ANGELA IS EVEN WITH IVAN
Success brings with it fame, fortune, and universal esteem. Men worship success, and with justice.
He who has saved a great treasure, who has restored to thousands of people their country, their industry; he who has overcome a universal calamity which threatened an entire province; he who has given to thousands on the verge of beggary their livelihood, who has dried the tears of the widow and the orphan--he is near to G.o.d himself.
Honors and rewards were showered upon Ivan. The government gave him for all time the patent for his discovery. By the Joint-Stock Mining Company he was handsomely remunerated. A monster deputation obliged him to accept the place of director. Scientific societies at home and abroad elected him member. His picture and biography appeared in all the ill.u.s.trated papers of Europe and America. The simple villagers in Bondathal prayed for him night and morning; and when the first train steamed out of the Bondavara station, the locomotive bore the name of "Behrend." It was only G.o.d's providence that preserved him from receiving "an order."
Perhaps the most interesting testimony, and the one most valued by Ivan, was a letter which the Countess Angela wrote to him with her own hand.
The countess told him frankly all that had happened to her since they had met; how she had married the Marquis Salista; how unhappy he had made her by the pressure he brought to bear upon her grandfather, Prince Theobald, which ended in his property being sequestrated, to the ruin of the whole family of Bondavary. She had suffered greatly in consequence, and had known what privation meant; also the income of the Countess Theudelinde had been considerably diminished, and the old lady had been forced to reduce her household. This condition of affairs had shown them their former friends in their true light--among others, Salista, her husband, who had gone to Mexico, and left her to shift for herself. Then Ivan had come to the rescue. Prince Waldemar's triumphal progress had been effectually checked. The million of money placed by Prince Theobald in the Bondavara Company had regained its value. The prince had arranged with his creditors, and his affairs were once more settled. She had been reconciled to him, and lived with him. Countess Theudelinde likewise had recovered her rents. The great family of Bondavary, which had been so near ruin, was reinstated in its former position. And for its new lease of life it had to thank a certain beneficent, clever--
Here Countess Angela's letter broke off. There was, however, a postscript:
"Answer this letter. I beg for one word. Write 'I forgive you.'"
Ivan answered her immediately. He expressed his grat.i.tude for her kind remembrance of him, but he could not imagine what he had to forgive.
On the contrary, he had a lively recollection of the many kindnesses he had received from the Countess Angela Salista.
The letter was evidently written with an effort to be cold and polite.
It was followed by a second letter from Angela, which ran thus:
"Do not answer me in that way. I have sinned against you. You do not reproach me, but my own heart and conscience do. To quiet these tormentors I need your pardon. Answer me sincerely. Can you ever forgive me? I should not have treated you as I did--"
Ivan answered this by a long, confidential letter. He confessed to her secrets of his heart, made to her confessions which never before pa.s.sed his lips. The countess might be confident that she had never offended him. She had never forfeited the place she held in his respect.
A third letter came from Angela.
"If you can do so from your heart, write upon a piece of paper, 'Angela Bondavary, I forgive you, from my heart.'"
Ivan wrote these words and nothing else.
One evening two carriages drove into the court-yard of Ivan's house.
He lived now in the handsome residence provided by the company for the director of the mines. The porter exchanged some words with the person who sat in the first carriage, and then came to Ivan with two visiting-cards.
Ivan, to his surprise, read the names--
_Countess Theudelinde Bondavary._
_Countess Angela Bondavary._
These names caused a great disturbance in Ivan's mind. What did they want? Why did they come to him? He told the porter to show the ladies in, and then, taking up the cards again, it struck him as odd that the Countess Angela's did not bear the name of her husband.
The door opened, and only one lady entered. She was dressed in mourning, and her face was covered by a thick veil, the thick c.r.a.pe concealing her features. It was the Countess Theudelinde. She had on a long black travelling-cloak with two capes. She came to Ivan and held out to him the finger-tips of her black glove, which he carried to his lips, while she murmured some words of greeting.
"Where is the marquise?" asked Ivan, anxiously.
"She will be here immediately; but it is very difficult to bring her in."
