<h2>CHAPTER X<br/> <span class="GutSmall">THE EAGLE’S PREY</span></h2>
<blockquote><p>“<span class="smcap">It</span> fell about
the Lammas tide,<br/>
When moor men win their hay,”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>that all the serfs of Adlerstein were collected to collect
their lady’s hay to be stored for the winter’s fodder
of the goats, and of poor Sir Eberhard’s old white mare,
the only steed as yet ridden by the young Barons.</p>
<p>The boys were fourteen years old. So monotonous was
their mother’s life that it was chiefly their growth that
marked the length of her residence in the castle. Otherwise
there had been no change, except that the elder Baroness was more
feeble in her limbs, and still more irritable and excitable in
temper. There were no events, save a few hunting adventures
of the boys, or the yearly correspondence with Ulm; and the same
life continued, of shrinking in dread from the old lady’s
tyrannous dislike, and of the constant endeavour to infuse better
principles into the boys, without the open opposition for which
there was neither power nor strength.</p>
<p>The boys’ love was entirely given to their mother.
Far from diminishing with their dependence on her, it increased
with the sense of protection; and, now that they were taller than
herself, she seemed to be cherished by them more than ever.
Moreover, she was their oracle. Quick-witted and
active-minded, loving books the more because their grandmother
thought signing a feud-letter the utmost literary effort becoming
to a noble, they never rested till they had acquired all that
their mother could teach them; or, rather, they then became more
restless than ever. Long ago had her whole store of tales
and ballads become so familiar, by repetition, that the boys
could correct her in the smallest variation; reading and writing
were mastered as for pleasure; and the Nuremberg Chronicle, with
its wonderful woodcuts, excited such a passion of curiosity that
they must needs conquer its Latin and read it for
themselves. This <i>World History</i>, with <i>Alexander
and the Nine Worthies</i>, the cities and landscapes, and the
oft-repeated portraits, was Eberhard’s study; but Friedmund
continued—constant to Walther of Vögelweide.
Eberhard cared for no character in the Vulgate so much as for
Judas the Maccabee; but Friedmund’s heart was all for King
David; and to both lads, shut up from companionship as they were,
every acquaintance in their books was a living being whose like
they fancied might be met beyond their mountain. And, when
they should go forth, like Dietrich of Berne, in search of
adventures, doughty deeds were chiefly to fall to the lot of
Ebbo’s lance; while Friedel was to be their Minnesinger;
and indeed certain verses, that he had murmured in his
brother’s ear, had left no doubt in Ebbo’s mind that
the exploits would be worthily sung.</p>
<p>The soft dreamy eye was becoming Friedel’s
characteristic, as fire and keenness distinguished his
brother’s glance. When at rest, the twins could be
known apart by their expression, though in all other respects
they were as alike as ever; and let Ebbo look thoughtful or
Friedel eager and they were again undistinguishable; and indeed
they were constantly changing looks. Had not Friedel been
beside him, Ebbo would have been deemed a wondrous student for
his years; had not Ebbo been the standard of comparison, Friedel
would have been in high repute for spirit and enterprise and
skill as a cragsman, with the crossbow, and in all feats of arms
that the Schneiderlein could impart. They shared all
occupations; and it was by the merest shade that Ebbo excelled
with the weapon, and Friedel with the book or tool. For the
artist nature was in them, not intentionally excited by their
mother, but far too strong to be easily discouraged. They
had long daily gazed at Ulm in the distance, hoping to behold the
spire completed; and the illustrations in their mother’s
books excited a strong desire to imitate them. The floor
had often been covered with charcoal outlines even before
Christina was persuaded to impart the rules she had learnt from
her uncle; and her carving-tools were soon seized upon. At
first they were used only upon knobs of sticks; but one day when
the boys, roaming on the mountain, had lost their way, and coming
to the convent had been there hospitably welcomed by Father
Norbert, they came home wild to make carvings like what they had
seen in the chapel. Jobst the Kohler was continually
importuned for soft wood; the fair was ransacked for knives; and
even the old Baroness could not find great fault with the
occupation, base and mechanical though it were, which disposed of
the two restless spirits during the many hours when winter storms
confined them to the castle. Rude as was their work, the
constant observation and choice of subjects were an unsuspected
training and softening. It was not in vain that they lived
in the glorious mountain fastness, and saw the sun descend in his
majesty, dyeing the masses of rock with purple and crimson; not
in vain that they beheld peak and ravine clothed in purest snow,
flushed with rosy light at morn and eve, or contrasted with the
purple blue of the sky; or that they stood marvelling at ice
caverns with gigantic crystal pendants shining with the most
magical pure depths of sapphire and emerald, “as if,”
said Friedel, “winter kept in his service all the
jewel-forging dwarfs of the motherling’s tales.” And,
when the snow melted and the buds returned, the ivy spray, the
smiling saxifrage, the purple gentian bell, the feathery rowan
leaf, the symmetrical lady’s mantle, were hailed and loved
first as models, then for themselves.</p>
<p>One regret their mother had, almost amounting to shame.
