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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:41:41 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:41:41 -0700
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13243 ***</div>
+
+<h1>In the Palace of the King</h1><br />
+<h2>A Love Story of Old Madrid</h2><br />
+<br />
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h3>F. MARION CRAWFORD</h3><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<h4>COPYRIGHT 1900</h4>
+<h4>BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</h4><br />
+
+<hr />
+
+<center>
+To my old friend<br />
+GEORGE P. BRETT<br />
+<br />
+New York, October, 1906<br />
+</center>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CONTENTS'></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<blockquote>
+<a href='#CHAPTER_I'>CHAPTER I</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_II'>CHAPTER II</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_III'>CHAPTER III</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_IV'>CHAPTER IV</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_V'>CHAPTER V</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_VI'>CHAPTER VI</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_VII'>CHAPTER VII</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_VIII'>CHAPTER VIII</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_IX'>CHAPTER IX</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_X'>CHAPTER X</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XI'>CHAPTER XI</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XII'>CHAPTER XII</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XIII'>CHAPTER XIII</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XIV'>CHAPTER XIV</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XV'>CHAPTER XV</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XVI'>CHAPTER XVI</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XVII'>CHAPTER XVII</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XVIII'>CHAPTER XVIII</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XIX'>CHAPTER XIX</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XX'>CHAPTER XX</a><br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_I'></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+
+<p>Two young girls sat in a high though very narrow room of the old Moorish
+palace to which King Philip the Second had brought his court when he
+finally made Madrid his capital. It was in the month of November, in the
+afternoon, and the light was cold and grey, for the two tall windows looked
+due north, and a fine rain had been falling all the morning. The stones in
+the court were drying now, in patches, but the sky was like a smooth vault
+of cast lead, closing over the city that lay to the northward, dark, wet
+and still, as if its life had shrunk down under ground, away from the
+bitter air and the penetrating damp.</p>
+
+<p>The room was scantily furnished, but the few objects it contained, the
+carved table, the high-backed chairs and the chiselled bronze brazier, bore
+the stamp of the time when art had not long been born again. On the walls
+there were broad tapestries of bold design, showing green forests populated
+by all sorts of animals in stiff attitudes, staring at one another in
+perpetual surprise. Below the tapestry a carved walnut wainscoting went
+round the room, and the door was panelled and flanked by fluted doorposts
+of the same dark wood, on which rested corbels fashioned into curling
+acanthus leaves, to hold up the cornice, which itself made a high shelf
+over the door. Three painted Italian vases, filled with last summer's rose
+leaves and carefully sealed lest the faint perfume should be lost, stood
+symmetrically on this projection, their contents slowly ripening for future
+use. The heap of white ashes, under which the wood coals were still alive
+in the big brazier, diffused a little warmth through the chilly room.</p>
+
+<p>The two girls were sitting at opposite ends of the table. The one held a
+long goose-quill pen, and before her lay several large sheets of paper
+covered with fine writing. Her eyes followed the lines slowly, and from
+time to time she made a correction in the manuscript. As she read, her lips
+moved to form words, but she made no sound. Now and then a faint smile lent
+singular beauty to her face, and there was more light in her eyes, too;
+then it disappeared again, and she read on, carefully and intently, as if
+her soul were in the work.</p>
+
+<p>She was very fair, as Spaniards sometimes are still, and were more often
+in those days, with golden hair and deep grey eyes; she had the high
+features, the smooth white throat, and the finely modelled ears that were
+the outward signs of the lordly Gothic race. When she was not smiling, her
+face was sad, and sometimes the delicate colour left her clear cheek and
+she grew softly pale, till she seemed almost delicate. Then the sensitive
+nostrils quivered almost imperceptibly, and the curving lips met closely as
+if to keep a secret; but that look came seldom, and for the most part her
+eyes were quiet and her mouth was kind. It was a face that expressed
+devotion, womanly courage, and sensitiveness rather than an active and
+dominating energy. The girl was indeed a full-grown woman, more than twenty
+years of age, but the early bloom of girlhood was on her still, and if
+there was a little sadness in the eyes, a man could guess well enough that
+it rose from the heart, and had but one simple source, which was neither a
+sudden grief nor a long-hidden sorrow, but only youth's one secret--love.
+Maria Dolores de Mendoza knew all of fear for the man she loved, that any
+woman could know, and much of the hope that is love's early life; but she
+knew neither the grief, nor the disappointment, nor the shame for another,
+nor for herself, nor any of the bitterness that love may bring. She did not
+believe that such things could be wrung from hearts that were true and
+faithful; and in that she was right. The man to whom she had given her
+heart and soul and hope had given her his, and if she feared for him, it
+was not lest he should forget her or his own honour. He was a man among
+men, good and true; but he was a soldier, and a leader, who daily threw his
+life to the battle, as Douglas threw the casket that held the Bruce's heart
+into the thick of the fight, to win it back, or die. The man she loved was
+Don John of Austria, the son of the great dead Emperor Charles the Fifth,
+the uncle of dead Don Carlos and the half brother of King Philip of
+Spain--the man who won glory by land and sea, who won back Granada a second
+time from the Moors, as bravely as his great grandfather Ferdinand had won
+it, but less cruelly, who won Lepanto, his brother's hatred and a death by
+poison, the foulest stain in Spanish history.</p>
+
+<p>It was November now, and it had been June of the preceding year when he
+had ridden away from Madrid to put down the Moriscoes, who had risen
+savagely against the hard Spanish rule. He had left Dolores de Mendoza an
+hour before he mounted, in the freshness of the early summer morning, where
+they had met many a time, on a lonely terrace above the King's apartments.
+There were roses there, growing almost wild in great earthen jars, where
+some Moorish woman had planted them in older days, and Dolores could go
+there unseen with her blind sister, who helped her faithfully, on pretence
+of taking the poor girl thither to breathe the sweet quiet air. For Inez
+was painfully sensitive of her affliction, and suffered, besides blindness,
+all that an over-sensitive and imaginative being can feel.</p>
+
+<p>She was quite blind, with no memory of light, though she had been born
+seeing, as other children. A scarlet fever had destroyed her sight.
+Motherless from her birth, her father often absent in long campaigns, she
+had been at the mercy of a heartless nurse, who had loved the fair little
+Dolores and had secretly tormented the younger child, as soon as she was
+able to understand, bringing her up to believe that she was so repulsively
+ugly as to be almost a monster. Later, when the nurse was gone, and Dolores
+was a little older, the latter had done all she could to heal the cruel
+wound and to make her sister know that she had soft dark hair, a sad and
+gentle face, with eyes that were quite closed, and a delicate mouth that
+had a little half painful, half pathetic way of twitching when anything
+hurt her,--for she was easily hurt. Very pale always, she turned her face
+more upwards than do people who have sight, and being of good average
+woman's height and very slender and finely made, this gave her carriage an
+air of dignity that seemed almost pride when she was offended or wounded.
+But the first hurt had been deep and lasting, and she could never quite
+believe that she was not offensive to the eyes of those who saw her, still
+less that she was sometimes almost beautiful in a shadowy, spiritual way.
+The blind, of all their sufferings, often feel most keenly the
+impossibility of knowing whether the truth is told them about their own
+looks; and he who will try and realize what it is to have been always
+sightless will understand that this is not vanity, but rather a sort of
+diffidence towards which all people should be very kind. Of all necessities
+of this world, of all blessings, of all guides to truth, God made light
+first. There are many sharp pains, many terrible sufferings and sorrows in
+life that come and wrench body and soul, and pass at last either into
+alleviation or recovery, or into the rest of death; but of those that abide
+a lifetime and do not take life itself, the worst is hopeless darkness. We
+call ignorance 'blindness,' and rage 'blindness,' and we say a man is
+'blind' with grief.</p>
+
+<p>Inez sat opposite her sister, at the other end of the table, listening.
+She knew what Dolores was doing, how during long months her sister had
+written a letter, from time to time, in little fragments, to give to the
+man she loved, to slip into his hand at the first brief meeting or to drop
+at his feet in her glove, or even, perhaps, to pass to him by the blind
+girl's quick fingers. For Inez helped the lovers always, and Don John was
+very gentle with her, talking with her when he could, and even leading her
+sometimes when she was in a room she did not know. Dolores knew that she
+could only hope to exchange a word with him when he came back, and that the
+terrace was bleak and wet now, and the roses withered, and that her father
+feared for her, and might do some desperate thing if he found her lover
+talking with her where no one could see or hear. For old Mendoza knew the
+world and the court, and he foresaw that sooner or later some royal
+marriage would be made for Don John of Austria, and that even if Dolores
+were married to him, some tortuous means would be found to annul her
+marriage, whereby a great shame would darken his house. Moreover, he was
+the King's man, devoted to Philip body and soul, as his sovereign, ready to
+give his life ten times for his sovereign's word, and thinking it treason
+to doubt a royal thought or motive. He was a rigid old man, a Spaniard of
+Spain's great days, fearless, proud, intolerant, making Spain's honour his
+idol, capable of gentleness only to his children, and loving them dearly,
+but with that sort of severity and hardness in all questions where his
+authority was concerned which can make a father's true affection the most
+intolerable burden to a girl of heart, and which, where a son is its
+object, leads sooner or later to fierce quarrels and lifelong estrangement.
+And so it had happened now. For the two girls had a brother much older than
+they, Rodrigo; and he had borne to be treated like a boy until he could
+bear no more, and then he had left his father's house in anger to find out
+his own fortune in the world, as many did in his day,--a poor gentleman
+seeking distinction in an army of men as brave as himself, and as keen to
+win honour on every field. Then, as if to oppose his father in everything,
+he had attached himself to Don John, and was spoken of as the latter's
+friend, and Mendoza feared lest his son should help Don John to a marriage
+with Dolores. But in this he was mistaken, for Rodrigo was as keen, as much
+a Spaniard, and as much devoted to the honour of his name as his father
+could be; and though he looked upon Don John as the very ideal of what a
+soldier and a prince should be, he would have cut off his own right hand
+rather than let it give his leader the letter Dolores had been writing so
+long; and she knew this and feared her brother, and tried to keep her
+secret from him.</p>
+
+<p>Inez knew all, and she also was afraid of Rodrigo and of her father,
+both for her sister's sake and her own. So, in that divided house, the
+father was against the son, and the daughters were allied against them
+both, not in hatred, but in terror and because of Dolores' great love for
+Don John of Austria.</p>
+
+<p>As they sat at the table it began to rain again, and the big drops beat
+against the windows furiously for a few minutes. The panes were round and
+heavy, and of a greenish yellow colour, made of blown glass, each with a
+sort of knob in the middle, where the iron blowpipe had been separated from
+the hot mass. It was impossible to see through them at all distinctly, and
+when the sky was dark with rain they admitted only a lurid glare into the
+room, which grew cold and colourless again when the rain ceased. Inez had
+been sitting motionless a long time, her elbow on the table, her chin
+resting upon her loosely clasped white hands, her blind face turned upward,
+listening to the turning of the pages and to the occasional scratching of
+her sister's pen. She sighed, moved, and let her hands fall upon the table
+before her in a helpless, half despairing way, as she leaned back in the
+big carved chair. Dolores looked up at once, for she was used to helping
+her sister in her slightest needs and to giving her a ready sympathy in
+every mood.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" she asked quickly. "Do you want anything, dear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you almost finished?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl's voice would almost have told that she was blind. It was sweet
+and low, but it lacked life; though not weak, it was uncertain in strength
+and full of a longing that could never be satisfied, but that often seemed
+to come within possible reach of satisfaction. There was in the tones, too,
+the perpetual doubt of one from whom anything might be hidden by silence,
+or by the least tarn of words. Every passing hope and fear, and every
+pleasure and pain, were translated into sound by its quick changes. It
+trusted but could not always quite promise to believe; it swelled and sank
+as the sensitive heart beat faster or slower. It came from a world without
+light, in which only sound had meaning, and only touch was certainty.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered Dolores. "I have almost finished--there is only half a
+page more to read over."</p>
+
+<p>"And why do you read it over?" asked Inez. "Do you change what you have
+written? Do you not think now exactly as you did when you wrote?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; I feel a great deal more--I want better words! And then it all
+seems so little, and so badly written, and I want to say things that no one
+ever said before, many, many things. He will laugh--no, not that! How could
+he? But my letter will seem childish to him. I know it will. I wish I had
+never written it I Do you think I had better give it to him, after
+all?"</p>
+
+<p>"How can I tell?" asked Inez hopelessly. "You have never read it to me.
+I do not know what you have said to him."</p>
+
+<p>"I have said that I love him as no man was ever loved before," answered
+Dolores, and the true words seemed to thrill with a life of their own as
+she spoke them.</p>
+
+<p>Then she was silent for a moment, and looked down at the written pages
+without seeing them. Inez did not move, and seemed hardly to breathe. Then
+Dolores spoke again, pressing both her hands upon the paper before her
+unconsciously.</p>
+
+<p>"I have told him that I love him, and shall love him for ever and ever,"
+she said; "that I will live for him, die for him, suffer for him, serve
+him! I have told him all that and much more."</p>
+
+<p>"More? That is much already. But he loves you, too. There is nothing you
+can promise which he will not promise, and keep, too, I think. But more!
+What more can you have said than that?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing I would not say if I could find words!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a fullness of life in her voice which, to the other's
+uncertain tones, was as sunshine to moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>"You will find words when you see him this evening," said Inez slowly.
+"And they will be better than anything you can write. Am I to give him your
+letter?"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores looked at her sister quickly, for there was a little constraint
+in the accent of the last phrase.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know," she answered. "How can I tell what may happen, or how I
+shall see him first?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will see him from the window presently. I can hear the guards
+forming already to meet him--and you--you will be able to see him from the
+window."</p>
+
+<p>Inez had stopped and had finished her speech, as if something had choked
+her. She turned sideways in her chair when she had spoken, as if to listen
+better, for she was seated with her back to the light.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you everything," said Maria Dolores softly. "It will be
+almost as if you could see him, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Almost--"</p>
+
+<p>Inez spoke the one word and broke off abruptly, and rose from her chair.
+In the familiar room she moved almost as securely as if she could see. She
+went to the window and listened. Dolores came and stood beside her.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, dear?" she asked. "What is the matter? What has hurt you?
+Tell me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," answered the blind girl, "nothing, dear. I was thinking--how
+lonely I shall be when you and he are married, and they send me to a
+convent, or to our dismal old house in Valladolid."</p>
+
+<p>A faint colour came into her pale face, and feeling it she turned away
+from Dolores; for she was not speaking the truth, or at least not half of
+it all.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not let you go!" answered Dolores, putting one arm round her
+sister's waist. "They shall never take you from me. And if in many years
+from now we are married, you shall always be with us, and I will always
+take care of you as I do now."</p>
+
+<p>Inez sighed and pressed her forehead and blind eyes to the cold window,
+almost withdrawing herself from the pressure of Dolores' arm. Down below
+there was tramping of heavy feet, as the companies of foot guards took
+their places, marching across the broad space, in their wrought steel caps
+and breastplates, carrying their tasselled halberds on their shoulders. An
+officer's voice gave sharp commands. The gust that had brought the rain had
+passed by, and a drizzling mist, caused by a sudden chill, now completely
+obscured the window.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you see anything?" asked Inez suddenly, in a low voice. "I think I
+hear trumpets far away."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot see--there is mist on the glass, too. Do you hear the trumpets
+clearly?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think I do. Yes--I hear them clearly now." She stopped. "He is
+coming," she added under her breath.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores listened, but she had not the almost supernatural hearing of the
+blind, and could distinguish nothing but the tramping of the soldiers
+below, and her sister's irregular breathing beside her, as Inez held her
+breath again and again in order to catch the very faint and distant
+sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Open the window," she said almost sharply, "I know I hear the
+trumpets."</p>
+
+<p>Her delicate fingers felt for the bolts with almost feverish anxiety.
+Dolores helped her and opened the window wide. A strain of distant clarions
+sounding a triumphant march came floating across the wet city. Dolores
+started, and her face grew radiant, while her fresh lips opened a little as
+if to drink in the sound with the wintry air. Beside her, Inez grew slowly
+pale and held herself by the edge of the window frame, gripping it hard,
+and neither of the two girls felt any sensation of cold. Dolores' grey eyes
+grew wide and bright as she gazed fixedly towards the city where the avenue
+that led to the palace began, but Inez, bending a little, turned her ear in
+the same direction, as if she could not bear to lose a single note of the
+music that told her how Don John of Austria had come home in triumph, safe
+and whole, from his long campaign in the south.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly it came nearer, strain upon strain, each more clear and loud and
+full of rejoicing. At first only the high-pitched clarions had sent their
+call to the window, but now the less shrill trumpets made rich harmonies to
+the melody, and the deep bass horns gave the marching time to the rest, in
+short full blasts that set the whole air shaking as with little peak of
+thunder. Below, the mounted officers gave orders, exchanged short phrases,
+cantered to their places, and came back again a moment later to make some
+final arrangement--their splendid gold-inlaid corslets and the rich
+caparisons of their horses looking like great pieces of jewelry that moved
+hither and thither in the thin grey mist, while the dark red and yellow
+uniforms of the household guards surrounded the square on three sides with
+broad bands of colour. Dolores could see her father, who commanded them and
+to whom the officers came for orders, sitting motionless and erect on his
+big black horse--a stern figure, with close-cut grey beard, clad all in
+black saving his heavily gilded breastplate and the silk sash he wore
+across it from shoulder to sword knot. She shrank back a little, for she
+would not have let him see her looking down from an upper window to welcome
+the returning visitor.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it? Do you see him? Is he there?" Inez asked the questions in a
+breath, as she heard her sister move.</p>
+
+<p>"No--our father is below on his horse. He must not see us." And she
+moved further into the embrasure.</p>
+
+<p>"You will not be able to see," said Inez anxiously. "How can you tell
+me--I mean, how can you see, where you are?"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores laughed softly, but her laugh trembled with the happiness that
+was coming so soon.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I see very well," she answered. "The window is wide open, you
+know."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes--I know."</p>
+
+<p>Inez leaned back against the wall beside the window, letting her hand
+drop in a hopeless gesture. The sample answer had hurt her, who could never
+see, by its mere thoughtlessness and by the joy that made her sister's
+voice quaver. The music grew louder and louder, and now there came with it
+the sound of a great multitude, cheering, singing the march with the
+trumpets, shouting for Don John; and all at once as the throng burst from
+the street to the open avenue the voices drowned the clarions for a moment,
+and a vast cry of triumph filled the whole air.</p>
+
+<p>"He is there! He is there!" repeated Inez, leaning towards the window
+and feeling for the stone sill.</p>
+
+<p>But Dolores could not hear for the shouting. The clouds had lifted to
+the westward and northward; and as the afternoon sun sank lower they broke
+away, and the level rays drank up the gloom of the wintry day in an
+instant. Dolores stood motionless before the window, undazzled, like a
+statue of ivory and gold in a stone niche. With the light, as the advancing
+procession sent the people before it, the trumpets rang high and clear
+again, and the bright breastplates of the trumpeters gleamed like dancing
+fire before the lofty standard that swayed with the slow pace of its
+bearer's horse. Brighter and nearer came the colours, the blazing armour,
+the standard, the gorgeous procession of victorious men-at-arms; louder and
+louder blew the trumpets, higher and higher the clouds were lifted from the
+lowering sun. Half the people of Madrid went before, the rest flocked
+behind, all cheering or singing or shouting. The stream of colour and light
+became a river, the river a flood, and in the high tide of a young victor's
+glory Don John of Austria rode onward to the palace gate. The mounted
+trumpeters parted to each side before him, and the standard-bearer ranged
+his horse to the left, opposite the banner of the King, which held the
+right, and Don John, on a grey Arab mare, stood out alone at the head of
+his men, saluting his royal brother with lowered sword and bent head. A
+final blast from the trumpets sounded full and high, and again and again
+the shout of the great throng went up like thunder and echoed from the
+palace walls, as King Philip, in his balcony above the gate, returned the
+salute with his hand, and bent a little forward over the stone railing.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores de Mendoza forgot her father and all that he might say, and
+stood at the open window, looking down. She had dreamed of this moment; she
+had seen visions of it in the daytime; she had told herself again and again
+what it would be, how it must be; but the reality was beyond her dreams and
+her visions and her imaginings, for she had to the full what few women have
+in any century, and what few have ever had in the blush of maidenhood,--the
+sight of the man she loved, and who loved her with all his heart, coming
+home in triumph from a hard-fought war, himself the leader and the victor,
+himself in youth's first spring, the young idol of a warlike nation, and
+the centre of military glory.</p>
+
+<p>When he had saluted the King he sat still a moment on his horse and
+looked upward, as if unconsciously drawn by the eyes that, of all others,
+welcomed him at that moment; and his own met them instantly and smiled,
+though his face betrayed nothing. But old Mendoza, motionless in his
+saddle, followed the look, and saw; and although he would have praised the
+young leader with the best of his friends, and would have fought under him
+and for him as well as the bravest, yet at that moment he would gladly have
+seen Don John of Austria fall dead from his horse before his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Don John dismounted without haste, and advanced to the gate as the King
+disappeared from the balcony above. He was of very graceful figure and
+bearing, not short, but looking taller than he really was by the perfection
+of his proportions. The short reddish brown hair grew close and curling on
+his small head, but left the forehead high, while it set off the clear skin
+and the mobile features. A very small moustache shaded his lip without
+hiding the boyish mouth, and at that time he wore no beard. The lips,
+indeed, smiled often, and the expression of the mouth was rather careless
+and good-humoured than strong. The strength of the face was in the
+clean-cut jaw, while its real expression was in the deep-set, fiery blue
+eyes, that could turn angry and fierce at one moment, and tender as a
+woman's the next.</p>
+
+<p>He wore without exaggeration the military dress of his time,--a
+beautifully chiselled corslet inlaid with gold, black velvet sleeves, loose
+breeches of velvet and silk, so short that they did not descend half way to
+the knees, while his legs were covered by tight hose and leather boots,
+made like gaiters to clasp from the knee to the ankle and heel. Over his
+shoulder hung a short embroidered cloak, and his head covering was a broad
+velvet cap, in which were fastened the black and yellow plumes of the House
+of Austria.</p>
+
+<p>As he came near to the gate, many friends moved forward to greet him,
+and he gave his hand to all, with a frank smile and words of greeting. But
+old Mendoza did not dismount nor move his horse a step nearer. Don John,
+looking round before he went in, saw the grim face, and waved his hand to
+Dolores' father; but the old man pretended that he saw nothing, and made no
+answering gesture. Some one in the crowd of courtiers laughed lightly. Old
+Mendoza's face never changed; but his knees must have pressed the saddle
+suddenly, for his black horse stirred uneasily, and tried to rear a little.
+Don John stopped short, and his eyes hardened and grew very light before
+the smile could fade from his lips, while he tried to find the face of the
+man whose laugh he had heard. But that was impossible, and his look was
+grave and stern as he went in under the great gate, the multitude cheering
+after him.</p>
+
+<p>From her high window Dolores had seen and heard also, for she had
+followed every movement he made and every change of his expression, and had
+faithfully told her sister what she saw, until the laugh came, short and
+light, but cutting. And Inez heard that, too, for she was leaning far
+forward upon the broad stone sill to listen for the sound of Don John's
+voice. She drew back with a springing movement, and a sort of cry of
+pain.</p>
+
+<p>"Some one is laughing at me!" she cried. "Some one is laughing because I
+am trying to see!"</p>
+
+<p>Instantly Dolores drew her sister to her, kissing her tenderly, and
+soothing her as one does a frightened child.</p>
+
+<p>"No, dear, no! It was not that--I saw what it was. Nobody was looking at
+you, my darling. Do you know why some one laughed? It hurt me, too. He
+smiled and waved his hand to our father, who took no notice of him. The
+laugh was for that--and for me, because the man knew well enough that our
+father does not mean that we shall ever marry. Do you see, dear? It was not
+meant for you."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he really look up at us when you said so?" asked Inez, in a
+smothered voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Who? The man who laughed?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. I mean--"</p>
+
+<p>"Don John? Yes. He looked up to us and smiled--as he often does at
+me--with his eyes only, while his face was quite grave. He is not changed
+at all, except that he looks more determined, and handsomer, and braver,
+and stronger than ever! He does each time I see him!"</p>
+
+<p>But Inez was not listening.</p>
+
+<p>"That was worth living for--worth being blind for," she said suddenly,
+"to hear the people shout and cheer for him as he came along. You who can
+see it all do not understand what the sound means to me. For a moment--only
+for a moment--I saw light--I know I saw a bright light before my eyes. I am
+not dreaming. It made my heart beat, and it made my head dizzy. It must
+have been light. Do you think it could be, Dolores?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know, dear," answered the other gently.</p>
+
+<p>But as the day faded and they sat together in the early dusk, Dolores
+looked long and thoughtfully at the blind face. Inez loved Don John, though
+she did not know it, and without knowing it she had told her sister.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_II'></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+
+<p>When Don John had disappeared within the palace the people lingered a
+little while, hoping that something might happen which would be worth
+seeing, and then, murmuring a little in perfectly unreasonable
+disappointment, they slowly dispersed. After that old Mendoza gave his
+orders to the officers of the guards, the men tramped away, one detachment
+after another, in a regular order; the cavalry that had ridden up with Don
+John wheeled at a signal from the trumpets, and began to ride slowly back
+to the city, pressing hard upon the multitude, and before it was quite dark
+the square before the palace was deserted again. The sky had cleared, the
+pavement was dry again, and the full moon was rising. Two tall sentinels
+with halberds paced silently up and down in the shadow.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores and her sister were still sitting in the dark when the door
+opened, and a grey-haired servant in red and yellow entered the room,
+bearing two lighted wax candles in heavy bronze candlesticks, which he set
+upon the table. A moment later he was followed by old Mendoza, still in his
+breastplate, as he had dismounted, his great spurs jingling on his heavy
+boots, and his long basket-hilted sword trailing on the marble pavement. He
+was bareheaded now, and his short hair, smooth and grizzled, covered his
+energetic head like a close-fitting skull cap of iron-grey velvet. He stood
+still before the table, his bony right hand resting upon it and holding
+both his long gloves. The candlelight shone upward into his dark face, and
+gleamed yellow in his angry eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Both the girls rose instinctively as their father entered; but they
+stood close together, their hands still linked as if to defend each other
+from a common enemy, though the hard man would have given his life for
+either of them at any moment since they had come into the world. They knew
+it, and trembled.</p>
+
+<p>"You have made me the laughing-stock of the court," he began slowly, and
+his voice shook with anger. "What have you to say in your defence?"</p>
+
+<p>He was speaking to Dolores, and she turned a little pale. There was
+something so cruelly hard in his tone and bearing that she drew back a
+little, not exactly in bodily fear, but as a brave man may draw back a step
+when another suddenly draws a weapon upon him. Instantly Inez moved
+forward, raising one white hand in protest, and turning her blind face to
+her father's gleaming eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not speaking to you," he said roughly, "but you," he went on,
+addressing Dolores, and the heavy table shook under his hand. "What devil
+possessed you that you should shame me and yourself, standing at your
+window to smile at Don John, as if he were the Espadero at a bull fight and
+you the beauty of the ring--with all Madrid there to look on, from his
+Majesty the King to the beggar in the road? Have you no modesty, no shame,
+no blood that can blush? And if not, have you not even so much woman's
+sense as should tell you that you are ruining your name and mine before the
+whole world?"</p>
+
+<p>"Father! For the sake of heaven do not say such words--you must not! You
+shall not!"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores' face was quite white now, as she gently pushed Inez aside and
+faced the angry man. The table was between them.</p>
+
+<p>"Have I said one word more than the very truth?" asked Mendoza. "Does
+not the whole court know that you love Don John of Austria--"</p>
+
+<p>"Let the whole world know it!" cried the girl bravely. "Am I ashamed to
+love the best and bravest man that breathes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let the whole world know that you are willing to be his toy, his
+plaything--"</p>
+
+<p>"His wife, sir!" Dolores' voice was steady and clear as she interrupted
+her father. "His wife," she repeated proudly; "And to-morrow, if you and
+the King will not hinder us. God made you my father, but neither God nor
+man has given you the right to insult me, and you shall not be unanswered,
+so long as I have strength and breath to speak. But for you, I should be
+Don John of Austria's wife to-day--and then, then his 'toy,' his
+'plaything'--yes, and his slave and his servant--what you will! I love him,
+and I would work for him with my hands, as I would give my blood and my
+life for his, if God would grant me that happiness and grace, since you
+will not let me be his wife!"</p>
+
+<p>"His wife!" exclaimed Mendoza, with a savage sneer. "His wife--to be
+married to-day and cast off to-morrow by a turn of the pen and the twisting
+of a word that would prove your marriage void, in order that Don John may
+be made the husband of some royal widowed lady, like Queen Mary of the
+Scots! His wife!" He laughed bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>"You have an exalted opinion of your King, my father, since you suppose
+that he would permit such deeds in Spain!"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores had drawn herself up to her full height as she spoke, and she
+remained motionless as she awaited the answer to what she had said. It was
+long in coming, though Mendoza's dark eyes met hers unflinchingly, and his
+lips moved more than once as if he were about to speak. She had struck a
+blow that was hard to parry, and she knew it. Inez stood beside her, silent
+and breathing hard as she listened.</p>
+
+<p>"You think that I have nothing to say," he began at last, and his tone
+had changed and was more calm. "You are right, perhaps. What should I say
+to you, since you have lost all sense of shame and all thought of respect
+or obedience? Do you expect that I shall argue with you, and try to
+convince you that I am right, instead of forcing you to respect me and
+yourself? Thank Heaven, I have never yet questioned my King's thoughts, nor
+his motives, nor his supreme right to do whatsoever may be for the honour
+and glory of Spain. My life is his, and all I have is his, to do with it
+all as he pleases, by grace of his divine right. That is my creed and my
+law--and if I have failed to bring you up in the same belief, I have
+committed a great sin, and it will be counted against me hereafter, though
+I have done what I could, to the best of my knowledge."</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza lifted his sheathed sword and laid his right hand upon the
+cross-bar of the basket hilt.</p>
+
+<p>"God--the King--Spain!" he said solemnly, as he pressed his lips to it
+once for each article of his faith.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish to shake your belief," said Dolores coldly. "I daresay
+that is impossible!"</p>
+
+<p>"As impossible as it is to make me change my determination," answered
+Mendoza, letting his long sword rest on the pavement again.</p>
+
+<p>"And what may your determination be?" asked the girl, still facing
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Something in his face forewarned her of near evil and danger, as he
+looked at her long without answering. She moved a little, so as to stand
+directly in front of Inez. Taking an attitude that was almost defiant, she
+began to speak rapidly, holding her hands behind her and pressing herself
+back against her sister to attract the latter's attention; and in her hand
+she held the letter she had written to Don John, folded into the smallest
+possible space, for she had kept it ready in the wrist of her tight sleeve,
+not knowing what might happen any moment to give her an opportunity of
+sending it.</p>
+
+<p>"What have you determined?" she asked again, and then went on without
+waiting for a reply. "In what way are you going to exhibit your power over
+me? Do you mean to take me away from the court to live in Valladolid again?
+Are you going to put me in the charge of some sour old woman who will never
+let me out of her sight from morning till morning?" She had found her
+sister's hand behind hers and had thrust the letter into the fingers that
+closed quickly upon it. Then she laughed a little, almost gaily. "Do you
+think that a score of sour old duennas could teach me to forget the man I
+love, or could prevent me from sending him a message every day if I chose?
+Do you think you could hinder Don John of Austria, who came back an hour
+ago from his victory the idol of all Spain, the favourite of the
+people--brave, young, powerful, rich, popular, beloved far more than the
+King himself, from seeing me every day if he chose, so long as he were not
+away in war? And then--I will ask you something more--do you think that
+father, or mother, or king, or law, or country has power to will away the
+love of a woman who loves with all her heart and soul and strength? Then
+answer me and tell me what you have determined to do with me, and I will
+tell you my determination, too, for I have one of my own, and shall abide
+by it, come what may, and whatsoever you may do!"</p>
+
+<p>She paused, for she had heard Inez softly close the door as she went
+out. The letter at least was safe, and if it were humanly possible, Inez
+would find a means of delivering it; for she had all that strange ingenuity
+of the blind in escaping observation which it seems impossible that they
+should possess, but of which every one who has been much with them is fully
+aware. Mendoza had seen Inez go out, and was glad that she was gone, for
+her blind face sometimes disturbed him when he wished to assert his
+authority.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, "I will tell you what I mean to do, and it is the only
+thing left to me, for you have given me no choice. You are disobedient and
+unruly, you have lost what little respect you ever had--or showed--for me.
+But that is not all. Men have had unruly daughters before, and yet have
+married them well, and to men who in the end have ruled them. I do not
+speak of my affection for you both, since you have none for me. But now,
+you are going beyond disobedience and lawlessness, for you are ruining
+yourself and disgracing me, and I will neither permit the one nor suffer
+the other." His voice rose harshly. "Do you understand me? I intend to
+protect my name from you, and yours from the world, in the only way
+possible. I intend to send you to Las Huelgas to-morrow morning. I am in
+earnest, and unless you consent to give up this folly and to marry as I
+wish, you shall stay there for the rest of your natural life. Do you
+understand? And until to-morrow morning you shall stay within these doors.
+We shall see whether Don John of Austria will try to force my dwelling
+first and a convent of holy nuns afterwards. You will be safe from him, I
+give you my word of honour,--the word of a Spanish gentleman and of your
+father. You shall be safe forever. And if Don John tries to enter here
+to-night, I will kill him on the threshold. I swear that I will."</p>
+
+<p>He ceased speaking, turned, and began to walk up and down the small
+room, his spurs and sword clanking heavily at every step. He had folded his
+arms, and his head was bent low.</p>
+
+<p>A look of horror and fear had slowly risen in Dolores' face, for she
+knew her father, and that he kept his word at every risk. She knew also
+that the King held him in very high esteem, and was as firmly opposed to
+her marriage as Mendoza himself, and therefore ready to help him to do what
+he wished. It had never occurred to her that she could be suddenly thrust
+out of sight in a religious institution, to be kept there at her father's
+pleasure, even for her whole life. She was too young and too full of life
+to have thought of such a possibility. She had indeed heard that such
+things could be done, and had been done, but she had never known such a
+case, and had never realized that she was so completely at her father's
+mercy. For the first time in her life she felt real fear, and as it fell
+upon her there came the sickening conviction that she could not resist it,
+that her spirit was broken all at once, that in a moment more she would
+throw herself at her father's feet and implore mercy, making whatever
+promise he exacted, yet making it falsely, out of sheer terror, in an utter
+degradation and abasement of all moral strength, of which she had never
+even dreamed. She grew giddy as she felt it coming upon her, and the lights
+of the two candles moved strangely. Already she saw herself on her knees,
+sobbing with fear, trying to take her father's hand, begging forgiveness,
+denying her love, vowing submission and dutiful obedience in an agony of
+terror. For on the other side she saw the dark corridors and gloomy cells
+of Las Huelgas, the veiled and silent nuns, the abomination of despair that
+was before her till she should die and escape at last,--the faint hope
+which would always prevent her from taking the veil herself, yet a hope
+fainter and fainter, crossed by the frightful uncertainty in which she
+should be kept by those who guarded her. They would not even tell her
+whether the man she loved were alive or dead, she could never know whether
+he had given up her love, himself in despair, or whether, then, as years
+went by, he would not lose the thread that took him back to the memory of
+her, and forget--and love again.</p>
+
+<p>But then her strong nature rose again, and the vision of fear began to
+fade as her faith in his love denied the last thought with scorn. Many a
+time, when words could tell no more, and seemed exhausted just when trust
+was strongest, he had simply said, "I love you, as you love me," and
+somehow the little phrase meant all, and far more than the tender speeches
+that sometimes formed themselves so gracefully, and yet naturally and
+simply, because they, too, came straight from the heart. So now, in her
+extreme need, the plain words came back to her in his voice, "I love you,
+as you love me," with a sudden strength of faith in him that made her live
+again, and made fear seem impossible. While her father slowly paced the
+floor in silence, she thought what she should do, and whether there could
+be anything which she would not do, if Don John of Austria were kept a
+prisoner from her; and she felt sure that she could overcome every obstacle
+and laugh at every danger, for the hope of getting to him. If she would, so
+would he, since he loved her as she loved him. But for all the world, he
+would not have her throw herself upon her father's mercy and make false
+promises and sob out denials of her love, out of fear. Death would be
+better than that.</p>
+
+<p>"Do as you will with me, since you have the power," she said at last,
+quite calmly and steadily.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the old man stopped in his walk, and turned towards her,
+almost as if he himself were afraid now. To her amazement she saw that his
+dark eyes were moist with tears that clung but half shed to the rugged lids
+and rough lashes. He did not speak for some moments, while she gazed at him
+in wonder, for she could not understand. Then all at once he lifted his
+brown hands and covered his face with a gesture of utter despair.</p>
+
+<p>"Dolores! My child, my little girl!" he cried, in a broken voice.</p>
+
+<p>Then he sat down, as it overcome, clasped his hands on the hilt of his
+sword, and rested his forehead against them, rocking himself with a barely
+perceptible motion. In twenty years, Dolores had never understood, not even
+guessed, that the hard man, ever preaching of wholesome duty and strict
+obedience, always rebuking, never satisfied, ill pleased almost always,
+loved her with all his heart, and looked upon her as the very jewel of his
+soul. She guessed it now, in a sudden burst of understanding; but it was so
+new, so strange, that she could not have told what she felt. There was at
+best no triumph at the thought that, of the two, he had broken down first
+in the contest. Pity came first, womanly, simple and kind, for the harsh
+nature that was so wounded at last. She came to his side, and laid one hand
+upon his shoulder, speaking softly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very, very sorry that I have hurt you," she said, and waited for
+him to speak, pressing his shoulder with a gentle touch.</p>
+
+<p>He did not look up, and still he rocked himself gently, leaning on his
+sword. The girl suffered, too, to see him suffering so. A little while ago
+he had been hard, fierce, angry, cruel, threatening her with a living death
+that had filled her with horror. It had seemed quite impossible that there
+could be the least tenderness in him for any one--least of all for her.</p>
+
+<p>"God be merciful to me," he said at length in very low tones. "God
+forgive me if it is my fault--you do not love me--I am nothing to you but
+an unkind old man, and you are all the world to me, child!"</p>
+
+<p>He raised his head slowly and looked into her face. She was startled at
+the change in his own, as well as deeply touched by what he said. His dark
+cheeks had grown grey, and the tears that would not quite fall were like a
+glistening mist under the lids, and almost made him look sightless. Indeed,
+he scarcely saw her distinctly. His clasped hands trembled a little on the
+hilt of the sword he still held.</p>
+
+<p>"How could I know?" cried Dolores, suddenly kneeling down beside him.
+"How could I guess? You never let me see that you were fond of me--or I
+have been blind all these years--"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, child!" he said. "Do not hurt me any more--it must have been my
+fault."</p>
+
+<p>He grew more calm, and though his face was very grave and sad, the
+natural dark colour was slowly coming back to it now, and his hands were
+steady again. The girl was too young, and far too different from him, to
+understand his nature, but she was fast realizing that he was not the man
+he had always seemed to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if I had only known!" she cried, in deep distress. "If I had only
+guessed, I would have been so different! I was always frightened, always
+afraid of you, since I can remember--I thought you did not care for us and
+that we always displeased you--how could we know?"</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza lifted one of his hands from the sword hilt, and took hers, with
+as much gentleness as was possible to him. His eyes became clear again, and
+the profound emotion he had shown subsided to the depths whence it had
+risen.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall never quite understand each other," he said quietly. "You
+cannot see that it is a man's duty to do what is right for his children,
+rather than to sacrifice that in order to make them love him."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Dolores that there might be a way open between the two, but
+she said nothing, and left her hand in his, glad that he was kind, but
+feeling, as he felt, that there could never be any real understanding
+between them. The breach had existed too long, and it was far too wide.</p>
+
+<p>"You are headstrong, my dear," he said, nodding at each word. "You are
+very headstrong, if you will only reflect."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not my head, it is my heart," answered Dolores. "And besides,"
+she added with a smile, "I am your daughter, and you are not of a very
+gentle and yielding disposition, are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," he answered with hesitation, "perhaps not." Then his face relaxed
+a little, and he almost smiled too.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed as if the peace were made and as if thereafter there need not
+be trouble again. But it was even then not far off, for it was as
+impossible for Mendoza to yield as it would have been for Dolores to give
+up her love for Don John. She did not see this, and she fancied that a real
+change had taken place in his disposition, so that he would forget that he
+had threatened to send her to Las Huelgas, and not think of it again.</p>
+
+<p>"What is done cannot be undone," he said, with renewed sadness. "You
+will never quite believe that you have been everything to me during your
+life. How could you not be, my child? I am very lonely. Your mother has
+been dead nearly eighteen years, and Rodrigo--"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped short suddenly, for he had never spoken his son's name in the
+girl's hearing since Rodrigo had left him to follow his own fortunes.</p>
+
+<p>"I think Rodrigo broke my heart," said the old man, after a short pause,
+controlling his voice so that it sounded dry and indifferent. "And if there
+is anything left of it, you will break the rest."</p>
+
+<p>He rose, taking his hand from hers, and turning away, with the roughness
+of a strong, hard man, who has broken down once under great emotion and is
+capable of any harshness in his fear of yielding to it again. Dolores
+started slightly and drew back. In her the kindly impression was still
+strong, but his tone and manner wounded her.</p>
+
+<p>"You are wrong," she said earnestly. "Since you have shown me that you
+love me, I will indeed do my best not to hurt you or displease you. I will
+do what I can--what I can."</p>
+
+<p>She repeated the last words slowly and with unconscious emphasis. He
+turned his face to her again instantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then promise me that you will never see Don John of Austria again, that
+you will forget that you ever loved him, that you will put him altogether
+out of your thoughts, and that you will obediently accept the marriage I
+shall make for you."</p>
+
+<p>The words of refusal to any such obedience as that rose to the girl's
+lips, ready and sharp. But she would not speak them this time, lest more
+angry words should answer hers. She looked straight at her father's eyes,
+holding her head proudly high for a moment. Then, smiling at the
+impossibility of what he asked, she turned from him and went to the window
+in silence. She opened it wide, leaned upon the stone sill and looked out.
+The moon had risen much higher now, and the court was white.</p>
+
+<p>She had meant to cut short the discussion without rousing anger again,
+but she could have taken no worse way to destroy whatever was left of her
+father's kindlier mood. He did not raise his voice now, as he followed her
+and spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"You refuse to do that?" he said, with an already ominous interrogation
+in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask the impossible," she answered, without looking round. "I have
+not refused, for I have no will in this, no choice. You can do what you
+please with me, for you have power over my outward life--and if you lacked
+it, the King would help you. But you have no power beyond that, neither
+over my heart nor over my soul. I love him--I have loved him long, and I
+shall love him till I die, and beyond that, forever and ever, beyond
+everything--beyond the great to-morrow of God's last judgment! How can I
+put him out of my thoughts, then? It is madness to ask it of me."</p>
+
+<p>She paused a moment, while he stood behind her, getting his teeth and
+slowly grinding the heel of one heavy boot on the pavement.</p>
+
+<p>"And as for threatening me," she continued, "you will not kill Don John,
+nor even try to kill him, for he is the King's brother. If I can see him
+this evening, I will--and there will be no risk for him. You would not
+murder him by stealth, I suppose? No! Then you will not attack him at all,
+and if I can see him, I will--I tell you so, frankly. To-morrow or the next
+day, when the festivities they have for him are over, and you yourself are
+at liberty, take me to Las Huelgas, if you will, and with as little scandal
+as possible. But when I am there, set a strong guard of armed men to keep
+me, for I shall escape unless you do. And I shall go to Don John. That is
+all I have to say. That is my last word."</p>
+
+<p>"I gave you mine, and it was my word of honour," said Mendoza. "If Don
+John tries to enter here, to see you, I will kill him. To-morrow, you shall
+go to Las Huelgas."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores made no answer and did not even turn her head. He left her and
+went out. She heard his heavy tread in the hall beyond, and she heard a
+bolt slipped at the further door. She was imprisoned for the night, for the
+entrance her father had fastened was the one which cut off the portion of
+the apartment in which the sisters lived from the smaller part which he had
+reserved for himself. These rooms, from which there was no other exit,
+opened, like the sitting-room, upon the same hall.</p>
+
+<p>When Dolores knew that she was alone, she drew back from the window and
+shut it. It had served its purpose as a sort of refuge from her father, and
+the night air was cold. She sat down to think, and being in a somewhat
+desperate mood, she smiled at the idea of being locked into her room,
+supperless, like a naughty child. But her face grew grave instantly as she
+tried to discover some means of escape. Inez was certainly not in the
+apartment--she must have gone to the other end of the palace, on pretence
+of seeing one of the court ladies, but really in the hope of giving Don
+John the letter. It was more than probable that she would not be allowed to
+enter when she came back, for Mendoza would distrust her. That meant that
+Dolores could have no communication with any one outside her rooms during
+the evening and night, and she knew her father too well to doubt that he
+would send her to Las Huelgas in the morning, as he had sworn to do.
+Possibly he would let her serving-woman come to her to prepare what she
+needed for the journey, but even that was unlikely, for he would suspect
+everybody.</p>
+
+<p>The situation looked hopeless, and the girl's face grew slowly pale as
+she realized that after all she might not even exchange a word with Don
+John before going to the convent--she might not even be able to tell him
+whither they were sending her, and Mendoza might keep the secret for
+years--and she would never be allowed to write, of course.</p>
+
+<p>She heard the further door opened again, the bolt running back with a
+sharp noise. Then she heard her father's footsteps and his voice calling to
+Inez, as he went from room to room. But there was no answer, and presently
+he went away, bolting the door a second time. There could be no more doubt
+about it now. Dolores was quite alone. Her heart beat heavily and slowly.
+But it was not over yet. Again the bolt slipped in the outer hall, and
+again she heard the heavy steps. They came straight towards the door. He
+had perhaps changed his mind, or he had something more to say; she held her
+breath, but he did not come in. As if to make doubly sure, he bolted her
+into the little room, crossed the hall a last time, and bolted it for the
+night, perfectly certain that Dolores was safely shut off from the outer
+world.</p>
+
+<p>For some minutes she sat quite still, profoundly disturbed, and utterly
+unable to find any way out of her difficulty, which was, indeed, that she
+was in a very secure prison.</p>
+
+<p>Then again there was a sound at the door, but very soft this time, not
+half as loud in her ears as the beating of her own heart. There was
+something ghostly in it, for she had heard no footsteps. The bolt moved
+very slowly and gently--she had to strain her ears to hear it move. The
+sound ceased, and another followed it--that of the door being cautiously
+opened. A moment later Inez was in the room--turning her head anxiously
+from side to side to hear Dolores' breathing, and so to find out where she
+was. Then as Dolores rose, the blind girl put her finger to her lips, and
+felt for her sister's hand.</p>
+
+<p>"He has the letter," she whispered quickly. "I found him by accident,
+very quickly. I am to say to you that after he has been some time in the
+great hall, he will slip away and come here. You see our father will be on
+duty and cannot come up."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores' hand trembled violently.</p>
+
+<p>"He swore to me that he would kill Don John if he came here," she
+whispered. "He will do it, if it costs his own life! You must find him
+again--go quickly, dear, for the love of Heaven!" Her anxiety increased.
+"Go--go, darling--do not lose a moment--he may come sooner--save him, save
+him!"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot go," answered Inez, in terror, as she understood the
+situation. "I had hidden myself, and I am locked in with you. He called me,
+but I kept quiet, for I knew he would not let me stay." She buried her face
+in her hands and sobbed aloud in an agony of fear.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores' lips were white, and she steadied herself against a chair.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_III'></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+
+<p>Dolores stood leaning against the back of the chair, neither hearing nor
+seeing her sister, conscious only that Don John was in danger and that she
+could not warn him to be on his guard. She had not believed herself when
+she had told her father that he would not dare to lift his hand against the
+King's half brother. She had said the words to give herself courage, and
+perhaps in a rush of certainty that the man she loved was a match for other
+men, hand to hand, and something more. It was different now. Little as she
+yet knew of human nature, she guessed without reasoning that a man who has
+been angry, who has wavered and given way to what he believes to be
+weakness, and whose anger has then burst out again, is much more dangerous
+than before, because his wrath is no longer roused against another only,
+but also against himself. More follies and crimes have been committed in
+that second tide of passion than under a first impulse. Even if Mendoza had
+not fully meant what he had said the first time, he had meant it all, and
+more, when he had last spoken. Once more the vision of fear rose before
+Dolores' eyes, nobler now; because it was fear for another and not for
+herself, but therefore also harder to conquer.</p>
+
+<p>Inez had ceased from sobbing now, and was sitting quietly in her
+accustomed seat, in that attitude of concentrated expectancy of sounds
+which is so natural to the blind, that one can almost recognize blindness
+by the position of the head and body without seeing the face. The blind
+rarely lean back in a chair; more often the body is quite upright, or bent
+a little forward, the face is slightly turned up when there is total
+silence, often turned down when a sound is already heard distinctly; the
+knees are hardly ever crossed, the hands are seldom folded together, but
+are generally spread out, as if ready to help the hearing by the sense of
+touch--the lips are slightly parted, for the blind know that they hear by
+the mouth as well as with their ears--the expression of the face is one of
+expectation and extreme attention, still, not placid, calm, but the very
+contrary of indifferent. It was thus that Inez sat, as she often sat for
+hours, listening, always and forever listening to the speech of things and
+of nature, as well as for human words. And in listening, she thought and
+reasoned patiently and continually, so that the slightest sounds had often
+long and accurate meanings for her. The deaf reason little or ill, and are
+very suspicious; the blind, on the contrary, are keen, thoughtful, and
+ingenious, and are distrustful of themselves rather than of others. Inez
+sat quite still, listening, thinking, and planning a means of helping her
+sister.</p>
+
+<p>But Dolores stood motionless as if she were paralyzed, watching the
+picture that «he could not chase away. For she saw the familiar figure of
+the man she loved coming down the gloomy corridor, alone and unarmed, past
+the deep embrasures through which the moonlight streamed, straight towards
+the oak door at the end; and then, from one of the windows another figure
+stood out, sword in hand, a gaunt man with a grey beard, and there were few
+words, and an uncertain quick confounding of shadows with a ray of cold
+light darting hither and thither, then a fall, and then stillness. As soon
+as it was over, it began again, with little change, save that it grew more
+distinct, till she could see Don John's white face in the moonlight as he
+lay dead on the pavement of the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>It became intolerable at last, and she slowly raised one hand and
+covered her eyes to shut out the sight.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen," said Inez, as Dolores stirred. "I have been thinking. You must
+see him to-night, even if you are not alone with him. There is only one way
+to do that; you must dress yourself for the court and go down to the great
+hall with the others and speak to him--then you can decide how to meet
+to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Inez--I have not told you the rest! To-morrow I am to be sent to Las
+Huelgas, and kept there like a prisoner." Inez uttered a low cry of
+pain.</p>
+
+<p>"To a convent!" It seemed like death.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores began to tell her all Mendoza had said, but Inez soon
+interrupted her. There was a dark flush in the blind girl's face.</p>
+
+<p>"And he would have you believe that he loves you?" she cried
+indignantly. "He has always been hard, and cruel, and unkind, he has never
+forgiven me for being blind---he will never forgive you for being young!
+The King! The King before everything and every one--before himself, yes,
+that is well, but before his children, his soul, his heart--he has no
+heart! What am I saying--" She stopped short.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet, in his strange way, he loves us both," said Dolores. "I cannot
+understand it, but I saw his face when there were tears in his eyes, and I
+heard his voice. He would give his life for us."</p>
+
+<p>"And our lives, and hearts, and hopes to feed his conscience and to save
+his own soul!"</p>
+
+<p>Inez was trembling with anger, leaning far forward, her face flushed,
+one slight hand clenched, the other clenching it hard. Dolores was silent.
+It was not the first time that Inez had spoken in this way, for the blind
+girl could be suddenly and violently angry for a good cause. But now her
+tone changed.</p>
+
+<p>"I will save you," she said suddenly, "but there is no time to be lost.
+He will not come back to our rooms now, and he knows well enough that Don
+John cannot come here at this hour, so that he is not waiting for him. We
+have this part of the place to ourselves, and the outer door only is bolted
+now. It will take you an hour to dress--say three-quarters of an hour. As
+soon as you get out, you must go quickly round the palace to the Duchess
+Alvarez. Our father will not go there, and you can go down with her, as
+usual--but tell her nothing. Our father will be there, and he will see you,
+but he will not care to make an open scandal in the court. Don John will
+come and speak to you; you must stay beside the Duchess of course--but you
+can manage to exchange a few words."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores listened intently, and her face brightened a little as Inez went
+on, only to grow sad and hopeless again a moment later. It was all an
+impossible dream.</p>
+
+<p>"That would be possible if I could once get beyond the door of the
+hall," she said despondently. "It is of no use, dear! The door is
+bolted."</p>
+
+<p>"They will open it for me. Old Eudaldo is always within hearing, and he
+will do anything for me. Besides, I shall seem to have been shut in by
+mistake, do you see? I shall say that I am hungry, thirsty, that I am cold,
+that in locking you in our father locked me in, too, because I was asleep.
+Then Eudaldo will open the door for me. I shall say that I am going to the
+Duchess's."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes--but then?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will cover yourself entirely with my black cloak and draw it over
+your head and face. We are of the same height--you only need to walk as I
+do--as if you were blind--across the hall to the left. Eudaldo will open
+the outer door for you. You will just nod to thank him, without speaking,
+and when you are outside, touch the wall of the corridor with your left
+hand, and keep close to it. I always do, for fear of running against some
+one. If you meet any of the women, they will take you for me. There is
+never much light in the corridor, is there? There is one oil lamp half way
+down, I know, for I always smell it when I pass in the evening."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is almost dark there--it is a little lamp. Do you really think
+this is possible?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is possible, not sure. If you hear footsteps in the corridor beyond
+the corner, you will have time to slip into one of the embrasures. But our
+father will not come now. He knows that Don John is in his own apartments
+with many people. And besides, it is to be a great festival to-night, and
+all the court people and officers, and the Archbishop, and all the rest who
+do not live in the palace will come from the city, so that our father will
+have to command the troops and give orders for the guards to march out, and
+a thousand things will take his time. Don John cannot possibly come here
+till after the royal supper, and if our father can come away at all, it
+will be at the same time. That is the danger."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores shivered and saw the vision in the corridor again.</p>
+
+<p>"But if you are seen talking with Don John before supper, no one will
+suppose that in order to meet him you would risk coming back here, where
+you are sure to be caught and locked up again. Do you see?"</p>
+
+<p>"It all depends upon whether I can get out," answered Dolores, but there
+was more hope in her tone. "How am I to dress without a maid?" she asked
+suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Trust me," said Inez, with a laugh. "My hands are better than a
+serving-woman's eyes. You shall look as you never looked before. I know
+every lock of your hair, and just how it should be turned and curled and
+fastened in place so that it cannot possibly get loose. Come, we are
+wasting time. Take off your slippers as I have done, so that no one shall
+hear us walking through the hall to your room, and bring the candles with
+you if you choose--yes, you need them to pick out the colours you
+like."</p>
+
+<p>"If you think it will be safer in the dark, it does not matter," said
+Dolores. "I know where everything is."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be safer," answered Inez thoughtfully. "It is just possible
+that he might be in the court and might see the light in your window,
+whereas if it burns here steadily, he will suspect nothing. We will bolt
+the door of this room, as I found it. If by any possibility he comes back,
+he will think you are still here, and will probably not come in."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray Heaven he may not!" exclaimed Dolores, and she began to go towards
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>Inez was there before her, opening it very cautiously.</p>
+
+<p>"My hands are lighter than yours," she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>They both passed out, and Inez slipped the bolt back into its place with
+infinite precaution.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there light here?" she asked under her breath.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a very small lamp on the table. I can just see my door."</p>
+
+<p>"Put it out as we pass," whispered Inez. "I will lead you if you cannot
+find your way."</p>
+
+<p>They moved cautiously forward, and when they reached the table, Dolores
+bent down to the small wick and blew out the flame. Then she felt her
+sister's hand taking hers and leading her quickly to the other door. The
+blind girl was absolutely noiseless in her movements, and Dolores had the
+strange impression that she was being led by a spirit through the darkness.
