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Love-at-Arms. Rafael SabatiniЧитать онлайн книгу.

Love-at-Arms - Rafael Sabatini


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through his pallid lips. Then he raised his heavy lids, and their glances met and held each other. And so, eyes that were brown and tender looked down into feverish languid eyes of black, what time her gentle hand held the moist cloth to his aching brow.

      “Angel of beauty!” he murmured dreamily, being but half-awake as yet to his position. Then, becoming conscious of her ministrations, “Angel of goodness!” he added, with yet deeper fervour.

      She had no answer for him, saving such answer—and in itself it was eloquent enough—as her blushes made, for she was fresh from a convent and all innocent of worldly ways and tricks of gallant speech.

      “Do you suffer?” she asked at last.

      “Suffer?” quoth he, now waking more and more, and his voice sounding a note of scorn. “Suffer? My head so pillowed and a saint from Heaven ministering to my ills? Nay, I am in no pain, Madonna, but in a joy more sweet than I have ever known.”

      “Gesù! What a nimble tongue!” gibed the fool from the background.

      “Are you there, too, Master Buffoon?” quoth Francesco. “And Fanfulla? Is he not here? Why, now I bethink me; he went to Acquasparta with the friar.” He thrust his elbow under him for more support.

      “You must not move,” said she, thinking that he would essay to rise.

      “I would not, lady, if I must,” he answered solemnly. And then, with his eyes upon her face, he boldly asked her name.

      “My name,” she answered readily, “is Valentina della Rovere, and I am niece to Guidobaldo of Urbino.”

      His brows shot up.

      “Do I indeed live,” he questioned, “or do I but dream the memories of some old romancer's tale, in which a wandering knight is tended thus by a princess?”

      “Are you a knight?” she asked, a wonder coming now into her eyes, for even into the seclusion of her convent-life had crept strange stories of these mighty men-at-arms.

      “Your knight at least, sweet lady,” answered he, “and ever your poor champion if you will do me so much honour.”

      A crimson flush stole now into her cheeks, summoned by his bold words and bolder glances, and her eyes fell. Yet, resentment had no part in her confusion. She found no presumption in his speech, nor aught that a brave knight might not say to the lady who had succoured him in his distress. Peppe, who stood listening and marking the Count's manner, knowing the knight's station, was filled now with wonder, now with mockery; yet never interfered.

      “What is your name, sir knight?” she asked, after a pause.

      His eyes looked troubled, and as they shot beyond her to the fool, they caught on Peppe's face a grin of sly amusement.

      “My name,” he said at last, “is Francesco.” And then, to prevent that she should further question him—“But tell me, Madonna,” he inquired, “how comes a lady of your station here, alone with that poor fraction of a man?” And he indicated the grinning Peppe.

      “My people are yonder in the woods, where we have halted for a little space. I am on my way to my uncle's court, from the Convent of Santa Sofia, and for my escort I have Messer Romeo Gonzaga and twenty spears. So that, you see, I am well protected, without counting Ser Peppe here and the saintly Fra Domenico, my confessor.”

      There was a pause, ended at length by Francesco.

      “You will be the younger niece of his Highness of Urbino?” said he.

      “Not so, Messer Francesco,” she answered readily. “I am the elder.”

      At that his brows grew of a sudden dark.

      “Can you be she whom they would wed to Gian Maria?” he exclaimed, at which the fool pricked up his ears, whilst she looked at the Count with a gaze that plainly showed how far she was from understanding him.

      “You said?” she asked.

      “Why, nothing,” he answered, with a sigh, and in that moment a man's voice came ringing through the wood.

      “Madonna! Madonna Valentina!”

      Francesco and the lady turned their eyes in the direction whence the voice proceeded, and they beheld a superbly dazzling figure entering the glade. In beauty of person and richness of apparel he was well worthy of the company of Valentina. His doublet was of grey velvet, set off with scales of beaten gold, and revealing a gold-embroidered vest beneath; his bonnet matched his doublet, and was decked by a feather that sparkled with costly gems; his gold-hilted sword was sheathed in a scabbard also of grey velvet set with jewels. His face was comely as a damsel's, his eyes blue and his hair golden.

      “Behold,” announced Peppino gravely, “Italy's latest translation of the Golden Ass of Apuleius.”

      Upon seeing the noble niece of Guidobaldo kneeling there with Francesco's head still pillowed in her lap, the new-comer cast up his arms in a gesture of dismay.

      “Saints in Heaven!” he exclaimed, hurrying towards them. “What occupation have you found? Who is this ugly fellow?”

      “Ugly?” was all she answered him, in accents of profound surprise.

      “Who is he?” the young man insisted, his tone growing heated. “And what does he here and thus, with you? Gesù! What would his Highness say? How would he deal with me were he to learn of this? Who is the man, Madonna?”

      “Why, as you see, Messer Gonzaga,” she answered, with some heat, “a wounded knight.”

      “A knight he?” gibed Gonzaga. “A thief more likely, a prowling masnadiero. What is your name?” he roughly asked the Count.

      Drawing himself a little away from Valentina, and reclining entirely upon his elbow, Francesco motioned him with a wave of the hand to come no nearer.

      “I beg, lady, that you will bid your pretty page stand back a little. I am still faint, and his perfumes overpower me.”

      Under the mask of the polite request Gonzaga detected the mocking, contemptuous note, and it gave fuel to his anger.

      “I am no page, fool,” he answered, then clapping his hands together, he raised his voice to shout—“Olá, Beltrame! To me!”

      “What would you do?” cried the lady, rising to confront him.

      “Carry this ruffian in bonds to Urbino, as is my duty.”

      “Sir, you may wound your pretty hands in grasping me,” replied the Count, in chill indifference.

      “Ah! You would threaten me with violence, vassal?” cried the other, retreating some paces farther as he spoke. “Beltrame!” he called again. “Are you never coming?” A voice answered him from the thicket, and with a clank of steel a half-dozen men flung themselves into the glade.

      “Your orders, sir?” craved he that led them, his eyes wandering to the still prostrate Count.

      “Tie me up this dog,” Gonzaga bade him. But before the fellow could move a foot to carry out the order Valentina barred his way.

      “You shall not,” she commanded, and so transformed was she from the ingenuous child that lately had talked with him, that Francesco gaped in pure astonishment. “In my uncle's name, I bid you leave this gentleman where he lies. He is a wounded knight whom I have been pleased to tend—a matter which seems to have aroused Messer Gonzaga's anger against him.”

      Beltrame paused, and looked from Valentina to Gonzaga, undecided.

      “Madonna,” said Gonzaga, with assumed humility, “your word is law with us. But I would have you consider that, what I bid Beltrame do is in the interest of his Highness, whose territory is infested by these vagabonding robbers. It is a fact that may not have reached you in your convent retreat, no more than has sufficient knowledge reached you yet—in your


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