<h2>CHAPTER V<br/> <span class="GutSmall">THE YOUNG FREIHERR</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Ermentrude von Adlerstein</span> slept
with her forefathers in the vaults of the hermitage chapel, and
Christina Sorel’s work was done.</p>
<p>Surely it was time for her to return home, though she should
be more sorry to leave the mountain castle than she could ever
have believed possible. She entreated her father to take
her home, but she received a sharp answer that she did not know
what she was talking of: the Schlangenwald Reitern were besetting
all the roads; and moreover the Ulm burghers had taken the
capture of the Constance wine in such dudgeon that for a retainer
of Adlerstein to show himself in the streets would be an absolute
asking for the wheel.</p>
<p>But was there any hope for her? Could he not take her to
some nunnery midway, and let her write to her uncle to fetch her
from thence?</p>
<p>He swore at woman’s pertinacity, but allowed at last
that if the plan, talked of by the Barons, of going to make their
submission to the Emperor at Linz, with a view to which all
violence at the ford had ceased, should hold good, it might be
possible thus to drop her on their way.</p>
<p>With this Christina must needs content herself. Poor
child, not only had Ermentrude’s death deprived her of the
sole object of her residence at Schloss Adlerstein, but it had
infinitely increased the difficulties of her position. No
one interfered with her possession of the upper room and its
turrets; and it was only at meal times that she was obliged to
mingle with the other inhabitants, who, for the most part,
absolutely overlooked the little shrinking pale maiden but with
one exception, and that the most perplexing of all. She had
been on terms with Freiherr Eberhard that were not so easily
broken off as if she had been an old woman of Ursel’s
age. All through his sister’s decline she had been
his comforter, assistant, director, living in intercourse and
sympathy that ought surely to cease when she was no longer his
sister’s attendant, yet which must be more than ever missed
in the full freshness of the stroke.</p>
<p>Even on the earliest day of bereavement, a sudden thought of
Hausfrau Johanna flashed upon Christina, and reminded her of the
guard she must keep over herself if she would return to Ulm the
same modest girl whom her aunt could acquit of all
indiscretion. Her cheeks flamed, as she sat alone, with the
very thought, and the next time she heard the well-known tread on
the stair, she fled hastily into her own turret chamber, and shut
the door. Her heart beat fast. She could hear Sir
Eberhard moving about the room, and listened to his heavy sigh as
he threw himself into the large chair. Presently he called
her by name, and she felt it needful to open her door and answer,
respectfully,</p>
<p>“What would you, my lord?”</p>
<p>“What would I? A little peace, and heed to her who
is gone. To see my father and mother one would think that a
partridge had but flown away. I have seen my father more
sorrowful when his dog had fallen over the abyss.”</p>
<p>“Mayhap there is more sorrow for a brute that cannot
live again,” said Christina. “Our bird has her
nest by an Altar that is lovelier and brighter than even our Dome
Kirk will ever be.”</p>
<p>“Sit down, Christina,” he said, dragging a chair
nearer the hearth. “My heart is sore, and I cannot
bear the din below. Tell me where my bird is
flown.”</p>
<p>“Ah! sir; pardon me. I must to the kitchen,”
said Christina, crossing her hands over her breast, to still her
trembling heart, for she was very sorry for his grief, but moving
resolutely.</p>
<p>“Must? And wherefore? Thou hast nought to do
there; speak truth! Why not stay with me?” and his
great light eyes opened wide.</p>
<p>“A burgher maid may not sit down with a noble
baron.”</p>
<p>“The devil! Has my mother been plaguing thee,
child?”</p>
<p>“No, my lord,” said Christina, “she reeks
not of me; but”—steadying her voice with great
difficulty—“it behoves me the more to be
discreet.”</p>
<p>“And you would not have me come here!” he said,
with a wistful tone of reproach.</p>
<p>“I have no power to forbid you; but if you do, I must
betake me to Ursel in the kitchen,” said Christina, very
low, trembling and half choked.</p>
<p>“Among the rude wenches there!” he cried, starting
up. “Nay, nay, that shall not be! Rather will I
go.”</p>
<p>“But this is very cruel of thee, maiden,” he
added, lingering, “when I give thee my knightly word that
all should be as when she whom we both loved was here,” and
his voice shook.</p>
<p>“It could not so be, my lord,” returned Christina
with drooping, blushing face; “it would not be maidenly in
me. Oh, my lord, you are kind and generous, make it not
hard for me to do what other maidens less lonely have friends to
do for them!”</p>
<p>“Kind and generous?” said Eberhard, leaning over
the back of the chair as if trying to begin a fresh score.
“This from you, who told me once I was no true
knight!”</p>
<p>“I shall call you a true knight with all my
heart,” cried Christina, the tears rushing into her eyes,
“if you will respect my weakness and loneliness.”</p>
<p>He stood up again, as if to move away; then paused, and,
twisting his gold chain, said, “And how am I ever to be
what the happy one bade me, if you will not show me
how?”</p>
<p>“My error would never show you the right,” said
Christina, with a strong effort at firmness, and retreating at
once through the door of the staircase, whence she made her way
to the kitchen, and with great difficulty found an excuse for her
presence there.</p>
<p>It had been a hard struggle with her compassion and gratitude,
and, poor little Christina felt with dismay, with something more
than these. Else why was it that, even while principle and
better sense summoned her back to Ulm, she experienced a deadly
weariness of the city-pent air, of the grave, heavy roll of the
river, nay, even of the quiet, well-regulated household?
