<h2>CHAPTER XV<br/> <span class="GutSmall">THE RIVAL EYRIE</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Ebbo</span> trusted that his kinsman of
Wildschloss was safe gone with the Court, and his temper smoothed
and his spirits rose in proportion while preparations for a
return to Adlerstein were being completed—preparations by
which the burgher lady might hope to render the castle far more
habitable, not to say baronial, than it had ever been.</p>
<p>The lady herself felt thankful that her stay at Ulm had turned
out well beyond all anticipations in the excellent understanding
between her uncle and her sons, and still more in Ebbo’s
full submission and personal loyalty towards the imperial
family. The die was cast, and the first step had been taken
towards rendering the Adlerstein family the peaceful, honourable
nobles she had always longed to see them.</p>
<p>She was one afternoon assisting her aunt in some of the duties
of her wirthschaft, when Master Gottfried entered the apartment
with an air of such extreme complacency that both turned round
amazed; the one exclaiming, “Surely funds have come in for
finishing the spire!” the other, “Have they appointed
thee Provost for next year, house-father?”</p>
<p>“Neither the one nor the other,” was the
reply. “But heard you not the horse’s
feet? Here has the Lord of Adlerstein Wildschloss been with
me in full state, to make formal proposals for the hand of our
child, Christina.”</p>
<p>“For Christina!” cried Hausfrau Johanna with
delight; “truly that is well. Truly our maiden has
done honour to her breeding. A second nobleman demanding
her—and one who should be able richly to endow
her!”</p>
<p>“And who will do so,” said Master Gottfried.
“For morning gift he promises the farms and lands of
Grünau—rich both in forest and corn glebe.
Likewise, her dower shall be upon Wildschloss—where the
soil is of the richest pasture, and there are no less than three
mills, whence the lord obtains large rights of multure.
Moreover, the Castle was added to and furnished on his marriage
with the late baroness, and might serve a Kurfürst; and
though the jewels of Freiherrinn Valeska must be inherited by her
daughter, yet there are many of higher price which have descended
from his own ancestresses, and which will all be hers.”</p>
<p>“And what a wedding we will have!” exclaimed
Johanna; “it shall be truly baronial. I will take my
hood and go at once to neighbour Sophie Lemsberg, who was wife to
the Markgraf’s Under Keller-Meister. She will tell me
point device the ceremonies befitting the espousals of a
baron’s widow.”</p>
<p>Poor Christina had sat all this time with drooping head and
clasped hands, a tear stealing down as the formal terms of the
treaty sent her spirit back to the urgent, pleading, imperious
voice that had said, “Now, little one, thou wilt not shut
me out;” and as she glanced at the ring that had lain on
that broad palm, she felt as if her sixteen cheerful years had
been an injury to her husband in his nameless bloody grave.
But protection was so needful in those rude ages, and second
marriages so frequent, that reluctance was counted as
weakness. She knew her uncle and aunt would never believe
that aught but compulsion had bound her to the rude outlaw, and
her habit of submission was so strong that, only when her aunt
was actually rising to go and consult her gossip, she found
breath to falter,</p>
<p>“Hold, dear aunt—my sons—”</p>
<p>“Nay, child, it is the best thing thou couldst do for
them. Wonders hast thou wrought, yet are they too old to be
without fatherly authority. I speak not of Friedel; the lad
is gentle and pious, though spirited, but for the baron.
The very eye and temper of my poor brother Hugh—thy father,
Stine—are alive again in him. Yea, I love the lad the
better for it, while I fear. He minds me precisely of Hugh
ere he was ’prenticed to the weapon-smith, and all became
bitterness.”</p>
<p>“Ah, truly,” said Christina, raising her eyes
“all would become bitterness with my Ebbo were I to give a
father’s power to one whom he would not love.”</p>
<p>“Then were he sullen and unruly, indeed!” said the
old burgomaster with displeasure; “none have shown him more
kindness, none could better aid him in court and empire.
