Home
  By Author [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Title [ A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z |  Other Symbols ]
  By Language
all Classics books content using ISYS

Download this book: [ ASCII ]

Look for this book on Amazon


We have new books nearly every day.
If you would like a news letter once a week or once a month
fill out this form and we will give you a summary of the books for that week or month by email.

Title: The Secret Dispatch - or, The Adventures of Captain Balgonie
Author: Grant, James
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Secret Dispatch - or, The Adventures of Captain Balgonie" ***


  THE
  SECRET DISPATCH;

  OR,

  THE ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN BALGONIE.



  BY

  JAMES GRANT,

  AUTHOR OF "ROMANCE OF WAR," "SCOTTISH CAVALIERS,"
  ETC. ETC.



  NEW EDITION.



  LONDON:
  CHAPMAN AND HALL, 193, PICCADILLY.



  TO

  PROFESSOR SIR JAMES Y. SIMPSON, BART.,

  M.D., D.C.L., &C., &C.,

  THIS TALE,
  FROM RUSSIAN MILITARY HISTORY,
  IS INSCRIBED,
  AS A MEMORIAL OF ADMIRATION AND SINCERE REGARD.



PREFACE.

I need scarcely inform the reader of history, that most of the events
narrated in the subsequent pages actually occurred in the manner
stated; and I have done much to soften, or subdue, the actual
barbarity of the story, though such barbarity was consonant enough to
the days of her, whose "lust of power and contempt of all moral
restraint" won her the name of "the Semiramis of the North."

For the betrothal of the young Lieutenant of the Valikolutz Infantry
to his cousin, it may be mentioned that a dispensation was necessary,
as the Russian Church--like the Catholic--forbids all marriages
within four degrees of relationship.

As stated in the text, the little song of the gipsy is one of many
current enough in Russia, where the destruction of the Crescent is
always fondly predicted; but never so confidently as during our late
Crimean War: and even at this very time, an aged Muscovite, named
Alexis Alexandrovitch, after a seclusion of many years in the
district of Samara, has come forth as a prophet on the same subject,
and is now proceeding from place to place, like another Peter the
Hermit, foretelling and preaching the downfall of "the sick man" at
Stamboul, and the speedy substitution of the Russian Cross for the
Turkish Crescent on the dome of St. Sophia.

26, DANUBE STREET, EDINBURGH.



  CONTENTS.

  CHAPTER I.
  The Lost Traveller

  CHAPTER II.
  The Castle of Louga

  CHAPTER III.
  Natalie

  CHAPTER IV.
  Corporal Podatchkine

  CHAPTER V.
  The Dagger of Bernikoff

  CHAPTER VI.
  The Palatine

  CHAPTER VII.
  The Soldier of the Czarina

  CHAPTER VIII.
  In Love

  CHAPTER IX.
  Deluded

  CHAPTER X.
  The Corporal in his own Trap

  CHAPTER XI.
  Olga, the Gipsy

  CHAPTER XII.
  St. Petersburg

  CHAPTER XIII.
  What the Secret Dispatch contained

  CHAPTER XIV.
  Charlie's first day in Schlusselburg

  CHAPTER XV.
  The Imperial Prisoner

  CHAPTER XVI.
  The Tratkir

  CHAPTER XVII.
  The Wood of the Honey Tree

  CHAPTER XVIII.
  Doubt and Dread

  CHAPTER XIX.
  The Night of the 15th September

  CHAPTER XX.
  Morning of the 16th September

  CHAPTER XXI.
  Underground

  CHAPTER XXII
  Over their Wine

  CHAPTER XXIII.
  Will he Succeed?

  CHAPTER XXIV.
  Conclusion

  L'Envoi



THE SECRET DISPATCH.



CHAPTER I.

THE LOST TRAVELLER.

"Heaven aid me! here am I now--which way shall I turn--advance or
retire?" exclaimed Balgonie, as his horse came plunging down almost
on its knees, amid wild gorse and matted jungle.

