fell
-upon his haggard face, Lenore gave a cry that
-was half a sob, and rushed upon him, clasping
-his arms,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Courtoise! Courtoise! How fares my
-lord?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise gazed down upon her, and did
-not speak. In his face was such a look of
-suffering as none had ever seen before upon it.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Courtoise!” she cried again, this time
-with a new note in her voice. “Courtoise!—my
-lord!—speak to me! speak—how fares
-my lord?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>But still, though she clung to him, Courtoise
-made no reply.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER TEN</em><br /> <span class='large'>FROM RENNES</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_276.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-Lenore’s two hands went
-up in an agony of entreaty.
-Courtoise maintained his
-silence. There was in the
-great hall a stillness that the
-rushing of the storm could
-not affect. Alixe moved back to the door,
-and barred it once more against the attacks of
-the wind. At the same time another figure
-appeared on the stairs. Madame Eleanore,
-fully dressed, her hair bound round with a
-metal filet, came rapidly down and joined the
-little group. Lenore was as one groping
-through a mist. She knew, vaguely, when
-madame came; but it meant nothing to her.
-Now she repeated, in the pleading tone of a
-child that begs for some sweet withheld from
-it by its elder,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>“Thou bringest a packet from my lord,
-Courtoise? Sweet Courtoise, deliver it to my
-hand. My lord sendeth me a letter, is it
-not so?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A low cry, inarticulate, heart-broken, came
-from the lips of the esquire; and therewith
-he fell upon his knees before the young
-Lenore and held up his two hands as if to
-ward off from her the blow that he should
-deal. “Madame!” he said; and, for some
-reason, Lenore cowered before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Then Eleanore came up to them, her face
-milk-white, her eyes burning; and, laying her
-hand upon the young man’s shoulder, she said
-softly: “Speak, Courtoise! Tell us what is
-come to thy lord. In pity for us, delay no
-more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise looked up to her, and saw how
-deeply haggard her face seemed. Then the
-world grew great and black; and out of
-the surrounding darkness came his voice,
-“The Seigneur is dead. Lord Gerault is
-killed of a spear-thrust that he got in the
-lists at Rennes. They bear him homeward
-now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A deep groan, born of this, her final world-wound,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>came from Eleanore’s gray lips. Alixe
-gave a long scream, and then fell forward upon
-her knees and began to mutter senseless words
-of prayer. Courtoise huddled himself up on
-the floor, and let fatigue and grief strive for
-the mastery over him. Only Lenore uttered no
-sound. She, the youngest of them there, and
-the most bereaved, stood perfectly still. One
-of her hands was pressed hard against her forehead;
-and she looked as if she were trying
-to recall some forgotten thing. Presently she
-whispered to herself a few indistinguishable
-words, and a faint smile hovered round her
-lips. Finally, seeing the piteous plight of
-Courtoise, she laid one hand upon his lowered
-head and said gently,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Courtoise, thou art weary, and wet, and
-spent with riding. Rise, dear squire, and seek
-thy bed, and rest. ’Tis very late—and
-thou’rt so weary. Go to thy rest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore looked at her, the frail girl, in
-amazement. Then she came round and took
-Lenore’s hand, and said: “Thou sayest well;
-’tis very late, Lenore, and thou art also
-lightly clad. Come thou to thy bed, and let
-Alixe to hers. Come, my girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>Lenore made no resistance, and went with
-madame toward the stairs; Alixe stared after
-them as if they had both been mad, for she
-had never known a blow that stuns the brain.
-Lenore suffered herself to be led quietly up
-the stairs, and, reaching her own room, which
-was dark save for the light that came through
-from madame’s open door, she dropped off her
-wide bliault, and lay down, shivering slightly,
-in the cold bed. She was numb and drowsy.
-Madame, bending over her, watched and saw
-the eyelids slowly close over her great blue
-eyes, till they were fast shut; and the young
-Lenore slept—slept as sweetly as a babe.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Of the night, however, that madame spent,
-who dares to speak in unexpressive words?
-What the slow-passing, dark-robed hours
-brought her, who shall say? Her last loss
-broke her spirit; and she felt that underneath
-the heavy, all-powerful hand of the
-Creator-Destroyer, none might stand upright
-and hope to live. Gerault had suffered,
-as now he gave, great sorrow. Eleanore had
-never felt herself close to his heart, as she had
-once been close to the heart of that daughter
-whom she had sacrificed to an unwilling God.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>But now, in the knowledge of his death, the
-memory of Gerault’s coldness and of his
-elected solitude went from her, and she recalled
-only the justice, the strength, the self-reliance
-of him. Gradually her memory drew
-her back through his manhood, through his
-youth and his boyhood, to the time of his
-infancy, when the little, helpless, dark-eyed
-babe had come to bless the loneliness of her
-own young life. And with this memory, at
-last, came tears,—those divine tears that can
-wash the direst grief free of its bitterness.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As the dawn showed in the east, and rose
-triumphant over the dying storm, madame
-crept to her bed, and laid her weary body
-on the kindly resting-place, and slept.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At half-past six the sun lifted above the
-eastern hills, and looked forth from a clear,
-green sky, over a land freshly washed, glittering
-with dew, and new-colored with brighter
-green and gold and red for the glorification
-of the September day. The sea, bringing
-great breakers in from the pathless west,
-was spread with a carpet of high-rolling gold,
-designed to cover all the new-stolen treasures
-gathered by night and stored within its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>treacherous, malignant depths. But the world
-poured fragrant incense to the sun, and the
-sun showered gold on the sea, and in this
-sacrificial worship Nature expiated her dire
-passion of the night.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was fair daylight when Lenore opened her
-eyes and sat up in her bed to greet the morning.
-She was glad indeed to escape from the
-fetters of sleep, for her dreams had been feverish
-things. In them she had wandered abroad
-over the gray battlements, and through the
-grim chambers of dimly lighted Crépuscule,
-and had seen and heard terrible things. Lenore
-smiled to herself at the thought that all were
-past. And then, creeping over her, came the
-black shadow of reality, of memory. There
-was the storm—her sleeplessness—Alixe—the
-story of the lost Lenore—were these
-dreams? And then—finally—God!—the
-coming of Courtoise—and—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>With a sharp cry Lenore sprang from the
-bed, flung her purple mantle upon her, and
-ran wildly through the adjoining room into
-that of madame. Eleanore, roused from her
-light sleep by that cry, had risen and met
-her daughter near the door. Lenore needed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>but one glance into madame’s colorless face.
-Then she knew that she had not dreamed in
-the past night. Her horrible visions were
-true.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Physical refreshment brought her a terrible
-power: the power of suffering. There could
-not now be any numb acceptance of facts.
-Eleanore herself was shocked at the change
-that a few seconds wrought in the young face.
-Yet still Lenore shed no tears, made no exhibition
-of her grief. Quietly, with the stillness
-of death about her movements, she returned
-to her room and began to dress herself. Before
-she had finished her toilet, Alixe crept in,
-white-faced and red-eyed, to ask if there were
-any service she might do. Lenore tremulously
-bade her wait till her hair was bound;
-and then she said: “Let Courtoise be brought
-in to me, here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Wilt thou not first eat—but a morsel
-of bread—nay, a sup of wine?” pleaded
-Alixe.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore looked at her. “How should I eat
-or drink? Let Courtoise be brought to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Obediently Alixe went and found Courtoise
-loitering about the foot of the stairs in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>hall below. He ascended eagerly when Alixe
-gave him her message, and entered alone into
-the room where sat Lenore.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Through two long hours Alixe and the
-demoiselles and young esquires, a stricken,
-silent company, huddled together at the table
-in the long room, sat and waited the coming
-of Courtoise. There was nothing to be done
-in the Castle save to wait; and it seemed
-to them all that they would rather work like
-slaves than sit thus, inert and silent, and
-with naught to do but think of what had
-come upon Le Crépuscule. They knew that
-the body of Gerault was on its way home.
-A henchman had long since started off for
-St. Nazaire to acquaint the Bishop with the
-news and bring him back to the Castle. Also,
-Anselm and the captain of the keep had lifted
-the great stone in the floor of the chapel,
-that led into the vault below. This was all
-there was to be done now, until the last home-coming
-of their lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At ten o’clock Courtoise appeared on the
-threshold of the long room, and his face bore
-a light as of transfiguration. As he went in
-and halted near the doorway, the little company
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>rose reverently, and waited for him to
-speak. He turned to Alixe, but it was a
-moment or two before he could get his voice
-and control it to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe—Alixe—Madame Lenore hath
-asked for you—asks that you come to her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe rose at once, and the two went out
-together into the hall. There, however, Courtoise
-halted, saying, in a low, almost reverent
-tone: “She is in her chamber. I am to
-remain here below.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe turned her white face and her bright
-green eyes upon him questioningly. “How
-doth she bear herself? Doth she yet weep?”
-she asked in a half-whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“She doth not weep. Ah, God! the
-Seigneur married an angel out of heaven,
-Alixe, and never knew it; and now can never
-know!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“He was our lord, Courtoise. Reproach
-not the dead.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise bent his head without speaking,
-and Alixe went on, up to Lenore’s chamber,
-the door of which stood half open. Alixe
-went softly in, and found Lenore sitting alone
-by the window, where madame had just left
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>her. Silently the widowed girl put out both
-hands to Alixe, and, as Alixe went over to her,
-the tears began to run from her eyes. It
-was this sight of tears that first broke through
-Lenore’s wonderful self-control. Springing to
-her feet, with a choking, hysterical cry she
-flung both arms around Alixe’s neck, and wailed
-out, in that breathless monotone that children
-sometimes use: “Alixe! Alixe! Why is it
-that I cannot die? O Alixe! Alixe! Pray
-God to let me die!”</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='c014'>At four o’clock in the afternoon Monseigneur
-de St. Nazaire arrived at the Castle.
-The body of the fallen knight had not yet
-come. Watchers had been placed in every
-tower to catch the first sight of the funeral
-train; but all day long they had strained their
-eyes in vain. At last, when the sun was near
-the horizon, and the golden shadows were long
-over the land, and the sky was haloed with a
-saintly glow, up, out of the cool depths of the
-forest, on the winding, barren road that rose
-toward the Castle on the cliff, came a wearily
-moving company of men and horses. There
-were six riders, who, with lances reversed, rode
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>three on a side of a broad, heavy cart, of which
-the burden was covered with a great, black
-cloth, embroidered in one corner with the
-ducal arms of Brittany.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The drawbridge was already lowered. In
-the courtyard an orderly company of henchmen
-and servants stood waiting to see the
-funeral car drive in. The Castle doors were
-open, and in their space stood the Bishop,
-with a priest at his right hand and, on his
-left, Courtoise, black-clothed, and white and
-calm. In front of the doorway the cart halted,
-and immediately the six gentlemen of Rennes,
-who had drawn Gerault from the fatal lists
-and had of their own desire brought him
-home, dismounted, and, after reverently saluting
-the Bishop, went to the cart and lifted
-out the stretcher. This, its burden still covered
-with the black cloth, they carried into
-the Castle and deposited in the chapel on
-the high, black bier made ready for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame Eleanore, Alixe, and the demoiselles,
-but not Lenore, were in the chapel
-waiting. When the burden of the litter had
-been placed, and the black cloth drawn close
-over the dead body, Eleanore, who till this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>time had been upon her knees before the altar,
-came forward to greet the six knightly gentlemen,
-and all of them, as they returned her
-sad salute, were struck with her impenetrable
-dignity. Her salutation at once thanked them,
-greeted them, and dismissed them from the
-chapel; and indeed they had no thought of
-staying to watch this first meeting of the living
-with the dead; but, returning obeisance to the
-mother of their comrade, they left the holy
-room and found Courtoise outside, waiting to
-conduct them to the refreshment that had been
-prepared.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>So was Eleanore left alone before her dead.
-Behind her, near the altar, knelt the maidens,
-weeping while they prayed. The tall candles
-around the bier were yet unlighted; but
-through one of the high windows came a last
-ray of sunlight, to bar the mourning-cloth
-with royal gold.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>For a moment, clasping both hands before
-her, in her silent strain, Eleanore stood still
-before the bier. Then, moving forward, she
-lifted the edge of the covering, and drew it away
-from the head and shoulders of her son.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>There was he,—Gerault. There was he,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>scarcely whiter or more still than she had seen
-him many times in life; yet he was dead:
-transparent and pinched and ineffably still, and
-dead! The head was bare of any cap or helmet,
-and the black locks and beard were
-smoothly combed. The broad, fair brow was
-calm and unwrinkled. The mouth, scarce
-concealed by the mustache, was curved into
-an expression of great peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame took the cover again, and drew it
-slowly down till the whole form lay before her.
-His armor had been removed, and he was
-clothed in silken vestments that hid all trace
-of his wound. The hands were folded fair
-across his breast; his feet were cased in long
-velvet shoes, fur-bordered. From the peacefulness
-of his attitude it was difficult to imagine
-the scene by which he had met his end: the
-great flashing and clashing of arms, the blare
-of trumpets, the shouting applause of thousands
-of fair onlookers, gayly clothed ladies,
-who, after their shouting, saw him fall.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Long Eleanore stood there, looking upon
-him as he lay, untroubled now by any human
-thing. And as she looked, many world-thoughts
-rose up within her as to his life, his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>griefs, and the manner of his going. She had
-had him always: had borne, and reared, and
-watched, and loved him; and he had loved her,
-she knew, though he had seldom shown it,
-and had lived much within himself. She
-yearned—ah, <em>how</em> she yearned!—to take him
-now into her arms again, and croon over him,
-and soothe him, as a mother soothes her
-children. Alas, that he did not need it of
-her! Her breast heaved twice or thrice, with
-deep, suppressed sobs. Then she fell upon
-her knees, and leaned her forehead over upon
-an edge of his robe while she prayed. And as
-she knelt there, twilight gathered over the sunset
-glow, and the chapel grew dim and gray
-with coming darkness.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After a long while madame rose and turned
-to Alixe, who stood near, looking at her and
-weeping. And madame said gently: “Alixe,
-let her be summoned—little Lenore—his
-wife. She should be here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe bowed silently, and went away out of
-the room. Eleanore remained in her place,
-and the demoiselles still knelt under the crucifix.
-Then came footboys, with tapers, to
-light the candles. Presently the bier was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>haloed with yellow flames, and the marble
-altar blazed with lights. The hour for the
-mass was near, and the people of the Castle,
-and a few country folk, clothed in their best,
-began to come softly into the chapel, by twos
-and threes. All, after bowing to the cross and
-pausing for a few seconds to look upon
-Gerault, passed over to the far side of the
-room, and knelt there, absorbed in prayer.
-The little room was more than half filled,
-when Courtoise, pale and wide-eyed, appeared
-upon the threshold, and, holding up his hand,
-whispered to the throng,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame Lenore is here! Peace, and be
-still! Madame Lenore comes in!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Immediately Lenore walked into the room,
-and men held their breath at sight of her. She
-was dressed as for a bridal, in robes of stiff,
-white damask, her mantle fastened at her throat
-with a silver pin, and her silver-woven wedding-veil
-falling over her from the filet that confined
-it. White as death itself she was, and
-staring straight before her, seeing nothing of the
-throng of onlookers. For a moment her eyes
-were blinded by the blaze of light. Then she
-started forward, to the body of her lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>When she entered, her two hands had been
-tightly clenched, and she had thought to restrain
-herself from any outbreak of grief before
-the people. But the living were forgotten
-now. Here before her was the face that she
-had loved so wofully, that she had hungered
-for so unspeakably. Here was he, the giver
-of her one brief hour of unutterable happiness;
-the cause of so many days and nights of tremulous
-woe. Here he lay, waiting not for her
-nor for anything, with no power to give her
-greeting when she came. Yet it was he; it
-was his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Gerault—Gerault—my lord!” she whispered
-softly, as if he slept: “Gerault!” She
-was beside him, and had taken one of the rigid
-hands in both her warm, living ones. “My
-lord, my beloved, wilt not turn thy face to me?
-I have waited long for thy kiss. Prithee, give
-but a little of thy love; <em>seem</em> but to notice me,
-and I will be well content. Nay, but thou
-surely wilt! Surely, surely, beloved, thou wilt
-not pass me by!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She had been covering the hand she held
-with kisses, but now she put it from her, and
-looked down upon the passive body, her eyes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>wide and hurt, and her mouth tremulous with
-his repulse. The spectators watched this pitiable
-scene with fascinated awe; and it seemed
-not to occur to one of them to prevent what
-followed. None there realized that Lenore
-was unbalanced: that to her, Gerault was still
-alive. She bent over, and put her lips to his.
-Then, burned and tortured by the unresponsiveness
-of the clay, she laid herself down upon
-the bier and put her head in the hollow of
-Gerault’s neck, where it had been wont to rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Now, at last, two of that watching company
-started forward to prevent a continuance of the
-scene. Courtoise and the Bishop went to her
-with one impulse; took her—monseigneur
-by the hands, Courtoise about the body;
-loosened her clasp upon the form of her dead
-husband, and drew her gently away from the
-bier. She, spent and shaken with her grief,
-made no resistance, but lay quietly back in
-their arms, trembling and weak. Thereupon
-both men looked helplessly toward Madame
-Eleanore, to know what should be done. She,
-strained almost to the point of breaking, came
-and stood over the form of Lenore and said to
-Courtoise,—</p>
-
-<div id='i_293' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i_293.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic006'>
-<p><em><span class='c016'>“G</span>erault—Gerault—my<br />lord!” she whispered.—Page <a href='#Page_275'>275</a></em></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>“She cannot remain here. ’Tis too terrible
-for her. Carry her up to her room, whither
-Alixe shall follow her. But I must remain
-here till the mass is said.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Both of the men would gladly have acted
-upon this suggestion; but madame had not
-finished speaking when Lenore began to struggle
-in their arms, crying piteously the while:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay! Let me stay! In the name of
-mercy, let me not be sent from him. I will
-not seek again to disturb his rest. I will be
-very quiet—very still. I will not even weep.
-I will but kneel here upon the stones, and will
-not speak through all the mass, so that you take
-me not out of his sight. Methinks he might
-care to have me here; it might be his wish
-that I should remain unto the end. Have
-pity, gentle Courtoise! Pity, monseigneur!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At once they granted her request, and released
-her; for indeed her plea was more
-than any of the three could well endure. The
-Bishop was beyond speech, and the tears were
-streaming from Courtoise’s eyes as he left
-her side. Lenore kept her word. She knelt
-down upon the stones, two or three feet from
-the bier; and, with head bent low and hands
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>clasped upon her breast, strove to force her
-thoughts to God and high heaven. St. Nazaire
-at once began the mass for the dead, and never
-had any man more reverence done him or more
-tears shed for him than the stern and silent
-Lord of Crépuscule, who, it seemed, had formed
-a light of life for Lenore the golden-haired.
-After the beginning of the service, she was left
-unnoticed where she had placed herself; and,
-as the minutes passed, her strained figure settled
-nearer and nearer to the floor; the candle-light
-played more joyously with her glorious hair;
-and finally, as the mass neared its end, she
-sank quietly down upon the stones, unconscious
-and released from tears at last.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A few moments later, Courtoise and Alixe
-bore her gently up the great stairs, and laid
-her, in her white bridal robes, upon her lonely
-bed. It was thus that she left Gerault; thus
-that her youth and her love met their end, and
-her long twilight of widowhood began.</p>
-
-<hr class='c011' />
-
-<p class='c014'>Another morning dawned, in tender primrose
-tints, and saluted the sea through a low-clinging
-September haze. The Castle rose at the usual
-hour, and dressed, and descended to the morning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>meal, scarce able to understand that there
-was any change in the usual quiet existence.
-It was impossible, indeed, to realize that, in
-two little days of sun and storm, the life of
-the Castle had died, its mainstay had broken,
-and that henceforth it must exist only in memories.