The lad has never had restraint enough. I blame thee not,
child, but he needs it sorely, by thine own showing.”</p>
<p>“Alas, uncle! mine be the blame, but it is over
late. My boy will rule himself for the love of God and of
his mother, but he will brook no hand over him—least of all
now he is a knight and thinks himself a man. Uncle, I
should be deprived of both my sons, for Friedel’s very soul
is bound up with his brother’s. I pray thee enjoin
not this thing on me,” she implored.</p>
<p>“Child!” exclaimed Master Gottfried, “thou
thinkst not that such a contract as this can be declined for the
sake of a wayward Junker!”</p>
<p>“Stay, house-father, the little one will doubtless hear
reason and submit,” put in the aunt. “Her sons
were goodly and delightsome to her in their upgrowth, but they
are well-nigh men. They will be away to court and camp, to
love and marriage; and how will it be with her then, young and
fair as she still is? Well will it be for her to have a
stately lord of her own, and a new home of love and honour
springing round her.”</p>
<p>“True,” continued Sorel; “and though she be
too pious and wise to reck greatly of such trifles, yet it may
please her dreamy brain to hear that Sir Kasimir loves her even
like a paladin, and the love of a tried man of six-and-forty is
better worth than a mere kindling of youthful fancy.”</p>
<p>“Mine Eberhard loved me!” murmured Christina,
almost to herself, but her aunt caught the word.</p>
<p>“And what was such love worth? To force thee into
a stolen match, and leave thee alone and unowned to the
consequences!”</p>
<p>“Peace!” exclaimed Christina, with crimson cheek
and uplifted head. “Peace! My own dear lord
loved me with true and generous love! None but myself knows
how much. Not a word will I hear against that tender
heart.”</p>
<p>“Yes, peace,” returned Gottfried in a conciliatory
tone,—“peace to the brave Sir Eberhard. Thine
aunt meant no ill of him. He truly would rejoice that the
wisdom of his choice should receive such testimony, and that his
sons should be thus well handled. Nay, little as I heed
such toys, it will doubtless please the lads that the baron will
obtain of the Emperor letters of nobility for this house, which
verily sprang of a good Walloon family, and so their shield will
have no blank. The Romish king promises to give thee rank
with any baroness, and hath fully owned what a pearl thou art,
mine own sweet dove! Nay, Sir Kasimir is coming to-morrow
in the trust to make the first betrothal with Graf von Kaulwitz
as a witness, and I thought of asking the Provost on the other
hand.”</p>
<p>“To-morrow!” exclaimed Johanna; “and how is
she to be meetly clad? Look at this widow-garb; and how is
time to be found for procuring other raiment? House-father,
a substantial man like you should better understand! The
meal too! I must to gossip Sophie!”</p>
<p>“Verily, dear mother and father,” said Christina,
who had rallied a little, “have patience with me. I
may not lightly or suddenly betroth myself; I know not that I can
do so at all, assuredly not unless my sons were heartily
willing. Have I your leave to retire?”</p>
<p>“Granted, my child, for meditation will show thee that
this is too fair a lot for any but thee. Much had I longed
to see thee wedded ere thy sons outgrew thy care, but I shunned
proposing even one of our worthy guildmasters, lest my young
Freiherr should take offence; but this knight, of his own blood,
true and wise as a burgher, and faithful and God-fearing withal,
is a better match than I durst hope, and is no doubt a special
reward from thy patron saint.”</p>
<p>“Let me entreat one favour more,” implored
Christina. “Speak of this to no one ere I have seen
my sons.”</p>
<p>She made her way to her own chamber, there to weep and
flutter. Marriage was a matter of such high contract
between families that the parties themselves had usually no voice
in the matter, and only the widowed had any chance of a personal
choice; nor was this always accorded in the case of females, who
remained at the disposal of their relatives. Good
substantial wedded affection was not lacking, but romantic love
was thought an unnecessary preliminary, and found a vent in
extravagant adoration, not always in reputable quarters.
