<h2>CHAPTER XXII<br/> <span class="GutSmall">PEACE</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Slowly</span> and painfully did Ebbo
recover from his swoon, feeling as if the means of revival were
rending him away from his brother. He was so completely
spent that he was satisfied with a mere assurance that nothing
was amiss, and presently dropped into a profound slumber, whence
he awoke to find it still broad daylight, and his mother sitting
by the side of his bed, all looking so much as it had done for
the last six weeks, that his first inquiry was if all that had
happened had been but a strange dream. His mother would
scarcely answer till she had satisfied herself that his eye was
clear, his voice steady, his hand cool, and that, as she said,
“That Kaisar had done him no harm.”</p>
<p>“Ah, then it was true! Where is he?
Gone?” cried Ebbo, eagerly.</p>
<p>“No, in the hall below, busy with letters they have
brought him. Lie still, my boy; he has done thee quite
enough damage for one day.”</p>
<p>“But, mother, what are you saying! Something
disloyal, was it not?”</p>
<p>“Well, Ebbo, I was very angry that he should have half
killed you when he could so easily have spoken one word.
Heaven forgive me if I did wrong, but I could not help
it.”</p>
<p>“Did <i>he</i> forgive you, mother?” said Ebbo,
anxiously.</p>
<p>“He—oh yes. To do him justice he was greatly
concerned; devised ways of restoring thee, and now has promised
not to come near thee again without my leave,” said the
mother, quite as persuaded of her own rightful sway in her
son’s sick chamber as ever Kunigunde had been of her
dominion over the castle.</p>
<p>“And is he displeased with me? Those cowardly
vindictive rascals, to fall on him, and set me at nought!
Before him, too!” exclaimed Ebbo, bitterly.</p>
<p>“Nay, Ebbo, he thought thy part most gallant. I
heard him say so, not only to me, but below stairs—both
wise and true. Thou didst know him then?”</p>
<p>“From the first glance of his princely eye—the
first of his keen smiles. I had seen him disguised
before. I thought you knew him too, mother; I never guessed
that your mind was running on Schlangenwald when we talked at
cross purposes last night.”</p>
<p>“Would that I had; but though I breathed no word openly,
I encouraged Heinz’s precautions. My boy, I could not
help it; my heart would tremble for my only one, and I saw he
could not be what he seemed.”</p>
<p>“And what doth he here? Who were the men who were
advancing?”</p>
<p>“They were the followers he had left at St.
Ruprecht’s, and likewise Master Schleiermacher and Sir
Kasimir of Wildschloss.”</p>
<p>“Ha!”</p>
<p>“What—he had not told thee?”</p>
<p>“No. He knew that I knew him, was at no pains to
disguise himself, yet evidently meant me to treat him as a
private knight. But what brought Wildschloss
here?”</p>
<p>“It seems,” said Christina, “that, on the
return from Carinthia, the Kaisar expressed his intention of
slipping away from his army in his own strange fashion, and
himself inquiring into the matter of the Ford. So he took
with him his own personal followers, the new Graf von
Schlangenwald, Herr Kasimir, and Master Schleiermacher. The
others he sent to Schlangenwald; he himself lodged at St.
