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Lysbeth: Chapter 23

Chapter 23

FATHER AND SON

When Adrian left his mother's house in the Bree Straat he wandered away
at hazard, for so utterly miserable was he that he could form no plans
as to what he was to do or whither he should go. Presently he found
himself at the foot of that great mound which in Leyden is still known
as the Burg, a strange place with a circular wall upon the top of it,
said to have been constructed by the Romans. Up this mound he climbed,
and throwing himself upon the grass under an oak which grew in one of
the little recesses of those ancient walls, he buried his face in his
hands and tried to think.

Think! How could he think? Whenever he shut his eyes there arose before
them a vision of his mother's face, a face so fearful in its awesome and
unnatural calm that vaguely he wondered how he, the outcast son, upon
whom it had been turned like the stare of the Medusa's head, withering
his very soul, could have seen it and still live. Why did he live? Why
was he not dead, he who had a sword at his side? Was it because of
his innocence? He was not guilty of this dreadful crime. He had
never intended to hand over Dirk van Goorl and Foy and Martin to the
Inquisition. He had only talked about them to a man whom he believed
to be a professor of judicial astrology, and who said that he could
compound draughts which would bend the wills of women. Could he help
it if this fellow was really an officer of the Blood Council? Of course
not. But, oh! why had he talked so much? Oh! why had he signed that
paper, why did he not let them kill him first? He had signed, and
explain as he would, he could never look an honest man in the face
again, and less still a woman, if she knew the truth. So he was not
still alive because he was innocent, since for all the good that
this very doubtful innocence of his was likely to be even to his own
conscience, he might almost as well have been guilty. Nor was he alive
because he feared to die. He did fear to die horribly, but to the young
and impressionable, at any rate, there are situations in which death
seems the lesser of two evils. That situation had been well-nigh reached
by him last night when he set the hilt of his sword against the floor
and shrank back at the prick of its point. To-day it was overpast.

No, he lived on because before he died he had a hate to satisfy, a
revenge to work. He would kill this dog, Ramiro, who had tricked him
with his crystal gazing and his talk of friendship, who had frightened
him with the threat of death until he became like some poor girl and for
fear signed away his honour--oh, Heaven! for very fear, he who prided
himself upon his noble Spanish blood, the blood of warriors--this
treacherous dog, who, having used him, had not hesitated to betray his
shame to her from whom most of all it should have been hidden, and,
for aught he knew, to the others also. Yes if ever he met him--his
own brother--Foy would spit upon him in the street; Foy, who was
so hatefully open and honest, who could not understand into what
degradation a man's nerves may drag him. And Martin, who had always
mistrusted and despised him, why, if he found the chance, he would tear
him limb from limb as a kite tears a partridge. And, worse still, Dirk
van Goorl, the man who had befriended him, who had bred him up although
he was no son of his, but the child of some rival, he would sit there
in his prison cell, and while his face fell in and his bones grew daily
plainer, till at length his portly presence was as that of a living
skeleton, he would sit there by the window, watching the dishes of
savoury food pass in and out beneath him, and between the pangs of his
long-drawn, hideous agony, put up his prayer to God to pay back to him,
Adrian, all the woe that he had caused.

Oh! it was too much. Under the crushing weight of his suffering, his
senses left him, and he found such peace as to-day is won by those who
are about to pass beneath the surgeon's knife; the peace that but too
often wakes to a livelier agony.

When Adrian came to himself again, he felt cold, for already the autumn
evening had begun to fall, and there was a feel in the clear, still air
as of approaching frost. Also he was hungry (Dirk van Goorl, too, must
be growing hungry now, he remembered), for he had eaten nothing since
the yesterday. He would go into the town, get food, and then make up his
mind what he should do.