Obedience first to the father, then to the husband, was the first
requisite; love might shift for itself; and the fair widow of
Adlerstein, telling her beads in sheer perplexity, knew not
whether her strong repugnance to this marriage and warm sympathy
with her son Ebbo were not an act of rebellion. Yet each
moment did her husband rise before her mind more vividly, with
his rugged looks, his warm, tender heart, his dawnings of
comprehension, his generous forbearance and reverential
love—the love of her youth—to be equalled by no
other. The accomplished courtier and polished man of the
world might be his superior, but she loathed the superiority,
since it was to her husband. Might not his one chosen dove
keep heart-whole for him to the last? She recollected that
coarsest, cruellest reproach of all that her mother-in-law had
been wont to fling at her,—that she, the recent widow, the
new-made mother of Eberhard’s babes, in her grief, her
terror, and her weakness had sought to captivate this suitor by
her blandishments. The taunt seemed justified, and her
cheeks burned with absolute shame “My husband! my loving
Eberhard! left with none but me to love thee, unknown to thine
own sons! I cannot, I will not give my heart away from
thee! Thy little bride shall be faithful to thee, whatever
betide. When we meet beyond the grave I will have been
thine only, nor have set any before thy sons. Heaven
forgive me if I be undutiful to my uncle; but thou must be
preferred before even him! Hark!” and she started as
if at Eberhard’s foot-step; then smiled, recollecting that
Ebbo had his father’s tread. But her husband had been
too much in awe of her to enter with that hasty agitated step and
exclamation, “Mother, mother, what insolence is
this!”</p>
<p>“Hush, Ebbo! I prayed mine uncle to let me speak
to thee.”</p>
<p>“It is true, then,” said Ebbo, dashing his cap on
the ground; “I had soundly beaten that grinning
’prentice for telling Heinz.”</p>
<p>“Truly the house rings with the rumour, mother,”
said Friedel, “but we had not believed it.”</p>
<p>“I believed Wildschloss assured enough for aught,”
said Ebbo, “but I thought he knew where to begin.
Does he not know who is head of the house of Adlerstein, since he
must tamper with a mechanical craftsman, cap in hand to any sprig
of nobility! I would have soon silenced his
overtures!”</p>
<p>“Is it in sooth as we heard?” asked Friedel,
blushing to the ears, for the boy was shy as a maiden.
“Mother, we know what you would say,” he added,
throwing himself on his knees beside her, his arm round her
waist, his cheek on her lap, and his eyes raised to hers.</p>
<p>She bent down to kiss him. “Thou knewst it,
Friedel, and now must thou aid me to remain thy father’s
true widow, and to keep Ebbo from being violent.”</p>
<p>Ebbo checked his hasty march to put his hand on her chair and
kiss her brow. “Motherling, I will restrain myself,
so you will give me your word not to desert us.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Ebbo,” said Friedel, “the motherling
is too true and loving for us to bind her.”</p>
<p>“Children,” she answered, “hear me
patiently. I have been communing with myself, and deeply do
I feel that none other can I love save him who is to you a mere
name, but to me a living presence. Nor would I put any
between you and me. Fear me not, Ebbo. I think the
mothers and sons of this wider, fuller world do not prize one
another as we do. But, my son, this is no matter for rage
or ingratitude. Remember it is no small condescension in a
noble to stoop to thy citizen mother.”</p>
<p>“He knew what painted puppets noble ladies are,”
growled Ebbo.</p>
<p>“Moreover,” continued Christina, “thine
uncle is highly gratified, and cannot believe that I can
refuse. He understands not my love for thy father, and sees
many advantages for us all. I doubt me if he believes I
have power to resist his will, and for thee, he would not count
thine opposition valid. And the more angry and vehement
thou art, the more will he deem himself doing thee a service by
overruling thee.”</p>
<p>“Come home, mother. Let Heinz lead our horses to
the door in the dawn, and when we are back in free Adlerstein it
will be plain who is master.”</p>
<p>“Such a flitting would scarce prove our wisdom,”
said Christina, “to run away with thy mother like a lover
in a ballad. Nay, let me first deal gently with thine
uncle, and speak myself with Sir Kasimir, so that I may show him
the vanity of his suit. Then will we back to Adlerstein
without leaving wounds to requite kindness.”</p>
<p>Ebbo was wrought on to promise not to attack the burgomaster
on the subject, but he was moody and silent, and Master Gottfried
let him alone, considering his gloom as another proof of his need
of fatherly authority, and as a peace-lover forbearing to provoke
his fiery spirit.</p>
<p>But when Sir Kasimir’s visit was imminent, and Christina
had refused to make the change in her dress by which a young