Ruprecht’s, appointing that Sir Kasimir should meet him
there this morning. From the convent he started on a
chamois hunt, and made his way hither; but, when the snow came
on, and he returned not, his followers became uneasy, and came in
search of him.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” said Ebbo, “he meant to intercede for
Wildschloss—it might be he would have tried his
power. No, for that he is too generous. How looked
Wildschloss, mother?”</p>
<p>“How could I tell how any one looked save thee, my poor
wan boy? Thou art paler than ever! I cannot have any
king or kaisar of them all come to trouble thee.”</p>
<p>“Nay, motherling, there is much more trouble and unrest
to me in not knowing how my king will treat us after such a
requital! Prithee let him know that I am at his
service.”</p>
<p>And, after having fed and refreshed her patient, the gentle
potentate of his chamber consented to intimate her consent to
admit the invader. But not till after delay enough to fret
the impatient nerves of illness did Maximilian appear, handing
her in, and saying, in the cheery voice that was one of his chief
fascinations,</p>
<p>“Yea, truly, fair dame, I know thou wouldst sooner trust
Schlangenwald himself than me alone with thy charge. How
goes it, my true knight?”</p>
<p>“Well, right well, my liege,” said Ebbo,
“save for my shame and grief.”</p>
<p>“Thou art the last to be ashamed for that,” said
the good-natured prince. “Have I never seen my
faithful vassals more bent on their own feuds than on my
word?—I who reign over a set of kings, who brook no will
but their own.”</p>
<p>“And may we ask your pardon,” said Ebbo,
“not only for ourselves, but for the misguided
men-at-arms?”</p>
<p>“What! the grewsome giant that was prepared with the
axe, and the honest lad that wanted to do his duty by his
father? I honour that lad, Freiherr; I would enrol him in
my guard, but that probably he is better off here than with
<i>Massimiliano pochi danari</i>, as the Italians call me.
But what I came hither to say was this,” and he spoke
gravely: “thou art sincere in desiring reconciliation with
the house of Schlangenwald?”</p>
<p>“With all my heart,” said Ebbo, “do I loathe
the miserable debt of blood for blood!”</p>
<p>“And,” said Maximilian, “Graf Dankwart is of
like mind. Bred from pagedom in his Prussian commandery, he
has never been exposed to the irritations that have fed the
spirit of strife, and he will be thankful to lay it aside.
The question next is how to solemnize this reconciliation, ere
your retainers on one side or the other do something to set you
by the ears together again, which, judging by this
morning’s work, is not improbable.”</p>
<p>“Alas! no,” said Ebbo, “while I am laid
by.”</p>
<p>“Had you both been in our camp, you should have sworn
friendship in my chapel. Now must Dankwart come hither to
thee, as I trow he had best do, while I am here to keep the
peace. See, friend Ebbo, we will have him here to-morrow;
thy chaplain shall deck the altar here, the Father Abbot shall
say mass, and ye shall swear peace and brotherhood before
me. And,” he added, taking Ebbo’s hand,
“I shall know how to trust thine oaths as of one who sets
the fear of God above that of his king.”</p>
<p>This was truly the only chance of impressing on the wild
vassals of the two houses an obligation that perhaps might
override their ancient hatred; and the Baron and his mother
gladly submitted to the arrangement. Maximilian withdrew to
give directions for summoning the persons required and Christina
was soon obliged to leave her son, while she provided for her
influx of guests.</p>
<p>Ebbo was alone till nearly the end of the supper below
stairs. He had been dozing, when a cautious tread came up
the turret steps, and he started, and called out, “Who goes
there? I am not asleep.”</p>
<p>“It is your kinsman, Freiherr,” said a well-known
voice; “I come by your mother’s leave.”</p>
<p>“Welcome, Sir Cousin,” said Ebbo, holding out his
hand. “You come to find everything
changed.”</p>
<p>“I have knelt in the chapel,” said Wildschloss,
gravely.</p>
<p>“And he loved you better than I!” said Ebbo.</p>
<p>“Your jealousy of me was a providential thing, for which
all may be thankful,” said Wildschloss gravely; “yet
it is no small thing to lose the hope of so many years!
However, young Baron, I have grave matter for your
consideration. Know you the service on which I am to be
sent? The Kaisar deems that the Armenians or some of the
Christian nations on the skirts of the Ottoman empire might be
made our allies, and attack the Turk in his rear. I am
chosen as his envoy, and shall sail so soon as I can make my way
to Venice. I only knew of the appointment since I came
hither, he having been led thereto by letters brought him this
day; and mayhap by the downfall of my hopes. He was
peremptory, as his mood is, and seemed to think it no small
favour,” added Wildschloss, with some annoyance.
