<h2 id="c23"><span class="h2line1">22</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">THE LAW OF LOVE</span></h2>
<p>(For a moment after the man had spoken, Rodvard felt as
though he were falling.) He looked at Lalette (and saw the same
black fear was in her also), but the step was taken, they could only
hope to carry matters through at the port office. Hinze was a thin
man in a sailor’s jacket, who looked over his shoulder back at the
captain as he led them down the cobbles to a brick building that
Lalette remembered all too well. “You will find it a good voyage.
The ship is tight as an egg, but the food not too good,” said he.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_381">381</div>
<p>There was a doorman in his coop, who directed Hinze down a
hall, whereupon the girl clutched Rodvard’s arm and said; “I do
not like this. I—”</p>
<p>(A silly remark, he thought.) “We cannot run away now,” he
said. “It is the only chance”; and Hinze was back to say that the
protostylarion would entertain them at once, there could be only
a moment of waiting. They looked at each other apprehensively;
Lalette leaned against a wall and closed her eyes, and a man came
down the hall to call them in.</p>
<p>Rodvard led the way into a room where a little man sat behind
a desk with lines of disobligingness set round his mouth. He said;
“You wish to leave the dominion of Mancherei for the barbarous
Green Islands?”</p>
<p>“It is because of a family matter,” said Rodvard. “My wife and
I—”</p>
<p>The protostylarion looked at Lalette’s hair, down in the maiden-sweep,
then quickly at Rodvard and back to her face. Wrinkles
shot up the middle of his forehead. “Wife? Wife? What is your
profession? Where is your certificate of employ?” He came up out
of his seat (like a small bear, Rodvard thought), peering the more
intently at the girl. “Ah, I have it! I know! You are the one I
registered for the Myonessae. The Dossolan; and a witch, too.
Guards! Guards!” His voice went treble; two or three armed men
tumbled into the room.</p>
<p>“An inquiry!” said the protostylarion, flinging up his arm to
point at the couple as Hinze shrank back. “These two for an inquiry!
I accuse her of being a runaway Myonessan!” The face was distorted
(the thought behind it one of the purest delight and triumph).
“Be careful with her; she is a witch!”</p>
<p>Rodvard was gripped above the elbow and jerked stumbling to
the door, catching only a glimpse of Lalette’s despairing face. Outside,
people stopped and goggled as the two were hurried along
and into a carriage, with a guard beside each. “I am sorry,” began
Rodvard, but one of the guards said; “Close your clack; no talking
among prisoners.” (His eyes spoke a brutality that would have
taken pleasure in a blow.)</p>
<p>They came to a structure with a battlemented gate, like a small
fortress; an odor of sewage emanated from it. A pair of guards
brought forward bills in salutation to those entering. Rodvard and
Lalette were swung into a gate-house, where a man lounged at a
window—an officer by his shoulder-knot. One of the guards said;
“These two are in for an inquiry. Authority of the Protostylarion
Barthvödi. He says to be careful of the woman, she’s a witch.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_382">382</div>
<p>The officer looked at Lalette appreciatively, then seated himself
at the desk and drew out a paper. “Your names and professions,” he
said.</p>
<p>Rodvard gave his; Lalette checked over the profession (wishing
to cry out that she would not give it, wishing to defy the man).
The officer looked at her. “You are warned,” he said, “that I am
diaconal, and your witchery will be wasted on me.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” she said, and half-choking; “Myonessan.”</p>
<p>“Which couvertine? . . . The more trouble it is to obtain the
information, the harder it will be with you.”</p>
<p>“Lolau.”</p>
<p>The officer turned to one of the guards. “Go to the couvertine
of Lolau and inform the mattern that she is to come here tomorrow
morning at the fourth glass for an inquiry in the matter of Demoiselle
Lalette.” He addressed the other guard. “You wait here while
I draw the proclamation calling for information on this Bergelin,
then take it around.”</p>
<p>(Rodvard thought of Leece, and wondered what she would
say in answer to the proclamation), (Lalette of facing Dame
Quasso again.) Another pair of guards came in to take them to
stone cells, set in the wall of the fortress. Rodvard saw Lalette
vanish into one and heard the door clang behind her, then was
himself thrust into another. There was a stool and straw on the
floor, an archery-slit for the only lighting. The place stank, the
origin of which odor was a bucket beneath the archery-slit. He
sat on the stool and tried to think, but the turmoil of fear held
him so that he could do little more than run around back and
over his own conduct like a mouse, to ask where he had stepped
wrongly and what else he could have done to make things come out
other than they were. This was the morning when Leece . . . and
he would have been bound to her for life. . . . No, that could
not have been the right path. Farther back, then? When he asked
that, he went off into a train of reminiscence in which thought
almost ceased.</p>
<p>His throat was dry, there was no water in the cell. Nor did
he seem to have near neighbors, all being silence around, save
that somewhere a tiny drip of water increased his thirst. Would
he be able to hold anything back tomorrow morning at the inquiry,
where an Initiate would surely question? Round the circuit
of his failure his mind ran again, and slid off into a consideration
of present circumstance. He rose, going to the iron-bound door,
but even the small trap in it would not open from his side. Alone.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_383">383</div>
<p>Not for the first time. How like the imprisonment on the ship
this was, and how dark the prospect had loomed then! Out of
that he had risen, but to what? A choice between Leece and this.
