<h2>CHAPTER XVII<br/> <span class="GutSmall">BRIDGING THE FORD</span></h2>
<p>The snow melted, the torrent became a flood, then contracted
itself, but was still a broad stream, when one spring afternoon
Ebbo showed his brother some wains making for the ford, adding,
“It cannot be rightly passable. They will come to
loss. I shall get the men together to aid them.”</p>
<p>He blew a blast on his horn, and added, “The knaves will
be alert enough if they hope to meddle with honest men’s
luggage.”</p>
<p>“See,” and Friedel pointed to the thicket to the
westward of the meadow around the stream, where the beech trees
were budding, but not yet forming a full mass of verdure,
“is not the Snake in the wood? Methinks I spy the
glitter of his scales.”</p>
<p>“By heavens, the villains are lying in wait for the
travellers at our landing-place,” cried Ebbo, and again
raising the bugle to his lips, he sent forth three notes well
known as a call to arms. Their echoes came back from the
rocks, followed instantly by lusty jodels, and the brothers
rushed into the hall to take down their light head-pieces and
corslets, answering in haste their mother’s startled
questions, by telling of the endangered travellers, and the
Schlangenwald ambush. She looked white and trembled, but
said no word to hinder them; only as she clasped Friedel’s
corslet, she entreated them to take fuller armour.</p>
<p>“We must speed the short way down the rock,” said
Ebbo, “and cannot be cumbered with heavy harness.
Sweet motherling, fear not; but let a meal be spread for our
rescued captives. Ho, Heinz, ’tis against the
Schlangenwald rascals. Art too stiff to go down the rock
path?”</p>
<p>“No; nor down the abyss, could I strike a good stroke
against Schlangenwald at the bottom of it,” quoth
Heinz.</p>
<p>“Nor see vermin set free by the Freiherr,” growled
Koppel; but the words were lost in Ebbo’s loud commands to
the men, as Friedel and Hatto handed down the weapons to
them.</p>
<p>The convoy had by this time halted, evidently to try the
ford. A horseman crossed, and found it practicable, for a
waggon proceeded to make the attempt.</p>
<p>“Now is our time,” said Ebbo, who was standing on
the narrow ledge between the castle and the precipitous path
leading to the meadow. “One waggon may get over, but
the second or third will stick in the ruts that it leaves.
Now we will drop from our crag, and if the Snake falls on them,
why, then for a pounce of the Eagle.”</p>
<p>The two young knights, so goodly in their bright steel, knelt
for their mother’s blessing, and then sprang like chamois
down the ivy-twined steep, followed by their men, and were lost
to sight among the bushes and rocks. Yet even while her
frame quivered with fear, her heart swelled at the thought what a
gulf there was between these days and those when she had hidden
her face in despair, while Ermentrude watched the Debateable
Ford.</p>
<p>She watched now in suspense, indeed, but with exultation
instead of shame, as two waggons safely crossed; but the third
stuck fast, and presently turned over in the stream, impelled
sideways by the efforts of the struggling horses. Then,
amid endeavours to disentangle the animals and succour the
driver, the travellers were attacked by a party of armed men, who
dashed out of the beechwood, and fell on the main body of the
waggons, which were waiting on the bit of bare shingly soil that
lay between the new and old channels. A wild
mêlée was all that Christina could see—weapons
raised, horses starting, men rushing from the river, while the
clang and the shout rose even to the castle.</p>
<p>Hark! Out rings the clear call, “The Eagle to the
rescue!” There they speed over the meadow, the two
slender forms with glancing helms! O overrun not the
followers, rush not into needless danger! There is Koppel
almost up with them with his big axe—Heinz’s broad
shoulders near. Heaven strike with them! Visit not
their forefathers’ sin on those pure spirits. Some
are flying. Some one has fallen! O heavens! on which
side? Ah! it is into the Schlangenwald woods that the
fugitives direct their flight. Three—four—the
whole troop pursued! Go not too far! Run not into
