CHAPTER XXX
TWO SCENES
/Scene the First/
Some months had gone by, and Alkmaar, that heroic little city of the
north, had turned the flood of Spanish victory. Full of shame and
rage, the armies of Philip and of Valdez marched upon Leyden, and from
November, 1573, to the end of March, 1574, the town was besieged. Then
the soldiers were called away to fight Louis of Nassau, and the
leaguer was raised till, on the fatal field of Mook Heath, the gallant
Louis, with his brother Henry and four thousand of their soldiers,
perished, defeated by D'Avila. Now once more the victorious Spaniards
threatened Leyden.
In a large bare room of the Stadthuis of that city, at the beginning
of the month of May, a man of middle-age might have been seen one
morning walking up and down, muttering to himself as he walked. He was
not a tall man and rather thin in figure, with brown eyes and beard,
hair tinged with grey, and a wide brow lined by thought. This was
William of Orange, called the Silent, one of the greatest and most
noble of human beings who ever lived in any age; the man called forth
by God to whom Holland owes its liberties, and who for ever broke the
hideous yoke of religious fanaticism among the Teuton races.
Sore was his trouble on this May morning. But last month two more of
his brothers had found death beneath the sword of the Spaniard, and
now this same Spaniard, with whom he had struggled for all these weary
years, was marching in his thousands upon Leyden.
"Money," he was muttering to himself. "Give me money, and I will save
the city yet. With money ships can be built, more men can be raised,
powder can be bought. Money, money, money--and I have not a ducat! All
gone, everything, even to my mother's trinkets and the plate upon my
table. Nothing is left, no, not the credit to buy a dozen geldings."
As he thought thus one of his secretaries entered the room.
"Well, Count," said the Prince, "have you been to them all?"
"Yes, sir."
"And with what success?"
"The burgomaster, van de Werff, promises to do everything he can, and
will, for he is a man to lean on, but money is short. It has all left
the country and there is not much to get."
"I know it," groaned Orange, "you can't make a loaf from the crumbs
beneath the table. Is the proclamation put up inviting all good
citizens to give or lend in this hour of their country's need?"
"Yes, sir."
"Thank you, Count, you can go; there is nothing more to do. We will
ride for Delft to-night."
"Sir," said the secretary, "there are two men in the courtyard who
wish to see you."
"Are they known?"
"Oh yes, perfectly. One is Foy van Goorl, who went through the siege
of Haarlem and escaped, the son of the worthy burgher, Dirk van Goorl,
whom they did to death yonder in the Gevangenhuis; and the other a
Friesland giant of a man called Red Martin, his servant, of whose
feats of arms you may have heard. The two of them held a shot tower in
this town against forty or fifty Spaniards, and killed I don't know
how many."
The Prince nodded. "I know. This Red Martin is a Goliath, a brave
fellow. What do they want?"
"I am not sure," said the secretary with a smile, "but they have
brought a herring-cart here, the Frisian in the shafts for a horse,
and the Heer van Goorl pushing behind. They say that it is laden with
ammunition for the service of their country."
"Then why do they not take it to the Burgomaster, or somebody in
authority?"
"I don't know, but they declare that they will only deliver it to you
in person."
"You are sure of your men, Count? You know," he added, with a smile,
"I have to be careful."
"Quite, they were identified by several of the people in the other
room."
"Then admit them, they may have something to say."
"But, sir, they wish to bring in their cart."
"Very well, let them bring it in if it will come through the door,"
answered the Prince, with a sigh, for his thoughts were far from these
worthy citizens and their cart.
Presently the wide double doors were opened, and Red Martin appeared,
not as he was after the siege of Haarlem, but as he used to be, well-
covered and bland, with a beard even longer and more fiery than of
yore. At the moment he was strangely employed, for across his great
breast lay the broad belly-band of a horse, and by its means,
harnessed between the shafts, he dragged a laden cart covered with an
old sail. Moreover the load must have been heavy, for notwithstanding
his strength and that of Foy, no weakling, who pushed behind, they had
trouble in getting the wheels up a little rise at the threshold.
