THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO
PART 26
CHAPTER VI
might we but hear
The folded flocks penn'd in their watled
cotes,
Or sound of pastoral reed with oaten stops,
Or whistle from the lodge, or village cock
Count the night watches to his feathery dames,
'Twould be some solace yet, some little
cheering
In this close dungeon of innumerous boughs.
MILTON
In the
morning, Emily was relieved from her fears for Annette, who came at an early
hour.
'Here
were fine doings in the castle, last night, ma'amselle,' said she, as soon as
she entered the room,—'fine doings, indeed! Was you not frightened, ma'amselle,
at not seeing me?'
'I was
alarmed both on your account and on my own,' replied Emily—'What detained you?'
'Aye, I
said so, I told him so; but it would not do. It was not my fault, indeed,
ma'amselle, for I could not get out. That rogue Ludovico locked me up again.'
'Locked
you up!' said Emily, with displeasure, 'Why do you permit Ludovico to lock you
up?'
'Holy
Saints!' exclaimed Annette, 'how can I help it! If he will lock the door,
ma'amselle, and take away the key, how am I to get out, unless I jump through
the window? But that I should not mind so much, if the casements here were not
all so high; one can hardly scramble up to them on the inside, and one should
break one's neck, I suppose, going down on the outside. But you know, I dare
say, ma'am, what a hurly-burly the castle was in, last night; you must have
heard some of the uproar.'
'What,
were they disputing, then?' said Emily.
'No,
ma'amselle, nor fighting, but almost as good, for I believe there was not one
of the Signors sober; and what is more, not one of those fine ladies sober,
either. I thought, when I saw them first, that all those fine silks and fine
veils,—why, ma'amselle, their veils were worked with silver! and fine
trimmings—boded no good—I guessed what they were!'
'Good
God!' exclaimed Emily, 'what will become of me!'
'Aye,
ma'am, Ludovico said much the same thing of me. Good God! said he, Annette,
what is to become of you, if you are to go running about the castle among all
these drunken Signors?'
'O! says
I, for that matter, I only want to go to my young lady's chamber, and I have
only to go, you know, along the vaulted passage and across the great hall and
up the marble stair-case and along the north gallery and through the west wing
of the castle and I am in the corridor in a minute.' 'Are you so? says he, and
what is to become of you, if you meet any of those noble cavaliers in the way?'
'Well, says I, if you think there is danger, then, go with me, and guard me; I
am never afraid when you are by.' 'What! says he, when I am scarcely recovered
of one wound, shall I put myself in the way of getting another? for if any of
the cavaliers meet you, they will fall a-fighting with me directly. No, no,
says he, I will cut the way shorter, than through the vaulted passage and up
the marble stair-case, and along the north gallery and through the west wing of
the castle, for you shall stay here, Annette; you shall not go out of this
room, to-night.' 'So, with that I says'—
'Well,
well,' said Emily, impatiently, and anxious to enquire on another subject,—'so
he locked you up?'
'Yes, he
did indeed, ma'amselle, notwithstanding all I could say to the contrary; and
Caterina and I and he staid there all night. And in a few minutes after I was
not so vexed, for there came Signor Verezzi roaring along the passage, like a
mad bull, and he mistook Ludovico's hall, for old Carlo's; so he tried to burst
open the door, and called out for more wine, for that he had drunk all the
flasks dry, and was dying of thirst. So we were all as still as night, that he
might suppose there was nobody in the room; but the Signor was as cunning as
the best of us, and kept calling out at the door, "Come forth, my antient
hero!" said he, "here is no enemy at the gate, that you need hide
yourself: come forth, my valorous Signor Steward!" Just then old Carlo
opened his door, and he came with a flask in his hand; for, as soon as the
Signor saw him, he was as tame as could be, and followed him away as naturally
as a dog does a butcher with a piece of meat in his basket. All this I saw
through the key-hole. Well, Annette, said Ludovico, jeeringly, shall I let you
out now? O no, says I, I would not'—
'I have
some questions to ask you on another subject,' interrupted Emily, quite wearied
by this story. 'Do you know whether there are any prisoners in the castle, and
whether they are confined at this end of the edifice?'