+Inez stopped a moment, and then went slowly on; they had entered the room
+though Dolores had not heard the door move, nor did she hear it closed
+behind her again. Her own room was perfectly dark, for the heavy curtain
+that covered the window was drawn; she made a step alone, and cautiously,
+and struck her knee against a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not move," whispered Inez. "You will make a noise. I can dress you
+where you stand, or if you want to find anything, I will lead you to the
+place where it is. Remember that it is always day for me."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores obeyed, and stood still, holding her breath a little in her
+intense excitement. It seemed impossible that Inez could do all she
+promised without making a mistake, and Dolores would not have been a woman
+had she not been visited just then by visions of ridicule. Without light
+she was utterly helpless to do anything for herself, and she had never
+before then fully realized the enormous misfortune with which her sister
+had to contend. She had not guessed, either, what energy and quickness of
+thought Inez possessed, and the sensation of being advised, guided, and
+helped by one she had always herself helped and protected was new.</p>
+
+<p>They spoke in quick whispers of what she was to wear and of how her hair
+was to be dressed, and Inez found what was wanted without noise, and almost
+as quickly as Dolores could have done in broad daylight, and placed a chair
+for her, making her sit down in it, and began to arrange her hair quickly
+and skilfully. Dolores felt the spiritlike hands touching her lightly and
+deftly in the dark--they were very slight and soft, and did not offend her
+with a rough movement or a wrong turn, as her maid's sometimes did. She
+felt her golden hair undone, and swiftly drawn out and smoothed without
+catching, or tangling, or hurting her at all, in a way no woman had ever
+combed it, and the invisible hands gently divided it, and turned it upon
+her head, slipping the hairpins into the right places as if by magic, so
+that they were firm at the first trial, and there was a faint sound of
+little pearls tapping each other, and Dolores felt the small string laid
+upon her hair and fastened in its place,--the only ornament a young girl
+could wear for a headdress,--and presently it was finished, and Inez gave a
+sigh of satisfaction at her work, and lightly felt her sister's head here
+and there to be sure that all was right. It felt as if soft little birds
+were just touching the hair with the tips of their wings as they fluttered
+round it. Dolores had no longer any fear of looking ill dressed in the
+blaze of light she was to face before long. The dressing of her hair was
+the most troublesome part, she knew, and though she could not have done it
+herself, she had felt that every touch and turn had been perfectly
+skilful.</p>
+
+<p>"What a wonderful creature you are!" she whispered, as Inez bade her
+stand up.</p>
+
+<p>"You have beautiful hair," answered the blind girl, "and you are
+beautiful in other ways, but to-night you must be the most beautiful of all
+the court, for his sake--so that every woman may envy you, and every man
+envy him, when they see you talking together. And now we must be quick, for
+it has taken a long time, and I hear the soldiers marching out again to
+form in the square. That is always just an hour and a half before the King
+goes into the hall. Here--this is the front of the skirt."</p>
+
+<p>"No--it is the back!"</p>
+
+<p>Inez laughed softly, a whispering laugh that Dolores could scarcely
+hear.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the front," she said. "You can trust me in the dark. Put your
+arms down, and let me slip it over your head so as not to touch your hair.
+No---hold your arms down!"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores had instinctively lifted her hands to protect her headdress.
+Then all went quickly, the silence only broken by an occasional whispered
+word and by the rustle of silk, the long soft sound of the lacing as Inez
+drew it through the eyelets of the bodice, the light tapping of her hands
+upon the folds and gatherings of the skirt and on the puffed velvet on the
+shoulders and elbows.</p>
+
+<p>"You must be beautiful, perfectly beautiful to-night," Inez repeated
+more than once.</p>
+
+<p>She herself did not understand why she said it, unless it were that
+Dolores' beauty was for Don John of Austria, and that nothing in the whole
+world could be too perfect for him, for the hero of her thoughts, the sun
+of her blindness, the immeasurably far-removed deity of her heart. She did
+not know that it was not for her sister's sake, but for his, that she had
+planned the escape and was taking such infinite pains that Dolores might
+look her best. Yet she felt a deep and delicious delight in what she did,
+like nothing she had ever felt before, for it was the first time in her
+life that she had been able to do something that could give him pleasure;
+and, behind that, there was the belief that he was in danger, that she
+could no longer go to him nor warn him now, and that only Dolores herself
+could hinder him from coming unexpectedly against old Mendoza, sword in
+hand, in the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>"And now my cloak over everything," she said. "Wait here, for I must get
+it, and do not move!"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores hardly knew whether Inez left the room or not, so noiselessly
+did the girl move. Then she felt the cloak laid upon her shoulders and
+drawn close round her to hide her dress, for skirts were short in those
+days and easily hidden. Inez laid a soft silk handkerchief upon her
+sister's hair, lest it should be disarranged by the hood which she lightly
+drew over all, assuring herself that it would sufficiently hide the
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"Now come with me," she whispered. I will lead you to the door that is
+bolted and place you just where it will open. Then I will call Eudaldo and
+speak to him, and beg him to let me out. If he does, bend your head and try
+to walk as I do. I shall be on one side of the door, and, as the room is
+dark, he cannot possibly see me. While he is opening the outer door for
+you, I will slip back into my own room. Do you understand? And remember to
+hide in an embrasure if you hear a man's footsteps. Are you quite sure you
+understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; it will be easy if Eudaldo opens. And I thank you, dear; I wish I
+knew how to thank you as I ought! It may have saved his life--"</p>
+
+<p>"And yours, too, perhaps," answered Inez, beginning to lead her away.
+"You would die in the convent, and you must not come back--you must never
+come back to us here--never till you are married. Good-by, Dolores--dear
+sister. I have done nothing, and you have done everything for me all your
+life. Good-by--one kiss--then we must go, for it is late."</p>
+
+<p>With her soft hands she drew Dolores' head towards her, lifted the hood
+a little, and kissed her tenderly. All at once there were tears on both
+their faces, and the arms of each clasped the other almost desperately.</p>
+
+<p>"You must come to me, wherever I am," Dolores said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I will come, wherever you are. I promise it."</p>
+
+<p>Then she disengaged herself quickly, and more than ever she seemed a
+spirit as she went before, leading her sister by the hand. They reached the
+door, and she made Dolores stand before the right hand panel, ready to slip
+out, and once more she touched the hood to be sure it hid the face. She
+listened a moment. A harsh and regular sound came from a distance,
+resembling that made by a pit-saw steadily grinding its way lengthwise
+through a log of soft pine wood.</p>
+
+<p>"Eudaldo is asleep," said Inez, and even at this moment she could hardly
+suppress a half-hysterical laugh. "I shall have to make a tremendous noise
+to wake him. The danger is that it may bring some one else,---the women,
+the rest of the servants."</p>
+
+<p>"What shall we do?" asked Dolores, in a distressed whisper.</p>
+
+<p>She had braced her nerves to act the part of her sister at the dangerous
+moment, and her excitement made every instant of waiting seem ten times its
+length. Inez did not answer the question at once. Dolores repeated it still
+more anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"I was trying to make up my mind," said the other at last. "You could
+pass Eudaldo well enough, I am sure, but it might be another matter if the
+hall were full of servants, as it is certain that our father has given a
+general order that you are not to be allowed to go out. We may wait an hour
+for the man to wake."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores instinctively tried the door, but it was solidly fastened from
+the outside. She felt hot and cold by turns as her anxiety grew more
+intolerable. Each minute made it more possible that she might meet her
+father somewhere outside.</p>
+
+<p>"We must decide something!" she whispered desperately. "We cannot wait
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know what to do," answered Inez. "I have done all I can; I
+never dreamt that Eudaldo would be asleep. At least, it is a sure sign that
+our father is not in the house."</p>
+
+<p>"But he may come at any moment! We must, we must do something at
+once!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will knock softly," said Inez. "Any one who hears it will suppose it
+is a knock at the hall door. If he does not open, some one will go and wake
+him up, and then go away again so as not to be seen."</p>
+
+<p>She clenched her small hand, and knocked three times. Such a sound could
+make not the slightest impression upon Eudaldo's sound sleep, but her
+reasoning was good, as well as ingenious. After waiting a few moments, she
+knocked again, more loudly. Dolores held her breath in the silence that
+followed. Presently a door was opened, and a woman's voice was heard, low
+but sharp.</p>
+
+<p>"Eudaldo, Eudaldo! Some one is knocking at the front door!"</p>
+
+<p>The woman probably shook the old man to rouse him, for his voice came
+next, growling and angry.</p>
+
+<p>"Witch! Hag! Mother of malefactors! Let me alone--I am asleep. Are you
+trying to tear my sleeve off with your greasy claws? Nobody is knocking;
+you probably hear the wine thumping in your ears!"</p>
+
+<p>The woman, who was the drudge and had been cleaning the kitchen, was
+probably used to Eudaldo's manner of expressing himself, for she only
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Wine makes men sleep, but it does not knock at doors," she answered.
+"Some one has knocked twice. You had better go and open the door."</p>
+
+<p>A shuffling sound and a deep yawn announced that Eudaldo was getting out
+of his chair. The two girls heard him moving towards the outer entrance.
+Then they heard the woman go away, shutting the other door behind her, as
+soon as she was sure that Eudaldo was really awake. Then Inez called him
+softly.</p>
+
+<p>"Eudaldo? Here--it was I that knocked--you must let me out, please--come
+nearer."</p>
+
+<p>"Do&ntilde;a Inez?" asked the old man, standing still.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" answered the girl. "Come nearer." She waited, listening while he
+approached. "Listen to me," she continued. "The General has locked me in,
+by mistake. He did not know I was here when he bolted the door. And I am
+hungry and thirsty and very cold, Eudaldo--and you must let me out, and I
+will run to the Duchess Alvarez and stay with her little girl. Indeed,
+Eudaldo, the General did not mean to lock me in, too."</p>
+
+<p>"He said nothing about your ladyship to me," answered the servant
+doubtfully. "But I do not know--" he hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"Please, please, Eudaldo," pleaded Inez, "I am so cold and lonely
+here--"</p>
+
+<p>"But Do&ntilde;a Dolores is there, too," observed Eudaldo.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores held her breath and steadied herself against the panel.</p>
+
+<p>"He shut her into the inner sitting-room. How could I dare to open the
+door! You may go in and knock--she will not answer you."</p>
+
+<p>"Is your ladyship sure that Do&ntilde;a Dolores is within?" asked
+Eudaldo, in a more yielding tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely, perfectly sure!" answered Inez, with perfect truth. "Oh, do
+please let me out."</p>
+
+<p>Slowly the old man drew the bolt, while Dolores' heart stood still, and
+she prepared herself for the danger; for she knew well enough that the
+faithful old servant feared his master much more than he feared the devil
+and all evil spirits, and would prevent her from passing, even with force,
+if he recognized her.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Eudaldo--thank you!" cried Inez, as the latch turned. "And
+open the front door for me, please," she said, putting her lips just where
+the panel was opening.</p>
+
+<p>Then she drew back into the darkness. The door was wide open now, and
+Eudaldo was already shuffling towards the entrance. Dolores went forward,
+bending her head, and trying to affect her sister's step. No distance had
+ever seemed so long to her as that which separated her from the hall door
+which Eudaldo was already opening for her. But she dared not hasten her
+step, for though Inez moved with perfect certainty in the house, she always
+walked with a certain deliberate caution, and often stopped to listen,
+while crossing a room. The blind girl was listening now, with all her
+marvellous hearing, to be sure that all went well till Dolores should be
+outside. She knew exactly how many steps there were from where she stood to
+the entrance, for she had often counted them.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores must have been not more than three yards from the door, when
+Inez started involuntarily, for she heard a sound from without, far off--so
+far that Dolores could not possibly have heard it yet, but unmistakable to
+the blind girl's keener ear. She listened intently--there were Dolores'
+last four steps to the open doorway, and there were others from beyond,
+still very far away in the vaulted corridors, but coming nearer. To call
+her sister back would have made all further attempt at escape hopeless--to
+let her go on seemed almost equally fatal--Inez could have shrieked aloud.
+But Dolores had already gone out, and a moment later the heavy door swung
+back to its place, and it was too late to call her. Like an immaterial
+spirit, Inez slipped away from the place where she stood and went back to
+Dolores' room, knowing that Eudaldo would very probably go and knock where
+he supposed her sister to be a prisoner, before slipping the outer bolt
+again. And so he did, muttering an imprecation upon the little lamp that
+had gone out and left the small hall in darkness. Then he knocked, and
+spoke through the door, offering to bring her food, or fire, and repeating
+his words many times, in a supplicating tone, for he was devoted to both
+the sisters, though terror of old Mendoza was the dominating element in his
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>At last he shook his head and turned despondently to light the little
+lamp again; and when he had done that, he went away and bolted the door
+after him, convinced that Inez had gone out and that Dolores had stayed
+behind in the last room.</p>
+
+<p>When she had heard him go away the last time, the blind girl threw
+herself upon Dolores' bed, and buried her face in the down cushion, sobbing
+bitterly in her utter loneliness; weeping, too, for something she did not
+understand, but which she felt the more painfully because she could not
+understand it, something that was at once like a burning fire and an
+unspeakable emptiness craving to be filled, something that longed and
+feared, and feared longing, something that was a strong bodily pain but
+which she somehow knew might have been the source of all earthly
+delight,--an element detached from thought and yet holding it, above the
+body and yet binding it, touching the soul and growing upon it, but filling
+the soul itself with fear and unquietness, and making her heart cry out
+within her as if it were not hers and were pleading to be free. So, as she
+could not understand that this was love, which, as she had heard said, made
+women and men most happy, like gods and goddesses, above their kind, she
+lay alone in the darkness that was always as day to her, and wept her heart
+out in scalding tears.</p>
+
+<p>In the corridor outside, Dolores made a few steps, remembering to put
+out her left hand to touch the wall, as Inez had told her to do; and then
+she heard what had reached her sister's ears much sooner. She stood still
+an instant, strained her eyes to see in the dim light of the single lamp,
+saw nothing, and heard the sound coming nearer. Then she quickly crossed
+the corridor to the nearest embrasure to hide herself. To her horror she
+realized that the light of the full moon was streaming in as bright as day,
+and that she could not be hid. Inez knew nothing of moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>She pressed herself to the wall, on the side away from her own door,
+making herself as small as she could, for it was possible that whoever came
+by might pass without turning his head. Nervous and exhausted by all she
+had felt and been made to feel since the afternoon, she held her breath and
+waited.</p>
+
+<p>The regular tread of a man booted and spurred came relentlessly towards
+her, without haste and without pause. No one who wore spurs but her father
+ever came that way. She listened breathlessly to the hollow echoes, and
+turned her eyes along the wall of the embrasure. In a moment she must see
+his gaunt figure, and the moonlight would be white on his short grey
+beard.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_IV'></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+
+<p>Dolores knew that there was no time to reflect as to what she should do,
+if her father found her hiding in the embrasure, and yet in those short
+seconds a hundred possibilities flashed through her disturbed thoughts. She
+might slip past him and run for her life down the corridor, or she might
+draw her hood over her face and try to pretend that she was some one
+else,--but he would recognize the hood itself as belonging to Inez,--or she
+might turn and lean upon the window-sill, indifferently, as if she had a
+right to be there, and he might take her for some lady of the court, and
+pass on. And yet she could not decide which to attempt, and stood still,
+pressing herself against the wall of the embrasure, and quite forgetful of
+the fact that the bright moonlight fell unhindered through all the other
+windows upon the pavement, whereas she cast a shadow from the one in which
+she was standing, and that any one coming along the corridor would notice
+it and stop to see who was there.</p>
+
+<p>There was something fateful and paralyzing in the regular footfall that
+was followed instantly by the short echo from the vault above. It was close
+at hand now she was sure that at the very next instant she should see her
+father's face, yet nothing came, except the sound, for that deceived her in
+the silence and seemed far nearer than it was. She had heard horrible ghost
+stories of the old Alcazar, and as a child she had been frightened by tales
+of evil things that haunted the corridors at night, of wraiths and goblins
+and Moorish wizards who dwelt in secret vaults, where no one knew, and came
+out in the dark, when all was still, to wander in the moonlight, a terror
+to the living. The girl felt the thrill of unearthly fear at the roots of
+her hair, and trembled, and the sound seemed to be magnified till it
+re&euml;choed like thunder, though it was only the noise of an advancing
+footfall, with a little jingling of spurs.</p>
+
+<p>But at last there was no doubt. It was close to her, and she shut her
+eyes involuntarily. She heard one step more on the stones, and then there
+was silence. She knew that her father had seen her, had stopped before her,
+and was looking at her. She knew how his rough brows were knitting
+themselves together, and that even in the pale moonlight his eyes were
+fierce and angry, and that his left hand was resting on the hilt of his
+sword, the bony brown fingers tapping the basket nervously. An hour
+earlier, or little more, she had faced him as bravely as any man, but she
+could not face him now, and she dared not open her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Madam, are you ill, or in trouble?" asked a young voice that was soft
+and deep.</p>
+
+<p>She opened her eyes with a sharp cry that was not of fear, and she threw
+back her hood with one hand as the looked.</p>
+
+<p>Don John of Austria was there, a step from her, the light full on his
+face, bareheaded, his cap in his hand, bending a little towards her, as one
+does towards a person one does not know, but who seems to be in distress
+and to need help. Against the whiteness without he could not see her face,
+nor could he recognize her muffled figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Can I not help you, Madam?" asked the kind voice again, very
+gravely.</p>
+
+<p>Then she put out her hands towards him and made a step, and as the hood
+fell quite back with the silk kerchief, he saw her golden hair in the
+silver light. Slowly and in wonder, and still not quite believing, he moved
+to meet her movement, took her hands in his, drew her to him, turned her
+face gently, till he saw it well. Then he, too, uttered a little sound that
+was neither a word nor a syllable nor a cry--a sound that was half fierce
+with strong delight as his lips met hers, and his hands were suddenly at
+her waist lifting her slowly to his own height, though he did not know it,
+pressing her closer and closer to him, as if that one kiss were the first
+and last that ever man gave woman.</p>
+
+<p>A minute passed, and yet neither he nor she could speak. She stood with
+her hands clasped round his neck, and her head resting on his breast just
+below the shoulder, as if she were saying tender words to the heart she
+heard beating so loud through the soft black velvet. She knew that it had
+never beaten in battle as it was beating now, and she loved it because it
+knew her and welcomed her; but her own stood still, and now and then it
+fluttered wildly, like a strong young bird in a barred cage, and then was
+quite still again. Bending his face a little, he softly kissed her hair
+again and again, till at last the kisses formed themselves into syllables
+and words, which she felt rather than heard.</p>
+
+<p>"God in heaven, how I love you--heart of my heart--life of my life--love
+of my soul!"</p>
+
+<p>And again he repeated the same words, and many more like them, with
+little change, because at that moment he had neither thought nor care for
+anything else in the world, not for life nor death nor kingdom nor glory,
+in comparison with the woman he loved. He could not hear her answers, for
+she spoke without words to his heart, hiding her face where she heard it
+throbbing, while her lips pressed many kisses on the velvet.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as thought returned, and the first thought was for him, she drew
+back a little with a quick movement, and looked up to him with frightened
+and imploring eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"We must go!" she cried anxiously, in a very low voice. "We cannot stay
+here. My father is very angry--he swore on his word of honour that he would
+kill you if you tried to see me to-night!"</p>
+
+<p>Don John laughed gently, and his eyes brightened. Before she could speak
+again, he held her close once more, and his kisses were on her cheeks and
+her eyes, on her forehead and on her hair, and then again upon her lips,
+till they would have hurt her if she had not loved them so, and given back
+every one. Then she struggled again, and he loosed his hold.</p>
+
+<p>"It is death to stay here," she said very earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is worse than death to leave you," he answered. "And I will not," he
+added an instant later, "neither for the King, nor for your father, nor for
+any royal marriage they may try to force upon me."</p>
+
+<p>She looked into his eyes for a moment, before she spoke, and there was
+deep and true trust in her own.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you must save me," she said quietly. "He has vowed that I shall be
+sent to the convent of Las Huelgas to-morrow morning. He locked me into the
+inner room, but Inez helped me to dress, and I got out under her
+cloak."</p>
+
+<p>She told him in a few words what she had done and had meant to do, in
+order to see him, and how she had taken his step for her father's. He
+listened gravely, and she saw his face harden slowly in an expression she
+had scarcely ever seen there. When she had finished her story he was silent
+for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"We are quite safe here," he said at last, "safer than anywhere else, I
+think, for your father cannot come back until the King goes to supper. For
+myself, I have an hour, but I have been so surrounded and pestered by
+visitors in my apartments that I have not found time to put on a court
+dress--and without vanity, I presume that I am a necessary figure at court
+this evening. Your father is with Perez, who seems to be acting as master
+of ceremonies and of everything else, as well as the King's secretary--they
+have business together, and the General will not have a moment. I
+ascertained that, before coming here, or I should not have come at this
+hour. We are safe from him here, I am sure."</p>
+
+<p>"You know best," answered Dolores, who was greatly reassured by what he
+said about Mendoza.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us sit down, then. You must be tired after all you have done. And
+we have much to say to each other."</p>
+
+<p>"How could I be tired now?" she asked, with a loving smile; but she sat
+down on the stone seat in the embrasure, close to the window.</p>
+
+<p>It was just wide enough for two to sit there, and Don John took his
+place beside her, and drew one of her hands silently to him between both
+his own, and kissed the tips of her fingers a great many times. But he felt
+that she was watching his face, and he looked up and saw her eyes--and
+then, again, many seconds passed before either could speak. They were but a
+boy and girl together, loving each other in the tender first love of early
+youth, for the victor of the day, the subduer of the Moors, the man who had
+won back Granada, who was already High Admiral of Spain, and who in some
+ten months from that time was to win a decisive battle of the world at
+Lepanto, was a stripling of twenty-three summers--and he had first seen
+Dolores when he was twenty and she seventeen, and now it was nearly two
+years since they had met.</p>
+
+<p>He was the first to speak, for he was a man of quick and unerring
+determinations that led to actions as sudden as they were bold and
+brilliant, and what Dolores had told him of her quarrel with her father was
+enough to rouse his whole energy at once. At all costs she must never be
+allowed to pass the gates of Las Huelgas. Once within the convent, by the
+King's orders, and a close prisoner, nothing short of a sacrilegious
+assault and armed violence could ever bring her out into the world again.
+He knew that, and that he must act instantly to prevent it, for he knew
+Mendoza's character also, and had no doubt but that he would do what he
+threatened. It was necessary to put Dolores beyond his reach at once, and
+beyond the King's also, which was not an easy matter within the walls of
+the King's own palace, and on such a night. Don John had been but little at
+the court and knew next to nothing of its intrigues, nor of the mutual
+relations of the ladies and high officers who had apartments in the
+Alcazar. In his own train there were no women, of course. Dolores' brother
+Rodrigo, who had fought by his side at Granada, had begged to be left
+behind with the garrison, in order that he might not be forced to meet his
+father. Do&ntilde;a Magdalena Quixada, Don John's adoptive mother, was far
+away at Villagarcia. The Duchess Alvarez, though fond of Dolores, was
+Mistress of the Robes to the young Queen, and it was not to be hoped nor
+expected that she should risk the danger of utter ruin and disgrace if it
+were discovered that she had hidden the girl against the King's wishes. Yet
+it was absolutely necessary that Dolores should be safely hidden within an
+hour, and that she should be got out of the palace before morning, and if
+possible conveyed to Villagarcia. Don John saw in a moment that there was
+no one to whom he could turn.</p>
+
+<p>Again he took Dolores' hand in his, but with a sort of gravity and
+protecting authority that had not been in his touch the first time.
+Moreover, he did not kiss her fingers now, and he resolutely looked at the
+wall opposite him. Then, in a low and quiet voice, he laid the situation
+before her, while she anxiously listened.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," he said at last, "there is only one way left. Dolores, do you
+altogether trust me?"</p>
+
+<p>She started a little, and her fingers pressed his hand suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Trust you? Ah, with all my soul!"</p>
+
+<p>"Think well before you answer," he said. "You do not quite
+understand--it is a little hard to put it clearly, but I must. I know you
+trust me in many ways, to love you faithfully always, to speak truth to you
+always, to defend you always, to help you with my life when you shall be in
+need. You know that I love you so, as you love me. Have we not often said
+it? You wrote it in your letter, too--ah, dear, I thank you for that. Yes,
+I have read it--I have it here, near my heart, and I shall read it again
+before I sleep--"</p>
+
+<p>Without a word, and still listening, she bent down and pressed her lips
+to the place where her letter lay. He touched her hair with his lips and
+went on speaking, as she leaned back against the wall again.</p>
+
+<p>"You must trust me even more than that, my beloved," he said. "To save
+you, you must be hidden by some one whom I myself can trust--and for such a
+matter there is no one in the palace nor in all Madrid--no one to whom I
+can turn and know that you will be safe--not one human being, except
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Except yourself!" Dolores loved the words, and gently pressed his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you, dearest heart--but do you know what that means? Do you
+understand that I must hide you myself, in my own apartments, and keep you
+there until I can take you out of the palace, before morning?"</p>
+
+<p>She was silent for a few moments, turning her face away from him. His
+heart sank.</p>
+
+<p>"No, dear," he said sadly, "you do not trust me enough for that--I see
+it--what woman could?"</p>
+
+<p>Her hand trembled and started in his, then pressed it hard, and she
+turned her face quite to him.</p>
+
+<p>"You are wrong," she said, with a tremor in her voice. "I love you as no
+man was ever loved by any woman, far beyond all that all words can say, and
+I shall love you till I die, and after that, for ever--even if I can never
+be your wife. I love you as no one loves in these days, and when I say that
+it is as you love me, I mean a thousand fold for every word. I am not the
+child you left nearly two years ago. I am a woman now, for I have thought
+and seen much since then--and I love you better and more than then. God
+knows, there is enough to see and to learn in this court--that should be
+hidden deep from honest women's sight! You and I shall have a heaven on
+this earth, if God grants that we may be joined together--for I will live
+for you, and serve you, and smooth all trouble out of your way--and ask
+nothing of you but your love. And if we cannot marry, then I will live for
+you in my heart, and serve you with my soul, and pray Heaven that harm may
+never touch you. I will pray so fervently that God must hear me. And so
+will you pray for me, as you would fight for me, if you could. Remember, if
+you will, that when you are in battle for Spain, your sword is drawn for
+Spain's honour, and for the honour of every Christian Spanish woman that
+lives--and for mine, too!"</p>
+
+<p>The words pleased him, and his free hand was suddenly clenched.</p>
+
+<p>"You would make cowards fight like wolves, if you could speak to them
+like that!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not speaking to cowards," she answered, with a loving smile. "I am
+speaking to the man I love, to the best and bravest and truest man that
+breathes--and not to Don John of Austria, the victorious leader, but to
+you, my heart's love, my life, my all, to you who are good and brave and
+true to me, as no man ever was to any woman. No--" she laughed happily, and
+there were tears in her eyes--"no, there are no words for such love as
+ours."</p>
+
+<p>"May I be all you would have me, and much more," he said fervently, and
+his voice shook in the short speech.</p>
+
+<p>"I am giving you all I have, because it is not belief, it is certainty.
+I know you are all that I say you are, and more too. And I trust you, as
+you mean it, and as you need my trust to save me. Take me where you will.
+Hide me in your own room if you must, and bolt and bar it if need be. I
+shall be as safe with you as I should be with my mother in heaven. I put my
+hands between yours."</p>
+
+<p>Again he heard her sweet low laughter, full of joy and trust, and she
+laid her hands together between his and looked into his eyes, straight and
+clear. Then she spoke softly and solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>"Into your hands I put my life, and my faith, and my maiden honour,
+trusting them all to you alone in this world, as I trust them to God."</p>
+
+<p>Don John held her hands tightly for a moment, still looking into her
+eyes as if he could see her soul there, giving itself to his keeping. But
+he swore no great oath, and made no long speech; for a man who has led men
+to deeds of glory, and against whom no dishonourable thing was ever
+breathed, knows that his word is good.</p>
+
+<p>"You shall not regret that you trust me, and you will be quite safe," he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>She wanted no more. Loving as she did, she believed in him without
+promises, yet she could not always believe that he quite knew how she loved
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"You are dearer to me than I knew," he said presently, breaking the
+silence that followed. "I love you even more, and I thought it could never
+be more, when I found you here a little while ago--because you do really
+trust me."</p>
+
+<p>"You knew it," the said, nestling to him. "But you wanted me to tell
+you. Yes--we are nearer now."</p>
+
+<p>"Far nearer--and a world more dear," he answered. "Do you know? In all
+these months I have often and often again wondered how we should meet,
+whether it would be before many people, or only with your sister Inez
+there--or perhaps alone. But I did not dare hope for that."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I. I have dreamt of meeting you a hundred times--and more than
+that! But there was always some one in the way. I suppose that if we had
+found each other in the court and had only been able to say a few words, it
+would have been a long time before we were quite ourselves together--but
+now, it seems as if we had never been parted at all, does it not?"</p>
+
+<p>"As if we could never be parted again," he answered softly.</p>
+
+<p>For a little while there was silence, and though there was to be a great
+gathering of the court, that night, all was very still where the lovers sat
+at the window, for the throne room and the great halls of state were far
+away on the other side of the palace, and the corridor looked upon a court
+through which few persons had to pass at night. Suddenly from a distance
+there came the rhythmical beat of the Spanish drums, as some detachment of
+troops marched by the outer gate. Don John listened.</p>
+
+<p>"Those are my men," he said. "We must go, for now that they are below I
+can send my people on errands with orders to them, until I am alone. Then
+you must come in. At the end of my apartments there is a small room, beyond
+my own. It is furnished to be my study, and no one will expect to enter it
+at night. I must put you there, and lock the door and take the key with me,
+so that no one can go in while I am at court--or else you can lock it on
+the inside, yourself. That would be better, perhaps," he added rather
+hurriedly.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the girl quietly. "I prefer that you should have the key. I
+shall feel even safer. But how can I get there without being seen? We
+cannot go so far together without meeting some one."</p>
+
+<p>He rose, and she stood up beside him.</p>
+
+<p>"My apartments open upon the broad terrace on the south side," he said.
+"At this time there will be only two or three officers there, and my two
+servants. Follow me at a little distance, with your hood over your face,
+and when you reach the sentry-box at the corner where I turn off, go in.
+There will be no sentinel there, and the door looks outward. I shall send
+away every one, on different errands, in five minutes. When every one is
+gone I will come for you. Is that clear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly." She nodded, as if she had made quite sure of what he had
+explained. Then she put up her hands, as if to say good-by. "Oh, if we
+could only stay here in peace!" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>He said nothing, for he knew that there was still much danger, and he
+was anxious for her. He only pressed her hands and then led her away. They
+followed the corridor together, side by side, to the turning. Then he
+whispered to her to drop behind, and she let him go on a dozen paces and
+followed him. The way was long, and ill lighted at intervals by oil lamps
+hung from the vault by small chains; they cast a broad black shadow beneath
+them, and shed a feeble light above. Several times persons passed them, and
+Dolores' heart beat furiously. A court lady, followed by a duenna and a
+serving-woman, stopped with a winning smile, and dropped a low courtesy to
+Don John, who lifted his cap, bowed, and went on. They did not look at
+Dolores. A man in a green cloth apron and loose slippers, carrying five
+lighted lamps in a greasy iron tray, passed with perfect indifference, and
+without paying the least attention to the victor of Granada. It was his
+business to carry lamps in that part of the palace--he was not a human
+being, but a lamplighter. They went on, down a short flight of broad steps,
+and then through a wider corridor where the lights were better, though the
+night breeze was blowing in and made them flicker and flare.</p>
+
+<p>A corporal's guard of the household halberdiers came swinging down at a
+marching step, coming from the terrace beyond. The corporal crossed his
+halberd in salute, but Don John stopped him, for he understood at once that
+a sentry had been set at his door.</p>
+
+<p>"I want no guard," he said. "Take the man away."</p>
+
+<p>"The General ordered it, your Highness," answered the man,
+respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Request your captain to report to the General that I particularly
+desire no sentinel at my door. I have no possessions to guard except my
+reputation, and I can take care of that myself." He laughed
+good-naturedly.</p>
+
+<p>The corporal grinned--he was a very dark, broad-faced man, with high
+cheek bones, and ears that stuck out. He faced about with his three
+soldiers, and followed Don John to the terrace--but in the distance he had
+seen the hooded figure of a woman.</p>
+
+<p>Not knowing what to do, for she had heard the colloquy, Dolores stood
+still a moment, for she did not care to pass the soldiers as they came
+back. Then she turned and walked a little way in the other direction, to
+gain time, and kept on slowly. In less than a minute they returned,
+bringing the sentinel with them. She walked slowly and counted them as they
+went past her--and then she started as if she had been stung, and blushed
+scarlet under her hood, for she distinctly heard the big corporal laugh to
+himself when he had gone by. She knew, then, how she trusted the man she
+loved.</p>
+
+<p>When the soldiers had turned the corner and were out of sight, she ran
+back to the terrace and hid herself in the stone sentry-box just outside,
+still blushing and angry. On the side of the box towards Don John's
+apartment there was a small square window just at the height of her eyes,
+and she looked through it, sure that her face could not be seen from
+without. She looked from mere curiosity, to see what sort of men the
+officers were, and Don John's servants; for everything connected with him
+or belonging to him in any way interested her most intensely. Two tall
+captains came out first, magnificent in polished breastplates with gold
+shoulder straps and sashes and gleaming basket-hilted swords, that stuck up
+behind them as their owners pressed down the hilts and strutted along,
+twisting their short black moustaches in the hope of meeting some court
+lady on their way. Then another and older man passed, also in a soldier's
+dress, but with bent head, apparently deep in thought. After that no one
+came for some time--then a servant, who pulled something out of his pocket
+and began to eat it, before he was in the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>Then a woman came past the little window. Dolores saw her as distinctly
+as she had seen the four men. She came noiselessly and stealthily, putting
+down her foot delicately, like a cat. She was a lady, and she wore a loose
+cloak that covered all her gown, and on her head a thick veil, drawn
+fourfold across her face. Her gait told the girl that she was young and
+graceful--something in the turn of the head made her sure that she was
+beautiful, too--something in the whole figure and bearing was familiar. The
+blood sank from Dolores' cheeks, and she felt a chill slowly rising to her
+heart. The lady entered the corridor and went on quickly, turned, and was
+out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>Then all at once, Dolores laughed to herself, noiselessly, and was happy
+again, in spite of her danger. There was nothing to disturb her, she
+reflected. The terrace was long, there were doubtless other apartments
+beyond Don John's, though she had not known it. The lady had indeed walked
+cautiously, but it might well be that she had reasons for not being seen
+there, and that the further rooms were not hers. The Alcazar was only an
+old Moorish castle, after all, restored and irregularly enlarged, and
+altogether very awkwardly built, so that many of the apartments could only
+be reached by crossing open terraces.</p>
+
+<p>When Don John came to get her in the sentry-box, Dolores' momentary
+doubt was gone, though not all her curiosity. She smiled as she came out of
+her hiding-place and met his eyes--clear and true as her own. She even
+hated herself for having thought that the lady could have come from his
+apartment at all. The light was streaming from his open door as he led her
+quickly towards it. There were three windows beyond it, and there the
+terrace ended. She looked at the front as they were passing, and counted
+again three windows between the open door and the corner where the
+sentry-box stood.</p>
+
+<p>"Who lives in the rooms beyond you?" she asked quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"No one--the last is the one where you are to be." He seemed
+surprised.</p>
+
+<p>They had reached the open door, and he stood aside to let her go in.</p>
+
+<p>"And on this side?" she asked, speaking with a painful effort.</p>
+
+<p>"My drawing-room and dining-room," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>She paused and drew breath before she spoke again, and she pressed one
+hand to her side under her cloak.</p>
+
+<p>"Who was the lady who came from here when all the men were gone?" she
+asked, very pale.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_V'></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+
+<p>Don John was a man not easily taken off his guard, but he started
+perceptibly at Dolores' question. He did not change colour, however, nor
+did his eyes waver; he looked fixedly into her face.</p>
+
+<p>"No lady has been here," he answered quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores doubted the evidence of her own senses. Her belief in the man
+she loved was so great that his words seemed at first to have destroyed and
+swept away what must have been a bad dream, or a horrible illusion, and her
+face was quiet and happy again as she passed him and went in through the
+open entrance. She found herself in a vestibule from which doors opened to
+the right and left. He turned in the latter direction, leading the way into
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>It was his bedchamber. Built in the Moorish manner, the vaulting began
+at the height of a man's head, springing upward in bold and graceful curves
+to a great height. The room was square and very large, and the wall below
+the vault was hung with very beautiful tapestries representing the battle
+of Pavia, the surrender of Francis the First, and a sort of apotheosis of
+the Emperor Charles, the father of Don John. There were two tall windows,
+which were quite covered by curtains of a dark brocade, in which the coats
+of Spain and the Empire were woven in colours at regular intervals; and
+opposite them, with the head to the wall, stood a vast curtained bedstead
+with carved posts twice a man's height. The vaulting had been cut on that
+side, in order that the foot of the bed might stand back against the wall.
+The canopy had coats of arms at the four corners, and the curtains were of
+dark green corded silk, heavily embroidered with gold thread in the
+beautiful scrolls and arabesques of the period of the Renascence. A carved
+table, dark and polished, stood half way between the foot of the bedstead
+and the space between the windows, where a magnificent kneeling-stool with
+red velvet cushions was placed under a large crucifix. Half a dozen big
+chairs were ranged against the long walls on each side of the room, and two
+commodious folding chairs with cushions of embossed leather were beside the
+table. Opposite the door by which Dolores had entered, another communicated
+with the room beyond. Both were carved and ornamented with scroll work of
+gilt bronze, but were without curtains. Three or four Eastern, rugs covered
+the greater part of the polished marble pavement, which here and there
+reflected the light of the tall wax torches that stood on the table in
+silver candlesticks, and on each side of the bed upon low stands. The vault
+above the tapestried walls was very dark blue, and decorated with gilded
+stars in relief. Dolores thought the room gloomy, and almost funereal. The
+bed looked like a catafalque, the candles like funeral torches, and the
+whole place breathed the magnificent discomfort of royalty, and seemed
+hardly intended for a human habitation.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores barely glanced at it all, as her companion locked the first door
+and led her on to the next room. He knew that he had not many minutes to
+spare, and was anxious that she should be in her hiding-place before his
+servants came back. She followed him and went in. Unlike the bedchamber,
+the small study was scantily and severely furnished. It contained only a
+writing-table, two simple chairs, a straight-backed divan covered with
+leather, and a large chest of black oak bound with ornamented steel work.
+The window was curtained with dark stuff, and two wax candles burned
+steadily beside the writing-materials that were spread out ready for
+use.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the room," Don John said, speaking for the first time since
+they had entered the apartments.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores let her head fall back, and began to loosen her cloak at her
+throat without answering him. He helped her, and laid the long garment upon
+the divan. Then he turned and saw her in the full light of the candles,
+looking at him, and he uttered an exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" she asked almost dreamily.</p>
+
+<p>"You are very beautiful," he answered in a low voice. "You are the most
+beautiful woman I ever saw."</p>
+
+<p>The merest girl knows the tone of a man whose genuine admiration breaks
+out unconsciously in plain words, and Dolores was a grown woman. A faint
+colour rose in her cheek, and her lips parted to smile, but her eyes were
+grave and anxious, for the doubt had returned, and would not be thrust
+away. She had seen the lady in the cloak and veil during several seconds,
+and though Dolores, who had been watching the men who passed, had not
+actually seen her come out of Don John's apartments, but had been suddenly
+aware of her as she glided by, it seemed out of the question that she
+should have come from any other place. There was neither niche nor
+embrasure between the door and the corridor, in which the lady could have
+been hidden, and it was hardly conceivable that she should have been
+waiting outside for some mysterious purpose, and should not have fled as
+soon as she heard the two officers coming out, since she evidently wished
+to escape observation. On the other hand, Don John had quietly denied that
+any woman had been there, which meant at all events that he had not seen
+any one. It could mean nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores was neither foolishly jealous nor at all suspicious by nature,
+and the man was her ideal of truthfulness and honour. She stood looking at
+him, resting one hand on the table, while he came slowly towards her,
+moving almost unconsciously in the direction of her exquisite beauty, as a
+plant lifts itself to the sun at morning. He was near to her, and he
+stretched out his arms as if to draw her to him. She smiled then, for in
+his eyes she forgot her trouble for a moment, and she would have kissed
+him. But suddenly his face grew grave, and he set his teeth, and instead of
+taking her into his arms, he took one of her hands and raised it to his
+lips, as if it had been the hand of his brother's wife, the young
+Queen.</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" she asked in surprise, and with a little start.</p>
+
+<p>"You are here under my protection," he answered. "Let me have my own
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I understand. How good you are to me!" She paused, and then went
+on, seating herself upon one of the chairs by the table as she spoke. "You
+must leave me now," she said. "You must lock me in and keep the key. Then I
+shall know that I am safe; and in the meantime you must decide how I am to
+escape--it will not be easy." She stopped again. "I wonder who that woman
+was!" she exclaimed at last.</p>
+
+<p>"There was no woman here," replied Don John, as quietly and assuredly as
+before.</p>
+
+<p>He was leaning upon the table at the other side, with both hands resting
+upon it, looking at her beautiful hair as she bent her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Say that you did not see her," she said, "not that she was not here,
+for she passed me after all the men, walking very cautiously to make no
+noise; and when she was in the corridor she ran--she was young and
+light-footed. I could not see her face."</p>
+
+<p>"You believe me, do you not?" asked Don John, bending over the table a
+little, and speaking very anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>She turned her face up instantly, her eyes wide and bright.</p>
+
+<p>"Should I be here if I did not trust you and believe you?" she asked
+almost fiercely. "Do you think--do you dare to think--that I would have
+passed your door if I had supposed that another woman had been here before
+me, and had been turned out to make room for me, and would have stayed
+here--here in your room--if you had not sent her away? If I had thought
+that, I would have left you at your door forever. I would have gone back to
+my father. I would have gone to Las Huelgas to-morrow, and not to be a
+prisoner, but to live and die there in the only life fit for a
+broken-hearted woman. Oh, no! You dare not think that,--you who would dare
+anything! If you thought that, you could not love me as I love
+you,--believing, trusting, staking life and soul on your truth and
+faith!"</p>
+
+<p>The generous spirit had risen in her eyes, roused not against him, but
+by all his question might be made to mean; and as she met his look of
+grateful gladness her anger broke away, and left only perfect love and
+trust behind it.</p>
+
+<p>"A man would die for you, and wish he might die twice," he answered,
+standing upright, as if a weight had been taken from him and he were free
+to breathe.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at the pale, strong features of the young fighter, who was
+so great and glorious almost before the down had thickened on his lip; and
+she saw something almost above nature in his face,--something high and
+angelic, yet manly and well fitted to face earthly battles. He was her sun,
+her young god, her perfect image of perfection, the very source of her
+trust. It would have killed her to doubt him. Her whole soul went up to him
+in her eyes; and as he was ready to die for her, she knew that for him she
+would suffer every anguish death could hold, and not flinch.</p>
+
+<p>Then she looked down, and suddenly laughed a little oddly, and her
+finger pointed towards the pens and paper.</p>
+
+<p>"She has left something behind," she said. "She was clever to get in
+here and slip out again without being seen."</p>
+
+<p>Don John looked where she pointed, and saw a small letter folded round
+the stems of two white carnations, and neatly tied with a bit of twisted
+silk. It was laid between the paper and the bronze inkstand, and half
+hidden by the broad white feather of a goose-quill pen, that seemed to have
+been thrown carelessly across the flowers. It lay there as if meant to be
+found, only by one who wrote, and not to attract too much attention.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" he exclaimed, in a rather singular tone, as he saw it, and a
+boyish blush reddened his face.</p>
+
+<p>Then he took the letter and drew out the two flowers by the blossoms
+very carefully. Dolores watched him. He seemed in doubt as to what he
+should do; and the blush subsided quickly, and gave way to a look of
+settled annoyance. The carnations were quite fresh, and had evidently not
+been plucked more than an hour. He held them up a moment and looked at
+them, then laid them down again and took the note. There was no writing on
+the outside. Without opening it he held it to the flame of the candle, but
+Dolores caught his wrist.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you not read it?" she asked quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear, I do not know who wrote it, and I do not wish to know anything
+you do not know also."</p>
+
+<p>"You have no idea who the woman is?" Dolores looked at him
+wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Not the very least," he answered with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>"But I should like to know so much!" she cried. "Do read it and tell me.
+I do not understand the thing at all."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot do that." He shook his head. "That would be betraying a
+woman's secret. I do not know who it is, and I must not let you know, for
+that would not be honourable."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," she said, after a pause. "You always are. Burn it."</p>
+
+<p>He pushed the point of a steel erasing-knife through the piece of folded
+paper and held it over the flame. It turned brown, crackled and burst into
+a little blaze, and in a moment the black ashes fell fluttering to the
+table.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you suppose it was?" asked Dolores innocently, as Don John
+brushed the ashes away.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear--it is very ridiculous--I am ashamed of it, and I do not quite
+know how to explain it to you." Again he blushed a little. "It seems
+strange to speak of it--I never even told my mother. At first I used to
+open them, but now I generally burn them like this one."</p>
+
+<p>"Generally! Do you mean to say that you often find women's letters with
+flowers in them on your table?"</p>
+
+<p>"I find them everywhere," answered Don John, with perfect simplicity. "I
+have found them in my gloves, tied into the basket hilt of my sword--often
+they are brought to me like ordinary letters by a messenger who waits for
+an answer. Once I found one on my pillow!"</p>
+
+<p>"But"--Dolores hesitated--"but are they--are they all from the same
+person?" she asked timidly. Don John laughed, and shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"She would need to be a very persistent and industrious person," he
+answered. "Do you not understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Who are these women who persecute you with their writing? And why
+do they write to you? Do they want you to help them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not exactly that;" he was still smiling. "I ought not to laugh, I
+suppose. They are ladies of the court sometimes, and sometimes others, and
+I--I fancy that they want me to--how shall I say?--to begin by writing them
+letters of the same sort."</p>
+
+<p>"What sort of letters?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why--love letters," answered Don John, driven to extremity in spite of
+his resistance.</p>
+
+<p>"Love letters!" cried Dolores, understanding at last. "Do you mean to
+say that there are women whom you do not know, who tell you that they love
+you before you have ever spoken to them? Do you mean that a lady of the
+court, whom you have probably never even seen, wrote that note and tied it
+up with flowers and risked everything to bring it here, just in the hope
+that you might notice her? It is horrible! It is vile! It is shameless! It
+is beneath anything!"</p>
+
+<p>"You say she was a lady--you saw her. I did not. But that is what she
+did, whoever she may be."</p>
+
+<p>"And there are women like that--here, in the palace! How little I
+know!"</p>
+
+<p>"And the less you learn about the world, the better," answered the young
+soldier shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"But you have never answered one, have you?" asked Dolores, with a scorn
+that showed how sure she was of his reply.</p>
+
+<p>"No." He spoke thoughtfully. "I once thought of answering one. I meant
+to tell her that she was out of her senses, but I changed my mind. That was
+long ago, before I knew you--when I was eighteen."</p>
+
+<p>"Ever since you were a boy!"</p>
+
+<p>The look of wonder was not quite gone from her face yet, but she was
+beginning to understand more clearly, though still very far from
+distinctly. It did not occur to her once that such things could be
+temptations to the brilliant young leader whom every woman admired and
+every man flattered, and that only his devoted love for her had kept him
+out of ignoble adventures since he had grown to be a man. Had she seen
+that, she would have loved him even better, if it were possible. It was
+all, as she had said, shameless and abominable. She had thought that she
+knew much of evil, and she had even told him so that evening, but this was
+far beyond anything she had dreamt of in her innocent thoughts, and she
+instinctively felt that there were lower depths of degradation to which a
+woman could fall, and of which she would not try to guess the vileness and
+horror.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I burn the flowers, too?" asked Don John, taking them in his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"The flowers? No. They are innocent and fresh. What have they to do with
+her? Give them to me."</p>
+
+<p>He raised them to his lips, looking at her, and then held them out. She
+took them, and kissed them, as he had done, and they both smiled happily.
+Then she fastened them in her hair.</p>
+
+<p>"No one will see me to-night but you," she said. "I may wear flowers in
+my hair like a peasant woman!"</p>
+
+<p>"How they make the gold gleam!" he exclaimed, as he looked. "It is
+almost time that my men came back," he said sadly. "When I go down to the
+court, I shall dismiss them. After the royal supper I shall try and come
+here again and see you. By that time everything will be arranged. I have
+thought of almost everything already. My mother will provide you with
+everything you need. To-morrow evening I can leave this place myself to go
+and see her, as I always do."</p>
+
+<p>He always spoke of Do&ntilde;a Magdalena Quixada as his mother--he had
+never known his own.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores rose from her seat, for he was ready to go.</p>
+
+<p>"I trust you in everything," she said simply. "I do not need to know how
+you will accomplish it all--it is enough to know that you will. Tell Inez,
+if you can--protect her if my father is angry with her."</p>
+
+<p>He held out his hand to take hers, and she was going to give it, as she
+had done before. But it was too little. Before he knew it she had thrown
+her arms round his neck, and was kissing him, with little cries and broken
+words of love. Then she drew back suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"I could not help it," she said. "Now lock me in. No--do not say
+good-by--even for two hours!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will come back as soon as I can," he answered, and with a long look
+he left her, closed the door and locked it after him, leaving her
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>She stood a few moments looking at the panels as if her sight could
+pierce them and reach him on the other side, and she tried to hold the last
+look she had seen in his eyes. Hardly two minutes had elapsed before she
+heard voices and footsteps in the bedchamber. Don John spoke in short
+sentences now and then to his servants, and his voice was commanding though
+it was kindly. It seemed strange to be so near him in his life; she
+wondered whether she should some day always be near him, as she was now,
+and nearer; she blushed, all alone. So many things had happened, and he and
+she had found so much to say that nothing had been said at all of what was
+to follow her flight to Villagarcia. She was to leave for the Quixadas'
+house before morning, but Quixada and his wife could not protect her
+against her father, if he found out where she was, unless she were married.
+After that, neither Mendoza nor any one else, save the King himself, would
+presume to interfere with the liberty of Don John of Austria's wife. All
+Spain would rise to protect her--she was sure of that. But they had said
+nothing about a marriage and had wasted time over that unknown woman's
+abominable letter. Since she reasoned it out to herself, she saw that in
+all probability the ceremony would take place as soon as Don John reached
+Villagarcia. He was powerful enough to demand the necessary permission of
+the Archbishop, and he would bring it with him; but no priest, even in the
+absence of a written order, would refuse to marry him if he desired it.
+Between the real power he possessed and the vast popularity he enjoyed, he
+could command almost anything.</p>
+
+<p>She heard his voice distinctly just then, though she was not listening
+for it. He was telling a servant to bring white shoes. The fact struck her
+because she had never seen him wear any that were not black or yellow. She
+smiled and wished that she might bring him his white shoes and hang his
+order of the Golden Fleece round his neck, and breathe on the polished hilt
+of his sword and rub it with soft leather. She had seen Eudaldo furbish her
+father's weapons in that way since she had been a child.</p>
+
+<p>It had all come so suddenly in the end. Shading her eyes from the
+candles with her hand, she rested one elbow on the table, and tried to
+think of what should naturally have happened, of what must have happened if
+the unknown voice among the courtiers had not laughed and roused her
+father's anger and brought all the rest. Don John would have come to the
+door, and Eudaldo would have let him in--because no one could refuse him
+anything and he was the King's brother. He would have spent half an hour
+with her in the little drawing-room, and it would have been a constrained
+meeting, with Inez near, though she would presently have left them alone.
+Then, by this time, she would have gone down with the Duchess Alvarez and
+the other maids of honour, and by and by she would have followed the Queen
+when she entered the throne room with the King and Don John; and she might
+not have exchanged another word with the latter for a whole day, or two
+days. But now it seemed almost certain that she was to be his wife within
+the coming week. He was in the next room.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not put the sword away," she heard him say. "Leave it here on the
+table."</p>
+
+<p>Of course; what should he do with a sword in his court dress? But if he
+had met her father in the corridor, coming to her after the supper, he
+would have been unarmed. Her father, on the contrary, being on actual duty,
+wore the sword of his rank, like any other officer of the guards, and the
+King wore a rapier as a part of his state dress.</p>
+
+<p>She was astonished at the distinctness with which she heard what was
+said in the next room. That was doubtless due to the construction of the
+vault, as she vaguely guessed. It was true that Don John spoke very
+clearly, but she could hear the servants' subdued answers almost as well,
+when she listened. It seemed to her that he took but a very short time to
+dress.</p>
+
+<p>"I have the key of that room," he said presently. "I have my papers
+there. You are at liberty till midnight. My hat, my gloves. Call my
+gentlemen, one of you, and tell them to meet me in the corridor."</p>
+
+<p>She could almost hear him drawing on his gloves. One of the servants
+went out.</p>
+
+<p>"Fadrique," said Don John, "leave out my riding-cloak. I may like to
+walk on the terrace in the moonlight, and it is cold. Have my drink ready
+at midnight and wait for me. Send Gil to sleep, for he was up last
+night."</p>
+
+<p>There was a strange pleasure in hearing his familiar orders and small
+directions and in seeing how thoughtful he was for his servants. She knew
+that he had always refused to be surrounded by valets and
+gentlemen-in-waiting, and lived very simply when he could, but it was
+different to be brought into such close contact with his life. There was a
+wonderful gentleness in his ways that contrasted widely with her father's
+despotic manner and harsh tone when he gave orders. Mendoza believed
+himself the type and model of a soldier and a gentleman, and he maintained
+that without rigid discipline there could be no order and no safety at home
+or in the army. But between him and Don John there was all the difference
+that separates the born leader of men from the mere martinet.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores listened. It was clear that Don John was not going to send
+Fadrique away in order to see her again before he went down to the throne
+room, though she had almost hoped he might.</p>
+
+<p>On the contrary, some one else came. She heard Fadrique announce
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"The Captain Don Juan de Escobedo is in waiting, your Highness," said
+the servant. "There is also Adonis."</p>
+
+<p>"Adonis!" Don John laughed, not at the name, for it was familiar to him,
+but at the mere mention of the person who bore it and who was the King's
+dwarf jester, Miguel de Antona, commonly known by his classic nickname.
+"Bring Adonis here--he is an old friend."</p>
+
+<p>The door opened again, and Dolores heard the well-known voice of the
+hunchback, clear as a woman's, scornful and full of evil laughter,--the
+sort of voice that is heard instantly in a crowd, though it is not always
+recognizable. The fellow came in, talking loud.</p>
+
+<p>"Ave C&aelig;sar!" he cried from the door. "Hail, conqueror! All hail,
+thou favoured of heaven, of man,--and of the ladies!"</p>
+
+<p>"The ladies too?" laughed Don John, probably amused by the dwarfs
+antics. "Who told you that?"</p>
+
+<p>"The cook, sir. For as you rode up to the gate this afternoon a scullery
+maid saw you from the cellar grating and has been raving mad ever since,
+singing of the sun, moon, and undying love, until the kitchen is more like
+a mad-house than this house would be if the Day of Judgment came before or
+after Lent."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you fast in Lent, Adonis?"</p>
+
+<p>"I fast rigidly three times a day, my lord conqueror,--no, six, for I
+eat nothing either just before or just after my breakfast, my dinner, and
+my supper. No monk can do better than that, for at those times I eat
+nothing at all."</p>
+
+<p>"If you said your prayers as often as you fast, you would be in a good
+way," observed Don John.</p>
+
+<p>"I do, sir. I say a short grace before and after eating. Why have you
+come to Madrid, my lord? Do you not know that Madrid is the worst, the
+wickedest, the dirtiest, vilest, and most damnable habitation devised by
+man for the corruption of humanity? Especially in the month of November?