Every virtuous person believed in the efficacy of the rod, and,
maugre her own docility, she had been chastised with it almost as
a religious duty; but her sons had never felt the weight of a
blow, except once when their grandmother caught them carving a
border of eagles and doves round the hall table, and then Ebbo
had returned the blow with all his might. As to herself, if
she ever worked herself up to attempt chastisement, the Baroness
was sure to fall upon her for insulting the noble birth of her
sons, and thus gave them a triumph far worse for them than
impunity. In truth, the boys had their own way, or rather
the Baron had his way, and his way was Baron
Friedmund’s. Poor, bare, and scanty as were all the
surroundings of their life, everything was done to feed their
arrogance, with only one influence to counteract their education
in pride and violence—a mother’s influence, indeed,
but her authority was studiously taken from her, and her position
set at naught, with no power save what she might derive from
their love and involuntary honour, and the sight of the pain
caused her by their wrong-doings.</p>
<p>And so the summer’s hay-harvest was come. Peasants
clambered into the green nooks between the rocks to cut down with
hook or knife the flowery grass, for there was no space for the
sweep of a scythe. The best crop was on the bank of the
Braunwasser, by the Debateable Ford, but this was cut and carried
on the backs of the serfs, much earlier than the mountain grass,
and never without much vigilance against the Schlangenwaldern;
but this year the Count was absent at his Styrian castle, and
little had been seen or heard of his people.</p>
<p>The full muster of serfs appeared, for Frau Kunigunde admitted
of no excuses, and the sole absentee was a widow who lived on the
ledge of the mountain next above that on which the castle
stood. Her son reported her to be very ill, and with tears
in his eyes entreated Baron Friedel to obtain leave for him to
return to her, since she was quite alone in her solitary hut,
with no one even to give her a drink of water. Friedel
rushed with the entreaty to his grandmother, but she laughed it
to scorn. Lazy Koppel only wanted an excuse, or, if not,
the woman was old and useless, and men could not be spared.</p>
<p>“Ah! good grandame,” said Friedel, “his
father died with ours.”</p>
<p>“The more honour for him! The more he is bound to
work for us. Off, junker, make no loiterers.”</p>
<p>Grieved and discomfited, Friedel betook himself to his mother
and brother.</p>
<p>“Foolish lad not to have come to me!” said the
young Baron. “Where is he? I’ll send him
at once.”</p>
<p>But Christina interposed an offer to go and take
Koppel’s place beside his mother, and her skill was so much
prized over all the mountain-side, that the alternative was
gratefully accepted, and she was escorted up the steep path by
her two boys to the hovel, where she spent the day in attendance
on the sick woman.</p>
<p>Evening came on, the patient was better, but Koppel did not
return, nor did the young Barons come to fetch their mother
home. The last sunbeams were dying off the mountain-tops,
and, beginning to suspect something amiss, she at length set off,
and half way down met Koppel, who replied to her question,
“Ah, then, the gracious lady has not heard of our
luck. Excellent booty, and two prisoners! The young
Baron has been a hero indeed, and has won himself a knightly
steed.” And, on her further interrogation, he added,
that an unusually rich but small company had been reported by
Jobst the Kohler to be on the way to the ford, where he had
skilfully prepared a stumbling-block. The gracious Baroness
had caused Hatto to jodel all the hay-makers together, and they
had fallen on the travellers by the straight path down the
crag. “Ach! did not the young Baron spring like a
young gemsbock? And in midstream down came their
pack-horses and their wares! Some of them took to flight,
but, pfui, there were enough for my young lord to show his mettle
upon. Such a prize the saints have not sent since the old
Baron’s time.”</p>
<p>Christina pursued her walk in dismay at this new beginning of
freebooting in its worst form, overthrowing all her hopes.
