Under the Witches' Moon: A Romantic Tale of Mediaeval Rome

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Under the Witches' Moon: A Romantic Tale of Mediaeval Rome Page 39

by Nathan Gallizier


  CHAPTER I

  THE RETURN OF THE MOOR

  In a domed chamber of the Emperor's Tomb there sat two personagesengaged in whispered conversation, Basil and a weird hooded phantomthat seemed part of the dread shadows which crowded in upon the room,quenching the dying light of day. Deep silence reigned. Only themonotonous tread of the sentries broke the stillness as they made therounds above them.

  It was Basil who spoke.

  "All is going well! We shall prevail! We shall set up the throne ofEbony in the stead of the Cross. I bow to your wisdom, my master! Thepromised reward shall not fail you!"

  As he spoke, the thin, black arm of his vis-a-vis trembled for a momentin the ample folds of his black gown. Then, with a quick, bird-likemovement, a thin hand, twisted like a claw, wrinkled and yellow, wasstretched out towards the Grand Chamberlain.

  On the second finger of this claw there was a ring. Basil bent andkissed it.

  Basil began to speak in his ordinary, conversational tone, but therewas a strange gleam in his eyes.

  "It has been accomplished," he said. "They tell me all Rome is astir!"

  The voice that replied seemed to come from a great distance; the lipsof the waxen face hardly moved. They parted, that was all.

  "It has been done! I took it myself! It was the Host which the Cardinalof Ravenna had consecrated on that morning."

  "And you were not seen?"

  "I was not," came the whispered reply. "As a measure of precaution Iwore the mask which I use to go about the churches at night. I met noone."

  "Is it here?" Basil queried eagerly.

  "It is not here," replied the voice. "It must be kept until the nightof the great consecration, when Lucifer himself shall sit upon theebony throne and demand his bride--his stainless dove. Where is shenow?"

  The light had faded out of Basil's eyes, and his face was ashen.

  "One has been found, worthy of even as fastidious a master as he, whomwe both serve. Well-nigh had she escaped us, had not one who neverfails me tracked her on that fatal night, when her body lay in hercoffin ready to be consecrated to the Nameless one."

  From the eyeless sockets of the shadow-mask a phosphorescent gleam shottowards the Grand Chamberlain.

  "What of the man?"

  "The wafer was discovered on a certain captain of the guard who hathcrossed my path to his undoing once too often. The Church herself shallpronounce sentence upon him--through me!"

  "And--that other?"

  There was a pause.

  "Her husband!--He deems her dead, nor grieves he overmuch, believing,as he does, that her love was another's--even his whom I have markedfor certain doom. I have it in my mind to try what a jest will do forhim."

  The lurid tone of the speaker seemed to impress even his shadowycompanion.

  "A jest?"

  "He shall attend the great ceremony," Basil explained. "And he shallbehold the stainless dove. When is it to be?" he added after a pause.

  "When is it to be?"

  "Six nights hence--on the night of the full moon."

  "And then you shall give to me that which I crave, and the forfeitshall be paid."

  "The forfeit shall be paid," the voice re-echoed from the shadows, andto Basil it seemed as if the damp, cold breath from an open grave hadbeen wafted to his cheeks.

  Like a phantom that sinks back into the night of the grave, whence ithad emerged, Bessarion vanished from the chamber. In his place stoodHormazd, who had noiselessly entered through a panel in the wall.

  Basil greeted him with a silent nod.

  "What of the messenger?" he turned to the Oriental.

  "He returns within the hour," replied the voice.

  "What are his tidings?" Basil queried eagerly. "Is Alberic in the landof shadows, where she dwells who gave him birth?"

  "Sent by the same relentless hand across the Styx," the cowled figurespoke, yet Basil knew not whether it was a question or a statement.

  He gave a start.

  "Tell me, how are secrets known to you at which Hell itself wouldpale?" he turned with unsteady tone to his companion.

  "Those of the shadows commune with the shadows," came the enigmaticalreply. "Is everything prepared?"

  "When the brazen tongue from the Capitol tolls the hour, the blow shallfall," Basil replied. "Hassan Abdullah and his Saracens are anchoredoff the port of Ostia. The Epirotes and Albanians in the Senator'sservice are bribed to our cause. Rome is in the throes of mortalterror. Even the Monk of Cluny is under the spell, and has ceasedto arraign the Scarlet Woman of Babylon. The dread of the impendingjudgment day will succor our cause. And--once installed within thesewalls as master of Rome--with Theodora by my side--you shall have fullsway, to do whatever your dark fancies may prompt. You shall have achamber and a laboratory and be at liberty to roam at will through yourdevil's kitchen."

  The cowled figure gave a silent nod, but, before he could speak, thedoor leading into the chamber opened as from the effect of a violentgust of wind, and a shapeless form, that seemed half human, half ape,flew at Basil's feet, who recoiled as if a ghost had arisen before himfrom the floor.

  For a moment Basil stared from Daoud the Moor to his shadowy visitor,then he bade the runner arise and commanded him in some Eastern tongueto unburden himself.

  With many protestations of his devotion the monster produced a bundlewhich Basil had not noted, owing to the swiftness with which theAfrican had entered the chamber. Panting, with deft, though tremblingfingers, Daoud untied the cords and a bloody head, severed from itstrunk, rolled upon the floor of the chamber, and lay still at Basil'sfeet. It had lost all human semblance and exhaled the putrid odor ofthe grave.

  Basil started to his feet, staring from the Moor to Hormazd.

  "Dead--" his pale lips stammered. Then, turning to his dark companion,he added by way of encouragement to himself:

  "You gave me truth!"

  Daoud was cowering on the floor, his eyes staring into the shadows,where hovered the Persian's almost invisible form.

  A nod from Basil caused him to rise.

  "Away with it!" shrieked the Grand Chamberlain overcome with terror."See that no one sets eyes upon it!"

  The Moor wrapped the severed head into the blood-stained cloth anddarted from the chamber.

  Then Basil turned to his visitor.

  "In six days Rome shall hail a new master! Let then the sable bannersof Hell be unfurled and the Nameless Presence rejoice upon his ebonythrone! And now do you come with me into the realms of doom that gapebelow, that your eyes may be gladdened by that which is in store foryou!"

  Taking up a torch, Basil lighted it with the aid of two flints and thetwain trooped out of the chamber into the shadowy corridor leading intothe crypts of the Emperor's Tomb.

 

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