“And meantime, what of my poor child? There she is in
the cloister at Ulm, but an inheritance is a very mill-stone
round the neck of an orphan maid. That insolent fellow,
Lassla von Trautbach, hath already demanded to espouse the poor
babe; he—a blood-stained, dicing, drunken rover, with whom
I would not trust a dog that I loved! Yet my death would
place her at the disposal of his father, who would give her at
once to him. Nay, even his aunt, the abbess, will believe
nothing against him, and hath even striven with me to have her
betrothed at once. On the barest rumour of my death will
they wed the poor little thing, and then woe to her, and woe to
my vassals!”</p>
<p>“The King,” suggested Ebbo. “Surely
she might be made his ward.”</p>
<p>“Young man,” said Sir Kasimir, bending over him,
and speaking in an undertone, “he may well have won your
heart. As friend, when one is at his side, none can be so
winning, or so sincere as he; but with all his brilliant gifts,
he says truly of himself that he is a mere reckless
huntsman. To-day, while I am with him, he would give me
half Austria, or fight single-handed in my cause or
Thekla’s. Next month, when I am out of sight, comes
Trautbach, just when his head is full of keeping the French out
of Italy, or reforming the Church, or beating the Turk, or
parcelling the empire into circles, or, maybe, of a new
touch-hole for a cannon—nay, of a flower-garden, or of
walking into a lion’s den. He just says, ‘Yea,
well,’ to be rid of the importunity, and all is over with
my poor little maiden. Hare-brained and bewildered with
schemes has he been as Romish King—how will it be with him
as Kaisar? It is but of his wonted madness that he is here
at all, when his Austrian states must be all astray for want of
him. No, no; I would rather make a weathercock guardian to
my daughter. You yourself are the only guard to whom I can
safely intrust her.”</p>
<p>“My sword as knight and kinsman—” began
Ebbo.</p>
<p>“No, no; ’tis no matter of errant knight or
distressed damsel. That is King Max’s own
line!” said Wildschloss, with a little of the irony that
used to nettle Ebbo. “There is only one way in which
you can save her, and that is as her husband.”</p>
<p>Ebbo started, as well he might, but Sir Kasimir laid his hand
on him with a gesture that bade him listen ere he spoke.
“My first wish for my child,” he said, “was to
see her brought up by that peerless lady below stairs. The
saints—in pity to one so like themselves—spared her
the distress our union would have brought her. Now, it
would be vain to place my little Thekla in her care, for
Trautbach would easily feign my death, and claim his niece, nor
are you of age to be made her guardian as head of our
house. But, if this marriage rite were solemnized, then
would her person and lands alike be yours, and I could leave her
with an easy heart.”</p>
<p>“But,” said the confused, surprised Ebbo,
“what can I do? They say I shall not walk for many
weeks to come. And, even if I could, I am so young—I
have so blundered in my dealings with my own mountaineers, and
with this fatal bridge—how should I manage such estates as
yours? Some better—”</p>
<p>“Look you, Ebbo,” said Wildschloss; “you
have erred—you have been hasty; but tell me where to find
another youth, whose strongest purpose was as wise as your
errors, or who cared for others’ good more than for his own
violence and vainglory? Brief as your time has been, one
knows when one is on your bounds by the aspect of your serfs, the
soundness of their dwellings, the prosperity of their crops and
cattle above all, by their face and tone if one asks for their
lord.”</p>
<p>“Ah! it was Friedel they loved. They scarce knew
me from Friedel.”</p>
<p>“Such as you are, with all the blunders you have made
and will make, you are the only youth I know to whom I could
intrust my child or my lands. The old Wildschloss castle is
a male fief, and would return to you, but there are domains since
granted that will cause intolerable trouble and strife, unless
you and my poor little heiress are united. As for age, you
are—?”</p>
<p>“Eighteen next Easter.”</p>
<p>“Then there are scarce eleven years between you.
You will find the little one a blooming bride when your first
deeds in arms have been fought out.”</p>
<p>“And, if my mother trains her up,” said Ebbo,
thoughtfully, “she will be all the better daughter to
her. But, Sir Cousin, you know I too must be going.