'I was
not in the way, ma'amselle,' replied Annette, 'when the first party came in
from the mountains, and the last party is not come back yet, so I don't know,
whether there are any prisoners; but it is expected back to-night, or
to-morrow, and I shall know then, perhaps.'
Emily
enquired if she had ever heard the servants talk of prisoners.
'Ah
ma'amselle!' said Annette archly, 'now I dare say you are thinking of Monsieur
Valancourt, and that he may have come among the armies, which, they say, are
come from our country, to fight against this state, and that he has met with
some of OUR people, and is taken captive. O Lord! how glad I should be, if it
was so!'
'Would
you, indeed, be glad?' said Emily, in a tone of mournful reproach.
'To be
sure I should, ma'am,' replied Annette, 'and would not you be glad too, to see
Signor Valancourt? I don't know any chevalier I like better, I have a very
great regard for the Signor, truly.'
'Your
regard for him cannot be doubted,' said Emily, 'since you wish to see him a
prisoner.'
'Why no,
ma'amselle, not a prisoner either; but one must be glad to see him, you know.
And it was only the other night I dreamt—I dreamt I saw him drive into the
castle-yard all in a coach and six, and dressed out, with a laced coat and a
sword, like a lord as he is.'
Emily
could not forbear smiling at Annette's ideas of Valancourt, and repeated her
enquiry, whether she had heard the servants talk of prisoners.
'No,
ma'amselle,' replied she, 'never; and lately they have done nothing but talk of
the apparition, that has been walking about of a night on the ramparts, and
that frightened the sentinels into fits. It came among them like a flash of
fire, they say, and they all fell down in a row, till they came to themselves
again; and then it was gone, and nothing to be seen but the old castle walls;
so they helped one another up again as fast as they could. You would not
believe, ma'amselle, though I shewed you the very cannon, where it used to
appear.'
'And are
you, indeed, so simple, Annette,' said Emily, smiling at this curious
exaggeration of the circumstances she had witnessed, 'as to credit these
stories?'
'Credit
them, ma'amselle! why all the world could not persuade me out of them. Roberto
and Sebastian and half a dozen more of them went into fits! To be sure, there
was no occasion for that; I said, myself, there was no need of that, for, says
I, when the enemy comes, what a pretty figure they will cut, if they are to
fall down in fits, all of a row! The enemy won't be so civil, perhaps, as to
walk off, like the ghost, and leave them to help one another up, but will fall
to, cutting and slashing, till he makes them all rise up dead men. No, no, says
I, there is reason in all things: though I might have fallen down in a fit that
was no rule for them, being, because it is no business of mine to look gruff,
and fight battles.'
Emily
endeavoured to correct the superstitious weakness of Annette, though she could
not entirely subdue her own; to which the latter only replied, 'Nay,
ma'amselle, you will believe nothing; you are almost as bad as the Signor
himself, who was in a great passion when they told of what had happened, and
swore that the first man, who repeated such nonsense, should be thrown into the
dungeon under the east turret. This was a hard punishment too, for only talking
nonsense, as he called it, but I dare say he had other reasons for calling it
so, than you have, ma'am.'
Emily
looked displeased, and made no reply. As she mused upon the recollected
appearance, which had lately so much alarmed her, and considered the
circumstances of the figure having stationed itself opposite to her casement,
she was for a moment inclined to believe it was Valancourt, whom she had seen.
Yet, if it was he, why did he not speak to her, when he had the opportunity of
doing so—and, if he was a prisoner in the castle, and he could be here in no
other character, how could he obtain the means of walking abroad on the
rampart? Thus she was utterly unable to decide, whether the musician and the
form she had observed, were the same, or, if they were, whether this was
Valancourt. She, however, desired that Annette would endeavour to learn whether
any prisoners were in the castle, and also their names.