widow was considered to lay herself open to another courtship,
Master Gottfried called the twins apart.</p>
<p>“My young lords,” he said, “I fear me ye are
vexing your gentle mother by needless strife at what must take
place.”</p>
<p>“Pardon me, good uncle,” said Ebbo, “I
utterly decline the honour of Sir Kasimir’s suit to my
mother.”</p>
<p>Master Gottfried smiled. “Sons are not wont to be
the judges in such cases, Sir Eberhard.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps not,” he answered; “but my
mother’s will is to the nayward, nor shall she be
coerced.”</p>
<p>“It is merely because of you and your pride,” said
Master Gottfried.</p>
<p>“I think not so,” rejoined the calmer Friedel;
“my mother’s love for my father is still
fresh.”</p>
<p>“Young knights,” said Master Gottfried, “it
would scarce become me to say, nor you to hear, how much matter
of fancy such love must have been towards one whom she knew but
for a few short months, though her pure sweet dreams, through
these long years, have moulded him into a hero. Boys, I
verily believe ye love her truly. Would it be well for her
still to mourn and cherish a dream while yet in her fresh age,
capable of new happiness, fuller than she has ever
enjoyed?”</p>
<p>“She is happy with us,” rejoined Ebbo.</p>
<p>“And ye are good lads and loving sons, though less
duteous in manner than I could wish. But look you, you may
not ever be with her, and when ye are absent in camp or court, or
contracting a wedlock of your own, would you leave her to her
lonesome life in your solitary castle?”</p>
<p>Friedel’s unselfishness might have been startled, but
Ebbo boldly answered, “All mine is hers. No joy to me
but shall be a joy to her. We can make her happier than
could any stranger. Is it not so, Friedel?”</p>
<p>“It is,” said Friedel, thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“Ah, rash bloods, promising beyond what ye can
keep. Nature will be too strong for you. Love your
mother as ye may, what will she be to you when a bride comes in
your way? Fling not away in wrath, Sir Baron; it was so
with your parents both before you; and what said the law of the
good God at the first marriage? How can you withstand the
nature He has given?”</p>
<p>“Belike I may wed,” said Ebbo, bluntly; “but
if it be not for my mother’s happiness, call me man-sworn
knight.”</p>
<p>“Not so,” good-humouredly answered Gottfried,
“but boy-sworn paladin, who talks of he knows not
what. Speak knightly truth, Sir Baron, and own that this
opposition is in verity from distaste to a stepfather’s
rule.”</p>
<p>“I own that I will not brook such rule,” said
Ebbo; “nor do I know what we have done to deserve that it
should be thrust on us. You have never blamed Friedel, at
least; and verily, uncle, my mother’s eye will lead me
where a stranger’s hand shall never drive me. Did I
even think she had for this man a quarter of the love she bears
to my dead father, I would strive for endurance; but in good
sooth we found her in tears, praying us to guard her from
him. I may be a boy, but I am man enough to prevent her
from being coerced.”</p>
<p>“Was this so, Friedel?” asked Master Gottfried,
moved more than by all that had gone before. “Ach, I
thought ye all wiser. And spake she not of Sir
Kasimir’s offers?—Interest with the Romish
king?—Yea, and a grant of nobility and arms to this house,
so as to fill the blank in your scutcheon?”</p>
<p>“My father never asked if she were noble,” said
Ebbo. “Nor will I barter her for a cantle of a
shield.”</p>
<p>“There spake a manly spirit,” said his uncle,
delighted. “Her worth hath taught thee how little to
prize these gewgaws! Yet, if you look to mingling with your
own proud kind, ye may fall among greater slights than ye can
brook. It may matter less to you, Sir Baron, but Friedel
here, ay, and your sons, will be ineligible to the choicest
orders of knighthood, and the canonries and chapters that are
honourable endowments.”</p>
<p>Friedel looked as if he could bear it, and Eberhard said,
“The order of the Dove of Adlerstein is enough for
us.”</p>
<p>“Headstrong all, headstrong all,” sighed Master
Gottfried. “One romantic marriage has turned all your
heads.”</p>
<p>The Baron of Adlerstein Wildschloss, unprepared for the
opposition that awaited him, was riding down the street equipped
point device, and with a goodly train of followers, in brilliant
suits. Private wooing did not enter into the honest ideas
of the burghers, and the suitor was ushered into the full family
assembly, where Christina rose and came forward a few steps to
meet him, curtseying as low as he bowed, as he said, “Lady,
I have preferred my suit to you through your honour-worthy uncle,
who is good enough to stand my friend.”</p>
<p>“You are over good, sir. I feel the honour, but a
second wedlock may not be mine.”</p>
<p>“Now,” murmured Ebbo to his brother, as the knight
and lady seated themselves in full view, “now will the
smooth-tongued fellow talk her out of her senses. Alack!
