<h2>CHAPTER XX<br/> <span class="GutSmall">THE WOUNDED EAGLE</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> star and the spark in the
stubble! Often did the presage of her dream occur to
Christina, and assist in sustaining her hopes during the days
that Ebbo’s life hung in the balance, and he himself had
hardly consciousness to realize either his brother’s death
or his own state, save as much as was shown by the words,
“Let him not be taken away, mother; let him wait for
me.”</p>
<p>Friedmund did wait, in his coffin before the altar in the
castle chapel, covered with a pall of blue velvet, and great
white cross, mournfully sent by Hausfrau Johanna; his sword,
shield, helmet, and spurs laid on it, and wax tapers burning at
the head and feet. And, when Christina could leave the one
son on his couch of suffering, it was to kneel beside the other
son on his narrow bed of rest, and recall, like a breath of
solace, the heavenly loveliness and peace that rested on his
features when she had taken her last long look at them.</p>
<p>Moritz Schleiermacher assisted at Sir Friedmund’s first
solemn requiem, and then made a journey to Ulm, whence he
returned to find the Baron’s danger so much abated that he
ventured on begging for an interview with the lady, in which he
explained his purpose of repairing at once to the imperial camp,
taking with him a letter from the guilds concerned in the bridge,
and using his personal influence with Maximilian to obtain not
only pardon for the combat, but authoritative sanction to the
erection. Dankwart of Schlangenwald, the Teutonic knight,
and only heir of old Wolfgang, was supposed to be with the
Emperor, and it might be possible to come to terms with him,
since his breeding in the Prussian commanderies had kept him
aloof from the feuds of his father and brother. This
mournful fight had to a certain extent equalized the injuries on
either side, since the man whom Friedel had cut down was Hierom,
one of the few remaining scions of Schlangenwald, and there was
thus no dishonour in trying to close the deadly feud, and coming
to an amicable arrangement about the Debateable Strand, the cause
of so much bloodshed. What was now wanted was Freiherr
Eberhard’s signature to the letter to the Emperor, and his
authority for making terms with the new count; and haste was
needed, lest the Markgraf of Wurtemburg should represent the
affray in the light of an outrage against a member of the
League.</p>
<p>Christina saw the necessity, and undertook if possible to
obtain her son’s signature, but, at the first mention of
Master Moritz and the bridge, Ebbo turned away his head, groaned,
and begged to hear no more of either. He thought of his
bold declaration that the bridge must be built, even at the cost
of blood! Little did he then guess of whose blood!
And in his bitterness of spirit he felt a jealousy of that
influence of Schleiermacher, which had of late come between him
and his brother. He hated the very name, he said, and hid
his face with a shudder. He hoped the torrent would sweep
away every fragment of the bridge.</p>
<p>“Nay, Ebbo mine, wherefore wish ill to a good work that
our blessed one loved? Listen, and let me tell you my dream
for making yonder strand a peaceful memorial of our peaceful
boy.”</p>
<p>“To honour Friedel?” and he gazed on her with
something like interest in his eyes.</p>
<p>“Yes, Ebbo, and as he would best brook honour. Let
us seek for ever to end the rival claims to yon piece of meadow
by praying this knight of a religious order, the new count, to
unite with us in building there—or as near as may be
safe—a church of holy peace, and a cell for a priest, who
may watch over the bridge ward, and offer the holy sacrifice for
the departed of either house. There will we place our
gentle Friedel to be the first to guard the peace of the ford,
and there will we sleep ourselves when our time shall come, and
so may the cruel feud of many generations be slaked for
ever.”</p>
<p>“In his blood!” sighed Ebbo. “Ah!
