<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
<p>The old woman hastened to obey, and gave orders, under
authority of that name which, by whomsoever pronounced,
set the whole castle in motion, as no one imagined that any
one would dare to use it unauthorised. She reached <i>Malanotte</i>
a little before the carriage: when it was near at hand, she
left the litter; and making a sign to the coachman to stop,
approached the window, and whispered in the ear of Nibbio
the will of her master.</p>
<p>Lucy, sensible that the motion of the carriage had
ceased, shook off the lethargy into which she had for some
time been plunged, and in an agony of terror looked
around her. Nibbio had drawn himself back on the seat,
and the old woman, resting her chin on the window, said
to Lucy, “Come, my child; come, poor girl; come with
me. I have orders to treat you kindly, and to offer you
every consolation.”</p>
<p>At the sound of a female voice the unfortunate girl felt
a momentary relief, which was, however, succeeded by
deeper terror as she looked at the person from whom it
proceeded. “Who are you?” said she, anxiously fixing
her eyes upon her.</p>
<p>“Come, come, poor girl,” repeated the old woman.</p>
<p>Nibbio and his two companions, inferring the designs of
their master from the extraordinary deportment of the old
woman, endeavoured to persuade the poor girl to obey;
but Lucy kept gazing at the wild and savage solitude
around, which left her no ray of hope. However, she attempted
to cry out; but seeing Nibbio give a look to the
handkerchief, she stopped, trembled, was seized, and then
placed in the litter. The old woman was placed beside
her; and Nibbio left the two villains for their escort, and
hastened forward at the call of his master. Lucy, aroused
to momentary energy by the near approach of the deformed
and withered features of her companion, cried, “Where
am I? Where are you taking me?”</p>
<p>“To one who wishes you well; to a great—you are
a lucky girl; be happy, do not be afraid; be happy. He
has told me to encourage you; you will tell him that I
have done so, will you not?”</p>
<p>“Who is this man? What is he? What does he want
with me? I do not belong to him. Tell me where I am.
Let me go. Tell these men to let me go, to take me to
some church. Oh, you, who are a woman, in the name
of the holy Virgin, I entreat you.”</p>
<p>This holy and tender name, so often pronounced with
respect in her early years, and for so long a time neglected
and forgotten, produced on the mind of the wretched woman,
who had not heard it for so long a time, a confused
impression, like the remembrance of lights and shadows on
the mind of one blind from infancy.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Unknown, standing at the door of the
castle, looked below, and saw the litter slowly ascending,
and Nibbio walking a few steps in advance of it. At the
sight of his master, he hurried forward. “Come here,”
said the signor to him, and led the way to an inner hall.
“Well?” said he, stopping.—“All has been done according
to your wishes,” replied Nibbio, bowing. “The order
in time, the young girl in time, no one near the place, a
single cry, no one alarmed, the coachman diligent, the
horses swift; but——”</p>
<p>“But what?”</p>
<p>“But, to say truth, I would rather have received orders
to plunge a dagger in her heart at once, than to have
been obliged to look at her, and hear her entreaties.”</p>
<p>“What is this? What is this? What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“I would say that during the whole journey—yes,
during the whole journey—she has excited my compassion.”</p>
<p>“Compassion! What dost thou know of compassion?
What <i>is</i> compassion?”</p>
<p>“I have never understood what it is until to-day; it is
something like fear; if it takes possession of one, one is
no longer a man.”</p>
<p>“Let me hear, then, what she has done to excite your
compassion?”</p>
<p>“Oh, most illustrious signor, she wept, implored, and
looked so piteously; then turned pale, pale as death; then
wept, and prayed again, and said such words——”</p>
<p>“I will not have this girl in the castle,” thought the
Unknown. “I was wrong to embark in this business;
but I have promised, I have promised: when she is far
away——” And looking imperiously at Nibbio, “Now,”
said he, “put an end to your compassion; mount a horse,
take with you two or three companions, if you wish; go
to the castle of Don Roderick, thou knowest it. Tell him
to send immediately, immediately—or otherwise——”</p>
<p>But another <i>No</i>, more imperious than the first, whose
sound was heard in the depth of his soul, prevented his
proceeding. “<i>No</i>,” said he in a determined tone, as if
expressing the command of this secret voice,—“<i>no</i>; go to
bed; and to-morrow morning you shall do what I shall
then order.”</p>
<p>“This girl must have some demon who protects her,”
thought he, as he remained alone, with his arms crossed
on his breast, regarding the fitful shadows cast by the rays
of the moon on the floor, which darted through the grating
of the lofty windows. “She must have some demon or
an angel who protects her. Compassion in Nibbio! To-morrow
morning, to-morrow morning at the latest, she shall
be sent away; she must submit to her destiny, that is
certain. And,” continued he, with the tone of one who
gives a command to a wayward child, under the conviction
that he will not obey it, “we will think of it no more.
