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"Aulus. Thou hast-a father!"
At that word father, his eyes dropped instantly, their haughty insolence abashed; his face turned deadly pale; his tongue _was_ frozen; he spoke no word again until at an early hour of morning, they reached the house he had so fatally dishonored.
Meanwhile, as the party, who had captured him, returned slowly with their prisoner down the mountain side, the last of the rebels having gallopped off long before to join the swordsmith and his gang, the boy, who took so deep an interest in Julia, dismounted from the white horse, which had borne him for so many hours with unabated fire and spirit, and leaving the high road, turned into a glade among the holm oaks, watered by a small streamlet, leading his courser by the rein.
Having reached a secluded spot, quite removed from sight of the highway, he drew from a small wallet, which was attached to the croupe, some pieces of coa.r.s.e bread and a skin of generous wine, of which he partook sparingly himself, giving by far the larger portion to his four-footed friend, who greedily devoured the cake saturated with the rich grape-juice.
This done he fastened the beast to a tree so that he could both graze and drink from the stream; and then throwing himself down at length on the gra.s.s, he soon fell into a heavy and quiet sleep.
It was already sunset, when he awoke, and the gray hues of night were gathering fast over the landscape; but he seemed to care nothing for the approaching darkness as he arose reinvigorated and full of spirit, and walked up to his horse which whinnied his joyful recognition, and tossed his long thin mane with a spirited and fiery air, as he felt the well-known hand clapping his high arched crest.
"Courage! brave horse," he cried-"Courage, White Ister. We will yet save her, for-Arvina!"
And, with the words he mounted, and cantered away through the gloom of the woodland night, on the road toward Bolsena, well a.s.sured of the route taken by Caius Crispus and his infernal crew.
CHAPTER XII
THE ROMAN FATHER.
Daughter, He fled.
That Flight was parricide.
MASON'S CARACTACUS.
The streets of Rome were in fierce and terrible confusion all that day long, on which the conspirators were arrested, and all the night that followed it.
Late on the evening of that day, when it was already dark, the Consul had addressed the people by torch-light in the forum, delivering that superb speech, known as the third oration against Catiline.
In it, he had informed them clearly of all the events which had occurred in the last twenty-four days, since the delivery of his second speech, more especially treating of those which had taken place in the preceding day and night.
The conspiracy made manifest by overwhelming evidence-the arrest of the amba.s.sadors, the seizure of the letters, the acknowledgment of those letters for their own by the terrified and bewildered traitors, and lastly the committal of the ringleaders of the plot to close custody, previous to the discussion of their fate-such were the wondrous and exciting facts, which he had announced to the a.s.sembled mult.i.tudes, inviting them to join him in a solemn thanksgiving to the G.o.ds, and public celebration, decreed by the Senate to his honor; congratulating them on their escape from a danger so imminent and so general; and calling on them, in conclusion, to watch over the safety of the city by nocturnal guards and patroles, as they had done so diligently during all that emergency.
The thundering acclamations, which greeted the close of that luculent and powerful exposition, the zeal with which the concourse hailed him unanimously Savior of Rome and Father of his country, the eagerness of affection with which all ranks and ages thronged around him, expressing their grat.i.tude and their devotion, by all means imaginable, proved satisfactorily that, whatever might have been the result had ma.s.sacre, plunder, and conflagration fallen upon them unawares, the vast ma.s.s of the people were now loyal, and true to their country.
The seven hills never had resounded with louder din of civic triumph, than they did on that glorious night; not when the n.o.ble Scipio triumphed for Carthage overthrown; not when the mighty Marius,(10) begirt with a host of captives and all the pomp of war, dismounted, happiest of men, from his Teutonic Car.
The streets were as light as day with the glare of lamps, and torches, and bonfires blazing on all the circ.u.mjacent heights, as with tremendous shouts, and unpremeditated triumph, the mighty mult.i.tude escorted the great Consul home, not to his own house, where the rites of the Good G.o.ddess were in celebration, and whither no male could be admitted, but to his next-door neighbor's mansion, in which he and his friends were entertained with more than regal splendor.
What could have been more glorious, what more unmixed with any touch of bitterness, or self reproach, than Cicero's position on that evening?
His country saved from miseries unparalleled-saved by himself alone-no aid of rival generals, no force of marshalled hosts to detract from the greatness of his own achievement-all the strife borne, all the success won, all the glory conquered by the force of his own genius, of his own moral resolution. No blood of friends had been spilt to buy that conquest, and wring its tribute of anguished sorrow from eyes bright with the mixed excitement of regret and triumph-no widow's tears, no orphan's sighs, had mounted heavenward amid those joyous conclamations.
With no sword drawn, with no army arrayed, alone in his peaceful toga, he had conquered the world's peace; and, for that night at least, he enjoyed, as his great merit's meed, a world's grat.i.tude.
