Captain Kyd - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"I bear a message to Robert of Lester! Detain me not, Elpsy; I have already lingered on the way."
"Who sends thee?"
"The young lady of Bellamont."
"Thy message?"
"I know not. 'Tis in this sealed pacquet."
"Is this all for which thou art sent?"
"It is."
"No instructions--no commands?"
"None, save to make no delay at Castle More, lest my young lord and I should renew a quarrel we had this day."
"Nothing else?"
"Nothing. But why these rapid questions--this anxiety of manner? What has come over thee, Elpsy?" he asked, with surprise.
She had put this series of interrogations to him with an irresistible energy and rapidity, that left him no alternative but direct and instant replies. At first she gave him no answer; her face worked convulsively, and she seemed to be contending with some strong feelings, that she in vain strove to get the mastery over. At length she muttered within her lips,
"I had feared! But 'tis safe, safe. 'Tis a pity to slay the fair young lad; but, if I do not, he will know that which he never must know--become that he never shall become! He must not see Castle More. He must die rather! Mark, come to me," she said, in a hollow and unearthly tone; "I would whisper in your ear what I would not have the laughing and grinning devils that flit about us in the air, hear! Come to me and listen!"
While she was speaking she nervously grasped the handle of her dagger, and took a step towards him. Her manner hitherto had already aroused his watchfulness, and the tone of her invitation by no means increased his confidence. He did not, indeed, suspect any attempt upon his life by her; but, being familiar with her restless and violent nature, he was prepared to expect some annoying violence; and for this he was cautiously on the watch.
"Wilt not approach?" she said, in a coaxing tone. "'Tis a sweet and fair tale I would tell thee! Ha, ha! as fair and sweet as I told the Lord Robert yestere'en! Wilt not come?" she shouted, as she saw he continued to step back as she advanced; "then will I come!"
She, with these words, made a spring towards him, seized him suddenly by the breast, and brandished her poniard in the air. He was not unprepared for this, sudden as it was: he caught her upraised arm, and bent it backward over her head till she shrieked with pain, and, with a cool and determined exertion of his whole strength, cast her from him so violently as to hurl her to the earth. She sprang to her feet like a cat, and, with a yell of rage, again leaped upon him. He avoided her attack by lightly springing to one side, when, missing her blow, she fell forward and struck her head on the edge of a stone, and sunk to the ground senseless and bleeding.
He instantly flew to her relief, lifted her from the earth, and attempted to a.s.suage the flow of blood from a severe contusion that she had received on the forehead. In a little time the loss of blood restored her to consciousness; it also had the effect of subduing her high fever of excitement, and making her comparatively calm. She permitted him to bind a handkerchief, that he took from his own neck, across her temples; but she neither spoke nor acknowledged his attentions, but sat in sullen silence on the ground.
"Elpsy," asked the youth, at length, "why do you seek my life?"
"You can never know!" she replied, slowly shaking her head with morose inflexibility.
"Have I wronged you?"
"Ask me not!"
"Is it thirst for blood, evil woman, that drives thee to this crime?"
"I would not slay thee, but thou and I, boy, can never live in the same land!" she said, obstinately.
"Thou mightst have spared this attempt, then, on my life, for soon the deep sea will roll between me and my native isle."
"How! Explain your words!" she asked, with awakened interest.
"I am resolved, as nature has denied me n.o.bility of birth, to give it at least to those who come after me."
"Speak on!" she cried, hanging on his words with intense expectation.
"I am going from my father's roof into the world, to see if I cannot make men forget from what I have sprung!"
"Is this thy purpose, boy? Speak truly!"
"It is, Elpsy. Seven hours ago I had nearly linked my fortunes with the yacht that takes the earl to England on the morrow--but--"
"But, what?" she eagerly demanded.
"My father--I thought of him, and--"
"Would not."
"I cannot desert him to suffering and want."
"And is this all?" she asked, her face lighting up with a newly awakened thought.
"The sole cause."
She began eagerly to search her belt, and drew forth from it a heavy purse. Shaking it with a gratified air, she then poured its glittering contents on the ground beside her.
"See that pile of gold! To-morrow go in this king's s.h.i.+p, and it shall be yours--there are three hundred guilders told--'twill give the old man food and raiment for a longer life than his will be, and afterward buy a coffin for his bones. Wilt go?"
"Mother," said he, his heart leaping with joy and hope, yet both tempered with the doubt to which he gave utterance, "this wealth! is it thine? How came you by it?"
"It matters not."
"I dare not touch it. I fear 'tis the price of sin--or, perhaps, of blood."
"Fool; 'tis wealth I've had in store these eighteen years, given to me by times by one who, if there be justice in Heaven or h.e.l.l, is now accursed on earth. There is no more evil in it than in every piece of gold that the earth contains--all gold is evil--it is all but the price of honour, of honesty, or of human blood. Take it, and depart from this land."
He gazed on the glittering heap, and hope, by its aid, pictured bright visions of the future, and the fruition of all his aspiring wishes.
Ambition once more awakened in his heart. Yet he hesitated. But, while he did so, he thought of Kate Bellamont--of the proud Lester--of his hopes of the future--of all that he had loved to contemplate; he even gave a thought to Grace Fitzgerald: all that an aspiring mind like his, at such a time, could be influenced by, had its effect upon him. She narrowly watched his countenance, read rightly his thoughts, and, feeling a.s.sured of his acceptance of it, mentally congratulated herself that her object could be effected without the shedding of his blood. She waited till she thought his mind was sufficiently ripe for her purpose, then replaced the gold in the purse, and, balancing it in her hand, said, "Before you take this purse, I name one condition of its acceptance."
He looked to her to mention it.
"That you for ever drop your present name and a.s.sume another; that you never breathe to mortal ear the place of your birth, nor give clew to your country."
"I gladly promise this--for already I had resolved on it, Elpsy. I have _one_ great motive for doing so. But what can be yours?"
"'Tis no matter. You promise this?"
"Cheerfully."
"Then take the gold for thy grandsire's support."
"Thanks, thanks, kind Elpsy--yet--"