Accordingly, descending from the Burg, Adrian went to the best inn
in Leyden, and, seating himself at a table under the trees that
grew outside of it, bade the waiting-man bring him food and beer.
Unconsciously, for he was thinking of other things, in speaking to
him, Adrian had assumed the haughty, Spanish hidalgo manner that was
customary with him when addressing his inferiors. Even then he noticed,
with the indignation of one who dwells upon his dignity, that this
server made him no bow, but merely called his order to someone in the
house, and, turning his back upon him, began to speak to a man who was
loitering near. Soon Adrian became aware that he was the subject of that
conversation, for the two of them looked at him out of the corners of
their eyes, and jerked their thumbs towards him. Moreover, first one,
then two, then quite a number of passers-by stopped and joined in the
conversation, which appeared to interest them very much. Boys came also,
a dozen or more of them, and women of the fish-wife stamp, and all of
these looked at him out of the corner of _their_ eyes, and from time to
time jerked _their_ thumbs towards him. Adrian began to feel uneasy and
angered, but, drawing down his bonnet, and folding his arms upon his
breast, he took no notice. Presently the server thrust his meal and
flagon of beer before him with such clattering clumsiness that some of
the liquor splashed over upon the table.

"Be more careful and wipe that up," said Adrian.

"Wipe it yourself," answered the man, rudely turning upon his heel.

Now Adrian was minded to be gone, but he was hungry and thirsty, so
first, thought he, he would satisfy himself. Accordingly he lifted the
tankard and took a long pull at it, when suddenly something struck the
bottom of the vessel, jerking liquor over his face and doublet. He set
it down with an oath, and laying his hand upon his sword hilt asked who
had done this. But the mob, which by now numbered fifty or sixty, and
was gathered about him in a triple circle, made no answer. They stood
there staring sullenly, and in the fading light their faces seemed
dangerous and hostile.

He was frightened. What could they mean? Yes, he was frightened, but
he determined to brave it out, and lifted the cover from his meat, when
something passed over his shoulder and fell into the dish, something
stinking and abominable--to be particular, a dead cat. This was too
much. Adrian sprang to his feet, and asked who dared thus to foul his
food. The crowd did not jeer, did not even mock; it seemed too much in
earnest for gibes, but a voice at the back called out:

"Take it to Dirk van Goorl. He'll be glad of it soon."

Now Adrian understood. All these people knew of his infamy; the whole of
Leyden knew that tale. His lips turned dry, and the sweat broke out upon
his body. What should he do? Brave it out? He sat down, and the fierce
ring of silent faces drew a pace or two nearer. He tried to bid the man
to bring more meat, but the words stuck in his throat. Now the mob saw
his fear, and of a sudden seemed to augur his guilt from it, and to pass
sentence on him in their hearts. At least, they who had been so dumb
broke out into yells and hoots.

"Traitor!" "Spanish spy!" "Murderer!" they screamed. "Who gave evidence
against our Dirk? Who sold his brother to the rack?"

Then came another shriller note. "Kill him." "Hang him up by the heels
and stone him." "Twist off his tongue," and so forth. Out shot a hand, a
long, skinny, female hand, and a harsh voice cried, "Give us a keepsake,
my pretty boy!" Then there was a sharp wrench at his head, and he knew
that from it a lock of hair was missing. This was too much. He ought to
have stopped there and let them kill him if they would, but a terror
of these human wolves entered his soul and mastered him. To be trodden
beneath those mire-stained feet, to be rent by those filthy hands, to be
swung up living by the ankles to some pole and then carved piecemeal--he
could not bear it. He drew his sword and turned to fly.

"Stop him," yelled the mob, whereon he lunged at them wildly, running a
small boy through the arm.

The sight of blood and the screech of the wounded lad settled the
question, and those who were foremost came at him with a spring. But
Adrian was swifter than they, and before a hand could be laid upon him,
amidst a shower of stones and filth, he was speeding down the street.
After him came the mob, and then began one of the finest man-hunts ever
known in Leyden.

