In the Palace of the King eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 355 pages of information about In the Palace of the King.

In the Palace of the King eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 355 pages of information about In the Palace of the King.
He had not recognized her, and she believed he was dying, he had kissed her, and all eternity could not take from her the memory of that moment.  In the wild confusion of her thoughts she was almost content that he should die now, for she had felt what she had never dared to feel in sweetest dreams, and it had been true, and no one could steal it away now, nor should any one ever know it, not even Dolores herself.  The jealous thought was there, in the whirlwind of her brain, with all the rest, sudden, fierce, and strong, as if Don John had been hers in life, and as if the sister she loved so dearly had tried to win him from her.  He was hers in death, and should be hers for ever, and no one should ever know.  It did not matter that he had taken her for another, his kisses were her own.  Once only had a man’s lips, not her father’s, touched her cheek, and they had been the lips of the fairest, and best, and bravest man in the world, her idol and her earthly god.  He might die now, and she would follow him, and in the world beyond God would make it right somehow, and he, and she, and her sister would all be but one loving soul for ever and ever.  There was no reasoning in all that—­it was but the flash of wild thoughts that all seemed certainties.

But Don John of Austria was neither dead nor dying.  His brother’s sword had pierced his doublet and run through the outer flesh beneath his left arm, as he stood sideways with his right thrust forward.  The wound was a mere scratch, as soldiers count wounds, and though the young blood had followed quickly, it had now ceased to flow.  It was the fall that had hurt him, not the stab.  The carpet had slipped from under his feet, and he had fallen backwards to his full length, as a man falls on ice, and his head had struck the marble floor so violently that he had lain half an hour almost in a swoon, like a dead man at first, with neither breath nor beating of the heart to give a sign of life, till after Dolores had left him; and then he had sighed back to consciousness by very slow degrees, because no one was there to help him, to raise his head a few inches from the floor, to dash a little cold water into his face.

He stirred uneasily now, and moved his hands again, and his eyes opened wide.  Inez felt the slight motion and heard his regular breathing, and an instinct told her that he was conscious, and not in a dream as he had been when he had kissed her.

“I am Inez,” she said, almost mechanically, and not knowing why she had feared that he should take her for her sister.  “I found your Highness here—­they all think that you are dead.”

“Dead?” There was surprise in his voice, and his eyes looked at her and about the room as he spoke, though he did not yet lift his head from the hood on which it lay.  “Dead?” he repeated, dazed still.  “No—­I must have fallen.  My head hurts me.”

He uttered a sharp sound as he moved again, more of annoyance than of suffering, as strong men do who unexpectedly find themselves hurt or helpless, or both.  Then, as his eyes fell upon the open door of the inner room, he forgot his pain instantly and raised himself upon his hand with startled eyes.

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In the Palace of the King from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.