<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<h2> BOOK THE FIRST </h2>
<h3> THE SOWING </h3>
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<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<h3> THE WOLF AND THE BADGER </h3>
<p>The time was in or about the year 1544, when the Emperor Charles V. ruled
the Netherlands, and our scene the city of Leyden.</p>
<p>Any one who has visited this pleasant town knows that it lies in the midst
of wide, flat meadows, and is intersected by many canals filled with Rhine
water. But now, as it was winter, near to Christmas indeed, the meadows
and the quaint gabled roofs of the city lay buried beneath a dazzling
sheet of snow, while, instead of boats and barges, skaters glided up and
down the frozen surface of the canals, which were swept for their
convenience. Outside the walls of the town, not far from the Morsch poort,
or gate, the surface of the broad moat which surrounded them presented a
sight as gay as it was charming. Just here one of the branches of the
Rhine ran into this moat, and down it came the pleasure-seekers in
sledges, on skates, or afoot. They were dressed, most of them, in their
best attire, for the day was a holiday set apart for a kind of skating
carnival, with sleighing matches, such games as curling, and other
amusements.</p>
<p>Among these merry folk might have been seen a young lady of two or three
and twenty years of age, dressed in a coat of dark green cloth trimmed
with fur, and close-fitting at the waist. This coat opened in front,
showing a broidered woollen skirt, but over the bust it was tightly
buttoned and surmounted by a stiff ruff of Brussels lace. Upon her head
she wore a high-crowned beaver hat, to which the nodding ostrich feather
was fastened by a jewelled ornament of sufficient value to show that she
was a person of some means. In fact, this lady was the only child of a sea
captain and shipowner named Carolus van Hout, who, whilst still a
middle-aged man, had died about a year before, leaving her heiress to a
very considerable fortune. This circumstance, with the added advantages of
a very pretty face, in which were set two deep and thoughtful grey eyes,
and a figure more graceful than was common among the Netherlander women,
caused Lysbeth van Hout to be much sought after and admired, especially by
the marriageable bachelors of Leyden.</p>
<p>On this occasion, however, she was unescorted except by a serving woman
somewhat older than herself, a native of Brussels, Greta by name, who in
appearance was as attractive as in manner she was suspiciously discreet.</p>
<p>As Lysbeth skated down the canal towards the moat many of the good
burghers of Leyden took off their caps to her, especially the young
burghers, one or two of whom had hopes that she would choose them to be
her cavalier for this day's fete. Some of the elders, also, asked her if
she would care to join their parties, thinking that, as she was an orphan
without near male relations, she might be glad of their protection in
times when it was wise for beautiful young women to be protected. With
this excuse and that, however, she escaped from them all, for Lysbeth had
already made her own arrangements.</p>
<p>At that date there was living in Leyden a young man of four or five and
twenty, named Dirk van Goorl, a distant cousin of her own. Dirk was a
native of the little town of Alkmaar, and the second son of one of its
leading citizens, a brass founder by trade. As in the natural course of
events the Alkmaar business would descend to his elder brother, their
father appointed him to a Leyden firm, in which, after eight or nine years
of hard work, he had become a junior partner. While he was still living,
Lysbeth's father had taken a liking to the lad, with the result that he
grew intimate at the house which, from the first, was open to him as a
kinsman. After the death of Carolus van Hout, Dirk had continued to visit
there, especially on Sundays, when he was duly and ceremoniously received
by Lysbeth's aunt, a childless widow named Clara van Ziel, who acted as
her guardian. Thus, by degrees, favoured with such ample opportunity, a
strong affection had sprung up between these two young people, although as
yet they were not affianced, nor indeed had either of them said a word of
open love to the other.</p>
<p>This abstinence may seem strange, but some explanation of their
self-restraint was to be found in Dirk's character. In mind he was
patient, very deliberate in forming his purposes, and very sure in
carrying them out. He felt impulses like other men, but he did not give
way to them. For two years or more he had loved Lysbeth, but being
somewhat slow at reading the ways of women he was not quite certain that
she loved him, and above everything on earth he dreaded a rebuff. Moreover
he knew her to be an heiress, and as his own means were still humble, and
his expectations from his father small, he did not feel justified in
asking her in marriage until his position was more assured. Had the
Captain Carolus still been living the case would have been different, for