would that it had been mine, mother. It is well, as well as
anything can be again. So shall the spot where he fell be
made sacred, and fenced from rude feet, and we shall see his fair
effigy keeping his armed watch there.”</p>
<p>And Christina was thankful to see his look of gratification,
sad though it was. She sat down near his bed, and began to
write a letter in their joint names to Graf Dankwart von
Schlangenwald, proposing that thus, after the even balance of the
wrongs of the two houses, their mutual hostility might be laid to
rest for ever by the consecration of the cause of their long
contention. It was a stiff and formal letter, full of the
set pious formularies of the age, scarcely revealing the deep
heart-feeling within; but it was to the purpose, and Ebbo, after
hearing it read, heartily approved, and consented to sign both it
and those that Schleiermacher had brought. Christina held
the scroll, and placed the pen in the fingers that had lately so
easily wielded the heavy sword, but now felt it a far greater
effort to guide the slender quill.</p>
<p>Moritz Schleiermacher went his way in search of the King of
the Romans, far off in Carinthia. A full reply could not be
expected till the campaign was over, and all that was known for
some time was through a messenger sent back to Ulm by
Schleiermacher with the intelligence that Maximilian would
examine into the matter after his return, and that Count Dankwart
would reply when he should come to perform his father’s
obsequies after the army was dispersed. There was also a
letter of kind though courtly condolence from Kasimir of
Wildschloss, much grieving for gallant young Sir Friedmund,
proffering all the advocacy he could give the cause of
Adlerstein, and covertly proffering the protection that she and
her remaining son might now be more disposed to accept.
Christina suppressed this letter, knowing it would only pain and
irritate Ebbo, and that she had her answer ready. Indeed,
in her grief for one son, and her anxiety for the other, perhaps
it was this letter that first made her fully realize the drift of
those earnest words of Friedel’s respecting his father.</p>
<p>Meantime the mother and son were alone together, with much of
suffering and of sorrow, yet with a certain tender comfort in the
being all in all to one another, with none to intermeddle with
their mutual love and grief. It was to Christina as if
something of Friedel’s sweetness had passed to his brother
in his patient helplessness, and that, while thus fully engrossed
with him, she had both her sons in one. Nay, in spite of
all the pain, grief, and weariness, these were times when both
dreaded any change, and the full recovery, when not only would
the loss of Friedel be every moment freshly brought home to his
brother, but when Ebbo would go in quest of his father.</p>
<p>For on this the young Baron had fixed his mind as a sacred
duty, from the moment he had seen that life was to be his
lot. He looked on his neglect of indications of the
possibility of his father’s life in the light of a sin that
had led to all his disasters, and not only regarded the intended
search as a token of repentance, but as a charge bequeathed to
him by his less selfish brother. He seldom spoke of his
intention, but his mother was perfectly aware of it, and never
thought of it without such an agony of foreboding dread as
eclipsed all the hope that lay beyond. She could only turn
away her mind from the thought, and be thankful for what was
still her own from day to day.</p>
<p>“Art weary, my son?” asked Christina one October
afternoon, as Ebbo lay on his bed, languidly turning the pages of
a noble folio of the Legends of the Saints that Master Gottfried
had sent for his amusement. It was such a book as fixed the
ardour a few years later of the wounded Navarrese knight, Inigo
de Loyola, but Ebbo handled it as if each page were lead.</p>
<p>“Only thinking how Friedel would have glowed towards
these as his own kinsmen,” said Ebbo. “Then
should I have cared to read of them!” and he gave a long
sigh.</p>
<p>“Let me take away the book,” she said.
“Thou hast read long, and it is dark.”</p>
<p>“So dark that there must surely be a
snow-cloud.”</p>
<p>“Snow is falling in the large flakes that our Friedel
used to call winter-butterflies.”</p>
<p>“Butterflies that will swarm and shut us in from the
weary world,” said Ebbo. “And alack! when they
go, what a turmoil it will be! Councils in the Rathhaus,
appeals to the League, wranglings with the Markgraf, wise saws,
overweening speeches, all alike dull and dead.”</p>
<p>“It will scarce be so when strength and spirit have
returned, mine Ebbo.”</p>
<p>“Never can life be more to me than the way to
him,” said the lonely boy; “and I—never like
him—shall miss the road without him.”</p>
<p>While he thus spoke in the listless dejection of sorrow and
weakness, Hatto’s aged step was on the stair.
