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PAGE 15

Thirteen At Table
by [?]

“Not the half; stay if you like it.”

“Decurio, this is madness! The flame will reach the powder immediately.”

“I see it.”

“Well, say a dollar.”

“Not a whit.”

“May the seventy-seven limited thunder-bolt strike you on St. Michael’s Day!” roared the Wallachian fiercely, as he rushed to the door; but after he had gone out, he once more thrust his head in and cried: “Will you give even a form? I am not gone yet.”

“Nor have I removed the match; you may come back.” The Wallachian slammed the door, and ran for his life, till exhausted and breathless he sank under a tree, where he lay with his tunic over his head, and his ears covered with his hands, only now and then raising his head nervously, to listen for the awful explosion which was to blow up the world.

Meanwhile Numa coolly removed the match, which was entirely burnt down; and throwing it into the grate, he stepped over to the bed and whispered into the young girl’s ear: “You are free!”

Trembling, she raised herself in the bed and taking the Decurio’s large, sinewy hands within her own, she murmured: “Be merciful! O hear my prayer, and kill me!”

The Decurio stroked the fair hair of the lovely suppliant. “Poor child!” he replied gently; “you have nothing to fear; nobody will hurt you now.”

“You have saved me from these fearful people–now save me from yourself!”

“You have nothing to fear from me,” replied the Dacian, proudly; “I fight for liberty alone, and you may rest as securely within my threshold as on the steps of the altar. When I am absent you need have no anxiety, for these walls are impregnable, and if anyone should dare offend you by the slightest look, that moment shall be the last of his mortal career. And when I am at home you have nothing to fear, for woman’s image never dwelt within my heart. Accept my poor couch, and may your rest be sweet!–Imre Bardy slept on it last night.”

“Imre!” exclaimed the starting girl. “You have seen him, then?– oh! where is he!”

The Decurio hesitated. “He should not have delayed so long,” he murmured, pressing his hand against his brow; “all would have been otherwise.”

“Oh! let me go to him; if you know where he is.”

“I do not know, but I am certain he will come here if he is alive– indeed he must come.”

“Why do you think that?”

“Because he will seek you.”

“Did he then speak–before you?”

“As he lay wounded on that couch, he pronounced your name in his dreams. Are you not that Jolanka Bardy whom they call ‘The Angel’? I knew you by your golden locks.”

The young girl cast down her eyes. “Then you think he will come?” she said in a low voice. And my relations?”

“He will come as soon as possible; and now you must take some food and rest. Do not think about your relations now; they are all in a safe place–nobody can hurt them more.

The Decurio brought some refreshment, laid a small prayer-book on the pillow, and left the orphan by herself.

The poor girl opened the prayer-book, and her tears fell like rain- drops on the blessed page; but, overcome by the fatigue and terror she had undergone, her head ere long sank gently back, and she slept calmly and sweetly the sleep of exhausted innocence.

As evening closed, the Decurio returned, and softly approaching the bed, looked long and earnestly at the fair sleeper’s face, until two large tears stood unconsciously in his eyes.

The Roumin hastily brushed away the unwonted moisture, and as if afraid of the feeling which had stolen into his breast, he hastened from the room, and laid himself upon his woolen rug before the open door.

The deserted castle still burned on, shedding a ghastly light on the surrounding landscape, while the deepest silence reigned around, only broken now and then by an expiring groan, or the hoarse song of a drunken reveler.