then he could have gone to him. But he was dead, and Dirk's fine and
sensitive nature recoiled from the thought that it might be said of him
that he had taken advantage of the inexperience of a kinswoman in order to
win her fortune. Also deep down in his mind he had a sincerer and quite
secret reason for reticence, whereof more in its proper place.</p>
<p>Thus matters stood between these two. To-day, however, though only with
diffidence and after some encouragement from the lady, he had asked leave
to be his cousin's cavalier at the ice fete, and when she consented,
readily enough, appointed the moat as their place of meeting. This was
somewhat less than Lysbeth expected, for she wished his escort through the
town. But, when she hinted as much, Dirk explained that he would not be
able to leave the works before three o'clock, as the metal for a large
bell had been run into the casting, and he must watch it while it cooled.</p>
<p>So, followed only by her maid, Greta, Lysbeth glided lightly as a bird
down the ice path on to the moat, and across it, through the narrow cut,
to the frozen mere beyond, where the sports were to be held and the races
run. There the scene was very beautiful.</p>
<p>Behind her lay the roofs of Leyden, pointed, picturesque, and covered with
sheets of snow, while above them towered the bulk of the two great
churches of St. Peter and St. Pancras, and standing on a mound known as
the Burg, the round tower which is supposed to have been built by the
Romans. In front stretched the flat expanse of white meadows, broken here
and there by windmills with narrow waists and thin tall sails, and in the
distance, by the church towers of other towns and villages.</p>
<p>Immediately before her, in strange contrast to this lifeless landscape,
lay the peopled mere, fringed around with dead reeds standing so still in
the frosty air that they might have been painted things. On this mere half
the population of Leyden seemed to be gathered; at least there were
thousands of them, shouting, laughing, and skimming to and fro in their
bright garments like flocks of gay-plumaged birds. Among them, drawn by
horses with bells tied to their harness, glided many sledges of wickerwork
and wood mounted upon iron runners, their fore-ends fashioned to quaint
shapes, such as the heads of dogs or bulls, or Tritons. Then there were
vendors of cakes and sweetmeats, vendors of spirits also, who did a good
trade on this cold day. Beggars too were numerous, and among them
deformities, who, nowadays, would be hidden in charitable homes, slid
about in wooden boxes, which they pushed along with crutches. Lastly many
loafers had gathered there with stools for fine ladies to sit on while the
skates were bound to their pretty feet, and chapmen with these articles
for sale and straps wherewith to fasten them. To complete the picture the
huge red ball of the sun was sinking to the west, and opposite to it the
pale full moon began already to gather light and life.</p>
<p>The scene seemed so charming and so happy that Lysbeth, who was young, and
now that she had recovered from the shock of her beloved father's death,
light-hearted, ceased her forward movement and poised herself upon her
skates to watch it for a space. While she stood thus a little apart, a
woman came towards her from the throng, not as though she were seeking
her, but aimlessly, much as a child's toy-boat is driven by light,
contrary winds upon the summer surface of a pond.</p>
<p>She was a remarkable-looking woman of about thirty-five years of age, tall
and bony in make, with deep-set eyes, light grey of colour, that seemed
now to flash fiercely and now to waver, as though in memory of some great
dread. From beneath a coarse woollen cap a wisp of grizzled hair fell
across the forehead, where it lay like the forelock of a horse. Indeed,
the high cheekbones, scarred as though by burns, wide-spread nostrils and
prominent white teeth, whence the lips had strangely sunk away, gave the
whole countenance a more or less equine look which this falling lock
seemed to heighten. For the rest the woman was poorly and not too
plentifully clad in a gown of black woollen, torn and stained as though
with long use and journeys, while on her feet she wore wooden clogs, to
which were strapped skates that were not fellows, one being much longer
than the other.</p>
<p>Opposite to Lysbeth this strange, gaunt person stopped, contemplating her
with a dreamy eye. Presently she seemed to recognise her, for she said in
a quick, low voice, the voice of one who lives in terror of being
overheard:—</p>
<p>"That's a pretty dress of yours, Van Hout's daughter. Oh, yes, I know you;
your father used to play with me when I was a child, and once he kissed me
on the ice at just such a fete as this. Think of it! Kissed me, Martha the
Mare," and she laughed hoarsely, and went on: "Yes, well-warmed and
well-fed, and, without doubt, waiting for a gallant to kiss you"; here she
turned and waved her hand towards the people—"all well-warmed and
well-fed, and all with lovers and husbands and children to kiss. But I
