<h2 id="c7"><span class="h2line1">6</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">NIGHT AND DAY; THE PLACE OF MASKS</span></h2>
<p>No step sounded, but as they stood close to catch any stir, a
clear, childish treble came muffled through the wood:</p>
<p>“What is it?”</p>
<p>Rodvard squeezed Lalette’s hand. “I cannot tell you from
here,” she said with her mouth close to the door, “but we need
help. Will you let us in?”</p>
<p>Pause, in which a chain rattled. “In the name and protection
of the God of Love, enter,” and the door melted before them into
a darkness different because it held shapes. “Stand there till I
make a light,” said the young voice. “You must be careful not
to break things.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</div>
<p>There was a small sound of fumbling, flint and steel clicked
and the candle came slowly into light on a scene that made
Rodvard and Lalette both almost cry out, for the small room
seemed crowded with people; princes and queens with coronets,
richly and gaily dressed, beggars in rags of silk, yellow warriors
with ram-horn helmets, Zigraners with want-chins and sliding
eyes and all other fantasies of human shape, so life-like in the
uncertain gleam that it was an eye-flick before they could be
recognized as festival masquerades. In the midst of them a smooth-haired
boy of it might be anywhere from twelve to sixteen stood
bowing gravely in his night-hose, candle held at arm’s length.</p>
<p>“I am glad to see you,” he said. “My name is Laduis Domijaiek.”</p>
<p>It was a good name for them, from the northwestern provinces,
where Queen and Florestan were least popular. Said
Rodvard; “We are pursued by the city provosts because a court
lord wishes harm to this lady. Will you help her get away?”</p>
<p>The boy looked at Lalette, cocking his head on one side, as
though listening to a distant voice. “Yes,” he said. “My heart says
it is right and we must always listen to the heart. Besides, we
don’t like the provosts.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said Lalette. “Where are your parents?”</p>
<p>“Father is in another world, and mother’s at the Marquis of
Palm’s palace to make the costumes for the spring festival. She’s
going to stay all night and she told me I must go to bed. But
this is more fun.” He looked at Lalette again, and his eyes
widened suddenly. “Oh, are you the witch? Witch something
for me.”</p>
<p>In spite of her situation, Lalette smiled. “Aren’t you afraid
it would hurt you?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no. We are Amorosians, and so witches can’t hurt anything
but our outsides. I’m not supposed to tell anybody that,
only the provosts are after you, too, so it’s all right.”</p>
<p>From outside came the sound of feet, tramp, tramp, on the
stair, and distant voices. “They are going to search,” said Rodvard.
“Laduis, the lady will come back and witch something for you
another day, but just now we must get her away from the
provosts. Is there any way out of this house except by the
main stair?”</p>
<p>The boy was all seriousness. “Not from this floor, Ser. I used
to go down the drain-pipe from Ser Tetteran’s quarter, but that
was when I was thirteen and it isn’t dignified.”</p>
<p>“Then we must hide her.” Rodvard’s eye darted round the
small room, took in the door to that still smaller, where beds
must be. “The masks; can you help us into some of these?”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</div>
<p>Laduis Domijaiek clapped his hands, and they set to work—for
Lalette a Kjermanash princess, whose billowing imitation furs
would hide the trimness of her figure; a hunchback Zigraner
moneylender for Rodvard, with a bag of brass-plated scudi. Her
dress had to come off, but the boy took it to hang with his
mother’s and came back to help Rodvard adjust the face-mask
as furniture was moved overhead. The thumping came to an end,
there was the sound of feet on the stairs once more, Rodvard and
Lalette squeezed past the ghostly figures at the front of the
assembled masks, and the boy blew out the candle.</p>
<p>Bang! “The Queen’s warrant!” said a voice outside. “Open!”</p>
<p>Rodvard could hear the boy’s feet go pad, pad, on the floor
from the bedroom, acting his part in all detail. “What is it?”</p>
<p>“Queen’s warrant; we’re looking for an assassin.”</p>
<p>Chain rattled. Through the eye-peeps of the mask, Rodvard
could see the priest in the light of the provost’s lantern, and
held his breath.</p>
<p>“My mother is not here.”</p>
<p>“We don’t need her. Stand aside.” Rodvard stood rigid, cursing
himself for a fool to have put on this Zigraner guise with its
bag of false coins that might jingle. “By the Service, the whole
assembly’s here.” The priest held high his amulet; this was the
moment of test, but it passed so lightly there might have been
no test at all. The provost raised his lantern; “Anybody call on
you tonight, sprout?”</p>
<p>“I was asleep, ser provost.”</p>
<p>The man grunted, light flickered as he went into the bedroom,
there was a thud as though he might be kicking something, and
he came back into the sweep of sight, a naked shortsword
showing in his hand. “Not there,” he said. “Ah, bah, she’s a
witch and has spirited herself to the Green Islands. But I’ll
have my revenge.” He swung his sword at the neck of a yellow-armored
Mayern fighting man, and Rodvard heard the head crack
to the floor as the boy cried; “Oh, no.” The provost; “Three
scudi reward for a foeman down. Tell your mother I saved you
from a villain. Hark, now; open your door this night to none
more; an order in Her Majesty’s name.”</p>
<p>The door banged to leave it dark for those within and feet
retreated beyond. Rodvard stirred cramped muscles. “Will they
come back?” Lalette’s voice whispered.</p>
<p>The candle lifted slowly into light. Laduis Domijaiek was on
one knee beside the fallen head, whose nose was broken off.