This animal Don Roderick must not come to torment me
with thanks, for—I do not wish to hear her spoken of. I
have served him—because I promised to do so; and I
promised, because it was my destiny. But Don Roderick
shall pay me with usury. Let us see——”</p>
<p>And he endeavoured to imagine some difficult enterprise
in which to engage Don Roderick as a punishment; but
his thoughts involuntarily recurred to another subject.
“Compassion in Nibbio! What has she done? I must
see her. No! Yes! I must see her.”</p>
<p>He passed through several halls, and arriving at the apartment
of the old woman, knocked with his foot at the door.</p>
<p>“Who is there?”</p>
<p>“Open.”</p>
<p>At the sound of this voice, the old woman quickly obeyed,
and flung the door wide open. The Unknown threw a
glance around the chamber, and by the light of the lantern,
which stood on the table, saw Lucy on the floor in
one corner of it.</p>
<p>“Why did you place her there?” said he, with a frowning
brow.</p>
<p>“She placed herself there,” replied she, timidly. “I
have done all I could to encourage her; but she will not
listen to me.”</p>
<p>“Rise,” said he to Lucy, who, at the noise of his step,
and at the sound of his voice, had been seized with new
terror. She buried her face in her hands, and remained
silent and trembling before him.</p>
<p>“Rise; I will not harm you; I can befriend you,”
said the signor. “Rise!” repeated he, in a voice of thunder,
irritated at having spoken in vain.</p>
<p>As if alarm had restored her exhausted strength, the
unfortunate girl fell on her knees, clasped her hands on
her breast, as if before a sacred image, then with her eyes
fixed on the earth, exclaimed, “Here I am, murder me if
you will.”</p>
<p>“I have already told you that I will not harm you,”
replied the Unknown, in a more gentle tone, gazing at her
agonised and altered features.</p>
<p>“Courage, courage,” said the old woman. “He tells
you himself that he will not harm you.”</p>
<p>“And why,” resumed Lucy, in a voice in which indignation
and despair were mingled with alarm and dismay,—“why
make me suffer the torments of hell? What have
I done to you?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps they have not treated you kindly? Speak!”</p>
<p>“Oh, kindly treated! They have brought me hither
by treachery and force. Why, why did they bring me?
Why am I here? Where am I? I am a poor creature.
What have I done to you? In the name of God——”</p>
<p>“God! God! always God!” said the Unknown. “Those
who are too weak to defend themselves, always make use
of the name of God, as if they knew something concerning
him! What! do you mean by this word to make me——”
and he left the sentence unfinished.</p>
<p>“Oh, signor, what could I mean, a poor girl like me,
except that you should have pity on me? God pardons
so many deeds for one act of mercy! Let me go; for
pity, for charity, let me go. Do not make a poor creature
suffer thus! Oh, you, who have it in your power, tell them
to let me go. They brought me hither by force. Put me
again in the carriage with this woman, and let it carry me
to my mother. O holy Virgin! My mother! my mother!
Perhaps she is not far from here—I thought I saw my
mountains! Why do you make me suffer? Carry me
to a church; I will pray for you all my life. Does it
cost you so much to say one word? Oh, I see that you
are touched! Say but the word, say it. God pardons so
many deeds for one act of mercy.”</p>
<p>“Oh, why is she not the daughter of one of the cowards
who outlawed me?” thought the Unknown. “I should
then enjoy her sufferings; but now——”</p>
<p>“Do not stifle so good an inspiration,” pursued Lucy,
on seeing hesitation in the countenance of her persecutor.
