Noémi. Baring-Gould Sabine. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Baring-Gould Sabine
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the shrines, and throw the holy rubbish away!"

      "How would you do that?"

      "I have been considering. I'd be let down over the edge of the cliff and throw in fireballs, till I had set the castle blazing."

      "And then?"

      "Then I'd have grappling-irons and crook them to the walls, and swing in under the ledge, and leap on the top of the battlements, and the place would fall. I'd cast the old bishop out if he would not go, and carry off all his cups and shrines and coin."

      "It would be sacrilege!"

      "Bah! What care I?" Then, after enjoying the astonishment of the lad, she said: "With two or three bold spirits it might be done. Will you join me? Be my mate, and we will divide the plunder." She burst into a merry laugh. "It would be sport to smoke out the old owl and send him flying down through the air, blinking and towhooing, to break his wings, or his neck, or his crown there – on those stones below."

      "I'm not English – I'm no brigand!" answered the young man vehemently.

      "I'm English!" said the girl.

      "What? An English woman or devil?"

      "I'm English – I'm Gascon. I'm anything where there is diversion to be got and plunder to be obtained. Oh, but we live in good times! Deliver me from others where there is nothing doing, no sport, no chevauchée 1 no spoil, no fighting."

      Then suddenly she threw away the hammer and spread her arms as might a bird preparing to fly, bent her lithe form as might a cricket to leap.

      "Stand aside! Go back! 'Ware, I am coming!"

      The lad hastily beat a retreat down the steps. He could do no other. Each step was but two feet in length from the rock. There was no handrail; no two persons could pass on it. Moreover, the impetus of the girl, if she leaped from one foothold to the next, and the next, and then again to the stair where undamaged, would be prodigious; she would require the way clear that she might descend bounding, swinging down the steep flight, two stages at a leap, till she reached the bottom. An obstruction would be fatal to her, and fatal to him who stood in her way.

      No word of caution, no dissuasion was of avail. In her attitude, in the flash of her eyes, in the tone of her voice, in the thrill that went through her agile frame, Jean saw that the leap was inevitable. He therefore hastened to descend, and when he reached the bottom, turned to see her bound.

      He held his breath. The blood in his arteries stood still. He set his teeth, and all the muscles of his body contracted as with the cramp.

      He saw her leap.

      Once started, nothing could arrest her.

      On her left hand was the smooth face of the rock, without even a blade of grass, a harebell, a tuft of juniper growing out of it. On her right was void. If she tripped, if she missed her perch, if she miscalculated her weight, if she lost confidence for one instant, if her nerve gave way in the slightest, if she was not true of eye, nimble of foot, certain in judging distance, then she would shoot down just as had the logs she had cast below.

      As certainly as he saw her fall would Jean spring forward in the vain hope of breaking her fall, as certainly to be struck down and perish with her.

      One – a whirl before his eyes. As well calculate her leaps as count the spokes in a wheel as it revolves on the road.

      One – two – three – thirty – a thousand – nothing!

      "There, clown!"

      She was at the bottom, her hands extended, her face flushed with excitement and pleasure.

      "You see – what I can dare and do."

       CHAPTER II.

      WHO IS THE FOOL NOW?

      There boiled up in the youth's heart a feeling of wrath and indignation against the girl who in sheer wantonness had imperiled her life and had given to him a moment of spasm of apprehension.

      Looking full into her glittering brown eyes, he said —

      "You have cast at me ill names. I have been to you but clown and fool; I have done nothing to merit such titles; I should never have thrown a thought away on you, but have gone on scraping my shaft, had not you done a silly thing – a silly thing. Acted like a fool, and a fool only!"

      "You dare not do what I have done."

      "If there be a need I will do it. If I do it for a purpose there is no folly in it. That is folly where there is recklessness for no purpose."

      "I had a purpose!"

      "A purpose? – what? To call my attention to you, to make me admire your daring, all to no end. Or was it in mere inconsiderate prank? A man is not brave merely because he is so stupid that he does not see the consequences before him. A blind man may walk where I should shrink from treading. And stupidity blinds some eyes that they run into danger and neither see nor care for the danger or for the consequences that will ensue on their rashness."

      The girl flushed with anger.

      "I am not accustomed to be spoken to thus," she said, and stamped her foot on the pavement of the platform.

      "All the better for you that it is spoken at last."

      "And who are you that dare say it?"

      "I – I am Jean del' Peyra."

      The girl laughed contemptuously. "I never heard the name."

      "I have told you my name, what is yours?" asked the boy, and he picked up his staff and began once more to point it.

      There was indifference in his tone, indifference in the act, that exasperated the girl.

      "You do not care – I will not say."

      "No," he answered, scraping leisurely at the wood. "I do not greatly care. Why should I? You have shown me to-day that you do not value yourself, and you do not suppose, then, that I can esteem one who does not esteem herself."

      "You dare say that!" The girl flared into fury. She stooped to pick up the hammer. Jean put his foot on it.

      "No," said he. "You would use that, I suppose, to knock out my brains, because I show you no homage, because I say that you have acted as a fool, that your bravery is that of a fool, that your thoughts – aye, your thoughts of plunder and murder against the Bishop of Sarlat, your old owl – towhit, towhoo! are the thoughts of a fool. No – I do not care for the name of a fool."

      "Why did you run up the steps? Why did you cry to me to desist from knocking out the posts? Why concern yourself a mite about me, if you so despise me?" gasped the girl, and it seemed as though the words shot like flames from her lips.

      "Because we are of like blood – that is all!" answered Jean, coolly.

      "Like blood! Hear him – hear him! He and I —he– he and I of like blood, and he a del' Peyra! And I – I am a Noémi!"

      "So – Noémi! That is your name?"

      "And I," continued the girl in her raging wrath, "I – learn this – I am the child of Le Gros Guillem. Have you ever heard of the Gros Guillem?" she asked in a tone of triumph, like the blast of a victor's trumpet.

      Jean lowered his staff, and looked steadily at her. His brows were contracted, his lips were set firm.

      "So!" he said, after a pause. "The daughter of Gros Guillem?"

      "Aye – have you heard of him?"

      "Of course I have heard of him."

      "And of the del' Peyras who ever heard?" asked the girl with mockery and scorn, and snapped her fingers.

      "No – God be thanked! – of the del' Peyras you have never heard as of the Gros Guillem."

      "The grapes – the grapes are sour!" scoffed the girl.

      "I wonder at nothing you have done," said the boy sternly, "since you have told me whence you come. Of the thorn – thorns; of the nettle – stings; of the thistle – thistles – all after their


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A chevauchée was an expedition to ravage a tract of country. Originally it signified a feudal service due from a vassal to his seigneur in private wars.