<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
<p>The castle of the Unknown was situated above a narrow
and shady valley, on the summit of a cliff, which, belonging
to a rugged chain of mountains, was nevertheless
separated from them by banks, caverns, and precipices. It
was only accessible on the side which overlooked the valley.
This was a declivity rather steep, but equal, and continued
towards the summit: it was occupied as pasture
ground, and its lower borders were cultivated, having
habitations scattered here and there. The bottom was a
bed of stones, through which flowed, according to the
season, a small brook, or a large torrent, which served for
a boundary between the two territories. The opposite
chain of mountains, which formed, as it were, the other wall
of the valley, was slightly cultivated towards its base; the
rest was composed of precipitous rocks without verdure,
and thrown together irregularly and wildly. The scene
altogether was one of savage grandeur.</p>
<p>From this castle, as the eagle from his eyrie, its lawless
owner overlooked his domain, and heard no human sound
above him. He could embrace at a view all the environs,
the declivities, the abyss, the practicable approaches. To
the eyes of one viewing it from above, the winding path
which ascended towards the terrible habitation could be
perceived throughout its whole course, and from the windows
and loopholes, the signor could leisurely count the
steps of the person ascending, and examine him with the
closest scrutiny. With the garrison of bravoes which he
kept at the castle he could defy an army, which he would
have crushed in the valley beneath, before an individual
could reach the summit. But none, except such as were
friends with the master of the castle, dared set foot even
in the valley. Tragical stories were related of some who
had attempted the dangerous enterprise, but these stories
were already of times long past, and none of the young
vassals could remember to have encountered a human being
in this place, except under his lord's authority.</p>
<p>Don Roderick arrived in the middle of the valley, at
the foot of the cliff, at the commencement of the rugged
and winding path; at this point was a tavern, which might
have been called a guard-house; an old sign, with a rising
sun painted on both sides, was suspended before the door;
but the people gave the place the more appropriate name
of <i>Malanotte</i>.</p>
<p>At the noise of the approaching cavalcade a young boy,
well furnished with swords and pistols, appeared on the
threshold of the door; and casting a rapid glance at the
party, informed three ruffians, who were playing at cards
within the house, of its approach. He who appeared to
be the chief among them arose, and recognising a friend
of his master, saluted him respectfully; Don Roderick returned
the salutation with much politeness, and asked if
the signor was at the castle. The man replied in the affirmative;
and he, dismounting, threw his horse's bridle to
Aimwell, one of his retinue. Then, taking his musket
from his shoulder, he gave it to <i>Montanarolo</i>, as if to relieve
himself from an useless encumbrance, but in reality
because he knew that on this cliff none were permitted to
bear arms. Drawing from his pocket some <i>berlinghe</i>, he
gave them to <i>Tanabuso</i>, saying, “Wait here till my return;
and in the mean time amuse yourselves with these
honest people.” Then presenting to the chief of the band
some crowns of gold for himself and his companions, he
ascended the path with Griso.</p>
<p>Another bravo belonging to the Unknown, who was on
his way to the castle, bore him company; thus sparing him
the trouble of declaring his name to whomsoever he should
meet. When he arrived at the castle (Griso was left at
the gate) he was conducted through a long succession of
dark galleries, and various halls hung with muskets, sabres,
and other weapons of warfare; each of these halls was
guarded by a bravo. After having waited some time, he
was admitted to the presence of the Unknown, who advanced
to meet him, replying to his salutation, and at the
same time, as was his custom, even with his oldest friends,
eying him from head to foot. He was tall in stature;
and from the baldness of his head, and the deep furrows
of his countenance, appeared to be much older than sixty,
which was his real age; his countenance and movements,
the firmness of his features, and the fire which sparkled
from his eyes, indicated a vigour of body as well as of
mind which would have been remarkable even in a young
man.</p>
<p>Don Roderick told him he had come for advice and assistance;
that, having embarked in a difficult enterprise,
from which his honour did not suffer him to withdraw,
he had remembered the promises of one who never promised
in vain; and he then related his abominable intrigue.