'O dear,
ma'amselle!' said Annette, 'I forget to tell you what you bade me ask about,
the ladies, as they call themselves, who are lately come to Udolpho. Why that
Signora Livona, that the Signor brought to see my late lady at Venice, is his
mistress now, and was little better then, I dare say. And Ludovico says (but
pray be secret, ma'am) that his excellenza introduced her only to impose upon
the world, that had begun to make free with her character. So when people saw
my lady notice her, they thought what they had heard must be scandal. The other
two are the mistresses of Signor Verezzi and Signor Bertolini; and Signor
Montoni invited them all to the castle; and so, yesterday, he gave a great
entertainment; and there they were, all drinking Tuscany wine and all sorts,
and laughing and singing, till they made the castle ring again. But I thought
they were dismal sounds, so soon after my poor lady's death too; and they
brought to my mind what she would have thought, if she had heard them—but she
cannot hear them now, poor soul! said I.'
Emily
turned away to conceal her emotion, and then desired Annette to go, and make
enquiry, concerning the prisoners, that might be in the castle, but conjured
her to do it with caution, and on no account to mention her name, or that of
Monsieur Valancourt.
'Now I
think of it, ma'amselle,' said Annette, 'I do believe there are prisoners, for
I overheard one of the Signor's men, yesterday, in the servants hall, talking
something about ransoms, and saying what a fine thing it was for his excellenza
to catch up men, and they were as good booty as any other, because of the
ransoms. And the other man was grumbling, and saying it was fine enough for the
Signor, but none so fine for his soldiers, because, said he, we don't go shares
there.'
This
information heightened Emily's impatience to know more, and Annette immediately
departed on her enquiry.
The late
resolution of Emily to resign her estates to Montoni, now gave way to new
considerations; the possibility, that Valancourt was near her, revived her
fortitude, and she determined to brave the threatened vengeance, at least, till
she could be assured whether he was really in the castle. She was in this
temper of mind, when she received a message from Montoni, requiring her
attendance in the cedar parlour, which she obeyed with trembling, and, on her
way thither, endeavoured to animate her fortitude with the idea of Valancourt.
Montoni
was alone. 'I sent for you,' said he, 'to give you another opportunity of
retracting your late mistaken assertions concerning the Languedoc estates. I
will condescend to advise, where I may command.—If you are really deluded by an
opinion, that you have any right to these estates, at least, do not persist in
the error—an error, which you may perceive, too late, has been fatal to you.
Dare my resentment no further, but sign the papers.'
'If I
have no right in these estates, sir,' said Emily, 'of what service can it be to
you, that I should sign any papers, concerning them? If the lands are yours by
law, you certainly may possess them, without my interference, or my consent.'
'I will
have no more argument,' said Montoni, with a look that made her tremble. 'What
had I but trouble to expect, when I condescended to reason with a baby! But I
will be trifled with no longer: let the recollection of your aunt's sufferings,
in consequence of her folly and obstinacy, teach you a lesson.—Sign the
papers.'
Emily's
resolution was for a moment awed:—she shrunk at the recollections he revived,
and from the vengeance he threatened; but then, the image of Valancourt, who so
long had loved her, and who was now, perhaps, so near her, came to her heart,
and, together with the strong feelings of indignation, with which she had
always, from her infancy, regarded an act of injustice, inspired her with a
noble, though imprudent, courage.
'Sign the
papers,' said Montoni, more impatiently than before.
'Never,
sir,' replied Emily; 'that request would have proved to me the injustice of
your claim, had I even been ignorant of my right.'
Montoni
turned pale with anger, while his quivering lip and lurking eye made her almost
repent the boldness of her speech.
'Then all
my vengeance falls upon you,' he exclaimed, with an horrible oath. 'And think
not it shall be delayed. Neither the estates in Languedoc, or Gascony, shall be
yours; you have dared to question my right,—now dare to question my power. I
have a punishment which you think not of; it is terrible! This night—this very
night'—
'This
night!' repeated another voice.
Montoni
paused, and turned half round, but, seeming to recollect himself, he proceeded
in a lower tone.
'You have
lately seen one terrible example of obstinacy and folly; yet this, it appears,
has not been sufficient to deter you.—I could tell you of others—I could make
you tremble at the bare recital.'
He was
interrupted by a groan, which seemed to rise from underneath the chamber they
were in; and, as he threw a glance round it, impatience and rage flashed from
his eyes, yet something like a shade of fear passed over his countenance. Emily
sat down in a chair, near the door, for the various emotions she had suffered,
now almost overcame her; but Montoni paused scarcely an instant, and,
commanding his features, resumed his discourse in a lower, yet sterner voice.