Foy shut the doors, then they trundled their cart into the middle of
the great room, halted and saluted. So curious was the sight, and so
inexplicable, that the Prince, forgetting his troubles for a minute,
burst out laughing.
"I daresay it looks strange, sir," said Foy, hotly, the colour rising
to the roots of his fair hair, "but when you have heard our story I am
not sure that you will laugh at us."
"Mynheer van Goorl," said the Prince with grave courtesy, "be assured
that I laugh at no true men such as yourself and your servant, Martin
the Frisian, and least of all at men who could hold yonder shot tower
against fifty Spaniards, who could escape out of Haarlem and bring
home with them the greatest devil in Don Frederic's army. It was your
equipage I laughed at, not yourselves," and he bowed slightly first to
the one and then to the other.
"His Highness thinks perhaps," said Martin, "that the man who does an
ass's work must necessarily be an ass," at which sally the Prince
laughed again.
"Sir," said Foy, "I crave your patience for a while, and on no mean
matter. Your Highness has heard, perhaps, of one Hendrik Brant, who
perished in the Inquisition."
"Do you mean the goldsmith and banker who was said to be the richest
man in the Netherlands?"
"Yes, sir, the man whose treasure was lost."
"I remember--whose treasure was lost--though it was reported that some
of our own people got away with it," and his eyes wandered wonderingly
to the sail which hid the burden on the cart.
"Sir," went on Foy, "you heard right; Red Martin and I, with a pilot
man who was killed, were they who got away with it, and by the help of
the waterwife, who now is dead, and who was known as Mother Martha, or
the Mare, we hid it in Haarlemer Meer, whence we recovered it after we
escaped from Haarlem. If you care to know how, I will tell you later,
but the tale is long and strange. Elsa Brant was with us at the
time----"
"She is Hendrik Brant's only child, and therefore the owner of his
wealth, I believe?" interrupted the Prince.
"Yes, sir, and my affianced wife."
"I have heard of the young lady, and I congratulate you. Is she in
Leyden?"
"No, sir, her strength and mind were much broken by the horrors which
she passed through in the siege of Haarlem, and by other events more
personal to her. Therefore, when the Spaniards threatened their first
leaguer of this place, I sent her and my mother to Norwich in England,
where they may sleep in peace."
"You were wise indeed, Heer van Goorl," replied the Prince with a
sigh, "but it seems that you stopped behind?"
"Yes, sir, Martin and I thought it our duty to see this war out. When
Leyden is safe from the Spaniards, then we go to England, not before."
"When Leyden is safe from the Spaniards----" and again the Prince
sighed, adding, "well, you have a true heart, young sir, and a right
spirit, for which I honour both of you. But I fear that things being
thus the Jufvrouw cannot sleep so very peacefully in Norwich after
all."
"We must each bear our share of the basket," answered Foy sadly; "I
must do the fighting and she the watching."
"It is so, I know it, who have both fought and watched. Well, I hope
that a time will come when you will both of you do the loving. And now
for the rest of the story."
"Sir, it is very short. We read your proclamation in the streets this
morning, and learned from it for certain what we have heard before,
that you are in sore want of money for the defence of Leyden and the
war at large. Therefore, hearing that you were still in the city, and
believing this proclamation of yours to be the summons and clear
command for which we waited, we have brought you Hendrik Brant's
treasure. It is there upon the cart."
The Prince put his hand to his forehead and reeled back a step.
"You do not jest with me, Foy van Goorl?" he said.
"Indeed no."
"But stay; this treasure is not yours to give, it belongs to Elsa
Brant."