“If you do not grant me mercy, the Lord will; he will
send death to relieve me, and all will be over. But you—one
day, perhaps, you also—but no, no—I will pray
the Lord to preserve you from evil. What would it cost
you to say one word? If ever you experience these torments——”</p>
<p>“Well, well, take courage,” said the Unknown, with a
gentleness that astonished the old woman. “Have I done
you any harm? Have I menaced you?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no. I see that you have a good heart, and that
you pity a poor creature. If you chose, you could alarm
me more than any of them, you could make me die with
fear; and on the contrary, you have—you have given me
some consolation. God reward you! Accomplish the work
you have begun; save me, save me.”</p>
<p>“To-morrow morning.”</p>
<p>“Oh, save me now, now!”</p>
<p>“To-morrow morning I will see you again, I tell you.
Be of good courage. Rest yourself. You must need food;
it shall be brought to you.”</p>
<p>“No, no, I shall die if any one comes into this room,
I shall die. Take me away, God will reward you.”</p>
<p>“A servant will bring you something to eat,” said the
Unknown; “and you,” continued he, turning to the old
woman, “persuade her to eat, and to repose on the bed.
If she consents to have you sleep with her, well; if not,
you can sleep very well on the floor. Be kind to her, I
say; and take care that she makes no complaint of you.”</p>
<p>He hastily quitted the room, before Lucy could renew
her entreaties.</p>
<p>“Oh, miserable that I am! Shut, shut the door!”
said Lucy, returning to seat herself in her corner. “Oh,
miserable that I am! Who shall I implore now? Where
am I? Tell me, tell me, for charity, who is this signor?
Who has been talking to me? who is he?”</p>
<p>“Who is he? Do you wish me to tell you? you must
wait awhile first. You are proud, because he protects you;
provided you are satisfied, no matter what becomes of me.
Ask <i>him</i> his name. If I should tell you, he would not
speak to me so gently as he did to you. I am an old
woman, I am an old woman,” continued she, grumbling:
but hearing the sobs of Lucy, she remembered the threat
of her master; and addressing her in a less bitter tone,
“Well! I have said no harm. Be cheerful. Do not ask
me what I cannot tell you, but have courage. How satisfied
most people would be, should he speak to them as he
has spoken to you! Be cheerful! Directly, you shall have
something to eat; and from what he said, I know it will
be something good. And then, you must lie down, and you
will leave a little room for me,” added she, with an accent
of suppressed rancour.</p>
<p>“I cannot eat; I cannot sleep. Leave me, approach
me not. You will not go away?”</p>
<p>“No, no,” said the old woman, seating herself on a
large arm-chair, and regarding her with a mingled expression
of alarm and rage. She looked at the bed, and did
not very well relish the idea of being banished from it for
the night, as it was very cold; but she hoped at least for
a good supper. Lucy felt neither cold nor hunger; she
remained stupified with grief and terror; her ideas became
vague and confused as in the delirium of a fever.</p>
<p>She shuddered at hearing a knock at the door. “Who
is there?” cried she, “who is there? Don't let any one
come in.”</p>
<p>“It is only Martha, bringing something to eat.”</p>
<p>“Shut, shut the door!” cried Lucy.</p>
<p>“Certainly,” replied the old woman. Taking a basket
from the hands of Martha, she placed it on the table, and
closed the door. She invited Lucy to taste the delicious
food, bestowing on it profuse praises, and on the wine too,
which was such as the signor himself drank with his friends;
but seeing that they were useless she said, “It is your
own fault, you <i>must</i> not forget to tell him that I asked
you. I will eat, however, and leave enough for you, if
you should come to your senses.” When her supper was
finished she approached Lucy again, and renewed her
solicitations.</p>
<p>“No, no, I wish nothing,” replied she, in a faint and
exhausted voice. “Is the door shut?” she exclaimed, with
momentary energy; “is it well secured?”</p>
<p>The old woman approached the door, and showed her
that it was firmly bolted. “You see,” said she, “it is well
fastened. Are you satisfied now?”</p>
<p>“Oh! satisfied! satisfied! in this place!” said Lucy,
sinking into her corner. “But God knows that I am
here.”</p>
<p>“Come to bed. What would you do there, lying like
a dog? How silly to refuse comforts when you can have
them!”</p>
<p>“No, no, leave me to myself.”</p>
<p>“Well, remember it is your own fault; if you wish to
come to bed, you can—I have left room enough for you;
remember I have asked you very often.” Thus saying,