The Unknown, who had already heard something of it,
listened with much attention to the recital, both because he
naturally loved such relations, and because Friar Christopher,
that avowed enemy of tyrants, was concerned in it.
Don Roderick spoke of the difficulty of the undertaking,
the distance of the place, a monastery, the <i>signora</i>,—but
the Unknown, as if prompted by the demon in his heart,
interrupted him, saying, that he took the charge of the
affair on himself. He wrote down the name of the poor Lucy,
and dismissed Don Roderick, saying, “In a little while
you will receive news from me.”</p>
<p>The reader may remember the villain Egidio, who lived
near the walls of the monastery into which Lucy had been
received; now, he was one of the most intimate colleagues
in crime of the Unknown; and this accounts for the
promptness with which this lord assumed the charge of
the undertaking. However, no sooner was he left alone
than he repented of his precipitation. He had for some
time experienced, not remorse, but a vague uneasiness on
account of his crimes; at every new addition to them, the
remembrance of those he had previously committed
pressed upon his memory, if not upon his conscience, and
loaded it with an intolerable weight. An undefinable repugnance
to the commission of crime, such as he had experienced
and subdued at the outset of his career, returned
with all its force to overwhelm his spirit. The thoughts
of the future contributed to render the past more painful.
“To grow old! to die! and then?” And the image of
death, which he had so often met undaunted, in face of an
enemy, and which seemed to inflame his courage and
double his energy—this same image now, in the midnight
silence of his castle, quelled his spirit, and impressed him
with an awe which he in vain endeavoured to resist. Formerly,
the frequent spectacle of violence and murder, inspiring
him with a ferocious emulation, had served as a
kind of authority against his conscience; now the confused
but terrible idea arose in his mind of individual responsibility
at the bar of God. The idea of having risen above
the crowd of vulgar criminals, and of having left them far
behind, an idea which once flattered his pride, now impressed
him with a sentiment of fearful solitude; and
experiencing at certain moments of despondence the
power and presence of that God whose existence he had
hitherto neither admitted nor denied, having been wholly
immersed in himself, his accumulated crimes rose up, to
justify the sentence which was about to condemn him to
eternal banishment from the divine presence. But this
uneasiness was not suffered to appear, either in his words
or his actions; he carefully concealed it under the appearance
of more profound and intense ferocity. Regretting
the time when he was accustomed to commit iniquity
without remorse, without any other solicitude than for its
success, he made every effort to recall these habits and
feelings; to take pleasure in wickedness; and glory in his
shame, in order to convince himself that he was still the
same man.</p>
<p>This accounts for the promptitude of his promise to
Don Roderick: he wished to deprive himself of the chance
of hesitation; but, scarcely alone, he felt his resolution
fail, and thoughts arose in his mind which almost tempted
him to break his word, and expose his weakness to an
inferior accomplice. But with a violent effort he put an
end to the painful conflict. He sent for Nibbio<SPAN class="tag" name="tag30" id="tag30" href="#note30">[30]</SPAN>, one of
the most skilful and resolute ministers of his atrocities,
and of whom he had made use in his correspondence with
Egidio, and ordered him to mount his horse, to go to
Monza, to inform Egidio of the affair he had undertaken,
and to require his assistance for its accomplishment.</p>
<p>The messenger returned sooner than his master expected
him with the reply of Egidio; the enterprise was
easy and safe; the Unknown had only to send a carriage
with two or three bravoes, well disguised; Egidio took
charge of the rest. The Unknown, whatever passed in
his mind, gave orders to Nibbio to arrange every thing,
and to set out immediately on the expedition.</p>
<p>If, to perform the horrible service which had been required
of him, Egidio had depended only on his ordinary
means, he would not certainly have sent back so explicit
an answer. But in the asylum of the convent, where
every thing appeared as an obstacle, the villain had a
means known to himself alone; and that which would
have been an insurmountable difficulty to others was to
him an instrument of success. We have related how the
unhappy signora once lent an ear to his discourse, and the
reader may have surmised that this was not the last time;
it was only the first step in the path of abomination and blood.