“Gracious lady,” he said, “here is a huntsman
bewildered in the hills, who has been asking shelter from the
storm that is drifting up.”</p>
<p>“See to his entertainment, then, Hatto,” said the
lady.</p>
<p>“My lady—Sir Baron,” added Hatto, “I
had not come up but that this guest seems scarce gear for us
below. He is none of the foresters of our tract. His
hair is perfumed, his shirt is fine holland, his buff suit is of
softest skin, his baldric has a jewelled clasp, and his
arblast! It would do my lord baron’s heart good only
to cast eyes on the perfect make of that arblast! He has a
lordly tread, and a stately presence, and, though he has a free
tongue, and made friends with us as he dried his garments, he
asked after my lord like his equal.”</p>
<p>“O mother, must you play the chatelaine?” asked
Ebbo. “Who can the fellow be? Why did none ever
so come when they would have been more welcome?”</p>
<p>“Welcomed must he be,” said Christina, rising,
“and thy state shall be my excuse for not tarrying longer
with him than may be needful.”</p>
<p>Yet, though shrinking from a stranger’s face, she was
not without hope that the variety might wholesomely rouse her son
from his depression, and in effect Ebbo, when left with Hatto,
minutely questioned him on the appearance of the stranger, and
watched, with much curiosity, for his mother’s return.</p>
<p>“Ebbo mine,” she said, entering, after a long
interval, “the knight asks to see thee either after supper,
or to-morrow morn.”</p>
<p>“Then a knight he is?”</p>
<p>“Yea, truly, a knight truly in every look and gesture,
bearing his head like the leading stag of the herd, and yet right
gracious.”</p>
<p>“Gracious to you, mother, in your own hall?” cried
Ebbo, almost fiercely.</p>
<p>“Ah! jealous champion, thou couldst not take
offence! It was the manner of one free and courteous to
every one, and yet with an inherent loftiness that pervades
all.”</p>
<p>“Gives he no name?” said Ebbo.</p>
<p>“He calls himself Ritter Theurdank, of the suite of the
late Kaisar, but I should deem him wont rather to lead than to
follow.”</p>
<p>“Theurdank,” repeated Eberhard, “I know no
such name! So, motherling, are you going to sup? I
shall not sleep till I have seen him!”</p>
<p>“Hold, dear son.” She leant over him and
spoke low. “See him thou must, but let me first
station Heinz and Koppel at the door with halberts, not within
earshot, but thou art so entirely defenceless.”</p>
<p>She had the pleasure of seeing him laugh. “Less
defenceless than when the kinsman of Wildschloss here visited us,
mother? I see for whom thou takest him, but let it be so; a
spiritual knight would scarce wreak his vengeance on a wounded
man in his bed. I will not have him insulted with
precautions. If he has freely risked himself in my hands, I
will as freely risk myself in his. Moreover, I thought he
had won thy heart.”</p>
<p>“Reigned over it, rather,” said Christina.
“It is but the disguise that I suspect and mistrust.
Bid me not leave thee alone with him, my son.”</p>
<p>“Nay, dear mother,” said Ebbo, “the matters
on which he is like to speak will brook no presence save our own,
and even that will be hard enough to bear. So prop me more
upright! So! And comb out these locks somewhat
smoother. Thanks, mother. Now can he see whether he
will choose Eberhard of Adlerstein for friend or foe.”</p>
<p>By the time supper was ended, the only light in the upper room
came from the flickering flames of the fire of pine knots on the
hearth. It glanced on the pale features and dark sad eyes
of the young Baron, sad in spite of the eager look of scrutiny
that he turned on the figure that entered at the door, and
approached so quickly that the partial light only served to show
the gloss of long fair hair, the glint of a jewelled belt, and
the outline of a tall, well-knit, agile frame.</p>
<p>“Welcome, Herr Ritter,” he said; “I am sorry
we have been unable to give you a fitter reception.”</p>
<p>“No host could be more fully excused than you,”
said the stranger, and Ebbo started at his voice. “I
