The liberty assumed by Karl was excessive; he spoke
out in the midst of General officers as if his views
were shared by them and the Marshal; and his error
was soon corrected; one after another reproached him,
until the Marshal, pitying his condition, sent him
into his writing-closet, where he lectured the youth
on military discipline. It chanced that there
followed between them a question upon what the General
in command at Brescia would do with his prisoners;
and hearing that they were subject to the rigours
of a court-martial, and if adjudged guilty, would
forthwith summarily be shot, Karl ventured to ask grace
for Vittoria’s husband. He succeeded finally
in obtaining his kind old Chief’s promise that
Count Ammiani should be tried in Milan, and as the
bearer of a paper to that effect, he called on his
sisters to get them or Wilfrid to convey word to Vittoria
of her husband’s probable safety. He found
Anna in a swoon, and Lena and the duchess bending
over her. The duchess’s chasseur Jacob
Baumwalder Feckelwitz had been returning from Moran,
when on the Brescian high-road he met the spy Luigi,
and acting promptly under the idea that Luigi was
always a pestilential conductor of detestable correspondence,
he attacked him, overthrew him, and ransacked him,
and bore the fruit of his sagacious exertions to his
mistress in Milan; it was Violetta d’Isorella’s
letter to Carlo Ammiani. “I have read it,”
the duchess said; “contrary to any habits when
letters are not addressed to me. I bring it open
to your sister Anna. She catches sight of one
or two names and falls down in the state in which
you see her.”
“Leave her to me,” said Karl.
He succeeded in extracting from Anna hints of the
fact that she had paid a large sum of her own money
to Countess d’Isorella for secrets connected
with the Bergamasc and Brescian rising. “We
were under a mutual oath to be silent, but if one
has broken it the other cannot; so I confess it to
you, dearest good brother. I did this for my country
at my personal sacrifice.”
Karl believed that he had a sister magnificent in
soul. She was glad to have deluded him, but she
could not endure his praises, which painted to her
imagination all that she might have been if she had
not dashed her patriotism with the low cravings of
vengeance, making herself like some abhorrent mediaeval
grotesque, composed of eagle and reptile. She
was most eager in entreating him to save Count Ammiani’s
life. Carlo, she said, was their enemy, but he
had been their friend, and she declared with singular
earnestness that she should never again sleep or hold
up her head, if he were slain or captured.
“My Anna is justified by me in everything she
has done,” Karl said to the duchess.
“In that case,” the duchess replied, “I
have only to differ with her to feel your sword’s
point at my breast.”
“I should certainly challenge the man who doubted
her,” said Karl.
The duchess laughed with a scornful melancholy.