she drew the clothes over her, and soon all was profound
silence.</p>
<p>Lucy remained motionless, with her face buried in her
hands, which rested on her knees; she was neither awake
nor asleep, but in a dreamy state of the imagination, painful,
vague, and changeful. At first, she recalled with
something of self-possession the minutest circumstances of
this horrible day; then her reason for a moment forsook
its throne, vainly struggling against the phantoms conjured
by uncertainty and terror; at last, weary and exhausted,
she sunk on the floor, in a state approaching to, and resembling,
sleep. But suddenly she awoke, as at an internal
call, and strove to recall her scattered senses, to know where
she was, and why she had been brought thither. She heard
a noise, and listened; it was the heavy breathing of the old
woman, in a deep slumber; she opened her eyes on the
objects around her, which the flickering of the lamp, now
dying in its socket, rendered confused and indistinct. But
soon her recent impressions returned distinctly to her mind,
and the unfortunate girl recognised her prison; and with
the knowledge came associated all the terrors of this horrible
day; and, overcome anew by anxiety and terror, she
wished earnestly for death. She could only pray, and as
the words fell from her trembling lips, she felt her confidence
revive. Suddenly a thought presented itself to her
mind; that her prayer would be more acceptable if united
with an offering of something dear to her; she remembered
the object to which she had clung for her happiness, and
resolved to sacrifice it; then clasping her hands over her
chaplet, which hung upon her neck, and raising her tearful
eyes to heaven, she cried, “O most holy Virgin! thou to
whom I have so often prayed, and who hast so often consoled
me—thou who hast suffered so much sorrow, and art
now so glorious—thou who hast performed so many miracles
for the afflicted—holy Virgin! succour me, take me
from this peril, mother of God! return me safely to my
mother, and I pledge myself to remain devoted to thy service;
I renounce for ever the unfortunate youth, and from
this time devote myself to thee!” After this consecration
of herself, she felt her confidence and faith increase; she
remembered the “<i>to-morrow morning</i>” uttered by the Unknown,
and took it as a promise of safety. Her wearied
senses yielded to this new sentiment, and she slept profoundly
and peacefully with the name of her protectress on
her lips.</p>
<p>But in this same castle was one who could not sleep:
after having quitted Lucy, and given orders for her supper,
he had visited the posts of his fortress; but her image remained
stamped on his mind, her words still resounded in
his ears. He retired to his chamber, and threw himself on
his bed; but in the stillness around this same image of
Lucy in her desolation and anguish took possession still
more absolutely of his thoughts, and rendered sleep hopeless.
“What new feelings are these?” thought he.
“Nibbio was right; but what is there in a woman's tears
to unman me thus? Did I never see a woman weep before?
Ay, and how often have I beheld their deepest
agonies unmoved? But now——”</p>
<p>And here he recalled, without much difficulty, many an
instance when neither prayers nor tears were able to make
him swerve from his atrocious purposes; but instead of deriving
augmented resolution, as he had hoped, from the
recollection, he experienced an emotion of alarm, of consternation;
so that even, as a relief from the torment of
retrospection, he thought of Lucy. “She lives still,” said
he, “she is here; there is yet time. I have it in my power
to say to her, Go in peace! I can also ask her forgiveness.
Forgiveness! I ask forgiveness of a woman! Ah, if in
that word existed the power to drive this demon from my
soul, I would say it; yes, I feel that I would say it. To
what am I reduced? I am no longer myself! Well,
well! many a time have such follies passed through my
head; this will take its flight also.”</p>
<p>And to procure the desired forgetfulness, he endeavoured
to busy himself with some new project; but in vain: all
appeared changed! that which at another time would have
been a stimulus to action, had now lost its charm; his
imagination was overwhelmed with the insupportable weight
of remembered crimes. Even the idea of continuing to
associate with those whom he had employed as the instruments
of his daring and licentious will was revolting to his
soul; and, disgusted and weary, he found relief only in the
thought that by the dawn of morning he would set at liberty
the unfortunate Lucy.</p>
<p>“I will save her; yes, I will save her. As soon as the
day breaks, I will fly to her, and say, Go, go in peace.