'I say, I
could give you other instances of my power and of my character, which it seems
you do not understand, or you would not defy me.—I could tell you, that, when
once my resolution is taken—but I am talking to a baby. Let me, however,
repeat, that terrible as are the examples I could recite, the recital could not
now benefit you; for, though your repentance would put an immediate end to
opposition, it would not now appease my indignation.—I will have vengeance as
well as justice.'
Another
groan filled the pause which Montoni made.
'Leave
the room instantly!' said he, seeming not to notice this strange occurrence.
Without power to implore his pity, she rose to go, but found that she could not
support herself; awe and terror overcame her, and she sunk again into the
chair.
'Quit my
presence!' cried Montoni. 'This affectation of fear ill becomes the heroine who
has just dared to brave my indignation.'
'Did you
hear nothing, Signor?' said Emily, trembling, and still unable to leave the
room.
'I heard
my own voice,' rejoined Montoni, sternly.
'And
nothing else?' said Emily, speaking with difficulty.—'There again! Do you hear
nothing now?'
'Obey my
order,' repeated Montoni. 'And for these fool's tricks—I will soon discover by
whom they are practised.'
Emily
again rose, and exerted herself to the utmost to leave the room, while Montoni
followed her; but, instead of calling aloud to his servants to search the
chamber, as he had formerly done on a similar occurrence, passed to the
ramparts.
As, in
her way to the corridor, she rested for a moment at an open casement, Emily saw
a party of Montoni's troops winding down a distant mountain, whom she noticed
no further, than as they brought to her mind the wretched prisoners they were,
perhaps, bringing to the castle. At length, having reached her apartment, she
threw herself upon the couch, overcome with the new horrors of her situation. Her
thoughts lost in tumult and perplexity, she could neither repent of, or
approve, her late conduct; she could only remember, that she was in the power
of a man, who had no principle of action—but his will; and the astonishment and
terrors of superstition, which had, for a moment, so strongly assailed her, now
yielded to those of reason.
She was,
at length, roused from the reverie, which engaged her, by a confusion of
distant voices, and a clattering of hoofs, that seemed to come, on the wind,
from the courts. A sudden hope, that some good was approaching, seized her
mind, till she remembered the troops she had observed from the casement, and
concluded this to be the party, which Annette had said were expected at
Udolpho.
Soon
after, she heard voices faintly from the halls, and the noise of horses' feet
sunk away in the wind; silence ensued. Emily listened anxiously for Annette's
step in the corridor, but a pause of total stillness continued, till again the
castle seemed to be all tumult and confusion. She heard the echoes of many
footsteps, passing to and fro in the halls and avenues below, and then busy
tongues were loud on the rampart. Having hurried to her casement, she perceived
Montoni, with some of his officers, leaning on the walls, and pointing from
them; while several soldiers were employed at the further end of the rampart
about some cannon; and she continued to observe them, careless of the passing
time.
Annette
at length appeared, but brought no intelligence of Valancourt, 'For,
ma'amselle,' said she, 'all the people pretend to know nothing about any
prisoners. But here is a fine piece of business! The rest of the party are just
arrived, ma'am; they came scampering in, as if they would have broken their
necks; one scarcely knew whether the man, or his horse would get within the
gates first. And they have brought word—and such news! they have brought word,
that a party of the enemy, as they call them, are coming towards the castle; so
we shall have all the officers of justice, I suppose, besieging it! all those
terrible-looking fellows one used to see at Venice.'
'Thank
God!' exclaimed Emily, fervently, 'there is yet a hope left for me, then!'
'What
mean you, ma'amselle? Do you wish to fall into the hands of those sad-looking
men! Why I used to shudder as I passed them, and should have guessed what they
were, if Ludovico had not told me.'
'We
cannot be in worse hands than at present,' replied Emily, unguardedly; 'but
what reason have you to suppose these are officers of justice?'