From one street to another, round this turn and round that, sped the
quarry, and after him, a swiftly growing pack, came the hounds. Some
women drew a washing-line across the street to trip him. Adrian jumped
it like a deer. Four men got ahead and tried to cut him off. He dodged
them. Down the Bree Straat he went, and on his mother's door he saw a
paper and guessed what was written there. They were gaining, they were
gaining, for always fresh ones took the place of those who grew weary.
There was but one chance for him now. Near by ran the Rhine, and here
it was wide and unbridged. Perhaps they would not follow him through the
water. In he went, having no choice, and swam for his life. They threw
stones and bits of wood at him, and called for bows but, luckily for
him, by now the night was falling fast, so that soon he vanished from
their sight, and heard them crying to each other that he was drowned.

But Adrian was not drowned, for at that moment he was dragging himself
painfully through the deep, greasy mud of the opposing bank and hiding
among the old boats and lumber which were piled there, till his breath
came to him again. But he could not stay long, for even if he had not
been afraid that they would come and find him, it was too cold. So he
crept away into the darkness.

Half an hour later, as, resting from their daily labours, Hague Simon
and his consort Meg were seated at their evening meal, a knock came at
the door, causing them to drop their knives and to look at each other
suspiciously.

"Who can it be?" marvelled Meg.

Simon shook his fat head. "I have no appointment," he murmured, "and I
don't like strange visitors. There's a nasty spirit abroad in the town,
a very nasty spirit."

"Go and see," said Meg.

"Go and see yourself, you----" and he added an epithet calculated to
anger the meekest woman.

She answered it with an oath and a metal plate, which struck him in the
face, but before the quarrel could go farther, again came the sound of
raps, this time louder and more hurried. Then Black Meg went to open the
door, while Simon took a knife and hid himself behind a curtain. After
some whispering, Meg bade the visitor enter, and ushered him into the
room, that same fateful room where the evidence was signed. Now he was
in the light, and she saw him.

"Oh! come here," she gasped. "Simon, come and look at our little
grandee." So Simon came, whereon the pair of them, clapping their hands
to their ribs, burst into screams of laughter.

"It's the Don! Mother of Heaven! it is the Don," gurgled Simon.

Well might they laugh, they who had known Adrian in his pride and rich
attire, for before them, crouching against the wall, was a miserable,
bareheaded object, his hair stained with mud and rotten eggs, blood
running from his temple where a stone had caught him, his garments a
mass of filth and dripping water, one boot gone and his hose burst to
tatters. For a while the fugitive bore it, then suddenly, without a
word, he drew the sword that still remained to him and rushed at the
bestial looking Simon, who skipped away round the table.

"Stop laughing," he said, "or I will put this through you. I am a
desperate man."

"You look it," said Simon, but he laughed no more, for the joke had
become risky. "What do you want, Heer Adrian?"

"I want food and lodging for so long as I please to stop here. Don't be
afraid, I have money to pay you."

"I am thinking that you are a dangerous guest," broke in Meg.

"I am," replied Adrian; "but I tell you that I shall be more dangerous
outside. I was not the only one concerned in that matter of the
evidence, and if they get me they will have you too. You understand?"

Meg nodded. She understood perfectly; for those of her trade Leyden was
growing a risky habitation.

"We will accommodate you with our best, Mynheer," she said. "Come
upstairs to the Master's room and put on some of his clothes. They will
fit you well; you are much of the same figure."

Adrian's breath caught in his throat.

"Is he here?" he asked.

"No, but he keeps his room."

"Is he coming back?"

"I suppose so, sometime, as he keeps his room. Do you want to see him?"

"Very much, but you needn't mention it; my business can wait till we
meet. Get my clothes washed and dried as quickly as you can, will you? I
don't care about wearing other men's garments."

A quarter of an hour later Adrian, cleaned and clothed, different
indeed to look on from the torn and hunted fugitive, re-entered the
sitting-room. As he came, clad in Ramiro's suit, Meg nudged her husband
and whispered, "Like, ain't they?"

"Like as two devils in hell," Simon answered critically, then added,
"Your food is ready; come, Mynheer, and eat."