But my promise! Ay, who is Don Roderick that I should
hold sacred a promise made to <i>him</i>?” With the perplexity
of a man to whom a superior addresses unexpectedly an
embarrassing question, the Unknown endeavoured to reply
to this his own, or, rather, that was whispered by this new
principle, that had of a sudden sprung up so awfully in his
soul, to pass judgment upon him. He wondered how he
could have resolved to engage himself to inflict suffering,
without any motive of hatred or fear, on an unfortunate
being whom he did not know, only to render a service to
this man. He could not find any excuse for it; he could
not even imagine how he had been led to do it. The hasty
determination had been the impulse of a mind obedient to
its habitual feelings, the consequence of a thousand previous
deeds; and from an examination of the motives which had
led him to commit a single deed, he was led to the retrospection
of his whole life.</p>
<p>In looking back from year to year, from enterprise to
enterprise, from crime to crime, from blood to blood, each
one of his actions appeared abstracted from the feelings
which had induced their perpetration, and therefore exposed
in all their horrible deformity, but which those feelings had
hitherto veiled from his view. They were all his own,
he was responsible for all; they comprised his life; the
horror of this thought filled him with despair; he grasped
his pistol, and raised it to his head—but at the moment in
which he would have terminated his miserable existence,
his thoughts rushed onwards to the time that must continue
to flow on after his end. He thought of his disfigured
corpse, without sense or motion, in the power of the vilest
men; the astonishment and confusion which would take
place in the castle, the conversation it would excite in the
neighbourhood and afar off, and, more than all, the rejoicing
of his enemies. The darkness and silence of the night inspired
him with other apprehensions still; it appeared to
him that he would not have hesitated to perform the deed
in open day, in the presence of others. “And, after all,
what was it? but a moment, and all would be over.” And
now another thought rose to his mind: “If that other life,
of which they tell, is an invention of priests, is a mere fabrication,
why should I die? Of what consequence is all
that I have done? It is a trifle—but if there should be
another life!”</p>
<p>At such a doubt, he was filled with deeper despair, a
despair from which death appeared no refuge. The pistol
dropped from his grasp—both hands were applied to his
aching head—and he trembled in every limb. Suddenly
the words he had heard a few hours before came to his memory,
“God pardons so many deeds for one act of mercy.”
They did not come to him clothed in the humble tone of
supplication, with which he had heard them pronounced,
but in one of authority which offered some gleam of hope.
It was a moment of relief: he brought to mind the figure
of Lucy, when she uttered them; and he regarded her, not
as a suppliant, but as an angel of consolation. He waited
with anxiety the approach of day, that he might hear from
her mouth other words of hope and life. He imagined
himself conducting her to her mother, “And then, what
shall I do to-morrow? what shall I do for the rest of the
day? what shall I do the day after, and the next day?
and the night? the night which will so soon return? Oh,
the night! let me not think of the night!” And, plunged
in the frightful void of the future, he sought in vain for
some employment of time, some method of living through
the days and nights. Now he thought of abandoning his
castle, and flying to some distant country, where he had
never been heard of; but, could he fly from himself?
Then he felt a confused hope of recovering his former
courage and habits; and that he should regard these terrors
of his soul but as a transient delirium: now, he dreaded
the approach of day, which should exhibit him so miserably
changed to his followers; then he longed for its light, as if
it would bring light also to his troubled thoughts. As the
day broke, a confused sound of merriment broke upon his
ear. He listened; it was a distant chiming of bells, and
he could hear the echo of the mountains repeat the harmony,
and mingle itself with it. From another quarter,
still nearer, and then from another, similar sounds were
heard. “What means this?” said he. “For what are
these rejoicings? What joyful event has taken place?”
He rose from his bed of thorns, and opened the window.</p>
<p>The mountains were still half veiled in darkness, the heavens
appeared enveloped in a heavy and vast cloud; but he
distinguished, through the faint dawn of the morning,
crowds passing towards the opening on the right of the
castle, villagers in their holyday garments. “What are
those people doing? what has happened to cause all this
joy?” And calling a bravo, who slept in the adjoining
room, he asked him the cause of the commotion. The
man replied that he was ignorant of it, but would go immediately
and enquire. His master remained at the window,
contemplating the moving spectacle, which increasing
day rendered more distinct every moment. He saw crowds
passing in succession; men, women, and children, as guided
by one impulse, directing their steps in one direction.
They appeared animated by a common joy; and the bells,
with their united sound of merriment, seemed to be an
echo of the general hilarity. The Unknown looked on intently,
and felt an eager curiosity to know what could have
communicated such happiness to such a multitude of
people.</p>
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