Ivan conducted the lady to a sofa and asked her to be seated.
"Do not go to meet her," continued the countess. "She will find her way. You will receive her kindly, won't you?"
"Oh, countess," Ivan began; but Theudelinde interrupted impatiently.
"No phrases, please. We have not come here for polite words or to exchange compliments. We come to make a request; the answer is simple.
Yes or no. Angela wants to remain here."
"Here!" repeated Ivan, horrified.
"Yes, here! Do not be afraid; not in this house, but in the neighborhood. She wishes to remain near you--never to leave you--that is her desire; and she has a right to have her wishes granted."
Ivan began to think he must be dreaming; he did not know what to say, but his thoughts were distracted by a strange noise outside. Along the pa.s.sage came the heavy tread of several men. The door opened and four miners came in, carrying between them a metal coffin, on the lid of which lay a white wreath of _repousse_ silver.
The wreath surrounded the arms of the Bondavary family, and underneath was carved in gold letters--
ANGELA BONDAVARY.
The coffin was placed upon the oak table. Ivan stood as if he were turned into a statue, his eyes fixed upon the wreath and the name underneath.
Theudelinde got up and seized his hand, saying, in a low, agitated voice:
"This is the Countess Angela Bondavary, who begs of you, as the master here in Bondavara, to find for her a small place in the family vault of the castle, where she may lie among her own people, waiting for the coming of Jesus Christ--the Bridegroom of all poor women whose lives have been desolated."
"How is it possible that she is dead?" said Ivan, who was deeply moved.
"How? Very easily! When you throw a rose into the fire, in two minutes you will only find its ashes. I had just heard her laugh; she was quite gay. Then she went too near the stove; the next moment she screamed, and I saw her enveloped in flames!"
"She was burned to death!" cried Ivan, covering his face with his hands. Then, after a pause, "Was there no one near to save her?"
"Was there no one?" answered Theudelinde. "Were you, then, asleep at midnight? Did you not hear her call, 'Ivan, help me!'? Did you not see her standing beside your bed in flames--an angel with h.e.l.l in her heart? Why were you not by her side to hold her in your arms, to stifle the flames, to s.n.a.t.c.h her from the jaws of death? Where were you, who should have saved her? Now she is here, and says to you, 'I am gone. I am no one. Let us be united.'"
Ivan felt as if an iron band had been laid upon his heart.
"She lived," continued Theudelinde, "for two days. She suffered the most terrible pain. When I think of all she went through I feel as if my senses were leaving me. To the last she was conscious. She spoke-- But no--why should I tell you what she said? Just before she died she asked for a pencil, and wrote a few words to you. Here they are in this envelope. Do not break the seal, do not read them, so long as I am here. I would rather give you no explanation. If you have anything to ask, ask it from her. Here is the key of the coffin; I give it to you."
Ivan recoiled from receiving such a present.
"Why should you be afraid? Why do you object to opening the coffin?
There is nothing to fear. The body is embalmed, and the flames did not touch her face. You will see that she smiles."
Ivan forced himself to raise the coffin-lid and to look on the face of the dead. There was no smile on her lips. She was calm and cold; as when she lay insensible in the wood, with her head upon a cushion of moss, so now she lay upon her white satin cushion. Ivan felt that if she could open her eyes for one minute she would look at him proudly and say, "I want nothing," and close them again. How beautiful she was, with her still, marble face, her immovable eyebrows. Ivan would not disturb its calm loveliness by even one kiss. He would have felt it to be dishonorable, and yet, if she could have come to life again, who knows--? As on the day when he had closed her dress with his breast-pin, so now he shrouded her secret with the coffin-lid. Her secret was safe with him.
"Keep the key," said Theudelinde. "The coffin, its key, and the treasure it holds are yours; that is settled. You are the master of the vault; it is your duty to take her there. You cannot escape it."
With eyes that were hot and tearless, Theudelinde looked through her veil at Ivan. He returned the glance. If either had shed a tear, or even let a sob escape, both would have burst into pa.s.sionate weeping, for grief is infectious; but each one of them was resolved to show mental strength in the presence of the other. They could even command their emotions.