A cold day in the middle of April had passed away; a pale and
cheerless sun, that had cast no heat on the leafless scenery and the
half-frozen marshes that border the Louga in Western Russia, had
sunk, and the darkness of a stormy night came on rapidly.  The keen
blast of the north, that swept the arid scalps of the Dudenhof (the
only range of hills that traverses the ancient Ingria), was bellowing
through a gorge, where the Louga poured in foam upon its passage to
the Gulf of Finland, between steep banks that were covered by gloomy
pines, when the speaker, a mounted officer in Russian uniform, who
seemed too surely to have lost his way, reined up a weary and
mud-covered horse on the margin of the stream, and by the light that
yet lingered on the tops of the tall pines, and gilded faintly the
metal-covered domes of a distant building on the opposite bank,
looked hopelessly about him for the means of crossing the dangerous
river.

"Where am I?" he repeated, almost despairingly; for, as Schiller
sings in his "Song of the Bell,"--

  "Man fears the kingly lion's tread;
    Man fears the tiger's fangs of terror;
  And still the dreadliest of the dread
    Is man himself in error!"


Though clad in the uniform of the Russian Regiment of Smolensko,
which was raised in the famous duchy of that name, the traveller was
neither Muscovite nor Calmuck, Cossack nor Tartar, but a cool, wary,
and determined young Briton, one of the many Scottish officers whom
misfortune or ambition had drawn into the Russian service, both by
sea and land, from the time of Peter the Great down to the beginning
of the present century; for many Scottish officers served in the
Russian fleet with Admiral Greig at the famous bombardment of Varna:
and it was such volunteers as these that first taught the barbarous
hordes of the growing empire the true science of war and the
necessity for discipline.

The rider's green uniform, faced with scarlet velvet and richly laced
with gold, was covered by a thick grey pelisse (like our present
patrol-jackets), trimmed with black wolf's fur: he wore a scarlet
forage cap with a square top, long boots that came above the knee,
and a Turkish sabre that had once armed a pasha of more tails than
one.

"Swim the river I must," he muttered, after having traversed the
valley in vain, looking for a bridge, boat, or raft of timber; "but,
egad, death may be the penalty.  Well," he added, with a gleam of ire
in his dark grey eyes and a bitter smile on his lip, "there was a
time, perhaps, when I little thought that I, Charlie Balgonie, would
find a nameless grave in this land of timber, hemp, and salted hides,
where caviare is a luxury, train-oil a liqueur, and the air of
Siberia deemed healthy for all who have any absurd ideas of political
freedom, or are silly enough to imagine that a man may be the lord of
his own proper person."

To add to his troubles and discomfort, though the month was
April--usually the most serene of the year in Russia--snow-flakes
were beginning to fall, rendering yet greater the gloom of the
gathering night.

"I was to have found a bridge here.  Can that Livonian villain,
Podatchkine, have deluded, and then left me to my fate?"

He knew that in his rear, the way by which he had come, lay
half-frozen morasses, heathy wastes, and forests of spruce, larch,
and silver-leaved firs--vast natural magazines for supplying all
Europe with masts and spars--the haunt of the wolf and bear; he knew
that to linger or to return were worse than to advance, and that he
must cross the stream and seek quarters and guidance at the château,
the name of which was yet unknown to him.

This was, if possible, the worst season for passing the Louga, which
is always deepest and most navigable in spring.  It rises in the
district of Novgorod; and, after traversing a country full of vast
forests for more than 180 miles, falls into the Gulf of Finland.

Balgonie buttoned tightly his holster-flaps, hooked up his sabre,
assured himself that an important dispatch with which he was
entrusted was safe in an inner pocket, and prepared seriously for the
perilous task of swimming his horse across the stream.

Again he looked anxiously at the château, the abode evidently of some
wealthy noble or boyar.  Its outline had almost disappeared in the
increasing obscurity; the last faint gleams of the west had faded
away on the onion-shaped roofs of its turrets, and a central dome of
polished copper, which was cut into facets like the outside of a
pine-apple (for there is much of the Oriental in the old Russian
architecture); but lights were beginning to sparkle cheerfully
through its double-sashed windows upon the feathery and the
funeral-like foliage of the solemn pine woods.

Could those who were comfortably, perhaps luxuriously seated within,
but know that there was a poor human being on the eve, perhaps, of
perishing helplessly amid the dark flow of that deep and roaring
river!

