CHAPTER VII
THE OPEN COUNTENANCE, THE CONCEALED THOUGHTS
The next day, at noon, Calderon visited Fonseca in his place of
confinement. The young man was seated by a window that overlooked a
large dull court-yard, with a neglected and broken fountain in the
centre, leaning his cheek upon his hand. His long hair was dishevelled,
his dress disordered, and a gloomy frown darkened features naturally open
and ingenuous. He started to his feet as Calderon approached. "My
release--you have brought my release--let us forth!"
"My dear pupil, be ruled, be calm. I have seen the duke: the cause of
your imprisonment is as I suspected. Some imprudent words, overheard,
perhaps, but by your valet, have escaped you; words intimating your
resolution not to abandon Beatriz. You know your kinsman, a mail of
doubts and fears,--of forms, ceremonies, and scruples. From very
affection for his kindred and yourself he has contrived your arrest;
all my expostulations have been in vain. I fear your imprisonment may
continue, either until you give a solemn promise to renounce all endeavor
to dissuade Beatriz from the final vows, or until she herself has
pronounced them."
Fonseca, as if stupefied, stared a moment at Calderon, and then burst
into a wild laugh. Calderon continued:
"Nevertheless, do not despair. Be patient; I am ever about the duke;
nay, I have the courage, in your cause, to appeal even to the king
himself."
"And to-night she expects me--to-night she was to be free!"
"We can convey the intelligence of your mischance to her: the porter will
befriend you."
"Away, false friend, or powerless protector, that you are! Are your
promises of aid come to this? But I care not; my case, my wrongs, shall
be laid before the king; I will inquire if it be thus that Philip the
Third treats the defenders of his crown. Don Roderigo Calderon, will you
place my memorial in the hands of your royal master? Do this, and I will
thank you."
"No, Fonseca, I will not ruin you; the king would pass your memorial to
the Duke de Lerma. Tush! this is not the way that men of sense deal with
misfortune. Think you I should be what I now am, if, in every reverse, I
had raved, and not reflected? Sit down, and let us think of what can now
be done."
"Nothing, unless the prison door open by sunset!"
"Stay, a thought strikes me. The term of your imprisonment ceases when
you relinquish the hope of Beatriz. But what if the duke could believe
that Beatriz relinquished you? What, for instance, if she fled from the
convent, as you proposed, and we could persuade the duke that it was with
another?"
"Ah! be silent!"
"Nay, what advantages in this scheme--what safety! If she fly alone,
or, as supposed, with another lover, the duke will have no interest in
pursuit, in punishment. She is not of that birth that the state will
take the trouble, very actively, to interfere: she may reach France in
safety; ay, a thousand times more safely than if she fled with you, a
hidalgo and a man of rank, whom the state would have an interest to
reclaim, and to whom the Inquisition, hating the nobles, would impute the
crime of sacrilege. It is an excellent thought! Your imprisonment may
be the salvation of you both: your plan may succeed still better without
your intervention; and, after a few days, the duke, believing that your
resentment must necessarily replace your love, will order your release;
you can join Beatriz on the frontier, and escape with her to France."
"But," said Fonseca, struck, but not convinced, by the suggestion of
Calderon, "who will take my place with Beatriz? who penetrate into the
gardens? who bear her from the convent?"
"That, for your sake, will I do. Perhaps," added Calderon, smiling, "a
courtier may manage such an intrigue with even more dexterity than a
soldier. I will bear her to the house we spoke of; there I know she can
lie hid in safety, till the languid pursuit of uninterested officials
shall cease, and thence I can easily find means to transport her, under
safe and honourable escort, to any place it may please you to appoint."
"And think you Beatriz will fly with you, a stranger? Impossible! Your
plan pleases me not."
"Nor does it please me," said Calderon, coldly; "the risks I proposed to
run are too imminent to be contemplated complacently: I thank you for
releasing me from my offer; nor should I have made it, Fonseca, but from
this fear, what if to-morrow the duke himself (he is a churchman,
remember) see the novice? what if he terrify her with threats against
yourself? what if he induce the abbess and the Church to abridge the
novitiate? what if Beatriz be compelled or awed into taking the veil?
what if you be released even next week and find her lost to you for
ever?"
"They cannot--they dare not!"
"The duke dares all things for ambition; your alliance with Beatriz he
would hold a disgrace to his house. Think not my warnings are without
foundation--I speak from authority; such is the course the Duke de Lerma
has resolved upon. Nothing else could have induced me to offer to brave
for your sake all the hazard of outraging the law and braving the terrors
of the Inquisition. But let us think of some other plan. Is your escape
possible? I fear not. No; you must trust to my chance of persuading the
duke into prosecuting the matter no further; trust to some mightier
scheme engrossing all his thoughts; to a fit of good-humour after his
siesta; or, perhaps, an attack of the gout, or a stroke of apoplexy.
Such, after all, are the chances of human felicity, the pivots on which
turns the solemn wheel of human life."
Fonseca made no reply for some moments; he traversed the room with hasty
and disordered strides, and at last stopped abruptly.
"Calderon, there is no option; I must throw myself on your generosity,
your faith, your friendship. I will write to Beatriz; I will tell her,
for my sake, to confide in you."
As he spoke, Don Martin turned to the table, and wrote a hasty and
impassioned note, in which he implored the novice to trust herself to the
directions of Don Roderigo Calderon, his best, his only friend; and, as
he placed this letter in the hands of the courtier he turned aside to
conceal his emotions. Calderon himself was deeply moved: his cheek was
flushed, and his hand seemed tremulous as it took the letter.
"Remember," said Fonseca, "that I trust to you my life of life. As you
are true to me, may Heaven be merciful to you!"
Calderon made no answer, but turned to the door. "Stay," said Fonseca;
"I had forgot this--here is the master key."
"True; how dull I was! And the porter--will he attend to thy proxy?"
"Doubt it not. Accost him with the word, 'Grenada.' But he expects to
share the flight."
"That can be arranged. To-morrow you will hear of my success.
Farewell!"