The best thing that could happen would be the immediate
interference of the Swabian League, while her sons were too young
to be personally held guilty. Yet this might involve ruin
and confiscation; and, apart from all consequences, she bitterly
grieved that the stain of robbery should have fallen on her
hitherto innocent sons.</p>
<p>Every peasant she met greeted her with praises of their young
lord, and, when she mounted the hall-steps, she found the floor
strewn with bales of goods.</p>
<p>“Mother,” cried Ebbo, flying up to her,
“have you heard? I have a horse! a spirited bay, a
knightly charger, and Friedel is to ride him by turns with
me. Where is Friedel? And, mother, Heinz said I
struck as good a stroke as any of them, and I have a sword for
Friedel now. Why does he not come? And, motherling,
this is for you, a gown of velvet, a real black velvet, that will
make you fairer than our Lady at the Convent. Come to the
window and see it, mother dear.”</p>
<p>The boy was so joyously excited that she could hardly
withstand his delight, but she did not move.</p>
<p>“Don’t you like the velvet?” he
continued. “We always said that, the first prize we
won, the motherling should wear velvet. Do but look at
it.”</p>
<p>“Woe is me, my Ebbo!” she sighed, bending to kiss
his brow.</p>
<p>He understood her at once, coloured, and spoke hastily and in
defiance. “It was in the river, mother, the horses
fell; it is our right.”</p>
<p>“Fairly, Ebbo?” she asked in a low voice.</p>
<p>“Nay, mother, if Jobst <i>did</i> hide a branch in
midstream, it was no doing of mine; and the horses fell.
The Schlangenwaldern don’t even wait to let them
fall. We cannot live, if we are to be so nice and
dainty.”</p>
<p>“Ah! my son, I thought not to hear you call mercy and
honesty mere niceness.”</p>
<p>“What do I hear?” exclaimed Frau Kunigunde,
entering from the storeroom, where she had been disposing of some
spices, a much esteemed commodity. “Are you chiding
and daunting this boy, as you have done with the
other?”</p>
<p>“My mother may speak to me!” cried Ebbo, hotly,
turning round.</p>
<p>“And quench thy spirit with whining fooleries!
Take the Baron’s bounty, woman, and vex him not after his
first knightly exploit.”</p>
<p>“Heaven knows, and Ebbo knows,” said the trembling
Christina, “that, were it a knightly exploit, I were the
first to exult.”</p>
<p>“Thou! thou craftsman’s girl! dost presume to call
in question the knightly deeds of a noble house!
There!” cried the furious Baroness, striking her
face. “Now! dare to be insolent again.”
Her hand was uplifted for another blow, when it was grasped by
Eberhard, and, the next moment, he likewise held the other hand,
with youthful strength far exceeding hers. She had often
struck his mother before, but not in his presence, and the
greatness of the shock seemed to make him cool and absolutely
dignified.</p>
<p>“Be still, grandame,” he said. “No,
mother, I am not hurting her,” and indeed the surprise
seemed to have taken away her rage and volubility, and
unresistingly she allowed him to seat her in a chair. Still
holding her arm, he made his clear boyish voice resound through
the hall, saying, “Retainers all, know that, as I am your
lord and master, so is my honoured mother lady of the castle, and
she is never to be gainsay’ed, let her say or do what she
will.”</p>
<p>“You are right, Herr Freiherr,” said Heinz.