+Has your lordship any reasonable reason for this unreason of coming here,
+when the streets are full of mud, and men's hearts are packed like
+saddle-bags with all the sins they have accumulated since Easter and mean
+to unload at Christmas? Even your old friends are shocked to see so young
+and honest a prince in such a place!"</p>
+
+<p>"My old friends? Who?"</p>
+
+<p>"I saw Saint John the Conqueror graciously wave his hand to a most
+highly respectable old nobleman this afternoon, and the nobleman was so
+much shocked that he could not stir an arm to return the salutation! His
+legs must have done something, though, for he seemed to kick his own horse
+up from the ground under him. The shock must have been terrible. As for me,
+I laughed aloud, which made both the old nobleman and Don Julius Caesar of
+Austria exceedingly angry. Get before me, Don Fadrique! I am afraid of the
+terror of the Moors,--and no shame to me either! A poor dwarf, against a
+man who tears armies to shreds,--and sends scullery maids into hysterics!
+What is a poor crippled jester compared with a powerful scullery maid or an
+army of heathen Moriscoes? Give me that sword, Fadrique, or I am a dead
+man!"</p>
+
+<p>But Don John was laughing good-naturedly.</p>
+
+<p>"So it was you, Adonis? I might have-known your voice, I should
+think."</p>
+
+<p>"No one ever knows my voice, sir. It is not a voice, it is a freak of
+grammar. It is masculine, feminine, and neuter in gender, singular by
+nature, and generally accusative, and it is optative in mood and full of
+acute accents. If you can find such another voice in creation, sir, I will
+forfeit mine in the King's councils."</p>
+
+<p>Adonis laughed now, and Dolores remembered the laughter she had heard
+from the window.</p>
+
+<p>"Does his Majesty consult you on matters of state?" inquired Don John.
+"Answer quickly, for I must be going."</p>
+
+<p>"It takes twice as long to tell a story to two men, as to tell it to
+one,--when you have to tell them different stories,"</p>
+
+<p>"Go, Fadrique," said Don John, "and shut the door."</p>
+
+<p>The dwarf, seeing the servant gone, beckoned Don John to the other side
+of the room.</p>
+
+<p>"It is no great secret, being only the King's," he said. "His Majesty
+bids me tell your Serene Highness that he wishes to speak with you
+privately about some matters, and that he will come here soon after supper,
+and begs you to be alone."</p>
+
+<p>"I will be here--alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Excellent, sir. Now there is another matter of secrecy which is just
+the contrary of what I have told you, for it is a secret from the King. A
+lady laid a letter and two white carnations on your writing-table. If there
+is any answer to be taken, I will take it."</p>
+
+<p>"There is none," answered Don John sternly, "Tell the lady that I burned
+the letter without reading it. Go, Adonis, and the next time you come here,
+do not bring messages from women. Fadrique!"</p>
+
+<p>"Your Highness burned the letter without reading it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Fadrique!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry," said the dwarf, in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>No more words were spoken, and in a few moments there was deep silence,
+for they were all gone, and Dolores was alone, locked into the little
+room.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VI'></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+
+<p>The great throne room of the palace was crowded with courtiers long
+before the time when the King and Queen and Don John of Austria were to
+appear, and the entries and halls by which it was approached were almost as
+full. Though the late November air was keen, the state apartments were at
+summer heat, warmed by thousands of great wax candles that burned in
+chandeliers, and in huge sconces and on high candelabra that stood in every
+corner. The light was everywhere, and was very soft and yellow, while the
+odour of the wax itself was perceptible in the air, and helped the
+impression that the great concourse was gathered in a wide cathedral for
+some solemn function rather than in a throne room to welcome a victorious
+soldier. Vast tapestries, dim and rich in the thick air, covered the walls
+between the tall Moorish windows, and above them the great pointed
+vaulting, ornamented with the fantastically modelled stucco of the Moors,
+was like the creamy crests of waves lashed into foam by the wind, thrown
+upright here, and there blown forward in swift spray, and then again
+breaking in the fall to thousands of light and exquisite shapes; and the
+whole vault thus gathered up the light of the candles into itself and shed
+it downward, distributing it into every corner and lighting every face in a
+soft and golden glow.</p>
+
+<p>At the upper end, between two great doors that were like the gateways of
+an eastern city, stood the vacant throne, on a platform approached by three
+broad steps and covered with deep red cloth; and there stood magnificent
+officers of the guard in gilded corslets and plumed steel caps, and other
+garments of scarlet and gold, with their drawn swords out. But Mendoza was
+not there yet, for it was his duty to enter with the King's own guard,
+preceding the Majorduomo. Above the throne, a huge canopy of velvet, red
+and yellow, was reared up around the royal coat of arms.</p>
+
+<p>To the right and left, on the steps, stood carved stools with silken
+cushions--those on the right for the chief ministers and nobles of the
+kingdom, those on the left for the great ladies of the court. These would
+all enter in the King's train and take their places. For the throng of
+courtiers who filled the floor and the entries there were no seats, for
+only a score of the highest and greatest personages were suffered to sit in
+the royal presence. A few, who were near the windows, rested themselves
+surreptitiously on the high mouldings of the pilasters, pushing aside the
+curtains cautiously, and seeming from a distance to be standing while they
+were in reality comfortably seated, an object of laughing envy and of many
+witticisms to their less fortunate fellow-courtiers. The throng was not so
+close but that it was possible to move in the middle of the hall, and
+almost all the persons there were slowly changing place, some going forward
+to be nearer the throne, others searching for their friends among their
+many acquaintances, that they might help the tedious hour to pass more
+quickly.</p>
+
+<p>Seen from the high gallery above the arch of the great entrance the hall
+was a golden cauldron full of rich hues that intermingled in streams, and
+made slow eddies with deep shadows, and then little waves of light that
+turned upon themselves, as the colours thrown into the dyeing vat slowly
+seethe and mix together in rivulets of dark blue and crimson, and of
+splendid purple that seems to turn black in places and then is suddenly
+shot through with flashes of golden and opalescent light. Here and there
+also a silvery gleam flashed in the darker surface, like a pearl in wine,
+for a few of the court ladies were dressed all in white, with silver and
+many pearls, and diamonds that shed little rays of their own.</p>
+
+<p>The dwarf Adonis had been there for a few moments behind the lattice
+which the Moors had left, and as he stood there alone, where no one ever
+thought of going, he listened to the even and not unmusical sound that came
+up from the great assembly--the full chorus of speaking voices trained
+never to be harsh or high, and to use chosen words, with no loud
+exclamations, laughing only to please and little enough out of merriment;
+and they would not laugh at all after the King and Queen came in, but would
+only murmur low and pleasant flatteries, the change as sudden as when the
+musician at the keys closes the full organ all at once and draws gentle
+harmonies from softer stops.</p>
+
+<p>The jester had stood there, and looked down with deep-set, eager eyes,
+his crooked face pathetically sad and drawn, but alive with a swift and
+meaning intelligence, while the thin and mobile lips expressed a sort of
+ready malice which could break out in bitterness or turn to a kindly irony
+according as the touch that moved the man's sensitive nature was cruel or
+friendly. He was scarcely taller than a boy of ten years old, but his
+full-grown arms hung down below his knees, and his man's head, with the
+long, keen face, was set far forward on his shapeless body, so that in
+speaking with persons of ordinary stature he looked up under his brows, a
+little sideways, to see better. Smooth red hair covered his bony head, and
+grew in a carefully trimmed and pointed beard on his pointed chin. A loose
+doublet of crimson velvet hid the outlines of his crooked back and
+projecting breastbone, and the rest of his dress was of materials as rich,
+and all red. He was, moreover, extraordinarily careful of his appearance,
+and no courtier had whiter or more delicately tended hands or spent more
+time before the mirror in tying a shoulder knot, and in fastening the
+stiffened collar of white embroidered linen at the fashionable angle behind
+his neck.</p>
+
+<p>He had entered the latticed gallery on his way to Don John's apartments
+with the King's message. A small and half-concealed door, known to few
+except the servants of the palace, opened upon it suddenly from a niche in
+one of the upper corridors. In Moorish days the ladies of the harem had
+been wont to go there unseen to see the reception of ambassadors of state,
+and such ceremonies, at which, even veiled, they could never be
+present.</p>
+
+<p>He only stayed a few moments, and though his eyes were eager, it was by
+habit rather than because they were searching for any one in the crowd. It
+pleased him now and then to see the court world as a spectacle, as it
+delights the hard-worked actor to be for once a spectator at another's
+play. He was an integral part of the court himself, a man of whom most was
+often expected when he had the least to give, to whom it was scarcely
+permitted to say anything in ordinary language, but to whom almost any
+license of familiar speech was freely allowed. He was not a man, he was a
+tradition, a thing that had to be where it was from generation to
+generation; wherever the court had lived a jester lay buried, and often two
+and three, for they rarely lived an ordinary lifetime. Adonis thought of
+that sometimes, when he was alone, or when he looked down at the crowd of
+delicately scented and richly dressed men and women, every one called by
+some noble name, who would doubtless laugh at some jest of his before the
+night was over. To their eyes the fool was a necessary servant, because
+there had always been a fool at court; he was as indispensable as a chief
+butler, a chief cook, or a state coachman, and much more amusing. But he
+was not a man, he had no name, he had no place among men, he was not
+supposed to have a mother, a wife, a home, anything that belonged to
+humanity. He was well lodged, indeed, where the last fool had died, and
+richly clothed as the other had been, and he fed delicately, and was given
+the fine wines of France to drink, lest his brain should be clouded by
+stronger liquor and he should fail to make the court laugh. But he knew
+well enough that somewhere in Toledo or Valladolid the next court jester
+was being trained to good manners and instructed in the art of wit, to take
+the vacant place when he should die. It pleased him therefore sometimes to
+look down at the great assemblies from the gallery and to reflect that all
+those magnificent fine gentlemen and tenderly nurtured beauties of Spain
+were to die also, and that there was scarcely one of them, man or woman,
+for whose death some one was not waiting, and waiting perhaps with evil
+anxiety and longing. They were splendid to see, those fair women in their
+brocades and diamonds, those dark young princesses and duchesses in velvet
+and in pearls. He dreamed of them sometimes, fancying himself one of those
+Djin of the southern mountains of whom the Moors told blood-curdling tales,
+and in the dream he flew down from the gallery on broad, black wings and
+carried off the youngest and most beautiful, straight to his magic fortress
+above the sea.</p>
+
+<p>They never knew that he was sometimes up there, and on this evening he
+did not wait long, for he had his message to deliver and must be in waiting
+on the King before the royal train entered the throne room. After he was
+gone, the courtiers waited long, and more and more came in from without.
+Now and then the crowd parted as best it might, to allow some grandee who
+wore the order of the Golden Fleece or of some other exalted order, to lead
+his lady nearer to the throne, as was his right, advancing with measured
+steps, and bowing gravely to the right and left as he passed up to the
+front among his peers. And just behind them, on one aide, the young girls,
+of whom many were to be presented to the King and Queen that night, drew
+together and talked in laughing whispers, gathering in groups and knots of
+three and four, in a sort of irregular rank behind their mothers or the
+elder ladies who were to lead them to the royal presence and pronounce
+their names. There was more light where they were gathered, the shadows
+were few and soft, the colours tender as the tints of roses in a garden at
+sunset, and from the place where they stood the sound of young voices came
+silvery and clear. That should have been Inez de Mendoza's place if she had
+not been blind. But Inez had never been willing to be there, though she had
+more than once found her way to the gallery where the dwarf had stood, and
+had listened, and smelled the odour of the wax candles and the perfumes
+that rose with the heated air.</p>
+
+<p>It was long before the great doors on the right hand of the canopy were
+thrown open, but courtiers are accustomed from their childhood to long
+waiting, and the greater part of their occupation at court is to see and to
+be seen, and those who can do both and can take pleasure in either are
+rarely impatient. Moreover, many found an opportunity of exchanging quick
+words and of making sudden plans for meeting, who would have found it hard
+to exchange a written message, and who had few chances of seeing each other
+in the ordinary course of their lives; and others had waited long to
+deliver a cutting speech, well studied and tempered to hurt, and sought
+their enemies in the crowd with the winning smile a woman wears to deal her
+keenest thrust. There were men, too, who had great interests at stake and
+sought the influence of such as lived near the King, flattering every one
+who could possibly be of use, and coolly overlooking any who had a matter
+of their own to press, though they were of their own kin. Many officers of
+Don John's army were there, too, bright-eyed and bronzed from their
+campaigning, and ready to give their laurels for roses, leaf by leaf, with
+any lady of the court who would make a fair exchange--and of these there
+were not a few, and the time seemed short to them. There were also
+ecclesiastics, but not many, in sober black and violet garments, and they
+kept together in one corner and spoke a jargon of Latin and Spanish which
+the courtiers could not understand; and all who were there, the great
+courtiers and the small, the bishops and the canons, the stout princesses
+laced to suffocation and to the verge of apoplexy, and fanning themselves
+desperately in the heat, and their slim, dark-eyed daughters, cool and
+laughing--they were all gathered together to greet Spain's youngest and
+greatest hero, Don John of Austria, who had won back Granada from the
+Moors.</p>
+
+<p>As the doors opened at last, a distant blast of silver trumpets rang in
+from without, and the full chorus of speaking voices was hushed to a mere
+breathing that died away to breathless silence during a few moments as the
+greatest sovereign of the age, and one of the strangest figures of all
+time, appeared before his court. The Grand Master of Ceremonies entered
+first, in his robe of office, bearing a long white staff. In the stillness
+his voice rang out to the ends of the hall:</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty the King! Her Majesty the Queen!"</p>
+
+<p>Then came a score of halberdiers of the guard, picked men of great
+stature, marching in even steps, led by old Mendoza himself, in his
+breastplate and helmet, sword in hand; and he drew up the guard at one side
+in a rank, making them pass him so that he stood next to the door.</p>
+
+<p>After the guards came Philip the Second, a tall and melancholy figure;
+and with him, on his left side, walked the young Queen, a small, thin
+figure in white, with sad eyes and a pathetic face--wondering, perhaps,
+whether she was to follow soon those other queens who had walked by the
+same King to the same court, and had all died before their time--Mary of
+Portugal, Mary of England, Isabel of Valois.</p>
+
+<p>The King was one of those men who seem marked by destiny rather than by
+nature, fateful, sombre, almost repellent in manner, born to inspire a
+vague fear at first sight, and foreordained to strange misfortune or to
+extraordinary success, one of those human beings from whom all men shrink
+instinctively, and before whom they easily lose their fluency of speech and
+confidence of thought. Unnaturally still eyes, of an uncertain colour,
+gazed with a terrifying fixedness upon a human world, and were oddly set in
+the large and perfectly colourless face that was like an exaggerated waxen
+mask. The pale lips did not meet evenly, the lower one protruding, forced,
+outward by the phenomenal jaw that has descended to this day in the House
+of Austria. A meagre beard, so fair that it looked faded, accentuated the
+chin rather than concealed it, and the hair on the head was of the same
+undecided tone, neither thin nor thick, neither long nor short, but parted,
+and combed with the utmost precision about the large but very finely
+moulded ears. The brow was very full as well as broad, and the forehead
+high, the whole face too large, even for a man so tall, and disquieting in
+its proportions. Philip bent his head forward a little when at rest; when
+he looked about him it moved with something of the slow, sure motion of a
+piece of mechanism, stopping now and then, as the look in the eyes
+solidified to a stare, and then, moving again, until curiosity was
+satisfied and it resumed its first attitude, and remained motionless,
+whether the lips were speaking or not.</p>
+
+<p>Very tall and thin, and narrow chested, the figure was clothed all in
+cream-coloured silk and silver, relieved only by the collar of the Golden
+Fleece, the solitary order the King wore. His step was ungraceful and slow,
+as if his thin limbs bore his light weight with difficulty, and he
+sometimes stumbled in walking. One hand rested on the hilt of his sword as
+he walked, and even under the white gloves the immense length of the
+fingers and the proportionate development of the long thumb were clearly
+apparent. No one could have guessed that in such a figure there could be
+much elasticity or strength, and yet, at rare moments and when younger,
+King Philip displayed such strength and energy and quickness as might well
+have made him the match of ordinary men. As a rule his anger was slow,
+thoughtful, and dangerous, as all his schemes were vast and
+far-reaching.</p>
+
+<p>With the utmost deliberation, and without so much as glancing at the
+courtiers assembled, he advanced to the throne and sat down, resting both
+hands on the gilded arms of the great chair; and the Queen took her place
+beside him. But before he had settled himself, there was a low sound of
+suppressed delight in the hall, a moving of heads, a brightening of women's
+eyes, a little swaying of men's shoulders as they tried to see better over
+those who stood before them; and voices rose here and there above the
+murmur, though not loudly, and were joined by others. Then the King's waxen
+face darkened, though the expression did not change and the still eyes did
+not move, but as if something passed between it and the light, leaving it
+grey in the shadow. He did not turn to look, for he knew that his brother
+had entered the throne room and that every eye was upon him.</p>
+
+<p>Don John was all in dazzling white--white velvet, white satin, white
+silk, white lace, white shoes, and wearing neither sword nor ornament of
+any kind, the most faultless vision of young and manly grace that ever
+glided through a woman's dream.</p>
+
+<p>His place was on the King's right, and he passed along the platform of
+the throne with an easy, unhesitating step, and an almost boyish smile of
+pleasure at the sounds he heard, and at the flutter of excitement that was
+in the air, rather to be felt than otherwise perceived. Coming up the steps
+of the throne, he bent one knee before his brother, who held out his
+ungloved hand for him to kiss--and when that was done, he knelt again
+before the Queen, who did likewise. Then, bowing low as he passed back
+before the King, he descended one step and took the chair set for him in
+the place that was for the royal princes.</p>
+
+<p>He was alone there, for Philip was again childless at his fourth
+marriage, and it was not until long afterwards that a son was born who
+lived to succeed him; and there were no royal princesses in Madrid, so that
+Don John was his brother's only near blood relation at the court, and since
+he had been acknowledged he would have had his place by right, even if he
+had not beaten the Moriscoes in the south and won back Granada.</p>
+
+<p>After him came the high Ministers of State and the ambassadors in a rich
+and stately train, led in by Don Antonio Perez, the King's new favourite, a
+man of profound and evil intelligence, upon whom Philip was to rely almost
+entirely during ten years, whom he almost tortured to death for his crimes,
+and who in the end escaped him, outlived him, and died a natural death, in
+Paris, when nearly eighty. With these came also the court ladies, the
+Queen's Mistress of the Robes, and the maids of honour, and with the ladies
+was Do&ntilde;a Ana de la Cerda, Princess of Eboli and Melito and Duchess
+of Pastrana, the wife of old Don Ruy Gomez de Silva, the Minister. It was
+said that she ruled her husband, and Antonio Perez and the King himself,
+and that she was faithless to all three.</p>
+
+<p>She was not more than thirty years of age at that time, and she looked
+younger when seen in profile. But one facing her might have thought her
+older from the extraordinary and almost masculine strength of her small
+head and face, compact as a young athlete's, too square for a woman's, with
+high cheekbones, deep-set black eyes and eyebrows that met between them,
+and a cruel red mouth that always curled a little just when she was going
+to speak, and showed extraordinarily perfect little teeth, when the lips
+parted. Yet she was almost beautiful when she was not angry or in a hurtful
+mood. The dark complexion was as smooth as a perfect peach, and tinged with
+warm colour, and her eyes could be like black opals, and no woman in Spain
+or Andalusia could match her for grace of figure and lightness of step.</p>
+
+<p>Others came after in the long train. Then, last of all, at a little
+distance from the rest, the jester entered, affecting a very dejected air.
+He stood still a while on the platform, looking about as if to see whether
+a seat had been reserved for him, and then, shaking his head sadly, he
+crouched down, a heap of scarlet velvet with a man's face, just at Don
+John's feet, and turning a little towards him, so as to watch his eyes. But
+Don John would not look at him, and was surprised that he should put
+himself there, having just been dismissed with a sharp reprimand for
+bringing women's messages.</p>
+
+<p>The ceremony, if it can be called by that name, began almost as soon as
+all were seated. At a sign from the King, Don Antonio Perez rose and read
+out a document which he had brought in his hand. It was a sort of throne
+speech, and set forth briefly, in very measured terms, the results of the
+long campaign against the Moriscoes, according high praise to the army in
+general, and containing a few congratulatory phrases addressed to Don John
+himself. The audience of nobles listened attentively, and whenever the
+leader's name occurred, the suppressed flutter of enthusiasm ran through
+the hall like a breeze that stirs forest leaves in summer; but when the
+King was mentioned the silence was dead and unbroken. Don John sat quite
+still, looking down a little, and now and then his colour deepened
+perceptibly. The speech did not hint at any reward or further distinction
+to be conferred on him.</p>
+
+<p>When Perez had finished reading, he paused a moment, and the hand that
+held the paper fell to his side. Then he raised his voice to a higher
+key.</p>
+
+<p>"God save his Majesty Don Philip Second!" be cried. "Long live the
+King!"</p>
+
+<p>The courtiers answered the cheer, but moderately, as a matter of course,
+and without enthusiasm, repeating it three times. But at the last time a
+single woman's voice, high and clear above all the rest, cried out other
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"God save Don John of Austria! Long live Don John of Austria!"</p>
+
+<p>The whole multitude of men and women was stirred at once, for every
+heart was in the cheer, and in an instant, courtiers though they were, the
+King was forgotten, the time, the place, and the cry went up all at once,
+full, long and loud, shaming the one that had gone before it.</p>
+
+<p>King Philip's hands strained at the arms of his great chair, and he half
+rose, as if to command silence; and Don John, suddenly pale, had half
+risen, too, stretching out his open hand in a gesture of deprecation, while
+the Queen watched him with timidly admiring eyes, and the dark Princess of
+Eboli's dusky lids drooped to hide her own, for she was watching him also,
+but with other thoughts. For a few seconds longer, the cheers followed each
+other, and then they died away to a comparative silence. The dwarf rocked
+himself, his head between his knees, at Don John's feet.</p>
+
+<p>"God save the Fool!" he cried softly, mimicking the cheer, and he seemed
+to shake all over, as he sat huddled together, swinging himself to and
+fro.</p>
+
+<p>But no one noticed what he said, for the King had risen to his feet as
+soon as there was silence. He spoke in a muffled tone that made his words
+hard to understand, and those who knew him best saw that he was very angry.
+The Princess of Eboli's red lips curled scornfully as she listened, and
+unnoticed she exchanged a meaning glance with Antonio Perez; for he and she
+were allies, and often of late they had talked long together, and had drawn
+sharp comparisons between the King and his brother, and the plan they had
+made was to destroy the King and to crown Don John of Austria in his place;
+but the woman's plot was deeper, and both were equally determined that Don
+John should not marry without their consent, and that if he did, his
+marriage should not hold, unless, as was probable, his young wife should
+fall ill and die of a sickness unknown to physicians.</p>
+
+<p>All had risen with the King, and he addressed Don John amidst the most
+profound silence.</p>
+
+<p>"My brother," he said, "your friends have taken upon themselves
+unnecessarily to use the words we would have used, and to express to you
+their enthusiasm for your success in a manner unknown at the court of
+Spain. Our one voice, rendering you the thanks that are your due, can
+hardly give you great satisfaction after what you have heard just now. Yet
+we presume that the praise of others cannot altogether take the place of
+your sovereign's at such a moment, and we formally thank you for the
+admirable performance of the task entrusted to you, promising that before
+long your services shall be required for an even more arduous undertaking.
+It is not in our power to confer upon you any personal distinction or
+public office higher than you already hold, as our brother, and as High
+Admiral of Spain; but we trust the day is not far distant when a marriage
+befitting your rank may place you on a level with kings."</p>
+
+<p>Don John had moved a step forward from his place and stood before the
+King, who, at the end of his short speech, put his long arms over his
+brother's shoulders, and proceeded to embrace him in a formal manner by
+applying one cheek to his and solemnly kissing the air behind Don John's
+head, a process which the latter imitated as nearly as he could. The court
+looked on in silence at the ceremony, ill satisfied with Philip's cold
+words. The King drew back, and Don John returned to his place. As he
+reached it the dwarf jester made a ceremonious obeisance and handed him a
+glove which he had dropped as he came forward. As he took it he felt that
+it contained a letter, which made a slight sound when his hand crumpled it
+inside the glove. Annoyed by the fool's persistence, Don John's eyes
+hardened as he looked at the crooked face, and almost imperceptibly he
+shook his head. But the dwarf was as grave as he, and slightly bent his
+own, clasping his hands in a gesture of supplication. Don John reflected
+that the matter must be one of importance this time, as Adonis would not
+otherwise have incurred the risk of passing the letter to him under the
+eyes of the King and the whole court.</p>
+
+<p>Then followed the long and tedious procession of the court past the
+royal pair, who remained seated, while all the rest stood up, including Don
+John himself, to whom a master of ceremonies presented the persons unknown
+to him, and who were by far the more numerous. To the men, old and young,
+great or insignificant, he gave his hand with frank cordiality. To the
+women he courteously bowed his head. A full hour passed before it was over,
+and still he grasped the glove with the crumpled letter in his hand, while
+the dwarf stood at a little distance, watching in case it should fall; and
+as the Duchess Alvarez and the Princess of Eboli presented the ladies of
+Madrid to the young Queen, the Princess often looked at Don John and often
+at the jester from beneath her half-dropped lids. But she did not make a
+single mistake of names nor of etiquette, though her mind was much
+preoccupied with other matters.</p>
+
+<p>The Queen was timidly gracious to every one; but Philip's face was
+gloomy, and his fixed eyes hardly seemed to see the faces of the courtiers
+as they passed before him, nor did he open his lips to address a word to
+any of them, though some were old and faithful servants of his own and of
+his father's.</p>
+
+<p>In his manner, in his silence, in the formality of the ceremony, there
+was the whole spirit of the Spanish dominion. It was sombrely magnificent,
+and it was gravely cruel; it adhered to the forms of sovereignty as rigidly
+as to the outward practices of religion; its power extended to the ends of
+the world, and the most remote countries sent their homage and obeisance to
+its head; and beneath the dark splendour that surrounded its gloomy
+sovereigns there was passion and hatred and intrigue. Beside Don John of
+Austria stood Antonio Perez, and under the same roof with Dolores de
+Mendoza dwelt Ana de la Cerda, Princess of Eboli, and in the midst of them
+all Miguel de Antona, the King's fool.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VII'></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+
+<p>When the ceremony was over, and every one on the platform and steps of
+the throne moved a little in order to make way for the royal personages,
+making a slight momentary confusion, Adonis crept up behind Don John, and
+softly touched his sleeve to attract his attention. Don John looked round
+quickly, and was annoyed to see the dwarf there. He did not notice the fact
+that Do&ntilde;a Ana de la Cerda was watching them both, looking sideways
+without turning her head.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a matter of importance," said the jester, in a low voice. "Read
+it before supper if you can."</p>
+
+<p>Don John looked at him a moment, and turned away without answering, or
+even making a sign that he understood. The dwarf met Do&ntilde;a Ana's
+eyes, and grew slowly pale, till his face was a yellow mask; for he feared
+her.</p>
+
+<p>The door on the other side of the throne was opened, and the King and
+Queen, followed by Don John, and preceded by the Master of Ceremonies, went
+out. The dwarf, who was privileged, went after them with his strange,
+rolling step, his long arms hanging down and swinging irregularly, as if
+they did not belong to his body, but were only stuffed things that hung
+loose from his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>As on all such state occasions, there were separate suppers, in separate
+apartments, one for the King, and one for the ministers of state and the
+high courtiers; thirdly, a vast collation was spread in a hall on the other
+side of the throne room for the many nobles who were but guests at the
+court and held no office nor had any special privileges. It was the custom
+at that time that the supper should last an hour, after which all
+re&euml;ntered the throne room to dance, except the King and Queen, who
+either retired to the royal apartments, or came back for a short time and
+remained standing on the floor of the hall, in order to converse with a few
+of the grandees and ambassadors.</p>
+
+<p>The royal party supped in a sombre room of oval shape, dark with
+tapestries and splendid with gold. The King and Queen sat side by side, and
+Don John was placed opposite them at the table, of which the shape and
+outline corresponded on a small scale with those of the room. Four or five
+gentlemen, whose office it was, served the royal couple, receiving the
+dishes and wines from the hands of the chief butler; and he, with two other
+servants in state liveries, waited on Don John. Everything was most exactly
+ordered according to the unchangeable rules of the most formal court in
+Europe, not even excepting that of Rome.</p>
+
+<p>Philip sat in gloomy silence, eating nothing, but occasionally drinking
+a little Tokay wine, brought with infinite precaution from Hungary to
+Madrid. As be said nothing, neither the Queen nor Don John could speak, it
+being ordained that the King must be the first to open his lips. The Queen,
+however, being young and of a good constitution in spite of her almost
+delicate appearance, began to taste everything that was set before her,
+glancing timidly at her husband, who took no notice of her, or pretended
+not to do so. Don John, soldier-like, made a sparing supper of the first
+thing that was offered to him, and then sat silently watching the other
+two. He understood very well that his brother wished to see him in private,
+and was annoyed that the Queen should make the meal last longer than
+necessary. The dwarf understood also, and smiled to himself in the corner
+where he stood waiting in case the King should wish to be amused, which on
+that particular evening seemed far from likely. But sometimes he turned
+pale and his lips twisted a little as if he were suffering great pain; for
+Don John had not yet read the letter that was hidden in his glove; and
+Adonis saw in the dark corners of the room the Princess of Eboli's cruel
+half-closed eyes, and he fancied he heard her deep voice, that almost
+always spoke very sweetly, telling him again and again that if Don John did
+not read her letter before he met the King alone that night, Adonis should
+before very long cease to be court jester, and indeed cease to be anything
+at all that 'eats and drinks and sleeps and wears a coat'--as Dante had
+said. What Do&ntilde;a Ana said she would do, was as good as done already,
+both then and for nine years from that time, but thereafter she paid for
+all her deeds, and more too. But this history is not concerned with those
+matters, being only the story of what happened in one night at the old
+Alcazar of Madrid.</p>
+
+<p>King Philip sat a little bent in his chair, apparently staring at a
+point in space, and not opening his lips except to drink. But his presence
+filled the shadowy room, his large and yellowish face seemed to be all
+visible from every part of it, and his still eyes dominated everything and
+every one, except his brother. It was as if the possession of some
+supernatural and evil being were stealing slowly upon all who were there;
+as if a monstrous spider sat absolutely motionless in the midst of its web,
+drawing everything within reach to itself by the unnatural fascination of
+its lidless sight--as if the gentlemen in waiting were but helpless flies,
+circling nearer and nearer, to be caught at last in the meshes, and the
+Queen a bright butterfly, and Don John a white moth, already taken and soon
+to be devoured. The dwarf thought of this in his corner, and his blood was
+chilled, for three queens lay in their tombs in three dim cathedrals, and
+she who sat at table was the fourth who had supped with the royal Spider in
+his web. Adonis watched him, and the penetrating fear he had long known
+crept all through him like the chill that shakes a man before a marsh
+fever, so that he had to set his teeth with all his might, lest they should
+chatter audibly. As he looked, he fancied that in the light of the waxen
+torches the King's face turned by degrees to an ashy grey, and then more
+slowly to a shadowy yellow again, as he had seen a spider's ugly body
+change colour when the flies came nearer, and change again when one was
+entangled in the threads. He thought that the faces of all the people in
+the room changed, too, and that he saw in them the look that only near and
+certain death can bring, which is in the eyes of him who goes out with
+bound hands, at dawn, amongst other men who will see the rising sun shine
+on his dead face. That fear came on the dwarf sometimes, and he dreaded
+always lest at that moment the King should call to him and bid him sing or
+play with words. But this had never happened yet. There were others in the
+room, also, who knew something of that same terror, though in a less
+degree, perhaps because they knew Philip less well than the jester, who was
+almost always near him. But Don John sat quietly in his place, no more
+realizing that there could be danger than if he had been charging the Moors
+at the head of his cavalry, or fighting a man hand to hand with drawn
+swords.</p>
+
+<p>But still the fear grew, and even the gentlemen and the servants
+wondered, for it had never happened that the King had not at last broken
+the silence at supper, so that all guessed trouble near at hand, and peril
+for themselves. The Queen grew nervous and ceased to eat. She looked from
+Philip to Don John, and more than once seemed about to speak, but
+recollected herself and checked the words. Her hand shook and her thin
+young nostrils quivered now and then. Evil was gathering in the air, and
+she felt it approaching, though she could not tell whence it came. A sort
+of tension took possession of every one, like what people feel in southern
+countries when the southeast wind blows, or when, almost without warning,
+the fresh sea-breeze dies away to a dead calm and the blackness rises like
+a tide of pitch among the mountains of the coast, sending up enormous
+clouds above it to the pale sky, and lying quite still below; and the air
+grows lurid quickly, and heavy to breathe and sultry, till the tempest
+breaks in lightning and-thunder and drenching rain.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the brewing storm the dwarf saw only the Spider in its
+web, illuminated by the unearthly glare of his own fear, and with it the
+frightened butterfly and the beautiful silver moth, that had never dreamed
+of danger. He shrank against the hangings, pressing backwards till he hurt
+his crooked back against the stone wall behind the tapestry, and could have
+shrieked with fear had not a greater fear made him dumb. He felt that the
+King was going to speak to him, and that he should not be able to answer
+him. A horrible thought suddenly seized him, and he fancied that the King
+had seen him slip the letter into Don John's glove, and would ask for it,
+and take it, and read it--and that would be the end. Thrills of torment ran
+through him, and he knew how it must feel to lie bound on the rack and to
+hear the executioner's hands on the wheel, ready to turn it again at the
+judge's word. He had seen a man tortured once, and remembered his face. He
+was sure that the King must have seen the letter, and that meant torment
+and death, and the King was angry also because the court had cheered Don
+John. It was treason, and he knew it--yet it would have been certain death,
+too, to refuse to obey Do&ntilde;a Ana. There was destruction on either
+side, and he could not escape. Don John had not read the writing yet, and
+if the King asked for it, he would probably give it to him without a
+thought, unopened, for he was far too simple to imagine that any one could
+accuse him of a treasonable thought, and too boyishly frank to fancy that
+his brother could be jealous of him--above all, he was too modest to
+suppose that there were thousands who would have risked their lives to set
+him on the throne of Spain. He would therefore give the King the letter
+unopened, unless, believing it to be a love message from some foolish
+woman, he chose to tear it up unread. The wretched jester knew that either
+would mean his own disgrace and death, and he quivered with agony from head
+to foot.</p>
+
+<p>The lights moved up and down before his sight, the air grew heavier, the
+royal Spider took gigantic proportions, and its motionless eyes were lurid
+with evil It was about to turn to him; he felt it turning already, and knew
+that it saw him in his corner, and meant to draw him to it, very slowly. In
+a moment he should fall to the floor a senseless heap, out of deadly
+fear--it would be well if his fear really killed him, but he could not even
+hope for that. His hands gripped the hangings on each side of him as he
+shrank and crushed his deformity against the wall. Surely the King was
+taming his head. Yes--he was right. He felt his short hair rising on his
+scalp and unearthly sounds screamed in his ears. The terrible eyes were
+upon him now, but he could not move hand or foot--if he had been nailed to
+the wall to die, he could not have been so helpless.</p>
+
+<p>Philip eyed him with cold curiosity, for it was not an illusion, and he
+was really looking steadily at the dwarf. After a long time, his protruding
+lower lip moved two or three times before he spoke. The jester should have
+come forward at his first glance, to answer any question asked him.
+Instead, his colourless lips were parted and tightly drawn back, and his
+teeth were chattering, do what he could to close them. The Queen and Don
+John followed the King's gaze and looked at the dwarf in surprise, for his
+agony was painfully visible.</p>
+
+<p>"He looks as if he were in an ague," observed Philip, as though he were
+watching a sick dog.</p>
+
+<p>He had spoken at last, and the fear of silence was removed. An audible
+sigh of relief was heard in the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor man!" exclaimed the Queen. "I am afraid he is very ill!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is more like--" began Don John, and then he checked himself, for he
+had been on the point of saying that the dwarfs fit looked more like
+physical fear than illness, for he had more than once seen men afraid of
+death; but he remembered the letter in his glove and thought the words
+might rouse Philip's suspicions.</p>
+
+<p>"What was your Serene Highness about to say?" enquired the King,
+speaking coldly, and laying stress on the formal title which he had himself
+given Don John the right to use.</p>
+
+<p>"As your Majesty says, it is very like the chill of a fever," replied
+Don John.</p>
+
+<p>But it was already passing, for Adonis was not a natural coward, and the
+short conversation of the royal personages had broken the spell that held
+him, or had at least diminished its power. When he had entered the room he
+had been quite sure that no one except the Princess had seen him slip the
+letter into Don John's glove. That quieting belief began to return, his jaw
+became steady, and he relaxed his hold on the tapestries, and even advanced
+half a step towards the table.</p>
+
+<p>"And now he seems better," said the King, in evident surprise. "What
+sort of illness is this, Fool? If you cannot explain it, you shall be sent
+to bed, and the physicians shall practise experiments upon your vile body,
+until they find out what your complaint is, for the advancement of their
+learning."</p>
+
+<p>"They would advance me more than their science, Sire," answered Adonis,
+in a voice that still quaked with past fear, "for they would send me to
+paradise at once and learn nothing that they wished to know."</p>
+
+<p>"That is probable," observed Don John, thoughtfully, for he had little
+belief in medicine generally, and none at all in the present case.</p>
+
+<p>"May it please your Majesty," said Adonis, taking heart a little, "there
+are musk melons on the table."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what of that?" asked the King.</p>
+
+<p>"The sight of melons on your Majesty's table almost kills me," answered
+the dwarf.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you so fond of them that you cannot bear to see them? You shall
+have a dozen and be made to eat them all. That will cure your abominable
+greediness."</p>
+
+<p>"Provided that the King had none himself, I would eat all the rest,
+until I died of a surfeit of melons like your Majesty's great-grandsire of
+glorious and happy memory, the Emperor Maximilian."</p>
+
+<p>Philip turned visibly pale, for he feared illness and death as few have
+feared either.</p>
+
+<p>"Why has no one ever told me that?" he asked in a muffled and angry
+voice, looking round the room, so that the gentlemen and servants shrank
+back a little.</p>
+
+<p>No one answered his question, for though the fact was true, it had been
+long forgotten, and it would have been hard for any of those present to
+realize that the King would fear a danger so far removed. But the dwarf
+knew him well.</p>
+
+<p>"Let there be no more melons," said Philip, rising abruptly, and still
+pale.</p>
+
+<p>Don John had suppressed a smile, and was taken unawares when the King
+rose, so that in standing up instantly, as was necessary according to the
+rules, his gloves slipped from his knees, where he had kept them during
+supper, to the floor, and a moment passed before he realized that they were
+not in his hand. He was still in his place, for the King had not yet left
+his own, being engaged in saying a Latin grace in a low tone, He crossed
+himself devoutly, and an instant later Don John stooped down and picked up
+what he had dropped. Philip could not but notice the action, and his
+suspicions were instantly roused.</p>
+
+<p>"What have you found?" he asked sharply, his eyes fixing themselves
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"My gloves, Sire. I dropped them."</p>
+
+<p>"And are gloves such precious possessions that Don John of Austria must
+stoop to pick them up himself?"</p>
+
+<p>Adonis began to tremble again, and all his fear returned, so that he
+almost staggered against the wall. The Queen looked on in surprise, for she
+had not been Philip's wife many months. Don John was unconcerned, and
+laughed in reply to the question.</p>
+
+<p>"It chances that after long campaigning these are the only new white
+gloves Don John of Austria possesses," he answered lightly.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see them," said the King, extending his hand, and smiling
+suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>With some deliberation Don John presented one of the gloves to his
+brother, who took it and pretended to examine it critically, still smiling.
+He turned it over several times, while Adonis looked on, gasping for
+breath, but unnoticed.</p>
+
+<p>"The other," said Philip calmly.</p>
+
+<p>Adonis tried to suppress a groan, and his eyes were fixed on Don John's
+face. Would he refuse? Would he try to extract the letter from the glove
+under his brother's eyes? Would he give it up?</p>
+
+<p>Don John did none of those things, and there was not the least change of
+colour in his cheek. Without any attempt at concealment he took the letter
+from its hiding-place, and held out the empty glove with his other hand.
+The King drew back, and his face grew very grey and shadowy with anger.</p>
+
+<p>"What have you in your other hand?" he asked in a voice indistinct with
+passion.</p>
+
+<p>"A lady's letter, Sire," replied Don John, unmoved.</p>
+
+<p>"Give it to me at once!"</p>
+
+<p>"That, your Majesty, is a request I will not grant to any gentleman in
+Spain."</p>
+
+<p>He undid a button of his close-fitting doublet, thrust the letter into
+the opening and fastened the button again, before the King could speak. The
+dwarf's heart almost stood still with joy,--he could have crawled to Don
+John's feet to kiss the dust from his shoes. The Queen smiled nervously,
+between fear of the one man and admiration for the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Serene Highness," answered Philip, with a frightful stare, "is the
+first gentleman of Spain who has disobeyed his sovereign."</p>
+
+<p>"May I be the last, your Majesty," said Don John, with a courtly gesture
+which showed well enough that he had no intention of changing his mind.</p>
+
+<p>The King turned from him coldly and spoke to Adonis, who had almost got
+his courage back a second time.</p>
+
+<p>"You gave my message to his Highness, Fool?" he asked, controlling his
+voice, but not quite steadying it to a natural tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sire."</p>
+
+<p>"Go and tell Don Antonio Perez to come at once to me in my own
+apartments."</p>
+
+<p>The dwarf bent till his crooked back was high above his head, and he
+stepped backwards towards the door through which the servants had entered
+and gone out. When he had disappeared, Philip turned and, as if nothing had
+happened, gave his hand to the Queen to lead her away with all the
+prescribed courtesy that was her due. The servants opened wide the door,
+two gentlemen placed themselves on each side of it, the chief gentleman in
+waiting went before, and the royal couple passed out, followed at a little
+distance by Don John, who walked unconcernedly, swinging his right glove
+carelessly in his hand as he went. The four gentlemen walked last. In the
+hall beyond, Mendoza was in waiting with the guards.</p>
+
+<p>A little while after they were all gone, Adonis came back from his
+errand, with his rolling step, and searched for the other glove on the
+floor, where the King had dropped it. He found it there at once and hid it
+in his doubtlet. No one was in the room, for the servants had disappeared
+as soon as they could. The dwarf went quickly to Don John's place, took a
+Venetian goblet full of untasted wine that stood there and drank it at a
+draught. Then he patted himself comfortably with his other hand and looked
+thoughtfully at the slices of musk melon that lay in the golden dish
+flanked by other dishes full of late grapes and pears.</p>
+
+<p>"God bless the Emperor Maximilian!" he said in a devout tone. "Since he
+could not live for ever, it was a special grace of Providence that his
+death should be by melons."</p>
+
+<p>Then he went away again, and softly closed the door behind him, after
+looking back once more to be sure that no one was there after all, and
+perhaps, as people sometimes do on leaving a place where they have escaped
+a great danger, fixing its details unconsciously in his memory, with
+something almost akin to gratitude, as if the lifeless things had run the
+risk with them and thus earned their lasting friendship. Thus every man who
+has been to sea knows how, when his vessel has been hove to in a storm for
+many hours, perhaps during more than one day, within a few miles of the
+same spot, the sea there grows familiar to him as a landscape to a
+landsman, so that when the force of the gale is broken at last and the sea
+subsides to a long swell, and the ship is wore to the wind and can lay her
+course once more, he looks astern at the grey water he has learned to know
+so well and feels that he should know it again if he passed that way, and
+he leaves it with a faint sensation of regret. So Adonis, the jester, left
+the King's supper-room that night, devoutly thanking Heaven that the
+Emperor Maximilian had died of eating too many melons more than a hundred
+and fifty years ago.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the King had left the Queen at the door of her apartments,
+and had dismissed Don John in angry silence by a gesture only, as he went
+on to his study. And when there, he sent away his gentlemen and bade that
+no one should disturb him, and that only Don Antonio Perez, the new
+favourite, should be admitted. The supper had scarcely lasted half an hour,
+and it was still early in the evening when he found himself alone and was
+able to reflect upon what had happened, and upon what it would be best to
+do to rid himself of his brother, the hero and idol of Spain.</p>
+
+<p>He did not admit that Don John of Austria could be allowed to live on,
+unmolested, as if he had not openly refused to obey an express command and
+as if he were not secretly plotting to get possession of the throne. That
+was impossible. During more than two years, Don John's popularity, not only
+with the people, but with the army, which was a much more serious matter,
+had been steadily growing; and with it and even faster than it, the King's
+jealousy and hatred had grown also, till it had become a matter of common
+discussion and jest among the soldiers when their officers were out of
+hearing.</p>
+
+<p>But though it was without real cause, it was not without apparent
+foundation. As Philip slowly paced the floor of his most private room, with
+awkward, ungainly steps, stumbling more than once against a cushion that
+lay before his great armchair, he saw clearly before him the whole
+dimensions of that power to which he had unwillingly raised his brother.
+The time had been short, but the means used had been great, for they had
+been intended to be means of destruction, and the result was tremendous
+when they turned against him who used them. Philip was old enough to have
+been Don John's father, and he remembered how indifferent he had been to
+the graceful boy of twelve, whom they called Juan Quixada, when he had been
+brought to the old court at Valladolid and acknowledged as a son of the
+Emperor Charles. Though he was his brother, Philip had not even granted him
+the privilege of living in the palace then, and had smiled at the idea that
+he should be addressed as "Serene Highness." Even as a boy, he had been
+impatient to fight; and Philip remembered how he was always practising with
+the sword or performing wild feats of skill and strength upon half-broken
+horses, except when he was kept to his books by Do&ntilde;a Magdalena
+Quixada, the only person in the world whom he ever obeyed without question.
+Every one had loved the boy from the first, and Philip's jealousy had begun
+from that; for he, who was loved by none and feared by all, craved
+popularity and common affection, and was filled with bitter resentment
+against the world that obeyed him but refused him what he most desired.</p>
+
+<p>Little more than ten years had passed since the boy had come, and he had
+neither died a natural death nor fallen in battle, and was grown up to
+young manhood, and was by far the greatest man in Spain. He had been
+treated as an inferior, the people had set him up as a god. He had been
+sent out to command expeditions that be might fail and be disgraced; but he
+had shown deeper wisdom than his elders, and had come back covered with
+honour; and now he had been commanded to fight out the final battle of
+Spain with the Moriscoes, in the hope that he might die in the fight, since
+he could not be dishonoured, and instead he had returned in triumph, having
+utterly subdued the fiercest warriors in Europe, to reap the ripe harvest
+of his military glory at an age when other men were in the leading-strings
+of war's school, and to be acclaimed a hero as well as a favourite by a
+court that could hardly raise a voice to cheer for its own King. Ten years
+had done all that. Ten more, or even five, might do the rest. The boy could
+not be without ambition, and there could be no ambition for him of which
+the object should be less than a throne. And yet no word had been breathed
+against him,--his young reputation was charmed, as his life was. In vain
+Philip had bidden Antonio Perez and the Princess of Eboli use all their
+wits and skill to prove that he was plotting to seize the crown. They
+answered that he loved a girl of the court, Mendoza's daughter, and that
+besides war, for war's sake, he cared for nothing in the world but Dolores
+and his adopted mother.</p>
+
+<p>They spoke the truth, for they had reason to know it, having used every
+means in their power to find out whether he could be induced to quarrel
+with Philip and enter upon a civil war, which could have had but one issue,
+since all Spain would have risen to proclaim him king. He had been tempted
+by questions, and led into discussions in which it seemed certain that he
+must give them some hope. But they and their agents lost heart before the
+insuperable obstacle of the young prince's loyalty. It was simple,
+unaffected, and without exaggeration. He never drew his sword and kissed
+the blade, and swore by the Blessed Virgin to give his last drop of blood
+for his sovereign and his country. He never made solemn vows to accomplish
+ends that looked impossible. But when the charge sounded, he pressed his
+steel cap a little lower upon his brow, and settled himself in the saddle
+without any words and rode at death like the devil incarnate; and then men
+followed him, and the impossible was done, and that was all. Or he could
+wait and watch, and manoeuvre for weeks, until he had his foe in his hand,
+with a patience that would have failed his officers and his men, had they
+not seen him always ready and cheerful, and fully sure that although he
+might fail twenty times to drive the foe into the pen, he should most
+certainly succeed in the end,--as he always did.</p>
+
+<p>Philip paced the chamber in deep and angry thought. If at that moment
+any one had offered to rid him of his brother, the reward would have been
+ready, and worth a murderer's taking. But the King had long cherished the
+scheme of marrying Don John to Queen Mary of Scotland,--whose marriage with
+Bothwell could easily be annulled--in order that his presumptuous ambition
+might be satisfied, and at the same time that he might make of his new
+kingdom a powerful ally of Spain against Elizabeth of England. It was for
+this reason that he had long determined to prevent his brother's marriage
+with Maria Dolores de Mendoza. Perez and Do&ntilde;a Ana de la Cerda, on
+the other hand, feared that if Don John were allowed to marry the girl he
+so devotedly loved, he would forget everything for her, give up
+campaigning, and settle to the insignificance of a thoroughly happy man.
+For they knew the world well from their own point of view. Happiness is
+often like sadness, for it paralyzes those to whose lot it falls; but pain
+and danger rouse man's strength of mind and body.</p>
+
+<p>Yet though the King and his treacherous favourite had diametrically
+opposite intentions, a similar thought had crossed the minds of both, even
+before Don John had ridden up to the palace gate late on that afternoon,
+from his last camping ground outside the city walls. Both had reasoned that
+whoever was to influence a man so straightforward and fearless must have in
+his power and keeping the person for whom Don John would make the greatest
+sacrifice of his life; and that person, as both knew, was Dolores herself.
+Yet when Antonio Perez entered Philip's study, neither had guessed the
+other's thought.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VIII'></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+
+<p>The court had been still at supper when Adonis had summoned Don Antonio
+Perez to the King, and the Secretary, as he was usually called, had been
+obliged to excuse his sudden departure by explaining that the King had sent
+for him unexpectedly. He was not even able to exchange a word with
+Do&ntilde;a Ana, who was seated at another of the three long tables and at
+some distance from him. She understood, however, and looked after him
+anxiously. His leaving was not signal for the others, but it caused a
+little stir which unhinged the solemn formality of the supper. The
+Ambassador of the Holy Roman Empire presently protested that he was
+suffering from an unbearable headache, and the Princess of Eboli, next to
+whom he was seated, begged him not to stand upon ceremony, since Perez was
+gone from the room, but to order his coach at once; she found it hot, she
+said, and would be glad to escape. The two rose together, and others
+followed their example, until the few who would have stayed longer were
+constrained to imitate the majority. When Mendoza, relieved at last from
+his duty, went towards the supper-room to take the place that was kept for
+him at one of the tables, he met Do&ntilde;a Ana in the private corridor
+through which the officers and ladies of the household passed to the state
+apartments. He stood still, surprised to see her there.</p>
+
+<p>"The supper is over," she said, stopping also, and trying to scrutinize
+the hard old face by the dim light of the lamps. "May I have a word with
+you, General? Let us walk together to your apartments."</p>
+
+<p>"It is far, Madam," observed Mendoza, who suspected at once that she
+wished to see Dolores.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be glad to walk a little, and breathe the air," she answered.
+"Your corridor has arches open to the air, I remember." She began to walk,
+and he was obliged to accompany her. "Yes," she continued indifferently,
+"we have had such changeable weather to-day! This morning it almost snowed,
+then it rained, then it, began to freeze, and now it feels like summer! I
+hope Dolores has not taken cold? Is she ill? She was not at court before
+supper."</p>
+
+<p>"The weather is indeed very changeable," replied the General, who did
+not know what to say, and considered it beneath his dignity to lie except
+by order of the King.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes--yes, I was saying so, was I not? But Dolores--is she ill? Please
+tell me." The Princess spoke almost anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Madam, my daughters are well, so far as I know."</p>
+
+<p>"But then, my dear General, it is strange that you should not have sent
+an excuse for Dolores' not appearing. That is the rule, you know. May I ask
+why you ventured to break it?" Her tone grew harder by degrees.</p>
+
+<p>"It was very sudden," said Mendoza, trying to put her off. "I hope that
+your Grace will excuse my daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"What was sudden?" enquired Do&ntilde;a Ana coldly. "You say she was not
+taken ill."</p>
+
+<p>"Her--her not coming to court." Mendoza hesitated and pulled at his grey
+beard as they went along. "She fully intended to come," he added, with
+perfect truth.</p>
+
+<p>Do&ntilde;a Ana walked more slowly, glancing sideways at his face,
+though she could hardly see it except when they passed by a lamp, for he
+was very tall, and she was short, though exquisitely proportioned.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand," she said, in a clear, metallic voice. "I have a
+right to an explanation, for it is quite impossible to give the ladies of
+the court who live in the palace full liberty to attend upon the Queen or
+not, as they please. You will be singularly fortunate if Don Antonio Perez
+does not mention the matter to the King."</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza was silent, but the words had their effect upon him, and a very
+unpleasant one, for they contained a threat.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," continued the Princess, pausing as they reached a flight of
+steps which they would have to ascend, "every one acknowledges the
+importance of your services, and that you have been very poorly rewarded
+for them. But that is in a degree your own fault, for you have refused to
+make friends when you might, and you have little interest with the
+King."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it," said the old soldier, rather bitterly. "Princess," he
+continued, without giving her time to say more, "this is a private matter,
+which concerns only me and my daughter. I entreat you to overlook the
+irregularity and not to question me further. I will serve you in any way in
+my power--"</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot serve me in any way," answered Do&ntilde;a Ana cruelly. "I
+am trying to help you," she added, with a sudden change of tone. "You see,
+my dear General, you are no longer young. At your age, with your name and
+your past services, you should have been a grandee and a rich man. You have
+thrown away your opportunities of advancement, and you have contented
+yourself with an office which is highly honourable--but poorly paid, is it
+not? And there are younger men who court it for the honour alone, and who
+are willing to be served by their friends."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is my successor?" asked Mendoza, bravely controlling his voice
+though he felt that he was ruined.</p>
+
+<p>The skilful and cruel woman began to mount the steps in silence, in
+order to let him suffer a few moments, before she answered. Reaching the
+top, she spoke, and her voice was soft and kind.</p>
+
+<p>"No one," she answered, "and there is nothing to prevent you from
+keeping your post as long as you like, even if you become infirm and have
+to appoint a deputy--but if there were any serious cause of complaint, like
+this extraordinary behaviour of Dolores--why, perhaps--"</p>
+
+<p>She paused to give her words weight, for she knew their value.</p>
+
+<p>"Madam," said Mendoza, "the matter I keep from you does not touch my
+honour, and you may know it, so far as that is concerned. But it is one of
+which I entreat you not to force me to speak."</p>
+
+<p>Do&ntilde;a Ana softly passed her arm through his.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not used to walking so fast," she said, by way of explanation.