-On this day two of the squires made
-their adieux to madame, and hied them forth
-to seek a lord by whom to be trained yet
-more thoroughly for knighthood; and mayhap
-to get themselves a little more familiar with its
-third article.<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c015'><sup>[3]</sup></a> But Courtoise, all heart-broken
-as he was, and Roland de St. Bertaux, and Guy
-le Trouvé, being all of gentle blood, but without
-other home to seek, came to their lady and
-kissed her hand, and swore her eternal allegiance
-and service. And the demoiselles, who had,
-indeed, no need of a lord in the Castle, renewed
-their duty to their mistress, and also tried to
-give her what little comfort they knew, in the
-shape of certain of Anselm’s Latin texts, and a
-few less pithy but warmer phrases of their own
-making. The six knights that had brought
-Gerault home, rode off again, sadly bearing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>with them Eleanore’s brave messages of loyalty
-and thanks to Duke Jean in Rennes. The
-Bishop of St. Nazaire sent his assistant priest
-home; but he himself elected to remain for
-a day or two, knowing that, should Lenore
-become seriously ill, he would be a stay for
-Madame Eleanore. Of Eleanore herself there
-were no fears. She was too strong to cause
-any one anxiety for her health. Indeed, it was
-generally thought that she had put Gerault too
-much away. How that may be is not certain;
-but there was nothing now in the Castle to
-speak of him. The chapel was empty; the
-mouth of the great vault had closed once
-more, this time to hide under its grim weight
-the last of the line of Crépuscule.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c014'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. “He shall uphold the rights of the weaker, such as orphans,
-damsels, and widows.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the second day after the funeral, Eleanore,
-knowing by bitter experience how excellent a
-cure for melancholy is hard work, betook herself
-and the demoiselles up to the spinning-room
-as usual. Lenore only, of the company,
-was missing. She, by madame’s own bidding,
-still kept her bed,—lying there silent, patient,
-asking no attendance from any one; listening
-hour by hour to the soft sound of the sea as it
-broke upon the cliffs far below her window.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>Of what was in her heart, what things she saw
-in her day dreams, neither Alixe nor madame
-sought to learn. But there was something in
-her face, thin, wan, transparent as it had grown,
-that sent a great fear to Eleanore’s heart, and
-caused her to watch over Lenore with deep
-anxiety; and it seemed as if the effort of walking
-would break the last vestige of strength in
-that frail body.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Through the first day of return to the old
-routine, madame was fully occupied in making
-a pretence at cheerfulness and in inducing those
-around her to hide their sadness. But afterwards,
-when chatter and smiles began to come
-naturally back to the young lips, and the gayety
-of youth to shine from their eyes again, she
-suddenly relaxed her strain, and let her mind
-sink into what depths it would. How dim
-with misery was the September air! Hope
-had gone out of her life; and the thought of
-joy was a mockery. Throughout her whole
-world there was not a single spot of brightness
-on which to feast her tired eyes. Even
-imagination had fled, and there remained to
-her only a vista of unending, monotonous
-days, the one so like the other that she should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>soon forget the passage of time. And this
-future was inevitable. Le Crépuscule was
-here, and she must keep to it. She had no
-other refuge save a nunnery; and that merest
-suggestion was terrible to her. Gerault’s
-widow, the young Lenore, was left; yet she
-would be infinitely happier to go back to the
-home of her youth. There was a cry of despair
-in Eleanore’s heart at this realization,
-and she fought with herself for a long time
-before finally she was wrought to the point of
-going to Lenore and counselling her return to
-her father’s roof. Yet Eleanore brought herself
-to this; for she felt that this last sacrifice
-was one of duty: that she had no right
-forever to shut the youth and beauty of
-the young life into the grim shadows of Le
-Crépuscule.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the evening of the third day of her new
-struggle Eleanore went, with woe in her heart,
-to the door of Lenore’s room. The apartment
-was flooded with the light of sunset, so that
-Lenore, lying in the very midst of it, seemed
-to be resting in a sea of glowing gold. When
-Eleanore entered, the young girl turned, with
-a little smile of pleasure, and said,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>“Thou’rt very kind to come to me here
-while I lie thus in idlesse. Indeed, I see not
-how thou shouldst bear with me that I do
-nothing when all the Castle is at work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Bear with thee! My child, thou hast
-given us nothing to bear. Thou hast rather
-brought into the Castle a light that will burn
-always in our hearts. And, in thy great grief,
-thou shalt get what comfort may be for thee
-from whatever thou canst find. Now, indeed,
-dear child, I am come to make a pleading
-that breaketh my heart; yet we have done so
-much wrong to thy fair young life, that it is
-not in me further to blight it.” She went over
-to the bedside, and Lenore, sitting up, took
-one of the strong white hands in her own delicate
-fingers and pressed it to her lips. Then,
-while Eleanore bent close over her, she said
-softly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“What is this thing that pains thee? Surely
-thou’lt not think that I could do aught to
-hurt thee?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yes, for this will bring happiness back into
-thy heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Happiness!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yes, Lenore, happiness. That word
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>sounds strange in thine ears from me; yet
-listen while I speak. Gerault, my dead son,
-brought thee out of a life of sunshine and
-gayety and fair youth into this grim Twilight
-Castle; and now thou hast entered, with all
-of us, from twilight into blackest night. But
-thou hast in thee what is lacking in me, and
-in those that dwell here as part of our race;
-thou’rt young, and thou hast had a joyous
-youth. Thou knowest what I long since forgot:
-that, in this world, there is a country of
-happiness. Now it is I, Gerault’s mother, that
-bids thee leave these shades of ours and return
-to thy real home. I bid thee go back again
-into thy youth, to thy father’s house, whither,
-if thou wilt, I will myself in all love convey
-thee; and I will tell thy father how thou
-hast been unto me all that—more than—a
-daughter should be; that I love thee as one
-of my own blood; that I am sore to give thee
-up—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame! Madame Eleanore! Thou must
-not give me up! Surely thou wilt not!”
-Lenore turned a quivering face up to the
-other; and madame read her expression with
-deep amazement.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>“Give thee up! Do I not tell thee that at
-the thought my heart is like to break? Nay,
-thou’rt my daughter always; and when thou
-wilt, this is thy home. Yet for the sake of
-thy youth—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame—” Lenore sat up straighter, and
-looked suddenly off to the windows of her
-room, her face by turns gone deathly white and
-rosy red: “madame, this Twilight Castle is
-my double home. Here dwelt Gerault, my
-beloved lord, and—and here shall dwell his
-child—the child that is to be born to me—the
-new Lord of Le Crépuscule.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Lenore!—Lenore!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“My mother!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Then, as the sunset died from the distant
-west, these two women, united as never before,
-sat together upon Gerault’s bed, clasping each
-other close and mingling their tears and their
-laughter in a joy that neither had thought to
-know again.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER ELEVEN</em><br /> <span class='large'>THE WANDERER</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_304.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-The utterly unexpected revelation
-that Lenore had
-made to madame drew the
-two women into a tender intimacy
-that brought a holy joy to both of them. That
-most beautiful, most priceless flowering of
-Lenore’s life gave to her nature an added
-sweetness, and to her soul a new depth that
-rendered her incomparably beautiful in the
-eyes of every one around her. The secret
-remained a secret between her and her new-made
-mother, and for this reason the happiness
-of the two was as inexplicable as it was joyous
-for the rest of the Castle. Alixe, standing
-jealously without the gate of this golden citadel,
-into which she had frequent glimpses,
-wondered at its brightness as much as she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>wondered at its existence at all. Day by day
-Lenore grew beautiful, and day by day the
-look of content upon her face became more
-marked, until it was marvelled at how she had
-forgotten her bereavement. And Eleanore—Madame
-Eleanore—found herself growing
-young again in the youth of Gerault’s bride;
-and in her love for the beautiful, tranquil girl
-she learned a lesson in patience that fifty years
-of trial and sorrow had never brought her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When Lenore finally rose from her bed she
-did not return to the mornings in the spinning-room;
-and, since madame must perforce be
-there to oversee the work, Alixe took her
-frame or her wheel to Lenore’s chamber, and
-sat there through the morning hours. Save
-for the fact that Alixe could not be addressed
-on the subject nearest her heart, Lenore probably
-enjoyed these periods of the younger
-woman’s company quite as much as those
-graver times with madame. Both of them
-were young, and Alixe, having a nature the
-individuality of which nothing could suppress,
-knew more of the gayeties of youth than
-one could have thought possible, considering
-her opportunities. This jumped well with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>Lenore’s disposition, for her own sunny nature
-would have shone through any cloud-thickness,
-provided there was some one to catch
-the beam and reflect it back to her. The two
-talked on every conceivable subject, but generally
-reverted to one common interest before
-many hours had gone. This was Nature: of
-which Lenore had been vaguely, but none the
-less passionately fond; and of which Alixe,
-in her lonely life, had made a beautiful and
-minute study. The two of them together
-watched the death of the summer, and saw
-autumn weave its full woof, from the rich
-colors of golden harvest and purple vine
-to the melancholy brown and gray of dead
-moorland and leafless branch. And when the
-dreariness of November came upon the land,
-there remained, to their keen eyes, the sea—the
-sea that is never twice the same—the sea
-whose beauties cannot die.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This sea, which Lenore had never looked
-on till she came a bride to Crépuscule, held
-for her a deep fascination. She watched it
-as an astronomer watches his stars. And its
-vasty, changing surface came to exercise a
-peculiar influence over her quiet life. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>night of the great storm brought it into
-double conjunction with the bitterest grief in
-her life; and, with the knowledge of its cruel
-power, awe was added to her interest and
-her admiration. She and Alixe were accustomed
-to talk daily of the lost Lenore, Lenore
-herself always introducing the topic with irresistible
-eagerness, and Alixe answering her
-innumerable questions with an interest born
-of curiosity regarding the young widow’s
-motive. In the presence of Alixe, Lenore
-never betrayed the tiniest tremor of sensitiveness;
-and it would have been impossible for
-Alixe to surmise how keen was the secret
-bitterness that lay hidden in her heart. What
-suffering it brought she endured alone, by
-night, and indeed she kept herself for the
-most part well shielded from it.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>From the first night after Gerault’s burial,
-Lenore had insisted upon sleeping alone. To
-every suggestion of company she replied that
-solitude was precious to her, and that she could
-not sleep with another in the room. Eleanore
-understood her feeling, and, while she left
-an easy access from her room to Lenore’s,
-never once ventured to enter Lenore’s chamber
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>after nightfall. For this, indeed, the young
-woman was grateful, not because of any joy
-she found in being alone in the darkness, but
-because, after she had gone to bed, she felt
-that her veil of appearances had fallen, and
-that she might let her mind take what temper
-it would. It was by night that she knew the
-terrible yearning for the dead that all women
-have in time, and from which they suffer keenest
-agony. It was by night that she pictured
-Gerault not as he had been, but as she had
-wished him to be toward her; and gradually
-Gerault dead came to be vested with every
-perfect quality, till her loss became endurable
-to her through the hours of her dreaming.
-By night, also, her childhood returned to
-her; and she recalled and gently regretted all
-the simple pleasures she had known, the rides
-and games and caroles that she had been wont
-to indulge in, in her father’s house. Sometimes,
-too, in hours of distorted vision, she
-came to feel that her great blessing was rather
-a burden; and she would weep at the thought
-of the little thing that must be born to the
-interminable shadows of this grim Castle,
-and felt that she alone would be responsible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>for the sadness of the young life. Yet there
-might be fair things devised for him. It
-could not be but a boy,—her child; and
-in his early youth she planned that he should
-ride to some distant, gay chateau, to be esquired
-to a gallant knight; and in time he
-should come riding home to her, himself
-golden-spurred; and then, later, he should
-bring a lady to the Castle whom he should
-love as a man loves once; and the two of
-them would bring the light of the sun to
-Crépuscule, and banish its shadows forever
-away. So dreamed Lenore for this unborn
-babe of hers.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>And then again, sometimes, by night, she
-would leave her bed and sit for hours together
-at that window where, long ago, Gerault had
-knelt in the hour of his passion. And Lenore
-would watch the quiet moon sail serenely
-through the sky, till it sank, at early dawn,
-under the other sea. And this vision of the
-setting moon never failed to bring peace to
-her heart. Sometimes, after Gerault’s example,
-but not in his tone, she would call down
-from her height upon the spirit of the lost
-Lenore that was supposed to walk the rocky
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>shore at the base of the Castle cliff. But no
-answering cry ever reached her ears, and this
-was well; for what such a thing would have
-brought to her already morbid mind, it were
-sad to surmise. Nevertheless, in the nights
-thus spent, this gentle ghost came to have a
-personality for her, in which she rather rejoiced,
-for she felt that here must be some
-one in whom she could expect understanding
-of her secret grief. Lenore at night, living
-with the creatures of her fancy, was a strange
-little being, no more resembling the Lenore of
-daylight than a gnome resembles some bright
-fairy. And so well did she hide her midnight
-moods that no one in the Castle ever so much
-as suspected them.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was not till the middle of November that
-Alixe learned of the hope of Crépuscule; but
-when she did know, her tenderness for Lenore
-became something beautiful to see, and she
-partook both of Eleanore’s deep joy and of
-Lenore’s quiet content. Three or four days
-after the knowledge had come to her, Alixe
-was pacing up and down the terrace in front
-of the Castle, side by side with Lenore. It
-was a blustering, chilly day, and both young
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>women drew their heavy mantles close around
-them as they watched the great flocks of
-gulls wheel and dip to the sea, looking like
-flurries of snowflakes against the sombre background
-of the sky. Far out in the bay one or
-two of the crude fishing-boats from St. Nazaire
-were beating their way southward toward their
-harbor, and then Lenore watched with eyes
-that dilated more and more with interest and
-desire.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe,” she said suddenly, “canst thou
-sail a boat?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Why dost thou ask?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Certes, for that I would know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe laughed. “’Tis a reason,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Tell me, Alixe! Make me answer!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Knowest thou not that, after the drowning
-of the demoiselle Lenore, it was forbidden
-any one in Crépuscule to put out upon the sea
-in any boat, though he might be able to walk
-the water like Our Lord?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Hush, Alixe! But yet—thou’st not
-replied to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Well, then, if thou wouldst know, I can
-sail a boat, and withal skilfully. In the olden
-days, Laure—’twas Gerault’s sister—and I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>have gone out in secret an hundred times in a
-fisherman’s boat anchored a mile down the shore,
-in front of some of the peasants’ huts. Laure
-and I paid the fisherman money to let us take
-the boat; for she loved it as well as I. Indeed,
-I have been lonely for it since her going.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah! Since her going thou’st not known
-the sea?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Not often. Alone, with a heavy boat,
-there is danger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe, take me with thee sometime!
-Soon! To-day! My soul is athirst to feel
-the tremor of the boiling waves!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame!” murmured Alixe, not relishing
-what she considered an ill-advised jest.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay! Look not like that upon me! I
-would truly go. Can we not set forth?
-There is yet time ere dark.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>From sheer nervousness Alixe laughed.
-Then she said solemnly: “Madame Lenore,
-right willingly, hadst thou need of it, I would
-yield up my life to you; but venture forth
-with you upon those waters will I not; nor
-thou nor any other that were not mad, would
-ask it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore frowned at these words, but she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>said nothing more, either on that subject or
-another; and presently the two went back
-into the Castle. But a strange desire had
-been born in Lenore, and she brooded upon
-it continually. Day by day she hungered for
-the sea; and, though she did not again suggest
-her wish, there were times when the roar of
-the waves on the cliffs, and the cold puffs of
-air strong with the odor of the salt tide, came
-near unbalancing her mind, and drove uncanny
-thoughts of watery deaths through her heart.
-But through that long winter she betrayed
-only occasional evidences of the effect that illness,
-loneliness, and long brooding were having
-upon her mind; and perhaps it was only the
-dread of betrayal that in the end saved her
-from actual insanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>December came in and advanced in the midst
-of arctic gales and continually swirling snow, till
-Brittany was wrapped deep under a pure, fleecy
-blanket. It was the season of warmth and idleness
-indoors, when the poorest peasant got out
-his chestnut-bag, and merrily roasted this staple
-article of his diet before the fire by night. The
-Christmas spirit was on all men; and this in
-Brittany was tempered and tinctured with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>quaintest fairy-lore relating to the season, and
-as real to every Breton as the story of their
-Christ. The Christmas mass was no more devoutly
-enjoyed than was the great feast, held a
-week later, on the night known throughout
-Brittany not as the New Year, but as St.
-Sylvester’s Eve, when all elfdom was abroad
-to guard the treasures left uncovered by the
-thirsty dolmens. And this, and an infinite
-number of other tales, of witch and gnome,
-sprite and fay, sleeping princess and hero-king,
-of Viviane and her wondrous forest of
-Broecilande, were told anew, each year, behind
-locked doors, before the crackling fires
-that burned from dusk to enchanted midnight.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>To Lenore, the holy week from Christmas
-to New Year’s was replete with interest; for
-in her own home, near Rennes, she had known
-nothing like it. Christmas morning saw all
-the peasantry of the estates of Crépuscule come
-to the Castle for mass; after which there was a
-great distribution of alms.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>From Christmas Day, throughout that week,
-according to ecclesiastic law, the Castle drawbridge
-was never raised; no watchers were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>posted on the battlements, and monk and
-knight, outlaw and criminal, high lord and
-lady, found welcome and food and shelter
-within the great gray walls. This open hospitality
-was made safe by the fact that, during
-this time, no matter what war might be
-in progress, or what family feud in height,
-no man was allowed to lift a hand against
-his neighbor, and the knight that dared to use
-his sword during those seven days was branded
-caitiff throughout his life. This law prevailed
-throughout the length and breadth of
-France; but its observance belonged more
-peculiarly to the far coast regions, where
-towns were scarce, and feudal fortresses offered
-the only hope of shelter to the traveller.
-And during this week there was scarcely
-an hour in the day that did not see its wanderer,
-of whatever degree, appealing for safe
-housing from the bitter cold.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The week was the merriest and the busiest
-that Lenore had known since coming to the
-Castle; and the arrival of the Bishop of St.
-Nazaire, on the day before New Year’s, brought
-all Le Crépuscule to the highest state of satisfaction.
-For many years it had been monseigneur’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>custom to spend St. Sylvester’s Day
-in the Castle,—formerly as the guest of the old
-Seigneur, latterly as that of Madame Eleanore;
-and though the Twilight Castle always delighted
-to honor his coming, on such occasions
-it was a double pleasure; for upon this one day
-he carried with him a spirit of bonhomie, of general,
-rollicking gayety, that roused every one
-to the same pitch of happiness, and made the
-Saint’s feast what it was.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Since the last home-coming of Gerault, St.
-Nazaire had spent a good deal of time at the
-Castle, had played many a well-fought game
-of chess with Madame Eleanore, and had
-exerted himself to lift little Lenore, for whom
-he entertained almost a veneration, out of her
-quiet melancholy. None in the Castle, from
-Alixe to the scullions, but would have done
-him any service; and his arrival assured the
-feast of something of its one-time merriment.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On this great day the time for midday meat
-was set forward two hours, it being just one
-o’clock when the company sat down at the immense
-horseshoe table, that nearly encircled
-the great hall; for the ordinary Castle retinue
-was increased by a rabble of peasants, and a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>dozen or more of travellers that had claimed
-their privilege of hospitality.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As Madame Eleanore, handed by the Bishop,
-took her place at the head of the table, the
-band of musicians in the stone gallery overhead
-sent out a noisy blast of trumpets, and
-everybody sought a place. Beside madame,
-supported by Courtoise, came Lenore; and
-again by her were Alixe, with Anselm the
-steward. When these were all standing behind
-their tabourets, monseigneur repeated the
-grace, in Latin. Immediately upon the amen,
-the trumpets rang out again, and there was a
-great rustling as everybody sat down and, in
-the same breath, began to talk. After a wait of
-not less than ten seconds, there appeared four
-pages, bearing high in their hands four huge
-platters, on each of which reposed a stuffed
-boar’s head, steaming fragrantly. Two more
-boys followed these first, carrying immense
-baskets of bread,—white to go above the salt,
-black for those below. Then came Grichot,
-the cellarer, rolling into the room a cask of
-beer, which was set up in the space between
-the two ends of the curved table, and tapped.
-Instantly this was surrounded by a throng of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>struggling henchmen, friars, and peasants, each
-with his horn in his hand, eager to be among
-the first to drink allegiance to their lady.
-Madame and her little party in the centre of
-the table were served with wine of every
-description known to the north; besides mead
-or punches for whosoever should call for
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore was seated between Courtoise and
-monseigneur; and for her alone of all the
-company, apparently, the feast held less of
-merriment than of sadness. When every one
-was seated, and the clatter of tongues had begun,
-she looked about her, vaguely wondering
-how many times she should, by this feast,
-measure a year passed in the grim Castle.
-Looking along the table either way, at the
-double rows of men and women, Lenore saw
-every mouth working greedily upon food
-already served, and every hand outstretched
-for more, as rapidly as the various dishes
-could be brought in. She saw burly men,
-roaring with the laughter of animal satisfaction,
-drinking down flagon after flagon of bitter
-beer. She caught echoes and fragments of
-coarse jokes and coarser suggestions; and her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>delicate nature revolted at the scene. She
-turned to look toward the mistress of the
-Castle, wondering how madame, who was of
-a fibre as fine as her own, could endure such
-sights and sounds. Eleanore sat calmly listening
-to monseigneur, her eyes lifted a little
-above the level of the scene, her lips smiling,
-her air pleasantly animated, though she was
-scarcely eating, and only a cup of milk stood
-before her place. As for the Bishop, he was
-unfeignedly enjoying himself. A generous
-portion of roast peacock was on his plate, and
-a bottle of red wine stood close at his elbow.
-His wit was at its best, and he was entertaining
-all his immediate neighborhood with such
-stories and reminiscences as he alone could relate.