So Adrian ate and drank heartily enough, for the meat and wine were
good, and he needed them. Also it rejoiced him in a dull way to find
that there was something left in which he could take pleasure, even if
it were but eating and drinking. When he had finished he told his
story, or so much of it as he wished to tell, and afterwards went to bed
wondering whether his hosts would murder him in his sleep for the purse
of gold he carried, half hoping that they might indeed, and slept for
twelve hours without stirring.

All that day and until the evening of the next Adrian sat in the home
of his spy hosts recovering his strength and brooding over his fearful
fall. Black Meg brought in news of what passed without; thus he learned
that his mother had sickened with the plague, and that the sentence of
starvation was being carried out upon the body of her husband, Dirk
van Goorl. He learned also the details of the escape of Foy and Martin,
which were the talk of all the city. In the eyes of the common people
they had become heroes, and some local poet had made a song about them
which men were singing in the streets. Two verses of that song were
devoted to him, Adrian; indeed, Black Meg repeated them to him word
by word with a suppressed but malignant joy. Yes, this was what had
happened; his brother had become a popular hero and he, Adrian, who
in every way was so infinitely that brother's superior, an object of
popular execration. And of all this the man, Ramiro, was the cause.

Well, he was waiting for Ramiro. That was why he risked his life by
staying in Leyden. Sooner or later Ramiro would be bound to visit this
haunt of his, and then--here Adrian drew his rapier and lunged and
parried, and finally with hissing breath drove it down into the wood of
the flooring, picturing, in a kind of luxury of the imagination, that
the throat of Ramiro was between its point and the ground. Of course
in the struggle that must come, the said Ramiro, who doubtless was a
skilful swordsman, might get the upper hand; it might be his, Adrian's
throat, which was between the point and the ground. Well, if so, it
scarcely mattered; he did not care. At any rate, for this once he would
play the man and then let the devil take his own; himself, or Ramiro, or
both of them.

On the afternoon of the second day Adrian heard shouting in the streets,
and Hague Simon came in and told him that a man had arrived with bad
news from Mechlin; what it was he could not say, he was going to find
out. A couple of hours went by and there was more shouting, this time
of a determined and ordered nature. Then Black Meg appeared and informed
him that the news from Mechlin was that everyone in that unhappy town
had been slain by the Spaniards; that further the people of Leyden had
risen and were marching to attack the Gevangenhuis. Out she hurried
again, for when the waters were stormy then Black Meg must go afishing.

Another hour went by, and once more the street door was opened with a
key, to be carefully shut when the visitor had entered.

Simon or Meg, thought Adrian, but as he could not be sure he took the
precaution of hiding himself behind the curtain. The door of the room
opened, and not Meg or Simon, but Ramiro entered. So his opportunity had
come!

The Master seemed disturbed. He sat down upon a chair and wiped his brow
with a silk handkerchief. Then aloud, and shaking his fist in the air,
he uttered a most comprehensive curse upon everybody and everything, but
especially upon the citizens of Leyden. After this once more he lapsed
into silence, sitting, his one eye fixed upon vacancy, and twisting his
waxed moustaches with his hand.

Now was Adrian's chance; he had only to step out from behind the curtain
and run him through before he could rise from his seat. The plan had
great charms, and doubtless he might have put it into execution had not
Adrian's histrionic instincts stayed his hand. If he killed Ramiro thus,
he would never know why he had been killed, and above all things Adrian
desired that he should know. He wanted not only to wreak his wrongs,
but to let his adversary learn why they were wreaked. Also, to do him
justice, he preferred a fair fight to a secret stab delivered from
behind, for gentlemen fought, but assassins stabbed.

Still, as there were no witnesses, he might have been willing to waive
this point, if only he could make sure that Ramiro should learn the
truth before he died. He thought of springing out and wounding him, and
then, after he had explained matters, finishing him off at his leisure.
But how could he be sure of his sword-thrust, which might do too much
or too little? No, come what would, the matter must be concluded in the
proper fashion.