needless risk! Your work is done, and gallantly. Well
done, young knights of Adlerstein! Which of you is it that
stands pointing out safe standing-ground for the men that are
raising the waggon? Which of you is it who stands in
converse with a burgher form? Thanks and blessings! the
lads are safe, and full knightly hath been their first
emprise.</p>
<p>A quarter of an hour later, a gay step mounted the ascent, and
Friedel’s bright face laughed from his helmet:
“There, mother, will you crown your knights? Could
you see Ebbo bear down the chief squire? for the old Snake was
not there himself. And whom do you think we rescued,
besides a whole band of Venetian traders to whom he had joined
himself? Why, my uncle’s friend, the architect, of
whom he used to speak—Master Moritz
Schleiermacher.”</p>
<p>“Moritz Schleiermacher! I knew him as a
boy.”</p>
<p>“He had been laying out a Lustgarten for the Romish king
at Innspruck, and he is a stout man of his hands, and attempted
defence; but he had such a shrewd blow before we came up, that he
lay like one dead; and when he was lifted up, he gazed at us like
one moon-struck, and said, ‘Are my eyes dazed, or are these
the twins of Adlerstein, that are as like as face to
mirror? Lads, lads, your uncle looked not to hear of you
acting in this sort.’ But soon we and his people let
him know how it was, and that eagles do not have the manner of
snakes.”</p>
<p>“Poor Master Moritz! Is he much hurt? Is
Ebbo bringing him up hither?”</p>
<p>“No, mother, he is but giddied and stunned, and now must
you send down store of sausage, sourkraut, meat, wine, and beer;
for the wains cannot all cross till daylight, and we must keep
ward all night lest the Schlangenwalden should fall on them
again. Plenty of good cheer, mother, to make a right merry
watch.”</p>
<p>“Take heed, Friedel mine; a merry watch is scarce a safe
one.”</p>
<p>“Even so, sweet motherling, and therefore must Ebbo and
I share it. You must mete out your liquor wisely, you see,
enough for the credit of Adlerstein, and enough to keep out the
marsh fog, yet not enough to make us snore too soundly. I
am going to take my lute; it would be using it ill not to let it
enjoy such a chance as a midnight watch.”</p>
<p>So away went the light-hearted boy, and by and by Christina
saw the red watch-fire as she gazed from her turret window.
She would have been pleased to see how, marshalled by a merchant
who had crossed the desert from Egypt to Palestine, the waggons
were ranged in a circle, and the watches told off, while the food
and drink were carefully portioned out.</p>
<p>Freiherr Ebbo, on his own ground, as champion and host, was
far more at ease than in the city, and became very friendly with
the merchants and architect as they sat round the bright fire,
conversing, or at times challenging the mountain echoes by songs
to the sound of Friedel’s lute. When the stars grew
bright, most lay down to sleep in the waggons, while others
watched, pacing up and down till Karl’s waggon should be
over the mountain, and the vigil was relieved.</p>
<p>No disturbance took place, and at sunrise a hasty meal was
partaken of, and the work of crossing the river was set in
hand.</p>
<p>“Pity,” said Moritz, the architect, “that
this ford were not spanned by a bridge, to the avoiding of danger
and spoil.”</p>
<p>“Who could build such a bridge?” asked Ebbo.</p>
<p>“Yourself, Herr Freiherr, in union with us burghers of
Ulm. It were well worth your while to give land and stone,
and ours to give labour and skill, provided we fixed a toll on
the passage, which would be willingly paid to save peril and
delay.”</p>
<p>The brothers caught at the idea, and the merchants agreed that
such a bridge would be an inestimable boon to all traffickers
between Constance, Ulm, and Augsburg, and would attract many
travellers who were scared away by the evil fame of the
Debateable Ford. Master Moritz looked at the stone of the
mountain, pronounced it excellent material, and already sketched
the span of the arches with a view to winter torrents. As
to the site, the best was on the firm ground above the ford; but