"Courage, friend Charlie!" said the rider to himself; and then he
hallooed loudly, as if to attract attention, but did so in vain.  The
night was becoming a very severe one; the flakes of snow fell thicker
and thicker on the gusty and cutting blast.

"Ah! if I should perish here--such a fate!" thought he, shuddering.
"Shall I be swept down this black and horrid stream, the Louga, to be
cast a drowned corpse upon its banks, to be found stripped and buried
by wondering but unpitying serfs and boors; or shall I be torn and
mangled by bears and wolves; or borne even to the Gulf of Finland,
far, far away, having thus an obscure and wretched fate, without
winning the name I had hoped to gain--forgotten even by those who
wronged me in Scotland, the land that never more shall be a home to
me!"

He did not say all this aloud; but certainly some such painful
surmises flashed upon him as he forced his snorting and reluctant
horse, by a vigorous use of the spurs, through the thickly interwoven
brushwood that grew on the bank of the river, the dull and monotonous
rush of which, encumbered as it was by large pieces of ice, was
sufficient to appal even a stouter heart than that of this young
Scottish soldier of fortune.

With a brief invocation on his lips, he gave his horse the reins and
gored it with the rowels.  A strong, active, and clean-limbed, but
somewhat undersized animal from the steppes of the Ukraine, with a
fierce and angry snort, it plunged into the torrent, and breasted the
icy masses bravely.

The slippery fragments that glided past, struck at times both horse
and rider, forcing them to swerve down the stream; others were dashed
by the whirling eddies against the projecting pieces of rock or roots
of old trees; but after twice nearly despairing of achieving the
passage, and believing himself lost, his horse trod firmly on the
opposite bank.  It emerged, panting, snorting, dripping, and
trembling in every fibre, from the flood, and then Captain Balgonie
found that he had escaped with life, and had safely passed the
swollen waters of the Louga!

Leading his sturdy little steed by the bridle and caressing it the
while, he made his way up the opposite bank, guided only by the
lights in the mansion (or castle); but he proceeded with extreme
difficulty, for the underwood was thick and dense as that which grew
round the Palace of the Sleeping Beauty; ere long, however, he
reached a plateau, the border of a park or lawn, and saw the
snow-whitened walls and turrets of the edifice towering before him.

Rising from a balustraded terrace, with an arched porte-cochère in
front, the façade was square, and three storied, having a central
dome like an inverted punchbowl, and several little angular towers,
tall and slender like minarets; these cut the sky-line, and were
surrounded each by a broad cornice or gallery, and terminated by a
bulbous-shaped roof, exactly like an onion with its acute end in the
air.

The lights in its many windows, the red and yellow coloured curtains
within, all indicated warmth and comfort; while with the snow flakes
freezing on his sodden and saturated uniform, his limbs benumbed, and
his teeth well-nigh chattering, Balgonie hastily led his horse under
the porte-cochère, and applied his hand vigorously to the great
brazen knocker on the front door.

It was speedily opened, and a white-bearded _dvornick_, or porter,
wearing a long flowing _shoubah_, or coat of fur, lined with red
flannel, admitted him with many humble genuflections, at the same
time summoning a groom to take charge of his horse.

By the bearing of these lackeys, one might almost have thought that
the Captain had been expected, or was a friend of the family: but a
uniform has ever been an all-powerful passport, and an epaulette the
most mighty of all introductions in Russia, where everything is
measured by a military standard; thus, in an incredibly short space
of time, the wants of rider and horse were alike hospitably attended
to.



CHAPTER II.

THE CASTLE OF LOUGA.

Captain Balgonie, of the Regiment of Smolensko, soon found himself in
a comfortable bed-chamber, where the genial glow of a _peitchka_, or
Russian wall-stove, diffused warmth through his chilled frame, and
where every current of the external atmosphere was carefully excluded
by double window sashes, adorned with artificial flowers between.

When he chose to repose, a couch draped with snow-white curtains, and
having a coverlet of the softest fur, awaited him; and above it hung
a little holy picture of the Byzantine school, a Holy Virgin, with a
halo of shining metal in the form of a horse-shoe round her head, if
he chose to be devout and offer up a prayer.