So soon as I can brook the saddle, I must seek out and ransom my
father.”</p>
<p>“That is like to be a far shorter and safer journey than
mine. The Genoese and Venetians understand traffic with the
infidels for their captives, and only by your own fault could you
get into danger. Even at the worst, should mishap befall
you, you could so order matters as to leave your girl-widow in
your mother’s charge.”</p>
<p>“Then,” added Ebbo, “she would still have
one left to love and cherish her. Sir Kasimir, it is well;
though, if you knew me without my Friedel, you would repent of
your bargain.”</p>
<p>“Thanks from my heart,” said Wildschloss,
“but you need not be concerned. You have never been
over-friendly with me even with Friedel at your side. But
to business, my son. You will endure that title from me
now? My time is short.”</p>
<p>“What would you have me do? Shall I send the
little one a betrothal ring, and ride to Ulm to wed and fetch her
home in spring?”</p>
<p>“That may hardly serve. These kinsmen would have
seized on her and the castle long ere that time. The only
safety is the making wedlock as fast as it can be made with a
child of such tender years. Mine is the only power that can
make the abbess give her up, and therefore will I ride this
moonlight night to Ulm, bring the little one back with me by the
time the reconciliation be concluded, and then shall ye be wed by
the Abbot of St. Ruprecht’s, with the Kaisar for a witness,
and thus will the knot be too strong for the Trautbachs to
untie.”</p>
<p>Ebbo looked disconcerted, and gasped, as if this were
over-quick work.—“To-morrow!” he said.
“Knows my mother?”</p>
<p>“I go to speak with her at once. The
Kaisar’s consent I have, as he says, ‘If we have one
vassal who has common sense and honesty, let us make the most of
him.’ Ah! my son, I shall return to see you his
counsellor and friend.”</p>
<p>Those days had no delicacies as to the lady’s side
taking the initiative: and, in effect, the wealth and power of
Wildschloss so much exceeded those of the elder branch that it
would have been presumptuous on Eberhard’s part to have
made the proposal. It was more a treaty than an affair of
hearts, and Sir Kasimir had not even gone through the form of
inquiring if Ebbo were fancy-free. It was true, indeed,
that he was still a boy, with no passion for any one but his
mother; but had he even formed a dream of a ladye love, it would
scarcely have been deemed a rational objection. The days of
romance were no days of romance in marriage.</p>
<p>Yet Christina, wedded herself for pure love, felt this
obstacle strongly. The scheme was propounded to her over
the hall fire by no less a person than Maximilian himself, and
he, whose perceptions were extremely keen when he was not too
much engrossed to use them, observed her reluctance through all
her timid deference, and probed her reasons so successfully that
she owned at last that, though it might sound like folly, she
could scarce endure to see her son so bind himself that the
romance of his life could hardly be innocent.</p>
<p>“Nay, lady,” was the answer, in a tone of deep
feeling. “Neither lands nor honours can weigh down
the up-springing of true love;” and he bowed his head
between his hands.</p>
<p>Verily, all the Low Countries had not impeded the true-hearted
affection of Maximilian and Mary; and, though since her death his
want of self-restraint had marred his personal character and
morals, and though he was now on the point of concluding a most
loveless political marriage, yet still Mary was—as he shows
her as the Beatrice of both his strange autobiographical
allegories—the guiding star of his fitful life; and in
heart his fidelity was so unbroken that, when after a long pause
he again looked up to Christina, he spoke as well understanding
her feelings.</p>
<p>“I know what you would say, lady; your son hardly knows
as yet how much is asked of him, and the little maid, to whom he
vows his heart, is over-young to secure it. But, lady, I
have often observed that men, whose family affections are as deep
and fervent as your son’s are for you and his brother,
seldom have wandering passions, but that their love flows deep
and steady in the channels prepared for it. Let your young
Freiherr regard this damsel as his own, and you will see he will
love her as such.”</p>
<p>“I trust so, my liege.”</p>
<p>“Moreover, if she turn out like the spiteful Trautbach
folk,” said Maximilian, rather wickedly, “plenty of
holes can be picked in a baby-wedding. No fear of its
over-firmness. I never saw one come to good; only he must
keep firm hold on the lands.”</p>