fear you have suffered much, and still have much to
suffer.”</p>
<p>“My sword wound is healing fast,” said Ebbo;
“it is the shot in my broken thigh that is so tedious and
painful.”</p>
<p>“And I dare be sworn the leeches made it worse. I
have hated all leeches ever since they kept me three days a
prisoner in a ’pothecary’s shop stinking with
drugs. Why, I have cured myself with one pitcher of water
of a raging fever, in their very despite! How did they
serve thee, my poor boy?”</p>
<p>“They poured hot oil into the wound to remove the venom
of the lead,” said Ebbo.</p>
<p>“Had it been my case the lead should have been in their
own brains first, though that were scarce needed, the
heavy-witted Hans Sausages. Why should there be more poison
in lead than in steel? I have asked all my surgeons that
question, nor ever had a reasonable answer. Greater havoc
of warriors do they make than ever with the arquebus—ay,
even when every lanzknecht bears one.”</p>
<p>“Alack!” Ebbo could not help exclaiming,
“where will be room for chivalry?”</p>
<p>“Talk not old world nonsense,” said Theurdank;
“chivalry is in the heart, not in the weapon. A youth
beforehand enough with the world to be building bridges should
know that, when all our troops are provided with such an arm,
then will their platoons in serried ranks be as a solid wall
breathing fire, and as impregnable as the lines of English
archers with long bows, or the phalanx of Macedon. And,
when each man bears a pistol instead of the misericorde, his life
will be far more his own.”</p>
<p>Ebbo’s face was in full light, and his visitor marked
his contracted brow and trembling lip. “Ah!” he
said, “thou hast had foul experience of these
weapons.”</p>
<p>“Not mine own hurt,” said Ebbo; “that was
but fair chance of war.”</p>
<p>“I understand,” said the knight; “it was the
shot that severed the goodly bond that was so fair to see.
Young man, none has grieved more truly than King Max.”</p>
<p>“And well he may,” said Ebbo. “He has
not lost merely one of his best servants, but all the better half
of another.”</p>
<p>“There is still stuff enough left to make that
<i>one</i> well worth having,” said Theurdank, kindly
grasping his hand, “though I would it were more
substantial! How didst get old Wolfgang down, boy? He
must have been a tough morsel for slight bones like these, even
when better covered than now. Come, tell me all. I
promised the Markgraf of Wurtemburg to look into the matter when
I came to be guest at St. Ruprecht’s cloister, and I have
some small interest too with King Max.”</p>
<p>His kindliness and sympathy were more effectual with Ebbo than
the desire to represent his case favourably, for he was still too
wretched to care for policy; but he answered Theurdank’s
questions readily, and explained how the idea of the bridge had
originated in the vigil beside the broken waggons.</p>
<p>“I hope,” said Theurdank, “the merchants
made up thy share? These overthrown goods are a seignorial
right of one or other of you lords of the bank.”</p>
<p>“True, Herr Ritter; but we deemed it unknightly to
snatch at what travellers lost by misfortune.”</p>
<p>“Freiherr Eberhard, take my word for it, while thou thus
holdest, all the arquebuses yet to be cut out of the Black Forest
will not mar thy chivalry. Where didst get these ways of
thinking?”</p>
<p>“My brother was a very St. Sebastian! My
mother—”</p>
<p>“Ah! her sweet wise face would have shown it, even had
not poor Kasimir of Adlerstein raved of her. Ah! lad, thou
hast crossed a case of true love there! Canst not brook
even such a gallant stepfather?”</p>
<p>“I may not,” said Ebbo, with spirit; “for
with his last breath Schlangenwald owned that my own father died
not at the hostel, but may now be alive as a Turkish
slave.”</p>
<p>“The devil!” burst out Theurdank.
“Well! that might have been a pretty mess! A Turkish
slave, saidst thou! What year chanced all this
matter—thy grandfather’s murder and all the
rest?”</p>
<p>“The year before my birth,” said Ebbo.