Why did such a marriage as she had thought her natural destiny,
with some worthy, kind-hearted brother of the guild, become so
hateful to her that she could only aspire to a convent
life? This same burgomaster would be an estimable man, no
doubt, and those around her were ruffians, but she felt utterly
contemptuous and impatient of him. And why was the
interchange of greetings, the few words at meals, worth all the
rest of the day besides to her? Her own heart was the
traitor, and to her own sensations the poor little thing had, in
spirit at least, transgressed all Aunt Johanna’s precepts
against young Barons. She wept apart, and resolved, and
prayed, cruelly ashamed of every start of joy or pain that the
sight of Eberhard cost her. From almost the first he had
sat next her at the single table that accommodated the whole
household at meals, and the custom continued, though on some days
he treated her with sullen silence, which she blamed herself for
not rejoicing in, sometimes he spoke a few friendly words; but he
observed, better than she could have dared to expect, her test of
his true knighthood, and never again forced himself into her
apartment, though now and then he came to the door with flowers,
with mountain strawberries, and once with two young doves.
“Take them, Christina,” he said, “they are very
like yourself;” and he always delayed so long that she was
forced to be resolute, and shut the door on him at last.</p>
<p>Once, when there was to be a mass at the chapel, Hugh Sorel,
between a smile and a growl, informed his daughter that he would
take her thereto. She gladly prepared, and, bent on making
herself agreeable to her father, did not once press on him the
necessity of her return to Ulm. To her amazement and
pleasure, the young Baron was at church, and when on the way
home, he walked beside her mule, she could see no need of sending
him away.</p>
<p>He had been in no school of the conventionalities of life,
and, when he saw that Hugh Sorel’s presence had obtained
him this favour, he wistfully asked, “Christina, if I bring
your father with me, will you not let me in?”</p>
<p>“Entreat me not, my lord,” she answered, with
fluttering breath.</p>
<p>She felt the more that she was right in this decision, when
she encountered her father’s broad grin of surprise and
diversion, at seeing the young Baron help her to dismount.
It was a look of receiving an idea both new, comical, and
flattering, but by no means the look of a father who would resent
the indignity of attentions to his daughter from a man whose rank
formed an insuperable barrier to marriage.</p>
<p>The effect was a new, urgent, and most piteous entreaty, that
he would find means of sending her home. It brought upon
her the hearing put into words what her own feelings had long
shrunk from confessing to herself.</p>
<p>“Ah! Why, what now? What, is the young Baron
after thee? Ha! ha! petticoats are few enough up here, but
he must have been ill off ere he took to a little ghost like
thee! I saw he was moping and doleful, but I thought it was
all for his sister.”</p>
<p>“And so it is, father.”</p>
<p>“Tell me that, when he watches every turn of that dark
eye of thine—the only good thing thou took’st of
mine! Thou art a witch, Stina.”</p>
<p>“Hush, oh hush, for pity’s sake, father, and let
me go home!”</p>
<p>“What, thou likest him not? Thy mind is all for
the mincing goldsmith opposite, as I ever told thee.”</p>
<p>“My mind is—is to return to my uncle and aunt the
true-hearted maiden they parted with,” said Christina, with
clasped hands. “And oh, father, as you were the son
of a true and faithful mother, be a father to me now! Jeer
not your motherless child, but protect her and help
her.”</p>
<p>Hugh Sorel was touched by this appeal, and he likewise
recollected how much it was for his own interest that his brother
should be satisfied with the care he took of his daughter.
He became convinced that the sooner she was out of the castle the
better, and at length bethought him that, among the merchants who
frequented the Midsummer Fair at the Blessed Friedmund’s
Wake, a safe escort might be found to convey her back to Ulm.</p>
<p>If the truth were known, Hugh Sorel was not devoid of a
certain feeling akin to contempt, both for his young
master’s taste, and for his forbearance in not having
pushed matters further with a being so helpless, meek, and timid
as Christina, more especially as such slackness had not been his
wont in other cases where his fancy had been caught.</p>
<p>But Sorel did not understand that it was not physical beauty
that here had been the attraction, though to some persons, the
sweet, pensive eyes, the delicate, pure skin, the slight, tender
form, might seem to exceed in loveliness the fully developed
animal comeliness chiefly esteemed at Adlerstein. It was
rather the strangeness of the power and purity of this timid,
fragile creature, that had struck the young noble. With all
their brutal manners reverence for a lofty female nature had been
in the German character ever since their Velleda prophesied to
them, and this reverence in Eberhard bowed at the feet of the
pure gentle maiden, so strong yet so weak, so wistful and
entreating even in her resolution, refined as a white flower on a
heap of refuse, wise and dexterous beyond his slow and dull
conception, and the first being in whom he had ever seen piety or
goodness; and likewise with a tender, loving spirit of
consolation such as he had both beheld and tasted by his
sister’s deathbed.</p>
<p>There was almost a fear mingled with his reverence. If
he had been more familiar with the saints, he would thus have
regarded the holy virgin martyrs, nay, even Our Lady herself; and
he durst not push her so hard as to offend her, and excite the
anger or the grief that he alike dreaded. He was wretched
and forlorn without the resources he had found in his
sister’s room; the new and better cravings of his higher
nature had been excited only to remain unsupplied and
disappointed; and the affectionate heart in the freshness of its
sorrow yearned for the comfort that such conversation had
supplied: but the impression that had been made on him was still
such, that he knew that to use rough means of pressing his wishes
would no more lead to his real gratification than it would to
appropriate a snow-bell by crushing it in his gauntlet.</p>
<p>And it was on feeble little Christina, yielding in heart,
though not in will, that it depended to preserve this reverence,
and return unscathed from this castle, more perilous now than
ever.</p>
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