'Why OUR
people, ma'am, are all in such a fright, and a fuss; and I don't know any thing
but the fear of justice, that could make them so. I used to think nothing on
earth could fluster them, unless, indeed, it was a ghost, or so; but now, some
of them are for hiding down in the vaults under the castle; but you must not
tell the Signor this, ma'amselle, and I overheard two of them talking—Holy
Mother! what makes you look so sad, ma'amselle? You don't hear what I say!'
'Yes, I
do, Annette; pray proceed.'
'Well,
ma'amselle, all the castle is in such hurly-burly. Some of the men are loading
the cannon, and some are examining the great gates, and the walls all round,
and are hammering and patching up, just as if all those repairs had never been
made, that were so long about. But what is to become of me and you, ma'amselle,
and Ludovico? O! when I hear the sound of the cannon, I shall die with fright.
If I could but catch the great gate open for one minute, I would be even with
it for shutting me within these walls so long!—it should never see me again.'
Emily
caught the latter words of Annette. 'O! if you could find it open, but for one
moment!' she exclaimed, 'my peace might yet be saved!' The heavy groan she
uttered, and the wildness of her look, terrified Annette, still more than her
words; who entreated Emily to explain the meaning of them, to whom it suddenly
occurred, that Ludovico might be of some service, if there should be a
possibility of escape, and who repeated the substance of what had passed between
Montoni and herself, but conjured her to mention this to no person except to
Ludovico. 'It may, perhaps, be in his power,' she added, 'to effect our escape.
Go to him, Annette, tell him what I have to apprehend, and what I have already
suffered; but entreat him to be secret, and to lose no time in attempting to
release us. If he is willing to undertake this he shall be amply rewarded. I
cannot speak with him myself, for we might be observed, and then effectual care
would be taken to prevent our flight. But be quick, Annette, and, above all, be
discreet—I will await your return in this apartment.'
The girl,
whose honest heart had been much affected by the recital, was now as eager to
obey, as Emily was to employ her, and she immediately quitted the room.
Emily's
surprise increased, as she reflected upon Annette's intelligence. 'Alas!' said
she, 'what can the officers of justice do against an armed castle? these cannot
be such.' Upon further consideration, however, she concluded, that, Montoni's
bands having plundered the country round, the inhabitants had taken arms, and
were coming with the officers of police and a party of soldiers, to force their
way into the castle. 'But they know not,' thought she, 'its strength, or the
armed numbers within it. Alas! except from flight, I have nothing to hope!'
Montoni,
though not precisely what Emily apprehended him to be—a captain of banditti—had
employed his troops in enterprises not less daring, or less atrocious, than
such a character would have undertaken. They had not only pillaged, whenever
opportunity offered, the helpless traveller, but had attacked, and plundered
the villas of several persons, which, being situated among the solitary
recesses of the mountains, were totally unprepared for resistance. In these
expeditions the commanders of the party did not appear, and the men, partly
disguised, had sometimes been mistaken for common robbers, and, at others, for
bands of the foreign enemy, who, at that period, invaded the country. But,
though they had already pillaged several mansions, and brought home considerable
treasures, they had ventured to approach only one castle, in the attack of
which they were assisted by other troops of their own order; from this,
however, they were vigorously repulsed, and pursued by some of the foreign
enemy, who were in league with the besieged. Montoni's troops fled
precipitately towards Udolpho, but were so closely tracked over the mountains,
that, when they reached one of the heights in the neighbourhood of the castle,
and looked back upon the road, they perceived the enemy winding among the
cliffs below, and at not more than a league distant. Upon this discovery, they
hastened forward with increased speed, to prepare Montoni for the enemy; and it
was their arrival, which had thrown the castle into such confusion and tumult.
As Emily
awaited anxiously some information from below, she now saw from her casements a
body of troops pour over the neighbouring heights; and, though Annette had been
gone a very short time, and had a difficult and dangerous business to
accomplish, her impatience for intelligence became painful: she listened;
opened her door; and often went out upon the corridor to meet her.
At
length, she heard a footstep approach her chamber; and, on opening the door,
saw, not Annette, but old Carlo! New fears rushed upon her mind. He said he
came from the Signor, who had ordered him to inform her, that she must be ready
to depart from Udolpho immediately, for that the castle was about to be
besieged; and that mules were preparing to convey her, with her guides, to a place
of safety.