-Lenore found relief in the sight of him
-and madame, and, pulling herself together,
-turned to the young squire on her right hand,
-and began to talk to him gently. Roland
-listened to her with the reverent adoration
-entertained for her by every man about the
-Castle; but his replies were a little inadequate,
-and presently Lenore was again sitting silent,
-her burning eyes staring straight in front of
-her, her white face, framed in its shining hair,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>looking very set, her white robes gleaming
-frostily in the candle-light, her whole bearing
-stiffly unapproachable. She was nervous and
-uneasy, and she longed intensely to escape to
-her own quiet room. But there was madame
-talking serenely on, apparently unconscious of
-the gluttony around her; there was Alixe the
-Scornful, merrily jesting with Anselm, who
-had forgotten his frowns and his Latin together.
-Here was a great company of varied
-people, variously making merry, among whom
-there was not one that could have understood
-or excused her displeasure with the scene.
-Therefore she was fain to sit on, disconsolate,
-enduring as best she might her weariness and
-her contempt.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“En passant!” cried the Bishop, presently,
-“where is David le petit? Is the dwarf lying
-sick?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Why, indeed, I do not know,” answered
-Eleanore, looking around her. “David! Is
-David not among us?” she cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At this moment there was a commotion at
-one end of the room, and presently the table
-began to shake. Dishes and flagons clattered
-together, and a little ripple of laughter rose and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>flowed along from mouth to mouth, following
-the progress of David himself, who was darting
-rapidly down the table, picking his way
-easily between clumps of holly and tall candles,
-and dishes and plates and flagons, as he moved
-around toward Madame Eleanore and her
-little party. His costume added materially to
-the effect of his appearance, for he was dressed
-like an elf, in scarlet hose, pointed brown shoes,
-tight jerkin of brown slashed with red, and
-peaked, parti-colored cap. In this garb his tiny
-figure showed off straight and slender, and his
-ruddy face and glittering eyes gave him proper
-animation for the role he had chosen to play.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Flying down the table till he came to a halt in
-front of madame and the Bishop, he jerked the
-cap from his head, whirled lightly round on his
-toes, twice or thrice, and then, with a quaint
-gesture of introduction, he sang, in a sing-song
-tone, these verses:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c017'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“From elf-land I—</div>
- <div class='line'>Gnome or troll—</div>
- <div class='line'>Leaped from the cave</div>
- <div class='line'>Whence dolmens roll</div>
- <div class='line'>Down from on high</div>
- <div class='line'>To the tumbling wave!</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>“In darkness I live;</div>
- <div class='line'>In darkness I love.</div>
- <div class='line'>Yet there’s one thing</div>
- <div class='line'>To mortals I give.</div>
- <div class='line'>From treasure-trove</div>
- <div class='line'>Jewels I bring!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'>With the last words he drew, from a fat
-pouch at his side, a handful of bright bits
-of quartz-crystal, and, tossing them high in
-the air, let them fall over him and down upon
-the table in a glittering shower. There was
-a quick scramble for them; and then, with an
-uncanny laugh, David pirouetted down the
-table, backward, guiding himself miraculously
-among the articles that loaded the board, flinging
-about him, at every other step, more of his
-“jewels,” and now and then singing more extemporaneous
-verses concerning his mysterious
-country. All the table paused in its eating
-and drinking to watch him, for, when he
-chose, he was a remarkably clever and magnetic
-actor. To-day he was making an unusual effort,
-and presently even Lenore leaned forward a
-little to catch his words; and, in a swift glance,
-he perceived that some color had come into
-her cheeks, and a faint light into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>It made a pleasant interlude in the feasting;
-and when at length the little man, with a hop
-and a spring, left the table, and came round
-to the place where he was accustomed to sit,
-he was followed by a burst of enthusiastic
-applause.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The gayety that he had excited by his
-rhymes and his pebble shower did not die
-away for some time. By now, however, the
-eating was at an end, and a lighter tone of
-conversation spread through the room, as the
-footboys brought in two extra casks of beer
-and some dozens of bottles of red wine. This
-was the wished-for stage of the day’s entertainment,
-and if there was any one present that
-should be unminded for what was to come,
-this was the signal for departure. Madame
-Lenore was the only one in the room to go;
-but she rose the moment that the table had
-been cleared of food, and, with a slight bow
-to madame and monseigneur, slipped quietly
-to the stairs and passed up to her room
-with a relief in her heart that the day was
-over.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The last white fold of Lenore’s drapery had
-scarcely disappeared round the bend in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>stairway, when there came a knocking upon
-the outer door of the great hall, which was
-presently thrust open, before one of the henchmen
-could reach it, to let in a beggar from the
-bitter cold outside. It was the last day of
-the week of hospitality, and perhaps this wanderer
-was the more readily admitted for that
-fact. It was a woman, ragged, unkempt, and
-purple with cold. Madame Eleanore just
-glanced at her, and then signed to those at
-the lower end of the table to give her place
-with them, and bring her food. But the new-comer
-seemed not to notice the invitations of
-those near by. She stood still, gazing intently
-toward Madame Eleanore, till presently one
-of the henchmen, somewhat affected with
-liquor, sprang from his place with the intention
-of pulling her to a seat. In this act he
-got a view of her face with the light from a
-torch falling full across it. Instantly he started
-back with a loud exclamation,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Mademoiselle!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Then all at once the woman, holding out
-both her arms toward madame’s chair, swayed
-forward to her knees with a low wailing cry
-that brought the whole company to their feet.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>There was one moment of terrible silence, and
-then a woman’s scream rang through the
-room, as Madame Eleanore staggered to her
-feet and started forward to the side of the
-wanderer.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure! Laure! O God! my Laure!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As the two women—madame now on her
-knees beside her daughter—intertwined their
-arms, and the older woman felt again the living
-flesh of her flesh, the throng at the table
-moved slowly together and drew closer and
-closer to these central figures. Nearest of all
-stood Alixe and Courtoise, white-faced, tremulous,
-but with great joy written in their eyes.
-They had recognized Laure simultaneously
-an instant before madame, but they had restrained
-themselves from rushing upon her,
-leaving the first place to the mother.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore was fondling Laure in her arms,
-murmuring over her inarticulate things, while
-tears streamed from her eyes, and her strained
-throat palpitated with sobs. What Laure did
-or felt, none knew. She lay back, half-fainting,
-in the warm clasp; but presently she struggled
-a little away, and sat straight. Pushing the
-tangled hair out of her eyes,—those black,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>brilliant eyes that were still undimmed,—and
-seeing the universal gaze upon her, she shrank
-within herself, and whispered to her mother:
-“In the name of God, madame, I prithee let
-me be alone with thee!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Then Eleanore bethought herself, and rose,
-lifting Laure also to her feet. For a moment
-she looked about her, and then with a mere
-lifting of her hand dispersed the crowd. They
-melted away like snow in rain, till only three
-were left there in the great hall: Courtoise,
-Alixe, and lastly monseigneur, who during
-the whole scene had stood apart from the
-throng, the law of excommunication heavy
-upon him. Forbid a mother, starved by
-nearly a year of denial of her child, to satisfy
-herself now that that child was at last returned
-to her? Not he, the man of flesh and blood
-and human passions!</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame stood still for an instant in the
-centre of the disordered room, supporting
-Laure with one arm. Then she turned to
-Alixe.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Go thou, Alixe, and get food,—milk, and
-meat, and bread,—and bring it in the space
-of a few moments to my room. But let
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>no other seek to disturb us in our solitude.
-Now, my girl!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame led her daughter across the hall
-and up the stairs, and to the door of her
-bedroom, into which Laure passed first. Madame
-followed her in, and closed and fastened
-the door after her. Then she turned to
-her child.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At last they were alone, where no human
-eyes could perceive them, no human ear hear
-what words they spoke. And now Eleanore’s
-arms dropped to her sides, and she stood
-a little off, face to face with Laure. With
-Laure? Yes, it was she,—there could be
-but one woman like her,—with her tall, lithe,
-straight form, terribly wasted now by hardship
-and suffering: with those firm features,
-and the unrivalled hair that hung, brown and
-unkempt, to her knees. And again, it was
-not the Laure that the mother had known.
-In her eyes—the great, doubting, haunted,
-shifting eyes—lay plainly written the story
-of the iron that had entered into her soul.
-And there was that in her manner, in her
-bearing, that something of defiant recklessness,
-that pierced her mother like a knife.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>It was not the rags and the dirt of her body;
-it was the rags and dirt of her defiled soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The girl looked straight before her into
-space; but she saw her mother’s head suddenly
-lowered, and she saw her mother’s hands
-go up before her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Then came Alixe’s knock at the door; and
-Laure went and opened it, took in the food,
-set it down on the bed, shut and fastened the
-door again, and returned to her mother, who
-was sitting now beside the shuttered window,
-her head lying on her arms, which rested on a
-table in front of her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>There was a silence. Laure’s hand crept
-up to her throat and held it tight, to keep the
-strain of repressed sobs from bursting her very
-flesh. Her eyes roved round the old, familiar,
-twilight room; but just now she did not see.
-Her brain was reeling under its weight of
-agonized weariness. What was she to say
-or do? What was there for her here? Her
-mother sat yonder, bent under the weight of
-her sin. Was there any excuse for her to
-make? Should she try to give reasons?
-Worst of all, should she ask forgiveness?
-Never! Laure had the pride of despair left
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>in her still. She had come home dreaming
-that the gates of heaven might still be open
-to her. She found them barred; and the
-password she could not speak. Hell alone,
-it seemed, remained.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame,” she said in a hard, quiet voice,
-“I have come wrongfully home, thinking thou
-couldst give me succor here. But I perceive
-that I do but pain thee. I will go forth
-again. ’Tis all I ask.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At the mere suggestion that Laure should
-go again, madame’s heart melted and ran in
-tears within her. “Ah, Laure! my baby—my
-girl—thou couldst not leave me again?”
-she cried in a kind of wail.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Mother! First of all, I came to thee!”
-said the girl, in a whisper that was very near
-a sob.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>But, unexpectedly, Eleanore rose again, with
-a gleam of anger coming anew into her eyes.
-“Nay; thou didst <em>not</em> first of all come to
-me! If thou hadst—if thou hadst—ere
-thou wast stolen away by the cowardly dastard
-that hath ruined thee—!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure trembled violently, and her voice was
-faint with pleading: “Speak no ill of him,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>madame! I was not stolen away. Freely,
-willingly, I went with him. Freely—” she
-drew herself up and held her head high—“freely
-and willingly, though with the curse
-of Heaven on my head, would I go with him
-still, were it in the same way!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“God of God! why hast thou left him,
-then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A black shadow spread itself out before
-Laure’s eyes, and in her unpitying wilderness
-her woman’s soul reeled, blindly. Her voice
-shook and her body grew rigid, as she answered:
-“I—did not—leave him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“He is dead?” Eleanore’s tone was softer.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“No; he is not dead!” Laure’s face contorted
-terribly, as there suddenly rushed over
-her the memory of the last three months; and
-as it swept upon her, she sank to her knees,
-and held out her hands again in supplication:
-“Ah, pity me! pity me! As thou’rt a
-woman, pity me, and ask me not what’s gone!
-I loved him. God in Heaven! How did
-I love him! And he hath gone from me.
-Mine no more, he left me to wander over
-the face of the earth. He left me to weep
-and mourn through all the years of mine
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>empty life. Flammecœur! Flammecœur!
-How wast thou dearer than God! more merciless
-than Him.” Here her words became so
-rapid and so incoherent that all meaning was
-lost, and the deserted woman, exhausted, overcome
-with her torn emotions, presently fell
-heavily forward to the floor, in a faint.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In this scene Eleanore had forgotten every
-scruple, every resentment, everything save her
-own motherhood and Laure’s need. Putting
-aside all thought of the girl’s shame, her abandonment,
-her rejection, she went to her and
-lifted her up in her strong and tender arms,
-and, with the art known only to the big-souled
-women of her type, poured comfort upon the
-bruised and broken body of the wanderer, and
-words of cheer and encouragement into her
-more cruelly bruised and broken mind. In
-a few moments Laure had recovered consciousness,
-had grown calm, and was weeping
-quietly in her mother’s arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Then madame began to make her fit for
-the Castle again. She took off the soiled and
-ragged garments, that hung upon the skin and
-bone of her wasted body. She bathed the
-poor flesh with hot water, and with her own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>tears. She combed and coiled the wonderful,
-tangled hair. And lastly, wrapping her, for
-warmth, in a huge woollen mantle, she led
-Laure over to her bed, drew back the heavy
-curtains, and laid the weary woman-child in it,
-to rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When Laure felt this soft comfort; when
-she realized where, indeed, she was and who
-was bending over her; when she knew what
-land of love and of tenderness she had finally
-reached after her months of anguished wandering,—it
-seemed that she could bear no more
-of mingled joy and pain. She let her tears flow
-as freely as they would. She clung to her
-mother’s hand, smoothing it, kissing it, pressing
-it to her cheek; and finally, lulled by the
-sound of her mother’s voice crooning an old
-familiar lullaby, her mind slipped gradually out
-of reality, and she went to sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Long and long and long she slept, with the
-sleep of one that is leaving an old life behind,
-and entering slowly into the new. And for
-many hours her mother watched her, in the
-gathering darkness, till after Alixe had come
-softly in, and lit a torch near by the bed. And
-later the mother, unwilling to leave her child
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>for a single moment, laid herself down, dressed
-as she was, and, drawing Laure’s passive form
-close to her, finally closed her eyes, and, worn
-out with emotion and with joy, lost herself in
-the mists of sleep.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER TWELVE</em><br /> <span class='large'>LAURE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_334.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-Through the long, chilly
-night, mother and daughter
-slept together, each with peace
-in her heart. At dawn, however,
-madame slipped quietly
-out of Laure’s unconscious embrace,
-and rose and prepared herself for the day.
-And presently she left the room, while Laure
-still slept. It was some time afterwards before
-there crept upon the blank of the girl’s mind
-a dim, fluttering shadow telling her that light
-had come again over the world. How long
-it was before this first sense became a double
-consciousness, no one knows. Laure’s stupor
-had been so heavy, she had been so utterly
-dead in her weariness, that it required a powerful
-subconscious effort to throw off the bonds
-of sleep. But when the two heavy eyes at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>last fell open, she gasped, and sat suddenly up
-in her bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Holy Mother! it is an angel!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The face that she looked on smiled sunnily.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“No. I am Lenore.” And she would have
-come round to the side of the bed, but that
-Laure held up a hand to stay her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Prithee, prithee, do not move, thou spirit
-of Lenore! Am I, then, come into thy land?
-Is’t heaven—for me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>For an instant, at the easily explainable illusion
-about that other, the new Lenore’s head
-drooped, and she sighed. How full of the
-dead maiden was every member of this Twilight
-Castle! But again, shaking off the momentary
-melancholy, she lifted her eyes, and
-answered Laure’s fixed look. So these two
-young women, whose histories had been so
-utterly different, and yet in their way so pitiably
-alike, learned, in this one long glance, to
-know each other. Into Laure’s deeply burning
-eyes, Lenore gazed till she was as one
-under a hypnotic spell. Her senses were all
-but swimming before the other turned her
-look, and then she asked dreamily: “Thou
-art Lenore. Tell me, who is Lenore?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>The other hesitated for a moment. She had
-learned from Alixe, on the previous evening,
-the history of the strange home-coming, and
-all that any one knew of what had gone before
-it; and she realized that any question that
-Laure might ask must be fully answered. Yet
-it cost her a strong mental effort before she
-could say: “I was the wife of thy brother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah! Gerault! Where is he?” Laure
-paused for an instant. “Thou—<em>wast</em>—his
-wife, thou sayest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore gazed at her sadly, wondering if the
-wanderer must so soon be confronted with new
-sorrow. Laure sat there, bewildered, but questioning
-with her eyes, a suggestion of fear beginning
-to show in her face. Lenore realized
-how madame must shrink from telling the
-story of Gerault’s death; so, presently, lifting
-her eyes to Laure’s again, she said in a low
-voice,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Gerault’s wife was I, because—since September,
-thy brother—sleeps—in the chapel—by his father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure listened with wide eyes to these words;
-and, having heard, she neither moved nor spoke.
-A few tears gathered slowly, and fell down her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>face to her woollen robe, and then she bowed
-her head till it rested on the hands clasped on
-her knee. Lenore stood where she was, looking
-on, knowing not whether to go or stay;
-realizing instinctively that there are natures that
-desire to find their own comfort.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>While Lenore was still debating the point,
-Madame Eleanore and Alixe came together
-into the room; and as soon as madame beheld
-Lenore, she knew that her daughter had
-learned all that she was to know of sorrow:
-that what she herself most dreaded, had mercifully
-come to pass. And going to the bed,
-she took Laure into her arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Their embrace was as close as the first of
-yesterday had been. Laure clung to her
-mother, getting comfort from the mere contact;
-and, in her child’s grief for the dead,
-Eleanore felt the touch of that sympathy for
-which she had hungered in silence through
-the first shock of her loss. For Laure was
-of her own blood and of Gerault’s; had known
-the Seigneur as brother, companion, and equal,
-and had looked up to him even as he had
-looked up to his mother. Thus, bitterly poignant
-as were these moments of fresh grief,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>there was in them also a great consolation,—the
-consolation of companionship. And when
-finally madame raised her head, there was written
-in her face what none had seen there since
-the time of Laure’s departure for her novitiate
-at La Madeleine. Then she reminded Laure of
-Alixe’s presence, and Laure, looking up, smiled
-through her tears, and held out both hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe! Alixe! my sister! Art thou glad
-I am come home?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“So glad, Laure! There have been many
-hours empty for want of thee since thy going.
-And art thou—” she hesitated a little—“art
-thou to stay with us now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Accidentally, inadvertently, had come the
-question that had lain hidden both in Laure’s
-heart and in her mother’s since almost the first
-moment of the return. Laure herself dared
-not answer Alixe; but she looked fearfully at
-her mother, her eyes filled with mute pleading.
-And Eleanore, seeing the look, made a sudden
-decision in her heart,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea! Laure shall stay with us now!
-There shall be no doubting of it. Laure is
-my child; and I shall keep her with me, an
-all Christendom forbid!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>The last sentence flew out in answer to
-madame’s secret fears; and she did not realize
-how much meaning it might hold for other
-ears. Her speech was followed by an intense
-silence. Laure did not dare ask aloud the
-questions that reason answered for her; and
-Lenore and Alixe both felt that it was not
-their place to speak. In the end, then, Eleanore
-herself had to break the strain, which she
-did by saying, with a brisk air,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Come, come, Laure! Rise, and go into
-thine own room here. I have laid out one
-of the old-time gowns, with shoes, chemise,
-bliault, and under-tunic complete, and also a
-wimple and head-veil. Make thyself ready
-for the day, while we go down to break our
-fast. When thou’rt dressed I will have food
-brought thee here; and after thou’st eaten,
-monseigneur will come up to thee. Hasten,
-for ’tis rarely cold!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure jumped from the bed eager to see her
-childhood’s room again; eager for her meal;
-most of all eager, in spite of her apprehensiveness,
-to know what St. Nazaire had to say
-to her. As she paused to gather her mantle
-close about her, and to push the hair out of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>her eyes, her gaze chanced to meet that of
-Lenore. There was between them no spoken
-word; but in that instant was born a sudden
-affection which, while they lived together, saw
-not the end of its growth.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As Eleanore and the two young women left
-madame’s room on their way downstairs, Laure
-entered alone into the room of her youth and
-her innocence. It was exactly as it had been on
-the day she last saw it. The small, curtained
-bed was ready for occupancy. The chairs,
-the table, the round steel mirror, the carved
-wooden chest for clothes, lastly, the small priedieu,
-were just where they had always stood.
-The wooden shutters were open, and the half-transparent
-glass was all aflame with the reflection
-of sunlight on the sea; for the cold, clear
-morning was advancing. Across a narrow settle,
-beside one of the windows, lay the clothes
-that the mother had selected,—the girlhood
-clothes that she had worn in those years of
-her other life. Like one that dimly dreams,
-Laure took these garments up, one by one,
-and examined them, handling them with the
-same ruminative tenderness of touch that she
-might have used for some one that had been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>very dear to her, but had died long since,—so
-long that the bitterness of death had gone from
-memory.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When she had looked at them for a long
-time, Laure began slowly to don her clothes.
-She performed her toilet with all the precision
-of her maidenhood, coiling her hair with a
-care that suggested vanity, and adjusting her
-filet and veil with the same touch that they
-had known so many times before. Her outer
-tunic was of green <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">saie</span></i>; and even though
-her whole form had grown deplorably thin,
-she found it a little snug in bust and hip.