tell you, Van Hout's daughter, as I have dared to creep from my hiding
hole in the great lake to tell all of them who will listen, that unless
they cast out the cursed Spaniard, a day shall come when the folk of
Leyden must perish by thousands of hunger behind those walls. Yes, yes,
unless they cast out the cursed Spaniard and his Inquisition. Oh, I know
him, I know him, for did they not make me carry my own husband to the
stake upon my back? And have you heard why, Van Hout's daughter? Because
what I had suffered in their torture-dens had made my face—yes, mine
that once was so beautiful—like the face of a horse, and they said
that 'a horse ought to be ridden.'"</p>
<p>Now, while this poor excited creature, one of a whole class of such people
who in those sad days might be found wandering about the Netherlands crazy
with their griefs and sufferings, and living only for revenge, poured out
these broken sentences, Lysbeth, terrified, shrank back before her. As she
shrank the other followed, till presently Lysbeth saw her expression of
rage and hate change to one of terror. In another instant, muttering
something about a request for alms which she did not wait to receive, the
woman had wheeled round and fled away as fast as her skates would carry
her—which was very fast indeed.</p>
<p>Turning about to find what had frightened her, Lysbeth saw standing on the
bank of the mere, so close that she must have overheard every word, but
behind the screen of a leafless bush, a tall, forbidding-looking woman,
who held in her hand some broidered caps which apparently she was offering
for sale. These caps she began to slowly fold up and place one by one in a
hide satchel that was hung about her shoulders. All this while she was
watching Lysbeth with her keen black eyes, except when from time to time
she took them off her to follow the flight of that person who had called
herself the Mare.</p>
<p>"You keep ill company, lady," said the cap-seller in a harsh voice.</p>
<p>"It was none of my seeking," answered Lysbeth, astonished into making a
reply.</p>
<p>"So much the better for you, lady, although she seemed to know you and to
know also that you would listen to her song. Unless my eyes deceived me,
which is not often, that woman is an evil-doer and a worker of magic like
her dead husband Van Muyden; a heretic, a blasphemer of the Holy Church, a
traitor to our Lord the Emperor, and one," she added with a snarl, "with a
price upon her head that before night will, I hope, be in Black Meg's
pocket." Then, walking with long firm steps towards a fat man who seemed
to be waiting for her, the tall, black-eyed pedlar passed with him into
the throng, where Lysbeth lost sight of them.</p>
<p>Lysbeth watched them go, and shivered. To her knowledge she had never seen
this woman before, but she knew enough of the times they lived in to be
sure that she was a spy of the priests. Already there were such creatures
moving about in every gathering, yes, and in many a private place, who
were paid to obtain evidence against suspected heretics. Whether they won
it by fair means or by foul mattered not, provided they could find
something, and it need be little indeed, to justify the Inquisition in
getting to its work.</p>
<p>As for the other woman, the Mare, doubtless she was one of those wicked
outcasts, accursed by God and man, who were called heretics; people who
said dreadful things about the Pope and the Church and God's priests,
having been misled and stirred up thereto by a certain fiend in human form
named Luther. Lysbeth shuddered at the thought and crossed herself, for in
those days she was an excellent Catholic. Yet the wanderer said that she
had known her father, so that she must be as well born as herself—and
then that dreadful story—no, she could not bear to think of it. But
of course heretics deserved all these things; of that there could be no
doubt whatever, for had not her father confessor told her that thus alone
might their souls be saved from the grasp of the Evil One?</p>
<p>The thought was comforting, still Lysbeth felt upset, and not a little
rejoiced when she saw Dirk van Goorl skating towards her accompanied by
another young man, also a cousin of her own on her mother's side who was
destined in days to come to earn himself an immortal renown—young
Pieter van de Werff. The two took off their bonnets to her, Dirk van Goorl
revealing in the act a head of fair hair beneath which his steady blue
eyes shone in a rather thick-set, self-contained face. Lysbeth's temper,
always somewhat quick, was ruffled, and she showed it in her manner.</p>
<p>"I thought, cousins, that we were to meet at three, and the kirk clock
yonder has just chimed half-past," she said, addressing them both, but
looking—not too sweetly—at Dirk van Goorl.</p>
<p>"That's right, cousin," answered Pieter, a pleasant-faced and alert young
man, "look at <i>him</i>, scold <i>him</i>, for he is to blame. Ever since
a quarter past two have I—I who must drive a sledge in the great
race and am backed to win—been waiting outside that factory in the
snow, but, upon my honour, he did not appear until seven minutes since.