The same voice which then addressed her, become imperious
through crime, now imposed on her the sacrifice
of the innocent girl who had been intrusted to her care.</p>
<p>The proposition appeared frightful to Gertrude; to lose
Lucy in any manner would have seemed to her a misfortune,
a punishment; and to deprive herself of her with
criminal perfidy, to add to her crimes by dealing treacherously
with the confiding girl, was to take away the only
gleam of virtuous enjoyment which had shone upon her
mysterious and wicked career. She tried every method to
avoid obedience; every method, except the only infallible
one, that was in her power. Crime is a severe and inflexible
master, against whom we are strong only when we
entirely rebel. Gertrude could not resolve on that, and
obeyed.</p>
<p>The day agreed on came; the hour approached; Gertrude,
alone with Lucy, bestowed on her more caresses
than ordinary, which the poor girl returned with increasing
tenderness, as the lamb licks the hand of the shepherd
who entices it without the fold into the murderous power
of the butcher who there awaits it.</p>
<p>“I want you to do me a great favour; many are ready
to obey me, but there is none but yourself whom I can
trust. I must speak immediately on an affair of great importance,
which I will relate to you some other time, to
the superior of the capuchins, who brought you hither,
my dear Lucy; but no one must know that I have sent
for him. I rely on you to carry a secret message——”</p>
<p>Lucy was astonished at such a request, and alleged
her reasons for declining to perform it; without her
mother! without a companion! in a solitary road! in a
strange country! But Gertrude, instructed in an infernal
school, showed great astonishment and displeasure at her
refusal, after having been loaded with so many benefits;
she affected to treat her excuses as frivolous. “In open
day! a short distance! a road that Lucy had travelled a few
days before!” She said so much, that the poor girl,
touched with gratitude and shame, enquired, “What was
to be done?”</p>
<p>“Go to the convent of the capuchins; ask for the
superior, tell him to come here immediately, but to let no
one suspect that he comes at my request.”</p>
<p>“But what shall I say to the portress, who has never
seen me go out, and will ask me where I am going?”</p>
<p>“Endeavour to pass without being seen; and if you
cannot, say you are going to some church to perform your
orisons.”</p>
<p>A new difficulty for Lucy! to tell a falsehood! but the
signora was so offended at her refusal, and so ridiculed her
for preferring a vain scruple to her gratitude, that the unhappy
girl, alarmed rather than convinced, replied, “Well,
I will go; may God be my guide and protector.”</p>
<p>Gertrude, from her grated window, followed her with
anxious looks, and when she saw her about to cross the
threshold, overcome by irresistible emotion, she cried,
“Stop, Lucy.”</p>
<p>Lucy returned to the window; but another idea, the one
accustomed to predominate, had resumed its sway over
the mind of the unhappy Gertrude. She affected dissatisfaction
at the directions she had given; described the road
again to Lucy, and dismissed her: “Do exactly as I have
told you, and return quickly.”</p>
<p>Lucy passed the door of the cloister unobserved, and
proceeding on her way with downcast eyes, found, with
the aid of the directions given, and her own recollections,
the gate of the suburb; timid and trembling, she continued
on the high road, until she arrived at that which led to
the convent. This road was buried, like the bed of a
river, between two high banks, bordered with trees,
whose branches united to form an arch above it. On
finding it entirely deserted, she felt her fears revive; she
hurried on, but gained courage from the sight of a travelling
carriage which had stopped a short distance before
her; before the door of it, which was open, there stood
two travellers looking about, as if uncertain of their way.
As she approached, she heard one of them say, “Here is
a good girl, who will tell us the way.” As she came on a
line with the carriage, this same man addressed her: “My
good girl, can you tell us the way to Monza?”</p>
<p>“You are going in the wrong direction,” replied the
poor girl; “Monza lies there.” As she turned to point
it out, his companion (it was Nibbio) seized her by the
waist, and lifted her from the ground. Lucy screamed
from surprise and terror; the ruffian threw her into the
carriage; a third, who was seated in the bottom of it, seized
her, and compelled her to sit down before him; another
put a handkerchief over her mouth, and stifled her cries.