-Finally, when she was quite dressed, she sat
-down at one of the windows to wait for some
-one to bring food to her. To her surprise, it
-was Lenore who carried up the tray of bread
-and milk; and she found herself a little relieved
-that no former member of the Castle
-was to see her yet in the familiar dress of
-long ago. When she took the tray from the
-frail white hands of her sister-in-law, she murmured
-gratefully: “I thank thee that thou
-hast deigned to wait on me, madame.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore’s big blue eyes opened wide, as she
-smiled and answered: “Prithee, say not ‘madame.’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>Rather, if thou canst, I would have
-thee call me ‘sister,’ for such I should wish
-to be to thee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“My sister!” Laure’s voice was choked as
-she raised both arms and threw them about
-the slender body of the other girl with such
-abandon that Lenore was obliged to put her
-off a little. Finally, however, Laure sat down
-to the table on which she had placed her
-simple breakfast, and as she carried the first
-bite to her lips, Lenore moved softly toward
-the door. Before going out, however, she
-turned and said quietly: “Thou’lt not be
-long alone. The Bishop is coming to thee
-at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure’s spoon fell suddenly into her bowl,
-and she looked quickly round; but, to her
-chagrin, Lenore had already slipped away.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Left to herself, Laure could not eat. Hungry
-as she was, her anxiety and her suspense
-were greater than her appetite. Why was it
-that Lenore had so suddenly escaped from
-her? Why was it that she had seen no members
-of the Castle company save three women
-since her home-coming? Why was she forced
-thus to eat alone? Above all, why should the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>Bishop come to her here, instead of receiving
-her, as had been his custom, in the chapel?
-Laure remembered the last serious talk she
-had had with St. Nazaire, and shuddered.
-In her own mind she realized perfectly the
-spiritual enormity of her sin; and, however
-persistently she might refuse to confess it
-to herself, she knew also what the penalty
-of that sin must be. It was many minutes
-before she could force herself to recommence
-her meal; and she had taken little when there
-was a tap on the door. She had not time
-to do more than rise when the door opened,
-and her mother, followed by St. Nazaire,
-entered the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame dropped behind as the Bishop
-advanced, and Laure bowed before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“My child, I trust thou art found well
-in body?” said St. Nazaire, more solemnly
-than she had ever heard him speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yes, monseigneur,” was the subdued
-reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Now madame came up, and indicated a chair
-to the Bishop, who, after seeing her seated, sat
-down himself, while Laure remained on her
-feet in front of them. Then followed a pause,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>uncomfortable to all, terrifying to Laure, who
-was becoming hysterically nervous with dread.
-She dared not, however, break the silence; and
-with a convulsive sigh she folded her arms
-across her breast, and stood waiting for whatever
-was to come. Monseigneur regarded her
-closely and steadily, as if he were reading
-something that he wished to know of her,
-but at the same time he did not make her
-shrink from him. On the contrary, his expression
-brought the assurance that he had
-lost nothing of his old-time sympathy with
-human nature. His first question was unhesitatingly
-direct.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure,” he said very quietly, “art thou
-bound by the marriage tie to this Bertrand
-Flammecœur?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At the sound of the name Laure trembled,
-and her white face grew whiter still. “No,”
-she answered in a half-whisper, at the same
-time clenching her two hands till the nails
-pierced her flesh.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And thou hast lived with him, under his
-name, since thy departure from the priory of
-the Holy Madeleine?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure paused for a moment to steady her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>voice, and then answered huskily: “Until
-two months past.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And in that two months?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I have begged my way from where we
-were—hither.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou hast in this time known none but
-the man Flammecœur?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure crimsoned and put up her hand in
-protest. Then she said quietly, “None.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Monseigneur bowed his head and remained
-silent for a moment. When he looked at
-her again it was with a gentler expression.
-“Laure,” said he, in a very kindly voice, “but
-a little time after thy flight from the priory,
-I placed upon thee, and upon the man that
-abducted thee, the ban of excommunication,
-for violating the holiest laws of the Holy
-Church. That ban is not yet raised, and by
-it, as well thou knowest, all that come in voluntary
-contact with thee are defiled.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>For a moment Laure dropped her head to
-her breast. When she lifted it again, her face
-had not changed; and she asked, “Can that
-ban ever be lifted?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yes. By me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure fell upon her knees before him.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>“What must I do? Tell me the penance!
-I would give anything—even to my life—yet—nay!
-There is one thing I will not do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>St. Nazaire frowned. “What is that?”
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Father, I will not go back into the priory.
-I will never return alive into that living death.
-Rather would I cast myself from the top
-of the Castle cliff into the sea below, and
-trust—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure! Laure! Be silent!” cried Eleanore,
-sharply.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure stopped and stood motionless, her
-eyes aflame, her face deathly white, her fingers
-twining and intertwining among themselves,
-as she waited for St. Nazaire to speak again.
-His hands were folded upon his knee, and he
-appeared lost in thought. Only after an unendurable
-suspense did he look again into the
-girl’s eyes, saying slowly, in a tone lower than
-was habitual to him,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou tookest once the vows of the nun.
-These, it is true, thou hast broken continually,
-and hast abused and violated till their chain
-of virtue binds thee no more. Yet the words
-of those vows passed thy lips scarce more than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>a year agone; and for that reason thou art not
-free. Ere thou canst be absolved of duty to
-the priory, thou must go to the Mother-prioress
-and ask her humbly if she will again
-receive thee into the convent. An she refuse,
-thou wilt be freed from the bond.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Monseigneur—will she set me free?”
-asked Laure, in a low tone.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea, Laure; for methinks I shall counsel
-her so to do. Thou hast not the vocation of
-a nun. Thy spirit is too much thine own, too
-freedom-loving, to accept the suppression of
-that secluded life. If I will, I can see to it that
-thou’rt freed from the priory. But that being
-accomplished—what then, Demoiselle Laure?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah—after that—may not the ban be
-removed? Can I obtain no absolution? Can
-I not be made free to dwell here in my home
-in my beloved Castle,—my fitting Crépuscule?—Mother!
-Shall I not be received here?
-Have I no home?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“This is thy home, and I thy mother
-always. Though my soul be condemned to
-eternal fire, Laure, thou art my child, the flesh
-of my flesh and the blood of my blood; and
-I will not give thee up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>“Eleanore!” The Bishop spoke sharply,
-and his face grew severe. “Eleanore, deceive
-not thyself. Nor yet thou, thou child of wilfulness!
-Laure hath sinned not only against
-the rules of her Church and her God, but
-against the laws of mankind. Her sin has
-been great and very ugly. Think not that,
-by brave words of motherhood, or many tears
-and pleadings of sudden repentance, she can
-regain her old position. The stain of this
-bygone year will remain upon her forever.
-She is under a heavy ban, and she must go
-through a rigorous penance ere she can be
-received again among the undefiled. Art
-ready, Laure, to place thy sick soul in my
-hands?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure bent her head.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then I prescribe for thee this penance:
-Thou shalt go alone, on foot, to Holy Madeleine,
-and there seek of the Reverend Mother
-thy freedom from the priory. If it be granted,
-thou mayest return hither to this same room
-and remain shut up in utter solitude, to pray
-and fast as rigorously as thy body will admit,
-for the space of fourteen days. If, by that
-time, thou art come to see truly the magnitude
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>of thy offence, and if thy mind be
-purified of evil thoughts and thy heart opened
-to the abounding mercy of God, I will absolve
-thee of thy sin, and lift away the ban of
-Heaven. For meseemeth, my daughter, that
-thy sin found thee out or ever thou hadst
-reached this house of safety. There is the
-mark of suffering upon thy brow, and, seeing
-it, I bow before the power of God, that holdeth
-over us whithersoever we may go. But see
-that in thy lonely hours thou find true repentance
-for thy evil deed. For if that come not,
-then truly shalt thou be an outcast on the face
-of the earth. I will go to-day to the priory to
-talk with the Mère Piteuse, if thy heart accepteth
-my word.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure fell upon her knees before the Bishop
-and kissed his hand in token of submission.
-St. Nazaire suffered her for a few moments
-to humble herself, and then, lifting her
-up, he rose himself and quickly left the
-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore remained a few moments longer
-with her daughter, and then went away, leaving
-Laure alone again, to dread the ordeal that
-was before her, the facing of the assemblage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>of nuns in that place that she remembered as
-her heart’s prison.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>By order of the Bishop, Laure was left alone
-all day, and this twenty-four hours was the
-most wretched that she had to spend after
-her return to Le Crépuscule. On the following
-day she went alone to the priory,—not
-on foot, as the Bishop had at first commanded;
-for the snow was too deep, and Laure too
-much exhausted by her privations of the last
-two months, for her safely to endure the
-fatigue of such a walk. She rode thither on
-horseback; and possibly extracted more soul’s
-good out of the ride than she would have got
-afoot, for the whole way was laden with bitter
-memories and grief and shame. The Bishop
-himself met her at the priory gate, and he
-remained at her side throughout the time that
-she was there. The ordeal was not terrible.
-Mère Piteuse bore out her name, and Laure
-thought that the spirit of the Saviour had
-surely descended upon the reverend woman.
-As an unheard-of concession, the penitent was
-permitted to recant her vows before only the
-eight officers of the priory assembled in the
-chapter-house, instead of before the whole
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>company of nuns in the great church; and
-thus Laure did not see at all her former companion
-and abettor, Sœur Eloise, a meeting
-with whom she had dreaded more than anything
-else. And when, in the afternoon,
-Laure finally rode away from the priory gate,
-it was with a heart throbbing with devotion
-for St. Nazaire and his goodness to her.
-Swiftly and eagerly, in the falling twilight, she
-traversed the road leading back to the Castle,
-and, when she reached home, night had fallen.
-Her mother, who had spent the day in the
-deepest anxiety, was waiting for her in the
-great hall, and, the moment that Laure entered,
-weary with the now unusual exercise, she cried
-out, “It is well? Thou art dismissed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>And as Laure began to answer the question
-with a full description of the day, her mother
-drew her slowly up the stairs, across the hall,
-and finally into her own narrow room, which
-was to be the chamber of penance. When they
-entered there, Laure became suddenly silent;
-for the little place was dark and chill, and the
-thought of what was before her struck an
-added tremor to her heart. Madame read her
-thoughts and said gently,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>“Be not so sad, dear child. When thou thinkest
-of the fair, pure, loving life that lies before
-us, in this Castle of thy youth, surely fourteen little
-days of peaceful solitude cannot fright thee?
-Think always that God is on high, and that
-around thee are those that love thee well; and
-thus thou canst not be very miserable. Lights
-and food shall be brought; and then—I bid
-thee make much of thy solitude, my child;
-for there is no more healing balm for wounded
-souls. Now, commending thee to the mercy
-of the All-merciful, I leave thee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the darkness, Laure clung to her mother
-as if it were their last embrace, and madame
-had to put the girl’s hands away before she
-would bear to be left alone. But at last the
-door was closed and bolted on the outside;
-and Laure, within, knew that her imprisonment
-was begun. Feeling her way to a chair,
-she seated herself thereon, and laid her head in
-her hands. Burning and incoherent thoughts
-hurried through her brain, and she was still
-lost in these when there was a soft tap at her
-door, and the outer bolt was drawn. She rose
-and stumbled hurriedly to open it, but there
-was no one outside. On the floor was a burning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>candle, and a tray on which stood a jug of
-water and a loaf of bread. As she took them
-in, Laure experienced a wave of desolation.
-However, she set the food and drink down
-on her table, lighted the torch on the wall at
-the candle-flame, and finally sat herself down
-to eat. No grace to God passed her lips as
-she took her first bite from the loaf; for her
-heart was bitter in its weariness. But after she
-had eaten and drunk she lost the inclination to
-brood; and, overcome with weariness and the
-emotions of the day, she hurriedly disrobed, extinguished
-both her lights, and crept, with her
-first sense of comfort, into the warmly covered
-bed. For a long time she lay there, chilly and a
-little nervous, but thinking of nothing. Then
-gradually her spirit grew calmer; some of the
-weariness was done away, and she fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When next she woke it was daylight,—a
-gray, January morning,—and Laure realized,
-rather disconsolately, that she could sleep no
-more for the time. Therefore she left her bed,
-threw a mantle around her, and went to the
-door, to see if there might be food without.
-Somewhat to her dismay, she found the door
-locked fast, and, having no means of knowing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>what the hour might be, she thought that possibly
-she had overslept, and that she should
-have nothing to eat throughout the morning.
-The heaviness of her head told her that she
-had slept too long; and, not daring to get
-back to bed again, she began resignedly to
-dress. She was in the midst of her toilet
-when there came a tap at the door, and she
-flew to open it. Outside stood a kitchen-boy,
-who handed her a tray containing fresh bread
-and water, and asked her with formal respect
-for the stale food of the night before. This
-she gave him; and immediately the door was
-shut and rebolted.</p>
-
-<div id='i_355' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i_355.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic006'>
-<p><em><span class='c016'>M</span>other and child were happy to sit all<br />day in the flower-strewn meadow.—Page <a href='#Page_402'>402</a></em></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>With grim precision Laure finished dressing
-and broke her fast, meantime keeping her
-thoughts fixed on the most trivial subjects.
-But when her meal was over, and she knew
-how long the day must be, and realized that
-there was no escape from herself, she sat down
-in the largest chair in the room, let her eyes
-wander over the familiar objects, and allowed
-her thoughts to take what form they would.
-The terrible fatigue of her lonely journey was
-quite gone now. Nor was there in her own
-person anything to remind her of her recent
-suffering. Her body was clean, well-clothed,
-and warm, and, in her youth, the memory
-of the past terrible two months grew dim,
-and instead there rose up before her mental
-vision a very different picture,—an image,—the
-image of the idol and the ruin of her life:
-her joy, her shame, her ecstasy, and her despair;
-Bertrand Flammecœur, the troubadour,
-in his matchless, irresponsible untrustworthiness,
-his incomparable beauty, his fiery enthusiasm.
-For, strange as it may be, all the
-bitterness, all the suffering that this man had
-brought her, had not killed her love for him
-nor blackened his image in her heart. There
-being nothing to check her fancy, Laure went
-mentally back to the hour of her flight with
-the troubadour, and passed slowly over the
-whole period of their life together,—from
-the first days of physical agony and mental
-shame through the period of increasing delight,
-to the culmination of her happiness in
-him and the beginning of its end. Once more
-she reviewed their journey out of Brittany up
-the north coast to Calais, whence, in the fair
-spring weather, they had taken passage to
-Dover, in England, thence making their way
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>by slow stages to London. Here, in the train
-of the Duke of Gloucester, uncle of the young
-Richard, the most powerful man in the kingdom,
-the two had passed their summer. To
-Laure it was a summer of fairyland. Flammecœur
-had become her god, and she saw him
-ascend height after height of popularity and
-favor. His nationality and his profession won
-for him instant recognition, for trouvères from
-Provence were Persian nightingales to the
-England of that day. And after his first introduction
-into high places, his breeding, his
-dress, and his graceful personality brought
-him an enviable position, especially among
-the women of the court. Laure passed always
-as his wife, and was adroitly exploited among
-the court gallants. She was still too single-minded
-to receive the slightest taint from this
-life. She was found to be as incorruptible as
-she was pretty, and by this unusual fact her
-own reputation went up, and her popularity
-rivalled that of the troubadour. If this manner
-of life sometimes weighed on her and
-brought her something of remorse, she found
-her consolation in the fact that Flammecœur
-never wavered in his fidelity. For the time
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>being he was thoroughly infatuated with her;
-and in their stolen hours of golden solitude
-both of them found their reward for the ofttimes
-wearisome round of pleasures that, with
-them, constituted work.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Now, alone, in her solitary prison-room,
-Laure of Le Crépuscule reviewed her high and
-holy noon of love, forgetting its subsequence,
-brooding only over its supreme forgetfulness,
-till the madness of it was tingling in her every
-vein, and there rushed over her again, in a
-tumultuous wave, all that fierce longing, all
-that hopeless desire, that she thought herself
-to have endured for the last time. In their
-early days Flammecœur had been so much
-her companion, so devoted to her in little,
-pretty, telling ways, so constant to her and to
-her alone, that the thought of any life other than
-the one with him would have been to her like a
-promise of eternal death. It was not more their
-hours of delirium than those of silent communion
-that they had held together, which
-brought her now the tears of hopeless yearning.
-All that she desired without him, was death.
-All that she had loved or cared for was with
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>At this time came to her the thought of
-Lenore; and she had an instinctive feeling
-that, had God seen fit to give her that most
-precious of all gifts, motherhood, this penitential
-cell had not been the end for her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Three days and three nights did Laure
-spend in this state of bitter rebellion against
-her lot; and then, from over-wishing, came
-a change. Up to this time, in her new flood
-of grief for the separation from Flammecœur,
-she had driven from her mind every creeping
-memory of the day of his change toward her.
-Another woman had come upon the horizon
-of his life: a young and noble Englishwoman,
-of high station. And soon he was pursuing
-her with the ardor that he no longer spent
-on Laure. This lady was one of the first that
-they had met in England, and Laure had liked
-her before Flammecœur’s new passion began
-to develop. But with her first real fears,
-the poor girl’s jealousy was born, and soon it
-became the moving spirit of her life. Many
-times in the ensuing weeks—those bitter
-weeks of early autumn—did angry words
-pass between her and her protector, her only
-shield from the world in this strange land.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>Once, in a fit of uncontrollable grief and
-passion, she had left him, and for two days
-wandered about the streets of London till
-starvation drove her back to the lodgings of
-the Flaming-heart. Her reception—of quiet
-indifference—on her return showed her that
-her world was in a state of dissolution. For
-a week she dwelt among its ruins, and then,
-when she demanded it, he told her that she
-was no longer dear to him, and he begged
-her to take what money he had and to set
-out whither she would, assuring her that she
-would find no difficulty in securing some
-excellent abiding-place in this adopted land.
-Laure took her dismissal heroically. She
-knew him too well to be horrified at his
-suggestions as to her procedure; and, refusing
-his gifts of money, she sold the clothes
-and ornaments that he had given her in a
-happier day, and with the proceeds started on
-her return to Crépuscule. Her little store
-gave out when she had scarce more than
-reached France; and the last half of the
-journey had been accomplished by literally
-begging her way from hut to hut, never
-giving up the idea of at last reaching the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>only refuge she could trust,—the place where
-now she sat dreaming out her woe.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Through the bitter hours when her old
-jealousy took possession of her again and
-seared her with its hot flames, Laure found
-herself, more than once, gazing fixedly at the
-little priedieu in the corner of the room,
-where, as a child, she had been wont to kneel
-each night and morning. Since the hour she
-had left the priory, a prayer had scarcely
-passed her lips; and now, in the time of
-reactive sorrow, she felt a pride about kneeling
-in supplication to Him whose laws she
-had so freely broken. In the course of time,
-for so doth solitude work changes in the
-hearts of the most stubborn, the spirit of real
-repentance of her sin came over her; and then,
-for the first time in her young life, she wept
-unselfish tears. It was only inch by inch that
-she crept back toward the place of heart’s
-peace. But at length, on the tenth day of
-her penance, she went to her God; and,
-throwing herself at the feet of the crucifix,
-claimed her own from the All-merciful.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Never in her life of prayers had Laure
-prayed as she prayed now. Now at last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>God was a living Being, and she was come
-home to Him for forgiveness and for comfort.
-Her words sprang from her deepest heart.
-Tears of joy, not pain, welled up within
-her; and it seemed as if she felt her purity
-coming back to her again. She believed that
-she was received before the throne, and listened
-to; and no absolution of a consecrated
-bishop had brought her such confidence as
-this, her first unlettered prayer.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When she rose from her knees it was as if
-she had been bathed in spirit. Her old joy
-of youth was again alive within her and shone
-forth from her eyes with a radiant softness. A
-strange quiet took possession of her; a new
-peace was hidden in her heart; tranquillity
-reigned about her, and the four days of solitude
-that remained were all too short. She
-was learning herself anew; but she dreaded
-that time when others should look into her
-face and think to find there what she knew
-was gone from her forever. After her first
-prayer she did not often resume the accepted
-attitude of communication with the Most
-High; yet she prayed almost continually,
-with a dreamy fervor peculiar to her state.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>She still thought of Flammecœur, but no
-longer with desire; only with a gentle regret
-for the fever of his soul and that he could
-never know such peace as hers. She also felt
-remorse for the part she had played in his
-life; and this remorse was now her only pain.
-She suffered under it; but it was easier to
-endure than the terrible, restless longing that
-had once consumed her. Indeed, at this time,
-Laure’s spirituality was exaggerated; for solitude
-is apt to breed exaggeration in whatever
-mood the recluse happens to be. But this
-state was also bound to know its reaction;
-and, upon the whole, it was as well that the
-penitential fortnight was near its end.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the afternoon of the fourteenth day,
-Laure dressed herself in the somberest robe to
-be found in her chest,—a loose tunic of rusty
-black, with mantle of the same, and a rosary
-around her waist by way of belt. She braided
-her hair into two long plaits, and bound these
-round and round her head like a heavy filet.
-This was all of her coiffure. When she was
-dressed, she stood in front of her mirror and
-looked at herself by the smoky light of a torch.