here only one side was Adlerstein, while on the other Ebbo
claimed both banks, and it was probable that an equally sound
foundation could be obtained, only with more cost and delay.</p>
<p>After this survey, the travellers took leave of the barons,
promising to write when their fellow-citizens should have been
sounded as to the bridge; and Ebbo remained in high spirits, with
such brilliant purposes that he had quite forgotten his gloomy
forebodings. “Peace instead of war at home,” he
said; “with the revenue it will bring, I will build a mill,
and set our lads to work, so that they may become less dull and
doltish than their parents. Then will we follow the Emperor
with a train that none need despise! No one will talk now
of Adlerstein not being able to take care of himself!”</p>
<p>Letters came from Ulm, saying that the guilds of mercers and
wine merchants were delighted with the project, and invited the
Baron of Adlerstein to a council at the Rathhaus. Master
Sorel begged the mother to come with her sons to be his guest;
but fearing the neighbourhood of Sir Kasimir, she remained at
home, with Heinz for her seneschal while her sons rode to the
city. There Ebbo found that his late exploit and his future
plan had made him a person of much greater consideration than on
his last visit, and he demeaned himself with far more ease and
affability in consequence. He had affairs on his hands too,
and felt more than one year older.</p>
<p>The two guilds agreed to build the bridge, and share the toll
with the Baron in return for the ground and materials; but they
preferred the plan that placed one pier on the Schlangenwald
bank, and proposed to write to the Count an offer to include him
in the scheme, awarding him a share of the profits in proportion
to his contribution. However vexed at the turn affairs had
taken, Ebbo could offer no valid objection, and was obliged to
affix his signature to the letter in company with the
guildmasters.</p>
<p>It was despatched by the city pursuivants—</p>
<blockquote><p>The only men who safe might ride;<br/>
Their errands on the border side;</p>
</blockquote>
<p>and a meeting was appointed in the Rathhaus for the day of
their expected return. The higher burghers sat on their
carved chairs in the grand old hall, the lesser magnates on
benches, and Ebbo, in an elbowed seat far too spacious for his
slender proportions, met a glance from Friedel that told him his
merry brother was thinking of the frog and the ox. The
pursuivants entered—hardy, shrewd-looking men, with the
city arms decking them wherever there was room for them.</p>
<p>“Honour-worthy sirs,” they said, “no letter
did the Graf von Schlangenwald return.”</p>
<p>“Sent he no message?” demanded Moritz
Schleiermacher.</p>
<p>“Yea, worthy sir, but scarce befitting this reverend
assembly.” On being pressed, however, it was
repeated: “The Lord Count was pleased to swear at what he
termed the insolence of the city in sending him heralds,
‘as if,’ said he, ‘the dogs,’ your
worships, ‘were his equals.’ Then having cursed
your worships, he reviled the crooked writing of Herr Clerk
Diedrichson, and called his chaplain to read it to him.
Herr Priest could scarce read three lines for his foul language
about the ford. ‘Never,’ said he, ‘would
he consent to raising a bridge—a mean trick,’ so said
he, ‘for defrauding him of his rights to what the flood
sent him.’”</p>
<p>“But,” asked Ebbo, “took he no note of our
explanation, that if he give not the upper bank, we will build
lower, where both sides are my own?”</p>
<p>“He passed it not entirely over,” replied the
messenger.</p>
<p>“What said he—the very words?” demanded
Ebbo, with the paling cheek and low voice that made his passion
often seem like patience.</p>
<p>“He said—(the Herr Freiherr will pardon me for
repeating the words)—he said, ‘Tell the misproud
mongrel of Adlerstein that he had best sit firm in his own saddle
ere meddling with his betters, and if he touch one pebble of the
Braunwasser, he will rue it. And before your city-folk take
up with him or his, they had best learn whether he have any right
at all in the case.’”</p>
<p>“His right is plain,” said Master Gottfried;