Nibbio then entered the carriage, the door was closed, and
the horses set off on a gallop. He who had asked her the
perfidious question remained behind; he was an emissary
of Egidio, who had watched Lucy when she quitted the
convent, and had hastened by a shorter road to inform his
colleagues, and wait for her at the place agreed on.</p>
<p>But who can describe the terror and anguish of the unfortunate
girl? Who can tell what passed in her heart?
Cruelly anxious to ascertain her horrible situation, she
wildly opened her eyes, but closed them again at the sight
of those frightful faces. She struggled in vain. The men
held her down in the bottom of the carriage: if she attempted
to cry, they drew the handkerchief tightly over
her mouth. In the mean while, three gruff voices, endeavouring
to assume a tone of humanity, said to her,
“Be quiet, be quiet: do not be afraid; we do not wish
to harm you.” After a while her struggles ceased, she
languidly opened her eyes, and the horrible faces before
her appeared to blend themselves into one monstrous image;
her colour fled, and she fell lifeless into their arms.</p>
<p>“Courage, courage,” said Nibbio; but Lucy was now
beyond the reach of his horrible voice.</p>
<p>“The devil! she appears to be dead,” said one of
them. “If she should really be dead!”</p>
<p>“Poh!” said the other, “these fainting fits are common
to women; they don't die in this way.”</p>
<p>“Hush,” said Nibbio, “be attentive to your duty, and
do not meddle with other affairs. Keep your muskets
ready, because this wood we are entering is a nest for
robbers. Don't keep them in your hands—the devil!
put them behind you. Do you not see that this girl is a
tender chicken, who faints at nothing? If she sees that
you have arms, she may die in reality. When she comes
to her senses, be careful not to frighten her. Touch her
not, unless I tell you to do so. I can hold her. Keep
quiet, and let me talk to her.”</p>
<p>Meanwhile the carriage entered the wood. Poor Lucy
awoke as from a profound and painful slumber. She
opened her eyes, and her horrible situation rushed with
full force upon her mind. She struggled again in vain,
she attempted to scream, but Nibbio said to her, holding
up the handkerchief, “Be tranquil; it is the best thing
you can do. We do not wish to harm you; but if you
do not keep silence, we must make you.”</p>
<p>“Let me go. Who are you? Where are you taking
me? Why am I here? Let me go, let me go.”</p>
<p>“I tell you, don't be frightened. You are not a child,
and you ought to know that we will not harm you. We
might have murdered you before this, if such had been
our intention. Be quiet, then.”</p>
<p>“No, no, let me go; I know you not.”</p>
<p>“We know you well enough, however.”</p>
<p>“Oh, holy Virgin! Let me go, for charity's sake.
Who are you? Why have you brought me here?”</p>
<p>“Because we have been ordered to do so.”</p>
<p>“Who? who? who ordered you to do it?”</p>
<p>“Hush!” said Nibbio, in a severe tone. “Such questions
must not be answered.”</p>
<p>Lucy attempted to throw herself from the door of the
carriage, but finding the effort vain, she had recourse again
to entreaties, and with her cheeks bathed in tears, and her
voice broken by sobs, she continued, “Oh, for the love
of heaven, and the holy Virgin, let me go! What harm
have I done you? I am a poor creature, who have never
injured you; I forgive you all that you have done, and
will pray to God for you. If you have a daughter, a
wife, or a mother, think what they would suffer in my
situation. Remember that we must all die, and that one
day you will hope that God will show mercy to you. Let
me go, let me go; the Lord will guide me on my way.”</p>
<p>“We cannot.”</p>
<p>“You cannot? Great God! why can you not? Where
are you taking me?”</p>
<p>“We cannot; your supplications are useless. Do not
be frightened; we will not harm you. Be quiet; no one
shall harm you.”</p>
<p>More than ever alarmed to perceive that her words produced
no effect, Lucy turned to Him who holds in his
powerful hand the hearts of men, and can, if he sees fit,
soften the most ferocious. She crossed her arms on her
breast, and prayed from the depth of her heart, fervently;
then again vainly implored to be set free: but we have
not the heart to relate more at length this painful journey,
which lasted four hours, and which was to be succeeded
by many hours of still deeper anguish.</p>
<p>At the castle, the Unknown was waiting her arrival
with extraordinary solicitude and agitation of mind.