-Her vanity was not flattered by the reflection;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>but steel is deceitful sometimes, and Laure did
-not know how much younger she had grown in
-the two weeks of her penance. As the hour of
-liberty approached, she became not a little
-excited. The thought of being surrounded with
-such a throng of familiar faces set her aflame
-with eagerness; and she waited, literally counting
-the seconds, till she should be set free.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Punctually at the hour in which, two weeks
-before, Laure had been left alone, her door
-was opened, and Eleanore and Lenore came
-together into the room, to lead the prisoner
-down to the chapel. Madame clasped her
-warmly by the hand, and looked searchingly
-into her face: but that was all the salutation
-that was given, for the ban of excommunication
-was still upon her. And so, without a word,
-the three moved quickly to the stairs, and, descending,
-passed at once into the lighted chapel.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Of all the ceremonies that had been performed
-in that little room since it was built,
-more than two centuries before, the one that
-now took place was perhaps the most impressive,
-certainly the most unique. Laure, in her
-penitential garb, presented a curious contrast
-to the gayly robed Castle company, and to St.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>Nazaire, in his most gorgeous of canonicals.
-Yet Laure’s face was more interesting to study
-than anything else in the crowded room. St.
-Nazaire, while he confessed and absolved her,
-watched her with an interest that he had never
-felt for her before; and he realized that probably
-never again would he hear such a confession
-as hers. She told him the whole story of
-her life after her flight from the priory, with
-neither break, hesitation, tremor, nor tear. She
-took her absolution in uplifted silence. And
-when the ban of excommunication was raised
-from her, neither the Bishop nor her mother
-could guess, from her face, what her feeling was.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>When she had been blessed, and the general
-benediction pronounced, all the company
-came crowding to her to give her welcome.
-After that followed a great feast, at which Laure
-ate not a mouthful, and drank nothing but
-a cup of milk. And finally, when all the
-merrymaking was through, the young woman
-returned alone to her room, and, this time with
-her door bolted from within, lay down upon
-her bed and wept as if her heart had finally
-dissolved in tears.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER THIRTEEN</em><br /> <span class='large'>LENORE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_367.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-On the morning of the sixteenth
-of January, Laure went into
-the spinning-room with the
-other women, to begin the old,
-familiar work. The sight of
-that room brought back to her
-a peculiar sensation. Long-forgotten memories
-of her girlhood’s yearnings and restless
-discontents, half-formed plans and desires,
-picture after picture of what she had once
-imagined convent life to be, crowded thick
-upon her, and caused her to shudder, knowing
-what these vague dreams had led her to. Here
-was the room, with its row of wheels and tambour-frames,
-and, at the end, the big, wooden
-loom, filled with red warp. Everywhere were
-little disorderly heaps of flax and uncarded
-wool, bits of thread and silk, and long woollen
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>remnants clipped from uneven tapestry borders.
-In a moment this place would be alive with
-the droning buzz of wheels, the clack-clack of
-the loom, and the bright chatter of feminine
-voices. Laure heard it all in the first glance
-down the room, and in the same instant she
-lived a lifetime here. Before her eyes was an
-endless vista of mornings spent in this place upon
-work that could never keep her thoughts from
-paths where they should not stray. Alas! with
-Flammecœur she had neither toiled nor spun.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In neither face nor manner did Laure betray
-any suggestion of her feeling; and she found
-herself presently seated at a wheel, between
-Alixe, who was at the tapestry frame, and
-Lenore, who had come to the room for the
-first time in many weeks, and was engaged in
-fashioning a delicate little garment of white <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">saie</span></i>.
-Madame, at the head of the room, was embroidering
-a square of linen and overseeing the
-work of every one else; and she glanced, every
-now and then, rather searchingly into her
-daughter’s face, finding in it, however, nothing
-that could cause her anxiety; for Laure was
-ashamed of her own sensations, and strove
-bravely to conceal them.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>Possibly this scene might have held out
-promise of reward to the thinker, the psychologist,
-or the humanitarian. Of all these quiet,
-busy women, was there one whose dull, passionless
-exterior did not cover an intricate
-and tumultuous heart-history? The rebellious
-thought-life of Alixe was no less interesting,
-despite her inactivity, than the deadening sorrow
-through which Lenore had passed. Nor
-had the early life of Eleanore, with its doubtful
-joys and its bitter periods of loneliness, left
-any stronger traces in her face than had the
-long after-years of rigid self-suppression. She
-had nearly overcome her once devastating habit
-of self-analysis, by forcing herself to take an
-unselfish interest in those around her. But
-the marks of her later and nobler struggles with
-grief lay as plainly in her face as those of her
-younger life. Only, the influence of her youth,
-with its rebellions and its solitudes, was to be
-found bodily transferred into the character of
-Laure, who had, in her infancy, absorbed her
-mother into herself. These four women, by
-reason either of years or station, had experienced
-much in the ways of joy and sorrow. But to
-what depths of unhappiness all the other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>pathetically colorless lives of the uninstructed
-and unloved women of that day had sunk,
-cannot be surmised by any one who has seen
-what strange courses loneliness and solitude
-will take. Who knows how great a self-struggle
-may result only in a pallid, vacant
-face and a negative personality? And what
-had they, all these neglected women of the
-chivalric age, to give them life, color, or
-force? Men did battle and feats of arms,
-expecting their ladies to sit at home, to toil
-and spin and bear them heirs, and, when their
-time came, haply die. So much we all know.
-But how much these same women, having
-something of both soul and brain, may have
-tried to use them in their small way, who has
-cared to surmise?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The January morning wore along, and by
-and by the fitful chatter became more fitful:
-the pauses grew longer; for every one was
-weary with work, and with the incessant noise
-of loom and wheel. Laure, who through the
-morning had been covertly watching Lenore
-at her task, saw that the young woman had
-grown paler than was her wont, and that the
-shadows under her eyes had deepened till their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>effect against her pallor was startling. Gradually
-Lenore’s hands moved more slowly. She
-would pause for a moment, and then, with a
-slight start, return to her work with so conscious
-an effort that Laure was more than once
-on the point of crying to her to stop. Presently,
-however, Lenore herself looked toward
-madame’s chair with an appeal in her eyes
-and a faintly murmured word on her lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore glanced at her, and then rose at
-once and went over to her side. “Why didst
-thou not speak sooner? Go quickly to thy
-room and lie down. Shall I send Alixe with
-thee?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay! Let me rather be alone!” And
-Lenore, hastily gathering her work into her
-arms, slipped from her place and was gone
-from the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The little scene caused no comment. Only
-Laure, who was not accustomed to the sight
-of Lenore’s transparent skin and almost startling
-frailty, sat thinking about her after she
-was gone. How forlorn must be her poor
-existence! If she had greatly loved Gerault,—and
-surely any maiden would have loved him,—how
-gray her world must have become!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>how without hope her life! Laure lost herself
-completely in a revery of Lenore’s sorrows,
-and forgot, for the time, how weary she herself
-was: how her foot ached with treading the
-wheel, and how irritated were her finger-tips
-with the long unaccustomed manipulation of
-thread. But it came as an intense relief when
-she heard her mother say softly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Go thou, Laure, to thy sister’s room.
-Make her comfortable, if thou canst. Take
-the wheel also with thee and finish thy skein
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, madame. The whirl of the wheel is
-distressing to Lenore; I saw it while she sat
-here. I will finish after noon if thou wilt,
-but Lenore must not be disturbed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame nodded to her, and Laure slipped
-away, not noticing how Alixe’s eyes followed
-her, or what disappointment was written in her
-face. For hitherto this ministering to Lenore
-had fallen to Alixe’s share, and it had been the
-proudest pleasure of her life.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore was lying upon her bed, which,
-some weeks previously, had been moved over
-close beside the windows of her room, that she
-might always have a view of the sea. When
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>Laure entered, she scarcely moved, and her
-great eyes continued to rove round the room.
-The new-comer paused in the doorway and
-gazed at her a moment or two before she
-asked: “May I enter? May I come and
-sit beside you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore smiled slightly; but there was no
-actual welcome in her face as she said, in her
-usual, gentle tone: “Certes. As ever, I was
-idle and unthinking. Come thou in, Laure,
-and sit where thou canst gaze out upon the
-sea. Look, there is a glint of sun on it, even
-through the folds of the clouds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure looked to where she pointed, and
-then came silently over and seated herself in
-a large chair that stood between the bed and
-the window, in a little jut in the wall. Her
-eyes were turned not to the many-paned glass,
-however, but rather upon the figure of Lenore,
-who was now looking off through a half-opened
-pane, through which blew fitful gusts
-of icy wind. The two young women remained
-here in silence for some moments,
-each in her own position, thinking silently.
-Suddenly, however, Laure shivered, and then
-sprang to her feet, saying: “Thou’lt surely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>freeze here! Let me cover thee.” She took
-up a thick coverlet that lay over the foot of
-the bed and placed it, folded double, upon
-Lenore’s form. Then, glancing down into
-the milk-white face, she said again: “Let me
-bring thee something—a little food—some
-wine. Thou’rt so pale—so ill!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Peace, Laure! I am comfortable. I lie
-thus for hours every day. Ah! for how many
-hours in the past months—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She looked up into Laure’s face, and the
-eyes of the two women met, in an unfathomable
-gaze. Then Laure went slowly back to
-her place, wishing that she might close the
-window, but not daring to interfere with her
-sister’s desired sight of the sea. After she
-had sat down, Lenore once more lost herself
-in a reverie, which, however, her companion
-did not respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Lenore,” she said in a low, rather melancholy
-voice, “how is it that thou canst endure
-this life of thine,—thou, young and
-bright and gay and all unused to this dim
-dwelling; how hath such existence not already
-killed thee? Tell me, how hast thou
-fared since Gerault went?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>Lenore turned her eyes from the sea and
-fixed them on Laure’s face. She wondered a
-little why she did not resent the question, not
-realizing that it was the first throb of natural
-understanding that had come to her out of
-Le Crépuscule. Lenore’s first impulse of
-affection toward her new sister had altered a
-little in the past two weeks. Since she had
-heard and understood the story of Laure’s last
-months, the white-souled girl had shrunk from
-contact with her whose career lay shrouded in
-so black a depth. Yet now Laure’s tone, as
-she spoke, and, more than that, the expression
-in her eyes, touched a key in Lenore’s
-nature that had long been unsounded, and
-which brought a tremor of unwonted feeling
-to her heart. Quickly repressing the impulse
-toward tears, she gave a moment’s pause, and
-then answered in a dreamy, reflective way, as
-if she were for the first time examining the
-array of her own emotions,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Meseemeth that, since the day of Gerault’s
-death, a part of me hath been asleep. Save
-when, on the night of his home-coming, I lay
-beside his body and touched again his hair
-and his eyes—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>“Holy God! Thou couldst lie beside the
-dead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah, was it not Gerault come home to me—seeming
-as if he slept? Since that time,
-and the night that followed it, I say, I have not
-wept for him. Mine eyes are dry. There is
-sometimes a fire in them; but the tears never
-come. And my heart ofttimes burns, and yet
-I do not very bitterly grieve. I know not
-why, but my sorrow hath not been all that I
-should have made it. I have been soothed
-with shadows. I have found great comfort
-in yon rolling sea. And then there is also
-the child,—Gerault’s son,—the Lord of
-Crépuscule.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yes, the child! Oh, I know how thou
-lovest him—I know!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou knowest? How?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Methinks, Lenore, I understand the
-mother-love. How should I have praised
-God had he deemed me also worthy of it!
-But I was not. I know well ’twas a vain
-desire. But, oh, to hold in mine arms a little
-one, a babe, and to know it for mine own!
-Wouldst not deliver up thy soul for that,
-Lenore?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>Lenore looked at her with a vague little
-smile. “Perhaps; I do not know. My
-babe must carry on his father’s name, and so
-I love him. Yea, I will bear any suffering so
-that he come into the world; for Gerault said
-to me long since that such must be my duty
-and my great joy. He spake somewhat as
-you do. Yet I know not that eagerness thou
-speakest of.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure examined the ethereal figure lying
-before her with new curiosity; and under the
-gaze of the calm, deep-hued eyes her own were
-kindled with a brighter gleam. “Hast thou
-not loved, Lenore?” she asked. “Knowest
-thou nothing of the joy of living, the two in
-one, united by divine fire? Dost thou not
-worship God for the reason that there is now
-in thee a double soul? Wake! Wake from
-thy dream-life! Suffer! For out of suffering,
-great joy will come upon thee!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As she met Laure’s look, a new light burned
-in Lenore’s eyes, and the other saw her quiver
-under those words. Finally, freeing her gaze,
-she said very softly: “I would not wake.
-How, indeed, should I live, if I roused myself?
-Life and love and the world are hidden
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>away behind the far hills of Rennes. Here I
-must dwell forever in the twilight. So let me
-dream! Ah, Laure, thou too, thou too wilt
-come to it. The fever may burn within thee
-still, but time will cool it. Tell me, Laure,”
-she added, smitten with a sudden curiosity
-that was foreign to her usual self, “tell me,
-Laure, how didst thou find courage to run out
-from thy dreams in the priory into life with
-Flammecœur, the trouvère?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At sound of the name, Laure flushed scarlet,
-and then turned pale again. “Flammecœur!
-Flammecœur!” she murmured to herself.
-Then, suddenly, she shook the spell away.
-“Ah, how did I fall from heaven to hell
-and find heaven in hell? I cannot tell thee
-more than thou thyself hast said. I was
-buried while I was yet alive; and so I arose
-from mine own tomb and escaped back to the
-world of living things. I was among sleepers,
-yet could not myself sleep. After a time fire,
-not blood, began to run in my veins. And so,
-in the end, I rode away with the Flaming-heart.
-And I loved him! <em>how</em> I loved him!
-God be merciful to me! Ah, Lenore, how do
-they put us poor, long-haired things into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>fair world, giving us hearts and brains and
-souls, and thereon bid us all only to spin—to
-spin, and weave, and so, perchance, kiss,
-once, and then go back to spin again?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure was half hysterical, but wholly in
-earnest,—so much in earnest that she had forgotten
-her companion; and when she looked
-at her again, she found Lenore lying back on
-her pillows, her breath coming more rapidly
-than usual, but her face rigidly calm, her blue
-eyes wandering through space, and Laure perceived
-that she had rejected the passionate
-words and kept herself still in the dream state.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was well that at this moment there came
-a tap at the door. Laure cried entrance, and
-as Alixe came in from the hall, Madame
-Eleanore appeared from the other door that
-led to Laure’s room, and thence through to
-madame’s own chamber. Evidently the work
-hours were over, and it was time for the noon
-meal.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore did not care to descend to meat,
-and she asked Alixe to bring a glass of wine
-and water and a manchet of bread to her
-room. This request Alixe joyfully promised
-to fulfil, and then Laure and her mother
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>together left the room, Laure in the throes
-of a painful reaction from strong feeling, and
-with a sense, moreover, that Lenore was relieved
-to have her go.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In this last conjecture, or rather, sense,
-Laure was right. But it was not through
-dislike of her sister that Lenore was glad
-to be alone again. It was rather because the
-young widow had been powerfully moved
-by Laure’s words, and she wanted time and
-solitude to readjust herself from the new and
-disquieting ideas that had been put into her
-mind. Alixe believed her to be fatigued, and
-perhaps suffering; and, understanding her nature
-much better than Laure did, she brought
-the invalid everything that she wanted in the
-way of food, and then left her, believing that
-she could sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was afternoon in the Castle. Dinner was
-at an end. Madame had betaken herself to her
-own room, for prayer and meditation. The
-damsels were all scattered, some to their own
-small rooms, some to the courtyard and the
-snow. Laure was in the chapel, before the
-altar, struggling with her newly roused demon
-of unrest. In the long room, off the great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>hall, was Courtoise, seated in Gerault’s old
-place, before a reading-desk, with an illuminated
-parchment before him. It was part of
-“The Romant de la Rose,” and he was reading
-the passage descriptive of the garden of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Déduit</span></i>.
-Although nothing, perhaps, could be found
-in the literature of that day better fitted to
-appeal to a dweller of Le Crépuscule, the
-mind of the dark-browed Courtoise was not
-very securely fixed upon his book. His eyes
-rested steadily on one word; his forehead was
-puckered, and there was an expression on his
-face which, had he been a maid, would likely
-have portended tears. Courtoise was not a
-man to weep; but he had lately fallen recklessly
-into the habit of his former lord, of
-coming here to sit with a parchment before
-him, as an excuse for brooding hopelessly
-on the trouble in his soul. His head was
-now so far bent that he did not see a woman’s
-figure glide into the room. Not till she
-stood over his very desk did he look up with
-a little start: “Thou, Alixe!” he said half
-impatiently.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea, Alixe, Master Courtoise. Thine
-eyes, it seems, can make out great shapes very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>well, but halt an untold time over one curly
-letter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“What sayest thou? Thy words, Alixe,
-are like the quips of the dwarf; but thou
-hast not his license to say them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ahimé, Courtoise</span>,” she came lazily round
-the table till she stood beside his chair, “seek
-to quarrel with me if thou wilt. A quarrel would
-be a merry thing in this Castle. For I am
-dull—dull—piteously dull, good master!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise looked at her rather grimly.
-“Art thou dull indeed, Mistress Alixe?
-What thinkest thou, then, of all of us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou also, quiet one? Well, I had
-guessed it. Yet methought—” she paused,
-with mischief in her eyes; and Courtoise,
-who knew some of her moods, was wise
-enough not to let her finish the sentence.
-Rising from his place, he went and got a
-tabouret from a corner of the room, and,
-placing it beside the chair at the desk, sat
-down on it, motioning Alixe to the seat
-beside him.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe refused the offer. “Nay, nay, Master
-Courtoise. Thou shalt sit in the brawny chair,
-for thou’rt to be my adviser. Sit, I prithee,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>and let me take the little place, and then list
-to me carefully while I do talk on a matter of
-grave importance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Name of Heaven! Is there something
-of importance in this house of shadows?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“There is Madame Lenore,” she said
-soberly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Lenore! Ah, ’tis of her thou wouldst
-speak,” he cried, his whole face lighting.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Suddenly Alixe broke into a rippling
-mockery of laughter. “There, Courtoise,
-thou art betrayed! Nay, I will be still about
-it, for I also love her. Now, to be cruel, my
-talk is not to be of her, but of myself, even
-me,—Alixe No-name. Thou, Courtoise, art
-in something the same position in Le Crépuscule
-as I, save that thou hast a binding
-tie of interest here. Then canst thou not
-offer me a moment’s thought, a moment’s
-sympathy? For, in very truth, I need them
-both.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>With Alixe’s first words, Courtoise had
-flushed an angry scarlet; but with her last, his
-ordinary color came back to him, and he
-looked at her in friendly fashion as he answered:
-“What time and thought I have are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>thine, Alixe. But thou must show me thy
-need of sympathy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Why, let it be just for dwelling in Le Crépuscule.
-And—if thou wouldst have more—for
-holding no certain place here. There was
-a time, after Laure had gone away, and when
-the Seigneur was in Rennes, that I was really
-wanted. I brought comfort to madame, and I
-know she loved me well. And also, since
-Madame Lenore was widowed, I have been
-sometimes a companion to her. But now there
-are two daughters here. Madame’s life is full
-with them; and my place in Le Crépuscule is
-only one of tolerance. Therefore—lend thine
-ear closely, Courtoise—I would go away, I,
-Alixe No-name, out into the world, to see if
-there be not a fortune hidden for me beyond
-the eastern hills. I would go to Rennes, or
-even farther, to try what city life might be;
-yet I would not have the trouble of explanation
-and protests and insistence, and finally of
-farewell, with the dwellers here. Rather, I
-would just steal away, some night, nor return
-again hither evermore. What say you,
-Courtoise? Think you that that wish is all
-ingratitude?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>It was some moments before Courtoise replied.
-His face was a little turned from Alixe,
-but she could see that his brow was knit in
-thought. At length he answered her: “Nay,
-Alixe, thy wish is not ingratitude. Rather, indeed,
-I have sometimes thought that Madame
-Eleanore showed something of ingratitude toward
-thee; for thou wast a daughter to her in
-her sorrow; and since the return of mademoiselle,
-I have seen thee many a time set aside.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“If thou wouldst fare forth into the world—well,
-Alixe, the world is a wide place, and many
-dangers lurk therein. Yet thou art stout of
-heart, and strong enow in body, and methinks
-there are few like thee that would of choice
-dwell in such a place as this. I myself, were
-it only not for— Ah, well, if thou wouldst go
-forth and make thy way at once to Rennes, depart
-not now in the winter season. Thou’dst
-freeze on thy way. Wait till the spring is upon
-us, and the woods are light at night. And
-then—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then thou’lt help me? Wilt thou, Courtoise?