“It was in the September of 1475.”</p>
<p>“Ha!” muttered Theurdank, musing to himself;
“that was the year the dotard Schenk got his overthrow at
the fight of Rain on Sare from the Moslem. Some composition
was made by them, and old Wolfgang was not unlikely to have been
the go-between. So! Say on, young knight,” he
added, “let us to the matter in hand. How rose the
strife that kept back two troops from our—from the banner
of the empire?”</p>
<p>Ebbo proceeded with the narration, and concluded it just as
the bell now belonging to the chapel began to toll for compline,
and Theurdank prepared to obey its summons, first, however,
asking if he should send any one to the patient. Ebbo
thanked him, but said he needed no one till his mother should
come after prayers.</p>
<p>“Nay, I told thee I had some leechcraft. Thou art
weary, and must rest more entirely;”—and, giving him
little choice, Theurdank supported him with one arm while
removing the pillows that propped him, then laid him tenderly
down, saying, “Good night, and the saints bless thee, brave
young knight. Sleep well, and recover in spite of the
leeches. I cannot afford to lose both of you.”</p>
<p>Ebbo strove to follow mentally the services that were being
performed in the chapel, and whose “Amens” and louder
notes pealed up to him, devoid of the clear young tones that had
sung their last here below, but swelled by grand bass notes that
as much distracted Ebbo’s attention as the memory of his
guest’s conversation; and he impatiently awaited his
mother’s arrival.</p>
<p>At length, lamp in hand, she appeared with tears shining in
her eyes, and bending over him said,</p>
<p>“He hath done honour to our blessed one, my Ebbo; he
knelt by him, and crossed him with holy water, and when he led me
from the chapel he told me any mother in Germany might envy me my
two sons even now. Thou must love him now, Ebbo.”</p>
<p>“Love him as one loves one’s loftiest
model,” said Ebbo—“value the old castle the
more for sheltering him.”</p>
<p>“Hath he made himself known to thee?”</p>
<p>“Not openly, but there is only one that he can
be.”</p>
<p>Christina smiled, thankful that the work of pardon and
reconciliation had been thus softened by the personal qualities
of the enemy, whose conduct in the chapel had deeply moved
her.</p>
<p>“Then all will be well, blessedly well,” she
said.</p>
<p>“So I trust,” said Ebbo, “but the bell broke
our converse, and he laid me down as tenderly as—O mother,
if a father’s kindness be like his, I have truly somewhat
to regain.”</p>
<p>“Knew he aught of the fell bargain?” whispered
Christina.</p>
<p>“Not he, of course, save that it was a year of Turkish
inroads. He will speak more perchance to-morrow.
Mother, not a word to any one, nor let us betray our recognition
unless it be his pleasure to make himself known.”</p>
<p>“Certainly not,” said Christina, remembering the
danger that the household might revenge Friedel’s death if
they knew the foe to be in their power. Knowing as she did
that Ebbo’s admiration was apt to be enthusiastic, and
might now be rendered the more fervent by fever and solitude, she
was still at a loss to understand his dazzled, fascinated
state.</p>
<p>When Heinz entered, bringing the castle key, which was always
laid under the Baron’s pillow, Ebbo made a movement with
his hand that surprised them both, as if to send it
elsewhere—then muttered, “No, no, not till he reveals
himself,” and asked, “Where sleeps the
guest?”</p>
<p>“In the grandmother’s room, which we fitted for a
guest-chamber, little thinking who our first would be,”
said his mother.</p>
<p>“Never fear, lady; we will have a care to him,”
said Heinz, somewhat grimly.</p>
<p>“Yes, have a care,” said Ebbo, wearily; “and
take care all due honour is shown to him! Good night,
Heinz.”</p>
<p>“Gracious lady,” said Heinz, when by a sign he had
intimated to her his desire of speaking with her unobserved by
the Baron, “never fear; I know who the fellow is as well as
you do. I shall be at the foot of the stairs, and woe to
whoever tries to step up them past me.”</p>
<p>“There is no reason to apprehend treason, Heinz, yet to
be on our guard can do no harm.”</p>
<p>“Nay, lady, I could look to the gear for the oubliette
if you would speak the word.”</p>
<p>“For heaven’s sake, no, Heinz. This man has
come hither trusting to our honour, and you could not do your
lord a greater wrong, nor one that he could less pardon, than by
any attempt on our guest.”</p>
<p>“Would that he had never eaten our bread!”
muttered Heinz. “Vipers be they all, and who knows
what may come next?”</p>
<p>“Watch, watch, Heinz; that is all,” implored
Christina, “and, above all, not a word to any one
else.”</p>
<p>And Christina dismissed the man-at-arms gruff and sullen, and
herself retired ill at ease between fears of, and for, the
unwelcome guest whose strange powers of fascination had rendered
her, in his absence, doubly distrustful.</p>
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