Choosing his opportunity, Adrian stepped from behind the hanging and
placed himself between Ramiro and the door, the bolt of which he shot
adroitly that no one might interrupt their interview. At the sound
Ramiro started and looked up. In an instant he grasped the situation,
and though his bronzed face paled, for he knew that his danger was
great, rose to it, as might have been expected from a gentleman of his
long and varied experience.

"The Heer Adrian called van Goorl, as I live!" he said. "My friend and
pupil, I am glad to see you; but, if I might ask, although the times are
rough, why in this narrow room do you wave about a naked rapier in that
dangerous fashion?"

"Villain," answered Adrian, "you know why; you have betrayed me and
mine, and I am dishonoured, and now I am going to kill you in payment."

"I see," said Ramiro, "the van Goorl affair again. I can never be clear
of it for half an hour even. Well, before you begin, it may interest you
to know that your worthy stepfather, after a couple of days' fasting, is
by now, I suppose, free, for the rabble have stormed the Gevangenhuis.
Truth, however, compels me to add that he is suffering badly from the
plague, which your excellent mother, with a resource that does
her credit, managed to communicate to him, thinking this end less
disagreeable on the whole than that which the law had appointed."

Thus spoke Ramiro, slowly and with purpose, for all the while he was
so manoeuvring that the light from the lattice fell full upon his
antagonist, leaving himself in the shadow, a position which experience
taught him would prove of advantage in emergency.

Adrian made no answer, but lifted his sword.

"One moment, young gentleman," went on Ramiro, drawing his own weapon
and putting himself on guard; "are you in earnest? Do you really wish to
fight?"

"Yes," answered Adrian.

"What a fool you must be," mused Ramiro. "Why at your age should you
seek to be rid of life, seeing that you have no more chance against me
than a rat in a corner against a terrier dog? Look!" and suddenly he
lunged most viciously straight at his heart. But Adrian was watching and
parried the thrust.

"Ah!" continued Ramiro, "I knew you would do that, otherwise I should
not have let fly, for all the angels know I do not wish to hurt you."
But to himself he added, "The lad is more dangerous than I thought--my
life hangs on it. The old fault, friend, too high, too high!"

Then Adrian came at him like a tiger, and for the next thirty seconds
nothing was heard in the room but the raspings of steel and the hard
breathing of the two men.

At first Adrian had somewhat the better of it, for his assault was
fierce, and he forced the older and cooler man to be satisfied with
guarding himself. He did more indeed, for presently thrusting over
Ramiro's guard, he wounded him slightly in the left arm. The sting
of his hurt seemed to stir Ramiro's blood; at any rate he changed
his tactics and began to attack in turn. Now, moreover, his skill and
seasoned strength came to his aid; slowly but surely Adrian was driven
back before him till his retreat in the narrow confines of the room
became continuous. Suddenly, half from exhaustion and half because of a
stumble, he reeled right across it, to the further wall indeed. With a
guttural sound of triumph Ramiro sprang after him to make an end of him
while his guard was down, caught his foot on a joined stool which had
been overset in the struggle, and fell prone to the ground.

This was Adrian's chance. In an instant he was on him and had the point
of his rapier at his throat. But he did not stab at once, not from any
compunction, but because he wished his enemy to feel a little before
he died, for, like all his race, Adrian could be vindictive and
bloodthirsty enough when his hate was roused. Rapidly Ramiro considered
the position. In a physical sense he was helpless, for Adrian had one
foot upon his breast, the other upon his sword-arm, and the steel at his
throat. Therefore if time were given him he must trust to his wit.

"Make ready, you are about to die," said Adrian.

"I think not," replied the prostrate Ramiro.

"Why not?" asked Adrian, astonished.

"If you will be so kind as to move that sword-point a little--it is
pricking me--thank you. Now I will tell you why. Because it is not usual
for a son to stick his father as though he were a farmyard pig."

"Son? Father?" said Adrian. "Do you mean----?"

"Yes, I do mean that we have the happiness of filling those sacred
relationships to each other."