-Wilt thou tell madame when I am
-gone wherefore it was I went? Wilt thou
-give her messages of faithful love? Wilt—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>“Wait, wait! Ask no more than that,” he
-said, smiling thoughtfully. “When the days
-are warmer and the spring is in the leaf, when
-the blood flows fast through the veins, and the
-head burns with new life—” he drew a sudden,
-quick breath, and Alixe, looking upon him
-with new interest, said quickly and softly:</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then come thou, also, Courtoise, out into
-the wide world! Let us together go forth to
-seek our fortunes. Thou’lt find me not too
-weak a comrade, I promise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise’s smile vanished, and he shook his
-head, a look of sadness stealing into his eyes:
-“Think you, Alixe, that after the death of
-my well-loved lord I should have stayed in
-this Castle to grow gray and mouldy ere my
-time, had it not held for me a trust so sacred
-that I could not give it up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Lenore,” murmured Alixe, gently.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou knowest it. Since the first day that
-she came home with the Seigneur, I knew that
-here she would sadly need a friend; and indeed
-she hath been my very saint. I have worshipped
-her more as an angel than as a woman,
-in her purity; and my heart hath all but broken
-for the great sadness of her life here. And if by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>remaining I can serve her in any way, in thought
-or in deed; if it giveth her comfort to have
-me in the Castle, I would sooner cut off my
-hand than leave her here alone. I feel also
-that my lord knoweth that I am faithful to the
-trust he left with me; and I would not forfeit
-his dead thanks. Therefore, Alixe, ask me
-not to return into the world with thee or with
-another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>While he spoke, Alixe had watched him
-fixedly, and had seen no suspicion either in
-tone or in face of a deeper feeling for Lenore
-than he had confessed. Now she sighed
-quietly, and said in a gentle voice: “Courtoise,
-I think thou shouldst not mourn that thou’rt
-to dwell here; for thou hast thy trust, and
-thou hast some one to serve, always. Therefore
-fear nothing, and give thanks to God;
-for with Lenore in thy world—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alas, alas, Alixe, there is that fear in me!
-Should Lenore be lost—should Lenore die—ah!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Low as was his voice, the agony in it was
-unmistakable; and now Alixe was sure of all
-his secret: that he also loved Lenore as man
-sometimes loves woman,—purely. And she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>could find no words to say to him when the
-usually self-contained and tranquil man laid his
-head down on the table before him and did not
-try to hide his grief.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was at this inopportune moment that
-Laure, tired of prayers, and still consumed by
-her restless fever, rushed in upon the two in
-the long room. Her old-time wild gayety was
-upon her, and she did not pause before the
-position of Courtoise, who, however, quickly
-straightened up. Laure scarcely saw it. She
-knew only that here were the companions of
-her youth, and as she entered she cried out to
-them,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe! Courtoise! Up and out with me!
-Burn ye not? Stifle ye not in this dim hole?
-Courtoise, is our old sailing-boat still in its
-mooring? Let us fare forth, all three, and set
-out upon the wintry sea! Let us feel this
-January wind pull and strain at the ropes!
-Let us watch the foamy waves pile up before
-and behind us—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Mon Dieu!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Mademoiselle, it is impossible. The boat
-lies on the beach; two days’ work would not
-fit her for the water.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>Laure stamped angrily on the floor. “Something,
-then, something! I will get out into
-the cold, into the snow; I will move, I will
-feel, I will breathe again!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was so much the wild, free Laure, it
-had in it so much her old-time magnetism of
-comradeship, so much the spirit of the dead
-Gerault, desirous of action, that Alixe and
-Courtoise were drawn irresistibly into her mood.
-Both of them moved forward, while Alixe cried
-gayly: “The hawks! Come, we will ride!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The hawks!” echoed Laure. “Run,
-Courtoise, and get the horses, while Alixe and
-I go don our riding-garb and jess the birds!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Without a moment’s hesitation, rather with
-a throb of pleasure, Courtoise ran obediently
-away toward the stables, while the young women
-hurried to their rooms. In twenty minutes
-the wild trio were dashing across the lowered
-drawbridge, all well mounted, hawk on wrist,
-spur at heel, with Laure in the lead. Down
-the road for the space of a mile they went, and
-then struck off to the snowy moor. They
-rode long and they rode hard, finding scarce
-a single quarry, but letting their pent-up spirits
-out in this free and healthful exercise. When
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>they came in again to the Castle courtyard, it
-was in starry darkness; and not one of the
-three but felt a new strength to resist the
-dead life of the Castle.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Perhaps, had Courtoise known how Lenore
-had quietly wept away the afternoon in her
-solitude and loneliness, he had not appeared
-at evening meat with air so vigorous, eye so
-bright, and appetite so ready. Lenore, however,
-was never known to make a plaint;
-and she came to table with her cheeks hardly
-paler than usual, though her downcast eyes
-were shrunken with tears, and their lids were
-tinged with feverish red.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Men say that it is one of the irrevocable
-blessings that Time should move as surely
-as he does. But when the hours, nay, the
-minutes, lag away as drearily as they did in
-Le Crépuscule that winter, one feels no gratitude
-to Time; but rather a resentment that his
-immortality should be so dead-alive. Yet winter
-did pass, however slowly. In March the
-frozen chains of the prisoned earth were riven.
-Streams began to flow fast and full. The snow
-melted and soaked into the rich, black soil,
-making it ready for the seed. The doors of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>the peasants’ huts were opened to the sun and
-rain. Flocks of storks began to fly northward
-on their return from the Nile to their unsettled
-fatherland. Spring caught the earth in a tender
-embrace; and wherever her warm breath
-touched the soil, a flower appeared, to mark
-the kiss.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>To Lenore the spring warmth was as heaven
-to a soul newly freed from earth-sorrow and
-suffering. Now the windows of her room
-could all be thrown wide open to the outer
-air. The whole sea lay before her, strewn with
-sunlight, and frosted with white foam. She
-saw the fishing-fleet from St. Nazaire go up
-past the bay, on its way to the herring fisheries;
-and then she was suddenly inspired
-again with an uncontrollable desire for the
-sea. That afternoon she sent one of her
-damsels to find Courtoise. He came to her
-room breathless, and eager to learn her will;
-and to him, without delay, she made known
-her imperative wish to be upon the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise found himself in a dilemma. He
-knew that there was a boat at her disposal, for
-he and Laure and Alixe had now been sailing
-every day for a fortnight. He believed Lenore
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>to be aware of this, though as a matter of fact
-she was not; nevertheless he at first refused
-her request point-blank. After that, because
-she wept, he temporized. Finally, in despair,
-he went and consulted madame, who was horrified
-at the idea. Lenore still insisted, appealed
-to every one in the Castle, from Alixe and Laure
-to the very scullions. Finding herself repulsed
-on every hand and powerless to act of her own
-accord, she became, all at once, utterly irresponsible,
-and made a scene that threatened
-to end everything with her. Half unbalanced
-by months of illness and lonely brooding, and
-tortured by this morbid and unreasonable
-fancy, she wept and screamed and raved, and
-threw herself about her bed, till she was in
-a state of complete exhaustion, and every one
-in the Castle awaited the result of her paroxysm
-with unconcealed distress.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After this time she did not leave her bed.
-She was very weak, and she seemed to have
-lost all ambition and all desire to move or even
-to speak. Her days she spent in silent moodiness,
-her nights in tossing feverishly about the
-bed. She seemed to take no notice of the
-little attentions so tenderly showered upon her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>by every one; except that she was pleased to
-see the little spring flowers, tender pink bells
-and anemones, that David and Courtoise spent
-hours in gathering at the edge of the forest on
-the St. Nazaire road. Upon these she smiled,
-and for many days kept a bouquet of them at
-her side, carrying them often to her lips. But
-after a little while she grew impatient of these
-simple flowers, and began to plead for violets,
-which no one in the world could find in Brittany
-before May. Courtoise brooded for two
-days over his inability to supply her want, and
-every one condoled her. Indeed, her own condition
-was not more pathetic than that of the
-Castle household in their eagerness for her
-welfare and her happiness, and for the welfare
-of that other precious soul that was in her
-keeping. Madame prayed night and morning
-for the heir of Le Crépuscule. Laure sewed
-for him, talked of him, dreamed of him, and
-bitterly envied Lenore. And now there was
-no whisper in the Castle that was not understood
-to pertain to “the little lord.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>At last there came an April twilight when
-the glow of the sunset was growing dim beneath
-the lowering veil of night. Lenore had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>passed an unusually quiet day, and was now
-lying in her bed, quite still and tranquil.
-That afternoon David had been admitted to
-her presence, and had amused her with tales
-from the fairy-lore of Brittany, which she
-dearly loved. Now he was gone, and Madame
-Eleanore sat in her room beside the bed.
-The two had been silent for some time when
-Lenore’s eyes opened, and she said softly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame, hast ever thought that there
-might be a daughter of Le Crépuscule? That
-is what I believe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“God forbid!” exclaimed Eleanore, involuntarily.
-Then, as Lenore turned a white,
-half-resentful face toward her, madame went
-on hurriedly: “There must be no more
-daughters of this house, Lenore. ’Tis what
-I could scarcely bear,—to see another maiden
-grow up in this endless twilight—” Her
-voice trailed off into silence, and then, for a
-long time, the women were still together,
-thinking.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A tear or two stole from Lenore’s eyes and
-meandered down her cheek to the folds of her
-white gown; but her weeping was noiseless.
-The evening darkened. A sweet, rich breath
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>of spring blew softly in from off the sea.
-Finally, one by one, the jewels of night began
-to gleam out from the sky. Each woman,
-unknown to the other, was offering up a
-prayer. And it was in the midst of this quiet
-scene that Lenore started suddenly up, knowing
-that her agony had begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>No one in Le Crépuscule slept that night.
-Laure was called to help her mother; and the
-three women were alone in the bedroom of
-dead Gerault. The demoiselles, all dressed,
-had assembled in the spinning-room, and clustered
-there in the torchlight, whispering nervously
-together, and listening with strained ears
-for any sounds coming from Madame Lenore’s
-bedchamber. In the hall below were a company
-of servants, women and men, and a half-dozen
-henchmen, who quaffed occasional flagons
-of beer, but spoke not a word through the
-hours. David and Alixe sat in a corner playing
-at chess together; and a wondrous game
-it was, for neither knew when the other was
-in check, nor paid attention to a queen in
-jeopardy. Lastly, Courtoise was there, pacing
-up and down the hall, his hands clenched
-behind him, and the beads of sweat rolling off
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>his face. And how many miles he walked that
-night, he never knew.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The hours passed solemnly away, and there
-was no sign from the holy room above. Time
-dragged by, slowly and yet more slowly, till
-the hours became as years; and it seemed that
-ages had gone when finally the dawn came
-creeping from beyond the distant hills, and a
-pale light glimmered across the moving waters.
-By the time the torches were flaring high in
-their mingling with the daybreak, there came,
-from above, the sound of a door softly opening
-and then closing again. In the hall below, no
-one breathed. Courtoise paused beside a table,
-and trembled and shook with cold. Alixe,
-very pale and white, moved slowly toward
-the stairs. There was a faint sound of rustling
-garments across the stones of the upper
-hall, and then, descending step by step in the
-wavering light, came Laure, great-eyed and
-deathly white, after the night’s terrible toil.
-She came alone, carrying nothing in her arms;
-and on the fifth step from the floor she stopped
-still, and looked down upon the motionless
-company. Once she tried to speak, and her
-throat failed her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>“Mademoiselle—in the name of God!”
-pleaded Courtoise, hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure trembled a little. “Good friends,” she
-said, “Madame Lenore is safely delivered; and
-there is—a new daughter in Le Crépuscule.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER FOURTEEN</em><br /> <span class='large'>ELEANORE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_398.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-When Laure, her message
-given, started back upstairs
-again, Alixe was at her side.
-At Lenore’s door they both
-stopped, till madame opened
-it. Laure entered the room
-at once, but Eleanore shook her head at the
-maiden, and bade her seek her rest. Then
-Alixe, disappointed, but too weary for speech,
-followed the chattering demoiselles down the
-corridor where were all their rooms, and, saying
-not a word to one of them, shut herself
-into her own chamber. Once there, she disrobed
-with speed, but when she had crept
-into her bed and pulled the coverings up
-above her, she found that sleep was an impossibility.
-There was a dull weight at her
-heart, which for the moment she could not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>analyze. It was as if some great misfortune
-had befallen her. Yet Lenore lived—was
-remarkably well. And the child—ah, the
-child! It was the first, almost, that Alixe
-had thought of the child. A girl, another
-girl, in Le Crépuscule! a thing of inaction,
-of resignation, of quiescence; the sport of
-Fate; the jest of the age! Alas, alas! A
-girl! To grow up alone, here in this wilderness,
-companionless, without hope of escape!
-Thus, dully, inarticulately, every one in Le
-Crépuscule was meditating with Alixe, till at
-last, one by one, they fell asleep, each in his
-late bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The morning was far spent, and an April
-sun streamed brightly across her coverlet,
-when Alixe finally awoke. Her sleep had
-done her good, and there was no trace of
-melancholy in her air as she rose and made
-herself ready for the day. She was healthfully
-hungry, but there was another interest,
-greater than hunger, that had caused her so
-speedily to dress. Hurrying out and down
-the hall, she stopped at the door to Lenore’s
-room, and tapped there softly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure opened it at once, and smiled a good-morning
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>to her. “Come thou in,” she whispered.
-“Lenore would have thee see the
-child.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe entered softly, and halted near the
-bed, transfixed by the sight of Lenore. Never,
-even in the early days of her bridal, had
-Gerault’s lady been so beautiful. The mysterious
-spell of her holy estate was on her,
-was clearly visible in her brilliant eyes, in the
-rosy flush of her cheeks, in the coiling, burning
-gold of her wondrous hair, in the smiling,
-gentle languor of her manner. There was
-something newly born in her, some still ecstasy,
-that had come to her together with the tiny
-bundle at her side.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Come thou, Alixe, and look at her,” she
-said, in a weak voice, smiling happily, and
-casting tender love-looks at the little thing.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe went over, and, with Laure’s aid,
-unwrapped enough of the small creature for
-her to see its tiny, red face and feeble, fluttering
-hands. As she gently touched one of the
-cheeks, the wide, blue, baby eyes stared up
-at her, unwinking in their new wonder at the
-world; while Lenore watched them, eagerly,
-hungrily. Neither she nor Alixe noticed that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>Laure had moved off to a distance, and was
-staring dully out of a window. When Alixe
-had stood for some moments over the baby,
-wondering in her heart what to say to Lenore,
-the mother looked up at her with those newly
-unfathomable eyes, and said softly,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Put her into my arms, Alixe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe did so, laying the infant carefully across
-the mother’s breast. Lenore’s arms closed
-around it, and her eyes fell shut while a smile
-of unutterable peace lighted up her gentle face.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe knew that it was time for her to go,
-and, moved as she had never been moved before
-in her young life, she started toward the
-door, glancing as she went at Laure, who followed
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“How beautiful she is!” whispered Alixe,
-as they stood together on the threshold.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure nodded, but there was no sign of joy
-in her face. “Alas for them both!” she said
-quietly. “There have been enough daughters
-in Le Crépuscule.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>To this Alixe could find no reply, and so,
-with a slight nod, she left the room and went
-down to the morning meal. Madame Eleanore
-was not there. After the strain of the past
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>night, she had gone to her room a little after
-sunrise, leaving Laure to care for the young
-mother. At breakfast, then, Courtoise and
-Alixe sat nearest the head of the table, but
-they did not talk together. In fact, no one
-said very much during the course of the
-meal. Instead of the joyful gayety that might
-have been expected, now that their dead lord’s
-lady was safely through her trial, a dull gloom
-seemed to overhang everything, to weigh every
-one down: Courtoise ate in silence, heavy-browed
-and brooding, his head bent far over;
-David, in no humor for wit, scarcely spoke;
-even Alixe, whose heart had been somewhat
-lightened by the sight of Lenore and her happiness,
-presently succumbed to the atmosphere,
-and began to reflect that the last hope of the
-Castle was gone, that the line of Crépuscule
-had died forever. And neither she nor any
-one else paused to think that, if the little Twilight
-baby asleep upstairs had understood the
-true nature of her welcome into the world,
-she might readily have been persuaded to escape
-again, as rapidly as possible, into her blue
-ether, where pain and unwelcome were things
-unknown.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>When Alixe had eaten, she returned to the
-sick-room and, madame being still asleep, insisted
-upon taking Laure’s place till the weary
-girl had eaten and slept. Lenore had already
-taken some nourishment, and the baby had
-been fed; and, while the noon sunshine poured
-a flood of gold over the world, the mother and
-child drowsed happily together in their bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe, having set the room as much to rights
-as was possible, seated herself by one of the
-open windows, and straightway began to dream.
-Her thoughts were of her own life, of the new
-life that she should now soon enter upon, and
-of what would befall her when she should really
-reach the vast world that lay behind the barrier
-of eastern hills,—that world that Laure had
-found, but could not stay in; that world from
-which Lenore had come, and whither Gerault
-had betaken himself to die. Alixe mused for
-a long time, and, in her untaught way, philosophized
-over the sad stories of those in the Castle,
-and the prospect of a real history that
-there might be for her when she should leave
-Le Crépuscule; and it was in the midst of
-this reverie that the door from Laure’s room
-opened softly, and madame came in.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>Near the threshold she paused, looking intently
-at the sleeping mother and child, so that
-she did not at first perceive Alixe, who sat
-motionless, transfixed by the change which,
-since yesterday, had come upon madame. If
-there were gloom throughout the Castle, because
-of a disappointment in the sex of
-Lenore’s child, that gloom was epitomized
-in the face of Madame Eleanore. She was
-paler and older than Alixe had ever seen
-her before. The white in her hair was more
-marked than the dark. Every line in her
-face had deepened. Her eyes, tearless as they
-were, seemed somehow faded, and her manner
-bespoke an unutterable weariness. She looked
-haggard and old and worn. And yet, as she
-gazed at the unconscious picture of youth and
-tender love, the joy of the world, and the life
-of her race asleep there before her, her face
-softened, and her mouth lost a little of its hardness.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>After some moments of this gazing, seeing
-that still she had not moved, Alixe went to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Laure was weary, madame, and so I took
-her place while Lenore and the baby slept,”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>Eleanore nodded, and Alixe wondered uneasily
-if she should leave the room. After a
-second or two, however, madame shook away
-her preoccupation and turned to the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe,” she said, “none hath as yet been
-despatched for Monseigneur de St. Nazaire;
-and I will not have Anselm baptize the child.
-Go thou and tell Courtoise to ride and fetch
-the Bishop as soon as may be, to perform one
-last ceremony for this house. Give him my
-good greeting. Tell him Lenore is well—and
-the babe—a girl. Mon Dieu! a girl!—Haste
-thee, Alixe. And thou needst not
-return. I will sit here while Lenore sleeps.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe bowed, but still stood hesitating,
-near the door, till madame looked up at her
-impatiently.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“When I have given Courtoise his message,
-let me bring thee food and wine, madame.
-Thou’lt be ill, an thou eat not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay. Begone, Alixe! Bring nothing to
-me. Why should I eat? Why should I
-eat, when after me there will be none of mine
-to eat in Crépuscule?” And it was with a
-kind of groan that madame moved slowly
-across to the bedside. When Alixe left the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>room she was still standing there, gazing
-down upon Lenore, who, if awake, could
-hardly have borne the look with which
-madame regarded her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>An hour later, Courtoise was on his way
-to St. Nazaire; but he did not return with
-Monseigneur till evensong of the next day.
-Arrived at the Castle, the Bishop was given
-chance for food and rest after his ride, before
-he was summoned to Lenore’s room, where
-madame received him. From Courtoise, on
-their way, St. Nazaire had learned of the disappointment
-of the Castle; so that he was
-prepared for what he found. He read Eleanore’s
-mind from her face, and was not surprised
-at it, but from his own manner no one
-could have told that he felt anything but the
-utmost delight with the whole affair. He was
-full of congratulations and felicitations of every
-kind; he was witty, he was gay, he was more
-talkative than any one had ever seen him
-before; and he took the baby and handled it,
-cried to it, cooed to it, with the air of an
-experienced old beldame. Lenore, still radiant
-with her happiness of motherhood, brightened
-yet more under the cheer of his presence;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>and in her unexpected joy the Bishop found
-some consolation for the cloud of misery that
-shrouded madame. Indeed, he watched Lenore
-with unaffected delight, seeing with amazement
-the miracle that had been worked in her,
-and knowing her now for the first time as
-what she had been before her marriage, when
-there was, in her nature, none of the melancholy,
-the morbidness, the pain of loneliness,
-that had for so long clouded her life.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore was not strong enough to endure
-even his cheerful presence very long; and
-when Laure presently stole in, he seized the
-opportunity that he had been waiting for, and,
-on some light excuse, drew madame with him
-out of the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The moment that they were alone together,
-his gay manner dropped from him like a cloak,
-and he looked upon the woman before him
-with piercing eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Eleanore,” he said severely, “it were well
-an thou came with me for a little time before
-God. There is written on thy face the tale
-of that old-time inward rebellion that hath been
-so long asleep that I had hoped it dead.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame looked at him with something of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>defiance, displeasure very plainly to be read in
-her brilliant eyes. “My lord,” she said coldly,
-“thou’rt wearied with thy ride. It were well
-an thou soughtest rest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I have already rested. Where wouldst
-thou rather be,—in thine own room, or in the
-chapel?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Charles!” madame spoke with angry impetuosity.