“The Frau Christina is our gracious and beloved dame.
Long live the Freiherrinn Christina!” And the voices of
almost all the serfs present mingled in the cry.</p>
<p>“And hear you all,” continued Eberhard, “she
shall rule all, and never be trampled on more. Grandame,
you understand?”</p>
<p>The old woman seemed confounded, and cowered in her chair
without speaking. Christina, almost dismayed by this
silence, would have suggested to Ebbo to say something kind or
consoling; but at that moment she was struck with alarm by his
renewed inquiry for his brother.</p>
<p>“Friedel! Was not he with thee?”</p>
<p>“No; I never saw him!”</p>
<p>Ebbo flew up the stairs, and shouted for his brother; then,
coming down, gave orders for the men to go out on the
mountain-side, and search and jodel. He was hurrying with
them, but his mother caught his arm. “O Ebbo, how can
I let you go? It is dark, and the crags are so
perilous!”</p>
<p>“Mother, I cannot stay!” and the boy flung his
arms round her neck, and whispered in her ear, “Friedel
said it would be a treacherous attack, and I called him a
craven. Oh, mother, we never parted thus before! He
went up the hillside. Oh, where is he?”</p>
<p>Infected by the boy’s despairing voice, yet relieved
that Friedel at least had withstood the temptation, Christina
still held Ebbo’s hand, and descended the steps with
him. The clear blue sky was fast showing the stars, and
into the evening stillness echoed the loud wide jodeln, cast back
from the other side of the ravine. Ebbo tried to raise his
voice, but broke down in the shout, and, choked with agitation,
said, “Let me go, mother. None know his haunts as I
do!”</p>
<p>“Hark!” she said, only grasping him tighter.</p>
<p>Thinner, shriller, clearer came a far-away cry from the
heights, and Ebbo thrilled from head to foot, then sent up
another pealing mountain shout, responded to by a jodel so
pitched as to be plainly not an echo. “Towards the
Red Eyrie,” said Hans.</p>
<p>“He will have been to the Ptarmigan’s Pool,”
said Ebbo, sending up his voice again, in hopes that the answer
would sound less distant; but, instead of this, its intonations
conveyed, to these adepts in mountain language, that Friedel
stood in need of help.</p>
<p>“Depend upon it,” said the startled Ebbo,
“that he has got up amongst those rocks where the dead
chamois rolled down last summer;” then, as Christina
uttered a faint cry of terror, Heinz added, “Fear not,
lady, those are not the jodeln of one who has met with a
hurt. Baron Friedel has the sense to be patient rather than
risk his bones if he cannot move safely in the dark.”</p>
<p>“Up after him!” said Ebbo, emitting a variety of
shouts intimating speedy aid, and receiving a halloo in reply
that reassured even his mother. Equipped with a rope and
sundry torches of pinewood, Heinz and two of the serfs were
speedily ready, and Christina implored her son to let her come so
far as where she should not impede the others. He gave her
his arm, and Heinz held his torch so as to guide her up a winding
path, not in itself very steep, but which she could never have
climbed had daylight shown her what it overhung. Guided by
the constant exchange of jodeln, they reached a height where the
wind blew cold and wild, and Ebbo pointed to an intensely black
shadow overhung by a peak rising like the gable of a house into
the sky. “Yonder lies the tarn,” he said.
“Don’t stir. This way lies the cliff.