A wave of misery swept across him, and then he thought of
Lalette, and her misery equal to his own, and maybe more.</p>
<p>But this was no help either, and he began to examine his
prison, finger-breadth by finger-breadth, for something that might
take his mind away from this procession of regrets and anxieties
toward a future he could not know. There were only accidents of
the wall at first, in which he tried to see pictures and carvings,
making up a tale for himself, like those in the ballads. This had
not gone far when he came to a trace of writing which looked as
though someone had tried to wipe it out, for there were only a
few words to be read:</p>
<p>“Horv . . . in the month . . . only for lov . . . God.”</p>
<p>A cryptic message, indeed; he tried to imagine the tale behind
it, and how the love of which these Amorosians forever gabbled
had brought someone to this cell. This caused him to ask himself
whether it was really love for Lalette that had brought him there;
for that matter whether he loved her, and what love was; and to
none of these questions could he find a satisfactory answer, because
he kept comparing her with Maritzl and wondering whether
the emotion were the same. But this in turn brought a deep weariness;
he flung himself on the straw to rest and work the matter
out; and so doing, fell into an uneasy slumber—product of his
sleepless night—in which he dreamed that the world was ruled,
not by the God he had been taught to believe in, nor disputed by
the two gods of whom the Amorosians spoke, but by three demons,
who sat in a closed space with smoke pouring from their mouths,
and decided what penalties should be exacted for witchery.</p>
<p>A key grated; he woke to see the trap being pulled back
from without, and a voice said roughly:</p>
<p>“Here’s your banquet, my lord. The sweetmeats come with
the dancing girls.”</p>
<p>A plate was thrust through, with a pewter mug of water. On
the former were some vegetables, cold and sticky, and no table
utensils, but Rodvard was in a mood of hunger that forbade him
to be over-nice and he ate, saving part of his water to cleanse his
fingers after the meal. It was hardly done before the trap opened
again, and the outer voice demanded; “The tools, pig-face. The
administration doesn’t give souvenirs to its guests.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_384">384</div>
<p>Rodvard passed the dishes through and seated himself again.
Time ticked; the light that had been fading when he woke was
all gone, he had slept so much that he could do so no more and
the uncertainty of his lot held him from consecutive thought.
Somewhere outside there was a thin cry and a sound of feet. Then
quiet again, but for the briefest space; and now another key
grated, in the main lock of his door. It was flung open; in the
space stood a small man and a dark, with no cap. Behind him, a
smoky torch held by another showed this first visitor to be holding
a naked sword, that dripped, plash, plash, on the stone.</p>
<p>“You are Bergelin?” he said. “I call myself Demadé Slair.
The revolt has begun. Have you the Blue Star safe?”</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>Questions whirled in Rodvard’s mind, but the larger of the
pair said; “Hurry,” and gripped him by the elbow like the guard
who had brought him in, dragging along the corridor.</p>
<p>“Wait!” said Rodvard, resisting. “There is another—”</p>
<p>“We must hurry,” said Demadé Slair. “You do not know how
desperate a business this is. We have had to kill.”</p>
<p>“No. I will not leave her. She is my sweetheart; my witch.”</p>
<p>“You have her here? Of the two of you, she is the more important!
Where is she?”</p>
<p>“At the third cell here, I think.”</p>
<p>Without another word Slair counted off. “The torch, Cordisso,”
and began to try keys from a chain of them. The big man advanced
the torch, but the place held only some babbling, furtive creature
with white hair and idiot eyes. The next cell was empty. Slair
swore furiously. “You are sure your doxy’s here?”</p>
<p>“She was brought in with me.”</p>
<p>He tried another door. It was she, rising surprised from the
floor in a whirl of dresses. Rodvard pushed past the small man to
grip her by the hands. “Come, and quickly.”</p>
<p>She made small uncomprehending sounds. Rodvard put an
arm around her and drew her toward the door. Reverse of the
stair by which they had been brought in; in the torchlight Rodvard
saw a pair of feet at the base. A dead man, one of the
guards. In spite of the hurry, he paused to unbelt the fellow’s
dag, and rushed with the rest, feeling more a man again now
the lost knife was replaced.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_385">385</div>
<p>At the outer gate stood two more men, hoods pulled over
their faces. They saluted Demadé respectively and led across the
street to where a carriage stood, pushing Lalette into the back
seat. There were three horses, one in front of the pair, according
to the Mancherei fashion. One of the hooded men cracked his
whip, and they were off at a bumping pace, as Demadé Slair
said; “It is as well you were placed in arrest and proclaimed this
afternoon. We should not have known how to find you otherwise.”</p>
<p>“Who sent you—Dr. Remigorius?”</p>
<p>A shadow winked across the man’s face, even in the dark.