Yes, we have done the whole distance in seven minutes, and I call that
very good skating."</p>
<p>"I thought as much," said Lysbeth. "Dirk can only keep an appointment with
a church bell or a stadhuis chandelier."</p>
<p>"It was not my fault," broke in Dirk in his slow voice; "I have my
business to attend. I promised to wait until the metal had cooled
sufficiently, and hot bronze takes no account of ice-parties and sledge
races."</p>
<p>"So I suppose that you stopped to blow on it, cousin. Well, the result is
that, being quite unescorted, I have been obliged to listen to things
which I did not wish to hear."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" asked Dirk, taking fire at once.</p>
<p>Then she told them something of what the woman who called herself the Mare
had said to her, adding, "Doubtless the poor creature is a heretic and
deserves all that has happened to her. But it is dreadfully sad, and I
came here to enjoy myself, not to be sad."</p>
<p>Between the two young men there passed a glance which was full of meaning.
But it was Dirk who spoke. The other, more cautious, remained silent.</p>
<p>"Why do you say that, Cousin Lysbeth?" he asked in a new voice, a voice
thick and eager. "Why do you say that she deserves all that can happen to
her? I have heard of this poor creature who is called Mother Martha, or
the Mare, although I have never seen her myself. She was noble-born, much
better born than any of us three, and very fair—once they called her
the Lily of Brussels—when she was the Vrouw van Muyden, and she has
suffered dreadfully, for one reason only, because she and hers did not
worship God as you worship Him."</p>
<p>"As we worship Him," broke in Van de Werff with a cough.</p>
<p>"No," answered Dirk sullenly, "as our Cousin Lysbeth van Hout worships
Him. For that reason only they killed her husband and her little son, and
drove her mad, so that she lives among the reeds of the Haarlemer Meer
like a beast in its den; yes, they, the Spaniards and their Spanish
priests, as I daresay that they will kill us also."</p>
<p>"Don't you think that it is getting rather cold standing here?"
interrupted Pieter van de Werff before she could answer. "Look, the sledge
races are just beginning. Come, cousin, give me your hand," and, taking
Lysbeth by the arm, he skated off into the throng, followed at a distance
by Dirk and the serving-maid, Greta.</p>
<p>"Cousin," he whispered as he went, "this is not my place, it is Dirk's
place, but I pray you as you love him—I beg your pardon—as you
esteem a worthy relative—do not enter into a religious argument with
him here in public, where even the ice and sky are two great ears. It is
not safe, little cousin, I swear to you that it is not safe."</p>
<p>In the centre of the mere the great event of the day, the sledge races,
were now in progress. As the competitors were many these must be run in
heats, the winners of each heat standing on one side to compete in the
final contest. Now these victors had a pretty prerogative not unlike that
accorded to certain dancers in the cotillion of modern days. Each driver
of a sledge was bound to carry a passenger in the little car in front of
him, his own place being on the seat behind, whence he directed the horse
by means of reins supported upon a guide-rod so fashioned that it lifted
them above the head of the traveller in the car. This passenger he could
select from among the number of ladies who were present at the games;
unless, indeed, the gentleman in charge of her chose to deny him in set
form; namely, by stepping forward and saying in the appointed phrase, "No,
for this happy hour she is mine."</p>
<p>Among the winners of these heats was a certain Spanish officer, the Count
Don Juan de Montalvo, who, as it chanced, in the absence on leave of his
captain, was at that date the commander of the garrison at Leyden. He was
a man still young, only about thirty indeed, reported to be of noble
birth, and handsome in the usual Castilian fashion. That is to say, he was
tall, of a graceful figure, dark-eyed, strong-featured, with a somewhat
humorous expression, and of very good if exaggerated address. As he had
but recently come to Leyden, very little was known about this attractive
cavalier beyond that he was well spoken of by the priests and, according
to report, a favourite with the Emperor. Also the ladies admired him much.</p>
<p>For the rest everything about him was handsome like his person, as might
be expected in the case of a man reputed to be as rich as he was noble.