+"But, my dear Mendoza," she went on, pressing his arm a little, "you do not
+think that I shall let what you tell me go further and reach any one
+else--do you? How can I be of any use to you, if you have no confidence in
+me? Are we not relatives? You must treat me as I treat you."</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza wished that he could.</p>
+
+<p>"Madam," he said almost roughly, "I have shut my daughter up in her own
+room and bolted the door, and to-morrow I intend to send her to a convent,
+and there she shall stay until she changes her mind, for I will not change
+mine"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" ejaculated Do&ntilde;a Ana, with a long intonation, as if grasping
+the position of affairs by degrees. "I understand," she said, after a long
+time. "But then you and I are of the same opinion, my dear friend. Let us
+talk about this."</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza did not wish to talk of the matter at all, and said nothing, as
+they slowly advanced. They had at last reached the passage that ended at
+his door, and he slackened his pace still more, obliging his companion,
+whose arm was still in his, to keep pace with him. The moonlight no longer
+shone in straight through the open embrasures, and there was a dim twilight
+in the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not wish Dolores to marry Don John of Austria, then," said the
+Princess presently, in very low tones. "Then the King is on your side, and
+so am I. But I should like to know your reason for objecting to such a very
+great marriage."</p>
+
+<p>"Simple enough, Madam. Whenever it should please his Majesty's policy to
+marry his brother to a royal personage, such as Queen Mary of Scotland, the
+first marriage would be proved null and void, because the King would
+command that it should be so, and my daughter would be a dishonoured woman,
+fit for nothing but a convent."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you call that dishonour?" asked the Princess thoughtfully. "Even if
+that happened, you know that Don John would probably not abandon Dolores.
+He would keep her near him--and provide for her generously--"</p>
+
+<p>"Madam!" cried the brave old soldier, interrupting her in sudden and
+generous anger, "neither man nor woman shall tell me that my daughter could
+ever fall to that!"</p>
+
+<p>She saw that she had made a mistake, and pressed his arm soothingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray, do not be angry with me, my dear friend. I was thinking what the
+world would say--no, let me speak! I am quite of your opinion that Dolores
+should be kept from seeing Don John, even by quiet force if necessary, for
+they will certainly be married at the very first opportunity they can find.
+But you cannot do such things violently, you know. You will make a scandal.
+You cannot take your daughter away from court suddenly and shut her up in a
+convent without doing her a great injury. Do you not see that? People will
+not understand that you will not let her marry Don John--I mean that most
+people would find it hard to believe. Yes, the world is bad, I know; what
+can one do? The world would say--promise me that you will not be angry,
+dear General! You can guess what the world would say."'</p>
+
+<p>"I see--I see!" exclaimed the old man, in sudden terror for his
+daughter's good name. "How wise you are!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered Do&ntilde;a Ana, stopping at ten paces from the door, "I
+am wise, for I am obliged to be. Now, if instead of locking Dolores into
+her room two or three hours ago, you had come to me, and told me the truth,
+and put her under my protection, for our common good, I would have made it
+quite impossible for her to exchange a word with Don John, and I would have
+taken such good care of her that instead of gossiping about her, the world
+would have said that she was high in favour, and would have begun to pay
+court to her. You know that I have the power to do that."</p>
+
+<p>"How very wise you are!" exclaimed Mendoza again, with more
+emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Will you let me take her with me now, my dear friend? I will
+console her a little, for I daresay she has been crying all alone in her
+room, poor girl, and I can keep her with me till Don John goes to
+Villagarcia. Then we shall see."</p>
+
+<p>Old Mendoza was a very simple-hearted man, as brave men often are, and a
+singularly spotless life spent chiefly in war and austere devotion had left
+him more than ignorant of the ways of the world. He had few friends,
+chiefly old comrades of his own age who did not live in the palace, and he
+detested gossip. Had he known what the woman was with whom he was speaking,
+he would have risked Dolores' life rather than give her into the keeping of
+Do&ntilde;a Ana. But to him, the latter was simply the wife of old Don Ruy
+Gomez de Silva, the Minister of State, and she was the head of the Queen's
+household. No one would have thought of repeating the story of a court
+intrigue to Mendoza, but it was also true that every one feared Do&ntilde;a
+Ana, whose power was boundless, and no one wished to be heard speaking ill
+of her. To him, therefore, her proposition seemed both wise and kind.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very grateful," he said, with some emotion, for he believed that
+she was helping him to save his fortune and his honour, as was perhaps
+really the case, though she would have helped him to lose both with equally
+persuasive skill could his ruin have served her. "Will you come in with me,
+Princess?" he asked, beginning to move towards the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Take me to her room and leave me with her."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, I would rather not see her myself this evening," said Mendoza,
+feeling his anger still not very far from the surface. "You will be able to
+speak more wisely than I should."</p>
+
+<p>"I daresay," answered Do&ntilde;a Ana thoughtfully. "If you went with me
+to her, there might be angry words again, and that would make it much
+harder for me. If you will leave me at the door of her rooms, and then go
+away, I will promise to manage the rest. You are not sorry that you have
+told me, now, are you, my dear friend?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am most grateful to you. I shall do all I can to be of service to
+you, even though you said that it was not in my power to serve you."</p>
+
+<p>"I was annoyed," said Do&ntilde;a Ana sweetly. "I did not mean
+it--please forgive me."</p>
+
+<p>They reached the door, and as she withdrew her hand from his arm, he
+took it and ceremoniously kissed her gloved fingers, while she smiled
+graciously. Then he knocked three times, and presently the shuffling of
+Eudaldo's slippers was heard within, and the old servant opened sleepily.
+On seeing the Princess enter first, he stiffened himself in a military
+fashion, for he had been a soldier and had fought under Mendoza when both
+were younger.</p>
+
+<p>"Eudaldo," said the General, in the stern tone he always used when
+giving orders, "her Excellency the Princess of Eboli will take Do&ntilde;a
+Dolores to her own apartments this evening. Tell the maid to follow later
+with whatever my daughter needs, and do you accompany the ladies with a
+candle."</p>
+
+<p>But at this Do&ntilde;a Ana protested strongly. There was moonlight,
+there were lamps, there was light everywhere, she said. She needed no one.
+Mendoza, who had no man-servant in the house but Eudaldo, and eked out his
+meagre establishment by making use of his halberdiers when he needed any
+one, yielded after very little persuasion.</p>
+
+<p>"Open the door of my daughter's apartments," he said to Eudaldo.
+"Madam," he said, turning to the Princess, "I have the honour to wish you
+good-night. I am your Grace's most obedient servant. I must return to my
+duty."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night, my dear friend," answered Do&ntilde;a Ana, nodding
+graciously.</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza bowed low, and went out again, Eudaldo closing the door behind
+him. He would not be at liberty until the last of the grandees had gone
+home, and the time he had consumed in accompanying the Princess was just
+what he could have spared for his supper. She gave a short sigh of relief
+as she heard his spurred heels and long sword on the stone pavement. He was
+gone, leaving Dolores in her power, and she meant to use that power to the
+utmost.</p>
+
+<p>Eudaldo shuffled silently across the hall, to the other door, and she
+followed him. He drew the bolt.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait here," she said quietly. "I wish to see Do&ntilde;a Dolores
+alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Her ladyship is in the farther room, Excellency," said the servant,
+bowing and standing back.</p>
+
+<p>She entered and closed the door, and Eudaldo returned to his big chair,
+to doze until she should come out.</p>
+
+<p>She had not taken two steps in the dim room, when a shadow flitted
+between her and the lamp, and it was almost instantly extinguished. She
+uttered an exclamation of surprise and stood still. Anywhere save in
+Mendoza's house, she would have run back and tried to open the door as
+quickly as possible, in fear of her life, for she had many enemies, and was
+constantly on her guard. But she guessed that the shadowy figure she had
+seen was Dolores. She spoke, without hesitation, in a gentle voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Dolores! Are you there?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later she felt a small hand on her arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is it?" asked a whisper, which might have come from Dolores' lips
+for all Do&ntilde;a Ana could tell.</p>
+
+<p>She had forgotten the existence of Inez, whom she had rarely seen, and
+never noticed, though she knew that Mendoza had a blind daughter.</p>
+
+<p>"It is I--the Princess of Eboli," she answered in the same gentle
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! Whisper to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Your father has gone back to his duty, my dear--you need not be
+afraid."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but Eudaldo is outside--he hears everything when he is not asleep.
+What is it, Princess? Why are you here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to talk with you a little," replied Do&ntilde;a Ana, whispering
+now, to please the girl. "Can we not get a light? Why did you put out the
+lamp? I thought you were in another room."</p>
+
+<p>"I was frightened. I did not know who you were. We can talk in the dark,
+if you do not mind. I will lead you to a chair. I know just where
+everything is in this room."</p>
+
+<p>The Princess suffered herself to be led a few steps, and presently she
+felt herself gently pushed into a seat. She was surprised, but realizing
+the girl's fear of her father, she thought it best to humour her. So far
+Inez had said nothing that could lead her visitor to suppose that she was
+not Dolores. Intimate as the devoted sisters were, Inez knew almost as much
+of the Princess as Dolores herself; the two girls were of the same height,
+and so long as the conversation was carried on in whispers, there was no
+possibility of detection by speech alone. The quick-witted blind girl
+reflected that it was strange if Do&ntilde;a Ana had not seen Dolores, who
+must have been with the court the whole evening, and she feared some harm.
+That being the case, her first impulse was to help her sister if possible,
+but so long as she was a prisoner in Dolores' place, she could do nothing,
+and she resolved that the Princess should help her to escape.</p>
+
+<p>Do&ntilde;a Ana began to speak quickly and fluently in the dark. She
+said that she knew the girl's position, and had long known how tenderly she
+loved Don John of Austria, and was loved by him. She sympathized deeply
+with them both, and meant to do all in her power to help them. Then she
+told how she had missed Dolores at court that night.</p>
+
+<p>Inez started involuntarily and drew her breath quickly, but Do&ntilde;a
+Ana thought it natural that Dolores should give some expression to the
+disappointment she must have felt at being shut up a prisoner on such an
+occasion, when all the court was assembled to greet the man she loved.</p>
+
+<p>Then the Princess went on to tell how she had met Mendoza and had come
+with him, and how with great difficulty she had learned the truth, and had
+undertaken Dolores' care for a few days; and how Mendoza had been
+satisfied, never suspecting that she really sympathized with the lovers.
+That was a state secret, but of course Dolores must know it. The King
+privately desired the marriage, she said, because he was jealous of his
+brother and wished that he would tire of winning battles and live quietly,
+as happy men do.</p>
+
+<p>"Don John will tell you, when you see him," she continued. "I sent him
+two letters this evening. The first he burned unopened, because he thought
+it was a love letter, but he has read the second by this time. He had it
+before supper."</p>
+
+<p>"What did you write to him?" asked Inez, whispering low.</p>
+
+<p>"He will tell you. The substance was this: If he would only be prudent,
+and consent to wait two days, and not attempt to see you alone, which would
+make a scandal, and injure you, too, if any one knew it, the King would
+arrange everything at his own pleasure, and your father would give his
+consent. You have not seen Don John since he arrived, have you?" She asked
+the question anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no!" answered the blind girl, with conviction. "I have not seen him.
+I wish to Heaven I had!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad of that," whispered the Princess. "But if you will come with
+me to my apartments, and stay with me till matters are arranged--well--I
+will not promise, because it might be dangerous, but perhaps you may see
+him for a moment."</p>
+
+<p>"Really? Do you think that is possible?" In the dark Inez was smiling
+sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps. He might come to see me, for instance, or my husband, and I
+could leave you together a moment."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be heaven!" And the whisper came from the heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Then come with me now, my dear, and I will do my best," answered the
+Princess.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I will! But will you wait one moment while I dress? I am in my
+old frock--it is hardly fit to be seen."</p>
+
+<p>This was quite true; but Inez had reflected that dressed as she was she
+could not pass Eudaldo and be taken by him for her sister, even with a hood
+over her head. The clothes Dolores had worn before putting on her court
+dress were in her room, and Dolores' hood was there, too. Before the
+Princess could answer, Inez was gone, closing the door of the bedroom
+behind her. Do&ntilde;a Ana, a little taken by surprise again, was fain to
+wait where she was, in the dark, at the risk of hurting herself against the
+furniture. Then it struck her that Dolores must be dressing in the dark,
+for no light had come from the door as it was opened and shut. She
+remembered the blind sister then, and she wondered idly whether those who
+lived continually with the blind learned from them to move easily in the
+dark and to do everything without a light. The question did not interest
+her much, but while she was thinking of it the door opened again. A skirt
+and a bodice are soon changed. In a moment she felt her hand taken, and she
+rose to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"I am ready, Princess. I will open the door if you will come with me. I
+have covered my head and face," she added carelessly, though always
+whispering, "because I am afraid of the night air."</p>
+
+<p>"I was going to advise you to do it in any case, my dear. It is just as
+well that neither of us should be recognized by any one in the corridors so
+far from my apartments."</p>
+
+<p>The door opened and let in what seemed a flood of light by comparison
+with the darkness. The Princess went forward, and Eudaldo got upon his legs
+as quickly as he could to let the two ladies out, without looking at them
+as they crossed the hall. Inez followed her companion's footfall exactly,
+keeping one step behind her by ear, and just pausing before passing out.
+The old servant saw Dolores' dress and Dolores' hood, which he expected to
+see, and no more suspected anything than he had when, as he supposed, Inez,
+had gone out earlier.</p>
+
+<p>But Inez herself had a far more difficult part to perform than her
+sister's. Dolores had gone out alone, and no one had watched her beyond the
+door, and Dolores had eyes, and could easily enough pretend that she could
+not see. It was another matter to be blind and to play at seeing, with a
+clever woman like the Princess at one's elbow, ready to detect the
+slightest hesitation. Besides, though she had got out of the predicament in
+which it had been necessary to place her, it was quite impossible to
+foresee what might happen when the Princess discovered that she had been
+deceived, and that catastrophe must happen sooner or later, and might occur
+at any moment. The Princess walked quickly, too, with a gliding, noiseless
+step that was hard to follow. Fortunately Inez was expected to keep to the
+left of a superior like her companion, and was accustomed to taking that
+side when she went anywhere alone in the palace. That made it easier, but
+trouble might come at one of the short flights of steps down and up which
+they would have to pass to reach the Princess's apartments. And then, once
+there, discovery must come, to a certainty, and then, she knew not
+what.</p>
+
+<p>She had not run the risk for the sake of being shut up again. She had
+got out by a trick in order to help her sister, if she could find her, and
+in order to be at liberty the first thing necessary was to elude her
+companion. To go to the door of her apartments would be fatal, but she had
+not had time to think what she should do. She thought now, with all the
+concentration of her ingenuity. One chance presented itself to her mind at
+once. They most pass the pillar behind which was the concealed entrance to
+the Moorish gallery above the throne room, and it was not at all likely
+that Do&ntilde;a Ana should know of its existence, for she never came to
+that part of the palace, and if Inez lagged a little way behind, before
+they reached the spot, she could slip noiselessly behind the pillar and
+disappear. She could always trust herself not to attract attention when she
+had to open and shut a door.</p>
+
+<p>The Princess spoke rarely, making little remarks now and then that
+hardly required an answer, but to which Inez answered in monosyllables,
+speaking in a low voice through the thick veil she had drawn over her
+mantle under her hood, on pretence of fearing the cold. She thought it a
+little safer to speak aloud in that way, lest her companion should wonder
+at her total silence.</p>
+
+<p>She knew exactly where she was, for she touched each corner as she
+passed, and counted her steps between one well-known point and the next,
+and she allowed the Princess to gain a little as they neared the last
+turning before reaching the place where she meant to make the attempt. She
+hoped in this way, by walking quite noiselessly, and then stopping suddenly
+just before she reached the pillar, to gain half a dozen paces, and the
+Princess would take three more before she stopped also. Inez had noticed
+that most people take at least three steps before they stop, if any one
+calls them suddenly when they are walking fast. It seems to need as much to
+balance the body when its speed is checked. She noticed everything that
+could be heard.</p>
+
+<p>She grew nervous. It seemed to her that her companion was walking more
+slowly, as if not wishing to leave her any distance behind. She quickened
+her own pace again, fearing that she had excited suspicion. Then she heard
+the Princess stop suddenly, and she had no choice but to do the same. Her
+heart began to beat painfully, as she saw her chance slipping from her. She
+waited for Do&ntilde;a Ana to speak, wondering what was the matter.</p>
+
+<p>"I have mistaken the way," said the Princess, in a tone of annoyance. "I
+do not know where I am. We had better go back and turn down the main
+staircase, even if we meet some one. You see, I never come to this part of
+the palace."</p>
+
+<p>"I think we are on the right corridor," said Inez nervously. "Let me go
+as far as the corner. There is a light there, and I can tell you in a
+moment." In her anxiety to seem to see, she had forgotten for the moment to
+muffle her voice in her veil.</p>
+
+<p>They went on rapidly, and the Do&ntilde;a Ana did what most people do
+when a companion offers to examine the way,--she stood still a moment and
+hesitated, looking after the girl, and then followed her with the slow step
+with which a person walks who is certain of having to turn back. Inez
+walked lightly to the corner, hardly touching the wall, turned by the
+corner, and was out of sight in a moment. The Princess walked faster, for
+though she believed that Dolores trusted her, it seemed foolish to give the
+girl a chance. She reached the corner, where there was a lamp,--and she saw
+that the dim corridor was empty to the very end.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_IX'></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+
+<p>The Princess was far from suspecting, even then, that she had been
+deceived about her companion's identity as well as tricked at the last,
+when Inez escaped from her. She would have laughed at the idea that any
+blind person could have moved as confidently as Inez, or could afterwards
+have run the length of the next corridor in what had seemed but an instant,
+for she did not know of the niche behind the pillar, and there were
+pilasters all along, built into the wall. The construction of the high,
+springing vault that covered the whole throne room required them for its
+solidity, and only the one under the centre of the arch was built as a
+detached pillar, in order to give access to the gallery. Seen from either
+end of the passage, it looked exactly like the rest, and few persons would
+have noticed that it differed from them, even in passing it.</p>
+
+<p>Do&ntilde;a Ana stood looking in the direction she supposed the girl to
+have taken. An angry flush rose in her cheek, she bit her lips till they
+almost bled, and at last she stamped once before she turned away, so that
+her little slipper sent a sharp echo along the corridor. Pursuit was out of
+the question, of course, though she could run like a deer; some one might
+meet her at any turning, and in an hour the whole palace would know that
+she had been seen running at full speed after some unknown person. It would
+be bad enough if she were recognized walking alone at night at a distance
+from her own apartments. She drew her veil over her face so closely that
+she could hardly see her way, and began to retrace her steps towards the
+principal staircase, pondering as to what she should say to Mendoza when he
+discovered that she had allowed his daughter to escape. She was a woman of
+manlike intelligence and not easily unbalanced by a single reverse,
+however, and before she had gone far her mind began to work clearly.
+Dolores, she reasoned, would do one of two things. She would either go
+straight to Don John's apartments, wait for him, and then tell him her
+story, in the hope that he would protect her, or she would go to the
+Duchess Alvarez and seek protection there. Under no circumstances would she
+go down to the throne room without her court dress, for her mere appearance
+there, dressed as she was, would produce the most profound astonishment,
+and could do her no possible good. And as for her going to the Duchess,
+that was impossible, too. If she had run away from Do&ntilde;a Ana, she had
+done so because the idea of not seeing Don John for two days was
+intolerable, and she meant to try and see him at once. The Duchess was in
+all probability with the Queen, in the latter's private apartments, as
+Dolores would know. On the whole, it seemed far more likely that she had
+done the rashest thing that had suggested itself to her, and had gone
+directly to the man she loved,--a man powerful enough to protect her
+against all comers, at the present time, and quite capable of facing even
+the King's displeasure.</p>
+
+<p>But the whole object of Do&ntilde;a Ana's manoeuvre had been to get
+possession of Dolores' person, as a means of strongly influencing Don
+John's actions, in order thus to lead him into a false position from which
+he should not be able to escape without a serious quarrel with King Philip,
+which would be the first step towards the execution of the plot elaborated
+by Do&ntilde;a Ana and Perez together. Anything which could produce an open
+difference between the brothers would serve to produce two parties in
+Spain, of which the one that would take Don John's side would be by far the
+stronger. His power would be suddenly much increased, an organized
+agitation would be made throughout the country to set him on the throne,
+and his popularity, like C&aelig;sar's, would grow still more, when he
+refused the crown, as he would most certainly do. But just then King Philip
+would die suddenly of a fever, or a cold, or an indigestion, as the
+conspirators thought best. There would be no direct male heir to the throne
+but Don John himself, the acknowledged son of the Emperor Charles; and even
+Don John would then be made to see that he could only serve his country by
+ruling it, since it cried out for his rule and would have no other. It was
+a hard and dangerous thing to lead King Philip; it would be an easy matter
+to direct King John. An honest and unsuspicious soldier would be but as a
+child in such skilful hands. Do&ntilde;a Ana and Perez would rule Spain as
+they pleased, and by and by Don John should be chosen Emperor also by the
+Electors of the Holy Roman Empire, and the conspirators would rule the
+world, as Charles the Fifth had ruled it. There was no limit to their
+ambition, and no scruple would stand between them and any crime, and the
+stake was high and worth many risks.</p>
+
+<p>The Princess walked slowly, weighing in the balance all there was to
+lose or gain. When she reached the head of the main staircase, she had not
+yet altogether decided how to act, and lest she should meet some one she
+returned, and walked up and down the lonely corridor nearly a quarter of an
+hour, in deep thought. Suddenly a plan of action flashed upon her, and she
+went quickly on her way, to act at once.</p>
+
+<p>Don John, meanwhile, had read the letter she had sent him by the dwarf
+jester. When the King had retired into his own apartments, Don John found
+himself unexpectedly alone. Mendoza and the guard had filed into the
+antechamber, the gentlemen in waiting, being temporarily at liberty, went
+to the room leading out of it on one side, which was appropriated to their
+use. The sentries were set at the King's door, and Mendoza marched his
+halberdiers out again and off to their quarters, while the servants
+disappeared, and the hero of the day was left to himself. He smiled at his
+own surprise, recollecting that he should have ordered his own attendants
+to be in waiting after the supper, whereas he had dismissed them until
+midnight.</p>
+
+<p>He turned on his heel and walked away to find a quiet place where he
+might read the paper which had suddenly become of such importance, and
+paused at a Moorish niche, where Philip had caused a sacred picture to be
+placed, and before which a hanging silver lamp shed a clear light.</p>
+
+<p>The small sheet of paper contained but little writing. There were half a
+dozen sentences in a clear hand, without any signature--it was what has
+since then come to be called an anonymous letter. But it contained neither
+any threat, nor any evidence of spite; it set forth in plain language that
+if, as the writer supposed, Don John wished to marry Dolores de Mendoza, it
+was as necessary for her personal safety as for the accomplishment of his
+desires, that he should make no attempt to see her for at least two days,
+and that, if he would accept this advice, he should have the support of
+every noble and minister at court, including the very highest, with the
+certainty that no further hindrance would be set in his way; it added that
+the letter he had burned had contained the same words, and that the two
+flowers had been intended to serve as a signal which it was now too late to
+use. It would be sufficient if he told the bearer of the present letter
+that he agreed to take the advice it contained. His assent in that way
+would, of course, be taken by the writer to mean that he promised, on his
+word. That was all.</p>
+
+<p>He did not like the last sentence, for it placed him in an awkward
+position, as a man of honour, since he had already seen Dolores, and
+therefore could not under any circumstances agree to take advice contrary
+to which he had already acted. The most he could now say to the dwarf would
+be that he could give no answer and would act as carefully as possible. For
+the rest, the letter contained nothing treasonable, and was not at all what
+he had expected and believed it to be. It appeared to be written in a
+friendly spirit, and with the exception of his own brother and Mendoza, he
+was not aware that he had an enemy in Spain, in which he was almost right.
+Nevertheless, bold and frank as he was by nature, he knew enough of real
+warfare to distrust appearances. The writer was attached to the King's
+person, or the letter might have been composed, and even written in an
+assumed hand, by the King himself, for Philip was not above using the
+methods of a common conspirator. The limitation of time set upon his
+prudence was strange, too. If he had not seen her and agreed to the terms,
+he would have supposed that Dolores was being kept out of his way during
+those two days, whereas in that time it would be possible to send her very
+far from Madrid, or to place her secretly in a convent where it would be
+impossible to find her. It flashed upon him that in shutting up Dolores
+that evening Mendoza had been obeying the King's secret orders, as well as
+in telling her that she was to be taken to Las Huelgas at dawn. No one but
+Philip could have written the letter--only the dwarf's fear of Philip's
+displeasure could have made him so anxious that it should be read at once.
+It was all as clear as daylight now, and the King and Mendoza were acting
+together. The first letter had been brought by a woman, who must have got
+out through the window of the study, which was so low that she could almost
+have stepped from it to the terrace without springing. She had watched
+until the officers and the servants had gone out and the way was clear.
+Nothing could have been simpler or easier.</p>
+
+<p>He would have burnt the letter at the lamp before the picture, had he
+not feared that some one might see him do it, and he folded it again and
+thrust it back under his doublet. His face was grave as he turned away, for
+the position, as he understood it, was a very desperate one. He had meant
+to send Dolores to Villagarcia, but it was almost impossible that such a
+matter should remain unknown, and in the face of the King's personal
+opposition, it would probably ruin Quixada and his wife. He, on his side,
+might send Dolores to a convent, under an assumed name, and take her out
+again before she was found, and marry her. But that would be hard, too, for
+no places were more directly under the sovereign's control than convents
+and monasteries. Somewhere she must go, for she could not possibly remain
+concealed in his study more than three or four hours.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he fancied that she might be in danger even now. The woman who
+had brought the first letter had of course left the window unfastened. She,
+or the King, or any one, might get in by that way, and Dolores was alone.
+They might have taken her away already. He cursed himself for not having
+looked to see that the window was bolted. The man who had won great battles
+felt a chill at his heart, and he walked at the best of his speed, careless
+whether he met any one or not. But no place is more deserted than the more
+distant parts of a royal palace when there is a great assembly in the state
+apartments. He met no one on his way, and entered his own door alone. Ten
+minutes had not elapsed since the King had left the supper-room, and it was
+almost at that moment that Do&ntilde;a Ana met Mendoza.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores started to her feet as she heard his step in the next room and
+then the key in the lock, and as he entered her hands clasped themselves
+round his neck, and her eyes looked into his. He was very pale when he saw
+her at last, for the belief that she had been stolen away had grown with
+his speed, till it was an intolerable certainty.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it? What has happened?" she cried anxiously. "Why are you so
+white? Are you ill?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was frightened," he said simply. "I was afraid you were gone. Look
+here!"</p>
+
+<p>He led her to the window, and drew the curtain to one side. The cool air
+rushed in, for the bolts were unfastened, and the window was ajar. He
+closed it and fastened it securely, and they both came back.</p>
+
+<p>"The woman got out that way," he said, in explanation. "I understand it
+all now--and some one might have come back."</p>
+
+<p>He told her quietly what had happened, and showed her the letter, which
+she read slowly to the end before she gave it back to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Then the other was not a love letter, after all," she said, with a
+little laugh that had more of relief in it than amusement, though she did
+not know it herself.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he answered gravely. "I wish I had read it. I should at least have
+shut the window before leaving you!"</p>
+
+<p>Careless of any danger to herself, she sat looking up into his anxious
+face, her clasped hands lying in his and quite covered by them, as he stood
+beside her. There was not a trace of fear in her own face, nor indeed of
+any feeling but perfect love and confidence. Under the gaze of her deep
+grey eyes his expression relaxed for a moment, and grew like hers, so that
+it would have been hard to say which trusted the other the more.</p>
+
+<p>"What does anything matter, since we are together now?" she asked. "I am
+with you, can anything happen to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not while I am alive," he answered, but the look of anxiety for her
+returned at once. "You cannot stay here."</p>
+
+<p>"No--you will take me away. I am ready--"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not mean that. You cannot stay in this room, nor in my apartments.
+The King is coming here in a few minutes. I cannot tell what he may do--he
+may insist on seeing whether any one is here, listening, for he is very
+suspicious, and he only comes here because he does not even trust his own
+apartments. He may wish to open the door--"</p>
+
+<p>"I will lock it on the inside. You can say that it is locked, and that
+you have not the key. If he calls men to open it, I will escape by the
+window, and hide in the old sentry-box. He will not stay talking with you
+till morning!"</p>
+
+<p>She laughed, and he saw that she was right, simply because there was no
+other place where she could be even as safe as where she was. He slowly
+nodded as she spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," she cried, with another little laugh of happy satisfaction,
+"you must keep me here whether you will or not! You are really
+afraid--frightened like a boy! You! How men would stare if they could see
+you afraid!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is true," he answered, with a faint smile.</p>
+
+<p>"But I will give you courage!" she said. "The King cannot come yet.
+Perez can only have just gone to him, you say. They will talk at least half
+an hour, and it is very likely that Perez will persuade him not to come at
+all, because he is angry with you. Perhaps Perez will come instead, and he
+will be very smooth and flattering, and bring messages of reconciliation,
+and beg to make peace. He is very clever, but I do not like his face. He
+makes me think of a beautiful black fox! Even if the King comes himself, we
+have more than half an hour. You can stay a little while with me--then go
+into your room and sit down and read, as if you were waiting for him. You
+can read my letter over, and I will sit here and say all the things I
+wrote, over and over again, and you will know that I am saying them--it
+will be almost as if I were with you, and could say them quite close to
+you--like this--I love you!"</p>
+
+<p>She had drawn his hand gently down to her while she was speaking, and
+she whispered the last words into his ear with a delicate little kiss that
+sent a thrill straight to his heart.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not afraid any more now, are you?" she asked, as she let him
+go, and he straightened himself suddenly as a man drawing back from
+something he both fears and loves.</p>
+
+<p>He opened and shut his hands quickly two or three times, as some nervous
+men do, as if trying to shake them clear from a spell, or an influence.
+Then he began to walk up and down, talking to her.</p>
+
+<p>"I am at my wit's end," he said, speaking fast and not looking at her
+face, as he turned and turned again. "I cannot send you to
+Villagarcia--there are things that neither you nor I could do, even for
+each other, things you would not have me do for you, Dolores. It would be
+ruin and disgrace to my adopted mother and Quixada--it might be worse, for
+the King can call anything he pleases high treason. It is impossible to
+take you there without some one knowing it--can I carry you in my arms?
+There are grooms, coachmen, servants, who will tell anything under
+examination--under torture! How can I send you there?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would not go," answered Dolores quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot send you to a convent, either," he went on, for he had taken
+her answer for granted, as lovers do who trust each other. "You would be
+found in a day, for the King knows everything. There is only one place,
+where I am master--"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped short, and grew very pale again, looking at the wall, but
+seeing something very far away.</p>
+
+<p>"Where?" asked Dolores. "Take me there! Oh, take me where you are
+master--where there is no king but you, where we can be together all our
+lives, and no one can come between us!"</p>
+
+<p>He stood motionless, staring at the wall, contemplating in amazement the
+vastness of the temptation that arose before him. Dolores could not
+understand, but she did what a loving women does when the man she loves
+seems to be in a great distress. She came and stood beside him, passing one
+arm through his and pressing it tenderly, without a word. There are times
+when a man needs only that to comfort him and give him strength. But even a
+woman does not always know them.</p>
+
+<p>Very slowly he turned to her, almost as if he were trying to resist her
+eyes and could not. He took his arm from hers and his hands framed her face
+softly, and pushed the gold hair gently back on her forehead. But she grew
+frightened by degrees, for there was a look in his eyes she had never seen
+there, and that had never been in them before, neither in love nor in
+battle. His hands were quite cold, and his face was like a beautiful
+marble, but there was an evil something in it, as in a fallen angel's, a
+defiance of God, an irresistible strength to do harm, a terror such as no
+man would dare to meet.</p>
+
+<p>"You are worth it," he said in a tone so different from his natural
+voice that Dolores started, and would have drawn back from him, but could
+not, for his hands held her, shaking a little fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>"What? What is it?" she asked, growing more and more frightened--half
+believing that he was going mad.</p>
+
+<p>"You are worth it," he repeated. "I tell you, you are worth that, and
+much more, and the world, and all the world holds for me, and all earth and
+heaven besides. You do not know how I love you--you can never guess--"</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes grew tender again, and her hands went up and pressed his that
+still framed her face.</p>
+
+<p>"As I love you--dear love!" she answered, wondering, but happy.</p>
+
+<p>"No--not now. I love you more. You cannot guess--you shall see what I
+will do for your sake, and then you will understand."</p>
+
+<p>He uttered an incoherent exclamation, and his eyes dazzled her as he
+seized her in his arms and pressed her to him so that she could have cried
+out. And suddenly he kissed her, roughly, almost cruelly, as if he meant to
+hurt her, and knew that he could. She struggled in his arms, in an unknown
+terror of him, and her senses reeled.</p>
+
+<p>Then all at once, he let her go, and turned from her quickly, leaving
+her half fainting, so that she leaned against the wall and pressed her
+cheek to the rough hanging. She felt a storm of tears, that she could not
+understand, rising in her heart and eyes and throat. He had crossed the
+room, getting as far as he could from her, and stood there, turned to the
+wall, his arms bent against it and his face buried in his sleeve. He
+breathed hard, and spoke as if to himself in broken words.</p>
+
+<p>"Worth it? My God! What are you not worth?"</p>
+
+<p>There was such a ring of agony and struggling in his voice that Dolores
+forgot herself and stood up listening, suddenly filled with anxiety for him
+again. He was surely going mad. She would have gone to him again,
+forgetting her terror that was barely past, the woman's instinct to help
+the suffering man overruling everything else. It was for his sake that she
+stayed where she was, lest if she touched him he should lose his senses
+altogether.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there is one place, where I am master and lord!" he was saying.
+"There is one thing to do--one thing--"</p>
+
+<p>"What is the thing?" she asked very gently. "Why are you suffering so?
+Where is the place?"</p>
+
+<p>He turned suddenly, as he would have turned in his saddle in battle at a
+trumpet call, straight and strong, with fixed eyes and set lips, that spoke
+deliberately.</p>
+
+<p>"There is Granada," he said. "Do you understand now?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," she answered timidly. "I do not understand. Granada? Why there? It
+is so far away--"</p>
+
+<p>He laughed harshly.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not understand? Yes, Granada is far away--far enough to be
+another kingdom--so far that John of Austria is master there--so far that
+with his army at his back he can be not only its master, but its King? Do
+you understand now? Do you see what I will do for your sake?"</p>
+
+<p>He made one step towards her, and she was very white.</p>
+
+<p>"I will take you, and go back to-morrow. Do you think the Moors are not
+men, because I beat them? I tell you that if I set up my standard in
+Granada and call them to me, they will follow me--if I lead them to the
+gate of Madrid. Yes--and so will more than half the Spanish army, if I
+will! But I do not want that--it is not the kingdom--what should I care for
+that? Could I not have taken it and held it? It is for you, dear love--for
+your sake only--that we may have a world of our own--a kingdom in which you
+are queen! Let there be war--why should I care? I will set the world ablaze
+and let it burn to its own ashes, but I will not let them take you from me,
+neither now, nor ever, while I am alive!"</p>
+
+<p>He came quickly towards her now, and she could not draw back, for the
+wall was behind her. But she thrust out her hands against him to keep him
+off. The gesture stopped him, just when he would have taken her in his
+arms.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" she cried vehemently. "You must not say such things, you must
+not think such thoughts! You are beside yourself, and you will drive me
+mad, too!"</p>
+
+<p>"But it will be so easy--you shall see--"</p>
+
+<p>She cut his words short.</p>
+
+<p>"It must not be easy, it must not be possible, it must not be at all! Do
+you believe that I love you and that I would let you do such deeds? Oh, no!
+That would not be love at all--it would be hate, it would be treason to
+you, and worse treason than yours against your brother!"</p>
+
+<p>The fierce light was sinking from his face. He had folded his arms and
+stood very still, listening to her.</p>
+
+<p>"You!" she cried, with rising energy. "You, the brave soldier, the
+spotless man, the very soul of honour made flesh and blood! You, who have
+but just come back in triumph from fighting your King's enemies--you
+against whom no living being has ever dared to breathe a slander or a
+slighting word. Oh, no, no, no, no! I could not bear that you should betray
+your faith and your country and yourself, and be called traitor for my
+sake! Not for ten lives of mine shall you ruin yours. And not because I
+might love you less if you had done that deed. God help me! I think I
+should love you if you committed any crime! The shame is the more to me--I
+know it. I am only a woman! But rather than let my love ruin you, make a
+traitor of you and lose you in this world and the next, my soul shall go
+first--life, soul, honour, everything! You shall not do it! You think that
+you love me more than I love you, but you do not. For to save you as you
+are, I love you so dearly that I will leave you--leave you to honour, leave
+you to your King, leave you to the undying glory of the life you have
+lived, and will live, in memory of my love!"</p>
+
+<p>The splendid words rang from her lips like a voice from heaven, and her
+eyes were divinely lightened. For they looked up, and not at him, calling
+Heaven to witness that she would keep her promise. As her open hand
+unconsciously went out, he took it tenderly, and felt her fingers softly
+closing on his own, as if she would lift him to himself again, and to the
+dear light of her own thoughts. There was silence for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"You are better and wiser than I," he said, and his tone told her that
+the madness was past.</p>
+
+<p>"And you know that I am right? You see that I must leave you, to save
+you from me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Leave me--now?" he cried. "You only said that--you meant me to
+understand--you did not mean that you would leave me now?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do mean it," she said, in a great effort. "It is all I can do, to
+show you how I love you. As long as I am in your life you will be in
+danger--you will never be safe from yourself--I see it all now! I stand
+between you and all the world would give you--I will not stand between you
+and honour!"</p>
+
+<p>She was breaking down, fight as she would against the pain. He could say
+nothing, for he could not believe that she really was in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>"I must!" she exclaimed suddenly. "It is all I can do for you--it is my
+life--take it!"</p>
+
+<p>The tears broke from her eyes, but she held her head high, and let them
+fall unheeded.</p>
+
+<p>"Take it!" she repeated. "It is all I have to give for yours and your
+honour. Good-by--oh, love, I love you so dearly! Once more, before I
+go--"</p>
+
+<p>She almost, fell into his arms as she buried her face on his shoulder
+and clasped his throat as she was wont. He kissed her hair gently, and from
+time to time her whole frame shook with the sobs she was choking down.</p>
+
+<p>"It kills me," she said in a broken voice. "I cannot--I thought I was so
+strong! Oh, I am the most miserable living woman in the world!"</p>
+
+<p>She broke away from him wildly and threw herself upon a chair, turning
+from him to its cushion and hiding her face in her hands, choking, pressing
+the furious tears back upon her eyes, shaking from head to foot.</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot go! You cannot!" he cried, falling on his knees beside her
+and trying to take her hands in his. "Dolores--look at me! I will do
+anything--promise anything--you will believe me! Listen, love--I give you
+my word--I swear before God--"</p>
+
+<p>"No--swear nothing--" she said, between the sobs that broke her
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>"But I will!" he insisted, drawing her hands down till she looked at
+him. "I swear upon my honour that I will never raise my hand against the
+King--that I will defend him, and fight for him, and be loyal to him,
+whatever he may do to me--and that even for you, I will never strike a blow
+in battle nor speak a word in peace that is not all honourable, through and
+through,--even as I have fought and spoken until now!"</p>
+
+<p>As she listened to his words her weeping subsided, and her tearful eyes
+took light and life again. She drew him close, and kissed him on the
+forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"I am so glad--so happy!" she cried softly. "I should never have had
+strength to really say good-by!"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_X'></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+
+<p>Don John smoothed her golden hair. Never since he had known that he
+loved her, had she seemed so beautiful as then, and his thought tried to
+hold her as she was, that she might in memory be always the same. There was
+colour in her cheeks, a soft flush of happiness that destroyed all traces
+of her tears, so that they only left her grey eyes dark and tender under
+the long wet lashes.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a cruel dream, dear love! It was not true!" Finding him again,
+her voice was low, and sweet with joy.</p>
+
+<p>He smiled, too, and his own eyes were quiet and young, now that the
+tempest had passed away, almost out of recollection. It had raged but for a
+few moments, but in that time both he and she had lived and loved as it
+were through years, and their love had grown better and braver. She knew
+that his word was enough, and that he would die rather than break it; but
+though she had called herself weak, and had seemed to break down in
+despair, she would have left him for ever rather than believe that he was
+still in danger through her. She did not again ask herself whether her
+sudden resolution had been all for his sake, and had not formed itself
+because she dreaded to think of being bound to one who betrayed his
+country. She knew it and needed no further self-questioning to satisfy her.
+If such a man could have committed crimes, she would have hated them, not
+him, she would have pardoned him, not them, she would still have laid her
+hand in his before the whole world, though it should mean shame and infamy,
+because she loved him and would always love him, and could never have left
+him for her own sake, come all that might. She had said it was a shame to
+her that she would have loved him still; yet if it had been so, she would
+have gloried in being shamed for his sake, for even then her love might
+have brought him back from the depths of evil and made him again for her in
+truth what he had once seemed to the whole world. She could have done that,
+and if in the end she had saved him she would have counted the price of her
+name as very little to set against his salvation from himself. She would
+have given that and much more, for her love, as she would freely give all
+for him and even for his memory, if he were dead, and if by some
+unimaginable circumstances her ruin before the world could keep his name
+spotless, and his glory unsullied. For there is nothing that a true-hearted
+loving woman will not give and do for him she loves and believes and
+trusts; and though she will give the greatest thing last of all, she will
+give it in the end, if it can save him from infamy and destruction. For it
+is the woman's glory to give, as it is the man's to use strength in the
+hour of battle and gentleness in the day of peace, and to follow honour
+always.</p>
+
+<p>"Forget it all," answered Don John presently. "Forget it, dear, and
+forgive me for it all."</p>
+
+<p>"I can forget it, because it was only a dream," she said, "and I have
+nothing to forgive. Listen to me. If it were true--even if I believed that
+we had not been dreaming, you and I, could I have anything to forgive you?
+What?"</p>
+
+<p>"The mere thought that I could betray a trust, turn against my sovereign
+and ruin my country," he answered bravely, and a blush of honest shame rose
+in his boyish cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"It was for me," said Dolores.</p>
+
+<p>That should explain all, her heart said. But he was not satisfied, and
+being a man he began to insist.</p>
+
+<p>"Not even for you should I have thought of it," he said. "And there is
+the thought to forgive, if nothing else."</p>
+
+<p>"No--you are wrong, love. Because it was for me, it does not need my
+forgiveness. It is different--you do not understand yet. It is I who should
+have never forgiven myself on earth nor expected pardon hereafter, if I had
+let myself be the cause of such deeds, if I had let my love stand between
+you and honour. Do you see?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see," he answered. "You are very brave and kind and good. I did not
+know that a woman could be like you."</p>
+
+<p>"A woman could be anything--for you--dare anything, do anything,
+sacrifice anything! Did I not tell you so, long ago? You only half believed
+me, dear--perhaps you do not quite believe me now--"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, indeed I do, with all my soul! I believe you as I love you, as
+I believe in your love--"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Tell me that you do--and tell me that you love me! It is so good
+to hear, now that the bad dream is gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I tell you?" He smiled, playing with her hand. "How can I? There
+are so few words in which to say so much. But I will tell you this--I would
+give my word for you. Does that sound little? You should know, for you know
+at what price you would have saved my honour a while ago. I believe in you
+so truly that I would stake my word, and my honour, and my Christian oath
+upon your faith, and promise for you before God or man that you will always
+love me as you do to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"You may pledge all three. I will, and I will give you all I have that
+is not God's--and if that is not enough, I will give my soul for yours, if
+I may, to suffer in your stead."</p>
+
+<p>She spoke quietly enough, but there was a little quaver of true
+earnestness in her voice, that made each word a solemn promise.</p>
+
+<p>"And besides that," she added, "you see how I trust you."</p>
+
+<p>She smiled again as she looked at him, and knew how safe she was, far
+safer now than when she had first come with him to the door. Something told
+her that he had mastered himself--she would not have wished to think that
+she had ruled him? it was enough if she had shown him the way, and had
+helped him. He pressed her hand to his cheek and looked down thoughtfully,
+wishing that he could find such simple words that could say so much, but
+not trusting himself to speak. For though, in love, a man speaks first, he
+always finds the least to say of love when it has strongest hold of him;
+but a woman has words then, true and tender, that come from her heart
+unsought. Yet by and by, if love is not enduring, so that both tire of it,
+the man plays the better comedy, because he has the greater strength, and
+sometimes what he says has the old ring in it, because it is so well said,
+and the woman smiles and wonders that his love should have lasted longer
+than hers, and desiring the illusion, she finds old phrases again; yet
+there is no life in them, because when love is dead she thinks of herself,
+and instead, it was only of him she thought in the good days when her heart
+used to beat at the sound of his footfall, and the light grew dim and
+unsteady as she felt his kiss. But the love of these two was not born to
+tire; and because he was so young, and knew the world little, save at his
+sword's point, he was ashamed that he could not speak of love as well as
+she.</p>
+
+<p>"Find words for me," he said, "and I will say them, for yours are better
+than mine."</p>
+
+<p>"Say, 'I love you, dear,' very softly and gently--not roughly, as you
+sometimes do. I want to hear it gently now, that, and nothing else."</p>
+
+<p>She turned a little, leaning towards him, her face near his, her eyes
+quiet and warm, and she took his hands and held them together before her as
+if he were her prisoner--and indeed she meant that he should not suddenly
+take her in his arms, as he often did.</p>
+
+<p>"I love you, dear," he repeated, smiling, and pretending to be very
+docile.</p>
+
+<p>"That is not quite the way," she said, with a girlish laugh. "Say it
+again--quite as softly, but more tenderly! You must be very much in
+earnest, you know, but you must not be in the least violent." She laughed
+again. "It is like teaching a young lion," she added. "He may eat you up at
+any moment, instead of obeying you. Tell me, you have a little lion that
+follows you like a dog when you are in your camp, have you not? You have
+not told me about him yet. How did you teach him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not try to make him say 'I love you, dear,'" answered Don John,
+laughing in his turn.</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke a distant sound caught his ear, and the smile vanished from
+his face, for though he heard only the far off rumbling of a coach in the
+great court, it recalled him to reality.</p>
+
+<p>"We are playing with life and death," he said suddenly. "It is late, the
+King may be here at any moment, and we have decided nothing." He rose.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it late?" asked Dolores, passing her hand over her eyes dreamily. "I
+had forgotten--it seems so short. Give me the key on my side of the
+door--we had decided that, you know. Go and sit down in your room, as we
+agreed. Shall you read my letter again, love? It may be half an hoar still
+before the King comes. When he is gone, we shall have all the night in
+which to decide, and the nights are very long now. Oh, I hate to lose one
+minute of you! What shall you say to the King?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know what he may say to me," answered Don John. "Listen and
+you shall hear--I would rather know that you hear everything I say. It will
+be as if I were speaking before you, and of course I should tell you
+everything the King says. He will speak of you, I think."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, it would be hard not to listen," said Dolores. "I should have
+to stop my ears, for one cannot help hearing every word that is said in the
+next room. Do you know? I heard you ask for your white shoes! I hardly
+dared to breathe for fear the servants should find out that I was
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"So much the better then. Sit in this chair near the door. But be
+careful to make no noise, for the King is very suspicious."</p>
+
+<p>"I know. Do not be afraid; I will be as quiet as a mouse. Go, love, go!
+It is time--oh, how I hate to let you leave me! You will be careful? You
+will not be angry at what he says? You would be wiser if you knew I were
+not hearing everything; you will want to defend me if he says the least
+word you do not like, but let him say what he will! Anything is better than
+an open quarrel between you and the King! Promise me to be very moderate in
+what you say, and very patient. Remember that he is the King!"</p>
+
+<p>"And my brother," said Don John, with some bitterness. "Do not fear. You
+know what I have promised you. I will bear anything he may say that
+concerns me as well as I can, but if he says anything slighting of
+you--"</p>
+
+<p>"But he may--that is the danger. Promise me not to be angry--"</p>
+
+<p>"How can I promise that, if he insults you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I did not mean that exactly. Promise that you will not forget
+everything and raise your hand against him. You see I know you would."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I will not raise my hand against him. That was in the promise I
+made you. And as for being angry, I will do my best to keep my temper."</p>
+
+<p>"I know you will. Now you must go. Good-by, love! Good-by, for a little
+while."</p>
+
+<p>"For such a little time shall we say good-by? I hate the word; it makes
+me think of the day when I left you last."</p>
+
+<p>"How can I tell what may happen to you when you are out of my sight?"
+asked Dolores. "And what is 'good-by' but a blessing each prays for the
+other? That is all it means. It does not mean that we part for long, love.
+Why, I would say it for an hour! Good-by, dear love, good-by!"</p>
+
+<p>She put up her face to kiss him, and it was so full of trust and
+happiness that the word lost all the bitterness it has gathered through
+ages of partings, and seemed, what she said it was, a loving blessing. Yet
+she said it very tenderly, for it was hard to let him go even for less than
+an hour. He said it, too, to please her; but yet the syllables came
+mournfully, as if they meant a world more than hers, and the sound of them
+half frightened her, so that she was sorry she had asked him for the
+word.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so!" she cried, in quick alarm. "You are not keeping anything from
+me? You are only going to the next room to meet the King--are you
+sure?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is all. You see, the word frightened you. It seems such a sad word
+to me--I will not say it again."</p>
+
+<p>He kissed her gently, as if to soothe her fear, and then he opened the
+door and set the key in the lock on the inside. Then when he was outside,
+he lingered a moment, and their lips met once more without a word, and they
+nodded and smiled to one another a last time, and he closed the door and
+heard her lock it.</p>
+
+<p>When she was alone, she turned away as if he were gone from her
+altogether instead of being in the next room, where she could hear him
+moving now and then, as he placed his chair near the light to read and
+arranged the candlesticks on the table. Then he went to the other door and
+opened it and opened the one beyond upon the terrace, and she knew that he
+was looking out to see if any one were there. But presently he came back
+and sat down, and she distinctly heard the rustle of the strong
+writing-paper as he unfolded a letter. It was hers. He was going to read
+it, as they had agreed.</p>
+
+<p>So she sat down where she could look at the door, and she tried to force
+her eyes to see through it, to make him feel that she was watching him,
+that she came near him and stood beside him, and softly read the words for
+him, but without looking at them, because she knew them all by heart. But
+it was not the same as if she had seen him, and it was very hard to be shut
+off from his sight by an impenetrable piece of wood, to lose all the
+moments that might pass before the King chose to come. Another hour might
+pass. No one could even tell whether he would come at all after he had
+consulted with Antonio Perez. The skilful favourite desired a quarrel
+between his master and Don John with all his heart, but he was not ready
+for it yet. He must have possession of Dolores first and hide her safely;
+and when the quarrel came, Don John should believe that the King had stolen
+her and imprisoned her, and that she was treated ill; and for the woman he
+loved, Don John would tear down the walls of Madrid, if need be, and if at
+the last he found her dead, there would be no harm done, thought Perez, and
+Don John would hate his brother even to death, and all Spain would cry out
+in sympathy and horror. But all this Dolores could neither know nor even
+suspect. She only felt sure that the King and Perez were even now
+consulting together to hinder her marriage with Don John, and that Perez
+might persuade the King not to see his brother that night.</p>
+
+<p>It was almost intolerable to think that she might wait there for hours,
+wasting the minutes for which she would have given drops of blood. Surely
+they both were overcautious. The door could be left open, so that they
+could talk, and at the first sound without, she could lock it again and sit
+down. That would be quite as safe.</p>
+
+<p>She rose and was almost in the act of opening the door again when she
+stopped and hesitated. It was possible that at any moment the King might be
+at the door; for though she could hear every sound that came from the next
+room, the thick curtains that hid the window effectually shut out all sound
+from without. It struck her that she could go to the window, however, and
+look out. Yet a ray of light might betray her presence in the room to any
+one outside, and if she drew aside the curtain the light would shine out
+upon the terrace. She listened at Don John's door, and presently she heard
+him turn her letter in his hand, and all her heart went out to him, and she
+stood noiselessly kissing the panels and saying over again in her heart
+that she loved him more than any words could tell. If she could only see
+out of the window and assure herself that no one was coming yet, there
+would be time to go to him again, for one moment only, and say the words
+once more.</p>
+
+<p>Then she sat down and told herself how foolish she was. She had been
+separated from him for many long and empty months, and now she had been
+with him and talked long with him twice in leas than three hours, and yet
+she could not bear that he should be out of her sight five minutes without
+wishing to risk everything to see him again. She tried to laugh at herself,
+repeating over and over again that she was very, very foolish, and that she
+should have a just contempt for any woman who could be as foolish as she.
+For some moments she sat still, staring at the wall.</p>
+
+<p>In the thought of him that filled her heart and soul and mind, she saw
+that her own life had begun when he had first spoken to her, and she felt
+that it would end with the last good-by, because if he should die or cease
+to love her, there would be nothing more to live for. Her early girlhood
+seemed dim and far away, dull and lifeless, as if it had not been hers at
+all, and had no connection with the present. She saw herself in the past,
+as she could not see herself now, and the child she remembered seemed not
+herself but another--a fair-haired girl living in the gloomy old house in
+Valladolid, with her blind sister and an old maiden cousin of her father's,
+who had offered to bring up the two and to teach them, being a woman of
+some learning, and who fulfilled her promise in such a conscientious and
+austere way as made their lives something of a burden under her strict
+rule. But that was all forgotten now, and though she still lived in
+Valladolid she had probably changed but little in the few years since
+Dolores had seen her; she was part of the past, a relic of something that
+had hardly ever had a real existence, and which it was not at all necessary
+to remember. There was one great light in the girl's simple existence, it
+had come all at once, and it was with her still. There was nothing dim nor
+dark nor forgotten about the day when she had been presented at court by
+the Duchess Alvarez, and she had first seen Don John, and he had first seen
+her and had spoken to her, when he had talked with the Duchess herself. At
+the first glance--and it was her first sight of the great world--she had
+seen that of all the men in the great hall, there was no one at all like
+him. She had no sooner looked into his face and cast her eyes upon his
+slender figure, all in white then, as he was dressed to-night, than she
+began to compare him with the rest. She looked so quickly from one to
+another that any one might have thought her to be anxiously searching for a
+friend in the crowd. But she had none then, and she was but assuring
+herself once, and for all her life, that the man she was to love was
+immeasurably beyond all other men, though the others were the very flower
+of Spain's young chivalry.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, as she told herself now, she had not loved him then, nor even
+when she heard his voice speaking to her the first time and was almost too
+happy to understand his words. But she had remembered them. He had asked
+her whether she lived in Madrid. She had told him that she lived in the
+Alcazar itself, since her father commanded the guards and had his quarters
+in the palace. And then Don John had looked at her very fixedly for a
+moment, and had seemed pleased, for he smiled and said that he hoped he
+might see her often, and that if it were in his power to be of use to her
+father, he would do what he could. She was sure that she had not loved him
+then, though she had dreamed of his winning face and voice and had thought
+of little else all the next day, and the day after that, with a sort of
+feverish longing to see him again, and had asked the Duchess Alvarez so
+many questions about him that the Duchess had smiled oddly, and had shaken
+her handsome young head a little, saying that it was better not to think
+too much about Don John of Austria. Surely, she had not loved him already,
+at first sight. But on the evening of the third day, towards sunset, when
+she had been walking with Inez on a deserted terrace where no one but the
+two sisters ever went, Don John had suddenly appeared, sauntering idly out
+with one of his gentlemen on his left, as if he expected nothing at all;
+and he had seemed very much surprised to see her, and had bowed low, and
+somehow very soon, blind Inez, who was little more than a child three years
+ago, was leading the gentleman about the terrace, to show him where the
+best roses grew, which she knew by their touch and smell, and Don John and
+Dolores were seated on an old stone bench, talking earnestly together. Even
+to herself she admitted that she had loved him from that evening, and
+whenever she thought of it she smelt the first scent of roses, and saw his
+face with the blaze of the sunset in his eyes, and heard his voice saying
+that he should come to the terrace again at that hour, in which matter he
+had kept his word as faithfully as he always did, and presumably without
+any especial effort. So she had known him as he really was, without the
+formalities of the court life, of which she was herself a somewhat
+insignificant part; and it was only when he said a few words to her before
+the other ladies that she took pains to say 'your Highness' to him once or
+twice, and he called her 'Do&ntilde;a Dolores,' and enquired in a friendly
+manner about her father's health. But on the terrace they managed to talk
+without any such formal mode of address, and used no names at all for each
+other, until one day--but she would not think of that now. If she let her
+memory run all its course, she could not sit there with the door closed
+between him and her, for something stronger than she would force her to go
+and open it, and make sure he was there. This method, indeed, would be a
+very certain one, leaving no doubt whatever, but at the present moment it
+would be foolish to resort to it, and, perhaps, it would be dangerous, too.
