Neath the Hoof of the Tartar - BestLightNovel.com
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"You are right, Akos," interposed the King. "Time may bring us good. Let us wait and be watchful! And don't forget that I have given this dear child into your care. Trust the rest of us to G.o.d, in whose hands is our fate; we shall defend ourselves, if need be, but you think only of her.
Do you promise me?"
"I swear I will," said Akos, with uplifted hand.
Then he embraced his bride, who accompanied him to the covered entrance, then followed him with her eyes all along the drawbridge, and after that watched him from a window until he was quite out of sight.
Kuthen had already doubled the guards about his dwelling, and had taken other precautions and measures of defence; but the walls were high, and all had been done so quietly that it had not attracted the attention of the sentries posted on the other side of the drawbridge. When Akos was gone, he and his sons armed themselves as if for battle.
Sheaves of arrows were brought out and placed in readiness, the guards were armed, and the Kun chiefs, who took it in turn to be on duty near the King, made all needful preparation for an obstinate defence.
Akos had not been gone more than an hour or two, when little groups and knots of people began to gather round Kuthen's house. There were three or four here, and three or four there, and presently they might be counted by the score. Later on a large crowd had collected. They were talking quietly to one another, and seemed so far to be quite peaceable, however.
The Kun royal family took no alarm, for they knew the Pest populace and its insatiable curiosity well by this time, and they fancied that there was perhaps some idea abroad that Kuthen and his sons would be going to the Diet; or perhaps Marana's betrothal was known.
Another hour pa.s.sed and the people began to shout and howl. Two persons were declaiming to them; but within the walls it was impossible to distinguish what they were saying. The crowd pressed nearer and nearer to the drawbridge, so near indeed, that the guards on duty there had the greatest difficulty in keeping them back, and a sudden rush of those in the rear sent two or three of the foremost splas.h.i.+ng into the moat, to the huge diversion of the rest.
Presently, however, the mob appeared to be seized by a new idea, for they all set off running in one direction; and in a few moments, only a few small knots of people remained.
But these few lay down on the patches of gra.s.s round about, as if they meant to stay indefinitely, and the Kun chiefs, who had been keeping close watch behind the loop-holed walls, noticed that they were all armed, some with knotty sticks and wooden clubs bristling with nails, and a few here and there with bows and quivers. It looked as if they meant mischief, and the Kunok were all on the alert for what might happen.
Akos meantime had been for the last hour or two at the Diet. From where he was he had a full view of the Danube, and after a time he noticed a large crowd of people crossing the river by the ferry-boats and making straight for the place where the Diet was being held. Both banks of the Danube were thronged, and soon the crowd became a vast, compact ma.s.s; but the first intimation of anything unusual that many of the members had, was the finding the table at which they sat suddenly surrounded by their own gaily caparisoned horses, which the crowd had found blocking their way, and had driven before them into the tent.
It was a terrible moment! No one could imagine what had happened, and some of the more nervous thought that the Tartars, whom they had taken so lightly before, had actually stormed the town. All started to their feet, seized the horses by their bridles, and drew their swords.
And now the howls of the furious mob were plainly to be heard.
"Kuthen! the Kunok! the traitors! Death to the Kunok!"
It was impossible to misunderstand what the mob were bent upon.
This was no peaceable, if clamorous deputation like the former one!
these were no faithful subjects rallying round the King in a moment of danger, and seeking his counsel and help!
No! the flood had burst its bounds, carrying all before it, and had come not to pet.i.tion, but to claim, and to threaten.
The King motioned for silence. He was the calmest and most collected of all present, and such was the magic influence of his presence, such the respect felt for him, that even now, in spite of all the excitement, for a moment the clamour seemed to cease.
Just then one of the n.o.bles, a young man in brilliant armour, with flas.h.i.+ng eyes, seized the bridle of the horse nearest him, flung himself on its back, dashed away, and looking neither behind nor before him, forced his way recklessly through the mob. All who noticed him supposed that he had received some command from the King, but the confusion was so great that his departure was un.o.bserved, except by those whose legs were endangered by his horse's hoofs.
"The Kun King is a prisoner," said Bela in a trumpet-like voice, which commanded attention at least for the moment. "No one in my dominions will be condemned unheard. I forbid all violence, and I shall hold the leaders of this insurgent mult.i.tude responsible."