'Of
safety!' exclaimed Emily, thoughtlessly; 'has, then, the Signor so much
consideration for me?'
Carlo
looked upon the ground, and made no reply. A thousand opposite emotions
agitated Emily, successively, as she listened to old Carlo; those of joy,
grief, distrust and apprehension, appeared, and vanished from her mind, with
the quickness of lightning. One moment, it seemed impossible, that Montoni
could take this measure merely for her preservation; and so very strange was
his sending her from the castle at all, that she could attribute it only to the
design of carrying into execution the new scheme of vengeance, with which he
had menaced her. In the next instant, it appeared so desirable to quit the
castle, under any circumstances, that she could not but rejoice in the
prospect, believing that change must be for the better, till she remembered the
probability of Valancourt being detained in it, when sorrow and regret usurped
her mind, and she wished, much more fervently than she had yet done, that it
might not be his voice which she had heard.
Carlo
having reminded her, that she had no time to lose, for that the enemy were
within sight of the castle, Emily entreated him to inform her whither she was
to go; and, after some hesitation, he said he had received no orders to tell;
but, on her repeating the question, replied, that he believed she was to be
carried into Tuscany.'
'To
Tuscany!' exclaimed Emily—'and why thither?'
Carlo
answered, that he knew nothing further, than that she was to be lodged in a
cottage on the borders of Tuscany, at the feet of the Apennines—'Not a day's
journey distant,' said he.
Emily now
dismissed him; and, with trembling hands, prepared the small package, that she
meant to take with her; while she was employed about which Annette returned.
'O
ma'amselle!' said she, 'nothing can be done! Ludovico says the new porter is
more watchful even than Barnardine was, and we might as well throw ourselves in
the way of a dragon, as in his. Ludovico is almost as broken-hearted as you
are, ma'am, on my account, he says, and I am sure I shall never live to hear
the cannon fire twice!'
She now
began to weep, but revived upon hearing of what had just occurred, and
entreated Emily to take her with her.
'That I
will do most willingly,' replied Emily, 'if Signor Montoni permits it;' to
which Annette made no reply, but ran out of the room, and immediately sought
Montoni, who was on the terrace, surrounded by his officers, where she began
her petition. He sharply bade her go into the castle, and absolutely refused
her request. Annette, however, not only pleaded for herself, but for Ludovico;
and Montoni had ordered some of his men to take her from his presence, before
she would retire.
In an
agony of disappointment, she returned to Emily, who foreboded little good
towards herself, from this refusal to Annette, and who, soon after, received a
summons to repair to the great court, where the mules, with her guides, were in
waiting. Emily here tried in vain to sooth the weeping Annette, who persisted
in saying, that she should never see her dear young lady again; a fear, which
her mistress secretly thought too well justified, but which she endeavoured to
restrain, while, with apparent composure, she bade this affectionate servant
farewell. Annette, however, followed to the courts, which were now thronged
with people, busy in preparation for the enemy; and, having seen her mount her
mule and depart, with her attendants, through the portal, turned into the
castle and wept again.
Emily,
meanwhile, as she looked back upon the gloomy courts of the castle, no longer
silent as when she had first entered them, but resounding with the noise of
preparation for their defence, as well as crowded with soldiers and workmen,
hurrying to and fro; and, when she passed once more under the huge portcullis,
which had formerly struck her with terror and dismay, and, looking round, saw
no walls to confine her steps—felt, in spite of anticipation, the sudden joy of
a prisoner, who unexpectedly finds himself at liberty. This emotion would not
suffer her now to look impartially on the dangers that awaited her without; on
mountains infested by hostile parties, who seized every opportunity for
plunder; and on a journey commended under the guidance of men, whose countenances
certainly did not speak favourably of their dispositions. In the present
moments, she could only rejoice, that she was liberated from those walls, which
she had entered with such dismal forebodings; and, remembering the
superstitious presentiment, which had then seized her, she could now smile at
the impression it had made upon her mind.