<p>This was not easy to answer, coming from a prince who had no
small experience in premature bridals coming to nothing, and
Christina felt that the matter was taken out of her hands, and
that she had no more to do but to enjoy the warm-hearted
Kaisar’s praises of her son.</p>
<p>In fact, the general run of nobles were then so boorish and
violent compared with the citizens, that a nobleman who possessed
intellect, loyalty, and conscience was so valuable to the
sovereign that Maximilian was rejoiced to do all that either
could bind him to his service or increase his power. The
true history of this expedition on the Emperor’s part was
this—that he had consulted Kasimir upon the question of the
Debateable Ford and the feud of Adlerstein and Schlangenwald,
asking further how his friend had sped in the wooing of the fair
widow, to which he remembered having given his consent at
Ulm.</p>
<p>Wildschloss replied that, though backed up by her kindred at
Ulm, he had made no progress in consequence of the determined
opposition of her two sons, and he had therefore resolved to wait
a while, and let her and the young Baron feel their inability to
extricate themselves from the difficulties that were sure to
beset them, without his authority, influence, and
experience—fully believing that some predicament might
arise that would bring the mother to terms, if not the sons.</p>
<p>This disaster did seem to have fallen out, and he had meant at
once to offer himself to the lady as her supporter and advocate,
able to bring about all her son could desire; though he owned
that his hopes would have been higher if the survivor had been
the gentle, friendly Friedmund, rather than the hot and imperious
Eberhard, who he knew must be brought very low ere his objections
would be withdrawn.</p>
<p>The touch of romance had quite fascinated Maximilian. He
would see the lady and her son. He would make all things
easy by the personal influence that he so well knew how to exert,
backed by his imperial authority; and both should see cause to be
thankful to purchase consent to the bridge-building, and pardon
for the fray, by the marriage between the widow and Sir
Kasimir.</p>
<p>But the Last of the Knights was a gentleman, and the meek
dignity of his hostess had hindered him from pressing on her any
distasteful subject until her son’s explanation of the
uncertainty of her husband’s death had precluded all
mention of this intention. Besides, Maximilian was himself
greatly charmed by Ebbo’s own qualities—partly
perhaps as an intelligent auditor, but also by his good sense,
high spirit, and, above all, by the ready and delicate tact that
had both penetrated and respected the disguise. Moreover,
Maximilian, though a faulty, was a devout man, and could
appreciate the youth’s unswerving truth, under
circumstances that did, in effect, imperil him more really than
his guest. In this mood, Maximilian felt disposed to be rid
to the very utmost of poor Sir Kasimir’s unlucky attachment
to a wedded lady; and receiving letters suggestive of the Eastern
mission, instantly decided that it would only be doing as he
would be done by instantly to order the disappointed suitor off
to the utmost parts of the earth, where he would much have liked
to go himself, save for the unlucky clog of all the realm of
Germany. That Sir Kasimir had any tie to home he had for
the moment entirely forgotten; and, had he remembered it, the
knight was so eminently fitted to fulfil his purpose, that it
could hardly have been regarded. But, when Wildschloss
himself devised his little heiress’s union with the head of
the direct line, it was a most acceptable proposal to the
Emperor, who set himself to forward it at once, out of policy,
and as compensation to all parties.</p>
<p>And so Christina’s gentle remonstrance was passed
by. Yet, with all her sense of the venture, it was
thankworthy to look back on the trembling anxiety with which she
had watched her boy’s childhood, and all his temptations
and perils, and compare her fears with his present position: his
alliance courted, his wisdom honoured, the child of the proud,
contemned outlaw received as the favourite of the Emperor, and
the valued ally of her own honoured burgher world. Yet he
was still a mere lad. How would it be for the future?</p>
<p>Would he be unspoiled? Yes, even as she already viewed
one of her twins as the star on high—nay, when kneeling in
the chapel, her dazzling tears made stars of the glint of the
light reflected in his bright helmet—might she not trust
that the other would yet run his course to and fro, as the spark
in the stubble?</p>
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