that gipsy prophecy!”</p>
<p>Wildschloss did not talk like a young wooer; such days were
over for both; but he spoke as a grave and honourable man, deeply
penetrated with true esteem and affection. He said that at
their first meeting he had been struck with her sweetness and
discretion, and would soon after have endeavoured to release her
from her durance, but that he was bound by the contract already
made with the Trautbachs, who were dangerous neighbours to
Wildschloss. He had delayed his distasteful marriage as
long as possible, and it had caused him nothing but trouble and
strife; his children would not live, and Thekla, the only
survivor, was, as his sole heiress, a mark for the cupidity of
her uncle, the Count of Trautbach, and his almost savage son
Lassla; while the right to the Wildschloss barony would become so
doubtful between her and Ebbo, as heir of the male line, that
strife and bloodshed would be well-nigh inevitable. These
causes made it almost imperative that he should re-marry, and his
own strong preference and regard for little Thekla directed his
wishes towards the Freiherrinn von Adlerstein. He backed
his suit with courtly compliments, as well as with
representations of his child’s need of a mother’s
training, and the twins’ equal want of fatherly guidance,
dilating on the benefits he could confer on them.</p>
<p>Christina felt his kindness, and had full trust in his
intentions. “No” was a difficult syllable to
her, but she had that within her which could not accept him; and
she firmly told him that she was too much bound to both her
Eberhards. But there was no daunting him, nor preventing
her uncle and aunt from encouraging him. He professed that
he would wait, and give her time to consider; and though she
reiterated that consideration would not change her mind, Master
Gottfried came forward to thank him, and express his confidence
of bringing her to reason.</p>
<p>“While I, sir,” said Ebbo, with flashing eyes, and
low but resentful voice, “beg to decline the honour in the
name of the elder house of Adlerstein.”</p>
<p>He held himself upright as a dart, but was infinitely annoyed
by the little mocking bow and smile that he received in return,
as Sir Kasimir, with his long mantle, swept out of the apartment,
attended by Master Gottfried.</p>
<p>“Burgomaster Sorel,” said the boy, standing in the
middle of the floor as his uncle returned, “let me hear
whether I am a person of any consideration in this family or
not?”</p>
<p>“Nephew baron,” quietly replied Master Gottfried,
“it is not the use of us Germans to be dictated to by
youths not yet arrived at years of discretion.”</p>
<p>“Then, mother,” said Ebbo, “we leave this
place to-morrow morn.” And at her nod of assent the
house-father looked deeply grieved, the house-mother began to
clamour about ingratitude. “Not so,” answered
Ebbo, fiercely. “We quit the house as poor as we
came, in homespun and with the old mare.”</p>
<p>“Peace, Ebbo!” said his mother, rising;
“peace, I entreat, house-mother! pardon, uncle, I pray
thee. O, why will not all who love me let me follow that
which I believe to be best!”</p>
<p>“Child,” said her uncle, “I cannot see thee
domineered over by a youth whose whole conduct shows his need of
restraint.”</p>
<p>“Nor am I,” said Christina. “It is I
who am utterly averse to this offer. My sons and I are one
in that; and, uncle, if I pray of you to consent to let us return
to our castle, it is that I would not see the visit that has made
us so happy stained with strife and dissension! Sure, sure,
you cannot be angered with my son for his love for me.”</p>
<p>“For the self-seeking of his love,” said Master
Gottfried. “It is to gratify his own pride that he
first would prevent thee from being enriched and ennobled, and
now would bear thee away to the scant—Nay, Freiherr, I will
not seem to insult you, but resentment would make you cruel to
your mother.”</p>
<p>“Not cruel!” said Friedel, hastily.