+The past was so beautiful and peaceful; she could think its history through
+many times up to that point, where thinking was sure to end suddenly in
+something which was too present for memory and too well remembered not to
+be present.</p>
+
+<p>It came back to her so vividly that she left her seat again and went to
+the curtained window, as if to get as far as possible from the irresistible
+attraction. Standing there she looked back and saw the key in the lock. It
+was foolish, girlish, childish, at such a time, but she felt that as long
+as it was there she should want to turn it. With a sudden resolution and a
+smile that was for her own weakness, she went to the door again, listened
+for footsteps, and then quietly took the key from the lock. Instantly Don
+John was on the other side, calling to her softly.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" he asked. "For Heaven's sake do not come in, for I think I
+hear him coming."</p>
+
+<p>"No," she answered through the panel. "I was afraid I should turn the
+key, so I have taken it out." She paused. "I love you!" she said, so that
+he could hear, and she kissed the wood, where she thought his face must be,
+just above her own.</p>
+
+<p>"I love you with all my heart!" he answered gently. "Hush, dear love, he
+is coming!"</p>
+
+<p>They were like two children, playing at a game; but they were playing on
+the very verge of tragedy, playing at life with death at the door and the
+safety of a great nation hanging in the balance.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later, Dolores heard Don John opening and shutting the other
+doors again, and then there were voices. She heard her father's name spoken
+in the King's unmistakable tones, at once harsh and muffled. Every word
+came to her from the other room, as if she were present.</p>
+
+<p>"Mendoza," said Philip, "I have private matters to discuss with his
+Highness. I desire you to wait before the entrance, on the terrace, and to
+let no one pass in, as we do not wish to be disturbed."</p>
+
+<p>Her father did not speak, but she knew how he was bending a little
+stiffly, before he went backwards through the open door. It closed behind
+him, and the two brothers were alone. Dolores' heart beat a little faster,
+and her face grew paler as she concentrated her attention upon making no
+noise. If they could hear her as she heard them, a mere rustling of her
+silk gown would be enough to betray her, and if then the King bade her
+father take her with him, all would be over, for Don John would certainly
+not use any violence to protect her.</p>
+
+<p>"This is your bedchamber," said Philip's voice.</p>
+
+<p>He was evidently examining the room, as Don John had anticipated that he
+would, for he was moving about. There was no mistaking his heavy steps for
+his brother's elastic tread.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no one behind the curtain," said the King, by which it was
+clear that he was making search for a possible concealed listener. He was
+by no means above such precautions.</p>
+
+<p>"And that door?" he said, with a question. "What is there?"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores' heart almost stood still, as she held her breath, and heard the
+clumsy footfall coming nearer.</p>
+
+<p>"It is locked," said Don John, with undisturbed calm. "I have not the
+key. I do not know where it is,--it is not here."</p>
+
+<p>As Dolores had taken it from the lock, even the last statement was true
+to the letter, and in spite of her anxiety she smiled as she heard it, but
+the next moment she trembled, for the King was trying the door, and it
+shook under his hand, as if it must fly open.</p>
+
+<p>"It is certainly locked," he said, in a discontented tone. "But I do not
+like locked doors, unless I know what is beyond them."</p>
+
+<p>He crossed the room again and called out to Mendoza, who answered at
+once.</p>
+
+<p>"Mendoza, come here with me. There is a door here, of which his Highness
+has not the key. Can you open it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will try, your Majesty," answered the General's hard voice.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later the panels shook violently under the old man's weight,
+for he was stronger than one might have thought, being lean and tough
+rather than muscular. Dolores took the moment when the noise was loudest
+and ran a few steps towards the window. Then the sounds ceased suddenly,
+and she stood still.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot open it, your Majesty," said Mendoza, in a disconsolate
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Then go and get the key," answered the King almost angrily.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XI'></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+
+<p>Inez remained hidden a quarter of an hour in the gallery over the throne
+room, before she ventured to open the door noiselessly and listen for any
+sound that might come from the passage. She was quite safe there, as long
+as she chose to remain, for the Princess had believed that she had fled far
+beyond and was altogether out of reach of any one whose dignity would not
+allow of running a race. It must be remembered that at the time she entered
+the gallery Mendoza had returned to his duty below, and that some time
+afterwards he had accompanied the King to Don John's apartments, and had
+then been sent in search of the key to the locked door.</p>
+
+<p>The blind girl was of course wholly ignorant of his whereabouts, and
+believed him to be in or about the throne room. Her instinct told her that
+since Dolores had not gone to the court, as she had intended, with the
+Duchess Alvarez, she must have made some last attempt to see Don John
+alone. In her perfect innocence such an idea seemed natural enough to Inez,
+and it at first occurred to her that the two might have arranged to meet on
+the deserted terrace where they had spent so many hours in former times.
+She went there first, finding her way with some little difficulty from the
+corridor where the gallery was, for the region was not the one to which she
+was most accustomed, though there was hardly a corner of the upper story
+where she had never been. Reaching the terrace, she went out and called
+softly, but there was no answer, nor could she hear any sound. The night
+was not cold now, but the breeze chilled her a little, and just then the
+melancholy cry of a screech owl pierced the air, and she shivered and went
+in again.</p>
+
+<p>She would have gone to the Duchess Alvarez had she not been sure that
+the latter was below with the Queen, and even as it was, she would have
+taken refuge in the Duchess's apartments with the women, and she might have
+learned something of Dolores there. But her touch reminded her that she was
+dressed in her sister's clothes, and that many questions might be asked her
+which it would be hard to answer. And again, it grew quite clear to her
+that Dolores must be somewhere near Don John, perhaps waiting in some
+concealed corner until all should be quiet. It was more than probable that
+he would get her out of the palace secretly during the night and send her
+to his adoptive mother at Villagarcia. She had not believed the Princess's
+words in the least, but she had not forgotten them, and had argued rightly
+enough to their real meaning.</p>
+
+<p>In the upper story all was still now. She and Dolores had known where
+Don John was to be lodged in the palace nearly a month before he had
+returned, and they had been there more than once, when no one was on the
+terrace, and Dolores had made her touch the door and the six windows, three
+on each side of it. She could get there without difficulty, provided that
+no one stopped her.</p>
+
+<p>She went a little way in the right direction and then hesitated. There
+was more danger to Dolores than to herself if she should be recognized,
+and, after all, if Dolores was near Don John she was safer than she could
+be anywhere else. Inez could not help her very much in any way if she found
+her there, and it would be hard to find her if she had met Mendoza at first
+and if he had placed her in the keeping of a third person. She imagined
+what his astonishment would have been had he found the real Dolores in her
+court dress a few moments after Inez had been delivered over to the
+Princess disguised in Dolores' clothes, and she almost smiled. But then a
+great loneliness and a sense of helplessness came over her, and she turned
+back and went out upon the deserted terrace again and sat down upon the old
+stone seat, listening for the screech owl and the fluttering of the bats
+that flew aimlessly in and out, attracted by the light and then scared away
+by it again because the moon was at the full.</p>
+
+<p>Inez had never before then wandered about the palace at night, and
+though darkness and daylight were one to her, there was something in the
+air that frightened her, and made her feel how really helpless she was in
+spite of her almost superhuman hearing and her wonderful sense of touch. It
+was very still--it was never so still by day. It seemed as if people must
+be lying in wait for her, holding their breath lest she should hear even
+that. She had never felt blind before; she had never so completely realized
+the difference between her life and the lives of others. By day, she could
+wander where she pleased on the upper story--it was cheerful, familiar; now
+and then some one passed and perhaps spoke to her kindly, as every one did
+who knew her; and then there was the warm sunlight at the windows, and the
+cool breath of the living day in the corridors. The sounds guided her, the
+sun warmed her, the air fanned her, the voices of the people made her feel
+that she was one of them. But now, the place was like an empty church, full
+of tombs and silent as the dead that lay there. She felt horribly lonely,
+and cold, and miserable, and she would have given anything to be in bed in
+her own room. She could not go there. Eudaldo would not understand her
+return, after being told that she was to stay with the Princess, and she
+would be obliged to give him some explanation. Then her voice would betray
+her, and there would be terrible trouble. If only she had kept her own
+cloak to cover Dolores' frock, she could have gone back and the servant
+would have thought it quite natural Indeed, by this time he would be
+expecting her. It would be almost better to go in after all, and tell him
+some story of her having mistaken her sister's skirt for her own, and beg
+him to say nothing. She could easily confuse him a little so that he would
+not really understand--and then in a few minutes she could be in her own
+room, safe and in bed, and far away from the dismal place where she was
+sitting and shivering as she listened to the owls.</p>
+
+<p>She rose and began to walk towards her father's quarters. But suddenly
+she felt that it was cowardly to go back without accomplishing the least
+part of her purpose, and without even finding out whether Dolores was in
+safety after all. There was but one chance of finding her, and that lay in
+searching the neighbourhood of Don John's lodging. Without hesitating any
+longer, she began to find her way thither at once. She determined that if
+she were stopped, either by her father or the Princess, she would throw
+back her head and show her face at once. That would be the safest way in
+the end.</p>
+
+<p>She reached Don John's windows unhindered at last. She had felt every
+corner, and had been into the empty sentry-box; and once or twice, after
+listening a long time, she had called Dolores in a very low tone. She
+listened by the first window, and by the second and third, and at the door,
+and then beyond, till she came to the last. There were voices there, and
+her heart beat quickly for a moment. It was impossible to distinguish the
+words that were spoken, through the closed window and the heavy curtains,
+but the mere tones told her that Don John and Dolores were there together.
+That was enough for her, and she could go back to her room; for it seemed
+quite natural to her that her sister should be in the keeping of the man
+she loved,--she was out of harm's way and beyond their father's power, and
+that was all that was necessary. She would go back to her room at once, and
+explain the matter of her dress to Eudaldo as best she might. After all,
+why should he care what she wore or where she had been, or whether in the
+Princess's apartments she had for some reason exchanged gowns with Dolores.
+Perhaps he would not even notice the dress at all.</p>
+
+<p>She meant to go at once, but she stood quite still, her hands resting on
+the low sill of the window, while her forehead pressed against the cold
+round panes of glass. Something hurt her which she could not understand, as
+she tried to fancy the two beautiful young beings who were within,--for she
+knew what beauty they had, and Dolores had described Don John to her as a
+young god. His voice came to her like strains of very distant sweet music,
+that connect themselves to an unknown melody in the fancy of him who
+faintly hears. But Dolores was hearing every word he said, and it was all
+for her; and Dolores not only heard, but saw; and seeing and hearing, she
+was loved by the man who spoke to her, as dearly as she loved him.</p>
+
+<p>Then utter loneliness fell upon the blind girl as she leaned against the
+window. She had expected nothing, she had asked nothing, even in her heart;
+and she had less than nothing, since never on earth, nor in heaven
+hereafter, could Don John say a loving word to her. And yet she felt that
+something had been taken from her and given to her sister,--something that
+was more to her than life, and dearer than the thought of sight to her
+blindness. She had taken what had not been given her, in innocent girlish
+thoughts that were only dreams, and could hurt no one. He had always spoken
+gently to her, and touched her hand kindly; and many a time, sitting alone
+in the sun, she had set those words to the well-remembered music of his
+voice, and she had let the memory of his light touch on her fingers thrill
+her strangely to the very quick. It had been but the reflection of a
+reflection in her darkness, wherein the shadow of a shadow seemed as bright
+as day. It had been all she had to make her feel that she was a part of the
+living, loving world she could never see. Somehow she had unconsciously
+fancied that with a little dreaming she could live happy in Dolores'
+happiness, as by a proxy, and she had never called it love, any more than
+she would have dared to hope for love in return. Yet it was that, and
+nothing else,--the love that is so hopeless and starving, and yet so
+innocent, that it can draw the illusion of an airy nourishment from that
+which to another nature would be the fountain of all jealousy and
+hatred.</p>
+
+<p>But now, without reason and without warning, even that was taken from
+her, and in its place something burned that she did not know, save that it
+was a bad thing, and made even blackness blacker. She heard their voices
+still. They were happy together, while she was alone outside, her forehead
+resting against the chill glass, and her hands half numb upon the stone;
+and so it would always be hereafter. They would go, and take her life with
+them, and she should be left behind, alone for ever; and a great revolt
+against her fate rose quickly in her breast like a flame before the wind,
+and then, as if finding nothing to consume, sank down again into its own
+ashes, and left her more lonely than before. The voices had ceased now, or
+else the lovers were speaking very low, fearing, perhaps, that some one
+might be listening at the window. If Inez had heard their words at first,
+she would have stopped her ears or gone to a distance, for the child knew
+what that sort of honour meant, and had done as much before. But the
+unformed sound had been good to hear, and she missed it. Perhaps they were
+sitting close and, hand in hand, reading all the sweet unsaid things in one
+another's eyes. There must be silent voices in eyes that could see, she
+thought. She took little thought of the time, yet it seemed long to her
+since they had spoken. Perhaps they had gone to another room. She moved to
+the next window and listened there, but no sound came from within. Then she
+heard footfalls, and one was her father's. Two men were coming out by the
+corridor, and she had not time to reach the sentry-box. With her hands out
+before her, she went lightly away from the windows to the outer side of the
+broad terrace, and cowered down by the balustrade as she ran against it,
+not knowing whether she was in the moonlight or the shade. She had crossed
+like a shadow and was crouching there before Mendoza and the King came out.
+She knew by their steady tread, that ended at the door, that they had not
+noticed her; and as the door closed behind them, she ran back to the window
+again and listened, expecting to hear loud and angry words, for she could
+not doubt that the King and her father had discovered that Dolores was
+there, and had come to take her away. The Princess must have told Mendoza
+that Dolores had escaped. But she only heard men's voices speaking in an
+ordinary tone, and she understood that Dolores was concealed. Almost at
+once, and to her dismay, she heard her father's step in the hall, and now
+she could neither pass the door nor run across the terrace again. A moment
+later the King called him from within. Instantly she slipped across to the
+other side, and listened again. They were shaking a door,--they were in the
+very act of finding Dolores. Her heart hurt her. But then the noise
+stopped, as if they had given up the attempt, and presently she heard her
+father's step again. Thinking that he would remain in the hall until the
+King called him,--for she could not possibly guess what had happened,--she
+stood quite still.</p>
+
+<p>The door opened without warning, and he was almost upon her before she
+knew it. To hesitate an instant was out of the question, and for the second
+time that night she fled, running madly to the corridor, which was not ten
+steps from where she had been standing, and as she entered it the light
+fell upon her from the swinging lamp, though she did not know it.</p>
+
+<p>Old as he was, Mendoza sprang forward in pursuit when he saw her figure
+in the dimness, flying before him, but as she reached the light of the lamp
+he stopped himself, staggering one or two steps and then reeling against
+the wall. He had recognized Dolores' dress and hood, and there was not the
+slightest doubt in his mind but that it was herself. In that same dress he
+had seen her in the late afternoon, she had been wearing it when he had
+locked her into the sitting-room, and, still clad in it, she must have come
+out with the Princess. And now she was running before him from Don John's
+lodging. Doubtless she had been in another room and had slipped out while
+he was trying the door within.</p>
+
+<p>He passed his hand over his eyes and breathed hard as he leaned against
+the wall, for her appearance there could only mean one thing, and that was
+ruin to her and disgrace to his name--the very end of all things in his
+life, in which all had been based upon his honour and every action had been
+a tribute to it.</p>
+
+<p>He was too much stunned to ask himself how the lovers had met, if there
+had been any agreement between them, but the frightful conviction took hold
+of him that this was not the first time, that long ago, before Don John had
+led the army to Granada, Dolores had found her way to that same door and
+had spent long hours with her lover when no one knew. Else she could not
+have gone to him without agreement, at an instant's notice, on the very
+night of his return.</p>
+
+<p>Despair took possession of the unhappy man from that moment. But that
+the King was with Don John, Mendoza would have gone back at that moment to
+kill his enemy and himself afterwards, if need be. He remembered his errand
+then. No doubt that was the very room where Dolores had been concealed, and
+she had escaped from it by some other way, of which her father did not
+know. He was too dazed to think connectedly, but he had the King's commands
+to execute at once. He straightened himself with a great effort, for the
+weight of his years had come upon him suddenly and bowed him like a burden.
+With the exertion of his will came the thirst for the satisfaction of
+blood, and he saw that the sooner he returned with the key, the sooner he
+should be near his enemy. But the pulses came and went in his throbbing
+temples, as when a man is almost spent in a struggle with death, and at
+first he walked uncertainly, as if he felt no ground under his feet.</p>
+
+<p>By the time he had gone a hundred yards he had recovered a sort of
+mechanical self-possession, such as comes upon men at very desperate times,
+when they must not allow themselves to stop and think of what is before
+them. They were pictures, rather than thoughts, that formed themselves in
+his brain as he went along, for he saw all the past years again, from the
+day when his young wife had died, he being then already in middle age,
+until that afternoon. One by one the years came back, and the central
+figure in each was the fair-haired little child, growing steadily to be a
+woman, all coming nearer and nearer to the end he had seen but now, which
+was unutterable shame and disgrace, and beyond which there was nothing. He
+heard the baby voice again, and felt the little hands upon his brow, and
+saw the serious grey eyes close to his own; and then the girl, gravely
+lovely--and her far-off laugh that hardly ever rippled through the room
+when he was there; and then the stealing softness of grown maidenhood,
+winning the features one by one, and bringing back from death to life the
+face he had loved best, and the voice with long-forgotten tones that
+touched his soul's quick, and dimmed his sight with a mist, so that he grew
+hard and stern as he fought within him against the tenderness he loved and
+feared. All this he saw and heard and felt again, knowing that each picture
+must end but in one way, in the one sight he had seen and that had told his
+shame--a guilty woman stealing by night from her lover's door. Not only
+that, either, for there was the almost certain knowledge that she had
+deceived him for years, and that while he had been fighting so hard to save
+her from what seemed but a show of marriage, she had been already lost to
+him for ever and ruined beyond all hope of honesty.</p>
+
+<p>They were not thoughts, but pictures of the false and of the true, that
+rose and glowed an instant and then sank like the inner darkness of his
+soul, leaving only that last most terrible one of all behind them, burned
+into his eyes till death should put out their light and bid him rest at
+last, if he could rest even in heaven with such a memory.</p>
+
+<p>It was too much, and though he walked upright and gazed before him, he
+did not know his way, and his feet took him to his own door instead of on
+the King's errand. His hand was raised to knock before he understood, and
+it fell to his side in a helpless, hopeless way, when he saw where he was.
+Then he turned stiffly, as a man turns on parade, and gathered his strength
+and marched away with a measured tread. For the world and what it held he
+would not have entered his dwelling then, for he felt that his daughter was
+there before him, and that if he once saw her face he should not be able to
+hold his hand. He would not see her again on earth, lest he should take her
+life for what she had done.</p>
+
+<p>He was more aware of outward things after that, though he almost
+commanded himself to do what he had to do, as he would have given orders to
+one of his soldiers. He went to the chief steward's office and demanded the
+key of the room in the King's name. But it was not forthcoming, and the
+fact that it could not be found strengthened his conviction that Don John
+had it in his keeping. Yet, for the sake of form, he insisted sternly,
+saying that the King was waiting for it even then. Servants were called and
+examined and threatened, but those who knew anything about it unanimously
+declared that it had been left in the door, while those who knew nothing
+supported their fellow-servants by the same unhesitating assertion, till
+Mendoza was convinced that he had done enough, and turned his back on them
+all and went out with a grey look of despair on his face.</p>
+
+<p>He walked rapidly now, for he knew that he was going back to meet his
+enemy, and he was trying not to think what he should do when he should see
+Don John before him and at arm's length, but defended by the King's
+presence from any sudden violence. He knew that in his heart there was the
+wild resolve to tell the truth before his master and then to take the
+payment of blood with one thrust and destroy himself with the next, but
+though he was half mad with despair, he would not let the thought become a
+resolve. In his soldier's nature, high above everything else and dominating
+his austere conscience of right and wrong, as well as every other instinct
+of his heart, there was the respect of his sovereign and the loyalty to him
+at all costs, good or bad, which sent self out of sight where his duty to
+the King was concerned.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XII'></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+
+<p>When he had sent away Mendoza, the King remained standing and began to
+pace the floor, while Don John stood by the table watching him and waiting
+for him to speak. It was clear that he was still angry, for his anger,
+though sometimes suddenly roused, was very slow to reach its height, and
+slower still to subside; and when at last it had cooled, it generally left
+behind it an enduring hatred, such as could be satisfied only by the final
+destruction of the object that had caused it. That lasting hate was perhaps
+more dangerous than the sudden outburst had been, but in moments of furious
+passion Philip was undoubtedly a man to be feared.</p>
+
+<p>He was evidently not inclined to speak until he had ascertained that no
+one was listening in the next room, but as he looked from time to time at
+Don John his still eyes seemed to grow almost yellow, and his lower lip
+moved uneasily. He knew, perhaps, that Mendoza could not at once find the
+servant in whose keeping the key of the door was supposed to be, and he
+grew impatient by quick degrees until his rising temper got the better of
+his caution. Don John instinctively drew himself up, as a man does who
+expects to be attacked. He was close to the table, and remained almost
+motionless during the discussion that followed, while Philip paced up and
+down, sometimes pausing before his brother for a moment, and then turning
+again to resume his walk. His voice was muffled always, and was hard to
+hear; now and then it became thick and indistinct with rage, and he cleared
+his throat roughly, as if he were angry with it, too. At first he
+maintained the outward forms of courtesy in words if not in tone, but long
+before his wrath had reached its final climax he forgot them
+altogether.</p>
+
+<p>"I had hoped to speak with you in privacy, on matters of great
+importance. It has pleased your Highness to make that impossible by your
+extraordinary behaviour."</p>
+
+<p>Don John raised his eyebrows a little incredulously, and answered with
+perfect calmness.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not recollect doing anything which should seem extraordinary to
+your Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"You contradict me," retorted Philip. "That is extraordinary enough, I
+should think. I am not aware that it is usual for subjects to contradict
+the King. What have you to say in explanation?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing. The facts explain themselves well enough."</p>
+
+<p>"We are not in camp," said Philip. "Your Highness is not in command
+here, and I am not your subordinate. I desire you to remember whom you are
+addressing, for your words will be remembered."</p>
+
+<p>"I never said anything which I wished another to forget," answered Don
+John proudly.</p>
+
+<p>"Take care, then!" The King spoke sullenly, and turned away, for he was
+slow at retort until he was greatly roused.</p>
+
+<p>Don John did not answer, for he had no wish to produce such a result,
+and moreover he was much more preoccupied by the serious question of
+Dolores' safety than by any other consideration. So far the King had said
+nothing which, but for some derogation from his dignity, might not have
+been said before any one, and Don John expected that he would maintain the
+same tone until Mendoza returned. It was hard to predict what might happen
+then. In all probability Dolores would escape by the window and endeavour
+to hide herself in the empty sentry-box until the interview was over. He
+could then bring her back in safety, but the discussion promised to be long
+and stormy, and meanwhile she would be in constant danger of discovery. But
+there was a worse possibility, not even quite beyond the bounds of the
+probable. In his present mood, Philip, if he lost his temper altogether,
+would perhaps be capable of placing Don John under arrest. He was all
+powerful, he hated his brother, and he was very angry. His last words had
+been a menace, or had sounded like one, and another word, when Mendoza
+returned, could put the threat into execution. Don John reflected, if such
+thought could be called reflection, upon the situation that must ensue, and
+upon the probable fate of the woman he loved. He wondered whether she were
+still in the room, for hearing that the door was to be opened, she might
+have thought it best to escape at once, while her father was absent from
+the terrace on his errand. If not, she could certainly go out by the window
+as soon as she heard him coming back. It was clearly of the greatest
+importance to prevent the King's anger from going any further. Antonio
+Perez had recognized the same truth from a very different point of view,
+and had spent nearly three-quarters of an hour in flattering his master
+with the consummate skill which he alone possessed. He believed that he had
+succeeded when the King had dismissed him, saying that he would not see Don
+John until the morning. Five minutes after Perez was gone, Philip was
+threading the corridors, completely disguised in a long black cloak, with
+the ever-loyal Mendoza at his heels. It was not the first time that he had
+deceived his deceivers.</p>
+
+<p>He paced the room in silence after he had last spoken. As soon as Don
+John realized that his liberty might be endangered, he saw that he must say
+what he could in honour and justice to save himself from arrest, since
+nothing else could save Dolores.</p>
+
+<p>"I greatly regret having done anything to anger your Majesty," he said,
+with quiet dignity. "I was placed in a very difficult position by
+unforeseen circumstances. If there had been time to reflect, I might have
+acted otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"Might have acted otherwise!" repeated Philip harshly. "I do not like
+those words. You might have acted otherwise than to defy your sovereign
+before the Queen! I trusted you might, indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>He was silent again, his protruding lip working angrily, as if he had
+tasted something he disliked. Don John's half apology had not been received
+with much grace, but he saw no way open save to insist that it was
+genuine.</p>
+
+<p>"It is certainly true that I have lived much in camps of late," he
+answered, "and that a camp is not a school of manners, any more than the
+habit of commanding others accustoms a man to courtly submission."</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely. You have learned to forget that you have a superior in
+Spain, or in the world. You already begin to affect the manners and speech
+of a sovereign--you will soon claim the dignity of one, too, I have no
+doubt. The sooner we procure you a kingdom of your own, the better, for
+your Highness will before long become an element of discord in ours."</p>
+
+<p>"Rather than that," answered Don John, "I will live in retirement for
+the rest of my life."</p>
+
+<p>"We may require it of your Highness," replied Philip, standing still and
+facing his brother. "It may be necessary for our own safety that you should
+spend some time at least in very close retirement--very!" He almost
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I should prefer that to the possibility of causing any disturbance in
+your Majesty's kingdom."</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could have been more gravely submissive than Don John's tone,
+but the King was apparently determined to rouse his anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Your deeds belie your words," he retorted, beginning to walk again.
+"There is too much loyalty in what you say, and too much of a rebellious
+spirit in what you do. The two do not agree together. You mock me."</p>
+
+<p>"God forbid that!" cried Don John. "I desire no praise for what I may
+have done, but such as my deeds have been they have produced peace and
+submission in your Majesty's kingdom, and not rebellion--"</p>
+
+<p>"And is it because you have beaten a handful of ill-armed Moriscoes, in
+the short space of two years, that the people follow you in throngs
+wherever you go, shouting for you, singing your praises, bringing petitions
+to you by hundreds, as if you were King--as if you were more than that, a
+sort of god before whom every one must bow down? Am I so simple as to
+believe that what you have done with such leisure is enough to rouse all
+Spain, and to make the whole court break out into cries of wonder and
+applause as soon as you appear? If you publicly defy me and disobey me, do
+I not know that you believe yourself able to do so, and think your power
+equal to mine? And how could that all be brought about, save by a party
+that is for you, by your secret agents everywhere, high and low, forever
+praising you and telling men, and women, too, of your graces, and your
+generosities, and your victories, and saying that it is a pity so good and
+brave a prince should be but a leader of the King's armies, and then
+contrasting the King himself with you, the cruel King, the grasping King,
+the scheming King, the King who has every fault that is not found in Don
+John of Austria, the people's god! Is that peace and submission? Or is it
+the beginning of rebellion, and revolution, and civil war, which is to set
+Don John of Austria on the throne of Spain, and send King Philip to another
+world as soon as all is ready?"</p>
+
+<p>Don John listened in amazement. It had never occurred to him any one
+could believe him capable of the least of the deeds Philip was attributing
+to him, and in spite of his resolution his anger began to rise. Then,
+suddenly, as if cold water had been dashed in his face, he remembered that
+an hour had not passed since he had held Dolores in his arms, swearing to
+do that of which he was now accused, and that her words only had held him
+back. It all seemed monstrous now. As she had said, it had been only a bad
+dream and he had wakened to himself again. Yet the thought of rebellion had
+more than crossed his mind, for in a moment it had taken possession of him
+and had seemed to change all his nature from good to bad. In his own eyes
+he was rebuked, and he did not answer at once.</p>
+
+<p>"You have nothing to say!" exclaimed Philip scornfully. "Is there any
+reason why I should not try you for high treason?"</p>
+
+<p>Don John started at the words, but his anger was gone, and he thought
+only of Dolores' safety in the near future.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Majesty is far too just to accuse an innocent man who has served
+you faithfully," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>Philip stopped and looked at him curiously and long, trying to detect
+some sign of anxiety if not of fear. He was accustomed to torture men with
+words well enough, before he used other means, and he himself had not
+believed what he had said. It had been only an experiment tried on a mere
+chance, and it had failed. At the root of his anger there was only jealousy
+and personal hatred of the brother who had every grace and charm which he
+himself had not.</p>
+
+<p>"More kind than just, perhaps," he said, with a slight change of tone
+towards condescension. "I am willing to admit that I have no proofs against
+you, but the evidence of circumstances is not in your favour. Take care,
+for you are observed. You are too much before the world, too imposing a
+figure to escape observation."</p>
+
+<p>"My actions will bear it. I only beg that your Majesty will take account
+of them rather than listen to such interpretation as may be put upon them
+by other men."</p>
+
+<p>"Other men do nothing but praise you," said Philip bluntly. "Their
+opinion of you is not worth having! I thought I had explained that matter
+sufficiently. You are the idol of the people, and as if that were not
+enough, you are the darling of the court, besides being the women's
+favourite. That is too much for one man to be--take care, I say, take care!
+Be at more pains for my favour, and at less trouble for your
+popularity."</p>
+
+<p>"So far as that goes," answered Don John, with some pride, "I think that
+if men praise me it is because I have served the King as well as I could,
+and with success. If your Majesty is not satisfied with what I have done,
+let me have more to do. I shall try to do even the impossible."</p>
+
+<p>"That will please the ladies," retorted Philip, with a sneer. "You will
+be overwhelmed with correspondence--your gloves will not hold it all"</p>
+
+<p>Don John did not answer, for it seemed wiser to let the King take this
+ground than return to his former position.</p>
+
+<p>"You will have plenty of agreeable occupation in time of peace. But it
+is better that you should be married soon, before you become so entangled
+with the ladies of Madrid as to make your marriage impossible."</p>
+
+<p>"Saving the last clause," said Don John boldly, "I am altogether of your
+Majesty's opinion. But I fear no entanglements here."</p>
+
+<p>"No--you do not fear them. On the contrary, you live in them as if they
+were your element."</p>
+
+<p>"No man can say that," answered Don John.</p>
+
+<p>"You contradict me again. Pray, if you have no entanglements, how comes
+it that you have a lady's letter in your glove?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell whether it was a lady's letter or a man's."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you not read it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"And you refused to show it to me on the ground that it was a woman's
+secret?"</p>
+
+<p>"I had not read it then. It was not signed, and it might well have been
+written by a man."</p>
+
+<p>Don John watched the King's face. It was for from improbable, he
+thought, that the King had caused it to be written, or had written it
+himself, that he supposed his brother to have read it, and desired to
+regain possession of it as soon as possible. Philip seemed to hesitate
+whether to continue his cross-examination or not, and he looked at the door
+leading into the antechamber, suddenly wondering why Mendoza had not
+returned. Then he began to speak again, but he did not wish, angry though
+he was, to face alone a second refusal to deliver the document to him. His
+dignity would have suffered too much.</p>
+
+<p>"The facts of the case are these," he said, as if he were recapitulating
+what had gone before in his mind. "It is my desire to marry you to the
+widowed Queen of Scots, as you know. You are doing all you can to oppose
+me, and you have determined to marry the dowerless daughter of a poor
+soldier. I am equally determined that you shall not disgrace yourself by
+such an alliance."</p>
+
+<p>"Disgrace!" cried Don John loudly, almost before the word had passed the
+King's lips, and he made half a step forward. "You are braver than I
+thought you, if you dare use that word to me!"</p>
+
+<p>Philip stepped back, growing livid, and his hand was on his rapier. Don
+John was unarmed, but his sword lay on the table within his reach. Seeing
+the King afraid, he stepped back.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said scornfully, "I was mistaken. You are a coward." He laughed
+as he glanced at Philip's hand, still on the hilt of his weapon and ready
+to draw it.</p>
+
+<p>In the next room Dolores drew frightened breath, for the tones of the
+two men's voices had changed suddenly. Yet her heart had leapt for joy when
+she had heard Don John's cry of anger at the King's insulting word. But Don
+John was right, for Philip was a coward at heart, and though he inwardly
+resolved that his brother should be placed under arrest as soon as Mendoza
+returned, his present instinct was not to rouse him further. He was indeed
+in danger, between his anger and his fear, for at any moment he might speak
+some bitter word, accustomed as he was to the perpetual protection of his
+guards, but at the next his brother's hands might be on his throat, for he
+had the coward's true instinct to recognize the man who was quite
+fearless.</p>
+
+<p>"You strangely forget yourself," he said, with an appearance of dignity.
+"You spring forward as if you were going to grapple with me, and then you
+are surprised that I should be ready to defend myself."</p>
+
+<p>"I barely moved a step from where I stand," answered Don John, with
+profound contempt. "I am unarmed, too. There lies my sword, on the table.
+But since you are the King as well as my brother, I make all excuses to
+your Majesty for having been the cause of your fright."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores understood what had happened, as Don John meant that she should.
+She knew also that her position was growing more and more desperate and
+untenable at every moment; yet she could not blame her lover for what he
+had said. Even to save her, she would not have had him cringe to the King
+and ask pardon for his hasty word and movement, still less could she have
+borne that he should not cry out in protest at a word that insulted her,
+though ever so lightly.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not desire to insist upon our kinship," said Philip coldly. "If I
+chose to acknowledge it when you were a boy, it was out of respect for the
+memory of the Emperor. It was not in the expectation of being called
+brother by the son of a German burgher's daughter."</p>
+
+<p>Don John did not wince, for the words, being literally true and without
+exaggeration, could hardly be treated as an insult, though they were meant
+for one, and hurt him, as all reference to his real mother always did.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, still scornfully. "I am the son of a German burgher's
+daughter, neither better nor worse. But I am your brother, for all that,
+and though I shall not forget that you are King and I am subject, when we
+are before the world, yet here, we are man and man, you and I, brother and
+brother, and there is neither King nor prince. But I shall not hurt you, so
+you need fear nothing. I respect the brother far too little for that, and
+the sovereign too much."</p>
+
+<p>There was a bad yellow light in Philip's face, and instead of walking
+towards Don John and away from him, as he had done hitherto, he began to
+pace up and down, crossing and recrossing before him, from the foot of the
+great canopied bed to one of the curtained windows, keeping his eyes upon
+his brother almost all the time.</p>
+
+<p>"I warned you when I came here that your words should be remembered," he
+said. "And your actions shall not be forgotten, either. There are safe
+places, even in Madrid, where you can live in the retirement you desire so
+much, even in total solitude."</p>
+
+<p>"If it pleases your Majesty to imprison Don John of Austria, you have
+the power. For my part, I shall make no resistance."</p>
+
+<p>"Who shall, then?" asked the King angrily. "Do you expect that there
+will be a general rising of the people to liberate you, or that there will
+be a revolution within the palace, brought on by your party, which shall
+force me to set you free for reasons of state? We are not in Paris that you
+should expect the one, nor in Constantinople where the other might be
+possible. We are in Spain, and I am master, and my will shall be done, and
+no one shall cry out against it. I am too gentle with you, too kind! For
+the half of what you have said and done, Elizabeth of England would have
+had your life to-morrow--yes, I consent to give you a chance, the benefit
+of a doubt there is still in my thoughts about you, because justice shall
+not be offended and turned into an instrument of revenge. Yes--I am kind, I
+am clement. We shall see whether you can save yourself. You shall have the
+chance."</p>
+
+<p>"What chance is that?" asked Don John, growing very quiet, for he saw
+the real danger near at hand again.</p>
+
+<p>"You shall have an opportunity of proving that a subject is at liberty
+to insult his sovereign, and that the King is not free to speak his mind to
+a subject. Can you prove that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you can be convicted of high treason," answered Philip, his evil
+mouth curling. "There are several methods of interrogating the accused," he
+continued. "I daresay you have heard of them."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you expect to frighten me by talking of torture?" asked Don John,
+with a smile at the implied suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>"Witnesses are also examined," replied the King, his voice thickening
+again in anticipation of the effect he was going to produce upon the man
+who would not fear him. "With them, even more painful methods are often
+employed. Witnesses may be men or women, you know, my dear brother--" he
+pronounced the word with a sneer--"and among the many ladies of your
+acquaintance--"</p>
+
+<p>"There are very few."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be the easier to find the two or three, or perhaps the only
+one, whom it will be necessary to interrogate--in your presence, most
+probably, and by torture."</p>
+
+<p>"I was right to call you a coward," said Don John, slowly turning pale
+till his face was almost as white as the white silks and satins of his
+doublet.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you give me the letter you were reading when I came here?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Not to save yourself from the executioner's hands?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Not to save--" Philip paused, and a frightful stare of hatred fixed his
+eyes on his brother. "Will you give me that letter to save Dolores de
+Mendoza from being torn piecemeal?"</p>
+
+<p>"Coward!"</p>
+
+<p>By instinct Don John's hand went to the hilt of his sheathed sword this
+time, as he cried out in rage, and sprang forward. Even then he would have
+remembered the promise he had given and would not have raised his hand to
+strike. But the first movement was enough, and Philip drew his rapier in a
+flash of light, fearing for his life. Without waiting for an attack he made
+a furious pass at his brother's body. Don John's hand went out with the
+sheathed sword in a desperate attempt to parry the thrust, but the weapon
+was entangled in the belt that hung to it, and Philip's lunge had been
+strong and quick as lightning.</p>
+
+<p>With a cry of anger Don John fell straight backwards, his feet seeming
+to slip from under him on the smooth marble pavement, and with his fall, as
+he threw out his hands to save himself, the sword flew high into the air,
+sheathed as it was, and landed far away. He lay at full length with one arm
+stretched out, and for a moment the hand twitched in quick spasms. Then it
+was quite still.</p>
+
+<p>At his feet stood Philip, his rapier in his hand, and blood on its fine
+point. His eyes shone yellow in the candlelight, his jaw had dropped a
+little, and he bent forwards, looking intently at the still, white
+face.</p>
+
+<p>He had longed for that moment ever since he had entered his brother's
+room, though even he himself had not guessed that he wanted his brother's
+life. There was not a sound in the room as he looked at what he had done,
+and two or three drops of blood fell one by one, very slowly, upon the
+marble. On the dazzling white of Don John's doublet there was a small red
+stain. As Philip watched it, he thought it grew wider and brighter.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond the door, Dolores had fallen upon her knees, pressing her hands
+to her temples in an agony beyond thought or expression. Her fear had risen
+to terror while she listened to the last words that had been exchanged, and
+the King's threat had chilled her blood like ice, though she was brave. She
+had longed to cry out to Don John to give up her letter or the other,
+whichever the King wanted--she had almost tried to raise her voice, in
+spite of every other fear, when she had heard Don John's single word of
+scorn, and the quick footsteps, the drawing of the rapier from its sheath,
+the desperate scuffle that had not lasted five seconds, and then the dull
+fall which meant that one was hurt.</p>
+
+<p>It could only be the King,--but that was terrible enough,--and yet, if
+the King had fallen, Don John would have come to the door the next instant.
+All was still in the room, but her terror made wild noises in her ears. The
+two men might have spoken now and she could not have heard them,--nor the
+opening of a door, nor any ordinary sound. It was no longer the fear of
+being heard, either, that made her silent. Her throat was parched and her
+tongue paralyzed. She remembered suddenly that Don John had been unarmed,
+and how he had pointed out to Philip that his sword lay on the table. It
+was the King who had drawn his own, then, and had killed his unarmed
+brother. She felt as if something heavy were striking her head as the
+thoughts made broken words, and flashes of light danced before her eyes.
+With her hands she tried to press feeling and reason and silence back into
+her brain that would not be quieted, but the certainty grew upon her that
+Don John was killed, and the tide of despair rose higher with every
+breath.</p>
+
+<p>The sensation came upon her that she was dying, then and there, of a
+pain human nature could not endure, far beyond the torments Philip had
+threatened, and the thought was merciful, for she could not have lived an
+hour in such agony,--something would have broken before then. She was
+dying, there, on her knees before the door beyond which her lover lay
+suddenly dead. It would be easy to die. In a moment more she would be with
+him, for ever, and in peace. They would find her there, dead, and perhaps
+they would be merciful and bury her near him. But that would matter little,
+since she should be with him always now. In the first grief that struck
+her, and bruised her, and numbed her as with material blows, she had no
+tears, but there was a sort of choking fire in her throat, and her eyes
+burned her like hot iron.</p>
+
+<p>She did not know how long she knelt, waiting for death. She was dying,
+and there was no time any more, nor any outward world, nor anything but her
+lover's dead body on the floor in the next room, and his soul waiting for
+hers, waiting beside her for her to die also, that they might go together.
+She was so sure now, that she was wondering dreamily why it took so long to
+die, seeing that death had taken him so quickly. Could one shaft be aimed
+so straight and could the next miss the mark? She shook all over, as a new
+dread seized her. She was not dying,--her life clung too closely to her
+suffering body, her heart was too young and strong to stand still in her
+breast for grief. She was to live, and bear that same pain a lifetime. She
+rocked herself gently on her knees, bowing her head almost to the
+floor.</p>
+
+<p>She was roused by the sound of her father's voice, and the words he was
+speaking sent a fresh shock of horror through her unutterable grief, for
+they told her that Don John was dead, and then something else so strange
+that she could not understand it.</p>
+
+<p>Philip had stood only a few moments, sword in hand, over his brother's
+body, staring down at his face, when the door opened. On the threshold
+stood old Mendoza, half-stunned by the sight he saw. Philip heard, stood
+up, and drew back as his eyes fell upon the old soldier. He knew that
+Mendoza, if no one else, knew the truth now, beyond any power of his to
+conceal it. His anger had subsided, and a sort of horror that could never
+be remorse, had come over him for what he had done. It must have been in
+his face, for Mendoza understood, and he came forward quickly and knelt
+down upon the floor to listen for the beating of the heart, and to try
+whether there was any breath to dim the brightness of his polished
+scabbard. Philip looked on in silence. Like many an old soldier Mendoza had
+some little skill, but he saw the bright spot on the white doublet, and the
+still face and the hands relaxed, and there was neither breath nor beating
+of the heart to give hope. He rose silently, and shook his head. Still
+looking down he saw the red drops that had fallen upon the pavement from
+Philip's rapier, and looking at that, saw that the point was dark. With a
+gesture of excuse he took the sword from the King's hand and wiped it quite
+dry and bright upon his own handkerchief, and gave it back to Philip, who
+sheathed it by his side, but never spoke.</p>
+
+<p>Together the two looked at the body for a full minute and more, each
+silently debating what should be done with it. At last Mendoza raised his
+head, and there was a strange look in his old eyes and a sort of wan
+greatness came over his war-worn face. It was then that he spoke the words
+Dolores heard.</p>
+
+<p>"I throw myself upon your Majesty's mercy! I have killed Don John of
+Austria in a private quarrel, and he was unarmed."</p>
+
+<p>Philip understood well enough, and a faint smile of satisfaction flitted
+through the shadows of his face. It was out of the question that the world
+should ever know who had killed his brother, and he knew the man who
+offered to sacrifice himself by bearing the blame of the deed. Mendoza
+would die, on the scaffold if need be, and it would be enough for him to
+know that his death saved his King. No word would ever pass his lips. The
+man's loyalty would bear any proof; he could feel horror at the thought
+that Philip could have done such a deed, but the King's name must be saved
+at all costs, and the King's divine right must be sustained before the
+world. He felt no hesitation from the moment when he saw clearly how this
+must be done. To accuse some unknown murderer and let it be supposed that
+he had escaped would have been worse than useless; the court and half Spain
+knew of the King's jealousy of his brother, every one had seen that Philip
+had been very angry when the courtiers had shouted for Don John; already
+the story of the quarrel about the glove was being repeated from mouth to
+mouth in the throne room, where the nobles had reassembled after supper. As
+soon as it was known that Don John was dead, it would be believed by every
+one in the palace that the King had killed him or had caused him to be
+murdered. But if Mendoza took the blame upon himself, the court would
+believe him, for many knew of Dolores' love for Don John, and knew also how
+bitterly the old soldier was opposed to their marriage, on the ground that
+it would be no marriage at all, but his daughter's present ruin. There was
+no one else in the palace who could accuse himself of the murder and who
+would be believed to have done it without the King's orders, and Mendoza
+knew this, when he offered his life to shield Philip's honour. Philip knew
+it, too, and while he wondered at the old man's simple devotion, he
+accepted it without protest, as his vast selfishness would have permitted
+the destruction of all mankind, that it might be satisfied and filled.</p>
+
+<p>He looked once more at the motionless body at his feet, and once more at
+the faithful old man. Then he bent his head with condescending gravity, as
+if he were signifying his pleasure to receive kindly, for the giver's sake,
+a gift of little value.</p>
+
+<p>"So be it," he said slowly.</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza bowed his head, too, as if in thanks, and then taking up the
+long dark cloak which the King had thrown off on entering, he put it upon
+Philip's shoulders, and went before him to the door. And Philip followed
+him without looking back, and both went out upon the terrace, leaving both
+doors ajar after them. They exchanged a few words more as they walked
+slowly in the direction of the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>"It is necessary that your Majesty should return at once to the throne
+room, as if nothing had happened," said Mendoza. "Your Majesty should be
+talking unconcernedly with some ambassador or minister when the news is
+brought that his Highness is dead."</p>
+
+<p>"And who shall bring the news?" asked Philip calmly, as if he were
+speaking to an indifferent person.</p>
+
+<p>"I will, Sire," answered Mendoza firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"They will tear you in pieces before I can save you," returned Philip,
+in a thoughtful tone.</p>
+
+<p>"So much the better. I shall die for my King, and your Majesty will be
+spared the difficulty of pardoning a deed which will be unpardonable in the
+eyes of the whole world."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true," said the King meditatively. "But I do not wish you to
+die, Mendoza," he added, as an afterthought. "You must escape to France or
+to England."</p>
+
+<p>"I could not make my escape without your Majesty's help, and that would
+soon be known. It would then be believed that I had done the deed by your
+Majesty's orders, and no good end would have been gained."</p>
+
+<p>"You may be right. You are a very brave man, Mendoza--the bravest I have
+ever known. I thank you. If it is possible to save you, you shall be
+saved."</p>
+
+<p>"It will not be possible," replied the soldier, in a low and steady
+voice. "If your Majesty will return at once to the throne room, it may be
+soon over. Besides, it is growing late, and it must be done before the
+whole court."</p>
+
+<p>They entered the corridor, and the King walked a few steps before
+Mendoza, covering his head with the hood of his cloak lest any one should
+recognize him, and gradually increasing his distance as the old man fell
+behind. Descending by a private staircase, Philip re&euml;ntered his own
+apartments by a small door that gave access to his study without obliging
+him to pass through the antechamber, and by which he often came and went
+unobserved. Alone in his innermost room, and divested of his hood and
+cloak, the King went to a Venetian mirror that stood upon a pier table
+between the windows, and examined his face attentively. Not a trace of
+excitement or emotion was visible in the features he saw, but his hair was
+a little disarranged, and he smoothed it carefully and adjusted it about
+his ears. From a silver box on the table he took a little scented lozenge
+and put it into his mouth. No reasonable being would have suspected from
+his appearance that he had been moved to furious anger and had done a
+murderous deed less than twenty minutes earlier. His still eyes were quite
+calm now, and the yellow gleam in them had given place to their naturally
+uncertain colour. With a smile of admiration for his own extraordinary
+powers, he turned and left the room. He was enjoying one of his rare
+moments of satisfaction, for the rival he had long hated and was beginning
+to dread was never to stand in his way again nor to rob him of the least of
+his attributes of sovereignty.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XIII'></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+
+<p>Dolores had not understood her father's words. All that was clear to her
+was that Don John was dead and that his murderers were gone. Had there been
+danger still for herself, she could not have felt it; but there was none
+now as she laid her hand upon the key to enter the bedchamber. At first the
+lock would not open, as it had been injured in some way by being so roughly
+shaken when Mendoza had tried it. But Dolores' desperate fingers wound
+themselves upon the key like little ropes of white silk, slender but very
+strong, and she wrenched at the thing furiously till it turned. The door
+flew open, and she stood motionless a moment on the threshold. Mendoza had
+said that Don John was dead, but she had not quite believed it.</p>
+
+<p>He lay on his back as he had fallen, his feet towards her, his graceful
+limbs relaxed, one arm beside him, the other thrown back beyond his head,
+the colourless fingers just bent a little and showing the nervous beauty of
+the hand. The beautiful young face was white as marble, and the eyes were
+half open, very dark under the waxen lids. There was one little spot of
+scarlet on the white satin coat, near the left breast. Dolores saw it all
+in the bright light of the candles, and she neither moved nor closed her
+fixed eyes as she gazed. She felt that she was at the end of life; she
+stood still to see it all and to understand. But though she tried to think,
+it was as if she had no mind left, no capacity for grasping any new
+thought, and no power to connect those that had disturbed her brain with
+the present that stared her in the face. An earthquake might have torn the
+world open under her feet at that moment, swallowing up the old Alcazar
+with the living and the dead, and Dolores would have gone down to
+destruction as she stood, unconscious of her fate, her eyes fixed upon Don
+John's dead features, her own life already suspended and waiting to follow
+his. It seemed as if she might stand there till her horror should stop the
+beating of her own heart, unless something came to rouse her from the
+stupor she was in.</p>
+
+<p>But gradually a change came over her face, her lids drooped and
+quivered, her face turned a little upward, and she grasped the doorpost
+with one hand, lest she should reel and fall. Then, knowing that she could
+stand no longer, instinct made a last effort upon her; its invisible power
+thrust her violently forward in a few swift steps, till her strength broke
+all at once, and she fell and lay almost upon the body of her lover, her
+face hidden upon his silent breast, one hand seeking his hand, the other
+pressing his cold forehead.</p>
+
+<p>It was not probable that any one should find her there for a long time.
+The servants and gentlemen had been dismissed, and until it was known that
+Don John was dead, no one would come. Even if she could have thought at
+all, she would not have cared who saw her lying there; but thought was
+altogether gone now, and there was nothing left but the ancient instinct of
+the primeval woman mourning her dead mate alone, with long-drawn, hopeless
+weeping and blinding tears.</p>
+
+<p>They came, too, when she had lain upon his breast a little while and
+when understanding had wholly ceased and given way to nature. Then her body
+shook and her breast heaved strongly, almost throwing her upon her side as
+she lay, and sounds that were hardly human came from her lips; for the
+first dissolving of a woman's despair into tears is most like the death
+agony of those who die young in their strength, when the limbs are wrung at
+the joints and the light breaks in the upturned eyes, when the bosom heaves
+and would take in the whole world at one breath, when the voice makes
+sounds of fear that are beyond words and worse to hear than any words could
+be.</p>
+
+<p>Her weeping was wild at first, measureless and violent, broken by sharp
+cries that hurt her heart like jagged knives, then strangled to a choking
+silence again and again, as the merciless consciousness that could have
+killed, if it had prevailed, almost had her by the throat, but was forced
+back again with cruel pain by the young life that would not die, though
+living was agony and death would have been as welcome as air.</p>
+
+<p>Then her loud grief subsided to a lower key, and her voice grew by
+degrees monotonous and despairing as the turning tide on a quicksand,
+before bad weather,--not diminished, but deeper drawn within itself; and
+the low moan came regularly with each breath, while the tears flowed
+steadily. The first wild tempest had swept by, and the more enduring storm
+followed in its track.</p>
+
+<p>So she lay a long time weeping; and then strong hands were upon her,
+lifting her up and dragging her away, without warning and without word. She
+did not understand, and she fancied herself in the arms of some
+supernatural being of monstrous strength that was tearing her from what was
+left of life and love. She struggled senselessly, but she could find no
+foothold as she was swept through the open door. She gasped for breath, as
+one does in bad dreams, and bodily fear almost reached her heart through
+its sevenfold armour of such grief as makes fear ridiculous and turns
+mortal danger to an empty show. The time had seemed an age since she had
+fallen upon dead Don John--it had measured but a short few minutes; it
+seemed as if she were being dragged the whole length of the dim palace as
+the strong hands bore her along, yet she was only carried from the room to
+the terrace; and when her eyes could see, she knew that she was in the open
+air on a stone seat in the moonlight, the cool night breeze fanning her
+face, while a gentle hand supported her head,--the same hand that had been
+so masterfully strong a moment earlier. A face she knew and did not dread,
+though it was unlike other faces, was just at the same height with her own,
+though the man was standing beside her and she was seated; and the
+moonlight made very soft shadows in the ill-drawn features of the dwarf, so
+that his thin and twisted lips were kind and his deep-set eyes were
+overflowing with human sympathy. When he understood that she saw him and
+was not fainting, he gently drew away his hand and let her head rest
+against the stone parapet.</p>
+
+<p>She was dazed still, and the tears veiled her sight. He stood before
+her, as if guarding her, ready in case she should move and try to leave
+him. His long arms hung by his sides, but not quite motionless, so that he
+could have caught her instantly had she attempted to spring past him; and
+he was wise and guessed rightly what she would do. Her eyes brightened
+suddenly, and she half rose before he held her again.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" she said desperately. "I must go to him--let me go--let me go
+back!"</p>
+
+<p>But his hands were on her shoulders in an instant, and she was in a
+vise, forced back to her seat.</p>
+
+<p>"How dare you touch me!" she cried, in the furious anger of a woman
+beside herself with grief. "How dare you lay hands on me!" she repeated in
+a rising key, but struggling in vain against his greater strength.</p>
+
+<p>"You would have died, if I had left you there," answered the jester.