“full proofs were given in, and his investiture by the
Kaisar forms a title in itself. It is mere bravado, and an
endeavour to make mischief between the Baron and the
city.”</p>
<p>“Even so did I explain, Herr Guildmaster,” said
the pursuivant; “but, pardon me, the Count laughed me to
scorn, and quoth he, ‘asked the Kaisar for proof of his
father’s death!’”</p>
<p>“Mere mischief-making, as before,” said Master
Gottfried, while his nephews started with amaze. “His
father’s death was proved by an eye-witness, whom you still
have in your train, have you not, Herr Freiherr?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” replied Ebbo, “he is at Adlerstein
now, Heinrich Bauermann, called the Schneiderlein, a lanzknecht,
who alone escaped the slaughter, and from whom we have often
heard how my father died, choked in his own blood, from a deep
breast-wound, immediately after he had sent home his last
greetings to my lady mother.”</p>
<p>“Was the corpse restored?” asked the able
Rathsherr Ulrich.</p>
<p>“No,” said Ebbo. “Almost all our
retainers had perished, and when a friar was sent to the hostel
to bring home the remains, it appeared that the treacherous foe
had borne them off—nay, my grandfather’s head was
sent to the Diet!”</p>
<p>The whole assembly agreed that the Count could only mean to
make the absence of direct evidence about a murder committed
eighteen years ago tell in sowing distrust between the
allies. The suggestion was not worth a thought, and it was
plain that no site would be available except the Debateable
Strand. To this, however, Ebbo’s title was
assailable, both on account of his minority, as well as his
father’s unproved death, and of the disputed claim to the
ground. The Rathsherr, Master Gottfried, and others,
therefore recommended deferring the work till the Baron should be
of age, when, on again tendering his allegiance, he might obtain
a distinct recognition of his marches. But this policy did
not consort with the quick spirit of Moritz Schleiermacher, nor
with the convenience of the mercers and wine-merchants, who were
constant sufferers by the want of a bridge, and afraid of waiting
four years, in which a lad like the Baron might return to the
nominal instincts of his class, or the Braunwasser might take
back the land it had given; whilst Ebbo himself was urgent, with
all the defiant fire of youth, to begin building at once in spite
of all gainsayers.</p>
<p>“Strife and blood will it cost,” said Master
Sorel, gravely.</p>
<p>“What can be had worth the having save at cost of strife
and blood?” said Ebbo, with a glance of fire.</p>
<p>“Youth speaks of counting the cost. Little knows
it what it saith,” sighed Master Gottfried.</p>
<p>“Nay,” returned the Rathsherr, “were it
otherwise, who would have the heart for enterprise?”</p>
<p>So the young knights mounted, and had ridden about half the
way in silence, when Ebbo exclaimed,
“Friedel”—and as his brother started,
“What art musing on?”</p>
<p>“What thou art thinking of,” said Friedel, turning
on him an eye that had not only something of the brightness but
of the penetration of a sunbeam.</p>
<p>“I do not think thereon at all,” said Ebbo,
gloomily. “It is a figment of the old serpent to
hinder us from snatching his prey from him.”</p>
<p>“Nevertheless,” said Friedel, “I cannot but
remember that the Genoese merchant of old told us of a German
noble sold by his foes to the Moors.”</p>
<p>“Folly! That tale was too recent to concern my
father.”</p>
<p>“I did not think it did,” said Friedel; “but
mayhap that noble’s family rest equally certain of his
death.”</p>
<p>“Pfui!” said Ebbo, hotly; “hast not heard
fifty times how he died even in speaking, and how Heinz crossed
his hands on his breast? What wouldst have more?”</p>
<p>“Hardly even that,” said Friedel, slightly
smiling.</p>
<p>“Tush!” hastily returned his brother, “I
meant only by way of proof. Would an honest old fellow like
Heinz be a deceiver?”</p>
<p>“Not wittingly. Yet I would fain ride to that
hostel and make inquiries!”</p>
<p>“The traitor host met his deserts, and was broken on the
wheel for murdering a pedlar a year ago,” said Ebbo.