Fried-mund!” exchanging the jodel for the name.</p>
<p>“Here!—this way! Under the Red Eyrie,”
called back the wanderer; and steering their course round the
rocks above the pool, the rescuers made their way towards the
base of the peak, which was in fact the summit of the mountain,
the top of the Eagle’s Ladder, the highest step of which
they had attained. The peak towered over them, and beneath,
the castle lights seemed as if it would be easy to let a stone
fall straight down on them.</p>
<p>Friedel’s cry seemed to come from under their
feet. “I am here! I am safe; only it grew so
dark that I durst not climb up or down.”</p>
<p>The Schneiderlein explained that he would lower down a rope,
which, when fastened round Friedel’s waist, would enable
him to climb safely up; and, after a breathless space, the
torchlight shone upon the longed-for face, and Friedel springing
on the path, cried, “The mother!—and
here!”—</p>
<p>“Oh, Friedel, where have you been? What is this in
your arms?”</p>
<p>He showed them the innocent face of a little white kid.</p>
<p>“Whence is it, Friedel?”</p>
<p>He pointed to the peak, saying, “I was lying on my back
by the tarn, when my lady eagle came sailing overhead, so low
that I could see this poor little thing, and hear it
bleat.”</p>
<p>“Thou hast been to the Eyrie—the inaccessible
Eyrie!” exclaimed Ebbo, in amazement.</p>
<p>“That’s a mistake. It is not hard after the
first” said Friedel. “I only waited to watch
the old birds out again.”</p>
<p>“Robbed the eagles! And the young ones?”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Friedmund, as if half ashamed,
“they were twin eaglets, and their mother had left them,
and I felt as though I could not harm them; so I only bore off
their provisions, and stuck some feathers in my cap. But by
that time the sun was down, and soon I could not see my footing;
and, when I found that I had missed the path, I thought I had
best nestle in the nook where I was, and wait for day. I
grieved for my mother’s fear; but oh, to see her
here!”</p>
<p>“Ah, Friedel! didst do it to prove my words
false?” interposed Ebbo, eagerly.</p>
<p>“What words?”</p>
<p>“Thou knowest. Make me not speak them
again.”</p>
<p>“Oh, those!” said Friedel, only now recalling
them. “No, verily; they were but a moment’s
anger. I wanted to save the kid. I think it is old
mother Rika’s white kid. But oh, motherling! I
grieve to have thus frightened you.”</p>
<p>Not a single word passed between them upon Ebbo’s
exploits. Whether Friedel had seen all from the heights, or
whether he intuitively perceived that his brother preferred
silence, he held his peace, and both were solely occupied in
assisting their mother down the pass, the difficulties of which
were far more felt now than in the excitement of the ascent; only
when they were near home, and the boys were walking in the
darkness with arms round one another’s necks, Christina
heard Friedel say low and rather sadly, “I think I shall be
a priest, Ebbo.”</p>
<p>To which Ebbo only answered, “Pfui!”</p>
<p>Christina understood that Friedel meant that robbery must be a
severance between the brothers. Alas! had the moment come
when their paths must diverge? Could Ebbo’s step not
be redeemed?</p>
<p>Ursel reported that Dame Kunigunde had scarcely spoken again,
but had retired, like one stunned, into her bed. Friedel
was half asleep after the exertions of the day; but Ebbo did not
speak, and both soon betook themselves to their little turret
chamber within their mother’s.</p>
<p>Christina prayed long that night, her heart full of dread of
the consequence of this transgression. Rumours of
freebooting castles destroyed by the Swabian League had reached
her every wake day, and, if this outrage were once known, the
sufferance that left Adlerstein unmolested must be over.
There was hope indeed in the weakness and uncertainty of the
Government; but present safety would in reality be the ruin of
Ebbo, since he would be encouraged to persist in the career of
violence now unhappily begun. She knew not what to ask,
save that her sons might be shielded from evil, and might fulfil
that promise of her dream, the star in heaven, the light on
earth. And for the present!—the good God guide her
and her sons through the difficult morrow, and turn the heart of
the unhappy old woman below!</p>
<p>When, exhausted with weeping and watching, she rose from her
knees, she stole softly into her sons’ turret for a last
look at them. Generally they were so much alike in their
sleep that even she was at fault between them; but that night
there was no doubt. Friedel, pale after the day’s
hunger and fatigue, slept with relaxed features in the most
complete calm; but though Ebbo’s eyes were closed, there
was no repose in his face—his hair was tossed, his colour
flushed, his brow contracted, the arm flung across his brother
had none of the ease of sleep. She doubted whether he were
not awake; but, knowing that he would not brook any endeavour to
force confidence he did not offer, she merely hung over them
both, murmured a prayer and blessing, and left them.</p>
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