“The High Center; I say the revolt has begun and they are in
rule. But you shall be told everything soon.” He would say no
more; the carriage bumped across cobbles, and they were at the
dock, with a man holding a candle-lantern by its side. Slair
leaped down without offering a hand to Lalette and sprang across
the plank of a ship with “Hurry!” Already, as she and Rodvard
reached the deck a whistle was blown, and men were moving
rapidly among the ropes. They followed their guide’s beckoning
down a ladder to a cabin; he set the lantern on a table.</p>
<p>“Let yourselves be placed, and hear me carefully,” he said.
“It is of the utmost moment to the cause and everything that
you are not caught or even held back. If the guards come aboard,
if we are stopped by a galley as we leave the harbor, you are
strictly to go down the ladder leftward of this cabin. At its base
is a pile of bales of goods, of which one is hollowed out to take a
man, with a flap at the edge that can be pulled to from inside.
Insert yourself and pull the flap.”</p>
<p>(A thrill more of excitement than apprehension shot through
Rodvard; the thought of being as important as this to the great
enterprise.) He said; “If this ship’s invaded, they will likely have
an Initiate or at least one of their diaconals with them, and from
the mind of anyone aboard, he will be likely to know where the
hiding place is.”</p>
<p>Slair grinned. “That has been thought of. No one knows of this
hollow but me. I made it and can take care of myself.”</p>
<p>Lalette said; “And I; what shall I do?”</p>
<p>Slair frowned. “You are a problem, demoiselle. We came for
friend Rodvard and his Blue Star, imagining you were still in
Dossola, and there’s no preparation.” He put an index-finger on
his chin. “You have the Art. Could you not—”</p>
<p>She raised a hand. “Ah, no. Never.” (In the flash of her eye
Rodvard saw how she was thinking of some witchery on a ship,
something terrible and sickening connected with it.)</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_386">386</div>
<p>“Of course,” said Slair. “Against an Initiate, it would miss nine
times out of ten. And concealment’s a weak resource. No, the
problem is one of hiding you in plain sight; that is, to let them
look but not know your identity. . . . Ah, I have it; let your hair
down and the hem of your dress up to show an ankle; be one of
those travelling strumpets who call themselves sea-witches.”</p>
<p>Lalette said steadily; “How will this deceive one of the Initiates?”</p>
<p>Demadé Slair made a twisting with his mouth. “Why, demoiselle,
these Initiates are not magicians; they can read no more
than thoughts and not all of those. All women have in them a
trifle of the strumpet; you have but to think yourself one, be one
with your mind. It would be a rare Initiate to tell the difference.”</p>
<p>(Lalette’s mind beat frantic wings; the bars were there again,
whatever route she took led to the same cage); (and Rodvard
caught enough of her thought to know how deep was her trouble.)
“Is there not some better plan?” he asked.</p>
<p>“No time; see, the ship is stirring.” Demadé Slair stood up. “So
now I must leave you.” The door banged behind him.</p>
<p>Lalette said; “This is a second rescue—from one prison to another,
each time. I thank you, Rodvard.” (Her eyes flashed a dark
color of anger, he knew what was stirring in her mind, but also
that if he mentioned it directly, there would be a flash.)</p>
<p>He said; “Lalette, let me implore you. I will not quarrel with
you about whose making this trouble is, or how we seem to go
from one difficulty to another. But if we can work together, this
escape shall be better than the last. I did not leave you at the
couvertine.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I am grateful,” she said, in the tone of one who is not
grateful in the least, turning aside her head. “If you had only—”</p>
<p>(He had wit enough not to carry this line on.) “Do you know
anything of this revolt?” he asked.</p>
<p>She turned again. “Ah, I cannot bear if that I should never have
a thought of my own while I am with you. Will you give me back
the Blue Star?”</p>
<p>“No! It is all our lives and fortune now, and the fate of many
more important than we.”</p>
<p>“I am not beautiful and brilliant like those girls of noble
houses; but even so, would like to be wanted for myself, and not
what I can bring.”</p>
<p>Outside, the first harbor-swell caught the ship; she turned her
face again, queasy at her stomach. They slept in shut-beds on
opposite sides of the cabin.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_387">387</div>
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