The eyes that looked up held tears.</p>
<p>“That man killed Baron Mondaifer,” he said, fiercely, “and I
would like to kill him, too.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</div>
<p>Lalette slipped off her head-mask and ran a hand across her
hair, looking very princess with her dark head against the white
Kjermanash fur. “A true sorrow and it is our fault,” she said.
“Do you have names for them all?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes. You are the Princess Sunimaa, and she’s always
getting into trouble because it’s cold where she comes from, and
her heart is all ice, and the others don’t like her except for
Bonsteg the beggar, who is really a prince in disguise, only she
doesn’t know it yet. But Baron Mondaifer was one of my favorites.
He’s from Mayern, you see, and he’s always lived in the
forest, even if he is in favor of Prince Pavinius, and thinks he’s
still a good prophet.”</p>
<p>Said Rodvard, undoing laces to get out of his Zigraner dress;
“Your mother will get someone to fix him and bring him back
to life.”</p>
<p>“No. His spirit’s gone away to another body, like father’s
and now there isn’t anything left but dust. If mother has a
new head made, I shall have to give it a different name.”</p>
<p>The boy looked at Rodvard solemnly, and though the Blue
Star was cold as cold upon his breast, he could not somehow
draw quite clear the thought behind those young candid eyes—something
about a place shrouded in clouds, an old house somewhere,
with a diffused golden light. Weariness slit his jaws into
a yawn. “There is a place where we can sleep?”</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>They had to take his mother’s bed, not meant for more than
one, so that for the first time they lay close wrapped in each
other’s arms with a night before them; and this, with the sharp
memory of the peril shared on the rooftops hand in hand, was a
little more than either could quite bear unmoved, even though
the boy was in a corner of the room. They began kissing and
holding each other very tight; presently deep breaths said Laduis
was asleep. She did not resist (nor desire to). Afterward, Rodvard
lay for a long time wakeful (thinking that this had been the
sobbing, true union, not an arranged accident like that under the
tree; they had pledged each other and were somehow one forever.
Now he was committed, and there was a deep harsh sweetness
in the thought of devotion and change, live and love, forgetting
all ambition, high destiny and even the Sons of the New
Day that had brought him to this.)</p>
<p>Of course lark and Laduis rose before them in the morn; the
first the pair heard was a double rap at the outer door and the
boy’s voice saying; “Mother, we have guests.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</div>
<p>Rodvard rolled out to make the best bow he could with half
his laces still undone, and saw a small woman of careworn
aspect and maybe thirty-five years, who had just set a heavy
basket on the floor. “Madame Domijaiek, I am your humble
servant, Rodvard Bergelin. Your son took my—sweetheart and
myself in last night to save us from distress.”</p>
<p>“Mother, I listened to the voice of the heart, as you said,”
piped the boy. “They are good. Besides a provost came and broke
Baron Mondaifer.”</p>
<p>“It is well done, son.” She placed a hand protectingly on his
shoulder. “Ser, I am glad that Laduis could help you. Have
you breakfasted?”</p>
<p>“I left some of my bread and cheese for them, mother. The
lady is a witch.”</p>
<p>Rodvard saw the woman’s face alter, and her eyes, which
had held only a mild questioning, were taken away from him.
She fumbled in her belt-purse. “Laduis,” she said, “will you get
another piotr-weight of millet from the shop at the market-square?”</p>
<p>Lalette came from the bedroom, looking only by the half as
delightful as Rodvard’s night memory painted her; curtsied and
said straightly; “Madame, I am in your benevolence and honor,
so now no concealments. I am Lalette Asterhax, the veritable
witch on whom the provosts have set a price, and if my being
here will trouble you, I’ll leave on the instant. But I swear I
have done nothing for which I might truly fear from a just God.”</p>
<p>Doubt melted from Dame Domijaiek’s face; she reached out
both hands to take the two of the girl’s, saying; “My dear, I
could not let you go from here into danger, for that would not
be love. But as for your witchery, we are also told that if one
live in the true world, the outer appearance of evil on all of
us, shall have no force. Each must find his own way to love.