+"And besides, the people will come soon, and they would have found you
+there, lying on his body, and your good name would have gone forever."</p>
+
+<p>"My name! What does a name matter? Or anything? Oh, let me go! No one
+must touch him--no hands that do not love him must come near him--let me
+get up--let me go in again!"</p>
+
+<p>She tried to force the dwarf from her--she would have struck him,
+crushed him, thrown him from the terrace, if she could. She was strong,
+too, in her grief; but his vast arms were like iron bars, growing from his
+misshapen body. His face was very grave and kind, and his eyes more tender
+than they had ever been in his life.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said gently. "You must not go. By and by you shall see him
+again, but not now. Do not try, for I am much stronger than you, and I will
+not let you go back into the room."</p>
+
+<p>Then her strength relaxed, and she turned to the stone parapet, burying
+her face in her crossed arms, and her tears came again. For this the jester
+was glad, knowing that tears quench the first white heat of such sorrows as
+can burn out the soul and drive the brain raving mad, when life can bear
+the torture. He stood still before her, watching her and guarding her, but
+he felt that the worst was past, and that before very long he could lead
+her away to a place of greater safety. He had indeed taken her as far as he
+could from Don John's door, and out of sight of it, where the long terrace
+turned to the westward, and where it was not likely that any one should
+pass at that hour. It had been the impulse of the moment, and he himself
+had not recovered from the shock of finding Don John's body lifeless on the
+floor. He had known nothing of what had happened, but lurking in a corner
+to see the King pass on his way back from his brother's quarters, he had
+made sure that Don John was alone, and had gone to his apartment to find
+out, if he could, how matters had fared, and whether he himself were in
+further danger or not. He meant to escape from the palace, or to take his
+own life, rather than be put to the torture, if the King suspected him of
+being involved in a conspiracy. He was not a common coward, but he feared
+bodily pain as only such sensitive organizations can, and the vision of the
+rack and the boot had been before him since he had seen Philip's face at
+supper. Don John was kind, and would have warned him if he were in danger,
+and so all might have been well, and by flight or death he might have
+escaped being torn limb from limb. So he had gone boldly in, and had found
+the door ajar and had entered the bedchamber, and when he had seen what was
+there, he would have fled at once, for his own safety, not only because Don
+John's murder was sure to produce terrible trouble, and many enquiries and
+trials, in the course of which he was almost sure to be lost, but also for
+the more immediate reason that if he were seen near the body when it was
+discovered, he should certainly be put to the question ordinary and
+extraordinary for his evidence.</p>
+
+<p>But he was not a common coward, and in spite of his own pardonable
+terror, he thought first of the innocent girl whose name and fame would be
+gone if she were found lying upon her murdered lover's body, and so far as
+he could, he saved her before he thought of saving himself, though with
+infinite difficulty and against her will.</p>
+
+<p>Half paralyzed by her immeasurable grief, she lay against the parapet,
+and the great sobs came evenly, as if they were counted, shaking her from
+her head to her waist, and just leaving her a breathing space between each
+one and the next. The jester felt that he could do nothing. So long as she
+had seemed unconscious, he had tried to help her a little by supporting her
+head with his hand and arm, as tenderly as if she had been his own child.
+So long as she did not know what he was doing, she was only a human being
+in distress, and a woman, and deep down in the jester's nature there was a
+marvellous depth of pity for all things that suffered--the deeper and truer
+because his own sufferings in the world were great. But it was quite
+different now that she knew where she was and recognized him. She was no
+longer a woman now, but a high-born lady, one of the Queen's maids of
+honour, a being infinitely far removed above his sphere, and whose hand he
+was not worthy to touch. He would have dared to be much more familiar with
+the King himself than with this young girl whom fate had placed in his
+keeping for a moment. In the moonlight he watched her, and as he gazed upon
+her graceful figure and small head and slender, bending arms, it seemed to
+him that she had come down from an altar to suffer in life, and that it had
+been almost sacrilege to lay his hands upon her shoulders and keep her from
+doing her own will. He almost wondered how he had found courage to be so
+rough and commanding. He was gentle of heart, though it was his trade to
+make sharp speeches, and there were wonderful delicacies of thought and
+feeling far down in his suffering cripple's nature.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," he said softly, when he had waited a long time, and when he
+thought she was growing more quiet. "You must let me take you away,
+Do&ntilde;a Maria Dolores, for we cannot stay here."</p>
+
+<p>"Take me back to him," she answered. "Let me go back to him!"</p>
+
+<p>"No--to your father--I cannot take you to him. You will be safe
+there."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores sprang to her feet before the dwarf could prevent her.</p>
+
+<p>"To my father? oh, no, no, no! Never, as long as I live! I will go
+anywhere, but not to him! Take your hands from me--do not touch me! I am
+not strong, but I shall kill you if you try to take me to my father!"</p>
+
+<p>Her small hands grasped the dwarfs wrists and wrung them with desperate
+energy, and she tried to push him away, so that she might pass him. But he
+resisted her quietly, planting himself in a position of resistance on his
+short bowed legs, and opposing the whole strength of his great arms to her
+girlish violence. Her hands relaxed suddenly in despair.</p>
+
+<p>"Not to my father!" she pleaded, in a broken voice. "Oh, please,
+please--not to my father!"</p>
+
+<p>The jester did not fully understand, but he yielded, for he could not
+carry her to Mendoza's apartments by force.</p>
+
+<p>"But what can I do to put you in a place of safety?" he asked, in
+growing distress. "You cannot stay here."</p>
+
+<p>While he was speaking a light figure glided out from the shadows, with
+outstretched hands, and a low voice called Dolores' name, trembling with
+terror and emotion. Dolores broke from the dwarf and clasped her sister in
+her arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it true?" moaned Inez. "Is it true? Is he dead?" And her voice
+broke.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XIV'></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+
+<p>The courtiers had assembled again in the great throne room after supper,
+and the stately dancing, for which the court of Spain was even then famous
+throughout Europe, had begun. The orchestra was placed under the great arch
+of the central window on a small raised platform draped with velvets and
+brocades that hung from a railing, high enough to conceal the musicians as
+they sat, though some of the instruments and the moving bows of the violins
+could be seen above it.</p>
+
+<p>The masked dancing, if it were dancing at all, which had been general in
+the days of the Emperor Maximilian, and which had not yet gone out of
+fashion altogether at the imperial court of Vienna, had long been relegated
+to the past in Spain, and the beautiful "pavane" dances, of which awkward
+travesties survive in our day, had been introduced instead. As now, the
+older ladies of the court withdrew to the sides of the hall, leaving the
+polished floor free for those who danced, and sets formed themselves in the
+order of their rank from the foot of the throne dais to the lower end. As
+now, too, the older and graver men congregated together in outer rooms; and
+there gaming-tables were set out, and the nobles lost vast sums at games
+now long forgotten, by the express authorization of the pious Philip, who
+saw that everything which could injure the fortunes of the grandees must
+consolidate his own, by depriving them of some of that immense wealth which
+was an ever-ready element of revolution. He did everything in his power to
+promote the ruin of the most powerful grandees in the kingdom by
+encouraging gaming and all imaginable forms of extravagance, and he looked
+with suspicion and displeasure upon those more prudent men who guarded
+their riches carefully, as their fathers had done before them. But these
+were few, for it was a part of a noble's dignity to lose enormous sums of
+money without the slightest outward sign of emotion or annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>It had been announced that the King and Queen would not return after
+supper, and the magnificent gravity of the most formal court in the world
+was a little relaxed when this was known. Between the strains of music, the
+voices of the courtiers rose in unbroken conversation, and now and then
+there was a ripple of fresh young laughter that echoed sweetly under the
+high Moorish vault, and died away just as it rose again from below.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the dancing was a matter of state, and solemn enough, though it was
+very graceful. Magnificent young nobles in scarlet, in pale green, in straw
+colour, in tender shades of blue, all satin and silk and velvet and
+embroidery, led lovely women slowly forward with long and gliding steps
+that kept perfect time to the music, and turned and went back, and wound
+mazy figures with the rest, under the waxen light of the waxen torches, and
+returned to their places with deep curtsies on the one side, and sweeping
+obeisance on the other. The dresses of the women were richer by far with
+gold and silver, and pearls and other jewels, than those of the men, but
+were generally darker in tone, for that was the fashion then. Their skirts
+were straight and barely touched the floor, being made for a time when
+dancing was a part of court life, and when every one within certain limits
+of age was expected to dance well. There was no exaggeration of the ruffle
+then, nor had the awkward hoop skirt been introduced in Spain. Those were
+the earlier days of Queen Elizabeth's reign, before Queen Mary was
+imprisoned; it was the time, indeed, when the rough Bothwell had lately
+carried her off and married her, after a fashion, with so little ceremony
+that Philip paid no attention to the marriage at all, and deliberately
+proposed to make her Don John's wife. The matter was freely talked of on
+that night by the noble ladies of elder years who gossiped while they
+watched the dancing.</p>
+
+<p>That was indeed such a court as had not been seen before, nor was ever
+seen again, whether one count beauty first, or riches and magnificence, or
+the marvel of splendid ceremony and the faultless grace of studied manners,
+or even the cool recklessness of great lords and ladies who could lose a
+fortune at play, as if they were throwing a handful of coin to a beggar in
+the street.</p>
+
+<p>The Princess of Eboli stood a little apart from the rest, having just
+returned to the ball-room, and her eyes searched for Dolores in the crowd,
+though she scarcely expected to see her there. It would have been almost
+impossible for the girl to put on a court dress in so short a time, though
+since her father had allowed her to leave her room, she could have gone
+back to dress if she had chosen. The Princess had rarely been at a loss in
+her evil life, and had seldom been baffled in anything she had undertaken,
+since that memorable occasion on which her husband, soon after her
+marriage, had forcibly shut her up in a convent for several months, in the
+vain hope of cooling her indomitable temper. But now she was nervous and
+uncertain of herself. Not only had Dolores escaped her, but Don John had
+disappeared also, and the Princess had not the least doubt but that the two
+were somewhere together, and she was very far from being sure that they had
+not already left the palace. Antonio Perez had informed her that the King
+had promised not to see Don John that night, and for once she was foolish
+enough to believe the King's word. Perez came up to her as she was debating
+what she should do. She told him her thoughts, laughing gaily from time to
+time, as if she were telling him some very witty story, for she did not
+wish those who watched them to guess that the conversation was serious.
+Perez laughed, too, and answered in low tones, with many gestures meant to
+deceive the court.</p>
+
+<p>"The King did not take my advice," he said. "I had scarcely left him,
+when he went to Don John's apartments."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know that?" asked the Princess, with some anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>"He found the door of an inner room locked, and he sent Mendoza to find
+the key. Fortunately for the old man's feelings it could not be found! He
+would have had an unpleasant surprise."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because his daughter was in the room that was locked," laughed
+Perez.</p>
+
+<p>"When? How? How long ago was that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Half an hour--not more."</p>
+
+<p>"That is impossible. Half an hour ago Dolores de Mendoza was with
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Then there was another lady in the room." Perez laughed again. "Better
+two than one," he added.</p>
+
+<p>"You are wrong," said the Princess, and her face darkened. "Don John has
+not so much as deigned to look at any other woman these two years."</p>
+
+<p>"You should know that best," returned the Secretary, with a little
+malice in his smile.</p>
+
+<p>It was well known in the court that two or three years earlier, during
+the horrible intrigue that ended in the death of Don Carlos, the Princess
+of Eboli had done her best to bring Don John of Austria to her feet, and
+had failed notoriously, because he was already in love with Dolores. She
+was angry now, and the rich colour came into her handsome dark face.</p>
+
+<p>"Don Antonio Perez," she said, "take care! I have made you. I can also
+unmake you."</p>
+
+<p>Perez assumed an air of simple and innocent surprise, as if he were
+quite sure that he had said nothing to annoy her, still less to wound her
+deeply. He believed that she really loved him and that he could play with
+her as if his own intelligence far surpassed hers. In the first matter he
+was right, but he was very much mistaken in the second.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand," he said. "If I have done anything to offend you,
+pray forgive my ignorance, and believe in the unchanging devotion of your
+most faithful slave."</p>
+
+<p>His dark eyes became very expressive as he bowed a little, with a
+graceful gesture of deprecation. The Princess laughed lightly, but there
+was still a spark of annoyance in her look.</p>
+
+<p>"Why does Don John not come?" she asked impatiently. "We should have
+danced together. Something must have happened--can you not find out?"</p>
+
+<p>Others were asking the same question in surprise, for it had been
+expected that Don John would enter immediately after the supper. His name
+was heard from end to end of the hall, in every conversation, wherever two
+or three persons were talking together. It was in the air, like his
+popularity, everywhere and in everything, and the expectation of his coming
+produced a sort of tension that was felt by every one. The men grew more
+witty, the younger women's eyes brightened, though they constantly glanced
+towards the door of the state apartments by which Don John should enter,
+and as the men's conversation became more brilliant the women paid less
+attention to it, for there was hardly one of them who did not hope that Don
+John might notice her before the evening was over,--there was not one who
+did not fancy herself a little in love with him, as there was hardly a man
+there who would not have drawn his sword for him and fought for him with
+all his heart. Many, though they dared not say so, secretly wished that
+some evil might befall Philip, and that he might soon die childless, since
+he had destroyed his only son and only heir, and that Don John might be
+King in his stead. The Princess of Eboli and Perez knew well enough that
+their plan would be popular, if they could ever bring it to maturity.</p>
+
+<p>The music swelled and softened, and rose again in those swaying strains
+that inspire an irresistible bodily longing for rhythmical motion, and
+which have infinite power to call up all manner of thoughts, passionate,
+gentle, hopeful, regretful, by turns. In the middle of the hall, more than
+a hundred dancers moved, swayed, and glided in time with the sound, changed
+places, and touched hands in the measure, tripped forward and back and
+sideways, and met and parted again without pause, the colours of their
+dresses mingling to rich unknown hues in the soft candlelight, as the
+figure brought many together, and separating into a hundred elements again,
+when the next steps scattered them again; the jewels in the women's hair,
+the clasps of diamonds and precious stones at throat, and shoulder, and
+waist, all moved with an intricate motion, in orbits that crossed and
+recrossed in the tinted sea of silk, and flashed all at once, as the
+returning burden of the music brought the dancers to stand and turn at the
+same beat of the measure. Yet it was all unlike the square dancing of these
+days, which is either no dancing at all, but a disorderly walk, or else is
+so stiffly regular and awkward that it makes one think of a squad of
+recruits exercising on the drill ground. There was not a motion, then, that
+lacked grace, or ease, or a certain purpose of beauty, nor any, perhaps,
+that was not a phrase in the allegory of love, from which all dancing is,
+and was, and always must be, drawn. Swift, slow, by turns, now languorous,
+now passionate, now full of delicious regret, singing love's triumph,
+breathing love's fire, sighing in love's despair, the dance and its music
+were one, so was sight intermingled with sound, and motion a part of both.
+And at each pause, lips parted and glance sought glance in the light, while
+hearts found words in the music that answered the language of love. Men
+laugh at dancing and love it, and women, too, and no one can tell where its
+charm is, but few have not felt it, or longed to feel it, and its
+beginnings are very far away in primeval humanity, beyond the reach of
+theory, unless instinct may explain all simply, as it well may. For light
+and grace and sweet sound are things of beauty which last for ever, and
+love is the source of the future and the explanation of the past; and that
+which can bring into itself both love and melody, and grace and light, must
+needs be a spell to charm men and women.</p>
+
+<p>There was more than that in the air on that night, for Don John's return
+had set free that most intoxicating essence of victory, which turns to a
+mad fire in the veins of a rejoicing people, making the least man of them
+feel himself a soldier, and a conqueror, and a sharer in undying fame. They
+had loved him from a child, they had seen him outgrow them in beauty, and
+skill, and courage, and they had loved him still the more for being the
+better man; and now he had done a great deed, and had fulfilled and
+overfilled their greatest expectations, and in an instant he leapt from the
+favourite's place in their hearts to the hero's height on the altar of
+their wonder, to be the young god of a nation that loved him. Not a man, on
+that night, but would have sworn that Don John was braver than Alexander,
+wiser than Charlemagne, greater than C&aelig;sar himself; not a man but
+would have drawn his sword to prove it on the body of any who should dare
+to contradict him,--not a mother was there, who did not pray that her sons
+might be but ever so little like him, no girl of Spain but dreamt she heard
+his soft voice speaking low in her ear. Not often in the world's story has
+a man so young done such great things as he had done and was to do before
+his short life was ended; never, perhaps, was any man so honoured by his
+own people, so trusted, and so loved.</p>
+
+<p>They could talk only of him, wondering more and more that he stayed away
+from them on such a night, yet sure that he would come, and join the
+dancing, for as he fought with a skill beyond that of other swordsmen, so
+he danced with the most surpassing grace. They longed to see him, to look
+into his face, to hear his voice, perhaps to touch his hand; for he was
+free of manner and gentle to all, and if he came he would go from one to
+another, and remember each with royal memory, and find kind words for every
+one. They wanted him among them, they felt a sort of tense desire to see
+him again, and even to shout for him again, as the vulgar herd did in the
+streets,--as they themselves had done but an hour ago when he had stood out
+beside the throne. And still the dancers danced through the endless
+measures, laughing and talking at each pause, and repeating his name till
+it was impossible not to hear it, wherever one might be in the hall, and
+there was no one, old or young, who did not speak it at least once in every
+five minutes. There was a sort of intoxication in its very sound, and the
+more they heard it, the more they wished to hear it, coupled with every
+word of praise that the language possessed. From admiration they rose to
+enthusiasm, from enthusiasm to a generous patriotic passion in which Spain
+was the world and Don John was Spain, and all the rest of everything was
+but a dull and lifeless blank which could have no possible interest for
+natural people.</p>
+
+<p>Young men, darkly flushed from dancing, swore that whenever Don John
+should be next sent with an army, they would go, too, and win his battles
+and share in his immortal glory; and grand, grey men who wore the Golden
+Fleece, men who had seen great battles in the Emperor's day, stood together
+and talked of him, and praised God that Spain had another hero of the
+Austrian house, to strike terror to the heart of France, to humble England
+at last, and to grasp what little of the world was not already gathered in
+the hollow of Spain's vast hand.</p>
+
+<p>Antonio Perez and the Princess of Eboli parted and went among the
+courtiers, listening to all that was to be heard and feeding the fire of
+enthusiasm, and met again to exchange glances of satisfaction, for they
+were well pleased with the direction matters were taking, and the talk grew
+more free from minute to minute, till many, carried away by a force they
+could not understand and did not seek to question, were openly talking of
+the succession to the throne, of Philip's apparent ill health, and of the
+chance that they might before long be doing service to his Majesty King
+John.</p>
+
+<p>The music ceased again, and the couples dispersed about the hall, to
+collect again in groups. There was a momentary lull in the talk, too, as
+often happens when a dance is just over, and at that moment the great door
+beside the throne was opened, with a noise that attracted the attention of
+all; and all believed that Don John was returning, while all eyes were
+fixed upon the entrance to catch the first glimpse of him, and every one
+pronounced his name at once in short, glad tones of satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"Don John is coming! It is Don John of Austria! Don John is there!"</p>
+
+<p>It was almost a universal cry of welcome. An instant later a dead
+silence followed as a chamberlain's clear voice announced the royal
+presence, and King Philip advanced upon the platform of the throne. For
+several seconds not a sound broke the stillness, and he came slowly forward
+followed by half a dozen nobles in immediate attendance upon him. But
+though he must have heard his brother's name in the general chorus of
+voices as soon as the door had been thrown open, he seemed by no means
+disconcerted; on the contrary, he smiled almost affably, and his eyes were
+less fixed than usual, as he looked about him with something like an air of
+satisfaction. As soon as it was clear that he meant to descend the steps to
+the floor of the hall, the chief courtiers came forward, Ruy Gomez de
+Silva, Prince of Eboli, Alvarez de Toledo, the terrible Duke of Alva, the
+Dukes of Medina Sidonia and of Infantado, Don Antonio Perez the chief
+Secretary, the Ambassadors of Queen Elizabeth of England and of France, and
+a dozen others, bowing so low that the plumes of their hats literally
+touched the floor beside them.</p>
+
+<p>"Why is there no dancing?" asked Philip, addressing Ruy Gomez, with a
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>The Minister explained that one of the dances was but just over.</p>
+
+<p>"Let there be more at once," answered the King. "Let there be dancing
+and music without end to-night. We have good reason to keep the day with
+rejoicing, since the war is over, and Don John of Austria has come back in
+triumph."</p>
+
+<p>The command was obeyed instantly, as Ruy Gomez made a sign to the leader
+of the musicians, who was watching him intently in expectation of the
+order. The King smiled again as the long strain broke the silence and the
+conversation began again all through the hall, though in a far more subdued
+tone than before, and with much more caution. Philip turned to the English
+Ambassador.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pity," he said, "that my sister of England cannot be here with
+us on such a night as this. We saw no such sights in London in my day, my
+lord."</p>
+
+<p>"There have been changes since then, Sire," answered the Ambassador.
+"The Queen is very much inclined to magnificence and to great
+entertainments, and does not hesitate to dance herself, being of a very
+vital and pleasant temper. Nevertheless, your Majesty's court is by far the
+most splendid in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"There you are right, my lord!" exclaimed the King. "And for that
+matter, we have beauty also, such as is found nowhere else."</p>
+
+<p>The Princess of Eboli was close by, waiting for him to speak to her, and
+his eyes fixed themselves upon her face with a sort of cold and snakelike
+admiration, to which she was well accustomed, but which even now made her
+nervous. The Ambassador was not slow to take up the cue of flattery, for
+Englishmen still knew how to flatter in Elizabeth's day.</p>
+
+<p>"The inheritance of universal conquest," he said, bowing and smiling to
+the Princess. "Even the victories of Don John of Austria must yield to
+that."</p>
+
+<p>The Princess laughed carelessly. Had Perez spoken the words, she would
+have frowned, but the King's eyes were watching her.</p>
+
+<p>"His Highness has fled from the field without striking a blow," she
+said. "We have not seen him this evening." As she spoke she met the King's
+gaze with a look of enquiry.</p>
+
+<p>"Don John will be here presently, no doubt," he said, as if answering a
+question. "Has he not been here at all since supper?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Sire; though every one expected him to come at once."</p>
+
+<p>"That is strange," said Philip, with perfect self-possession. "He is
+fond of dancing, too--no one can dance better than he. Have you ever known
+a man so roundly gifted as my brother, my lord?"</p>
+
+<p>"A most admirable prince," answered the Ambassador, gravely and without
+enthusiasm, for he feared that the King was about to speak of his brother's
+possible marriage with Queen Mary of Scots.</p>
+
+<p>"And a most affectionate and gentle nature," said Philip, musing. "I
+remember from the time when he was a boy that every one loved him and
+praised him, and yet he is not spoiled. He is always the same. He is my
+brother--how often have I wished for such a son! Well, he may yet be King.
+Who should, if not he, when I am gone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your Majesty need not anticipate such a frightful calamity!" cried the
+Princess fervently, though she was at that moment weighing the comparative
+advantage of several mortal diseases by which, in appearance at least, his
+exit from the world might be accelerated.</p>
+
+<p>"Life is very uncertain, Princess," observed the King. "My lord," he
+turned to the English Ambassador again, "do you consider melons
+indigestible in England? I have lately heard much against them."</p>
+
+<p>"A melon is a poor thing, of a watery constitution, your Majesty,"
+replied the Ambassador glibly. "There can be but little sustenance in a
+hollow piece of water that is sucked from a marsh and enclosed in a green
+rind. To tell the truth, I hear it ill spoken of by our physicians, but I
+cannot well speak of the matter, for I never ate one in my life, and please
+God I never will!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not!" enquired the King, who took an extraordinary interest in the
+subject. "You fear them, then! Yet you seem to be exceedingly strong and
+healthy."</p>
+
+<p>"Sire, I have sometimes drunk a little water for my stomach's sake, but
+I will not eat it."</p>
+
+<p>The King smiled pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>"How wise the English are!" he said. "We may yet learn much of
+them."</p>
+
+<p>Philip turned away from the Ambassador and watched the dance in silence.
+The courtiers now stood in a wide half circle to the right and left of him
+as he faced the hall, and the dancers passed backwards and forwards across
+the open space. His slow eyes followed one figure without seeing the rest.
+In the set nearest to him a beautiful girl was dancing with one of Don
+John's officers. She was of the rarest type of Andalusian beauty, tall,
+pliant, and slenderly strong, with raven's-wing hair and splendidly
+languorous eyes, her creamy cheek as smooth as velvet, and a mouth like a
+small ripe fruit. As she moved she bent from the waist as easily and
+naturally as a child, and every movement followed a new curve of beauty
+from her white throat to the small arched foot that darted into sight as
+she stepped forward now and then, to disappear instantly under the shadow
+of the gold-embroidered skirt. As she glanced towards the King, her shadowy
+lids half hid her eyes and the long black lashes almost brushed her cheek.
+Philip could not look away from her.</p>
+
+<p>But suddenly there was a stir among the courtiers, and a shadow came
+between the King and the vision he was watching. He started a little,
+annoyed by the interruption and at being rudely reminded of what had
+happened half an hour earlier, for the shadow was cast by Mendoza, tall and
+grim in his armour, his face as grey as his grey beard, and his eyes hard
+and fixed. Without bending, like a soldier on parade, he stood there,
+waiting by force of habit until Philip should speak to him. The King's
+brows bent together, and he almost unconsciously raised one hand to signify
+that the music should cease. It stopped in the midst of a bar, leaving the
+dancers at a standstill in their measure, and all the moving sea of light
+and colour and gleaming jewels was arrested instantly in its motion, while
+every look was turned towards the King. The change from sound to silence,
+from motion to immobility, was so sudden that every one was startled, as if
+some frightful accident had happened, or as if an earthquake had shaken the
+Alcazar to its deep foundation.</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza's harsh voice spoke out alone in accents that were heard to the
+end of the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"Don John of Austria is dead! I, Mendoza, have killed him unarmed."</p>
+
+<p>It was long before a sound was heard, before any man or woman in the
+hall had breath to utter a word. Philip's voice was heard first.</p>
+
+<p>"The man is mad," he said, with undisturbed coolness. "See to him,
+Perez."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" cried Mendoza. "I am not mad. I have killed Don John. You
+shall find him in his room as he fell, with the wound in his breast."</p>
+
+<p>One moment more the silence lasted, while Philip's stony face never
+moved. A single woman's shriek rang out first, long, ear-piercing,
+agonized, and then, without warning, a cry went up such as the old hall had
+never heard before. It was a bad cry to hear, for it clamoured for blood to
+be shed for blood, and though it was not for him, Philip turned livid and
+shrank back a step. But Mendoza stood like a rock, waiting to be taken.</p>
+
+<p>In another moment furious confusion filled the hall. From every side at
+once rose women's cries, and the deep shouts of angry men, and high, clear
+yells of rage and hate. The men pushed past the ladies of the court to the
+front, and some came singly, but a serried rank moved up from behind,
+pushing the others before them.</p>
+
+<p>"Kill him! Kill him at the King's feet! Kill him where he stands!"</p>
+
+<p>And suddenly something made blue flashes of light high over the heads of
+all; a rapier was out and wheeled in quick circles from a pliant wrist. An
+officer of Mendoza's guard had drawn it, and a dozen more were in the air
+in an instant, and then daggers by scores, keen, short, and strong, held
+high at arm's length, each shaking with the fury of the hand that held
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"Sangre! Sangre!"</p>
+
+<p>Some one had screamed out the wild cry of the Spanish soldiers--'Blood!
+Blood!'--and the young men took it up in a mad yell, as they pushed
+forwards furiously, while the few who stood in front tried to keep a space
+open round the King and Mendoza.</p>
+
+<p>The old man never winced, and disdained to turn his head, though he
+heard the cry of death behind him, and the quick, soft sound of daggers
+drawn from leathern sheaths, and the pressing of men who would be upon him
+in another moment to tear him limb from limb with their knives.</p>
+
+<p>Tall old Ruy Gomez had stepped forwards to stem the tide of death, and
+beside him the English Ambassador, quietly determined to see fair play or
+to be hurt himself in preventing murder.</p>
+
+<p>"Back!" thundered Ruy Gomez, in a voice that was heard. "Back, I say!
+Are you gentlemen of Spain, or are you executioners yourselves that you
+would take this man's blood? Stand back!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sangre! Sangre!" echoed the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"Then take mine first!" shouted the brave old Prince, spreading his
+short cloak out behind him with his hands to cover Mendoza more
+completely.</p>
+
+<p>But still the crowd of splendid young nobles surged up to him, and back
+a little, out of sheer respect for his station and his old age, and
+forwards again, dagger in hand, with blazing eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Sangre! Sangre! Sangre!" they cried, blind with fury.</p>
+
+<p>But meanwhile, the guards filed in, for the prudent Perez had hastened
+to throw wide the doors and summon them. Weapons in hand and ready, they
+formed a square round the King and Mendoza and Ruy Gomez, and at the sight
+of their steel caps and breastplates and long-tasselled halberds, the yells
+of the courtiers subsided a little and turned to deep curses and
+execrations and oaths of vengeance. A high voice pierced the low roar, keen
+and cutting as a knife, but no one knew whose it was, and Philip almost
+reeled as he heard the words.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember Don Carlos! Don John of Austria is gone to join Don Carlos and
+Queen Isabel!"</p>
+
+<p>Again a deadly silence fell upon the multitude, and the King leaned on
+Perez' arm. Some woman's hate had bared the truth in a flash, and there
+were hundreds of hands in the hall that were ready to take his life instead
+of Mendoza's; and he knew it, and was afraid.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XV'></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+
+<p>The agonized cry that had been first heard in the hall had come from
+Inez's lips. When she had fled from her father, she had regained her
+hiding-place in the gallery above the throne room. She would not go to her
+own room, for she felt that rest was out of the question while Dolores was
+in such danger; and yet there would have been no object in going to Don
+John's door again, to risk being caught by her father or met by the King
+himself. She had therefore determined to let an hour pass before attempting
+another move. So she slipped into the gallery again, and sat upon the
+little wooden bench that had been made for the Moorish women in old times;
+and she listened to the music and the sound of the dancers' feet far below,
+and to the hum of voices, in which she often distinguished the name of Don
+John. She had heard all,--the cries when it was thought that he was coming,
+the chamberlain's voice announcing the King, and then the change of key in
+the sounds that had followed. Lastly, she had heard plainly every syllable
+of her father's speech, so that when she realized what it meant, she had
+shrieked aloud, and had fled from the gallery to find her sister if she
+could, to find Don John's body most certainly where it lay on the marble
+floor, with the death wound at the breast. Her instinct--she could not have
+reasoned then--told her that her father must have found the lovers
+together, and that in sudden rage he had stabbed Don John, defenceless.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores' tears answered her sister's question well enough when the two
+girls were clasped in one another's arms at last. There was not a doubt
+left in the mind of either. Inez spoke first. She said that she had hidden
+in the gallery.</p>
+
+<p>"Our father must have come in some time after the King," she said, in
+broken sentences, and almost choking. "Suddenly the music stopped. I could
+hear every word. He said that he had done it,--that he had murdered Don
+John,--and then I ran here, for I was afraid he had killed you, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Would God he had!" cried Dolores. "Would to Heaven that I were dead
+beside the man I love!"</p>
+
+<p>"And I!" moaned Inez pitifully, and she began to sob wildly, as Dolores
+had sobbed at first.</p>
+
+<p>But Dolores was silent now, as if she had shed all her tears at once,
+and had none left. She held her sister in her arms, and soothed her almost
+unconsciously, as if she had been a little child. But her own thoughts were
+taking shape quickly, for she was strong; and after the first paroxysm of
+her grief, she saw the immediate future as clearly as the present. When she
+spoke again she had the mastery of her voice, and it was clear and low.</p>
+
+<p>"You say that our father confessed before the whole court that he had
+murdered Don John?" she said, with a question. "What happened then? Did the
+King speak? Was our father arrested? Can you remember?"</p>
+
+<p>"I only heard loud cries," sobbed Inez. "I came to you--as quickly as I
+could--I was afraid."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall never see our father again--unless we see him on the morning
+when he is to die."</p>
+
+<p>"Dolores! They will not kill him, too?" In sudden and greater fear than
+before, Inez ceased sobbing.</p>
+
+<p>"He will die on the scaffold," answered Dolores, in the same clear tone,
+as if she were speaking in a dream, or of things that did not come near
+her. "There is no pardon possible. He will die to-morrow or the next
+day."</p>
+
+<p>The present truth stood out in all its frightful distinctness. Whoever
+had done the murder--since Mendoza had confessed it, he would be made to
+die for it,--of that she was sure. She could not have guessed what had
+really happened; and though the evidence of the sounds she had heard
+through the door would have gone to show that Philip had done the deed
+himself, yet there had been no doubt about Mendoza's words, spoken to the
+King alone over Don John's dead body, and repeated before the great
+assembly in the ball-room. If she guessed at an explanation, it was that
+her father, entering the bedchamber during the quarrel, and supposing from
+what he saw that Don John was about to attack the King, had drawn and
+killed the Prince without hesitation. The only thing quite clear was that
+Mendoza was to suffer, and seemed strangely determined to suffer, for what
+he had or had not done. The dark shadow of the scaffold rose before
+Dolores' eyes.</p>
+
+<p>It had seemed impossible that she could be made to bear more than she
+had borne that night, when she had fallen upon Don John's body to weep her
+heart out for her dead love. But she saw that there was more to bear, and
+dimly she guessed that there might be something for her to do. There was
+Inez first, and she must be cared for and placed in safety, for she was
+beside herself with grief. It was only on that afternoon by the window that
+Dolores had guessed the blind girl's secret, which Inez herself hardly
+suspected even now, though she was half mad with grief and utterly
+broken-hearted.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores felt almost helpless, but she understood that she and her sister
+were henceforth to be more really alone in what remained of life than if
+they had been orphans from their earliest childhood. The vision of the
+convent, that had been unbearable but an hour since, held all her hope of
+peace and safety now, unless her father could be saved from his fate by
+some miracle of heaven. But that was impossible. He had given himself up as
+if he were determined to die. He had been out of his mind, beside himself,
+stark mad, in his fear that Don John might bring harm upon his daughter.
+That was why he had killed him--there could be no other reason, unless he
+had guessed that she was in the locked room, and had judged her then and at
+once, and forever. The thought had not crossed her mind till then, and it
+was a new torture now, so that she shrank under it as under a bodily blow;
+and her grasp tightened violently upon her sister's arm, rousing the
+half-fainting girl again to the full consciousness of pain.</p>
+
+<p>It was no wonder that Mendoza should have done such a deed, since he had
+believed her ruined and lost to honour beyond salvation. That explained
+all. He had guessed that she had been long with Don John, who had locked
+her hastily into the inner room to hide her from the King. Had the King
+been Don John, had she loved Philip as she loved his brother, her father
+would have killed his sovereign as unhesitatingly, and would have suffered
+any death without flinching. She believed that, and there was enough of his
+nature in herself to understand it.</p>
+
+<p>She was as innocent as the blind girl who lay in her arms, but suddenly
+it flashed upon her that no one would believe it, since her own father
+would not, and that her maiden honour and good name were gone for ever,
+gone with her dead lover, who alone could have cleared her before the
+world. She cared little for the court now, but she cared tenfold more
+earnestly for her father's thought of her, and she knew him and the
+terrible tenacity of his conviction when he believed himself to be right.
+He had proved that by what he had done. Since she understood all, she no
+longer doubted that he had killed Don John with the fullest intention, to
+avenge her, and almost knowing that she was within hearing, as indeed she
+had been. He had taken a royal life in atonement for her honour, but he was
+to give his own, and was to die a shameful death on the scaffold, within a
+few hours, or, at the latest, within a few days, for her sake.</p>
+
+<p>Then she remembered how on that afternoon she had seen tears in his
+eyes, and had heard the tremor in his voice when he had said that she was
+everything to him, that she had been all his life since her mother had
+died--he had proved that, too; and though he had killed the man she loved,
+she shrank from herself again as she thought what he must have suffered in
+her dishonour. For it was nothing else. There was neither man nor woman nor
+girl in Spain who would believe her innocent against such evidence. The
+world might have believed Don John, if he had lived, because the world had
+loved him and trusted him, and could never have heard falsehood in his
+voice; but it would not believe her though she were dying, and though she
+should swear upon the most sacred and true things. The world would turn
+from her with an unbelieving laugh, and she was to be left alone in her
+dishonour, and people would judge that she was not even a fit companion for
+her blind sister in their solitude. The King would send her to Las Huelgas,
+or to some other distant convent of a severe order, that she might wear out
+her useless life in grief and silence and penance as quickly as possible.
+She bowed her head. It was too hard to bear.</p>
+
+<p>Inez was more quiet now, and the two sat side by side in mournful
+silence, leaning against the parapet. They had forgotten the dwarf, and he
+had disappeared, waiting, perhaps, in the shadow at a distance, in case he
+might be of use to them. But if he was within hearing, they did not see
+him. At last Inez spoke, almost in a whisper, as if she were in the
+presence of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>"Were you there, dear?" she asked. "Did you see?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was in the next room," Dolores answered. "I could not see, but I
+heard. I heard him fall," she added almost inaudibly, and choking.</p>
+
+<p>Inez shuddered and pressed nearer to her sister, leaning against her,
+but she did not begin to sob again. She was thinking.</p>
+
+<p>"Can we not help our father, at least?" she asked presently. "Is there
+nothing we can say, or do? We ought to help him if we can, Dolores--though
+he did it."</p>
+
+<p>"I would save him with my life, if I could. God knows, I would! He was
+mad when he struck the blow. He did it for my sake, because he thought Don
+John had ruined my good name. And we should have been married the day after
+to-morrow! God of heaven, have mercy!"</p>
+
+<p>Her grief took hold of her again, like a material power, shaking her
+from head to foot, and bowing her down upon herself and wringing her hands
+together, so that Inez, calmer than she, touched her gently and tried to
+comfort her without any words, for there were none to say, since nothing
+mattered now, and life was over at its very beginning. Little by little the
+sharp agony subsided to dull pain once more, and Dolores sat upright. But
+Inez was thinking still, and even in her sorrow and fright she was
+gathering all her innocent ingenuity to her aid.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there no way?" she asked, speaking more to herself than to her
+sister. "Could we not say that we were there, that it was not our father
+but some one else? Perhaps some one would believe us. If we told the judges
+that we were quite, quite sure that he did not do it, do you not think--but
+then," she checked herself--"then it could only have been the King."</p>
+
+<p>"Only the King himself," echoed Dolores, half unconsciously, and in a
+dreamy tone.</p>
+
+<p>"That would be terrible," said Inez. "But we could say that the King was
+not there, you know--that it was some one else, some one we did not
+know--"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores rose abruptly from the seat and laid her hand upon the parapet
+steadily, as if an unnatural strength had suddenly grown up in her. Inez
+went on speaking, confusing herself in the details she was trying to put
+together to make a plan, and losing the thread of her idea as she attempted
+to build up falsehoods, for she was truthful as their father was. But
+Dolores did not hear her.</p>
+
+<p>"You can do nothing, child," she said at last, in a firm tone. "But I
+may. You have made me think of something that I may do--it is just
+possible--it may help a little. Let me think."</p>
+
+<p>Inez waited in silence for her to go on, and Dolores stood as motionless
+as a statue, contemplating in thought the step she meant to take if it
+offered the slightest hope of saving her father. The thought was worthy of
+her, but the sacrifice was great even then. She had not believed that the
+world still held anything with which she would not willingly part, but
+there was one thing yet. It might be taken from her, though her father had
+slain Don John of Austria to save it, and was to die for it himself. She
+could give it before she could be robbed of it, perhaps, and it might buy
+his life. She could still forfeit her good name of her own free will, and
+call herself what she was not. In words she could give her honour to the
+dead man, and the dead could not rise up and deny her nor refuse the gift.
+And it seemed to her that when the people should hear her, they would
+believe her, seeing that it was her shame, a shame such as no maiden who
+had honour left would bear before the world. But it was hard to do. For
+honour was her last and only possession now that all was taken from
+her.</p>
+
+<p>It was not the so-called honour of society, either, based on
+long-forgotten traditions, and depending on convention for its being--not
+the sort of honour within which a man may ruin an honest woman and suffer
+no retribution, but which decrees that he must take his own life if he
+cannot pay a debt of play made on his promise to a friend, which allows him
+to lie like a cheat, but ordains that he must give or require satisfaction
+of blood for the imaginary insult of a hasty word--the honour which is to
+chivalry what black superstition is to the true Christian faith, which
+compares with real courage and truth and honesty, as an ape compares with a
+man. It was not that, and Dolores knew it, as every maiden knows it; for
+the honour of woman is the fact on which the whole world turns, and has
+turned and will turn to the end of things; but what is called the honour of
+society has been a fiction these many centuries, and though it came first
+of a high parentage, of honest thought wedded to brave deed, and though
+there are honourable men yet, these are for the most part the few who talk
+least loudly about honour's code, and the belief they hold has come to be a
+secret and a persecuted faith, at which the common gentleman thinks fit to
+laugh lest some one should presume to measure him by it and should find him
+wanting.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores did not mean to hesitate, after she had decided what to do. But
+she could not avoid the struggle, and it was long and hard, though she saw
+the end plainly before her and did not waver. Inez did not understand and
+kept silence while it lasted.</p>
+
+<p>It was only a word to say, but it was the word which would be repeated
+against her as long as she lived, and which nothing she could ever say or
+do afterwards could take back when it had once been spoken--it would leave
+the mark that a lifetime could not efface. But she meant to speak it. She
+could not see what her father would see, that he would rather die, justly
+or unjustly, than let his daughter be dishonoured before the world. That
+was a part of a man's code, perhaps, but it should not hinder her from
+saving her father's life, or trying to, at whatever cost. What she was
+fighting against was something much harder to understand in herself. What
+could it matter now, that the world should think her fallen from her maiden
+estate? The world was nothing to her, surely. It held nothing, it meant
+nothing, it was nothing. Her world had been her lover, and he lay dead in
+his room. In heaven, he knew that she was innocent, as he was himself, and
+he would see that she was going to accuse herself that she might save her
+father. In heaven, he had forgiven his murderer, and he would understand.
+As for the world and what it said, she knew that she must leave it
+instantly, and go from the confession she was about to make to the convent
+where she was to die, and whence her spotless soul would soon be wafted
+away to join her true lover beyond the earth. There was no reason why she
+should find it hard to do, and yet it was harder than anything she had ever
+dreamed of doing. But she was fighting the deepest and strongest instinct
+of woman's nature, and the fight went hard.</p>
+
+<p>She fancied the scene, the court, the grey-haired nobles, the fair and
+honourable women, the brave young soldiers, the thoughtless courtiers, the
+whole throng she was about to face, for she meant to speak before them all,
+and to her own shame. She was as white as marble, but when she thought of
+what was coming the blood sprang to her face and tingled in her forehead,
+and she felt her eyes fall and her proud head bend, as the storm of
+humiliation descended upon her. She could hear beforehand the sounds that
+would follow her words, the sharp, short laugh of jealous women who hated
+her, the murmur of surprise among the men. Then the sea of faces would seem
+to rise and fall before her in waves, the lights would dance, her cheeks
+would burn like flames, and she would grow dizzy. That would be the end.
+Afterwards she could go out alone. Perhaps the women would shrink from her,
+no man would be brave enough to lead her kindly from the room. Yet all that
+she would bear, for the mere hope of saving her father. The worst, by far
+the worst and hardest to endure, would be something within herself, for
+which she had neither words nor true understanding, but which was more real
+than anything she could define, for it was in the very core of her heart
+and in the secret of her soul, a sort of despairing shame of herself and a
+desolate longing for something she could never recover.</p>
+
+<p>She closed her tired eyes and pressed her hand heavily upon the stone
+coping of the parapet. It was the supreme effort, and when she looked down
+at Inez again she knew that she should live to the end of the ordeal
+without wavering.</p>
+
+<p>"I am going down to the throne room," she said, very quietly and gently.
+"You had better go to our apartment, dear, and wait for me there. I am
+going to try and save our father's life--do not ask me how. It will not
+take long to say what I have to say, and then I will come to you."</p>
+
+<p>Inez had risen now, and was standing beside her, laying a hand upon her
+arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me come, too," she said. "I can help you, I am sure I can help
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Dolores, with authority. "You cannot help me, dearest,
+and it would hurt you, and you must not come."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I will stay here," said Inez sorrowfully. "I shall be nearer to
+him," she added under her breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay here--yes. I will come back to you, and then--then we will go in
+together, and say a prayer--his soul can hear us still--we will go and say
+good-by to him--together."</p>
+
+<p>Her voice was almost firm, and Inez could not see the agony in her white
+face. Then Dolores clasped her in her arms and kissed her forehead and her
+blind eyes very lovingly, and pressed her head to her own shoulders and
+patted it and smoothed the girl's dark hair.</p>
+
+<p>"I will come back," she said, "and, Inez--you know the truth, my
+darling. Whatever evil they may say of me after to-night, remember that I
+have said it of myself for our father's sake, and that it is not true."</p>
+
+<p>"No one will believe it," answered Inez. "They will not believe anything
+bad of you."</p>
+
+<p>"Then our father must die."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores kissed her once more and made her sit down, then turned and went
+away. She walked quickly along the corridors and descended the second
+staircase, to enter the throne room by the side door reserved for the
+officers of the household and the maids of honour. She walked swiftly, her
+head erect, one hand holding the folds of her cloak pressed to her bosom,
+and the other, nervously clenched, and hanging down, as if she were
+expecting to strike a blow.</p>
+
+<p>She reached the door, and for a moment her heart stopped beating, and
+her eyes closed. She heard many loud voices within, and she knew that most
+of the court must still be assembled. It was better that all the world
+should hear her--even the King, if he were still there. She pushed the door
+open and went in by the familiar way, letting the dark cloak that covered
+her court dress fall to the ground as she passed the threshold. Half a
+dozen young nobles, grouped near the entrance, made way for her to
+pass.</p>
+
+<p>When they recognized her, their voices dropped suddenly, and they stared
+after her in astonishment that she should appear at such a time. She was
+doubtless in ignorance of what had happened, they thought. As for the
+throng in the hall, there was no restraint upon their talk now, and words
+were spoken freely which would have been high treason half an hour earlier.
+There was the noise, the tension, the ceaseless talking, the excited air,
+that belong to great palace revolutions.</p>
+
+<p>The press was closer near the steps of the throne, where the King and
+Mendoza had stood, for after they had left the hall, surrounded and
+protected by the guards, the courtiers had crowded upon one another, and
+those near the further door and outside it in the outer apartments had
+pressed in till there was scarcely standing room on the floor of the hall.
+Dolores found it hard to advance. Some made way for her with low
+exclamations of surprise, but others, not looking to see who she was,
+offered a passive resistance to her movements.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you kindly let me pass?" she asked at last, in a gentle tone, "I
+am Dolores de Mendoza."</p>
+
+<p>At the name the group that barred her passage started and made way, and
+going through she came upon the Prince of Eboli, not far from the steps of
+the throne. The English Ambassador, who meant to stay as long as there was
+anything for him to observe, was still by the Prince's side. Dolores
+addressed the latter without hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>"Don Ruy Gomez," she said, "I ask your help. My father is innocent, and
+I can prove it. But the court must hear me--every one must hear the truth.
+Will you help me? Can you make them listen?"</p>
+
+<p>Ruy Gomez looked down at Dolores' pale and determined features in
+courteous astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"I am at your service," he answered. "But what are you going to say? The
+court is in a dangerous mood to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"I must speak to all," said Dolores. "I am not afraid. What I have to
+say cannot be said twice--not even if I had the strength. I can save my
+father--"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not go to the King at once?" argued the Prince, who feared
+trouble.</p>
+
+<p>"For the love of God, help me to do as I wish!" Dolores grasped his arm,
+and spoke with an effort. "Let me tell them all, how I know that my father
+is not guilty of the murder. After that take me to the King if you
+will."</p>
+
+<p>She spoke very earnestly, and he no longer opposed her. He knew the
+temper of the court well enough, and was sure that whatever proved Mendoza
+innocent would be welcome just then, and though he was far too loyal to
+wish the suspicion of the deed to be fixed upon the King, he was too just
+not to desire Mendoza to be exculpated if he were innocent.</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me," he said briefly, and he took Dolores by the hand, and
+led her up the first three steps of the platform, so that she could see
+over the heads of all present.</p>
+
+<p>It was no time to think of court ceremonies or customs, for there was
+danger in the air. Ruy Gomez did not stop to make any long ceremony.
+Drawing himself up to his commanding height, he held up his white gloves at
+arm's length to attract the attention of the courtiers, and in a few
+moments there was silence. They seemed an hour of torture to Dolores. Ruy
+Gomez raised his voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandees! The daughter of Don Diego de Mendoza stands here at my side
+to prove to you that he is innocent of Don John of Austria's death!"</p>
+
+<p>The words had hardly left his lips when a shout went up, like a ringing
+cheer. But again he raised his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Hear Do&ntilde;a Maria Dolores de Mendoza!" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>Then he stepped a little away from Dolores, and looked towards her. She
+was dead white, and her lips trembled. There was an almost glassy look in
+her eyes, and still she pressed one hand to her bosom, and the other hung
+by her side, the fingers twitching nervously against the folds of her
+skirt. A few seconds passed before she could speak.</p>
+
+<p>"Grandees of Spain!" she began, and at the first words she found
+strength in her voice so that it reached the ends of the hall, clear and
+vibrating. The silence was intense, as she proceeded.</p>
+
+<p>"My father has accused himself of a fearful crime. He is innocent. He
+would no more have raised his hand against Don John of Austria than against
+the King's own person. I cannot tell why he wishes to sacrifice his life by
+taking upon himself the guilt. But this I know. He did not do the deed. You
+ask me how I know that, how I can prove it? I was there, I, Dolores de
+Mendoza, his daughter, was there unseen in my lover's chamber when he was
+murdered. While he was alive I gave him all, my heart, my soul, my maiden
+honour; and I was there to-night, and had been with him long. But now that
+he is dead, I will pay for my father's life with my dishonour. He must not
+die, for he is innocent. Grandees of Spain, as you are men of honour, he
+must not die, for he is one of you, and this foul deed was not his."</p>
+
+<p>She ceased, her lids drooped till her eyes were half closed and she
+swayed a little as she stood. Roy Gomez made one long stride and held her,
+for he thought she was fainting. But she bit her lips, and forced her eyes
+to open and face the crowd again.</p>
+
+<p>"That is all," she said in a low voice, but distinctly, "It is done. I
+am a ruined woman. Help me to go out."</p>
+
+<p>The old Prince gently led her down the steps. The silence had lasted
+long after she had spoken, but people were beginning to talk again in lower
+tones. It was as she had foreseen it. She heard a scornful woman's laugh,
+and as she passed along, she saw how the older ladies shrank from her and
+how the young ones eyed her with a look of hard curiosity, as if she were
+some wild creature, dangerous to approach, though worth seeing from a
+distance.</p>
+
+<p>But the men pressed close to her as she passed, and she heard them tell
+each other that she was a brave woman who could dare to save her father by
+such means, and there were quick applauding words as she passed, and one
+said audibly that he could die for a girl who had such a true heart, and
+another answered that he would marry her if she could forget Don John. And
+they did not speak without respect, but in earnest, and out of the fulness
+of their admiration.</p>
+
+<p>At last she was at the door, and she paused to speak before going
+out.</p>
+
+<p>"Have I saved his life?" she asked, looking up to the old Prince's kind
+face. "Will they believe me?"</p>
+
+<p>"They believe you," he answered. "But your father's life is in the
+King's hands. You should go to his Majesty without wasting time. Shall I go
+with you? He will see you, I think, if I ask it."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I tell the King?" asked Dolores. "He was there--he saw it
+all--he knows the truth."</p>
+
+<p>She hardly realized what she was saying.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XVI'></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+
+<p>Ruy Gomez was as loyal, in his way, as Mendoza himself, but his loyalty
+was of a very different sort, for it was tempered by a diplomatic spirit
+which made it more serviceable on ordinary occasions, and its object was
+altogether a principle rather than a person. Mendoza could not conceive of
+monarchy, in its abstract, without a concrete individuality represented by
+King Philip; but Ruy Gomez could not imagine the world without the Spanish
+monarchy, though he was well able to gauge his sovereign's weaknesses and
+to deplore his crimes. He himself was somewhat easily deceived, as good men
+often are, and it was he who had given the King his new secretary, Antonio
+Perez; yet from the moment when Mendoza had announced Don John's death, he
+had been convinced that the deed had either been done by Philip himself or
+by his orders, and that Mendoza had bravely sacrificed himself to shield
+his master. What Dolores had said only confirmed his previous opinion, so
+far as her father's innocence was at stake. As for her own confession, he
+believed it, and in spite of himself he could not help admiring the girl's
+heroic courage. Dolores might have been in reality ten times worse than she
+had chosen to represent herself; she would still have been a model of all
+virtue compared with his own wife, though he did not know half of the
+Princess's doings, and was certainly ignorant of her relations with the
+King.</p>
+
+<p>He was not at all surprised when Dolores told him at the door that
+Philip knew the truth about the supposed murder, but he saw how dangerous
+it might be for Dolores to say as much to others of the court. She wished
+to go away alone, as she had come, but he insisted on going with her.</p>
+
+<p>"You must see his Majesty," he said authoritatively. "I will try to
+arrange it at once. And I entreat you to be discreet, my dear, for your
+father's sake, if not for any other reason. You have said too much already.
+It was not wise of you, though it showed amazing courage. You are your
+father's own daughter in that--he is one of the bravest men I ever knew in
+my life."</p>
+
+<p>"It is easy to be brave when one is dead already!" said Dolores, in low
+tones.</p>
+
+<p>"Courage, my dear, courage!" answered the old Prince, in a fatherly
+tone, as they went along. "You are not as brave as you think, since you
+talk of death. Your life is not over yet."</p>
+
+<p>"There is little left of it. I wish it were ended already."</p>
+
+<p>She could hardly speak, for an inevitable and overwhelming reaction had
+followed on the great effort she had made. She put out her hand and caught
+her companion's arm for support. He led her quickly to the small entrance
+of the King's apartments, by which it was his privilege to pass in. They
+reached a small waiting-room where there were a few chairs and a marble
+table, on which two big wax candles were burning. Dolores sank into a seat,
+and leaned back, closing her eyes, while Ruy Gomez went into the
+antechamber beyond and exchanged a few words with the chamberlain on duty.
+He came back almost immediately.</p>
+
+<p>"Your father is alone with the King," he said. "We must wait."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores scarcely heard what he said, and did not change her position nor
+open her eyes. The old man looked at her, sighed, and sat down near a
+brazier of wood coals, over which he slowly warmed his transparent hands,
+from time to time turning his rings slowly on his fingers, as if to warm
+them, too. Outside, the chamberlain in attendance walked slowly up and
+down, again and again passing the open door, through which he glanced at
+Dolores' face. The antechamber was little more than a short, broad
+corridor, and led to the King's study. This corridor had other doors,
+however, and it was through it that the King's private rooms communicated
+with the hall of the royal apartments.</p>
+
+<p>As Ruy Gomez had learned, Mendoza was with Philip, but not alone. The
+old officer was standing on one side of the room, erect and grave, and King
+Philip sat opposite him, in a huge chair, his still eyes staring at the
+fire that blazed in the vast chimney, and sent sudden flashes of yellow
+through the calm atmosphere of light shed by a score of tall candles. At a
+table on one side sat Antonio Perez, the Secretary. He was provided with
+writing-materials and appeared to be taking down the conversation as it
+proceeded. Philip asked a question from time to time, which Mendoza
+answered in a strange voice unlike his own, and between the questions there
+were long intervals of silence.</p>
+
+<p>"You say that you had long entertained feelings of resentment against
+his Highness," said the King, "You admit that, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your Majesty's pardon. I did not say resentment. I said that I
+had long looked upon his Highness's passion for my daughter with great
+anxiety."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that what he said, Perez?" asked Philip, speaking to the Secretary
+without looking at him. "Read that."</p>
+
+<p>"He said: I have long resented his Highness's admiration for my
+daughter," answered Perez, reading from his notes.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," said the King. "You resented it. That is resentment. I was
+right. Be careful, Mendoza, for your words may be used against you
+to-morrow. Say precisely what you mean, and nothing but what you mean."</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza inclined his head rather proudly, for he detested Antonio Perez,
+and it appeared to him that the King was playing a sort of comedy for the
+Secretary's benefit. It seemed an unworthy interlude in what was really a
+solemn tragedy.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you resent his Highness's courtship of your daughter?" enquired
+Philip presently, continuing his cross-examination.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I never believed that there could be a real marriage," answered
+Mendoza boldly. "I believed that my child must become the toy and plaything
+of Don John of Austria, or else that if his Highness married her, the
+marriage would soon be declared void, in order that he might marry a more
+important personage."</p>
+
+<p>"Set that down," said the King to Perez, in a sharp tone. "Set that down
+exactly. It is important." He waited till the Secretary's pen stopped
+before he went on. His next question came suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"How could a marriage consecrated by our holy religion ever be declared
+null and void?"</p>
+
+<p>"Easily enough, if your Majesty wished it," answered Mendoza
+unguardedly, for his temper was slowly heating.</p>
+
+<p>"Write down that answer, Perez. In other words, Mendoza, you think that
+I have no respect for the sacrament of marriage, which I would at any time
+cause to be revoked to suit my political purposes. Is that what you
+think?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not say that, Sire. I said that even if Don John married my
+daughter--"</p>
+
+<p>"I know quite well what you said," interrupted the King suavely. "Perez
+has got every word of it on paper."</p>
+
+<p>The Secretary's bad black eyes looked up from his writing, and he slowly
+nodded as he looked at Mendoza. He understood the situation perfectly,
+though the soldier was far too honourable to suspect the truth.</p>
+
+<p>"I have confessed publicly that I killed Don John defenceless," he said,
+in rough tones. "Is not that enough?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no!" Philip almost smiled, "That is not enough. We must also know
+why you committed such on abominable crime. You do not seem to understand
+that in taking your evidence here myself, I am sparing you the indignity of
+an examination before a tribunal, and under torture--in all probability.