A valet, after supplying him with hot coffee and a good dram of vodka
(which somewhat reminded him of his native "mountain dew"), said that
the Count, his master, would rejoice to have the pleasure of the
visitor's society, after he had made a suitable toilet, and exchanged
his wet uniform for a luxurious robe-de-chambre, in the pocket of
which he took especial care to secure his dispatch, unseen.

Hospitality such as this, was not merely then a characteristic of the
people, but was the result, perhaps, of a meagre population, and the
absence of inns; thus the arrival of a stranger, especially an
officer on duty, at this Russian mansion, created little or no
surprise among its inmates.

He was ushered into the presence of Count Mierowitz, whose name at
once inspired him with confidence and satisfaction; for, by one of
those singular coincidences "which novelists dare not use in fiction,
but which occur daily in actual and matter-of-fact life," he had
arrived at a mansion where he was not altogether unknown.

"I have to apologise to your High Excellency for this apparent
intrusion," said he; "but I have been misled or abandoned by my
guide.  I am Captain Balgonie, of the Regiment of Smolensko, and have
the good fortune to number among my friends your son, Lieutenant
Basil Mierowitz, the senior subaltern of my company."

"For Basil's sake, not less than your own, Captain, are you most
welcome to the Castle of Louga," replied the Count, lifting and
laying aside his cap.

He was a man well on in years; his stature was not great, neither was
his presence dignified; he stooped a little and was thick set, with a
venerable beard, undefiled by steel; for, like a true old Muscovite,
he contended that man was made in the image of God, and should
neither be cut or carved upon.  His eyebrows were white, but his eyes
were dark, keen, quick, and expressed a spirit of ready impulse, for
laughter or for ferocity--one, who by turns could be suave or
irritable, especially when under the influence of wine, which
generally made him fierce and stupid; for never, in all his life, had
he suffered control or had his will disputed.

His silver hair was simply tied behind with a black ribbon; in his
hand he carried a little cap of black wolf's fur, adorned by rudely
set jewels; he wore a queerly cut coat of dark red cloth trimmed with
fur, and wore breeches of the same stuff, and lacked but a dagger and
pistols with brass Turkish butts at his girdle, to seem what he
really was, in disposition and character, a type of the boyar of the
old school, who preferred quass to champagne, ate his pancakes with
caviare, and was proud of being a specimen of the old Russian noble,
as he existed in the time of Peter the Great, when his class first
united some of the vices and luxuries of Western Europe to their
native lawlessness and hardy ferocity.

Such was Count Mierowitz.

"When did you last see my son?" he asked, in tone more of authority
than of anxious inquiry.

"Some three months since, Excellency: he has been detached on the
Livonian frontier."

"And you, Captain--"

"I am proceeding on urgent imperial service from Novgorod where my
regiment is stationed in the old palace of the Czars."

"To whither?"

"Schlusselburg."

The host changed countenance and almost manifested signs of
discomposure on hearing of that formidable fortress and prison--the
veritable Bastille of St. Petersburg, and he said:

"A name to shudder at--by St. Nicholas it is!"

"And, but for the feather in the wax of my dispatch," resumed
Balgonie (showing a red government seal in which a piece of feather
twitched from a pen was inserted, the usual Russian emblem of
_speed_), "I had not, perhaps, tempted the dangers of the Louga, but
sought a billet on the other side, if such could be found."

"You know not, perhaps, that my woods are full of wolves; but this is
not the way to St. Petersburg."

"Yet I was so directed, Excellency."

"You have been misled, and are only some seventy versts or so from
the place you have left."

"You amaze me, Count," exclaimed the perplexed Captain; for in the
Russian service, an error becomes a crime.

"Captain, you should have gone by Gori, Oustensk, Spask, and so on."

"That devil of a Podatchkine, an orderly of General Weymarn, who sent
him specially with me, has either deluded or abandoned me."