“My mother is willing. And verily, good uncle,
methinks that we all were best at home. We have benefited
much and greatly by our stay; we have learnt to love and
reverence you; but we are wild mountaineers at the best; and,
while our hearts are fretted by the fear of losing our sweet
mother, we can scarce be as patient or submissive as if we had
been bred up by a stern father. We have ever judged and
acted for ourselves, and it is hard to us not to do so still,
when our minds are chafed.”</p>
<p>“Friedel,” said Ebbo, sternly, “I will have
no pardon asked for maintaining my mother’s cause. Do
not thou learn to be smooth-tongued.”</p>
<p>“O thou wrong-headed boy!” half groaned Master
Gottfried. “Why did not all this fall out ten years
sooner, when thou wouldst have been amenable? Yet, after
all, I do not know that any noble training has produced a more
high-minded loving youth,” he added, half relenting as he
looked at the gallant, earnest face, full of defiance indeed, but
with a certain wistful appealing glance at “the
motherling,” softening the liquid lustrous dark eye.
“Get thee gone, boy, I would not quarrel with you; and it
may be, as Friedel says, that we are best out of one
another’s way. You are used to lord it, and I can
scarce make excuses for you.”</p>
<p>“Then,” said Ebbo, scarce appeased, “I take
home my mother, and you, sir, cease to favour Kasimir’s
suit.”</p>
<p>“No, Sir Baron. I cease not to think that nothing
would be so much for your good. It is because I believe
that a return to your own old castle will best convince you all
that I will not vex your mother by further opposing your
departure. When you perceive your error may it only not be
too late! Such a protector is not to be found every
day.”</p>
<p>“My mother shall never need any protector save
myself,” said Ebbo; “but, sir, she loves you, and
owes all to you. Therefore I will not be at strife with
you, and there is my hand.”</p>
<p>He said it as if he had been the Emperor reconciling himself
to all the Hanse towns in one. Master Gottfried could
scarce refrain from shrugging his shoulders, and Hausfrau Johanna
was exceedingly angry with the petulant pride and insolence of
the young noble; but, in effect, all were too much relieved to
avoid an absolute quarrel with the fiery lad to take exception at
minor matters. The old burgher was forbearing; Christina,
who knew how much her son must have swallowed to bring him to
this concession for love of her, thought him a hero worthy of all
sacrifices; and peace-making Friedel, by his aunt’s side,
soon softened even her, by some of the persuasive arguments that
old dames love from gracious, graceful, great-nephews.</p>
<p>And when, by and by, Master Gottfried went out to call on Sir
Kasimir, and explain how he had thought it best to yield to the
hot-tempered lad, and let the family learn how to be thankful for
the goods they had rejected, he found affairs in a state that
made him doubly anxious that the young barons should be safe on
their mountain without knowing of them. The Trautbach
family had heard of Wildschloss’s designs, and they had set
abroad such injurious reports respecting the Lady of Adlerstein,
that Sir Kasimir was in the act of inditing a cartel to be sent
by Count Kaulwitz, to demand an explanation—not merely as
the lady’s suitor, but as the only Adlerstein of full
age. Now, if Ebbo had heard of the rumour, he would
certainly have given the lie direct, and taken the whole defence
on himself; and it may be feared that, just as his cause might
have been, Master Gottfried’s faith did not stretch to
believing that it would make his sixteen-year-old arm equal to
the brutal might of Lassla of Trautbach. So he heartily
thanked the Baron of Wildschloss, agreed with him that the young
knights were not as yet equal to the maintenance of the cause,
and went home again to watch carefully that no report reached
either of his nephews. Nor did he breathe freely till he
had seen the little party ride safe off in the early morning, in
much more lordly guise than when they had entered the city.</p>
<p>As to Wildschloss and his nephew of Trautbach, in spite of
their relationship they had a sharp combat on the borders of
their own estates, in which both were severely wounded; but Sir
Kasimir, with the misericorde in his grasp, forced Lassla to
retract whatever he had said in dispraise of the Lady of
Adlerstein. Wily old Gottfried took care that the tidings
should be sent in a form that might at once move Christina with
pity and gratitude towards her champion, and convince her sons
that the adversary was too much hurt for them to attempt a fresh
challenge.</p>
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