Thus his sledge was shaped and coloured to resemble a great black wolf
rearing itself up to charge. The wooden head was covered in wolf skin and
adorned by eyes of yellow glass and great fangs of ivory. Round the neck
also ran a gilded collar hung with a silver shield, whereon were painted
the arms of its owner, a knight striking the chains from off a captive
Christian saint, and the motto of the Montalvos, "Trust to God and me."
His black horse, too, of the best breed, imported from Spain, glittered in
harness decorated with gilding, and bore a splendid plume of dyed feathers
rising from the head-band.</p>
<p>Lysbeth happened to be standing near to the spot where this gallant had
halted after his first victory. She was in the company of Dirk van Goorl
alone—for as he was the driver of one of the competing sledges, her
other cousin, Pieter van de Werff, had now been summoned away. Having
nothing else to do at the moment, she approached and not unnaturally
admired this brilliant equipage, although in truth it was the sledge and
the horse rather than their driver which attracted her attention. As for
the Count himself she knew him slightly, having been introduced to and
danced a measure with him at a festival given by a grandee of the town. On
that occasion he was courteous to her in the Spanish fashion, rather too
courteous, she thought, but as this was the manner of Castilian dons when
dealing with burgher maidens she paid no more attention to the matter.</p>
<p>The Captain Montalvo saw Lysbeth among the throng and recognised her, for
he lifted his plumed hat and bowed to her with just that touch of
condescension which in those days a Spaniard showed when greeting one whom
he considered his inferior. In the sixteenth century it was understood
that all the world were the inferiors to those whom God had granted to be
born in Spain, the English who rated themselves at a valuation of their
own—and were careful to announce the fact—alone excepted.</p>
<p>An hour or so later, after the last heat had been run, a steward of the
ceremonies called aloud to the remaining competitors to select their
passengers and prepare for the final contest. Accordingly each Jehu,
leaving his horse in charge of an attendant, stepped up to some young lady
who evidently was waiting for him, and led her by the hand to his sledge.
While Lysbeth was watching this ceremony with amusement—for these
selections were always understood to show a strong preference on behalf of
the chooser for the chosen—she was astonished to hear a well-trained
voice addressing her, and on looking up to see Don Juan de Montalvo bowing
almost to the ice.</p>
<p>"Senora," he said in Castilian, a tongue which Lysbeth understood well
enough, although she only spoke it when obliged, "unless my ears deceived
me, I heard you admiring my horse and sledge. Now, with the permission of
your cavalier," and he bowed courteously to Dirk, "I name you as my
passenger for the great race, knowing that you will bring me fortune. Have
I your leave, Senor?"</p>
<p>Now if there was a people on earth whom Dirk van Goorl hated, the
Spaniards were that people, and if there lived a cavalier who he would
prefer should not take his cousin Lysbeth for a lonely drive, that
cavalier was the Count Juan de Montalvo. But as a young man, Dirk was
singularly diffident and so easily confused that on the spur of the moment
it was quite possible for a person of address to make him say what he did
not mean. Thus, on the present occasion, when he saw this courtly Spaniard
bowing low to him, a humble Dutch tradesman, he was overwhelmed, and
mumbled in reply, "Certainly, certainly."</p>
<p>If a glance could have withered him, without doubt Dirk would immediately
have been shrivelled to nothing. To say that Lysbeth was angry is too
little, for in truth she was absolutely furious. She did not like this
Spaniard, and hated the idea of a long interview with him alone. Moreover,
she knew that among her fellow townspeople there was a great desire that
the Count should not win this race, which in its own fashion was the event
of the year, whereas, if she appeared as his companion it would be
supposed that she was anxious for his success. Lastly—and this was
the chiefest sore—although in theory the competitors had a right to
ask any one to whom they took a fancy to travel in their sledges, in
practise they only sought the company of young women with whom they were
on the best of terms, and who were already warned of their intention.</p>
<p>In an instant these thoughts flashed through her mind, but all she did was
to murmur something about the Heer van Goorl——</p>
<p>"Has already given his consent, like an unselfish gentleman," broke in
Captain Juan tendering her his hand.</p>
<p>Now, without absolutely making a scene, which then, as to-day, ladies
considered an ill-bred thing to do, there was no escape, since half Leyden
gathered at these "sledge choosings," and many eyes were on her and the
Count. Therefore, because she must, Lysbeth took the proferred hand, and
was led to the sledge, catching, as she passed to it through the throng,
more than one sour look from the men and more than one exclamation of
surprise, real or affected, on the lips of the ladies of her acquaintance.