"Sir, the legal title to it is in myself, for my father was Brant's
lawful heir and executor, and I inherit his rights. Moreover, although
a provision for her is charged upon it, it is Elsa's desire--I have it
written here under her hand and witnessed--that the money should be
used, every ducat of it, for the service of the country in such way as
I might find good. Lastly, her father, Hendrik Brant, always believed
that this wealth of his would in due season be of such service. Here
is a copy of his will, in which he directs that we are to apply the
money 'for the defence of our country, the freedom of religious Faith,
and the destruction of the Spaniards in such fashion and at such time
or times as God shall reveal to us.' When he gave us charge of it
also, his words to me were: 'I am certain that thousands and tens of
thousands of our folk will live to bless the gold of Hendrik Brant.'
On that belief too, thinking that God put it into his mind, and would
reveal His purpose in His own hour, we have acted all of us, and
therefore for the sake of this stuff we have gone to death and
torture. Now it has come about as Brant foretold; now we understand
why all these things have happened, and why we live, this man and I,
to stand before you, sir, to-day, with the hoard unminished by a
single florin, no, not even by Martin's legacy."
"Man, you jest, you jest!" said Orange.
Foy made a sign, and Martin going to the cart, pulled off the sail-
cloth, revealing the five mud-stained barrels painted, each of them,
with the mark B. There, too, ready for the purpose, were a hammer,
mallet, and chisel. Resting the shafts of the cart upon a table,
Martin climbed into it, and with a few great blows of the mallet,
drove in the head of a cask selected at hazard. Beneath appeared wool,
which he removed, not without fear lest there might be some mistake;
then, as he could wait no longer, he tilted the barrel up and shot its
contents out upon the floor.
As it chanced this was the keg that contained the jewels into which,
foreseeing troublous days, from time to time Brant had converted the
most of his vast wealth. Now in one glittering stream of red and white
and blue and green, breaking from their cases and wrappings that the
damp had rotted, save for those pearls, the most valuable of them all,
which were in the watertight copper box--they fell jingling to the
open floor, where they rolled hither and thither like beans shot from
a sack in the steading.
"I think there is only this one tub of jewels," said Foy quietly; "the
rest, which are much heavier, are full of gold coin. Here, sir, is the
inventory so that you may check the list and see that we have kept
back nothing."
But William of Orange heeded him not, only he looked at the priceless
gems and muttered, "Fleets of ships, armies of men, convoys of food,
means to bribe the great and buy goodwill--aye, and the Netherlands
themselves wrung from the grip of Spain, the Netherlands free and rich
and happy! O God! I thank Thee Who thus hast moved the hearts of men
to the salvation of this Thy people from sore danger."
Then in the sudden ecstasy of relief and joy, the great Prince hid his
face in his hands and wept.
Thus it came about that the riches of Hendrik Brant, when Leyden lay
at her last gasp, paid the soldiers and built the fleets which, in due
time, driven by a great wind sent suddenly from heaven across the
flooded meadows, raised the dreadful siege and signed the doom of
Spanish rule in Holland. Therefore it would seem that not in vain was
Hendrik Brant stubborn and foresighted, that his blood and the blood
of Dirk van Goorl were not shed in vain; that not in vain also did
Elsa suffer the worst torments of a woman's fear in the Red Mill on
the marshes; and Foy and Martin play their parts like men in the shot-
tower, the Gevangenhuis and the siege, and Mother Martha the Sword
find a grave and rest in the waters of the Haarlem Meer.
There are other morals to this story also, applicable, perhaps, to our
life to-day, but the reader is left to guess them.
/Scene the Second/
Leyden is safe at last, and through the broken dykes Foy and Martin,
with the rescuing ships, have sailed, shouting and red-handed, into
her famine-stricken streets. For the Spaniards, those that are left of
them, are broken and have fled away from their forts and flooded
trenches.