So far the King was allowed to speak without interruption, or at least without having his voice drowned. But after this, if he spoke, he could not make himself heard. For no sooner did the magnates and others a.s.sembled understand what all the uproar was about, than the King's words lost their effect.
Members from the counties where the Kunok were settled, recalled the many irregularities of which the latter had been guilty on their first arrival, envied them their rich pastures, and joined the mob in crying for vengeance upon them, and in shrieking "Treachery!"
There were but few on the King's side, save the two Archbishops, the two Szirmays, one Foyacs, and Hedervary the Palatine.
The mob surged into the tent, howling and threatening.
"If the King won't consent, let us settle it ourselves! The country stands first! The King himself will thank us when his eyes are opened!
Let's go! what are we waiting for? There are enough of us!"
Duke Friedrich, who, as being the most powerful and most distinguished guest present, was sitting next the King, turned to him and said in a half whisper: "Your Majesty, this is a case in which you must give in!
Nothing is more dangerous than for the people to think they can act against the King's will and go unpunished. No one will defend Kuthen, and who knows what has been going on yonder, or even whether Kuthen is still alive?"
The King maintained a determined silence, but his eyes flashed, and his hand grasped the hilt of his sword.
The tumult increased, and some even of those who believed in the Kunok's innocence, were so alarmed by the rage of the insurgents that they hurried up to the King and implored him to yield. The pressure around him waxed greater and greater.
Duke Kalman, who was standing not far off, cried out, "Your Majesty won't give in! The honour of the nation is at stake!"
But the noise and confusion were so great that the King could not hear a word his brother said. The Duke shouted for his horse, but it was all in vain, for he could not move.
King Bela, pressed on all sides by those who were beseeching, imploring, urging, forgot himself for a moment. He put his hands over his eyes, then stretching them out, he said, "Lavabo ma.n.u.s meas! (I will wash my hands). You will answer to G.o.d for this wickedness. I have done what I could do!"
"The King has consented!" roared those nearest him.
The mob began to sway about, the horses neighed, the people all poured forth, roaring, "Eljen a kiraly! Long live the King! Death to the false traitors! Forward! To Kuthen! to Kuthen!"
No sooner was he free than Duke Kalman mounted the first horse he could seize, while the mob rushed off like a whirlwind in the direction of the house by the Danube.
When the King looked round none were left but some of the magnates.
"A horse!" he shouted furiously; and he galloped away after the mob, accompanied by the Austrian Duke and the rest.
If Bela had mounted his horse before he addressed the mob, if he had faced the insurgents as a king, and had at once punished the ringleaders, the country might have been spared great part of the disasters which were now on the very threshold. But once again the King was weak at a critical moment. There is much to be said in his excuse and defence; but weakness, however brilliantly defended, remains weakness still.
A few moments after the mob had burst into the King's tent, Akos was again at the drawbridge which led to Kuthen's dwelling.
"What do you want, sir?" asked the captain of the guard hotly, as he sprang forward to meet him. "No one is admitted."
"Since when?" asked Akos haughtily.
"The King sent orders an hour ago."
"Maybe! but I have come straight from the Diet by the King's command, and I am to take Kuthen and all his family before him and the States at once, while you can remain here to guard the place till our return."
The captain turned back submissively, and blew the horn which hung at his side. Possibly the drawbridge which formed the outer gate of the castle would not even now have been lowered, but that Kuthen had recognised Akos, and that they were so well armed as to be quite a match for the guard, and for those of the mob who had remained behind.
The drawbridge was lowered therefore, but raised again the moment Akos had pa.s.sed. He rode across the covered s.p.a.ce between the drawbridge and the inner gate, and there he had to wait again a few moments while the bolts and bars were withdrawn. He leapt from his horse as soon as he was within, and Kuthen and his sons hurried from the entrance-hall to meet him, doubting whether he brought good news or bad.
"Quick!" said Akos, "to horse! your Majesty, to horse! all of you," and without waiting Kuthen's answer, he shouted, "Horses! bring the horses!
and mount, all who can!"
The Princes flew at once to the stables, and bridled the horses--which were always kept ready saddled--while Kuthen asked in some surprise, "What has happened? Where are we to go?" for he had not been able to read anything in young Szirmay's face, whether of good or of evil.
"Where?" said Akos bitterly, "where we can be farthest from the mob--the mob has risen and may be here any moment."