These manifestations, however, put her upon her mettle. So determining
that at least she would not look sullen or ridiculous, she began to enter
into the spirit of the adventure, and smiled graciously while the Captain
Montalvo wrapped a magnificent apron of wolf skins about her knees.</p>
<p>When all was ready her charioteer took the reins and settled himself upon
the little seat behind the sleigh, which was then led into line by a
soldier servant.</p>
<p>"Where is the course, Senor?" Lysbeth asked, hoping that it would be a
short one.</p>
<p>But in this she was to be disappointed, for he answered:</p>
<p>"Up to the little Quarkel Mere, round the island in the middle of it, and
back to this spot, something over a league in all. Now, Senora, speak to
me no more at present, but hold fast and have no fear, for at least I
drive well, and my horse is sure-footed and roughed for ice. This is a
race that I would give a hundred gold pieces to win, since your
countrymen, who contend against me, have sworn that I shall lose it, and I
tell you at once, Senora, that grey horse will press me hard."</p>
<p>Following the direction of his glance, Lysbeth's eye lit upon the next
sledge. It was small, fashioned and painted to resemble a grey badger,
that silent, stubborn, and, if molested, savage brute, which will not
loose its grip until the head is hacked from off its body. The horse,
which matched it well in colour, was of Flemish breed; rather a raw-boned
animal, with strong quarters and an ugly head, but renowned in Leyden for
its courage and staying power. What interested Lysbeth most, however, was
to discover that the charioteer was none other than Pieter van de Werff,
though now when she thought of it, she remembered he had told her that his
sledge was named the Badger. In his choice of passenger she noted, too,
not without a smile, that he showed his cautious character, disdainful of
any immediate glory, so long as the end in view could be attained. For
there in the sleigh sat no fine young lady, decked out in brave attire,
who might be supposed to look at him with tender eyes, but a little
fair-haired mate aged nine, who was in fact his sister. As he explained
afterwards, the rules provided that a lady passenger must be carried, but
said nothing of her age and weight.</p>
<p>Now the competitors, eight of them, were in a line, and coming forward,
the master of the course, in a voice that every one might hear, called out
the conditions of the race and the prize for which it was to be run, a
splendid glass goblet engraved with the cross-keys, the Arms of Leyden.
This done, after asking if all were ready, he dropped a little flag,
whereon the horses were loosed and away they went.</p>
<p>Before a minute had passed, forgetting all her doubts and annoyances,
Lysbeth was lost in the glorious excitement of the moment. Like birds in
the heavens, cleaving the keen, crisp air, they sped forward over the
smooth ice. The gay throng vanished, the dead reeds and stark bushes
seemed to fly away from them. The only sounds in their ears were the
rushing of the wind, the swish of the iron runners, and the hollow tapping
of the hooves of their galloping horses. Certain sledges drew ahead in the
first burst, but the Wolf and the Badger were not among these. The Count
de Montalvo was holding in his black stallion, and as yet the grey Flemish
gelding looped along with a constrained and awkward stride. When, passing
from the little mere, they entered the straight of the canal, these two
were respectively fourth and fifth. Up the course they sped, through a
deserted snow-clad country, past the church of the village of Alkemaade.
Now, half a mile or more away appeared the Quarkel Mere, and in the centre
of it the island which they must turn. They reached it, they were round
it, and when their faces were once more set homewards, Lysbeth noted that
the Wolf and the Badger were third and fourth in the race, some one having
dropped behind. Half a mile more and they were second and third; another
half mile and they were first and second with perhaps a mile to go. Then
the fight began.</p>
<p>Yard by yard the speed increased, and yard by yard the black stallion drew
ahead. Now in front of them lay a furlong or more of bad ice encumbered
with lumps of frozen snow that had not been cleared away, which caused the
sleigh to shake and jump as it struck. Lysbeth looked round.</p>
<p>"The Badger is coming up," she said.</p>
<p>Montalvo heard, and for the first time laid his whip upon the haunches of
his horse, which answered gallantly. But still the Badger came up. The
grey was the stronger beast, and had begun to put out his strength.
