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She was not distressed on her own account, but she could not bear to hear her husband run down.
And now all the women crowded together at the corner of the pew, and turned their backs upon her just to let her know that there was no room for her anywhere.
Poor Michal could have sunk into the ground for shame, when all at once a wondrously beautiful, handsomely dressed lady stepped out of a richly carved pew covered with heraldic emblazonments which stood close to the central column, hastened toward Michal, and said to her: "What! is there no room for the young lady? Pray come into my pew, there is room enough there." And with that she took pilloried Michal by the hand, led her to her own pew, made her sit down beside her, and pushed toward her her beautiful gold-clasped prayer book, so that they might both sing out of it together.
Now this lady was the Countess Isabella Hommonai the wife of the Captain-General and Commander of Ka.s.sa, whom the latter, as we have already mentioned, had married a short time before.
The whole sisterhood of backbiters was most cruelly checkmated, their vexation nearly choked them.
But Michal, with streaming eyes, prayed the Almighty to protect her beloved Valentine in his present great peril, save him from wounds and captivity, and bring him back safe and sound. She had nothing else to pray for.
And when divine service was over, the countess did not consider it beneath her dignity to accompany Michal out of church, waited in the porch for Dame Sarah, and then said to Michal, who gratefully kissed her hand, that she must make haste and come and pay her a visit at the castle.
All the other women heard it and were ready to burst for envy.
CHAPTER XXVII.
Wherein is shown how great a force the will of a woman is, and how quickly it can alter the order of things which man devises.
Three days later, Count Hommonai brought back his forces, after successfully driving the Turkish freebooters into the neighboring county; it was for the neighboring county to drive them on still further.
Valentine came riding safe and sound into his own courtyard, and great was Michal's joy when she saw him return in such a merry mood.
Nevertheless, she surrendered the first kisses to her mother-in-law.
"Well, have you cut down many Turks?" inquired Dame Sarah.
"I've felled a few, but I did not count how many."
"I'm only glad they've done you no harm," said Michal joyfully.
"You've been praying for me, darling, have you not? Were you not in church, did you sit by my mother?"
"Oh, no!" cried Dame Sarah, eager to tell everything. "That wicked old Furmender woman would not let her come into the pew. She said to her: 'Servant maids must sit behind.' And do you know who it was that found her a seat after all? Why the good Countess Hommonai!
Yes, the countess herself actually made Michal come and sit down beside her in her own beautiful pew."
Valentine s.n.a.t.c.hed his cap from his head as if the countess stood before him in person.
"G.o.d bless her for it! You thanked her for her graciousness, I hope?"
"At the time we hardly knew what to say, we were so confused; but her ladys.h.i.+p has invited Michal to the castle."
"And have you been?"
"Not yet, I waited for you. We must go together."
Valentine scratched his head.
"With Count Hommonai I should think nothing of going against a whole host of dog-headed Tartars, but how can I approach the countess? She is such a fine lady, and I am such a stupid blockhead."
But he had to go all the same, and that at once, for scarcely had he had time to change his clothes when the captain's carriage drove up to the door, and a heyduke brought the message that the count and countess wished to speak to Mr. and Mrs. Kalondai.
"Well, I don't know what will be the end of it," stammered Valentine. He was so nervous that he could not even tie his neckerchief properly, and kept on b.u.t.toning his coat at one moment a b.u.t.ton too high, and at another a b.u.t.ton too low, so that he had to begin it all over again.
But he had to go, for the carriage was waiting outside.
Dame Sarah now gave her daughter-in-law another dress to wear, a trifle simpler than the former one, and hung a handsome mantle round her shoulders.
The Countess Hommonai come forward to meet her guests to the very door of the room, and received Michal with great cordiality.
"And to think, my dear!" said she, "that while I was delivering you out of the hands of the Philistines last Sunday, your husband should be rescuing mine from the hands of the Turks! But you have heard all about it already, I dare say?"
"I have heard nothing. My husband never boasts of his exploits."
"He never boasts, eh? Then he's all the more a man."
Valentine grew fiery red.
They had got thus far, when the count himself entered the countess's chamber. And he was as handsome a man as she was a woman. He had long, chestnut-brown hair rolling down his shoulders, red cheeks, an open forehead, a well-twisted mustache, and a stately figure.
And the count also was very kind to them both, and ignoring altogether the fact that he was a magnate and a captain, while Valentine was only a simple gentleman and a corporal, he held out his hand and shook Valentine's so vigorously that Valentine grew visibly.
But the countess made Michal sit down beside her on the sofa, which was covered with a beautiful gobelin.
Valentine thought that Michal, now that she was in polite society, would put on the fine manners she had learnt at home and thus betray herself. All the more pleasantly surprised was he, therefore, when he saw that Milly could clean forget Michal, so well did she know how to fall into the ways of the rustics. First of all, she shyly hesitated to sit down at all. Then she dusted the corner of the sofa a little with her skirt before sitting down on the edge of it, just as the country people are wont to do, at which the countess secretly smiled.
"Yes, my husband would certainly at this moment be a prisoner among the Turks," said the countess to Milly, "if your husband had not saved him. Mine had ventured forward a little too far. When the Turks had been put to flight, and the hussars were busy tying the prisoners together in couples, my lord captain took it into his head to capture the pasha single-handed. The pasha, however, had already taken to his heels, and n.o.body had a horse swift enough to catch him but my husband, who accordingly overtook and captured him.
But while he was securing him, up came the pasha's attendants, who threw a hair la.s.so round my husband's neck and pulled him from his horse. Then they began to hale him away, when Kalondai perceived the danger of his captain, and dashed forward at the head of two of his men. The Turks, overtaken, and thus prevented from dragging away my husband alive, at once resolved to kill him, and one of them drew a saber to cut off his head. But Kalondai was quicker than the Turk, and cut him down with a single blow. Thus he saved my husband's life and liberty. The mark of the cord is still visible on my husband's neck, and the cord itself (which he has brought home with him) I shall always preserve among my curiosities. So now you see how well we did in praying together out of the same prayer book. You have a brave husband!"
Valentine's heart swelled with pride at this great praise.
"And he shall be rewarded for his valor," put in the count. "I'll give him the pick of the prisoners and of the captured horses, and I make him my lieutenant besides."
"I thank my gracious lord for his goodness," replied Valentine (he was never at a loss when he had men to deal with, it was only with women that he felt shy); "if I may choose, I'll pick out from among the captives a good-natured fellow of humble rank who may help my mother in her household duties. A horse I don't want. I am content with that I have. But if my lord captain will do me a favor, I beg of him a better horse for my comrade Simplex, the field-trumpeter, for his present nag is lame. As to my promotion to the rank of lieutenant, I thank my lord captain for it, but I must decline it.
That is no post for one like me who has never learnt the art of war.
I should like, however, to make another request of my gracious lord.
It is the inmost wish of my poor mother that I should relieve her of the cares of the business, which is a heavy burden to her. I therefore beg permission to leave the service that I may carry on the trade of a butcher."
The count laughed.
"But you have clean forgotten one of your best arguments: 'As I have only just been married, I would much rather remain at home with my wife than scamper after the foe!' You are right. I would say the same if I only could. I'll release you at once from your military service."
"But not that you may become a butcher," said the countess. "A man like you deserves a better place. The post of castellan has become vacant, and my husband has the gift of it. My dear, you must make Mr. Kalondai our castellan."
"It shall be done," declared the count.