As she
gazed, with these emotions, upon the turrets of the castle, rising high over
the woods, among which she wound, the stranger, whom she believed to be confined
there, returned to her remembrance, and anxiety and apprehension, lest he
should be Valancourt, again passed like a cloud upon her joy. She recollected
every circumstance, concerning this unknown person, since the night, when she
had first heard him play the song of her native province;—circumstances, which
she had so often recollected, and compared before, without extracting from them
any thing like conviction, and which still only prompted her to believe, that
Valancourt was a prisoner at Udolpho. It was possible, however, that the men,
who were her conductors, might afford her information, on this subject; but,
fearing to question them immediately, lest they should be unwilling to discover
any circumstance to her in the presence of each other, she watched for an
opportunity of speaking with them separately.
Soon
after, a trumpet echoed faintly from a distance; the guides stopped, and looked
toward the quarter whence it came, but the thick woods, which surrounded them,
excluding all view of the country beyond, one of the men rode on to the point
of an eminence, that afforded a more extensive prospect, to observe how near
the enemy, whose trumpet he guessed this to be, were advanced; the other,
meanwhile, remained with Emily, and to him she put some questions, concerning
the stranger at Udolpho. Ugo, for this was his name, said, that there were
several prisoners in the castle, but he neither recollected their persons, or
the precise time of their arrival, and could therefore give her no information.
There was a surliness in his manner, as he spoke, that made it probable he
would not have satisfied her enquiries, even if he could have done so.
Having
asked him what prisoners had been taken, about the time, as nearly as she could
remember, when she had first heard the music, 'All that week,' said Ugo, 'I was
out with a party, upon the mountains, and knew nothing of what was doing at the
castle. We had enough upon our hands, we had warm work of it.'
Bertrand,
the other man, being now returned, Emily enquired no further, and, when he had
related to his companion what he had seen, they travelled on in deep silence;
while Emily often caught, between the opening woods, partial glimpses of the
castle above—the west towers, whose battlements were now crowded with archers,
and the ramparts below, where soldiers were seen hurrying along, or busy upon
the walls, preparing the cannon.
Having
emerged from the woods, they wound along the valley in an opposite direction to
that, from whence the enemy were approaching. Emily now had a full view of
Udolpho, with its gray walls, towers and terraces, high over-topping the
precipices and the dark woods, and glittering partially with the arms of the
condottieri, as the sun's rays, streaming through an autumnal cloud, glanced
upon a part of the edifice, whose remaining features stood in darkened majesty.
She continued to gaze, through her tears, upon walls that, perhaps, confined
Valancourt, and which now, as the cloud floated away, were lighted up with
sudden splendour, and then, as suddenly were shrouded in gloom; while the
passing gleam fell on the wood-tops below, and heightened the first tints of
autumn, that had begun to steal upon the foliage. The winding mountains, at
length, shut Udolpho from her view, and she turned, with mournful reluctance,
to other objects. The melancholy sighing of the wind among the pines, that
waved high over the steeps, and the distant thunder of a torrent assisted her
musings, and conspired with the wild scenery around, to diffuse over her mind
emotions solemn, yet not unpleasing, but which were soon interrupted by the
distant roar of cannon, echoing among the mountains. The sounds rolled along
the wind, and were repeated in faint and fainter reverberation, till they sunk
in sullen murmurs. This was a signal, that the enemy had reached the castle,
and fear for Valancourt again tormented Emily. She turned her anxious eyes
towards that part of the country, where the edifice stood, but the intervening
heights concealed it from her view; still, however, she saw the tall head of a
mountain, which immediately fronted her late chamber, and on this she fixed her
gaze, as if it could have told her of all that was passing in the scene it
overlooked. The guides twice reminded her, that she was losing time and that
they had far to go, before she could turn from this interesting object, and,
even when she again moved onward, she often sent a look back, till only its
blue point, brightening in a gleam of sunshine, appeared peeping over other
mountains.
The sound
of the cannon affected Ugo, as the blast of the trumpet does the war-horse; it
called forth all the fire of his nature; he was impatient to be in the midst of
the fight, and uttered frequent execrations against Montoni for having sent him
to a distance. The feelings of his comrade seemed to be very opposite, and
adapted rather to the cruelties, than to the dangers of war.