+You ought to be very grateful, my dear Mendoza."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank your Majesty," said the brave old soldier coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"That is right. So we know that your hatred of his Highness was of long
+standing, and you had probably determined some time ago that you would
+murder him on his return." The King paused a moment and then continued. "Do
+you deny that on this very afternoon you swore that if Don John attempted
+to see your daughter, you would kill him at once?"</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza was taken by surprise, and his haggard eyes opened wide as he
+stared at Philip.</p>
+
+<p>"You said that, did you not?" asked the King, insisting upon the point.
+"On your honour, did you say it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I said that," answered Mendoza at last. "But how did your Majesty
+know that I did?"</p>
+
+<p>The King's enormous under lip thrust itself forward, and two ugly lines
+of amusement were drawn in his colourless cheeks. His jaw moved slowly, as
+if he were biting something of which he found the taste agreeable.</p>
+
+<p>"I know everything," he said slowly. "I am well served in my own house.
+Perez, be careful. Write down everything. We also know, I think, that your
+daughter met his Highness this evening. You no doubt found that out as
+others did. The girl is imprudent. Do you confess to knowing that the two
+had met this evening?"</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza ground his teeth as if he were suffering bodily torture. His
+brows contracted, and as Perez looked up, he faced him with such a look of
+hatred and anger that the Secretary could hot meet his eyes. The King was a
+sacred and semi-divine personage, privileged to ask any question he chose
+and theoretically incapable of doing wrong, but it was unbearable that this
+sleek black fox should have the right to hear Diego de Mendoza confess his
+daughter's dishonour. Antonio Perez was not an adventurer of low birth, as
+many have gratuitously supposed, for his father had held an honourable post
+at court before him; but he was very far from being the equal of one who,
+though poor and far removed from the head of his own family, bore one of
+the most noble names in Spain.</p>
+
+<p>"Let your Majesty dismiss Don Antonio Perez," said Mendoza boldly. "I
+will then tell your Majesty all I know."</p>
+
+<p>Perez smiled as he bent over his notes, for he knew what the answer
+would be to such a demand. It came sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not the privilege of a man convicted of murder to choose his
+hearers. Answer my questions or be silent. Do you confess that you knew of
+your daughter's meeting with Don John this evening?"</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza's lips set themselves tightly under his grey beard, and he
+uttered no sound. He interpreted the King's words literally.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what have you to say?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, Sire, since I have your Majesty's permission to be
+silent."</p>
+
+<p>"It does not matter," said Philip indifferently. "Note that he refuses
+to answer the question, Perez. Note that this is equivalent to confessing
+the fact, since he would otherwise deny it. His silence is &amp; reason,
+however, for allowing the case to go to the tribunal to be examined in the
+usual way--the usual way," he repeated, looking hard at Mendoza and
+emphasizing the words strongly.</p>
+
+<p>"Since I do not deny the deed, I entreat your Majesty to let me suffer
+for it quickly. I am ready to die, God knows. Let it be to-morrow morning
+or to-night. Your Majesty need only sign the warrant for my execution,
+which Don Antonio Perez has, no doubt, already prepared."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all, not at all," answered the King, with horrible coolness. "I
+mean that you shall have a fair and open trial and every possible
+opportunity of justifying yourself. There must be nothing secret about
+this. So horrible a crime must be treated in the most public manner. Though
+it is very painful to me to refer to such a matter, you must remember that
+after it had pleased Heaven, in its infinite justice, to bereave me of my
+unfortunate son, Don Carlos, the heir to the throne, there were not wanting
+ill-disposed and wicked persons who actually said that I had caused his
+life to be shortened by various inhuman cruelties. No, no! we cannot have
+too much publicity. Consider how terrible a thing it would be if any one
+should dare to suppose that my own brother had been murdered with my
+consent! You should love your country too much not to fear such a result;
+for though you have murdered my brother in cold blood, I am too just to
+forget that you have proved your patriotism through a long and hitherto
+honourable career. It is my duty to see that the causes of your atrocious
+action are perfectly clear to my subjects, so that no doubt may exist even
+in the most prejudiced minds. Do you understand? I repeat that if I have
+condescended to examine you alone, I have done so only out of a merciful
+desire to spare an old soldier the suffering and mortification of an
+examination by the tribunal that is to judge you. Understand that."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand that and much more besides," answered Mendoza, in low and
+savage tones.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not necessary that you should understand or think that you
+understand anything more than what I say," returned the King coldly. "At
+what time did you go to his Highness's apartments this evening?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your Majesty knows."</p>
+
+<p>"I know nothing of it," said the King, with the utmost calm. "You were
+on duty after supper. You escorted me to my apartments afterwards. I had
+already sent for Perez, who came at once, and we remained here, busy with
+affairs, until I returned to the throne room, five minutes before you came
+and confessed the murder; did we not, Perez?"</p>
+
+<p>"Most certainly, Sire," answered the Secretary gravely. "Your Majesty
+must have been at work with me an hour, at least, before returning to the
+throne room."</p>
+
+<p>"And your Majesty did not go with me by the private staircase to Don
+John of Austria's apartment?" asked Mendoza, thunderstruck by the enormous
+falsehood.</p>
+
+<p>"With you?" cried the King, in admirably feigned astonishment. "What
+madness is this? Do not write that down, Perez. I really believe the man is
+beside himself!"</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza groaned aloud, for he saw that he had been frightfully deceived.
+In his magnificent generosity, he had assumed the guilt of the crime, being
+ready and willing to die for it quickly to save the King from blame and to
+put an end to his own miserable existence. But he had expected death
+quickly, mercifully, within a few hours. Had he suspected what Philip had
+meant to do,--that he was to be publicly tried for a murder he had not
+committed, and held up to public hatred and ignominy for days and perhaps
+weeks together, while a slow tribunal dragged out its endless
+procedure,--neither his loyalty nor his desire for death could have had
+power to bring his pride to such a sacrifice. And now he saw that he was
+caught in a vise, and that no accusation he could bring against the King
+could save him, even if he were willing to resort to such a measure and so
+take back his word. There was no witness for him but himself. Don John was
+dead, and the infamous Perez was ready to swear that Philip had not left
+the room in which they had been closeted together. There was not a living
+being to prove that Mendoza had not gone alone to Don John's apartments
+with the deliberate intention of killing him. He had, indeed, been to the
+chief steward's office in search of a key, saying that the King desired to
+have it and was waiting; but it would be said that he had used the King's
+authority to try and get the key for himself because he knew that his
+daughter was hidden in the locked room. He had foolishly fancied that the
+King would send for him and see him alone before he died, that his
+sovereign would thank him for the service that was costing his life, would
+embrace him and send him to his death for the good of Spain and the divine
+right of monarchy. Truly, he had been most bitterly deceived.</p>
+
+<p>"You said," continued Philip mercilessly, "that you killed his Highness
+when he was unarmed. Is that true?"</p>
+
+<p>"His Highness was unarmed," said Mendoza, almost through his closed
+teeth, for he was suffering beyond words.</p>
+
+<p>"Unarmed," repeated the King, nodding to Perez, who wrote rapidly. "You
+might have given him a chance for his life. It would have been more
+soldier-like. Had you any words before you drew upon him? Was there any
+quarrel?"</p>
+
+<p>"None. We did not speak to each other." Mendoza tried to make Philip
+meet his eyes, but the King would not look at him.</p>
+
+<p>"There was no altercation," said the King, looking at Perez. "That
+proves that the murder was premeditated. Put it down--it is very important.
+You could hardly have stabbed him in the back, I suppose. He must have
+turned when he heard you enter. Where was the wound?"</p>
+
+<p>"The wound that killed his Highness will be found near the heart."</p>
+
+<p>"Cruel!" Philip looked down at his own hands, and he shook his head very
+sadly. "Cruel, most cruel," he repeated in a low tone.</p>
+
+<p>"I admit that it was a very cruel deed," said Mendoza, looking at him
+fixedly. "In that, your Majesty is right."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you see your daughter before or after you had committed the
+murder?" asked the King calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not seen my daughter since the murder was committed."</p>
+
+<p>"But you saw her before? Be careful, Perez. Write down every word. You
+say that you saw your daughter before you did it."</p>
+
+<p>"I did not say that," answered Mendoza firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"It makes very little difference," said the King, "If you had seen her
+with his Highness, the murder would have seemed less cold-blooded, that is
+all. There would then have been something like a natural provocation for
+it."</p>
+
+<p>There was a low sound, as of some one scratching at the door. That was
+the usual way of asking admittance to the King's room on very urgent
+matters. Perez rose instantly, the King nodded to him, and he went to the
+door. On opening, someone handed him a folded paper on a gold salver. He
+brought it to Philip, dropped on one knee very ceremoniously, and presented
+it. Philip took the note and opened it, and Perez returned to his seat at
+once.</p>
+
+<p>The King unfolded the small sheet carefully. The room was so full of
+light that he could read it when he sat, without moving. His eyes followed
+the lines quickly to the end, and returned to the beginning, and he read
+the missive again more carefully. Not the slightest change of expression
+was visible in his face, as he folded the paper neatly again in the exact
+shape in which he had received it. Then he remained silent a few moments.
+Perez held his pen ready to write, moving it mechanically now and then as
+if he were writing in the air, and staring at the fire, absorbed in his own
+thoughts, though his ear was on the alert.</p>
+
+<p>"You refuse to admit that you found your daughter and Don John together,
+then?" The King spoke with an interrogation.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not find them together," answered Mendoza. "I have said so." He
+was becoming exasperated under the protracted cross-examination.</p>
+
+<p>"You have not said so. My memory is very good, but if it should fail we
+have everything written down. I believe you merely refused to answer when I
+asked if you knew of their meeting--which meant that you did know of it. Is
+that it, Perez?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly so, Sire." The Secretary had already found the place among his
+notes.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you persistently refuse to admit that you had positive evidence of
+your daughter's guilt before the murder?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will not admit that, Sire, for it would not be true."</p>
+
+<p>"Your daughter has given her evidence since," said the King, holding up
+the folded note, and fixing his eyes at last on his victim's face. If it
+were possible, Mendoza turned more ashy pale than before, and he started
+perceptibly at the King's words.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never believe that!" he cried in a voice which nevertheless
+betrayed his terror for his child.</p>
+
+<p>"A few moments before this note was written," said Philip calmly, "your
+daughter entered the throne room, and addressed the court, standing upon
+the steps of the throne--a very improper proceeding and one which Ruy Gomez
+should not have allowed. Your daughter Dolores--is that the girl's name?
+Yes. Your daughter Dolores, amidst the most profound silence, confessed
+that she--it is so monstrous that I can hardly bring myself to say it--that
+she had yielded to the importunities of his late Highness, that she was
+with him in his room a long time this evening, and that, in fact, she was
+actually in his bedchamber when he was murdered."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a lie!" cried Mendoza vehemently. "It is an abominable lie--she
+was not in the room!"</p>
+
+<p>"She has said that she was," answered Philip. "You can hardly suppose a
+girl capable of inventing such damning evidence against herself, even for
+the sake of saving her own father. She added that his Highness was not
+killed by you. But that is puerile. She evidently saw you do it, and has
+boldly confessed that she was in the room--hidden somewhere, perhaps, since
+you absolutely refuse to admit that you saw her there. It is quite clear
+that you found the two together and that you killed his Highness before
+your daughter's eyes. Why not admit that, Mendoza? It makes you seem a
+little less cold-blooded. The provocation was great--"</p>
+
+<p>"She was not there," protested Mendoza, interrupting the King, for he
+hardly knew what he was doing.</p>
+
+<p>"She was there, since she confesses to have been in the room. I do not
+tolerate interruption when I am speaking. She was there, and her evidence
+will be considered. Even if you did not see her, how can you be sure that
+your daughter was not there? Did you search the room? Did you look behind
+the curtains?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not." The stern old man seemed to shrink bodily under the
+frightful humiliation to which he was subjected.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then you cannot swear that she was not in the room. But you
+did not see her there. Then I am sorry to say that there can have been no
+extenuating circumstances. You entered his Highness's bedchamber, you did
+not even speak to him, you drew your sword and you killed him. All this
+shows that you went there fully determined to commit the crime. But with
+regard to its motive, this strange confession of your daughter's makes that
+quite clear. She had been extremely imprudent with Don John, you were aware
+of the fact, and you revenged yourself in the most brutal way. Such
+vengeance never can produce any but the most fatal results. You yourself
+must die, in the first place, a degrading and painful death on the
+scaffold, and you die leaving behind you a ruined girl, who must bury
+herself in a convent and never be seen by her worldly equals again. And
+besides that, you have deprived your King of a beloved brother, and Spain
+of her most brilliant general. Could anything be worse?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. There are worse things than that, your Majesty, and worse things
+have been done. It would have been a thousand times worse if I had done the
+deed and cast the blame of it on a man so devoted to me that he would bear
+the guilt in my stead, and a hundred thousand times worse if I had then
+held up that man to the execration of mankind, and tortured him with every
+distortion of evidence which great falsehoods can put upon a little truth.
+That would indeed have been far worse than anything I have done. God may
+find forgiveness for murderers, but there is only hell for traitors, and
+the hell of hells is the place of men who betray their friends."</p>
+
+<p>"His mind is unsettled, I fear," said the King, speaking to Perez.
+"These are signs of madness."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I fear so, Sire," answered the smooth Secretary, shaking his
+head solemnly. "He does not know what he says."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not mad, and I know what I am saying, for I am a man under the
+hand of death." Mendoza's eyes glared at the King savagely as he spoke, and
+then at Perez, but neither could look at him, for neither dared to meet his
+gaze. "As for this confession my daughter has made, I do not believe in it.
+But if she has said these things, you might have let me die without the
+bitterness of knowing them, since that was in your power. And God knows
+that I have staked my life freely for your Majesty and for Spain these many
+years, and would again if I had it to lose instead of having thrown it
+away. And God knows, too, that for what I have done, be it good or bad, I
+will bear whatsoever your Majesty shall choose to say to me alone in the
+way of reproach. But as I am a dying man I will not forgive that scribbler
+there for having seen a Spanish gentleman's honour torn to rags, and an old
+soldier's last humiliation, and I pray Heaven with my dying breath, that he
+may some day be tormented as he has seen me tormented, and worse, till he
+shall cry out for mercy--as I will not!"</p>
+
+<p>The cruelly injured man's prayer was answered eight years from that day,
+and even now Perez turned slowly pale as he heard the words, for they were
+spoken with all the vehemence of a dying man's curse. But Philip was
+unmoved. He was probably not making Mendoza suffer merely for the pleasure
+of watching his pain, though others' suffering seems always to have caused
+him a sort of morbid satisfaction. What he desired most was to establish a
+logical reason for which Mendoza might have committed the crime, lest in
+the absence of sound evidence he himself should be suspected of having
+instigated it. He had no intention whatever of allowing Mendoza to be
+subjected to torture during the trial that was to ensue. On the contrary,
+he intended to prepare all the evidence for the judges and to prevent
+Mendoza from saying anything in self-defence. To that end it was necessary
+that the facts elicited should be clearly connected from first cause to
+final effect, and by the skill of Antonio Perez in writing down only the
+words which contributed to that end, the King's purpose was now
+accomplished. He heard every word of Mendoza's imprecation and thought it
+proper to rebuke him for speaking so freely.</p>
+
+<p>"You forget yourself, sir," he said coldly. "Don Antonio Perez is my
+private Secretary, and you must respect him. While you belonged to the
+court his position was higher and more important than your own; now that
+you stand convicted of an outrageous murder in cold blood, you need not
+forget that he is an innocent man. I have done, Mendoza. You will not see
+me again, for you will be kept in confinement until your trial, which can
+only have one issue. Come here."</p>
+
+<p>He sat upright in his chair and held out his hand, while Mendoza
+approached with unsteady steps, and knelt upon one knee, as was the
+custom.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not unforgiving," said the King. "Forgiveness is a very beautiful
+Christian virtue, which we are taught to exercise from our earliest
+childhood. You have cut off my dearly loved brother in the flower of his
+youth, but you shall not die believing that I bear you any malice. So far
+as I am able, I freely forgive you for what you have done, and in token I
+give you my hand, that you may have that comfort at the last."</p>
+
+<p>With incredible calmness Philip took Mendoza's hand as he spoke, held it
+for a moment in his, and pressed it almost warmly at the last words. The
+old man's loyalty to his sovereign had been a devotion almost amounting to
+real adoration, and bitterly as he had suffered throughout the terrible
+interview, he well-nigh forgot every suffering as he felt the pressure of
+the royal fingers. In an instant he had told himself that it had all been
+but a play, necessary to deceive Perez, and to clear the King from
+suspicion before the world, and that in this sense the unbearable agony he
+had borne had served his sovereign. He forgot all for a moment, and bending
+his iron-grey head, he kissed the thin and yellow hand fervently, and
+looked up to Philip's cold face and felt that there were tears of gratitude
+in his own eyes, of gratitude at being allowed to leave the world he hated
+with the certainty that his death was to serve his sovereign idol.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be faithful to your Majesty until the end," he said simply, as
+the King withdrew his fingers, and he rose to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>The King nodded slowly, and his stony look watched Mendoza with a sort
+of fixed curiosity. Even he had not known that such men lived.</p>
+
+<p>"Call the guards to the door, Perez," he said coldly. "Tell the officer
+to take Don Diego Mendoza to the west tower for to-night, and to treat him
+with every consideration."</p>
+
+<p>Perez obeyed. A detachment of halberdiers with an officer were stationed
+in the short, broad corridor that led to the room where Dolores was
+waiting. Perez gave the lieutenant his orders.</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza walked backwards to the door from the King's presence, making
+three low bows as he went. At the door he turned, taking no notice of the
+Secretary, marched out with head erect, and gave himself up to the
+soldiers.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XVII'></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+
+<p>The halberdiers closed round their old chief, but did not press upon
+him. Three went before him, three behind, and one walked on each side, and
+the lieutenant led the little detachment. The men were too much accustomed
+to seeing courtiers in the extremes of favour and disfavour to be much
+surprised at the arrest of Mendoza, and they felt no great sympathy for
+him. He had always been too rigidly exacting for their taste, and they
+longed for a younger commander who should devote more time to his own
+pleasure and less to inspecting uniforms and finding fault with details.
+Yet Mendoza had been a very just man, and he possessed the eminently
+military bearing and temper which always impose themselves on soldiers. At
+the present moment, too, they were more inclined to pity him than to treat
+him roughly, for if they did not guess what had really taken place, they
+were quite sure that Don John of Austria had been murdered by the King's
+orders, like Don Carlos and Queen Isabel and a fair number of other
+unfortunate persons; and if the King had chosen Mendoza to do the deed, the
+soldiers thought that he was probably not meant to suffer for it in the
+end, and that before long he would be restored to his command. It would,
+therefore, be the better for them, later, if they showed him a certain
+deference in his misfortune. Besides, they had heard Antonio Perez tell
+their officer that Mendoza was to be treated with every consideration.</p>
+
+<p>They marched in time, with heavy tread and the swinging gait to right
+and left that is natural to a soldier who carries for a weapon a long
+halberd with a very heavy head. Mendoza was as tall as any of them, and
+kept their step, holding his head high. He was bareheaded, but was
+otherwise still in the complete uniform he wore when on duty on state
+occasions.</p>
+
+<p>The corridor, which seemed short on account of its breadth and in
+comparison with the great size of the halls in the palace, was some thirty
+paces long and lighted by a number of chandeliers that hung from the
+painted vault. The party reached the door of the waiting room and halted a
+moment, while one of the King's footmen opened the doors wide. Don Ruy
+Gomez and Dolores were waiting within. The servant passed rapidly through
+to open the doors beyond. Ruy Gomez stood up and drew his chair aside,
+somewhat surprised at the entrance of the soldiers, who rarely passed that
+way. Dolores opened her eyes at the sound of marching, but in the uncertain
+light of the candles she did not at first see Mendoza, half hidden as he
+was by the men who guarded him. She paid little attention, for she was
+accustomed to seeing such detachments of halberdiers marching through the
+corridors when the sentries were relieved, and as she had never been in the
+King's apartments she was not surprised by the sudden appearance of the
+soldiers, as her companion was. But as the latter made way for them he
+lifted his hat, which as a Grandee he wore even in the King's presence, and
+he bent his head courteously as Mendoza went by. He hoped that Dolores
+would not see her father, but his own recognition of the prisoner had
+attracted her attention. She sprang to her feet with a cry. Mendoza turned
+his head and saw her before she could reach him, for she was moving
+forward. He stood still, and the soldiers halted instinctively and parted
+before her, for they all knew their commander's daughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Father!" she cried, and she tried to take his hand.</p>
+
+<p>But he pushed her away and turned his face resolutely towards the door
+before him.</p>
+
+<p>"Close up! Forward--march!" he said, in his harsh tone of command.</p>
+
+<p>The men obeyed, gently forcing Dolores aside. They made two steps
+forward, but Ruy Gomez stopped them by a gesture, standing in their way and
+raising one hand, while he laid the other on the young lieutenant's
+shoulder. Ruy Gomez was one of the greatest personages in Spain; he was the
+majorduomo of the palace, and had almost unlimited authority. But the
+officer had his orders directly from the King and felt bound to carry them
+out to the letter.</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty has directed me to convey Don Diego de Mendoza to the west
+tower without delay," he said. "I beg your Excellency to let us
+proceed."</p>
+
+<p>Ruy Gomez still held him by the shoulder with a gentle pressure.</p>
+
+<p>"That I will not," he said firmly; "and if you are blamed for being slow
+in the execution of your duty, say that Ruy Gomez de Silva hindered you,
+and fear nothing. It is not right that father and daughter should part as
+these two are parting."</p>
+
+<p>"I have nothing to say to my daughter," said Mendoza harshly; but the
+words seemed to hurt him.</p>
+
+<p>"Don Diego," answered Ruy Gomez, "the deed of which you have accused
+yourself is as much worse than anything your child has done as hatred is
+worse than love. By the right of mere humanity I take upon myself to say
+that you shall be left here a while with your daughter, that you may take
+leave of one another." He turned to the officer. "Withdraw your men, sir,"
+he said. "Wait at the door. You have my word for the security of your
+prisoner, and my authority for what you do. I will call you when it is
+time."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke in a tone that admitted of no refusal, and he was obeyed. The
+officers and the men filed out, and Ruy Gomez closed the door after them.
+He himself recrossed the room and went out by the other way into the broad
+corridor. He meant to wait there. His orders had been carried out so
+quickly that Mendoza found himself alone with Dolores, almost as by a
+surprise. In his desperate mood he resented what Ruy Gomez had done, as an
+interference in his family affairs, and he bent his bushy brows together as
+he stood facing Dolores, with folded arms. Four hours had not passed since
+they had last spoken together alone in his own dwelling; there was a
+lifetime of tragedy between that moment and this.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores had not spoken since he had pushed her away. She stood beside a
+chair, resting one hand upon it, dead white, with the dark shadow of pain
+under her eyes, her lips almost colourless, but firm, and evenly closed.
+There were lines of suffering in her young face that looked as if they
+never could be effaced. It seemed to her that the worst conflict of all was
+raging in her heart as she watched her father's face, waiting for the sound
+of his voice; and as for him, he would rather have gone back to the King's
+presence to be tormented under the eyes of Antonio Perez than stand there,
+forced to see her and speak to her. In his eyes, in the light of what he
+had been told, she was a ruined and shameless woman, who had deceived him
+day in, day out, for more than two years. And to her, so far as she could
+understand, he was the condemned murderer of the man she had so innocently
+and truly loved. But yet, she had a doubt, and for that possibility, she
+had cast her good name to the winds in the hope of saving his life. At one
+moment, in a vision of dread, she saw his armed hand striking at her
+lover--at the next she felt that he could never have struck the blow, and
+that there was an unsolved mystery behind it all. Never were two innocent
+human beings so utterly deceived, each about the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Father," she said, at last, in a trembling tone, "can you not speak to
+me, if I can find heart to hear you?"</p>
+
+<p>"What can we two say to each other?" he asked sternly. "Why did you stop
+me? I am ready to die for killing the man who ruined you. I am glad. Why
+should I say anything to you, and what words can you have for me? I hope
+your end may come quickly, with such peace as you can find from your shame
+at the last. That is what I wish for you, and it is a good wish, for you
+have made death on the scaffold look easy to me, so that I long for it. Do
+you understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Condemned to death!" she cried out, almost incoherently, before he had
+finished speaking. "But they cannot condemn you--I have told them that I
+was there--that it was not you--they must believe me--O God of mercy!"</p>
+
+<p>"They believe you--yes. They believe that I found you together and
+killed him. I shall be tried by judges, but I am condemned beforehand, and
+I must die." He spoke calmly enough. "Your mad confession before the court
+only made my conviction more certain," he said. "It gave the reason for the
+deed--and it burned away the last doubt I had. If they are slow in trying
+me, you will have been before the executioner, for he will find me dead--by
+your hand. You might have spared me that--and spared yourself. You still
+had the remnant of a good name, and your lover being dead, you might have
+worn the rag of your honour still. You have chosen to throw it away, and
+let me know my full disgrace before I die a disgraceful death. And yet you
+wish to speak to me. Do you expect my blessing?"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores had lost the power of speech. Passing her hand now and then
+across her forehead, as though trying to brush away a material veil, she
+stood half paralyzed, staring wildly at him while he spoke. But when she
+saw him turn away from her towards the door, as if he would go out and
+leave her there, her strength was loosed from the spell, and she sprang
+before him and caught his wrists with her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"I am as innocent as when my mother bore me," she said, and her low
+voice rang with the truth. "I told the lie to save your life. Do you
+believe me now?"</p>
+
+<p>He gazed at her with haggard eyes for many moments before he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"How can it be true?" he asked, but his voice shook in his throat. "You
+were there--I saw you leave his room--"</p>
+
+<p>"No, that you never saw!" she cried, well knowing how impossible it was,
+since she had been locked in till after he had gone away.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw your dress--not this one--what you wore this afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>"Not this one? I put on this court dress before I got out of the room in
+which you had locked me up. Inez helped me--I pretended that I was she, and
+wore her cloak, and slipped away, and I have not been back again. You did
+not see me."</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza passed his hand over his eyes and drew back from her. If what
+she said were true, the strongest link was gone from the chain of facts by
+which he had argued so much sorrow and shame. Forgetting himself and his
+own near fate, he looked at the court dress she wore, and a mere glance
+convinced him that it was not the one he had seen.</p>
+
+<p>"But--" he was suddenly confused--"but why did you need to disguise
+yourself? I left the Princess of Eboli with you, and I gave her permission
+to take you away to stay with her. You needed no disguise."</p>
+
+<p>"I never saw her. She must have found Inez in the room. I was gone long
+before that."</p>
+
+<p>"Gone--where?" Mendoza was fast losing the thread of it all--in his
+confusion of ideas he grasped the clue of his chief sorrow, which was far
+beyond any thought for himself. "But if you are innocent--pray God you may
+be, as you say--how is it possible--oh, no! I cannot believe it--I cannot!
+No woman could do that--no innocent girl could stand out before a multitude
+of men and women, and say what you said--"</p>
+
+<p>"I hoped to save your life. I had the strength. I did it."</p>
+
+<p>Her clear grey eyes looked into his, and his doubt began to break away
+before the truth.</p>
+
+<p>"Make me believe it!" he cried, his voice breaking. "Oh, God! Make me
+believe it before I die!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is true," she cried, in a low, strong voice that carried belief to
+his breast in spite of such reasoning as still had some power over him. "It
+is true, and you shall believe it; and if you will not, the man you have
+killed, the man I loved and trusted, the dead man who knows the whole truth
+as I know it, will come back from the dead to prove it true--for I swear it
+upon his soul in heaven, and upon yours and mine that will not be long on
+earth--as I will swear it in the hour of your death and mine, since we must
+die!"</p>
+
+<p>He could not take his eyes from hers that held him, and suddenly in the
+pure depths he seemed to see her soul facing him without fear, and he knew
+that what she said was true, and his tortured heart leapt up at the good
+certainty.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe you, my child," he said at last, and then his grey lids half
+closed over his eyes and he bent down to her, and put his arm round
+her.</p>
+
+<p>But she shuddered at the touch of his right hand, and though she knew
+that he was a condemned man, and that she might never see him again, she
+could not bear to receive his parting kiss upon her forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, father, why did you kill him?" she asked, turning her head away and
+moving to escape from his hold.</p>
+
+<p>But Mendoza did not answer. His arm dropped by his side, and his face
+grew white and stony. She was asking him to give up the King's secret, to
+keep which he was giving his life. He felt that it would be treason to tell
+even her. And besides, she would not keep the secret--what woman could,
+what daughter would? It must go out of the world with him, if it was to be
+safe. He glanced at her and saw her face ravaged by an hour's grief. Yet
+she would not mourn Don John the less if she knew whose hand had done the
+deed. It could make but a little difference to her, though to himself that
+difference would be great, if she knew that he died innocent.</p>
+
+<p>And then began a struggle fierce and grim, that tore his soul and
+wounded his heart as no death agony could have hurt him. Since he had
+judged her unjustly, since it had all been a hideous dream, since she was
+still the child that had been all in all to him throughout her life, since
+all was changed, he did not wish to die, he bore the dead man no hatred, it
+was no soothing satisfaction to his outraged heart to know him dead of a
+sword wound in the breast, far away in the room where they had left him,
+there was no fierce regret that he had not driven the thrust himself. The
+man was as innocent as the innocent girl, and he himself, as innocent as
+both, was to be led out to die to shield the King--no more. His life was to
+be taken for that only, and he no longer set its value at naught nor wished
+it over. He was the mere scapegoat, to suffer for his master's crime, since
+crime it was and nothing better. And since he was willing to bear the
+punishment, or since there was now no escape from it, had he not at least
+the human right to proclaim his innocence to the only being he really
+loved? It would be monstrous to deny it. What could she do, after all, even
+if she knew the truth? Nothing. No one would dare to believe her if she
+accused the King. She would be shut up in a convent as a mad woman, but in
+any case, she would certainly disappear to end her life in some religious
+house as soon as he was dead. Poor girl--she had loved Don John with all
+her heart--what could the world hold for her, even if the disgrace of her
+father's death were not to shut her out of the world altogether, as it
+inevitably must. She would not live long, but she would live in the
+profoundest sorrow. It would be an alleviation, almost the greatest
+possible, to know that her father's hand was not stained by such a
+deed.</p>
+
+<p>The temptation to speak out was overwhelming, and he knew that the time
+was short. At any moment Ruy Gomez might open the door, and bid him part
+from her, and there would be small chance for him of seeing her again. He
+stood uncertain, with bent head and folded arms, and she watched him,
+trying to bring herself to touch his hand again and bear his kiss.</p>
+
+<p>His loyalty to the King, that was like a sort of madness, stood between
+him and the words he longed to say. It was the habit of his long soldier's
+life, unbending as the corslet he wore and enclosing his soul as the steel
+encased his body, proof against every cruelty, every unkindness, every
+insult. It was better to die a traitor's death for the King's secret than
+to live for his own honour. So it had always seemed to him, since he had
+been a boy and had learned to fight under the great Emperor. But now he
+knew that he wavered as he had never done in the most desperate charge,
+when life was but a missile to be flung in the enemy's face, and found or
+not, when the fray was over. There was no intoxication of fury now, there
+was no far ring of glory in the air, there was no victory to be won. The
+hard and hideous fact stared him in the face, that he was to die like a
+malefactor by the hangman's hand, and that the sovereign who had graciously
+deigned to accept the sacrifice had tortured him for nearly half an hour
+without mercy in the presence of an inferior, in order to get a few facts
+on paper which might help his own royal credit. And as if that were not
+enough, his own daughter was to live after him, believing that he had
+cruelly murdered the man she most dearly loved. It was more than humanity
+could bear.</p>
+
+<p>His brow unbent, his arms unfolded themselves, and he held them out to
+Dolores with a smile almost gentle.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no blood on these hands, my little girl," he said tenderly. "I
+did not do it, child. Let me hold you in my arms once, and kiss you before
+I go. We are both innocent--we can bless one another before we part for
+ever."</p>
+
+<p>The pure, grey eyes opened wide in amazement. Dolores could hardly
+believe her ears, as she made a step towards him, and then stopped,
+shrinking, and then made one step more. Her lips moved and wondering words
+came to him, so low that he could hardly understand, save that she
+questioned him.</p>
+
+<p>"You did not do it!" she breathed. "You did not kill him after all? But
+then--who--why?"</p>
+
+<p>Still she hesitated, though she came slowly nearer, and a faint light
+warmed her sorrowful face.</p>
+
+<p>"You must try to guess who and why," he said, in a tone as low as her
+own. "I must not tell you that."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot guess," she answered; but she was close to him now, and she
+had taken one of his hands softly in both her own, while she gazed into his
+eyes. "How can I understand unless you tell me? Is it so great a secret
+that you must die for it, and never tell it? Oh, father, father! Are you
+sure--quite sure?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was dead already when I came into the room," Mendoza answered. "I
+did not even see him hurt."</p>
+
+<p>"But then--yes--then"--her voice sank to a whisper--"then it was the
+King!"</p>
+
+<p>He saw the words on her lips rather than heard them, and she saw in his
+face that she was right. She dropped his hand and threw her arms round his
+neck, pressing her bosom to his breastplate; and suddenly her love for him
+awoke, and she began to know how she might have loved him if she had known
+him through all the years that were gone.</p>
+
+<p>"It cannot be that he will let you die!" she cried softly. "You shall
+not die!" she cried again, with sudden strength, and her light frame shook
+his as if she would wrench him back from inevitable fate.</p>
+
+<p>"My little girl," he answered, most tenderly clasping her to him, and
+most thoughtfully, lest his armour should hurt her, "I can die happy now,
+for I have found all of you again."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall not die! You shall not die!" she cried. "I will not let you
+go--they must take me, too--"</p>
+
+<p>"No power can save me now, my darling," he answered. "But it does not
+matter, since you know. It will be easy now."</p>
+
+<p>She could only hold him with her small hands, and say over and over
+again that she would not let him go.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! why have you never loved me before in all these years?" he cried.
+"It was my fault--all my fault."</p>
+
+<p>"I love you now with all my heart," she answered, "and I will save you,
+even from the King; and you and I and Inez will go far away, and you two
+shall comfort me and love me till I go to him."</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza shook his head sadly, looking over her shoulder as he held her,
+for he knew that there was no hope now. Had he known, or half guessed, but
+an hour or two ago, he would have turned on his heel from the door of Don
+John's chamber, and he would have left the King to bear the blame or shift
+it as he could.</p>
+
+<p>"It is too late, Dolores. God bless you, my dear, dear child! It will
+soon be over--two days at most, for the people will cry out for the blood
+of Don John's murderer; and when they see mine they will be satisfied. It
+is too late now. Good-by, my little girl, good-by! The blessing of all
+heaven be on your dear head!"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores nestled against him, as she had never done before, with the
+feeling that she had found something that had been wanting in her life, at
+the very moment when the world, with all it held for her, was slipping over
+the edge of eternity.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not leave you," she cried again. "They shall take me to your
+prison, and I will stay with you and take care of you, and never leave you;
+and at last I shall save your life, and then--"</p>
+
+<p>The door of the corridor opened, and she saw Ruy Gomez standing in the
+entrance, as if he were waiting. His face was calm and grave as usual, but
+she saw a profound pity in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" she cried to him, "not yet--one moment more!"</p>
+
+<p>But Mendoza turned his head at her words, looking over his shoulder, and
+he saw the Prince also.</p>
+
+<p>"I am ready," he said briefly, and he tried to take Dolores' hands from
+his neck. "It is time," he said to her. "Be brave, my darling! We have
+found each other at last. It will not be long before we are together for
+ever."</p>
+
+<p>He kissed her tenderly once more, and loosed her hold, putting her two
+hands together and kissing them also.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not say good-by," she said. "It is not good-by--it shall not be.
+I shall be with you soon."</p>
+
+<p>His eyes lingered upon hers for a moment, and then he broke away,
+setting his teeth lest he should choke and break down. He opened the door
+and presented himself to the halberdiers. Dolores heard his familiar voice
+give the words of command.</p>
+
+<p>"Close up! Forward, march!"</p>
+
+<p>The heavy tramp she knew so well began at once, and echoed along the
+outer entries, growing slowly less distinct till it was only a distant and
+rumbling echo, and then died away altogether. Her hand was still on the
+open door, and Ruy Gomez was standing beside her. He gently drew her away,
+and closed the door again. She let him lead her to a chair, and sat down
+where she had sat before. But this time she did not lean back exhausted,
+with half-closed eyes,--she rested her elbow on her knee and her chin in
+her hand, and she tried to think connectedly to a conclusion. She
+remembered all the details of the past hours one by one, and she felt that
+the determination to save her father had given her strength to live.</p>
+
+<p>"Don Ruy Gomez," she said at last, looking up to the tall old nobleman,
+who stood by the brazier warming his hands again, "can I see the King
+alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is more than I can promise," answered the Prince. "I have asked an
+audience for you, and the chamberlain will bring word presently whether his
+Majesty is willing to see you. But if you are admitted, I cannot tell
+whether Perez will be there or not. He generally is. His presence need make
+no difference to you. He is an excellent young man, full of heart. I have
+great confidence in him,--so much so that I recommended him to his Majesty
+as Secretary. I am sure that he will do all he can to be of use to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores looked up incredulously, and with a certain wonder at the
+Prince's extreme simplicity. Yet he had been married ten years to the
+clever woman who ruled him and Perez and King Philip, and made each one
+believe that she was devoted to him only, body and soul. Of the three,
+Perez alone may have guessed the truth, but though it was degrading enough,
+he would not let it stand in the way of his advancement; and in the end it
+was he who escaped, leaving her to perish, the victim of the King's
+implacable anger, Dolores could not help shaking her head in answer to the
+Prince of Eboli's speech.</p>
+
+<p>"People are very unjust to Perez," he said. "But the King trusts him. If
+he is there, try to conciliate him, for he has much influence with his
+Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores said nothing, and resuming her attitude, returned to her sad
+meditations, and to the study of some immediate plan. But she could think
+of no way. Her only fixed intention was to see the King himself. Ruy Gomez
+could do no more to help her than he had done already, and that indeed was
+not little, since it was to his kindly impulse that she owed her meeting
+with her father.</p>
+
+<p>"And if Perez is not inclined to help Don Diego," said the Prince, after
+a long pause which had not interrupted the slow progression of, his kindly
+thought, "I will request my wife to speak to him. I have often noticed that
+the Princess can make Perez do almost anything she wishes. Women are far
+cleverer than men, my dear--they have ways we do not understand. Yes, I
+will interest my wife in the affair. It would be a sad thing if your
+father--"</p>
+
+<p>The old man stopped short, and Dolores wondered vaguely what he had been
+going to say. Ruy Gomez was a very strange compound of almost childlike and
+most honourable simplicity, and of the experienced wisdom with regard to
+the truth of matters in which he was not concerned, which sometimes belongs
+to very honourable and simple men.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not believe that my father is guilty," said Dolores, boldly
+asserting what she suspected.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child," answered Ruy Gomez, twisting his rings on his fingers
+as he spread his hands above the coals in the brazier, "I have lived in
+this court for fifty years, and I have learned in that time that where
+great matters are at stake those who do not know the whole truth are often
+greatly deceived by appearances. I know nothing of the real matter now, but
+it would not surprise me if a great change took place before to-morrow
+night. A man who has committed a crime so horrible as the one your father
+confessed before us all rarely finds it expedient to make such a
+confession, and a young girl, my dear, who has really been a little too
+imprudently in love with a royal Prince, would be a great deal too wise to
+make a dramatic statement of her fault to the assembled Grandees of
+Spain."</p>
+
+<p>He looked across at Dolores and smiled gently. But she only shook her
+head gravely in answer, though she wondered at what he said, and wondered,
+too, whether there might not be a great many persons in the court who
+thought as he did. She was silent, too, because it hurt her to talk when
+she could not draw breath without remembering that what she had lived for
+was lying dead in that dim room on the upper story.</p>
+
+<p>The door opened, and a chamberlain entered the room.</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty is pleased to receive Do&ntilde;a Dolores de Mendoza, in
+private audience," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Ruy Gomez rose and led Dolores out into the corridor.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XVIII'></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+
+<p>Dolores had prepared no speech with which to appeal to the King, and she
+had not counted upon her own feelings towards him when she found herself in
+the room where Mendoza had been questioned, and heard the door closed
+behind her by the chamberlain who had announced her coming. She stood still
+a moment, dazzled by the brilliant lights after having been so long in the
+dimmer waiting room. She had never before been in the King's study, and she
+had fancied it very different from what it really was when she had tried to
+picture to herself the coming interview. She had supposed the room small,
+sombre, littered with books and papers, and cold; it was, on the contrary,
+so spacious as to be almost a hall, it was brightly illuminated and warmed
+by the big wood fire. Magnificent tapestries covered the walls with glowing
+colour, and upon one of these, in barbaric bad taste, was hung a single
+great picture by Titian, Philip's favourite master. Dolores blushed as she
+recognized in the face of the insolent Venus the features of the Princess
+of Eboli. Prom his accustomed chair, the King could see this painting.
+Everywhere in the room there were rich objects that caught and reflected
+the light, things of gold and silver, of jade and lapis lazuli, in a sort
+of tasteless profusion that detracted from the beauty of each, and made
+Dolores feel that she had been suddenly transported out of her own element
+into another that was hard to breathe and in which it was bad to live. It
+oppressed her, and though her courage was undiminished, the air of the
+place seemed to stifle her thought and speech.</p>
+
+<p>As she entered she saw the King in profile, seated in his great chair at
+some distance from the fire, but looking at it steadily. He did not notice
+her presence at first. Antonio Perez sat at the table, busily writing, and
+he only glanced at Dolores sideways when he heard the door close after her.
+She sank almost to the ground as she made the first court curtsey before
+advancing, and she came forward into the light. As her skirt swept the
+ground a second time, Philip looked slowly round, and his dull stare
+followed her as she came round in a quarter of a wide circle and curtsied a
+third time immediately in front of him.</p>
+
+<p>She was very beautiful, as she stood waiting for him to speak, and
+meeting his gaze fearlessly with a look of cold contempt in her white face
+such as no living person had ever dared to turn to him, while the light of
+anger burned in her deep grey eyes. But for the presence of the Secretary,
+she would have spoken first, regardless of court ceremony. Philip looked at
+her attentively, mentally comparing her with his young Queen's placidly
+dull personality and with the Princess of Eboli's fast disappearing and
+somewhat coarse beauty. For the Princess had changed much since Titian had
+painted his very flattering picture, and though she was only thirty years
+of age, she was already the mother of many children. Philip stared steadily
+at the beautiful girl who stood waiting before him, and he wondered why she
+had never seemed so lovely to him before. There was a half morbid, half
+bitter savour in what he felt, too,--he had just condemned the beauty's
+father to death, and she must therefore hate him with all her heart. It
+pleased him to think of that; she was beautiful and he stared at her
+long.</p>
+
+<p>"Be seated, Do&ntilde;a Dolores," he said at last, in a muffled voice
+that was not harsh. "I am glad that you have come, for I have much to say
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>Without lifting his wrist from the arm of the chair on which it rested,
+the King moved his hand, and his long forefinger pointed to a low cushioned
+stool that was placed near him. Dolores came forward unwillingly and sat
+down. Perez watched the two thoughtfully, and forgot his writing. He did
+not remember that any one excepting the Princess of Eboli had been allowed
+to be seated in the King's study. The Queen never came there. Perez' work
+exempted him in private, of course, from much of the tedious ceremonial
+upon which Philip insisted. Dolores sat upon the edge of the stool, very
+erect, with her hands folded on her knees.</p>
+
+<p>"Do&ntilde;a Dolores is pale," observed the King. "Bring a cordial,
+Perez, or a glass of Oporto wine."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank your Majesty," said the young girl quickly. "I need
+nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"I will be your physician," answered Philip, very suavely. "I shall
+insist upon your taking the medicine I prescribe."</p>
+
+<p>He did not turn his eyes from her as Perez brought a gold salver and
+offered Dolores the glass. It was impossible to refuse, so she lifted it to
+her lips and sipped a little.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank your Majesty," she said again. "I thank you, sir," she said
+gravely to Perez as she set down the glass, but she did not raise her eyes
+to his face as she spoke any more than she would have done if he had been a
+footman.</p>
+
+<p>"I have much to say to you, and some questions to ask of you," the King
+began, speaking very slowly, but with extreme suavity.</p>
+
+<p>He paused, and coughed a little, but Dolores said nothing. Then he began
+to look at her again, and while he spoke he steadily examined every detail
+of her appearance till his inscrutable gaze had travelled from her
+headdress to the points of her velvet slippers, and finally remained fixed
+upon her mouth in a way that disturbed her even more than the speech he
+made. Perez had resumed his seat.</p>
+
+<p>"In my life," he began, speaking of himself quite without formality, "I
+have suffered more than most men, in being bereaved of the persons to whom
+I have been most sincerely attached. The most fortunate and successful
+sovereign in the world has been and is the most unhappy man in his kingdom.
+One after another, those I have loved have been taken from me, until I am
+almost alone in the world that is so largely mine. I suppose you cannot
+understand that, my dear, for my sorrows began before you were born. But
+they have reached their crown and culmination to-day in the death of my
+dear brother."</p>
+
+<p>He paused, watching her mouth, and he saw that she was making a
+superhuman effort to control herself, pressing the beautiful lips together,
+though they moved gainfully in spite of her, and visibly lost colour.</p>
+
+<p>"Perez," he said after a moment, "you may go and take some rest. I will
+send for you when I need you."</p>
+
+<p>The Secretary rose, bowed low, and left the room by a small masked door
+in a corner. The King waited till he saw it close before he spoke again.
+His tone changed a little then and his words came quickly, as if he felt
+here constraint.</p>
+
+<p>"I feel," he said, "that we are united by a common calamity, my dear. I
+intend to take you under my most particular care and protection from this
+very hour. Yes, I know!" he held up his hand o deprecate any interruption,
+for Dolores seemed about to speak. "I know why you come to me, you wish to
+intercede for your father. That is natural, and you are right to come to me
+yourself, for I would rather hear your voice than that of another speaking
+for you, and I would rather grant any mercy in my power to you directly
+than to some personage of the court who would be seeking his own interest
+as much as yours."</p>
+
+<p>"I ask justice, not mercy, Sire," said Dolores, in a firm, low voice,
+and the fire lightened in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Your father shall have both," answered Philip, "for they are
+compatible."</p>
+
+<p>"He needs no mercy," returned the young girl, "for he has done no harm.
+Your Majesty knows that as well as I."</p>
+
+<p>"If I knew that, my dear, your father would not be under arrest. I
+cannot guess what you know or do not know--"</p>
+
+<p>"I know the truth." She spoke so confidently that the King's expression
+changed a little.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I did," he answered, with as much suavity as ever. "But tell me
+what you think you know about this matter. You may help me to sift it, and
+then I shall be the better able to help you, if such a thing be possible.
+What do you know?"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores leaned forward toward him from her seat, almost rising as she
+lowered her voice to a whisper, her eyes fixed on his face.</p>
+
+<p>"I was close behind the door your Majesty wished to open," she said. "I
+heard every word; I heard your sword drawn and I heard Don John fall--and
+then it was some time before I heard my father's voice, taking the blame
+upon himself, lest it should be said that the King had murdered his own
+brother in his room, unarmed. Is that the truth, or not?"</p>
+
+<p>While she was speaking, a greenish hue overspread Philip's face, ghastly
+in the candlelight. He sat upright in his chair, his hands straining on its
+arms and pushing, as if he would have got farther back if he could. He had
+foreseen everything except that Dolores had been in the next room, for his
+secret spies had informed him through Perez that her father had kept her a
+prisoner during the early part of the evening and until after supper.</p>
+
+<p>"When you were both gone," Dolores continued, holding him under her
+terrible eyes, "I came in, and I found him dead, with the wound in his left
+breast, and he was unarmed, murdered without a chance for his life. There
+is blood upon my dress where it touched his--the blood of the man I loved,
+shed by you. Ah, he was right to call you coward, and he died for me,
+because you said things of me that no loving man would bear. He was right
+to call you coward--it was well said--it was the last word he spoke, and I
+shall not forget it. He had borne everything you heaped upon himself, your
+insults, your scorn of his mother, but he would not let you cast a slur
+upon my name, and if you had not killed him out of sheer cowardice, he
+would have struck you in the face. He was a man! And then my father took
+the blame to save you from the monstrous accusation, and that all might
+believe him guilty he told the lie that saved you before them all. Do I
+know the truth? Is one word of that not true?"</p>
+
+<p>She had quite risen now and stood before him like an accusing angel. And
+he, who was seldom taken unawares, and was very hard to hurt, leaned back
+and suffered, slowly turning his head from side to side against the back of
+the high carved chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Confess that it is true!" she cried, in concentrated tones. "Can you
+not even find courage for that? You are not the King now, you are your
+brother's murderer, and the murderer of the man I loved, whose wife I
+should have been to-morrow. Look at me, and confess that I have told the
+truth. I am a Spanish woman, and I would not see my country branded before
+the world with the shame of your royal murders, and if you will confess and
+save my father, I will keep your secret for my country's sake. But if
+not--then you must either kill me here, as you slew him, or by the God that
+made you and the mother that bore you, I will tell all Spain what you are,
+and the men who loved Don John of Austria shall rise and take your blood
+for his blood, though it be blood royal, and you shall die, as you killed,
+like the coward you are!"</p>
+
+<p>The King's eyes were closed, and still his great pale head moved slowly
+from side to side; for he was suffering, and the torture of mind he had
+made Mendoza bear was avenged already. But he was silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you not speak?" asked the young girl, with blazing eyes. "Then
+find some weapon and kill me here before I go, for I shall not wait till
+you find many words."</p>
+
+<p>She was silent, and she stood upright in the act to go. He made no
+sound, and she moved towards the door, stood still, then moved again and
+then again, pausing for his answer at each step. He heard her, but could
+not bring himself to speak the words she demanded of him. She began to walk
+quickly. Her hand was almost on the door when he raised himself by the arms
+of his chair, and cried out to her in a frightened voice:--</p>
+
+<p>"No, no! Stay here--you must not go--what do you want me to say?"</p>
+
+<p>She advanced a step again, and once more stood still and met his scared
+eyes as he turned his face towards her.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, 'You have spoken the truth,'" she answered, dictating to him as if
+she were the sovereign and he a guilty subject.</p>
+
+<p>She waited a moment and then moved as if she would go out.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay--yes--it is true--I did it--for God's mercy do not betray me!"</p>
+
+<p>He almost screamed the words out to her, half rising, his body bent, his
+face livid in his extreme fear. She came slowly back towards him, keeping
+her eyes upon him as if he were some dangerous wild animal that she
+controlled by her look alone.</p>
+
+<p>"That is not all," she said. "That was for me, that I might hear the
+words from your own lips. There is something more."</p>
+
+<p>"What more do you want of me?" asked Philip, in thick tones, leaning
+back exhausted in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"My father's freedom and safety," answered Dolores. "I must have an
+order for his instant release. He can hardly have reached his prison yet.
+Send for him. Let him come here at once, as a free man."</p>
+
+<p>"That is impossible," replied Philip. "He has confessed the deed before
+the whole court--he cannot possibly be set at liberty without a trial. You
+forget what you are asking--indeed you forget yourself altogether too
+much."</p>
+
+<p>He was gathering his dignity again, by force of habit, as his terror
+subsided, but Dolores was too strong for him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not asking anything of your Majesty; I am dictating terms to my
+lover's murderer," she said proudly.</p>
+
+<p>"This is past bearing, girl!" cried Philip hoarsely. "You are out of
+your mind--I shall call servants to take you away to a place of safety. We
+shall see what you will do then. You shall not impose your insolence upon
+me any longer."</p>
+
+<p>Dolores reflected that it was probably in his power to carry out the
+threat, and to have her carried off by the private door through which Perez
+had gone out. She saw in a flash how great her danger was, for she was the
+only witness against him, and if he could put her out of the way in a place
+of silence, he could send her father to trial and execution without risk to
+himself, as he had certainly intended to do. On the other hand, she had
+been able to terrify him to submission a few moments earlier. In the
+instant working of her woman's mind, she recollected how his fright had
+increased as she had approached the door by which she had entered. His only
+chance of accomplishing her disappearance lay in having her taken away by
+some secret passage, where no open scandal could be possible.</p>
+
+<p>Before she answered his last angry speech, she had almost reached the
+main entrance again.</p>
+
+<p>"Call whom you will," she said contemptuously. "You cannot save
+yourself. Don Ruy Gomez is on the other side of that door, and there are
+chamberlains and guards there, too. I shall have told them all the truth
+before your men can lay hands on me. If you will not write the order to
+release my father, I shall go out at once. In ten minutes there will be a
+revolution in the palace, and to-morrow all Spain will be on fire to avenge
+your brother. Spain has not forgotten Don Carlos yet! There are those alive
+who saw you give Queen Isabel the draught that killed her--with your own
+hand. Are you mad enough to think that no one knows those things, that your
+spies, who spy on others, do not spy on you, that you alone, of all
+mankind, can commit every crime with impunity?"</p>
+
+<p>"Take care, girl! Take care!"</p>
+
+<p>"Beware--Don Philip of Austria, King of Spain and half the world, lest a
+girl's voice be heard above yours, and a girl's hand loosen the foundation
+of your throne, lest all mankind rise up to-morrow and take your life for
+the lives you have destroyed! Outside this door here, there are men who
+guess the truth already, who hate you as they hate Satan, and who loved
+your brother as every living being loved him--except you. One moment
+more--order my father to be set free, or I will open and speak. One moment!