So the scene changes from warring, blood-stained, triumphant Holland
to the quiet city of Norwich and a quaint gabled house in Tombland
almost beneath the shadow of the tall spire of the cathedral, which
now for about a year had been the home of Lysbeth van Goorl and Elsa
Brant. Here to Norwich they had come in safety in the autumn of 1573
just before the first siege of Leyden was begun, and here they had
dwelt for twelve long, doubtful, anxious months. News, or rather
rumours, of what was passing in the Netherlands reached them from time
to time; twice even there came letters from Foy himself, but the last
of these had been received many weeks ago just as the iron grip of the
second leaguer was closing round the city. Then Foy and Martin, so
they learned from the letter, were not in the town but with the Prince
of Orange in Delft, working hard at the fleet which was being built
and armed for its relief.
After this there was a long silence, and none could tell what had
happened, although a horrible report reached them that Leyden had been
taken, sacked, and burnt, and all its inhabitants massacred. They
lived in comfort here in Norwich, for the firm of Munt and Brown, Dirk
van Goorl's agents, were honest, and the fortune which he had sent
over when the clouds were gathering thick, had been well invested by
them and produced an ample revenue. But what comfort could there be
for their poor hearts thus agonised by doubts and sickening fears?
One evening they sat in the parlour on the ground floor of the house,
or rather Lysbeth sat, for Elsa knelt by her, her head resting upon
the arm of the chair, and wept.
"Oh! it is cruel," she sobbed, "it is too much to bear. How can you be
so calm, mother, when perhaps Foy is dead?"
"If my son is dead, Elsa, that is God's Will, and I am calm, because
now, as many a time before, I resign myself to the Will of God, not
because I do not suffer. Mothers can feel, girl, as well as
sweethearts."
"Would that I had never left him," moaned Elsa.
"You asked to leave, child; for my part I should have bided the best
or the worst in Leyden."
"It is true, it is because I am a coward; also he wished it."
"He wished it, Elsa, therefore it is for the best; let us await the
issue in patience. Come, our meal is set."
They sat themselves down to eat, these two lonely women, but at their
board were laid four covers as though they expected guests. Yet none
were bidden--only this was Elsa's fancy.
"Foy and Martin /might/ come," she said, "and be vexed if it seemed
that we did not expect them." So for the last three months or more she
had always set four covers at the table, and Lysbeth did not gainsay
her. In her heart she too hoped that Foy might come.
That very night Foy came, and with him Red Martin, the great sword
Silence still strapped about his middle.
"Hark!" said Lysbeth suddenly, "I hear my son's footsteps at the door.
It seems, Elsa, that, after all, the ears of a mother are quicker than
those of a lover."
But Elsa never heard her, for now--now at length, she was wrapped in
the arms of Foy; the same Foy, but grown older and with a long pale
scar across his forehead.
"Yet," went on Lysbeth to herself, with a faint smile on her white and
stately face, "the son's lips are for the lover first."
An hour later, or two, or three, for who reckoned time that night when
there was so much to hear and tell, while the others knelt before her,
Foy and Elsa hand in hand, and behind them Martin like a guardian
giant, Lysbeth put up her evening prayer of praise and thanksgiving.
"Almighty God," she said in her slow, sonorous voice, "Thy awful Hand
that by my own faithless sin took from me my husband, hath given back
his son and mine who shall be to this child a husband, and for us as
for our country over sea, out of the night of desolation is arisen a
dawn of peace. Above us throughout the years is Thy Everlasting Will,
beneath us when our years are done, shall by Thy Everlasting Arms. So
for the bitter and the sweet, for the evil and the good, for the past
and for the present, we, Thy servants, render Thee glory, thanks, and
praise, O God of our fathers, That fashioneth us and all according to
Thy desire, remembering those things which we have forgotten and
foreknowing those things which are not yet. Therefore to Thee, Who
through so many dreadful days hast led us to this hour of joy, be
glory and thanks, O Lord of the living and the dead. Amen."
And the others echoed "To Thee be glory and thanks, O Lord of the
living and the dead. Amen."
Then, their prayer ended, the living rose, and, with separations done
and fears appeased at last, leant towards each other in the love and
hope of their beautiful youth.
But Lysbeth sat silent in the new home, far from the land where she
was born, and turned her stricken heart towards the dead.
FINIS