“I would I knew where my father was buried, for then would
I bring his corpse honourably back; but as to his being a living
man, I will not have it spoken of to trouble my
mother.”</p>
<p>“To trouble her?” exclaimed Friedel.</p>
<p>“To trouble her,” repeated Ebbo. “Long
since hath passed the pang of his loss, and there is reason in
what old Sorel says, that he must have been a rugged, untaught
savage, with little in common with the gentle one, and that
tender memory hath decked him out as he never could have
been. Nay, Friedel, it is but sense. What could a man
have been under the granddame’s breeding?”</p>
<p>“It becomes not thee to say so!” returned
Friedel. “Nay, he could learn to love our
mother.”</p>
<p>“One sign of grace, but doubtless she loved him the
better for their having been so little together. Her heart
is at peace, believing him in his grave; but let her imagine him
in Schlangenwald’s dungeon, or some Moorish galley, if thou
likest it better, and how will her mild spirit be
rent!”</p>
<p>“It might be so,” said Friedel,
thoughtfully. “It may be best to keep this secret
from her till we have fuller certainty.”</p>
<p>“Agreed then,” said Ebbo, “unless the
Wildschloss fellow should again molest us, when his answer is
ready.”</p>
<p>“Is this just towards my mother?” said
Friedel.</p>
<p>“Just! What mean’st thou? Is it not
our office and our dearest right to shield our mother from
care? And is not her chief wish to be rid of the
Wildschloss suit?”</p>
<p>Nevertheless Ebbo was moody all the way home, but when there
he devoted himself in his most eager and winning way to his
mother, telling her of Master Gottfried’s woodcuts, and
Hausfrau Johanna’s rheumatism, and of all the news of the
country, in especial that the Kaisar was at Lintz, very ill with
a gangrene in his leg, said to have been caused by his habit of
always kicking doors open, and that his doctors thought of
amputation, a horrible idea in the fifteenth century. The
young baron was evidently bent on proving that no one could make
his mother so happy as he could; and he was not far wrong
there.</p>
<p>Friedel, however, could not rest till he had followed Heinz to
the stable, and speaking over the back of the old white mare, the
only other survivor of the massacre, had asked him once more for
the particulars, a tale he was never loth to tell; but when
Friedel further demanded whether he was certain of having seen
the death of his younger lord, he replied, as if hurt:
“What, think you I would have quitted him while life was
yet in him?”</p>
<p>“No, certainly, good Heinz; yet I would fain know by
what tokens thou knewest his death.”</p>
<p>“Ah! Sir Friedel; when you have seen a stricken
field or two, you will not ask how I know death from
life.”</p>
<p>“Is a swoon so utterly unlike death?”</p>
<p>“I say not but that an inexperienced youth might be
mistaken,” said Heinz; “but for one who had learned
the bloody trade, it were impossible. Why ask,
sir?”</p>
<p>“Because,” said Friedel, low and
mysteriously—“my brother would not have my mother
know it, but—Count Schlangenwald demanded whether we could
prove my father’s death.”</p>
<p>“Prove! He could not choose but die with three
such wounds, as the old ruffian knows. I shall bless the
day, Sir Friedmund, when I see you or your brother give back
those strokes! A heavy reckoning be his.”</p>
<p>“We all deem that line only meant to cross our
designs,” said Friedel. “Yet, Heinz, I would I
knew how to find out what passed when thou wast gone. Is
there no servant at the inn—no retainer of Schlangenwald
that aught could be learnt from?”</p>
<p>“By St. Gertrude,” roughly answered the
Schneiderlein, “if you cannot be satisfied with the oath of
a man like me, who would have given his life to save your father,
I know not what will please you.”</p>
<p>Friedel, with his wonted good-nature, set himself to pacify
the warrior with assurances of his trust; yet while Ebbo plunged
more eagerly into plans for the bridge-building, Friedel drew
more and more into his old world of musings; and many a summer
afternoon was spent by him at the Ptarmigan’s Mere, in deep
communings with himself, as one revolving a purpose.</p>
<p>Christina could not but observe, with a strange sense of
foreboding, that, while one son was more than ever in the lonely
mountain heights, the other was far more at the base.
Master Moritz Schleiermacher was a constant guest at the castle,
and Ebbo was much taken up with his companionship. He was a
strong, shrewd man, still young, but with much experience, and he
knew how to adapt himself to intercourse with the proud nobility,
preserving an independent bearing, while avoiding all that
haughtiness could take umbrage at; and thus he was acquiring a
greater influence over Ebbo than was perceived by any save the
watchful mother, who began to fear lest her son was acquiring an
infusion of worldly wisdom and eagerness for gain that would
indeed be a severance between him and his brother.</p>
<p>If she had known the real difference that unconsciously kept
her sons apart, her heart would have ached yet more.</p>
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