All night long had the streets been crowded with fond and ardent throngs of all ages, s.e.xes, ranks, conditions, questioning, cheering, carolling, carousing-all, in appearance at least, unanimous in joy; for none dared in such an ebullition of patriotic feeling to display any disaffection.
And the morrow dawned upon Rome, still noisy, still alive with tumultuous joy, still filled, through the whole area within its walls, by thousands, and tens of thousands, hoa.r.s.e with shouting, weary almost of revelling, haggard and pale from the excess of excitement.
Such was the scene, which the metropolis of the world presented, when at the second hour of the morning, on the day following the arrest of Lentulus, a small party consisting of about fifty hors.e.m.e.n, conducting a prisoner, with his arms bound behind his back, gagged, and with the lappet of his cloak so disposed as to conceal his face, entered the Quirinal gate, from the direction of the Flaminian way.
They were the clients of the Fulvian House, leading the miserable Aulus homeward, under the command of his cousin. The horses were jaded, and bleeding from many a spur gall; the men were covered with dust and sweat; and several of their number were wounded; but, what at once struck the minds of all who beheld them, was that their faces, although stern and resolute, were grave, dejected and sad, while still it would seem that they were returning in triumph from some successful expedition.
At any other time, the entrance of such a party would have awakened much astonishment and surprise, perhaps might have created a tumult among the excitable and easily agitated Romans; but now so strangely had the popular mind been stimulated during the last days, that they either paid no attention to the train at all, or observed, pointing to the prisoner, that there went another of the parricides.
Just, however, as the new-comers entered the gate, another armed band met them, moving outward; the latter being a full troop, thirty in number, of cavalry of the seventh legion, with a banner, and clarion, and Paullus Arvina at their head, in complete armor, above which he wore a rich scarlet cloak, or _paludamentum_, floating over his left shoulder.
The face of the young man was as pale as that of a corpse, his eyes were sunken, and surrounded by dark circles, his cheeks were hollow, and among the short black curls, which were visible beneath the brazen peak of his sculptured casque, there was one as white as snow.
Since the dread news had reached him of Julia's abduction, he had not closed his eyes for a moment; and, although scarcely eight and forty hours had elapsed, since he received the fatal intelligence, he had grown older by many years.
No one, who looked upon him, would have judged him to be younger than thirty-five or forty years, when he was in truth little more than half way on life's journey toward the second period.
There was a cold firm determination too written on all his features, such as is rarely seen in young men; and the wild vacillating light which used to flicker so changefully over his fine face, was lost in an expression of mournful and despairing resolution.
Still his att.i.tude on his charger's back was fine and spirited; his head was proudly erect; and his voice, as from time to time, he uttered some command to his troopers, was clear, steady, and sonorous.
So much indeed was he altered, that Caius Fulvius, who knew him well, gazed at him doubtfully for half a minute ere he addressed him, as the two troops came almost into contact, the mounted clients of the Fulvian House, withdrawing to the wayside to allow the legionaries to pa.s.s.
a.s.sured at last that it was indeed Arvina, he called out as he pa.s.sed-
"Tell me, I pray thee, Paullus, what means this concourse in the streets?
hath aught of ill befallen?"
"Ha! is it thou, Caius Fulvius?" replied Arvina. "I will speak with thee anon. Lead the men forward," he added, turning round in his saddle to the second Decurion of his troop, "my good Drusus. I will overtake you, ere you shall reach the Mulvian bridge." Here wheeling his horse to the side of the young n.o.bleman, "Where hast thou been, Caius, that thou hast not heard? All the conspirators have been arrested. Lentulus, and Cethegus, Gabinius, Statilius, and Caeparius! They have confessed their letters-the Gaulish amba.s.sadors, and t.i.tus Volturcius have given evidence against them. The senate is debating even now on their doom."
"Indeed! indeed! when did all this fall out?" enquired the other evidently in great astonishment.
"Yesterday morning they were taken. The previous night, in the third watch, the amba.s.sadors were stopped on the Mulvian bridge, and the treasonable papers found on Volturcius."
"Ha! this is indeed news!" cried Caius. "What will befall Lentulus and the rest? Do men know anything!"
"Death!" answered Arvina gravely.
"Death! art thou certain? A Praetor, a consular of Rome! and all the others Senators! Death! Paullus?"
"Death!" replied the other still more solemnly, than before. "Yet methinks! that rather should be a boon, than the fit penalty of such guilt! But where have you been, that you are ignorant of all this, and whom have you there?"
Caius Fulvius shook his head sorrowfully, and a deep groan burst from the lips of the m.u.f.fled man, a groan of rage mingled with hate and terror.
"I will tell _thee_, Arvina," said the young man, after a moment's pause, during which Paullus had been gazing with a singular, and even to himself incomprehensible, emotion at the captive horseman. "We have been sent to fetch _him_ back," and he pointed to his wretched cousin, "as he fled to join Catiline. We overtook him nigh to Volsinii."
"Who-who-" exclaimed Arvina in a terrible hoa.r.s.e voice-"By all the G.o.ds!