Presently his ugly head was behind them, for Lysbeth felt the breath from
his nostrils blowing on her, and saw their steam. Then it was past, for
the steam blew back into her face; yes, and she could see the eager eyes
of the child in the grey sledge. Now they were neck and neck, and the
rough ice was done with. Six hundred yards away, not more, lay the goal,
and all about them, outside the line of the course, were swift skaters
travelling so fast that their heads were bent forward and down to within
three feet of the ice.</p>
<p>Van de Werff called to his horse, and the grey began to gain. Montalvo
lashed the stallion, and once more they passed him. But the black was
failing, and he saw it, for Lysbeth heard him curse in Spanish. Then of a
sudden, after a cunning glance at his adversary, the Count pulled upon the
right rein, and a shrill voice rose upon the air, the voice of the little
girl in the other sledge.</p>
<p>"Take care, brother," it cried, "he will overthrow us."</p>
<p>True enough, in another moment the black would have struck the grey
sideways. Lysbeth saw Van de Werff rise from his seat and throw his weight
backward, dragging the grey on to his haunches. By an inch—not more—the
Wolf sleigh missed the gelding. Indeed, one runner of it struck his hoof,
and the high wood work of the side brushed and cut his nostril.</p>
<p>"A foul, a foul!" yelled the skaters, and it was over. Once more they were
speeding forward, but now the black had a lead of at least ten yards, for
the grey must find his stride again. They were in the straight; the course
was lined with hundreds of witnesses, and from the throats of every one of
them arose a great cry, or rather two cries.</p>
<p>"The Spaniard, the Spaniard wins!" said the first cry that was answered by
another and a deeper roar.</p>
<p>"No, Hollander, the Hollander! The Hollander comes up!"</p>
<p>Then in the midst of the fierce excitement—bred of the excitement
perhaps—some curious spell fell upon the mind of Lysbeth. The race,
its details, its objects, its surroundings faded away; these physical
things were gone, and in place of them was present a dream, a spiritual
interpretation such as the omens and influences of the times she lived in
might well inspire. What did she seem to see?</p>
<p>She saw the Spaniard and the Hollander striving for victory, but not a
victory of horses. She saw the black Spanish Wolf, at first triumphant,
outmatch the Netherland Badger. Still, the Badger, the dogged Dutch
badger, held on.</p>
<p>Who would win? The fierce beast or the patient beast? Who would be the
master in this fight? There was death in it. Look, the whole snow was red,
the roofs of Leyden were red, and red the heavens; in the deep hues of the
sunset they seemed bathed in blood, while about her the shouts of the
backers and factions transformed themselves into a fierce cry as of
battling peoples. All voices mingled in that cry—voices of hope, of
agony, and of despair; but she could not interpret them. Something told
her that the interpretation and the issue were in the mind of God alone.</p>
<p>Perhaps she swooned, perhaps she slept and dreamed this dream; perhaps the
sharp rushing air overcame her. At the least Lysbeth's eyes closed and her
mind gave way. When they opened and it returned again their sledge was
rushing past the winning post. But in front of it travelled another
sledge, drawn by a gaunt grey horse, which galloped so hard that its belly
seemed to lie upon the ice, a horse driven by a young man whose face was
set like steel and whose lips were as the lips of a trap.</p>
<p>Could that be the face of her cousin Pieter van de Werff, and, if so, what
passion had stamped that strange seal thereon? She turned herself in her
seat and looked at him who drove her.</p>
<p>Was this a man, or was it a spirit escaped from doom? Blessed Mother of
Christ! what a countenance! The eyeballs starting and upturned, nothing
but the white of them to be seen; the lips curled, and, between, two lines
of shining fangs; the lifted points of the mustachios touching the high
cheekbones. No—no, it was neither a spirit nor a man, she knew now
what it was; it was the very type and incarnation of the Spanish Wolf.</p>
<p>Once more she seemed to faint, while in her ears there rang the cry—"The
Hollander! Outstayed! Outstayed! Conquered is the accursed Spaniard!"</p>
<p>Then Lysbeth knew that it was over, and again the faintness overpowered
her.</p>
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