-“Think you I am to be treated
-as a child?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“There are times when all of us are
-children, Eleanore,—times when we need the
-Father-hand, the Father-guidance. I would
-not be harsh with thee were there another way;
-nevertheless, thou must do my bidding.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She led him in silence to her own room,
-and they entered it together, St. Nazaire closing
-the door behind him. Madame seated
-herself at once in a broad chair near a window,
-and the Bishop paced up and down before
-her. The room was warm, for the night
-air was soft, and a half-dead fire gleamed upon
-the stone hearth. A torch upon the wall had
-been lighted, and two candles burned on the
-table near by. By this light St. Nazaire could
-watch Eleanore’s face as he walked. It was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>some moments before he spoke, and when
-he began, his voice had changed again, and
-was as gentle as a woman’s,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“This birth of a girl child hath been a grievous
-disappointment to thee, dear friend?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Eleanore replied only by a look; but what
-words could have expressed half so much?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Art thou angry with me, Eleanore! Am
-I to blame for it? Is there fault in any one
-for what is come? Sex is no matter of choice
-with the world. Were it so, methinks thou
-hadst not now been grieving.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou sayest truly, it is no matter of choice
-with the world. But hast not ever taught that
-there is One who may choose always as He
-will? There is a fault, and it is the fault of
-God! God of God, Charles, have I not had
-enough to bear? Could I not, now that the
-end cannot be far away, have known a little
-content in mine old age? What hath there
-been for me, these thirty years, save sorrow?
-With the death of Gerault, I believed that the
-world held no further woe for me; but in the
-following months hope, which I had thought
-forever gone, came on me again, combat its
-coming as I would. Yet the thought that an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>heir might be born to Crépuscule, the thought
-that the line might yet be carried on to something
-better than this eternal sadness, came to
-be so strong with me that I gave way, fool
-that I was, to joy. And now, by the merciless
-wrath of God, Fate makes sport of me again.
-God alone would have been so pitiless. And
-am I, a mortal, to forgive the Almighty for all
-the woes that He recklessly putteth on me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In this speech Eleanore’s low voice had
-risen above its usual pitch, and rang out in
-tones of deep-seated, passionate anger. St.
-Nazaire paused in his walk to look at her as
-she spoke; and never had he felt himself in a
-more difficult position. Sincere as was his belief,
-there were, indeed, things in the divine
-order that his creed could not explain away.
-He dreaded to take the only orthodox stand,—resignation
-and continued praise of the
-Lord, for in Eleanore’s present state of mind
-this would be worse than mockery; and yet
-in this he was obliged at length to take his
-refuge.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Eleanore, when Laure, the infant, was first
-put into thy arms, wast thou grieved that she
-was not a man child?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>“I had Gerault—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Hast thou not loved Laure and cared for
-her throughout thy life because she was thy
-child, flesh of thy flesh, blood of thy blood,
-conceived of great love, and born of suffering?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea, verily.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And, despite her months of grievous wandering
-from thy sight, still hath she not given
-thee all the joy that Gerault gave?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“More, methinks; in that she hath ever
-been more mine own.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then, Eleanore,” and there was joy in the
-man’s tone, “take this child of thy son to thy
-heart and love her. Let her young innocence
-bring thee peace. Hold her close to thy life,
-and give and receive comfort through thy love.
-Seek not woe because she is not what she cannot
-be. Assume not a knowledge greater
-than that of God. Trouble not thyself about
-the future; but, rather, take what is given
-thee, and know that it is good. Shall not a
-young voice cause these walls to echo again
-to the sound of laughter? Will not a child
-bring light into thy life? Why shouldst thou
-grieve because, in the years after thy death, Le
-Crépuscule may fall into other hands than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>those of thy race? Thinkest thou thou wilt
-be here to see it? For shame, Eleanore!
-Forget thy bitterness, and find the joy that
-Gerault’s widow already knows!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Though she would not have acknowledged
-it, Eleanore was influenced by the Bishop’s
-words; and the change in her was already visible
-in her face. Judging wisely, then, St.
-Nazaire let his plea rest where it was, and
-blessing her, said good-night and left her to
-sleep or to pray—he could not tell which.
-And in truth Eleanore slept; but in her sleep,
-love and pity entered into her heart. She
-woke in the early dawn, and, hardly thinking
-what she did, stole into Lenore’s room, creeping
-softly to the bed where the sleeping
-mother and infant lay. At sight of them a
-wave of feeling overswept her. She knew
-again the crowning joy of woman’s life: she
-felt again the glory of youth; and when she
-returned to her solitude, it was to weep away
-the greater part of her bitterness, and to take
-into her inmost heart the helpless baby of
-Gerault.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the following morning, in the presence
-of an imposing company, the Lord Bishop
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>officiating, the little girl was baptized. Laure
-and Courtoise were the godparents; Laure
-feeling that, in being trusted with this holy
-office, she stood once more honorably in the
-eyes of the world. According to her mother’s
-wish, the babe was christened Lenore,
-and Alixe guessed wrong when she thought
-the little one called after another of that
-name. When the ceremony was over, and
-the baptismal feast lay ready spread, madame
-took the child into her arms to carry it back
-to the mother; and St. Nazaire, seeing the
-kiss that she pressed upon the tiny cheek,
-realized that the cause was won.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Madame Eleanore’s lead was quickly followed
-by every one in the Castle; and the
-disappointment at the baby’s sex wore away so
-rapidly that in a month probably no one
-would have admitted that there had ever been
-any chagrin at all. Perhaps no royal heir had
-ever known more abject homage than was paid
-to that wee, bright-eyed, grave-faced, helpless
-creature, who was perfectly contented only
-when she lay in her mother’s arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore regained her strength slowly. Her
-long winter of idleness and grieving had ill-fitted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>her to bear the strain of what she had
-endured; and it was many weeks before she
-tried to leave her room. Thus, bit by bit, the
-whole life of the Castle came to gravitate
-around her chamber. It was like a court of
-which the young mother was queen, and
-where at certain hours of the day, all the
-women-folk of Crépuscule were wont to congregate.
-It was on an afternoon in the middle
-of May, when summer first hovered over the
-land, that Lenore was dressed for the first
-time. She sat in a semi-reclining position by
-the window, whence she could look off upon
-the sea, the baby at her side, and Alixe the
-only other person in the room. For nearly an
-hour Lenore had been silent, one hand gently
-caressing the baby’s little cheek, her big eyes
-wandering along the far horizon line. Alixe
-was bent over a parchment manuscript, which
-Anselm had taught her how to read, and she
-scarcely raised her eyes from it to look at anything
-in the room. Her passage had become
-complicated, and, at the same time, interesting,
-when Lenore’s voice suddenly broke in
-upon her,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Alixe, ’tis long time now since I saw
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>Courtoise. Thinkest thou he is near and
-would come and talk to me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe let her poetry go, and jumped hastily
-up. “I will seek him. An he be about the
-Castle, he will surely come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Lenore smiled with pleasure. “Thank thee,
-maiden. Let him come now, at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe, hugging Courtoise’s secret to her
-heart, hurriedly left the room, and ran downstairs,
-straight upon Courtoise, who stood in
-the hall below. He was booted and spurred,
-and his horse waited for him in the doorway.
-Making a hasty apology to Alixe, he was going
-on, when she cried to him: “Courtoise, stay!
-Madame Lenore seeks thy presence. She
-would have thee go to her and talk with her
-for an hour this afternoon. Shall I tell her
-thou’rt ridden hawking?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Holy Mary! Say that—say that I come
-instantly. She hath asked for me? Hurry,
-Alixe! Say that I come at once!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise retreated to his room, trembling
-like a girl. He had forgotten his horse, which
-Alixe considerately caused to be taken back to
-the stable, and while he removed his spurs and
-fussily rearranged his dress and hair, he tried
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>in vain to recover his equanimity. Then,
-when he could no longer torture himself with
-delay, he hurried away to the door of her
-room and there paused again, remembering
-how many times since her illness he had stood
-there, both by night and by day, listening, not
-always vainly, for the sound of her voice, or
-for the little wailing cry of the hungry babe.
-And now—now he was to enter that sacred
-room, holier to him than any consecrated
-church of God. Now he was to look at her,
-to touch her hand, to feast his eyes upon her
-exquisite face. He drew a long breath and
-was about to tap on the door, when it suddenly
-opened, and Alixe, finding herself face
-to face with him, gave a little exclamation,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Holy saints! I was just coming to seek
-thee again. Hadst forgotten that madame
-waits for thee? There—go in!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Courtoise never noticed the mischief of
-Alixe’s tone, but went straight into the room,
-and saw Lenore sitting by the window with the
-baby on her lap. She turned toward him,
-smiling, and holding out her hand. He went
-over, looking at her thirstily, but not so that
-she could read what was in his heart. Then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>he realized vaguely that Alixe had left the
-room, and that he was alone with Lenore.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“’Tis very long, Courtoise, very long, since
-we have seen each other. Why hast thou
-not come ere now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Madame! Had I but thought thou’dst
-have had me! Thrice every day during thy
-illness came I to thy door to ask after thee
-and the babe; and since then—often—I have
-stood and listened, to hear if thou wast speaking
-here within. But I did not know—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Enough, Courtoise! I thank thee.
-Thou’rt very good. Thou knowest thou’rt
-all that I have left of Gerault, and I would
-fain have thee oftener near me. Wilt take the
-babe? Little one! She feels the strength of
-a man’s arms but seldom. Sit there yonder
-with her. So!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She put the tiny bundle into his strong
-arms, and laughed to see the half-terrified air
-with which the young fellow bore it over to
-the settle which she indicated. But when he
-had sat down, he laid the baby on his knees,
-and then, retaining careful hold of it, turned
-his whole look upon Lenore.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She smiled at him, supremely unconscious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>of the electric thrills that were making the
-man’s whole body quiver and tremble with
-emotion. Indeed, it would have been difficult
-enough to read his feeling in his matter-of-fact
-manner. For a long time they sat there,
-talking upon many subjects, but most of all
-about Gerault, whose name had scarcely crossed
-Lenore’s lips since the time of his death. To
-Courtoise it was an acute pain to hear her refer
-to the various incidents of her courtship in
-Rennes; but back of her words there was no
-suggestion of either grief or bitterness. She
-recalled her first acquaintance with Gerault
-fully, incident by incident, and caused Courtoise
-to take an unwilling part in the reminiscences.
-He hoped continually to get her away
-from the subject, to matters now nearer both
-of them; but time sped on, and, as the sun
-began to near the sea, the baby woke from
-sleep with a little cry that Courtoise recognized
-with a pang. His hour was over; and he
-had gained little hope from it. Yet, as he returned
-the baby to its mother’s arms, there
-was a smile for him in Lenore’s calm eyes, and
-he retreated with a beating heart as Madame
-Eleanore and Laure came together into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>room, to spend their usual evening hour with
-the mother and child.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>This hour of the day, the twilight time, the
-time of yearning for things long gone, had of
-late weeks been drawing these three women
-of the Twilight Castle very close together.
-Laure, Lenore, and Eleanore, these three, with
-Alixe ofttimes a shadow in the background,
-were accustomed to sit together, watching the
-sunset die over the great waters, and waiting
-for the appearance of the evening star upon
-the fading glow. And in this time of silent
-companionship each felt within her a new
-growth, a new, half-sorrowful love for the life
-in this lonely habitation. The spell of solitude
-was weaving about them a slow, strong bond,
-which in after years none of the three felt
-any wish to break. Many dream-shadows, the
-ghosts of forgotten lives, rose up for each out
-of the darkening waste of the sea; and with
-these spirits of memory or imagination, each
-one was making a life as real and as strong
-as the lives of those that dwelt out in the great
-world, for which, at one time or another, all
-of them had so deeply yearned. Each felt,
-in her heart, that her active life was over;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>and, as time passed, and thoughts began adequately
-to take the place of realities, none of
-them cared to keep alive the sharp stings of
-bitterness or of unavailing regret. They knew
-themselves dead to the great, outer life that
-each, in her way, had known. Nor did they
-mourn themselves. What fire of life remained
-with them had been transformed into secret
-dreams and ambitions for the future of that
-little creature swathed so carefully from the
-world, now lying peacefully asleep upon the
-mother-breast of Gerault’s widow.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER FIFTEEN</em><br /> <span class='large'>THE RISING TIDE</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_421.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-Summer was on the world
-again, and with its coming,
-melancholy was banished for
-a season from Le Crépuscule.
-With the first northward flight
-of storks, a new air, a breath
-of hidden life and gayety, crept into the Castle
-household, and, in the early days of June,
-broke forth in a riot of pleasures,—caroles,
-garland-weaving parties, and hunting. As in
-former times, Laure was now the moving
-spirit in every sport, and, to the general amazement,
-madame, who in her younger days had
-been celebrated at the chase, herself headed one
-of the rabbit-hunts,—in that day a favorite
-pastime with women.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The country around Le Crépuscule was as
-beautiful in summer as it was desolate in winter;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>for the moorlands were one gay tangle
-of many-colored wild-flowers. The cultivated
-land around the peasants’ homes was thick with
-various crops, and the cool, green depths of
-the forest hid beauties surpassing all those
-of the open country. The stables of Le Crépuscule
-were well supplied with horses, for the
-family, both women and men, had always been
-persistent riders. In these June days the
-women-folk, Madame and Laure and the
-demoiselles, rode early and late, deserting
-wheel, loom, and tambour frame to revel in
-a much-needed rest and change of occupation.
-Only Lenore refused to take part in the
-sports, finding pleasure enough at home with
-the child, who was growing to be a fine lusty
-infant, with a smile as ready as if she had been
-born in Rennes. And the mother and child
-were happy enough to sit all day in the flower-strewn
-meadow, between the north wall and
-the dry moat, playing together with bright
-posies, watching the movements of the birds
-in the open falconry, and sometimes taking
-part in quieter revels with the others. Ere
-June was gone, the demoiselles were scarcely to
-be recognized for the pale, heavy-eyed, pallid
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>things that had been wont to assemble in the
-great hall after supper on winter evenings to
-listen to the stories told round the fire. Now
-their laughter was ever ready, their feet light
-for the dance, their cheeks brown, and their
-eyes bright with the continual riot in sunlight
-and sea-winds. Winter lay behind, like the
-shadow of an ugly dream, and now, of a sudden,
-God’s world, and with it Le Crépuscule, became
-beautiful for man.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>In the first week of July, however, the
-period of gayety was checked by the loss of
-four members of the household. Two of the
-demoiselles of noble family, whom madame
-had taken to train as gentlewomen of rank,
-Berthe de Montfort and Isabelle de Joinville,
-had now been in Le Crépuscule the customary
-time for the acquirement of etiquette and the
-arts of needlework, and escorts arrived from
-their homes to convoy them away. After
-their departure, the squires Louis of Florence
-and Robert Meloc resigned their places and
-rode out into the world, to seek a life of
-action.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>There were now left in Le Crépuscule the
-demoiselles whom Lenore had brought with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>her from Rennes a year ago, and two others
-who had come to madame many years ago,
-and who must perforce stay on, having no
-other home than this, living as they did upon
-madame’s bounty. And there were also two
-young squires, who had sworn fealty to madame,
-but hoped some day to ride to Rennes
-and win their spurs in the lists of their Lord
-Duke. For the present they were content to
-remain out on the lonely coast, where Courtoise
-taught them the articles of knighthood,
-and where twenty stout henchmen could
-look up to them as superiors. These, with
-David le petit, Anselm the steward, Alixe,
-Courtoise, and a young peasant woman, who
-had come to foster the infant of Madame
-Lenore, comprised the attendants of the three
-ladies of Crépuscule. It was a well-knit little
-company, and one so accustomed to the quiet
-life, that none of them save only one desired
-better things.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Of the mood of Alixe during these summer
-months, much might be said. Throughout
-the spring she had been in a state of hot
-desire for what was not in Le Crépuscule.
-She was filled with unrest; but her plans
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>were too vague, too indefinite, for immediate
-action. Strong as was the will that would
-have carried her through any difficulty that
-lay not in the condition of her heart, she
-was still, after nearly six months of dreaming
-and debating, in Le Crépuscule. Still she labored
-through the long, dull mornings; and
-still, through the afternoons, she drifted about
-through moving seas of doubt and yearning.
-She longed for the world, but she could not
-give up Le Crépuscule, and those whom it
-held. Here was her problem,—which way to
-turn. She felt that another such winter as
-she had just passed would drive her senses
-from her; but she knew that anywhere outside
-Le Crépuscule the visions of three faces,
-the fair, sad faces of her ladies, would haunt
-her by day and by night till she should return
-to them at last. She carried her struggle
-always with her, and at length it drove her to
-seek an old-time solitude. She began to spend
-her afternoons in a cave in the great cliff north
-of that on which the Castle stood. This cave
-had been formed by the action of the water,
-and it stretched in cavernous darkness far into
-the wall of rock,—much farther than Alixe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>had ever dared to go. Near the entrance,
-four or five feet above the tide-washed floor,
-was a little ledge where she was accustomed to
-sit till the rising water drove her to the upper
-shore. Tides, in Brittany, are proverbially
-high; and at full tide the top of the cave’s
-opening was scarcely visible above the water;
-so it behooved Alixe to restrain herself from
-sleep while she lay therein, meditating on her
-other life.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>On the 19th of July the tide was at low ebb
-at half-past two in the afternoon; and at three
-o’clock Alixe entered the cave, and climbed,
-dry-shod, up to her ledge of rock. Here, as
-she knew, she was safe for two hours, if she
-chose to stay so long.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The interior of this cave was by no means
-an uninteresting place, though Alixe had never
-yet explored it beyond the space of twenty
-feet, where it was bright with the daylight
-that poured in through its jagged entrance.
-After that it wound a darker way into the cliff,
-and the far recesses were lost in utter blackness.
-A spoken word directed toward the
-inner passage-way would reverberate along
-that mysterious interior till one could not but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>be a little awed at the vast extent of the
-lost passage. The visible floor of the cavern
-was a thing of interest and beauty, for at low
-tide it was like a little park, where pools of
-clear sea-water alternated with groves of filmy
-plants, small ridges of pebbles and rocks, and
-patches of delicately ribbed sand, where every
-species of shell-fish dwelt. At times Alixe
-spent hours in studying sea-life in these places;
-and certainly, on hot summer afternoons, no
-pleasanter occupation could have been found.
-Probably others than Alixe would have taken
-to it, were it not for the fact that the cave was
-the scene of one of the weirdest legends of the
-coast, and was held in avoidance as much by
-Castle folk as by the peasantry. Alixe, however,
-had long been held to possess some
-uncanny power over the people of the supernatural
-world, for she would venture fearlessly
-into the most unholy spots, emerging unharmed
-and undisturbed; nor could any one ever learn
-from her whether or not she had actually held
-intercourse with the creatures whom they devoutly
-believed in, and so devoutly dreaded.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>To-day, certainly, there was no suggestion
-of the uncanny about her as she lay upon her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>ledge of rock, looking off upon the sparkling
-waters that danced up to the very edge of her
-retreat. With one hand she shaded her eyes
-from the golden glare, and her head was pillowed
-on her other arm. Her usually smooth
-brow was puckered into a frown for which the
-sun was not responsible; nor yet was Alixe’s
-mind upon any subject that might be supposed
-to anger or distress her. For the moment
-she had dropped her inward debate, and
-was lazily watching the sea. The warmth of
-the afternoon had made her drowsy, and now
-the shadowy coolness of the cave soothed her
-till her vivid mental images had become a
-little blurred, and the sparkle of the water and
-its crispy rustle, as it advanced and retreated
-over the sand outside, was luring her mind
-into the faery wastes of dreamland. She
-wondered a little whether she were awake or
-asleep; but, in point of fact, her eyes were
-not actually shut, when a slender figure came
-round a corner of the entrance, and slipped
-lightly into the cave.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe started, and sat up straight, while a
-high tenor voice cried out: “Ho, Mistress
-Alixe, ’tis thou, then? Is’t I that discover
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>thee in thy retreat, or thou that hast invaded
-mine?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ohé</span>, David, thou’st startled me! Meseemeth
-I all but slept.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“’Tis a day for sleep, but this is not the
-place. Is there room there on the ledge? Wilt
-let me up? ’Tis wet enough, below here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Yea; thy feet slop i’ the sand, and thou’st
-frightened two crabs. Canst climb hither?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>He laughed merrily, and scrambled up beside
-her, his light body seeming but a feather
-in weight. She made room beside her, and he
-sat down there, cocking one parti-colored knee
-upon the other, and beginning lightly: “Thus
-bravely, then, thou comest into the cave of the
-water goblin. Art thou, perchance, courted
-here by some sly water sprite?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The maiden, responding to his mood, laughed
-also. “Not unless thou’lt play the sprite,
-Master David. Say—wilt court me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, sister. Thou and I, and all i’ the
-Castle up above, know each other in a way that
-admits no love-foolery. Heigho!” The
-little man’s tone had changed to one of whimsical
-earnestness. Alixe made no immediate
-reply to his speech, and so, to entertain himself,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>he took from his open bag two pebbles,
-and began to toss them lightly into the air,
-one after the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>For a few seconds Alixe watched him absently.