"You lie," said Adrian.

"Let me stand up and give me my sword, young sir, and you shall pay for
that. Never yet did a man tell the Count Juan de Montalvo that he lied,
and live."

"Prove it," said Adrian.

"In this position, to which misfortune, not skill, has reduced me, I can
prove nothing. But if you doubt it, ask your mother, or your hosts, or
consult the registers of the Groote Kerke, and see whether on a date,
which I will give you, Juan de Montalvo was, or was not, married to
Lysbeth van Hout, of which marriage was born one Adrian. Man, I will
prove it to you. Had I not been your father, would you have been saved
from the Inquisition with others, and should I not within the last five
minutes had run you through twice over, for though you fought well, your
swordsmanship is no match for mine?"

"Even if you are my father, why should I not kill you, who have forced
me to your will by threats of death, you who wronged and shamed me, you
because of whom I have been hunted through the streets like a mad dog,
and made an outcast?" And Adrian looked so fierce, and brought down his
sword so close, that hope sank very low in Ramiro's heart.

"There are reasons which might occur to the religious," he said, "but
I will give you one that will appeal to your own self-interest. If you
kill me, the curse which follows the parricide will follow you to your
last hour--of the beyond I say nothing."

"It would need to be a heavy one," answered Adrian, "if it was worse
than that of which I know." But there was hesitation in his voice,
for Ramiro, the skilful player upon human hearts, had struck the right
string, and Adrian's superstitious nature answered to the note.

"Son," went on Ramiro, "be wise and hold your hand before you do that
for which all hell itself would cry shame upon you. You think that I
have been your enemy, but it is not so; all this while I have striven
to work you good, but how can I talk lying thus like a calf before its
butcher? Take the swords, both of them, and let me sit up, and I will
tell you all my plans for the advantage of us both. Or if you wish it,
thrust on and make an end. I will not plead for my life with you; it is
not worthy of an hidalgo of Spain. Moreover, what is life to me who have
known so many sorrows that I should seek to cling to it? Oh! God,
who seest all, receive my soul, and I pray Thee pardon this youth his
horrible crime, for he is mad and foolish, and will live to sorrow for
the deed."

Since it was no further use to him, Ramiro had let the sword fall from
his hand. Drawing it towards him with the point of his own weapon,
Adrian stooped and picked it up.

"Rise," he said, lifting his foot, "I can kill you afterwards if I
wish."

Could he have looked into the heart of his new-found parent as stiff and
aching he staggered to his feet, the execution would not have been long
delayed.

"Oh! my young friend, you have given me a nasty fright," thought Ramiro
to himself, "but it is over now, and if I don't pay you out before I
have done with you, my sweet boy, your name is not Adrian."

Ramiro rose, dusted his garments, seated himself deliberately, and began
to talk with great earnestness. It will be sufficient to summarise
his arguments. First of all, with the most convincing sincerity, he
explained that when he had made use of him, Adrian, he had no idea that
he was his son. Of course this was a statement that will not bear a
moment's examination, but Ramiro's object was to gain time, and Adrian
let it pass. Then he explained that it was only after his mother had,
not by his wish, but accidentally, seen the written evidence upon which
her husband was convicted, that he found out that Adrian van Goorl was
her child and his own. However, as he hurried to point out, all these
things were now ancient history that had no bearing on the present.
Owing to the turbulent violence of the mob, which had driven him from
his post and fortress, he, Ramiro, was in temporary difficulties, and
owing to other circumstances, he, Adrian, was, so far as his own party
and people were concerned, an absolutely dishonoured person. In this
state of affairs he had a suggestion to make. Let them join forces; let
the natural relationship that existed between them, and which had been
so nearly severed by a sword thrust that both must have regretted,
become real and tender. He, the father, had rank, although it suited
him to sink it; he had wide experience, friends, intelligence, and the
prospect of enormous wealth, which, of course, he could not expect to
enjoy for ever. On the other side, he, the son, had youth, great beauty
of person, agreeable and distinguished manners, a high heart, the
education of a young man of the world, ambition and powers of mind that
would carry him far, and for the immediate future an object to gain,
the affection of a lady whom all acknowledged to be as good as she was
charming, and as charming as she was personally attractive.