Strange, that he who had coldly and calmly disposed of
so many lives, and had regarded as nothing the torments he
inflicted, should now feel an impression of remorse, almost
of terror, at the tyranny he exercised over an unknown
girl, an humble peasant! From a high window of his
castle, he had for some time looked down upon the valley
beneath; at last he saw the carriage approaching slowly
at a distance, as if the horses were wearied with their rapid
journey. He perceived it, and felt his heart beat violently.</p>
<p>“Is she there?” thought he. “What trouble this
girl gives me! I must free myself from it.” And he
prepared himself to send one of his ruffians to meet the
carriage, and tell Nibbio to conduct the girl immediately to
the castle of Don Roderick; but an imperious <i>No</i>, which
made itself heard by his conscience, caused him to relinquish
his design. Tormented, however, by the necessity
of ordering something to be done, and insupportably weary
of waiting the slow approach of the carriage, he sent for
an old woman who was attached to his service.</p>
<p>This woman had been born in the castle, and had passed
her life in it. She had been impressed from infancy with
an opinion of the unlimited power of its masters; and her
principal maxim was implicit obedience towards them.
To the ideas of duty were united sentiments of respect,
fear, and servile devotion. When the Unknown became
lord of the castle, and began to make such horrible use of
his power, she experienced a degree of pain, and at the
same time a more profound sentiment of subjection. In
time she became habituated to what was daily acting before
her: the powerful and unbridled will of such a lord
she viewed as an exercise of fated justice. When somewhat
advanced in years, she had espoused a servant of the
house, who being sent on a hazardous expedition, left his
body on the high road, and his wife a widow in the castle.
The revenge that her lord took for his death imparted to
her a savage consolation, and increased her pride at being
under his protection. From that day she rarely set foot
beyond the castle walls, and by degrees there remained to
her no other idea of human beings, than that of those by
whom she was daily surrounded. She was not employed
in any particular service, but each one gave her something
to do as it pleased him. She had sometimes clothes to
mend, food to prepare, and wounds to dress. Commands,
reproaches, and thanks were equally mingled with abusive
raillery: she went by the appellation of the <i>old woman</i>,
and the tone with which the name was uttered varied
according to the circumstances and humour of the speaker.
Disturbed in her idleness and irritated in her self-love,
which were her two ruling passions, she returned these
compliments with language in which Satan might have
recognised more of his own genius than in that of her
persecutors.</p>
<p>“You see that carriage below there,” said the Unknown.</p>
<p>“I do,” said she.</p>
<p>“Have a litter prepared immediately, and let it carry
you to <i>Malanotte</i>. Quick, quick; you must arrive before
the carriage; it approaches with the slow step of death.
In this carriage there is—there ought to be—a young girl.
If she is there, tell Nibbio from me, that he must place her
in the litter, and that he must come at once to me.
You will get into the litter with her; and when you arrive
here, you must take her to your room. If she asks you where
you are leading her, whose is this castle, be careful——”</p>
<p>“Oh, do not doubt me,” said the old woman.</p>
<p>“But,” pursued the Unknown, “comfort her, encourage
her.”</p>
<p>“What can I say to her?”</p>
<p>“What can you say to her? Comfort her, I tell you.
Have you arrived at this age, and know not how to administer
consolation to the afflicted? Have you never had any
sorrow? Have you never been visited by fear? Do you
not know the language that consoles in such moments?
Speak this language to <i>her</i> then; find it in the remembrance
of your own misfortunes. Go directly.”</p>
<p>When she was gone, he remained some time at the
window, gazing at the approaching carriage; he then
looked at the setting sun, and the glorious display of
clouds about the horizon. He soon withdrew, closed the
window, and kept pacing the apartment in a state of uneasy
excitement.</p>
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