-Then she said: “Those pebbles,
-David, are like thee and me. Watch now
-which will be the first to fall from thy hand.
-Thou’rt the mottled; I the gray.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And I, damsel,” said he, as he began to
-handle them a little less carelessly, “I, who
-sit here forever, for my amusement tossing
-into the air two light souls, catching them when
-they come back to me, and flinging them again
-away—who am I, I ask?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thou, David?” Alixe’s face took on a
-little, bitter smile. “Why, thou art that inexorable
-thing that men call God. Wilt never
-drop thy stones from their wearisome sphere,
-Almighty One?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“They will not fall. They return to me
-evermore,” he answered; and, after another
-toss or two, he let them both remain in his
-hand while he looked at them for a moment.
-After that he put them back into his bag again,
-with a curious smile. “That, then, is our
-end,” he remarked, at last.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>“<em>Is</em> it our end? David, David! Shall I
-not leave Le Crépuscule, to fare forth into the
-world? I dream, and dream, and vow
-unto myself that I shall surely go; and then—I
-still remain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ay. There are things that keep thee here—and
-me too. There is the baby, now, and
-its angel-faced mother. And then madame—how
-is one to leave her, when she is a little
-more alive than formerly? I, too, Alixe, have
-dreamed dreams. The fever of my boyhood,
-with its wanderings, its life, its continual change,
-comes upon me strong sometimes. Here, in
-this place, my wit lies buried, my soul grows
-gray within me, my eyes have forgot the look
-of the world’s bright colors. And yet I stay
-on—I stay on forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“How if we two went out together, David,
-thou and I? Think you the world might hold
-a place for us? I would be a good comrade,
-I promise thee. I would march stoutly at thy
-side, nor complain when weariness overcame
-me. We should not have always to beg for
-food, for I have a little bag—”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“See, Alixe, look! There below, on the
-sand, by that sharp-pointed stone,—there is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>a gray-white crab. He must be hurt. See
-how he fumbles and struggles, without avail, to
-reach the little pool ten inches from him.
-Watch him; he makes no progress. Now that
-were thou and I, thrown upon the world. Oh,
-this place is full of omens! I have found them
-here before. ’Tis the witchery of the cave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe failed to smile. This last augury,
-though it confirmed the one that she herself
-had made, did not please her. She sat silent
-on the ledge, her feet hanging, her elbows on
-her knees, her head on her hand, watching
-intently all the little dramas taking place below
-her among the sea-creatures. Nor was David
-in a mood to make conversation. So the two
-of them sat silent for a long time—how long a
-time neither of them knew. The water was
-growing more brightly golden under the beams
-of the fast-descending sun, and Alixe noted the
-fact, but held her peace. It was David who,
-after a little while, suddenly exclaimed,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Diable, Alixe! See how the tide hath risen!
-We shall be wet enough getting out and back
-to the upper cliff. Come quickly!” As he
-spoke, he slid from the ledge, landing in water
-that was up to his ankles. “Quickly, Alixe!
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>I will steady thee. Come, thou’lt but be the
-wetter if thou stayest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe sat motionless upon the ledge above,
-and looked calmly down upon the dwarf.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Reflect, David, how easy it were not to wet
-my ankles thus. How easy ’twould be just
-to sit here—until the stone should drop for
-the last time into the hand of God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>David stood looking up at her, wide-eyed.
-The idea was slow to pierce his brain. “Why,
-yes,” said he, “’twere easy enow, easy enow.
-Yet when I go, ’t must be from mine own room,
-and by a clean dagger-stroke. I care not to
-choke myself to death in a goblin’s cave. Come,
-Alixe, the water riseth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Go thou on, David. I can come down
-when I will; for I have traversed the way
-often.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Come down!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, David.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Come down.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The water was deeper by four inches than it
-had been when he first reached the bottom of
-the cave. The dwarf looked up at the girl,
-who sat smiling at him, and his face reddened
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>slightly. Then, without more ado, he climbed
-back upon the ledge, and sat down beside
-Alixe, hanging his dripping feet toward the
-water, which now covered the tallest of the
-stones on the floor of the cave.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“David, thou must go. Climb down, and
-save thyself quickly. Thy slender body cannot
-much longer breast the tide.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>David crossed his knees and clasped his
-hands around them. “If thou stayest, I also
-will remain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“I beg of thee, go, ere it is too late!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Not without thee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“In the name of God I ask it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“We two were together in God’s hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Then so be it, David. Sit thou here beside
-me. We will wait together.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The little man did not reply to her this
-time, and Alixe felt no more need for speech.
-They sat there, occupied with their own
-thoughts, both watching, under the spell of a
-peculiar fascination, how the green water was
-mounting, mounting toward them. The cave
-was filled with blinding light from the setting
-sun. The roar of the ocean, a voice mighty
-and ineffable, filled all their consciousness.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>White-crested breakers rolled in and broke
-below them, and their faces were wet with chill
-salt spray. The water in the cave was waist-deep.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe was growing cold. A deadly intoxication
-stole upon her senses, and she bent
-far over the ledge to look into the swirling,
-foamy green below her.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“By the Almighty God, His creation is
-wondrous! This is a scene worthy of the
-end!” cried David, suddenly, in a hoarse,
-emotional tone.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe started violently. The sound of a
-human voice, breaking in upon the universal
-murmur of the infinite waters, sent a sudden
-stab to her heart. In a quick flash, she beheld
-Lenore’s baby holding out its feeble hands
-to her. Near it stood Laure, the penitent;
-and, on the other hand, madame, with her
-great, grave, sorrowful eyes fixed full upon
-herself, Alixe.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“David!” cried the girl, suddenly, wildly,
-above the roar of the tide: “David! We
-must escape!—Quickly! Quickly! Quickly!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>As she spoke, she left the ledge, to find
-herself swaying almost shoulder deep in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>fierce, swelling water. “Come!” she cried,
-her face livid with her new-born terror.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>For an instant, David looked down upon
-her with something resembling a smile. Then
-he followed her, and would have been carried
-off his feet in the water, had not Alixe steadied
-him with one hand, while, with the other, she
-clung to the rock above her head. The sudden
-chill woke David’s senses, and he said sharply:
-“We must hurry, Alixe! There is no time
-to lose.”</p>
-
-<div id='i_437' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_437.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic005'>
-<p><em><span class='c016'>H</span>and in hand, by the murmurous<br />sea, they walked.—Page <a href='#Page_427'>427</a></em></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c014'><span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>Then the two of them began their work
-of getting out of the cave. David, with his
-small, lithe body clad in tight-fitting hosen
-and jerkin, started to swim lightly through
-the water, diving headforemost into the beating
-breakers, and rounding toward the shore
-with rather a sense of pleasurable skill than
-anything else. But with Alixe, the case was
-different. Her long skirts were soaked with
-water, and clung disastrously about her feet.
-The idea of her swimming was vain; and she
-grimly gave thanks for her height. But she
-found that the matter of walking had its
-dangers too. The bottom of the cave and the
-outer stretch that lay between her and safety
-was very uneven. She stumbled over rocks
-and sank into sudden hollows, continually
-hampered by her clinging skirts. Presently
-she fell, and a great breaker came tumbling
-over her. In it she lost her self-control, and
-was presently rolling helpless in the tide, gasping
-in sea-water with every terrified breath, and
-unable to get her limbs free from their binding,
-clinging robe. Alixe was very near death
-in earnest, now, and she knew it. Presently,
-where a sweeping wave left her head for a
-moment above water, she sent one hoarse,
-guttural shriek toward David, who had regained
-the land; and he turned, horrified, to
-look at her. She heard his cry of amazement
-and distress, and then she was rolled upon her
-face, and knew nothing more till she found
-herself lying on the sand, with David bending
-over her, whiter than death, and trembling like
-a woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>She was dizzy and weak and sick, and her
-lungs ached furiously; yet with it all, she
-saw David’s distress, and managed to keep
-herself conscious by staring at him fixedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Up, Alixe! Up!” he muttered. “Thou
-<em>must</em> get up to the Castle. I cannot carry thee
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>there, and here thou’lt perish. Up, I say!
-Here, hold to my belt. See, the water is upon
-us again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>With an effort that seemed to her to be
-superhuman, Alixe struggled to her feet.
-He held her dripping skirts away from her,
-so that she could walk as little hampered as
-possible; and though she staggered and reeled
-at every step, they still made progress, and
-were halfway up the cliff before she collapsed
-again, utterly exhausted. Happily, at that
-moment, David spied the figure of Laure at
-the top of the cliff, and he cried to her with
-all the strength that was left him to come
-down. In a moment she was beside them,
-staring in silent astonishment at their plight.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The demoiselle Alixe had a fancy for
-bathing. She hath bathed,” observed David.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe did not speak. But suddenly her eyes
-met Laure’s, and she burst into hysterical laughter.
-Laure, being a woman, realized that she
-was strained to the point of collapse. So she
-bade David go on before them and take all
-precautions to recover from his bath; and then,
-as soon as Alixe signified her ability to go on
-again, Laure put one of her strong, young arms
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>about the dripping body, and, sustaining more
-than half her weight, succeeded in getting her
-to the Castle. Alixe demurred faintly about
-going in, for she dreaded questions. But it
-was that hour of the day when the open rooms
-of the Castle were deserted, when all the world
-was asleep or at play, and, as the two crossed
-the courtyard and went through the lower hall,
-they met no one but a pair of henchmen who
-were too respectful of Laure to voice their curiosity.
-As the young women went through the
-upper hall, on their way to Alixe’s room, there
-came, from behind Lenore’s closed door, the
-gurgling crow of the baby. At this sound
-Alixe shuddered, and through her heart shot
-a pang of horrified remorse at the crime she
-had so nearly committed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>A few moments later the exhausted girl lay
-in her bed, wrapped round with blankets,
-her dripping garments stripped away, and her
-body glowing again with the warmth of vigorous
-friction, while her wet hair was fastened
-high on her head, away from her face. When
-Laure had removed, as far as possible, every
-evidence of the escapade, she bent for a moment
-over the pillow of her foster-sister, and then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>stole quietly away. Alixe made no sign at her
-departure. She lay back in the bed, her eyes
-closed, her face set like marble, her mind wandering
-vaguely over the events of the afternoon.
-Gradually her world grew full of misty, creeping
-shadows, and she was on the borderland of
-sleep, when some one again bent over her, and
-the fragrant breath of hot wine came to her
-nostrils. With an effort she shook her eyes
-open, to find Laure’s kindly face above her,
-and Laure’s hand holding out to her a silver
-cup.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Drink, Alixe. ’Twill give thee strength.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Obediently, Alixe drank; and the posset
-sent a new glow of warmth through her body.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Now, if thou canst, thou must sleep.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe sent a thoughtful glance into her
-companion’s eyes, and there was something in
-her look that caused Laure to take both of the
-trembling hands in her own, and to wait for
-Alixe to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nay, Laure, nay; I cannot sleep till I have
-told thee. Some one I must tell,—some one
-that will understand. Let me confess to thee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Laure seated herself on the edge of the bed,
-Alixe still retaining her hands. And Laure’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span>sad eyes looked down upon the drawn face of
-her foster-sister, while she spoke. “Alixe,”
-she said softly, “methinks I know thy confession.
-Thou hast tried to leave Le Crépuscule.
-Is it not so?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Alixe’s eyes suddenly filled with tears. “It
-is so. I tried—to leave Le Crépuscule.”
-The last she only whispered, faintly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“But it drew thee back again? The Castle
-would not loose its hold on thee? Even so
-was it with me. Methought I hated it, Alixe,
-with its loneliness and its shadows and its vast
-silences. Yet however far away I was, I found
-it always before my eyes, or hidden in my
-thoughts. Through my hours of highest happiness
-I yearned for it; and it drew me back
-to it at last.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It is true! It is true! I know thou
-speakest truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And thou wilt not try again to go away,
-my sister?”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Not again; oh, not again! I could see
-you all, you and madame and Madame Lenore,
-and your eyes called me back. It is my
-home, is’t not? I have a place here, have I
-not? Ah, Laure, thou’st been so good to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span>me! Shall we not, thou and I, go back again
-into our childhood, and dream of naught better
-than dwelling here forever in this place? Both
-of us have sinned. And now we are come
-home into the shadow of the Castle of Twilight,
-for forgiveness’ sake.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'><em>CHAPTER SIXTEEN</em><br /> <span class='large'>THE MIDDLE OF THE VALLEY</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_break-detail.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c013'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/di_445.jpg' width='100' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_8'>
-Alixe had faith enough in
-David to believe that he would
-keep silent about the affair of
-that afternoon, and her confidence
-was not misplaced. No
-one save Laure knew of the
-caprice and the projected sin that had led
-them into their dangerous plight. And to
-the dwarf’s credit be it said that he never
-attached any blame to Alixe for their adventure.
-Indeed, thereafter, his manner toward
-her was marked by unusual consideration, a
-little veiled interest and sympathy, sprung
-from a knowledge that their habits of mind
-had led them both in the same ways of thought
-and desire. During the remainder of the summer,
-however, neither of them ventured again
-into the Goblin’s Cave; and, from Alixe’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span>mind at least, every thought, every desire, to
-leave the Castle, had been washed away. Her
-dreams of another life were dead. And, as
-the golden days slipped by, the thought that
-Le Crépuscule must be her home forever, came
-to have no bitterness in it; for she had learned
-in a strange way how Le Crépuscule was rooted
-into her heart, and how impossible it would be
-that she should leave it till the great Inevitable
-should bid her say farewell.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Indeed, the Castle had set its seal upon every
-one of its inmates. The little household had
-acquired the peculiar characteristics that generally
-grow up in a secluded community. Every
-dweller in the Twilight Land was unconsciously
-possessed of the same quiet manner, the same
-air of tranquil repose, the same habit of abstracted
-thought. And these things had stolen
-upon them so unawares that none was conscious
-of it in any other, and least of all in
-herself. It was a singularly beautiful atmosphere
-in which to bring up a little being fresh
-to the world. In this place a new soul might
-have dwelt forever untainted by any mark of
-worldliness, of passion, or of sin; for these
-things were foreign to the whole place. No
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>one in the Castle but had, at some time, been
-through the depths of human experience, been
-swayed by the most powerful emotions, and
-known the passion that is inherent in every
-mortal. But from these things the Twilight
-folk had been purified by long stretches of vain
-longing, vain struggles in the midst of solitude,
-and that continued repression that alone can
-eradicate mortal tendencies toward sin. And
-now the women of this Castle had reached, in
-their progress, the neutral vale of tranquillity
-that lies between the gorgeous meadows of
-delight and the grim crags of grief and
-disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>There was no one in the Castle that did not
-at times reflect upon these things; but of them
-all, Eleanore saw most clearly whence they had
-all come, and where they now were. Whither
-they might be going—ah, that! that, who
-should say? But she could see and understand
-the quiet happiness that Lenore had reached
-through her child; and the increasing contentment,
-that was more than resignation, in Laure.
-And if she was ignorant of the route by which
-Courtoise, Alixe, and David had come into the
-kingdom of tranquillity, at least she knew that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>all had reached it, and was glad that it was so.
-To St. Nazaire, who was now her only connection
-with the outer world, she talked of all
-these things, and found in him not quite the
-spirit of her Castle, but yet a great understanding
-of human and spiritual matters.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>Summer wove out its web over the Castle by
-the sea, and at length its golden heat began to
-give way before the attacks of chilly nights and
-shortening days. The earth grew rich and red
-with autumn. Chestnut fires began to blaze
-upon peasants’ hearths, and the early morning
-air had in it that little sting that brings the
-blood to the cheek and fire to the eye. It
-was still too early for flights of storks toward
-the Nile, and the year, hovering on the edge of
-dissolution, was at the zenith of its glory. It
-was the time when the smoke from the forest
-fires lingers pungently over the land for days
-on end, like incense proffered to the beauty
-of Mother Earth. It was the time when the
-sun rises and sets in a veil of mist that transcends
-the splendor of its golden gleams, till,
-before the incomparable richness and purity of
-its glory, the human spectator can only stand
-back, aghast and trembling with awe. In fine,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>it was that time when, Nature having reached
-the full measure of her maturity, she was turning
-to look back upon her youth, in retrospect
-of all the loveliness that had been hers, before
-she should start toward the darker, colder,
-grayer regions that lay about her coming
-grave.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>It was late in the afternoon of such an
-autumn day that the three women of Le Crépuscule,
-Laure, Lenore, and Eleanore, each
-lightly wrapped about to protect her from the
-slight chill in the air, went out of the Castle to
-the terrace bordering the cliff, for their evening
-walk. In the hearts of all three lay that little
-wistful sadness that was part of the time of year,
-and in their surrounding solitude they involuntarily
-drew close each to the other. Yet their
-faces were not wholly sad. None of them
-wept at the thought of the long winter that
-was again upon them. Hand in hand, by the
-murmurous sea, they walked, looking off upon
-the broad plain of moving waters, each unconsciously
-seeking to read there the destiny
-of her remaining years.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The hour was a holy one, and there came
-no sound from the living world to pierce its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>stillness. Nature knelt before the great marriage
-of the sun and sea. The altar of the
-west was hung with golden and purple tapestries;
-and the ministers of the sky poured out
-a libation of crimson-flowing wine before the
-Lord of Heaven. And when the sacrifice
-was made, all could behold how the great sun
-slipped gently from his car into the embrace
-of the sea, and the two of them were presently
-hidden underneath the golden locks and shimmering
-veil of the beautiful bride; and thereafter
-Twilight, the swift-footed handmaid, aided
-by all the ocean nymphs, quickly pulled the
-broad curtains of gray and crimson across the
-portals of the bridal room.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The sweet dusk deepened, but it was not
-yet time for the rising of the moon. There
-was still a flush of red in the west, and still the
-breasts of the gulls that veered over the waters
-flashed white and luminous in the gathering
-gray. The silence was absolute, save for the
-silken swish of the tide rising gently along the
-shore. The spell of twilight, the great soul-twilight
-of the middle ages, hung heavy on the
-battlements of the Castle on the cliff. On
-the terrace the three women paused in their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>slow walk. Lenore, her white face uplifted,
-and a look in her face as if the gates of
-Heaven had opened a little before her eyes,
-said dreamily,—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“How sweet it is,—and how beautiful,—our
-home!”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The silence of the others throbbed assent to
-her whispered words.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>The gulls were sinking slowly toward their
-nests. The drawbridge over the moat was
-just lifting for the night. A lapwing or two
-floated round the high turrets of the Castle;
-and from the doorway there, Alixe was coming
-forth, bearing Lenore’s baby in her arms. The
-stillness grew more intense, and over the edge
-of the eastern trees slipped the round, pink
-harvest moon. Then, one by one, a few great
-stars came sparkling out into the sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“See,” murmured Eleanore, very softly,
-“the east is clear around the rising moon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>And Laure replied to her: “Yes, very clear.
-How beautiful will be the morrow’s dawn!”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='small'>THE END</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_detail-for-ads.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='ph2 section'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='small'>MISS POTTER’S FIRST SUCCESS</span></div>
- <div class='c004'><cite>Uncanonized</cite></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='large'><span class='sc'>By</span> MARGARET HORTON POTTER</span></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='small'><em>Author of “The Castle of Twilight”</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
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-
-<p class='c018'>One of the most powerful historical romances that has ever
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-
-<p class='c018'>In such romances we shall always delight, turning to them
-from much that is dull and inane in what passes for the realistic
-reflex of our present-day life.—<span class='sc'>Harper’s Magazine.</span></p>
-
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-Transcript.</span></p>
-
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-and courage and a girl’s devotion, the atmosphere of great days and primitive
-human passions.—<span class='sc'>Philadelphia Ledger.</span></p>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
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- <div><span class='small'>A BOOK OF GREAT BEAUTY</span></div>
- <div class='c004'><cite>The Thrall of Leif the Lucky</cite></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='small'>A STORY OF VIKING DAYS</span></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='large'><span class='sc'>By</span> OTTILIE A. LILJENCRANTZ</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
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-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c012'>A remarkable book because it not only tells
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-
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-
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-York Mail and Express.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>One of the best constructed historical romances that has appeared in
-America in some years.—<span class='sc'>Brooklyn Eagle.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>The atmosphere of the old days of fighting and adventure glows in the
-book.—<span class='sc'>Springfield Republican.</span></p>
-
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-
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- <div class='nf-center'>
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- <div class='c004'>WITH SIX FULL-PAGE PICTURES IN COLOR, AND OTHER DECORATIONS BY THE KINNEYS. $1.50</div>
- <div class='c004'>A. C. McCLURG &amp; CO., <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='ph2 section'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
- <ol class='ol_1 c003'>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- </li>
- <li>Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.
-
- </li>
- <li>Footnotes were re-indexed using numbers.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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