"She hates me," broke in Adrian.

"Ah!" laughed Ramiro, "there speaks the voice of small experience. Oh!
youth, so easily exalted and so easily depressed! Joyous, chequered
youth! How many happy marriages have I not known begin with such hate
as this? Well, there it is, you must take my word for it. If you want
to marry Elsa Brant, I can manage it for you, and if not, why, you can
leave it alone."

Adrian reflected, then as his mind had a practical side, he put a
question.

"You spoke of the prospect of enormous wealth; what is it?"

"I will tell you, I will tell you," whispered his parent, looking about
him cautiously; "it is the vast hoard of Hendrik Brant which I intend
to recover; indeed, my search for it has been at the root of all this
trouble. And now, son, you can see how open I have been with you, for if
you marry Elsa that money will legally be your property, and I can only
claim whatever it may please you to give me. Well, as to that question,
in the spirit of the glorious motto of our race, 'Trust to God and me,'
I shall leave it to your sense of honour, which, whatever its troubles,
has never yet failed the house of Montalvo. What does it matter to
me who is the legal owner of the stuff, so long as it remains in the
family?"

"Of course not," replied Adrian, loftily, "especially as I am not
mercenary."

"Ah! well," went on Ramiro, "we have talked for a long while, and if I
continue to live there are affairs to which I ought to attend. You have
heard all I have to say, and you have the swords in your hand, and, of
course, I am--only your prisoner on parole. So now, my son, be so good
as to settle this matter without further delay. Only, if you make up
your mind to use the steel, allow me to show you where to thrust, as I
do not wish to undergo any unnecessary discomfort"--and he stood before
him and bowed in a very courtly and dignified fashion.

Adrian looked at him and hesitated. "I don't trust you," he said; "you
have tricked me once and I daresay that you will trick me again. Also I
don't think much of people who masquerade under false names and lay such
traps as you laid to get my evidence against the rest of them. But I am
in a bad place and without friends. I want to marry Elsa and recover my
position in the world; also, as you know well, I can't cut the throat of
my own father in cold blood," and he threw down one of the swords.

"Your decision is just such as I would have expected from my knowledge
of your noble nature, son Adrian," remarked Ramiro as he picked up his
weapon and restored it to the scabbard. "But now, before we enter upon
this perfect accord, I have two little stipulations to make on my side."

"What are they?" asked Adrian.

"First, that our friendship should be complete, such as ought to exist
between a loving father and son, a friendship without reservations.
Secondly--this is a condition that I fear you may find harder--but,
although fortune has led me into stony paths, and I fear some doubtful
expedients, there was always one thing which I have striven to cherish
and keep pure, and that in turn has rewarded me for my devotion in many
a dangerous hour, my religious belief. Now I am Catholic, and I could
wish that my son should be Catholic also; these horrible errors, believe
me, are as dangerous to the soul as just now they happen to be fatal
to the body. May I hope that you, who were brought up but not born in
heresy, will consent to receive instruction in the right faith?"

"Certainly you may," answered Adrian, almost with enthusiasm. "I have
had enough of conventicles, psalm-singing, and the daily chance of being
burned; indeed, from the time when I could think for myself I always
wished to be a Catholic."

"Your words make me a happy man," answered Ramiro. "Allow me to unbolt
the door, I hear our hosts. Worthy Simon and Vrouw, I make you parties
to a solemn and joyful celebration. This young man is my son, and in
token of my fatherly love, which he has been pleased to desire, I now
take him in my arms and embrace him before you," and he suited the
action to the word.

But Black Meg, watching his face in astonishment from over Adrian's
shoulder, saw its one bright eye suddenly become eclipsed. Could it be
that the noble Master had winked?

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