Emily
asked frequent questions, concerning the place of her destination, but could
only learn, that she was going to a cottage in Tuscany; and, whenever she
mentioned the subject, she fancied she perceived, in the countenances of these
men, an expression of malice and cunning, that alarmed her.
It was
afternoon, when they had left the castle. During several hours, they travelled
through regions of profound solitude, where no bleat of sheep, or bark of
watch-dog, broke on silence, and they were now too far off to hear even the
faint thunder of the cannon. Towards evening, they wound down precipices, black
with forests of cypress, pine and cedar, into a glen so savage and secluded,
that, if Solitude ever had local habitation, this might have been 'her place of
dearest residence.' To Emily it appeared a spot exactly suited for the retreat
of banditti, and, in her imagination, she already saw them lurking under the
brow of some projecting rock, whence their shadows, lengthened by the setting
sun, stretched across the road, and warned the traveller of his danger. She
shuddered at the idea, and, looking at her conductors, to observe whether they
were armed, thought she saw in them the banditti she dreaded!
It was in
this glen, that they proposed to alight, 'For,' said Ugo, 'night will come on
presently, and then the wolves will make it dangerous to stop.' This was a new
subject of alarm to Emily, but inferior to what she suffered from the thought
of being left in these wilds, at midnight, with two such men as her present
conductors. Dark and dreadful hints of what might be Montoni's purpose in
sending her hither, came to her mind. She endeavoured to dissuade the men from
stopping, and enquired, with anxiety, how far they had yet to go.
'Many
leagues yet,' replied Bertrand. 'As for you, Signora, you may do as you please
about eating, but for us, we will make a hearty supper, while we can. We shall
have need of it, I warrant, before we finish our journey. The sun's going down
apace; let us alight under that rock, yonder.'
His
comrade assented, and, turning the mules out of the road, they advanced towards
a cliff, overhung with cedars, Emily following in trembling silence. They
lifted her from her mule, and, having seated themselves on the grass, at the
foot of the rocks, drew some homely fare from a wallet, of which Emily tried to
eat a little, the better to disguise her apprehensions.
The sun
was now sunk behind the high mountains in the west, upon which a purple haze
began to spread, and the gloom of twilight to draw over the surrounding
objects. To the low and sullen murmur of the breeze, passing among the woods,
she no longer listened with any degree of pleasure, for it conspired with the
wildness of the scene and the evening hour, to depress her spirits.
Suspense
had so much increased her anxiety, as to the prisoner at Udolpho, that, finding
it impracticable to speak alone with Bertrand, on that subject, she renewed her
questions in the presence of Ugo; but he either was, or pretended to be
entirely ignorant, concerning the stranger. When he had dismissed the question,
he talked with Ugo on some subject, which led to the mention of Signor Orsino
and of the affair that had banished him from Venice; respecting which Emily had
ventured to ask a few questions. Ugo appeared to be well acquainted with the
circumstances of that tragical event, and related some minute particulars, that
both shocked and surprised her; for it appeared very extraordinary how such
particulars could be known to any, but to persons, present when the
assassination was committed.
'He was
of rank,' said Bertrand, 'or the State would not have troubled itself to
enquire after his assassins. The Signor has been lucky hitherto; this is not
the first affair of the kind he has had upon his hands; and to be sure, when a
gentleman has no other way of getting redress—why he must take this.'
'Aye,'
said Ugo, 'and why is not this as good as another? This is the way to have
justice done at once, without more ado. If you go to law, you must stay till
the judges please, and may lose your cause, at last, Why the best way, then, is
to make sure of your right, while you can, and execute justice yourself.'
'Yes,
yes,' rejoined Bertrand, 'if you wait till justice is done you—you may stay
long enough. Why if I want a friend of mine properly served, how am I to get my
revenge? Ten to one they will tell me he is in the right, and I am in the
wrong. Or, if a fellow has got possession of property, which I think ought to
be mine, why I may wait, till I starve, perhaps, before the law will give it
me, and then, after all, the judge may say—the estate is his. What is to be
done then?—Why the case is plain enough, I must take it at last.'
Emily's
horror at this conversation was heightened by a suspicion, that the latter part
of it was pointed against herself, and that these men had been commissioned by
Montoni to execute a similar kind of JUSTICE, in his cause.
To be continued