Now you shall tell me the whole story, while I set forth something
to eat.”</p>
<p>The girl gave it all fairly, hiding nothing, as they munched
on bread and cheese and pickled onions. When she had finished
on the note of Mme. Kaja’s treachery, Dame Domijaiek said;
“Ill done, but the poor woman’s fault is partly your own.”</p>
<p>Said Rodvard, surprised; “How can that be, Madame?”</p>
<p>“It takes more than one to make a murder. If you had been
wholly ruled by the God of love, the good will you bore her
could not but have been reflected back toward you. Was there
not something, perhaps seeming of slight importance, on which
you felt almost in fury with her?”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</div>
<p>Rodvard flushed (recalling the moment when Mme. Kaja had
burst in to find them on the bed), but Lalette said simply; “Yes,
and on a question that most sharply brings angers; to wit, money.
Speaking of which, have you the spadas, Rodvard?”</p>
<p>“Why, no. I reached for them where they were on the table
as we went through the window, but they were not there, and I
thought you had taken them.”</p>
<p>Lalette’s nostrils moved. “A victory for Mme. Kaja. She has
left us penniless.”</p>
<p>“Believe me, an evident result of the fact that you quarrelled
with her on pennies,” said Dame Domijaiek.</p>
<p>Rodvard; “I will not say I disbelieve you, madame; yet I
cannot see how this is valuable in our present necessity. The
thing’s done. Now we have to ask how matters can be bettered,
and how to carry word to my good friend, Dr. Remigorius, so
that we can elude the body of this pursuit.”</p>
<p>The widow looked at him steadily and though he was new to
this Blue Star, he felt surprise that he could make out nothing
at all behind her eyes, no thought whatever. “Ser Bergelin,” she
said, “you will one day learn that before you can escape the
world’s despairs, you must first escape the world’s self. But now
you have been sent to me for help, and helped you shall be.
With what I know of mask-making, I can so alter your appearance
that it will not be hard to pass a relaxed watch. But will
your doctor provide security?”</p>
<p>“Assuredly,” said Rodvard, (too quickly, Lalette thought), (and
it was so, for he remembered the moment when he surprised
the doctor’s mind, his carelessness of what happened to Lalette.)</p>
<p>Dame Domijaiek gave a trifling sigh. “You will be safe here
for the time. But there is a condition to my aid. I believe in a rule
more certain than yours of witchcraft, demoiselle; and will ask
that while you are under my roof, you will banish from your
mind every thought of evil and horror and revenge, even toward
those who have wronged you. It is a protection I ask for me and
my son, though you will not believe it.”</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>By this time it was clear to both Rodvard and Lalette that as
the boy had said, they were certainly in the house of a follower
of the Prophet of Mancherei. Though they did not speak of it,
the thought gave them both an inner qualm, not over being
found there, but at the thought of what might be done to their
inner selves by one of these insidious probers in secret thoughts,
who had so misused their own Prophet. But a mouse cannot
choose the smell of the hole he hides in; they glanced at each
other, and gave the widow their word, as she had asked. The boy
Laduis returned. It was thought better that the pair be somewhat
disguised again, in case of visitors. Lalette kept the Kjermanash
furs; Rodvard at first donned the garb of an executioner,
but the girl not liking him in that, took the gear of a hunter-guide
from the Ragged Mountains instead.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</div>
<p>It was a morning of nervous attent, through which they heard
feet come and go in the apartment overhead. Between the promise
to the widow and their own feelings, there was hardly anything
that could be said of what they wished to say, so they
spent the time listening to the lad, who told them tales of his
imagined people behind the masks. It would be about the noon-glass
when a man knocked, who said he was the butler of the
Baroness Stampalia to look at a costume; coming so quickly
to the door that Rodvard and Lalette were without time to don
head-masks, and sought refuge in the bedroom. This was as well;
the butler examined attentively everything in the outer room.</p>
<p>Not long later the widow returned, narrowing her eyes over
the tale of the Stampalia butler. “She has her own dressmaker.
Could he have been a spy?” Then to the couple; “You see, you
obeyed my injunction as to thought, and were protected.”</p>
<p>Rodvard would have made a point of this, but Dame Domijaiek
gave him no time, turning to Lalette, with; “Touching your
mother, my dear, I think you have not to be troubled. I have
not seen her myself, but the gossip is that Count Cleudi has
most generously sent her a present of money, which is an evidence
of the working of the God of love, though the instrument
may not be what we would desire.”</p>
<p>Rodvard, whom this style of discourse filled with a discomfort
he could not readily assay, asked about Remigorius. The
dame had visited his shop; she produced a chit from the doctor
which confirmed all Rodvard’s discomforts on the matter of
Lalette, for it commanded him in guarded words to come at once,
and without her. Lalette did not understand when he showed
her the paper, but she said he must clearly go. Dame Domijaiek
added her voice to the same purport, saying that if Rodvard
were needed to go elsewhere, Lalette would be the safer there
for hiding alone.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</div>
<p>From a cabinet she brought some of the false hair used on
masks and skillfully affixed a fur of it to Rodvard’s face, while
Lalette, suddenly gay, changed the dress of his head and added
a ribbon that make him quite a different person. He kissed her
farewell; the widow simpered as though it were she who had
been saluted, and said she would offer an answerable prayer to
the God of love for the success of his going.</p>
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