+You will not? It is too late--you are lost!"</p>
+
+<p>Her hand went out to open, but Philip was already on his feet, and with
+quick, clumsy steps he reached the writing-table, seized the pen Perez had
+thrown down, and began to scrawl words rapidly in his great angular
+handwriting. He threw sand upon it to dry the ink, and then poured the
+grains back into the silver sandbox, glanced at the paper and held it out
+to Dolores without a word. His other hand slipped along the table to a
+silver bell, used for calling his private attendants, but the girl saw the
+movement and instinctively suspected his treachery. He meant her to come to
+the table, when he would ring the bell and then catch her and hold her by
+main force till help came. Her faculties were furiously awake under the
+strain she bore, and outran his slow cunning.</p>
+
+<p>"If you ring that bell, I will open," she said imperiously. "I must have
+the paper here, where I am safe, and I must read it myself before I shall
+be satisfied."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a terrible woman," said the King, but she did not like his
+smile as he came towards her, holding out the document.</p>
+
+<p>She took it from his hand, keeping her eyes on his, for something told
+her that he would try to seize her and draw her from the door while she was
+reading it. For some seconds they faced each other in silence, and she knew
+by his determined attitude that she was right, and that it would not be
+safe to look down. She wondered why he did not catch her in his arms as she
+stood, and then she realized that her free hand was on the latch of the
+door, and that he knew it. She slowly turned the handle, and drew the door
+to her, and she saw his face fall. She moved to one side so that she could
+have sprung out if he had tried violence, and then at last she allowed her
+eyes to glance at the paper. It was in order and would be obeyed; she saw
+that, at a glance, for it said that Don Diego de Mendoza was to be set at
+liberty instantly and unconditionally.</p>
+
+<p>"I humbly thank your Majesty, and take my leave," she said, throwing the
+door wide open and curtseying low.</p>
+
+<p>A chamberlain who had seen the door move on its hinges stepped in to
+shut it, for it opened inward. The King beckoned him in, and closed it, but
+before it was quite shut, he heard Dolores' voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Don Ruy Gomez," she was saying, "this is an order to set my father at
+liberty unconditionally and at once. I do not know to whom it should be
+given. Will you take it for me and see to it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will go to the west tower myself," he said, beginning to walk with
+her. "Such good news is even better when a friend brings it."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. Tell him from me that he is safe, for his Majesty has told
+me that he knows the whole truth. Will you do that? You have been very kind
+to me to-night, Prince--let me thank you with all my heart now, for we may
+not meet again. You will not see me at court after this, and I trust my
+father will take us back to Valladolid and live with us."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be wise," answered Ruy Gomez. "As for any help I have given
+you, it has been little enough and freely given. I will not keep your
+father waiting for his liberty. Good-night, Do&ntilde;a Dolores."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XIX'></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+
+<p>All that had happened from the time when Don John had fallen in his room
+to the moment when Dolores left her sister on the terrace had occupied
+little more than half an hour, during which the King had descended to the
+hall, Mendoza had claimed the guilt of Don John's murder, and the two had
+gone out under the protection of the guards. As soon as Dolores was out of
+hearing, Inez rose and crept along the terrace to Don John's door. In the
+confusion that had ensued upon the announcement of his death no one had
+thought of going to him; every one took it for granted that some one else
+had done what was necessary, and that his apartments were filled with
+physicians and servants. It was not the first time in history that a royal
+personage had thus been left alone an hour, either dead or dying, because
+no one was immediately responsible, and such things have happened
+since.</p>
+
+<p>Inez stole along the terrace and found the outer door open, as the dwarf
+had left it when he had carried Dolores out in his arms. She remembered
+that the voices she had heard earlier had come from rooms on the left of
+the door, and she felt her way to the entrance of the bedchamber, and then
+went in without hesitation. Bending very low, so that her hands touched the
+floor from time to time, she crept along, feeling for the body she expected
+to find. Suddenly she started and stood upright in an instant. She had
+heard a deep sigh in the room, not far off.</p>
+
+<p>She listened intently, but even her ears could detect no sound after
+that. She was a little frightened, not with any supernatural fear, for the
+blind, who live in the dark for ever, are generally singularly exempt from
+such terrors, but because she had thought herself alone with the dead man,
+and did not wish to be discovered.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is here?" she asked quickly, but there was no answer out of the
+dead stillness.</p>
+
+<p>She stood quite still a few seconds and then crept forward again,
+bending down and feeling before her along the floor. A moment later her
+hand touched velvet, and she knew that she had found what she sought. With
+a low moan she fell upon her knees and felt for the cold hand that lay
+stretched out upon the marble pavement beyond the thick carpet. Her hand
+followed the arm, reached the shoulder and then the face. Her fingers
+fluttered lightly upon the features, while her own heart almost stood still
+She felt no horror of death, though she had never been near a dead person
+before; and those who were fond of her had allowed her to feel their
+features with her gentle hands, and she knew beauty through her touch, by
+its shape. Though her heart was breaking, she had felt that once, before it
+was too late, she must know the face she had long loved in dreams. Her
+longing satisfied, her grief broke out again, and she let herself fall her
+length upon the floor beside Don John, one arm across his chest, her head
+resting against the motionless shoulder, her face almost hidden against the
+gathered velvet and silk of his doublet. Once or twice she sobbed
+convulsively, and then she lay quite still, trying with all her might to
+die there, on his arm, before any one came to disturb her. It seemed very
+simple, just to stop living and stay with him for ever.</p>
+
+<p>Again she heard a sound of deep-drawn breath--but it was close to her
+now, and her own arm moved with it on his chest--the dead man had moved, he
+had sighed. She started up wildly, with a sharp cry, half of paralyzing
+fear, and half of mad delight in a hope altogether impossible. Then, he
+drew his breath again, and it issued from his lips with a low groan. He was
+not quite dead yet, he might speak to her still, he could hear her voice,
+perhaps, before he really died. She could never have found courage to kiss
+him, even then she could have blushed scarlet at the thought, but she bent
+down to his face, very close to it, till her cheek almost touched his as
+she spoke in a very trembling, low voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet--not yet--come back for one moment, only for one little moment!
+Oh, let it be God's miracle for me!"</p>
+
+<p>She hardly knew what she said, but the miracle was there, for she heard
+his breath come again and again, and as she stared into her everlasting
+night, strange flashes, like light, shot through her brain, her bosom
+trembled, and her hands stiffened in the spasm of a delirious joy.</p>
+
+<p>"Come back!" she cried again. "Come back!" Her hands shook as they felt
+his body move.</p>
+
+<p>His voice came again, not in a word yet, but yet not in a groan of pain.
+His eyes, that had been half open and staring, closed with a look of rest,
+and colour rose slowly in his cheeks. Then he felt her breath, and his
+strength returned for an instant, his arms contracted and clasped her to
+him violently.</p>
+
+<p>"Dolores!" he cried, and in a moment his lips rained kisses on her face,
+while his eyes were still closed.</p>
+
+<p>Then he sank back again exhausted, and her arm kept his head from
+striking the marble floor. The girl's cheek flushed a deep red, as she
+tried to speak, and her words came broken and indistinct.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not Dolores," she managed to say. "I am Inez--"</p>
+
+<p>But he did not hear, for he was swooning again, and the painful blush
+sank down again, as she realized that he was once more unconscious. She
+wondered whether the room were dark or whether there were lights, or
+whether he had not opened his eyes when he had kissed her. His head was
+very heavy on her arm. With her other hand she drew off the hood she wore
+and rolled it together, and lifting him a little she made a pillow of it so
+that he rested easily. He had not recognized her, and she believed he was
+dying, he had kissed her, and all eternity could not take from her the
+memory of that moment. In the wild confusion of her thoughts she was almost
+content that he should die now, for she had felt what she had never dared
+to feel in sweetest dreams, and it had been true, and no one could steal it
+away now, nor should any one ever know it, not even Dolores herself. The
+jealous thought was there, in the whirlwind of her brain, with all the
+rest, sudden, fierce, and strong, as if Don John had been hers in life, and
+as if the sister she loved so dearly had tried to win him from her. He was
+hers in death, and should be hers for ever, and no one should ever know. It
+did not matter that he had taken her for another, his kisses were her own.
+Once only had a man's lips, not her father's, touched her cheek, and they
+had been the lips of the fairest, and best, and bravest man in the world,
+her idol and her earthly god. He might die now, and she would follow him,
+and in the world beyond God would make it right somehow, and he, and she,
+and her sister would all be but one loving soul for ever and ever. There
+was no reasoning in all that--it was but the flash of wild thoughts that
+all seemed certainties.</p>
+
+<p>But Don John of Austria was neither dead nor dying. His brother's sword
+had pierced his doublet and run through the outer flesh beneath his left
+arm, as he stood sideways with his right thrust forward. The wound was a
+mere scratch, as soldiers count wounds, and though the young blood had
+followed quickly, it had now ceased to flow. It was the fall that had hurt
+him, not the stab. The carpet had slipped from under his feet, and he had
+fallen backwards to his full length, as a man falls on ice, and his head
+had struck the marble floor so violently that he had lain half an hour
+almost in a swoon, like a dead man at first, with neither breath nor
+beating of the heart to give a sign of life, till after Dolores had left
+him; and then he had sighed back to consciousness by very slow degrees,
+because no one was there to help him, to raise his head a few inches from
+the floor, to dash a little cold water into his face.</p>
+
+<p>He stirred uneasily now, and moved his hands again, and his eyes opened
+wide. Inez felt the slight motion and heard his regular breathing, and an
+instinct told her that he was conscious, and not in a dream as he had been
+when he had kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Inez," she said, almost mechanically, and not knowing why she had
+feared that he should take her for her sister. "I found your Highness
+here--they all think that you are dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Dead?" There was surprise in his voice, and his eyes looked at her and
+about the room as he spoke, though he did not yet lift his head from the
+hood on which it lay. "Dead?" he repeated, dazed still. "No--I must have
+fallen. My head hurts me."</p>
+
+<p>He uttered a sharp sound as he moved again, more of annoyance than of
+suffering, as strong men do who unexpectedly find themselves hurt or
+helpless, or both. Then, as his eyes fell upon the open door of the inner
+room, he forgot his pain instantly and raised himself upon his hand with
+startled eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Dolores?" he cried, in utmost anxiety. "Where have they taken
+her? Did she get out by the window?"</p>
+
+<p>"She is safe," answered Inez, hardly knowing what she said, for he
+turned pale instantly and had barely heard her answer, when he reeled as he
+half sat and almost fell against her.</p>
+
+<p>She held him as well as she could, but the position was strained and she
+was not very strong. Half mad now, between fear lest he should die in her
+arms and the instinctive belief that he was to live, she wished with all
+her heart that some one would come and help her, or send for a physician.
+He might die for lack of some simple aid she did not know how to give him.
+But he had only been dizzy with the unconscious effort he had made, and
+presently he rested on his own hand again.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God Dolores is safe!" he said, in a weak voice. "Can you help me
+to get to a chair, my dear child? I must have been badly stunned. I wonder
+how long I have been here. I remember--"</p>
+
+<p>He paused and passed one hand over his eyes. The first instinct of
+strong persons who have been unconscious is to think aloud, and to try and
+recall every detail of the accident that left them unconscious.</p>
+
+<p>"I remember--the King was here--we talked and we quarrelled--oh!"</p>
+
+<p>The short exclamation ended his speech, as complete recollection
+returned, and he knew that the secret must be kept, for his brother's sake.
+He laid one head on the slight girl's shoulder to steady himself, and with
+his other he helped himself to kneel on one knee.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very dizzy," he said. "Try and help me to a chair, Inez."</p>
+
+<p>She rose swiftly, holding his hand, and then putting one arm round him
+under his own. He struggled to his feet and leaned his weight upon her, and
+breathed hard. The effort hurt him where the flesh was torn.</p>
+
+<p>"I am wounded, too," he said quietly, as he glanced at the blood on his
+vest. "But it is nothing serious, I think."</p>
+
+<p>With the instinct of the soldier hurt in the chest, he brushed his lips
+with the small lace ruffle of his sleeve, and looked at it, expecting to
+see the bright red stains that might mean death. There was nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"It is only a scratch," he said, with an accent of indifference. "Help
+me to the chair, my dear."</p>
+
+<p>"Where?" she asked. "I do not know the room."</p>
+
+<p>"One forgets that you are blind," he answered, with a smile, and leaning
+heavily upon her, he led her by his weight, till he could touch the chair
+in which he had sat reading Dolores' letter when the King had entered an
+hour earlier.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down with a sigh of relief, and stretched first one leg and then
+the other, and leaned back with half-closed eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Dolores?" he asked at last. "Why did she go away?"</p>
+
+<p>"The jester took her away, I think," answered Inez. "I found them
+together on the terrace. She was trying to come back to you, but he
+prevented her. They thought you were dead."</p>
+
+<p>"That was wise of him." He spoke faintly still, and when he opened his
+eyes, the room swam with him. "And then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then I told her what had happened at court; I had heard everything from
+the gallery. And Dolores went down alone. I could not understand what she
+was going to do, but she is trying to save our father."</p>
+
+<p>"Your father!" Don John looked at her in surprise, forgetting his hurt,
+but it was as if some one had struck his head again, and he closed his
+eyes. "What has happened?" he asked faintly. "Try and tell me. I do not
+understand."</p>
+
+<p>"My father thought he had killed you," answered Inez, in surprise. "He
+came into the great hall when the King was there, and he cried out in a
+loud voice that he had killed you, unarmed."</p>
+
+<p>"Your father?" He forgot his suffering altogether now. "Your father was
+not even in the room when--when I fell! And did the King say nothing? Tell
+me quickly!"</p>
+
+<p>"There was a great uproar, and I ran away to find Dolores. I do not know
+what happened afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>Don John turned painfully in his chair and lifted his hand to the back
+of his head. But he said nothing at first, for he was beginning to
+understand, and he would not betray the secret of his accident even to
+Inez.</p>
+
+<p>"I knew he could not have done it! I thought he was mad--he most have
+been! But I also thought your Highness was dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear child!" Don John's voice was very kind. "You brought me to life.
+Your father was not here. It was some one else who hurt me. Do you think
+you could find Dolores or send some one to tell her--to tell every one that
+I am alive? Say that I had a bad fall and was stunned for a while. Never
+mind the scratch--it is nothing--do not speak of it. If you could find
+Adonis, he could go."</p>
+
+<p>He groaned now, for the pain of speaking was almost intolerable. Inez
+put out her hand towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"Does it hurt very much?" she asked, with a sort of pathetic, childlike
+sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my head hurts, but I shall not faint. There is something to drink
+by the bed, I think--on this side. If you could only find it. I cannot walk
+there yet, I am so giddy."</p>
+
+<p>"Some one is coming!" exclaimed Inez, instead of answering him. "I hear
+some one on the terrace. Hark!" she listened with bent head. "It is Adonis.
+I know his step. There he is!"</p>
+
+<p>Almost as she spoke the last words the dwarf was in the doorway. He
+stood still, transfixed with astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy of heaven!" he exclaimed devoutly. "His Highness is alive after
+all!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Inez, in a glad tone. "The Prince was only stunned by the
+fall. Go and tell Dolores--go out and tell every one--bring every one here
+to me!"</p>
+
+<p>"No!" cried Don John. "Try and bring Do&ntilde;a Dolores alone, and let
+no one else know. The rest can wait."</p>
+
+<p>"But your Highness needs a physician," protested the dwarf, not yet
+recovered from his astonishment. "Your Highness is wounded, and must
+therefore be bled at once. I will call the Doctor Galdos--"</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you it is nothing," interrupted Don John. "Do as I order you,
+and bring Do&ntilde;a Dolores. Give me that drink there, first--from the
+little table. In a quarter of an hour I shall be quite well again. I have
+been as badly stunned before when my horse has fallen with me at a
+barrier."</p>
+
+<p>The jester swung quickly to the table, in his awkward, bow-legged gait,
+and brought the beaker that stood there. Don John drank eagerly, for his
+lips were parched with pain.</p>
+
+<p>"Go!" he said imperatively. "And come back quickly."</p>
+
+<p>"I will go," said Adonis. "But I may not come back quickly, for I
+believe that Do&ntilde;a Dolores is with his Majesty at this moment, or
+with her father, unless the three are together. Since it has pleased your
+Highness not to remain dead, it would have been much simpler not to die at
+all, for your Highness's premature death has caused trouble which your
+Highness's premature resurrection may not quickly set right."</p>
+
+<p>"The sooner you bring Do&ntilde;a Dolores, the sooner the tremble will
+be over," said Don John. "Go at once, and do your best."</p>
+
+<p>Adonis rolled away, shaking his head and almost touching the floor with
+his hands as he walked.</p>
+
+<p>"So the Last Trumpet is not merely another of those priests' tales!" he
+muttered. "I shall meet Don Carlos on the terrace, and the Emperor in the
+corridor, no doubt! They might give a man time to confess his sins. It was
+unnecessary that the end of the world should come so suddenly!"</p>
+
+<p>The last words of his jest were spoken to himself, for he was already
+outside when he uttered them, and he had no intention of wasting time in
+bearing the good news to Dolores. The difficulty was to find her. He had
+been a witness of the scene in the hall from the balcony, and he guessed
+that when she left the hall with Ruy Gomez she would go either to her
+father or the King. It would not be an easy matter to see her, and it was
+by no means beyond the bounds of possibility that he might be altogether
+hindered from doing so, unless he at once announced to every one he met the
+astounding fact that Don John was alive after all. He was strongly tempted
+to do that, without waiting, for it seemed by far the most sensible thing
+to do in the disturbed state of the court; but it was his business to serve
+and amuse many masters, and his office, if not his life, depended upon
+obeying each in turn and finding the right jest for each. He placed the
+King highest, of course, among those he had to please, and before he had
+gone far in the corridor he slackened his pace to give himself time to
+think over the situation. Either the King had meant to kill Don John
+himself, or he had ordered Mendoza to do so. That much was clear to any one
+who had known the secret of Don Carlos' death, and the dwarf had been one
+of the last who had talked with the unfortunate Prince before that dark
+tragedy. And on this present night he had seen everything, and knew more of
+the thoughts of each of the actors in the drama than any one else, so that
+he had no doubt as to his conclusions. If, then, the King had wished to get
+rid of Don John, he would be very much displeased to learn that the latter
+was alive after all. It would not be good to be the bearer of that news,
+and it was more than likely that Philip would let Mendoza go to the
+scaffold for the attempt, as he long afterwards condemned Antonio Perez to
+death for the murder of Escobedo, Don John's secretary, though he himself
+had ordered Perez to do that deed; as he had already allowed the
+ecclesiastic Doctor Cazalla to be burned alive, though innocent, rather
+than displease the judges who had condemned him. The dwarf well knew that
+there was no crime, however monstrous, of which Philip was not capable, and
+of the righteous necessity of which he could not persuade himself if he
+chose. Nothing could possibly be more dangerous than to stand between him
+and the perpetration of any evil he considered politically necessary,
+except perhaps to hinder him in the pursuit of his gloomy and secret
+pleasures. Adonis decided at once that he would not be the means of
+enlightening the King on the present occasion. He most go to some one else.
+The second person in command of his life, and whom he dreaded most after
+Philip himself, was the Princess of Eboli.</p>
+
+<p>He knew her secret, too, as he had formerly known how she had forged the
+letters that brought about the deaths of Don Carlos and of Queen Isabel;
+for the Princess ruled him by fear, and knew that she could trust him as
+long as he stood in terror of her. He knew, therefore, that she had not
+only forgiven Don John for not yielding to her charm in former days, but
+that she now hoped that he might ascend the throne in Philip's stead, by
+fair means or foul, and that the news of his death must have been a
+destructive blow to her hopes. He made up his mind to tell her first that
+he was alive, unless he could get speech with Dolores alone, which seemed
+improbable. Having decided this, he hastened his walk again.</p>
+
+<p>Before he reached the lower story of the palace he composed his face to
+an expression of solemnity, not to say mourning, for he remembered that as
+no one knew the truth but himself, he must not go about with too gay a
+look. In the great vestibule of the hall he found a throng of courtiers,
+talking excitedly in low tones, but neither Dolores nor Ruy Gomez was
+there. He sidled up to a tall officer of the guards who was standing alone,
+looking on.</p>
+
+<p>"Could you inform me, sir," he asked, "what became of Do&ntilde;a
+Dolores de Mendoza when she left the hall with the Prince of Eboli?"</p>
+
+<p>The officer looked down at the dwarf, with whom he had never spoken
+before, but who, in his way, was considered to be a personage of importance
+by the less exalted members of the royal household. Indeed, Adonis was by
+no means given to making acquaintance at haphazard with all those who
+wished to know him in the hope that he might say a good word for them when
+the King was in a pleasant humour.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know, Master Adonis," answered the magnificent lieutenant,
+very politely. "But if you wish it, I will enquire."</p>
+
+<p>"You are most kind and courteous, sir," answered the dwarf
+ceremoniously. "I have a message for the lady."</p>
+
+<p>The officer turned away and went towards the King's apartments, leaving
+the jester in the corner. Adonis knew that he might wait some time before
+his informant returned, and he shrank into the shadow to avoid attracting
+attention. That was easy enough, so long as the crowd was moving and did
+not diminish, but before long he heard some one speaking within the hall,
+as if addressing a number of persons at once, and the others began to leave
+the vestibule in order to hear what was passing. Though the light did not
+fall upon him directly, the dwarf, in his scarlet dress, became a
+conspicuous object. Yet he did not dare to go away, for fear of missing the
+officer when the latter should return. His anxiety to escape observation
+was not without cause, since he really wished to give Don John's message to
+Dolores before any one else knew the truth. In a few moments he saw the
+Princess of Eboli coming towards him, leaning on the arm of the Duke of
+Medina Sidonia. She came from the hall as if she had been listening to the
+person who was still speaking near the door, and her handsome face wore a
+look of profound dejection and disappointment. She had evidently seen the
+dwarf, for she walked directly towards him, and at half a dozen paces she
+stopped and dismissed her companion, who bowed low, kissed the tips of her
+fingers, and withdrew.</p>
+
+<p>Adonis drew down the corners of his mouth, bent his head still lower,
+and tried to look as unhappy as possible, in imitation of the Princess's
+expression. She stood still before him, and spoke briefly in imperious
+tones.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the meaning of all this?" she asked. "Tell me the truth at
+once. It will be the better for you."</p>
+
+<p>"Madam," answered Adonis, with all the assurance he could muster, "I
+think your Excellency knows the truth much better than I."</p>
+
+<p>The Princess bent her black brows and her eyes began to gleam angrily.
+Titian would not have recognized in her stern face the smiling features of
+his portrait of her--of the insolently beautiful Venus painted by order of
+King Philip when the Princess was in the height of his favour.</p>
+
+<p>"My friend," she said, in a mocking tone, "I know nothing, and you know
+everything. At the present moment your disappearance from the court will
+not attract even the smallest attention compared with the things that are
+happening. If you do not tell me what you know, you will not be here
+to-morrow, and I will see that you are burned alive for a sorcerer next
+week. Do you understand? Now tell me who killed Don John of Austria, and
+why. Be quick, I have no time to lose."</p>
+
+<p>Adonis made up his mind very suddenly that it would be better to disobey
+Don John than the angry woman who was speaking to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody killed him," he answered bluntly.</p>
+
+<p>The Princess was naturally violent, especially with her inferiors, and
+when she was angry she easily lost all dignity. She seized the dwarf by the
+arm and shook him.</p>
+
+<p>"No jesting!" she cried. "He did not kill himself--who did it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody," repeated Adonis doggedly, and quite without fear, for he knew
+how glad she would be to know the truth. "His Highness is not dead at
+all--"</p>
+
+<p>"You little hound!" The Princess shook him furiously again and
+threatened to strike him with her other hand.</p>
+
+<p>He only laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Before heaven, Madam," he said, "the Prince is alive and recovered, and
+is sitting in his chair. I have just been talking with him. Will you go
+with me to his Highness's apartment? If he is not there, and safe, burn me
+for a heretic to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>The Princess's hands dropped by her sides in sheer amazement, for she
+saw that the jester was in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>"He had a scratch in the scuffle," he continued, "but it was the fall
+that killed him, his resurrection followed soon afterwards--and I trust
+that his ascension may be no further distant than your Excellency
+desires."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed at his blasphemous jest, and the Princess laughed too, a
+little wildly, for she could hardly control her joy.</p>
+
+<p>"And who wounded him?" she asked suddenly. "You know everything, you
+must know that also."</p>
+
+<p>"Madam," said the dwarf, fixing his eyes on hers, "we both know the name
+of the person who wounded Don John, very well indeed, I regret that I
+should not be able to recall it at this moment. His Highness has forgotten
+it too, I am sure."</p>
+
+<p>The Princess's expression did not change, but she returned his gaze
+steadily during several seconds, and then nodded slowly to show that she
+understood. Then she looked away and was silent for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry I was rough with you, Adonis," she said at last,
+thoughtfully. "It was hard to believe you at first, and if the Prince had
+been dead, as we all believed, your jesting would have been abominable.
+There,"--she unclasped a diamond brooch from her bodice--"take that,
+Adonis--you can turn it into money."</p>
+
+<p>The Princess's financial troubles were notorious, and she hardly ever
+possessed any ready gold.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall keep it as the most precious of my possessions," answered the
+dwarf readily.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said quickly. "Sell it. The King--I mean--some one may see it
+if you keep it."</p>
+
+<p>"It shall be sold to-morrow, then," replied the jester, bending his head
+to hide his smile, for he understood what she meant.</p>
+
+<p>"One thing more," she said; "Don John did not send you down to tell this
+news to the court without warning. He meant that I should know it before
+any one else. You have told me--now go away and do not tell others."</p>
+
+<p>Adonis hesitated a moment. He wished to do Don John's bidding if he
+could, but he knew his danger, and that he should be forgiven if, to save
+his own head, he did not execute the commission. The Princess wished an
+immediate answer, and she had no difficulty in guessing the truth.</p>
+
+<p>"His Highness sent you to find Do&ntilde;a Dolores," she said. "Is that
+not true?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is true," replied Adonis. "But," he added, anticipating her wish out
+of fear, "it is not easy to find Do&ntilde;a Dolores."</p>
+
+<p>"It is impossible. Did you expect to find her by waiting in this corner!
+Adonis, it is safer for you to serve me than Don John, and in serving me
+you will help his interests. You know that. Listen to me--Do&ntilde;a
+Dolores must believe him dead till to-morrow morning. She must on no
+account find out that he is alive."</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the officer who had offered to get information for the
+dwarf returned. Seeing the latter in conversation with such a great
+personage, he waited at a little distance.</p>
+
+<p>"If you have found out where Do&ntilde;a Dolores de Mendoza is at this
+moment, my dear sir," said Adonis, "pray tell the Princess of Eboli, who is
+very anxious to know."</p>
+
+<p>The officer bowed and came nearer.</p>
+
+<p>"Do&ntilde;a Dolores de Mendoza is in his Majesty's inner apartment," he
+said.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XX'></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+
+<p>Dolores and Ruy Gomez had passed through the outer vestibule, and he
+left her to pursue his way towards the western end of the Alcazar, which
+was at a considerable distance from the royal apartments. Dolores went down
+the corridor till she came to the niche and the picture before which Don
+John had paused to read the Princess of Eboli's letter after supper. She
+stopped a moment, for she suddenly felt that her strength was exhausted and
+that she must rest or break down altogether. She leaned her weight against
+the elaborately carved railing that shut off the niche like a shrine, and
+looked at the painting, which was one of Raphael's smaller masterpieces, a
+Holy Family so smoothly and delicately painted that it jarred upon her at
+that moment as something untrue and out of all keeping with possibility.
+Though most perfectly drawn and coloured, the spotlessly neat figures with
+their airs of complacent satisfaction seemed horribly out of place in the
+world of suffering she was condemned to dwell in, and she fancied, somewhat
+irreverently and resentfully, that they would look as much out of keeping
+with their surroundings in a heaven that must be won by the endurance of
+pain. Their complacent smiles seemed meant for her anguish, and she turned
+from the picture in displeasure, and went on.</p>
+
+<p>She was going back to her sister on the terrace, and she was going to
+kneel once more beside the dear head of the man she had loved, and to say
+one last prayer before his face was covered for ever. At the thought she
+felt that she needed no rest again, for the vision drew her to the
+sorrowful presence of its reality, and she could not have stopped again if
+she had wished to. She must go straight on, on to the staircase, up the
+long flight of steps, through the lonely corridors, and out at hist to the
+moonlit terrace where Inez was waiting. She went forward in a dream,
+without pausing. Since she had freed her father she had a right to go back
+to her grief. But as she went along, lightly and quickly, it seemed beyond
+her own belief that she should have found strength for what she had done
+that night. For the strength of youth is elastic and far beyond its own
+knowledge. Dolores had reached the last passage that led out upon the
+terrace, when she heard hurrying footsteps behind her, and a woman in a
+cloak slipped beside her, walking very easily and smoothly. It was the
+Princess of Eboli. She had left the dwarf, after frightening him into
+giving up his search for Dolores, and she was hastening to Don John's rooms
+to make sure that the jester had not deceived her or been himself deceived
+in some way she could not understand.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores had lost her cloak in the hall, and was bareheaded, in her court
+dress. The Princess recognized her in the gloom and stopped her.</p>
+
+<p>"I have looked for you everywhere," she said. "Why did you run away from
+me before?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was my blind sister who was with you," answered Dolores, who knew
+her voice at once and had understood from her father what had happened.
+"Where are you going now?" she asked, without giving the Princess time to
+put a question.</p>
+
+<p>"I was looking for you. I wish you to come and stay with me
+to-night--"</p>
+
+<p>"I will stay with my father. I thank you for your kindness, but I would
+not on any account leave him now."</p>
+
+<p>"Your father is in prison--in the west tower--he has just been sent
+there. How can you stay with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are well informed," said Dolores quietly. "But your husband is just
+now gone to release him. I gave Don Ruy Gomez the order which his Majesty
+had himself placed in my hands, and the Prince was kind enough to take it
+to the west tower himself. My father is unconditionally free."</p>
+
+<p>The Princess looked fixedly at Dolores while the girl was speaking, but
+it was very dark in the corridor and the lamp was flickering to go out in
+the night breeze. The only explanation of Mendoza's release lay in the fact
+that the King was already aware that Don John was alive and in no danger.
+In that case Dolores knew it, too. It was no great matter, though she had
+hoped to keep the girl out of the way of hearing the news for a day or two.
+Dolores' mournful face might have told her that she was mistaken, if there
+had been more light; but it was far too dark to see shades of colour or
+expression.</p>
+
+<p>"So your father is free!" she said. "Of course, that was to be expected,
+but I am glad that he has been set at liberty at once."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think it was exactly to be expected," answered Dolores, in
+some surprise, and wondering whether there could have been any simpler way
+of getting what she had obtained by such extraordinary means.</p>
+
+<p>"He might have been kept under arrest until to-morrow morning, I
+suppose," said the Princess quietly. "But the King is of course anxious to
+destroy the unpleasant impression produced by this absurd affair, as soon
+as possible."</p>
+
+<p>"Absurd!" Dolores' anger rose and overflowed at the word. "Do you dare
+to use such a word to me to-night?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Dolores, why do you lose your temper about such a thing?" asked
+the Princess, in a conciliatory tone. "Of course if it had all ended as we
+expected it would, I never should use such a word--if Don John had
+died--"</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" Dolores held her by the wrist in an instant and the
+maddest excitement was in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>"What I mean? Why--" the Princess stopped short, realizing that Dolores
+might not know the truth after all. "What did I say?" she asked, to gain
+time. "Why do you hold my hand like that?"</p>
+
+<p>"You called the murder of Don John an absurd affair, and then you said,
+'if Don John had died'--as if he were not lying there dead in his room,
+twenty paces from where you stand! Are you mad? Are you playing some
+heartless comedy with me? What does it all mean?"</p>
+
+<p>The Princess was very worldly wise, and she saw at a glance that she
+must tell Dolores the truth. If she did not, the girl would soon learn it
+from some one else, but if she did, Dolores would always remember who had
+told her the good news.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear," she said very gently, "let my wrist go and let me take your
+arm. We do not understand each other, or you would not be so angry with me.
+Something has happened of which you do not know--"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no! I know the whole truth!" Dolores interrupted her, and resisted
+being led along in a slow walk. "Let me go to him!" she cried. "I only wish
+to see him once more--"</p>
+
+<p>"But, dearest child, listen to me--if I do not tell you everything at
+once, it is because the shock might hurt you. There is some hope that he
+may not die--"</p>
+
+<p>"Hope! Oh no, no, no! I saw him lying dead--"</p>
+
+<p>"He had fainted, dear. He was not dead--"</p>
+
+<p>"Not dead?" Dolores' voice broke. "Tell me--tell me quickly." She
+pressed her hand to her side.</p>
+
+<p>"No. He came to himself after you had left him--he is alive. No--listen
+to me--yes, dear, he is alive and not much hurt. The wound was a scratch,
+and he was only stunned--he is well--to-morrow he will be as well as
+ever--ah, dear, I told you so!"</p>
+
+<p>Dolores had borne grief, shame, torment of mind that night, as bravely
+as ever a woman bore all three, but the joy of the truth that he lived
+almost ended her life then and there. She fell back upon the Princess's arm
+and threw out her hands wildly, as if she were fighting for breath, and the
+lids of her eyes quivered violently and then were quite still, and she
+uttered a short, unnatural sound that was more like a groan of pain than a
+cry of happiness.</p>
+
+<p>The Princess was very strong, and held her, steadying herself against
+the wall, thinking anything better than to let her slip to the floor and
+lie swooning on the stone pavement. But the girl was not unconscious, and
+in a moment her own strength returned.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me go!" she cried wildly. "Let me go to him, or I shall die!"</p>
+
+<p>"Go, child--go," said the Princess, with an accent of womanly kindness
+that was rare in her voice. But Dolores did not hear it, for she was
+already gone.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores saw nothing in the room, as she entered, but the eyes of the man
+she loved, though Inez was still beside him. Dolores threw herself wildly
+into his arms and hid her face, crying out incoherent words between little
+showers of happy tears; and her hands softly beat upon his shoulders and
+against his neck, and stole up wondering to his cheeks and touched his
+hair, as she drew back her head and held him still to look at him and see
+that he was whole. She had no speech left, for it was altogether beyond the
+belief of any sense but touch itself that a man should rise unhurt from the
+dead, to go on living as if nothing not common had happened in his life, to
+have his strength at once, to look into her eyes and rain kisses on the
+lids still dark with grief for his death. Sight could not believe the
+sight, hearing could not but doubt the sound, yet her hands held him and
+touched him, and it was he, unhurt saving for a scratch and a bruise. In
+her overwhelming happiness, she had no questions, and the first syllables
+that her lips could shape made broken words of love, and of thanks to
+Heaven that he had been saved alive for her, while her hands still
+fluttered to his face and beat gently and quickly on his shoulders and his
+arms, as if fearing lest he should turn to incorporeal light, without
+substance under her touch, and vanish then in air, as happiness does in a
+dream, leaving only pain behind.</p>
+
+<p>But at last she threw back her head and let him go, and her hands
+brushed away the last tears from her grey eyes, and she looked into his
+face and smiled with parted lips, drinking the sight of him with her breath
+and eyes and heart. One moment so, and then they kissed as only man and
+woman can when there has been death between them and it is gone not to come
+back again.</p>
+
+<p>Then memory returned, though very slowly and broken in many places, for
+it seemed to her as if she had not been separated from him a moment, and as
+if he must know all she had done without hearing her story in words. The
+time had been so short since she had kissed him last, in the little room
+beyond: there had been the minutes of waiting until the King had come, and
+then the trying of the door, and then the quarrel, that had lasted a short
+ten minutes to end in Don John's fall; then the half hour during which he
+had lain unconscious and alone till Inez had come at the moment when
+Dolores had gone down to the throne room; and after that the short few
+minutes in which she had met her father, and then her interview with the
+King, which had not lasted long, and now she was with him again; and it was
+not two hours since they had parted--a lifetime of two hours.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot believe it!" she cried, and now she laughed at last. "I
+cannot, I cannot! It is impossible!"</p>
+
+<p>"We are both alive," he answered. "We are both flesh and blood, and
+breathing. I feel as if I had been in an illness or in a sleep that had
+lasted very long."</p>
+
+<p>"And I in an awful dream." Her face grew grave as she thought of what
+was but just passed. "You must know it all--surely you know it already--oh,
+yes! I need not tell it all."</p>
+
+<p>"Something Inez has told me," he replied, "and some things I guess, but
+I do not know everything. You must try and tell me--but you should not be
+here--it is late. When my servants know that I am living, they will come
+back, and my gentlemen and my officers. They would have left me here all
+night, if I had been really dead, lest being seen near my body should send
+them to trial for my death." He laughed. "They were wise enough in their
+way. But you cannot stay here."</p>
+
+<p>"If the whole court found me here, it would not matter," answered
+Dolores. "Their tongues can take nothing from my name which my own words
+have not given them to feed on."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand," he said, suddenly anxious. "What have you said?
+What have you done?"</p>
+
+<p>Inez came near them from the window, by which she had been standing. She
+laid a hand on Dolores' arm.</p>
+
+<p>"I will watch," she said. "If I hear anything, I will warn you, and you
+can go into the small room again."</p>
+
+<p>She went out almost before either of them could thank her. They had,
+indeed, forgotten her presence in the room, being accustomed to her being
+near them; but she could no longer bear to stay, listening to their loving
+words that made her loneliness so very dark. And now, too, she had memories
+of her own, which she would keep secret to the end of her life,--beautiful
+and happy recollections of that sweet moment when the man that seemed dead
+had breathed and had clasped her in his arms, taking her for the other, and
+had kissed her as he would have kissed the one he loved. She knew at last
+what a kiss might be, and that was much; but she knew also what it was to
+kneel by her dead love and to feel his life come back, breath by breath and
+beat by beat, till he was all alive; and few women have felt that or can
+guess how great it is to feel. It was better to go out into the dark and
+listen, lest any one should disturb the two, than to let her memories of
+short happiness be marred by hearing words that were not meant for her.</p>
+
+<p>"She found you?" asked Dolores, when she was gone.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she found me. You had gone down, she said, to try and save your
+father. He is safe now!" he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"She found you alive." Dolores lingered on the words. "I never envied
+her before, I think; and it is not because if I had stayed I should have
+suffered less, dear." She put up her hands upon his shoulders again. "It is
+not for that, but to have thought you dead and to have seen you grow alive
+again, to have watched your face, to have seen your eyes wake and the
+colour come back to your cheeks and the warmth to your dear hands! I would
+have given anything for that, and you would rather that I should have been
+there, would you not?" She laughed low and kissed away the answer from his
+lips. "If I had stayed beside you, it would have been sooner, love. You
+would have felt me there even in your dream of death, and you would have
+put out your hand to come back to me. Say that you would! You could not
+have let me lie there many minutes longer breaking my heart over you and
+wanting to die, too, so that we might be buried together. Surely my kisses
+would have brought you back!"</p>
+
+<p>"I dreamed they did, as mine would you."</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down beside me," she said presently. "It will be very hard to
+tell--and it cannot be very long before they come. Oh, they may find me
+here! It cannot matter now, for I told them all that I had been long in
+your room to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"Told them all? Told whom? The King? What did you say?" His face was
+grave again.</p>
+
+<p>"The King, the court, the whole world. But it is harder to tell you."
+She blushed and looked away. "It was the King that wounded you--I heard you
+fall."</p>
+
+<p>"Scratched me. I was only stunned for a while."</p>
+
+<p>"He drew his sword, for I heard it. You know the sound a sword makes
+when it is drawn from a leathern sheath? Of course--you are a soldier! I
+have often watched my father draw his, and I know the soft, long pull. The
+King drew quickly, and I knew you were unarmed, and besides--you had
+promised me that you would not raise your hand against him."</p>
+
+<p>"I remember that my sword was on the table in its scabbard. I got it
+into my hand, sheathed as it was, to guard myself. Where is it? I had
+forgotten that. It must be somewhere on the floor."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind--your men will find it. You fell, and then there was
+silence, and presently I heard my father's voice saying that he had killed
+you defenceless. They went away. I was half dead myself when I fell there
+beside you on the floor. There--do you see? You lay with your head towards
+the door and one arm out. I shall see you so till I die, whenever I think
+of it. Then--I forget. Adonis must have found me there, and he carried me
+away, and Inez met me on the terrace and she had heard my father tell the
+King that he had murdered you--and it was the King who had done it! Do you
+understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see, yes. Go on!" Don John was listening breathlessly, forgetting the
+pain he still suffered from time to time.</p>
+
+<p>"And then I went down, and I made Don Ruy Gomez stand beside me on the
+steps, and the whole court was there--the Grandees and the great
+dukes--Alva, Medina Sidonia, Medina Cali, Infantado, the Princess of
+Eboli--the Ambassadors, everyone, all the maids of honour, hundreds and
+hundreds--an ocean of faces, and they knew me, almost all of them."</p>
+
+<p>"What did you say?" asked Don John very anxiously. "What did you tell
+them all? That you had been here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes--more than that, much more. It was not true, but I hoped they would
+believe it I said--" the colour filled her face and she caught her breath.
+"Oh, how can I tell you? Can you not guess what I said?"</p>
+
+<p>"That we were married already, secretly?" he asked. "You might have said
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"No. Not that--no one would have believed me. I told them," she paused
+and gathered her strength, and then the words came quickly, ashamed of
+being heard--"I told them that I knew my father had no share in the crime,
+because I had been here long to-night, in this room, and even when you were
+killed, and that I was here because I had given you all, my life, my soul,
+my honour, everything."</p>
+
+<p>"Great God!" exclaimed Don John starting. "And you did that to save your
+father?"</p>
+
+<p>She had covered her face with her hands for a moment. Then suddenly she
+rose and turned away from him, and paced the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I did that. What was there for me to do? It was better that I
+should be ruined and end in a convent than that my father should die on the
+scaffold. What would have become of Inez?"</p>
+
+<p>"What would have become of you?" Don John's eyes followed her in loving
+wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"It would not have mattered. But I had thrown away my name for nothing.
+They believed me, I think, but the King, to spare himself, was determined
+that my father should die. We met as he was led away to prison. Then I went
+to the King himself--and when I came away I had my father's release in my
+hand. Oh, I wish I had that to do again! I wish you had been there, for you
+would have been proud of me, then. I told him he had killed you, I heard
+him confess it, I threatened to tell the court, the world, all Spain, if he
+would not set my father free. But the other--can you forgive me, dear?"</p>
+
+<p>She stood before him now, and the colour was fainter in her cheeks, for
+she trusted him with all her heart, and she put out her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive you? What? For doing the bravest thing a woman ever did?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you would know it in heaven and understand," she said. "It is
+better that you know it on earth--but it was hard to tell."</p>
+
+<p>He held her hands together and pressed them to his lips. He had no words
+to tell her what he thought. Again and again he silently kissed the firm
+white fingers folded in his own.</p>
+
+<p>"It was magnificent," he said at last. "But it will be hard to undo,
+very hard."</p>
+
+<p>"What will it ever matter, since we know it is not true?" she asked.
+"Let the world think what it will, say what it likes--"</p>
+
+<p>"The world shall never say a slighting word of you," he interrupted. "Do
+you think that I will let the world say openly what I would not hear from
+the King alone between these four walls? There is no fear of that, love. I
+will die sooner."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no!" she cried, in sudden fear. "Oh, do not speak of death again
+to-night! I cannot bear the word!"</p>
+
+<p>"Of life, then, of life together,--of all our lives in peace and love!
+But first this must be set right. It is late, but this must be done now--at
+once. There is only one way, there is only one thing to be done."</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a moment, and his eyes looked quickly to the door and
+back to Dolores' face.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot go away," she cried, nestling to him. "You will not make me
+go? What does it matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"It matters much. It will matter much more hereafter." He was on his
+feet, and all his energy and graceful strength came back as if he had
+received no hurt. "There is little time left, but what there is, is ours.
+Inez!" He was at the door. "Is no one there upon the terrace? Is there no
+servant, no sentry? Ho, there! Who are you? Come here, man! Let me see your
+face! Adonis?"</p>
+
+<p>Inez and the dwarf were in the door. Dolores was behind him, looking
+out, not knowing what he meant to do. He had his hand on the dwarf's arm in
+his haste. The crooked creature looked up, half in fear.</p>
+
+<p>"Quick! Go!" cried Don John. "Get me a priest, a monk, a
+bishop,--anything that wears a frock and can speak Latin. Bring him here.
+Threaten his life, in my name, if you like. Tell him Don John of Austria is
+in extreme need, and must have a priest. Quick, man! Fly! Your life and
+fortune are in your legs! Off, man! Off!"</p>
+
+<p>Adonis was already gone, rolling through the gloom with swinging arms,
+more like a huge bat than anything human, and at a rate of speed none would
+have guessed latent in his little twisted legs. Don John drew back within
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay within," he said to Dolores, gently pressing her backwards into
+the room. "I will let no one pass till the priest comes; and then the world
+may come, too, and welcome,--and the court and the King, and the devil and
+all his angels!" He laughed aloud in his excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"You have not told me," Dolores began, but her eyes laughed in his.</p>
+
+<p>"But you know without words," he answered. "When that is done which a
+priest can do in an instant, and no one else, the world is ours, with all
+it holds, in spite of men and women and Kings!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is ours already," she cried happily. "But is this wise, love? Are
+you not too quick?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would you have me slow when you and your name and my honour are all at
+stake on one quick throw? Can we play too quickly at such a game with fate?
+There will be time, just time, no more. For when the news is known, it will
+spread like fire. I wonder that no one comes yet."</p>
+
+<p>He listened, and Inez' hearing was ten times more sensitive than his,
+but there was no sound. For besides Dolores and Inez only the dwarf and the
+Princess of Eboli knew that Don John was living; and the Princess had
+imposed silence on the jester and was in no haste to tell the news until
+she should decide who was to know it first and how her own advantage could
+be secured. So there was time, and Adonis swung himself along the dim
+corridor and up winding stairs that be knew, and roused the little wizened
+priest who lived in the west tower all alone, and whose duty it was to say
+a mass each morning for any prisoner who chanced to be locked up there; and
+when there was no one in confinement he said his mass for himself in the
+small chapel which was divided from the prison only by a heavy iron
+grating. The jester sometimes visited him in his lonely dwelling and
+shocked and delighted him with alternate tales of the court's wickedness
+and with harmless jokes that made his wizened cheeks pucker and wrinkle
+into unaccustomed smiles. And he had some hopes of converting the poor
+jester to a pious life. So they were friends. But when the old priest heard
+that Don John of Austria was suddenly dying in his room and that there was
+no one to shrive him,--for that was the tale Adonis told,--he trembled from
+head to foot like a paralytic, and the buttons of his cassock became as
+drops of quicksilver and slipped from his weak fingers everywhere except
+into the buttonholes, so that the dwarf had to fasten them for him in a
+furious hurry, and find his stole, and set his hat upon his head, and
+polish away the tears of excitement from his cheeks with his own silk
+handkerchief. Yet it was well done, though so quickly, and he had a kind
+old face and was a good priest.</p>
+
+<p>But when Adonis had almost carried him to Don John's door, and pushed
+him into the room, and when he saw that the man he supposed to be dying was
+standing upright, holding a most beautiful lady by the hand, he drew back,
+seeing that he had been deceived, and suspecting that he was to be asked to
+do something for which he had no authority. The dwarf's long arm was behind
+him, however, and he could not escape.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the priest of the west tower, your Highness," said Adonis. "He
+is a good priest, but he is a little frightened now."</p>
+
+<p>"You need fear nothing," said Don John kindly. "I am Don John of
+Austria. This lady is Do&ntilde;a Maria Dolores de Mendoza. Marry us
+without delay. We take each other for man and wife."</p>
+
+<p>"But--" the little priest hesitated--"but, your Highness--the banns--or
+the bishop's license--"</p>
+
+<p>"I am above banns and licenses, my good sir," answered Don John, "and if
+there is anything lacking in the formalities, I take it upon myself to set
+all right to-morrow. I will protect you, never fear. Make haste, for I
+cannot wait. Begin, sir, lose no time, and take my word for the right of
+what you do."</p>
+
+<p>"The witnesses of this," faltered the old man, seeing that he must
+yield, but doubtful still.</p>
+
+<p>"This lady is Do&ntilde;a Inez de Mendoza," said Don John, "and this is
+Miguel de Antona, the court jester. They are sufficient."</p>
+
+<p>So it chanced that the witnesses of Don John of Austria's secret
+marriage were a blind girl and the King's fool.</p>
+
+<p>The aged priest cleared his throat and began to say the words in Latin,
+and Don John and Dolores held their clasped hands before him, not knowing
+what else to do, and each looked into the other's eyes and saw there the
+whole world that had any meaning for them, while the priest said things
+they but half understood, but that made the world's difference to them,
+then and afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>It was soon done, and he raised his trembling hand and blessed them,
+saying the words very softly and clearly and without stumbling, for they
+were familiar, and meant much; and having reached them, his haste was over.
+The dwarf was on his knees, his rough red head bent reverently low, and on
+the other side Inez knelt with joined hands, her blind eyes turned upward
+to her sister's face, while she prayed that all blessings of life and joy
+might be on the two she loved so well, and that they might have for ever
+and unbroken the infinite happiness she had felt for one instant that
+night, not meant for her, but dearer to her than all memories or hopes.</p>
+
+<p>Then as the priest's words died away in the silent room, there was a
+sound of many feet and of many voices on the terrace outside, coming nearer
+and nearer to the door, very quickly; and the priest looked round in
+terror, not knowing what new thing was to come upon him, and wishing with
+all his heart that he were safe in his tower room again and out of all
+harm's way. But Don John smiled, while he still held Dolores' hand, and the
+dwarf rose quickly and led the priest into the study where Dolores had been
+shut up so long, and closed the door behind him.</p>
+
+<p>That was hardly done when the outer door was opened wide, and a clear,
+formal voice was heard speaking outside.</p>
+
+<p>"His Majesty the King!" cried the chamberlain who walked before
+Philip.</p>
+
+<p>Dolores dropped Don John's hand and stood beside him, growing a little
+pale; but his face was serene and high, and he smiled quietly as he went
+forward to meet his brother. The King advanced also, with outstretched
+arms, and he formally embraced Don John, to exhibit his joy at such an
+unexpected recovery.</p>
+
+<p>Behind him came in torch-bearers and guards and many of the court who
+had joined the train, and in the front rank Mendoza, grim and erect, but no
+longer ashy pale, and Ruy Gomez with him, and the Princess of Eboli, and
+all the chief Grandees of Spain, filling the wide bedchamber from side to
+side with a flood of rich colour in which the little constellations of
+their jewels shone here and there with changing lights.</p>
+
+<p>Out of respect for the King they did not speak, and yet there was a soft
+sound of rejoicing in the room, and their very breathing was like a murmur
+of deep satisfaction. Then the King spoke, and all at once the silence was
+profound.</p>
+
+<p>"I wished to be the first to welcome my dear brother back to life," he
+said. "The court has been in mourning for you these two hours, and none has
+mourned you more deeply and sorrowfully than I. We would all know the cause
+of your Highness's accident, the meaning of our friend Mendoza's strange
+self-accusation, and of other things we cannot understand without a word
+from you."</p>
+
+<p>The chair in which Don John had sat to read Dolores' letter was brought
+forward, and the King took his seat in it, while the chief officers of the
+household grouped themselves round him. Don John remained standing, facing
+him and all the rest, while Dolores drew back a little into the shadow not
+far from him. The King's unmoving eyes watched him closely, even
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"The story is short, Sire, and if it is not all clear, I shall crave
+your Majesty's pardon for being silent on certain points which concern my
+private life. I was alone this evening in my room here, after your Majesty
+had left supper, and I was reading. A man came to visit me then whom I have
+known and trusted long. We were alone, we have had differences before,
+to-night sharp words passed between us. I ask your Majesty's permission not
+to name that man, for I would not do him an injury, though it should cost
+me my life."</p>
+
+<p>His eyes were fixed on the King, who slowly nodded his assent. He had
+known that he could trust his brother not to betray him, and he wondered
+what was to come next. Don John smiled a little as he went on.</p>
+
+<p>"There were sharp words," he said, "and being men, steel was soon out,
+and I received this scratch here--a mere nothing. But as chance would have
+it I fell backward and was so stunned that I seemed dead. And then, as I
+learn, my friend Mendoza there came in, either while we fought, or
+afterwards, and understood--and so, as I suppose, in generous fear for my
+good name, lest it should be told that I had been killed in some dishonest
+brawl, or for a woman's sake--my friend Mendoza, in the madness of
+generosity, and because my love for his beautiful daughter might give the
+tale some colour, takes all the blame upon himself, owns himself murderer,
+loses his wits, and well-nigh loses his head, too. So I understand the
+matter, Sire."</p>
+
+<p>He paused a moment, and again the King slowly nodded, but this time he
+smiled also, and seemed much pleased.</p>
+
+<p>"For what remains," Don John continued, "that is soon explained. This
+brave and noble lady whom you found here, you all know. I have loved her
+long and faithfully, and with all my heart. Those who know me, know that my
+word is good, and here before your Majesty, before man and before Heaven, I
+solemnly swear upon my most sacred word that no harm has ever come near
+her, by me, or by another. Yet, in the hope of saving her father's life,
+believing and yet not believing that he might have hurt me in some quarrel,
+she went among you, and told you the tale you know. I ask your Majesty to
+say that my word and oath are good, and thereby to give your Majesty's
+authority to what I say. And if there is any man here, or in Spain, among
+your Majesty's subjects, who doubts the word I give, let him say so, for
+this is a grave matter, and I wish to be believed before I say more."</p>
+
+<p>A third time the King nodded, and this time not ungraciously, since
+matters had gone well for him.</p>
+
+<p>"For myself," he said, "I would take your word against another man's
+oath, and I think there is no one bold enough to question what we both
+believe."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank your Majesty. And moreover, I desire permission to present to
+your Majesty--"</p>
+
+<p>He took Dolores' hand and drew her forward, though she came a little
+unwillingly, and was pale, and her deep grey eyes gazed steadily at the
+King's face.</p>
+
+<p>"--My wedded wife," said Don John, completing the sentence.</p>
+
+<p>"Your wife!" exclaimed the King, in great surprise. "Are you married
+already?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wedded man and wife, Sire," answered Don John, in tones that all could
+hear.</p>
+
+<p>"And what does Mendoza say to this?" asked Philip, looking round at the
+veteran soldier.</p>
+
+<p>"That his Highness has done my house a great honour, your Majesty; and I
+pray that my daughter and I be not needlessly separated hereafter."</p>
+
+<p>His glance went to Dolores' triumphant eyes almost timidly, and then
+rested on her face with a look she had never seen in his, save on that
+evening, but which she always found there afterwards. And at the same time
+the hard old man drew Inez close to him, for she had found him among the
+officers, and she stood by him and rested her arm on his with a new
+confidence.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as the King rose, there was a sound of glad voices in the room, as
+all talked at once and each told the other that an evil adventure was well
+ended, and that Don John of Austria was the bravest and the handsomest and
+the most honourable prince in the world, and that Maria Dolores de Mendoza
+had not her equal among women for beauty and high womanly courage and
+perfect devotion.</p>
+
+<p>But there were a few who were ill pleased; for Antonio Perez said
+nothing, and absently smoothed his black hair with his immaculate white
+hand, and the Princess of Eboli was very silent, too, for it seemed to her
+that Don John's sudden marriage, and his reconciliation with his brother,
+had set back the beginning of her plan beyond the bounds of possible
+accomplishment; and she was right in that, and the beginning of her
+resentment against Don John for having succeeded in marrying Dolores in
+spite of every one was the beginning of the chain that led her to her own
+dark fate. For though she held the cards long in her hands after that, and
+played for high stakes, as she had done before, fortune failed her at the
+last, and she came to unutterable ruin.</p>
+
+<p>It may be, too, that Don John's splendid destiny was measured on that
+night, and cut off beforehand, though his most daring fights were not yet
+fought, nor his greatest victories won. To tell more here would be to tell
+too much, and much, too, that is well told elsewhere. But this is true,
+that he loved Dolores with all his heart; that the marriage remained a
+court secret; and that she bore him one fair daughter, and died, and the
+child grew up under another reign, a holy nun, and was abbess of the
+convent of Las Huelgas whither Dolores was to have gone on the morning
+after that most eventful night.</p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13243 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>