The Green Book - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel The Green Book Part 37 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"It was only a manner of speaking. If one dislikes any one very much, one says that he or she is a devil."
"It was on account of the stag that my G.o.dmother was so angry with you, was it not?"
"Yes; for that."
"But she need not then have frightened me so by telling me that the devil looked just like you."
"Oh, little goose! There is no such thing as a devil. Only that people like to ascribe their own wicked imaginings to an ideal being, who, in reality, has nothing to do with the evil within them."
"But you are a real fairy, then! For you read into my very soul, and how anxious I was about Sophie, and longing to see her. It was just for that that I was praying, that my darling little Sophie might be saved and brought here. And then you come in and bring me, like the message in the Gospel, the comforting answer: 'Go yourself and fetch her!' And do you still venture to affirm that there is no good in prayer?"
"To those who believe it is good," replied Zeneida, kissing the girl's forehead; upon which the latter, throwing her two arms lovingly round Fraulein Ilmarinen's neck, said:
"Let us say 'thou' to each other."
And they signed the compact with a kiss. Then joyously running to the table, Bethsaba drank her wine soup almost at a breath. There was a little left in the gla.s.s.
"That you must drink; I left it for you."
And the bond was sealed.
"I am quite ready; let us go," said Bethsaba.
"Wait just a few minutes. We will let the gentlemen get away first. We will go out by the garden gate, and take only one man to steer and another for the boat-hook."
"Then we will row, won't we? I am accustomed to it, and strong as iron."
"It would be no use. The boat can only be sculled through the ice, especially against the current, and that will be done with the boat-hook."
"Well, I am still convinced that you are a good fairy, Zeneida. You will call me Betsi, won't you? And I must tell you that I am not at all afraid of good spirits. Oh, we have so many at home! Tamara is queen of them. For if you were not a fairy, how could you know that the flood was going to last two or three days longer?"
"There is no magic in that, dear little Betsi, for the barometer hanging over there against the wall is pointing to continued storms. Moreover, the city archives tell us that the danger always lasts several days when a southwest wind causes the Neva to overflow its bank."
"Well, that certainly is simple enough. So it was no prophecy? But then you said something else--that that gentleman, Sophie's only protector, could not go to her help. Now what barometer told you that?"
"Humph!" Zeneida, pressing her lips together, reflected for a moment, then said, "Do you know who that ill.u.s.trious person is?"
"Of course I do. Why, how often have I met him at Sophie's and have told him fairy tales! And Sophie has told me everything; things that no one else knows anything about. But I will tell them to you, for people who love each other must have no secrets--don't you think so?"
"Certainly! Well, then, dear child, all this time that ill.u.s.trious personage has been unable to go to Sophie, because, since the flooding of the Greater Neva, it has been necessary for him to show himself wherever the danger was greatest, in order, by his presence, to stimulate others to the task of a.s.sistance and to insure success. Had he, instead of this, gone to Sophie, who lives on the Lesser Neva, there would have been fearful rioting. Do you understand this?"
"Yes, indeed, I understand too well," returned Bethsaba, sorrowfully.
"But to-day they do not allow that ill.u.s.trious personage to show himself in the inundated streets."
"Who?"
"His advisers."
"Why not?"
"Because they have discovered a plot against his life."
"Oh, how sad!" sighed Bethsaba. Then her mind flew to the last link of her chain of thought: "A plot against the life of the Czar, and known to Zeneida! From whom could she have obtained the knowledge so quickly?
From those two men; but from which?"
Timidly approaching Zeneida, and leaning over her shoulder, she whispered:
"It was not the younger man of the two, was it, who told you?"
"No, no," replied Zeneida, to whom the child's whole soul was revealed.
"Fear nothing for him! His hand and heart are clear from it."
"And you are in it?" asked the girl, touching Zeneida's breast with the tip of her finger.
Zeneida was startled by the direct questions. Was it childish curiosity, or had it a deeper meaning? Bethsaba remarked her surprise.
"You see, there can be no secrets where love is. I will tell you all I know, and what hitherto I have told to no one--not even to my G.o.dmother, whom I believe I fear more than I love. But you I love so very, very much, and that is why I am going to tell what I know, and how awfully they plot against him. He himself told Sophie. In Petrovsko the rebellious soldiers and peasants would not allow him to go farther; they insulted and threatened him to that degree that he had to turn back. Now these people were ragged and starving, and I can understand their being angry with him. But what complaint have you against him? You are rich, beautiful, and feted. Why, then, are you one of the conspirators?"
An idea flashed into Zeneida's mind. This child might form the link in the chain that was still wanting.
"Come nearer; let us whisper it, that even the walls do not hear. I, too, love you, and will frankly tell you all I know. I, too, am in the conspiracy, and play an important part in it."
"What reason have you?"
"I am a 'Kalevaine.'"
"And what is a 'Kalevaine'?"
"In Soumalain language, that which you are in the Circa.s.sian language. A girl who, when she came into the world, had a home she no longer has, whose nation, then Soumalain, is now known as Finnish. Doubtless you remember as clearly as I do the people and places you were among up to your sixth year, whom you may never look on again, and yet whom you never can forget?"
"Oh, it is true."
"Is it not? Amid all the pomp and splendor the world can give, in the midst of the most brilliant court festivities, do you not feel a sudden pang at heart when the thought of your dark native woods flashes across you; of the hors.e.m.e.n, on their fiery steeds, coursing over the rushing mountain streams; of the blue mountains in the far distance, and your ancestral castle, in which, enthroned, your father received the homage of his va.s.sals?"
"Oh yes, yes."
"And even now you remember the legends told you by the murmuring streams of your native land?"
"You are right; you are right."
"Well, then, you see, so it is with me. My recollections, like the mighty roll of the Imatras, are forever surging in my soul. Just as little can I forget those moss-covered rocks, the most ancient peak in the whole world, the Fata Morgana of our Finnish plains; the red-roofed houses, with low beams across the rooms, from which hung strings of loaves; the legends of Kalevala, and its people's freedom, of which my father used so often to tell me. Then I did not understand all he said; now I recall all and--understand him."
"I, too, recall; but I do not understand it yet."
"The Czar has deprived you, as me, of our fatherland; he has deprived our people of their freedom! And, as through him we became orphaned, homeless, so he became a father to us in place of our own fathers. For our little kingdoms he has given us a great one; for our quiet homes, pomp and splendor. As a man, he has been a father to us; as Czar, a tyrant. For the one I cannot be ungrateful to him; for the other I cannot forgive him. So I stand hemmed in by two conflicting duties. As my adopted father, it is my duty to shield his sensitive heart, to protect him from the a.s.sa.s.sin's dagger, from pain and sickness; but at the same time I am bound to deliver my country from the iron grasp of the tyrant, to s.n.a.t.c.h from it my people and their freedom. Do you understand?"
"I see you fly before me; but I cannot follow your flight, cannot catch you up. Tell me, is 'he' too in the conspiracy?"