"Yet we must thank your Podatchkine, in so far that he has procured
us the pleasure of your society in this lonely place--my daughter and
my niece, Captain Ivanovitch Balgonie," continued the Count,
introducing two young ladies who came through the curtains of a
species of boudoir, "Natalie and Mariolizza Usakoff.  Our visitor,
Natalie, is that Ivanovitch Balgonie of whom Basil has spoken so much
and so kindly."

Without being a vain man, Balgonie felt at that moment considerable
satisfaction in the conviction that he was--as his glass had often
informed him--decidedly a good-looking young fellow, with regular
features, fine dark eyes, curling brown hair, and a smart moustache;
for Natalie Mierowna, like her cousin Mariolizza, was one of the most
attractive women at the dangerous Court of the Empress Catharine II.;
for it was during her reign that the story and the atrocities we have
unfortunately to record took place; when among us, in more civilised
Britain, the grandfather of her present Majesty, old George III., was
king, and the arts of peace and war grew side by side.

"The friend and comrade of my brother Basil is welcome," said
Natalie, presenting her hands (very tiny and delicate they were) to
Balgonie, who bowed and touched them lightly with his lips; "he has
often written to us concerning you and your adventures together in
Silesia."

"I am but too fortunate to be remembered thus."

"Nay," rejoined Natalie, "we could scarcely forget that daring act of
yours, which won you the rank you hold at present.  Ah, Basil told us
all about that when he was last here," she added, with a beautiful
smile, of which she knew that many had already felt the power.

"You mean my reconnoitring the enemy's position and avoiding being
taken by them?"

"Yes, pray tell me about it?" said Mariolizza, her blue eyes dilating
with pleasure; "my brother was there too--Apollo Usakoff, a
lieutenant in the Regiment of Valikolutz."

"It was a very simple matter," replied Balgonie, bowing to each of
the cousins, and not sorry to have a good personal anecdote to relate
of himself, one which was certain to make him appear to advantage in
the estimation of two very attractive women.  "It was only a _ruse de
guerre_, and occurred when our Regiment of Smolensko was with the
combined armies in Silesia, and before the King of Prussia attacked
Count Daun at the Heights of Buckersdorff.  An exact account of the
Austrian position was required by our general, who had not then
received the orders of the Empress to fall back upon the Russian
frontier.  The task was one of extreme peril; so I being a soldier of
fortune, having all to win, and nothing to lose----"

"Save your life!" interrupted Natalie.

"One in my position, among a foreign army, must not value that too
much," said the Captain, in a tone not untinged with melancholy.

"Well?"

"I volunteered for it, despite all that your son, Count, my friend
could say to dissuade me.  Well armed, at midnight, I set out upon my
solitary mission, unattended and alone, without relinquishing my
uniform; for if taken prisoner when otherwise attired, I would
infallibly be hanged as a spy; but ere long I found, that in such a
dress, there were insuperable difficulties to making the
reconnoissance required.

"At the cottage of a Silesian boor, near the base of the Eulanbirge
(or mountain of the owls), I stopped to make some inquiries.  The
fellow proved to be partially tipsy; the contents of my pocket-flask,
potent vodka, completed his happy condition, and after a few jests I
prevailed upon him to change dresses with me.  He donned the green
coat, epaulettes, and boots of the Regiment of Smolensko; I, the
ample canvas caftan and girdle of a Silesian boor,--a fur cap, and a
visage daubed with grime, completed my costume.  Thus attired, and
retaining only my pistols, I reconnoitred safely and unheeded the
Austrian position, noting the defences, trenches, fascine batteries,
cannon, and general disposition; but I had a narrow escape, for when
returning to the cottage of my new friend the boor, a party of Count
Daun's Imperial Cuirassiers, who had been patrolling the Eulanbirge,
overtook me, and at once perceiving I was not a Silesian, questioned
me rather closely and curiously.

"I succeeded in passing myself off as a Pomeranian, and pointing to
the cottage, told them that there was concealed an officer of the
famous Regiment of Smolensko.  They at once galloped off and
surrounded it, while I stole away to a thicket, and climbed into a
tree, from whence I could see the poor boor, clad in my uniform, and
still labouring under the influence of his late debauch, dragged a
prisoner--despite all his bewildered protestations and
denials--towards the camp of Count Daun, while I, under cover of
night, reached in safety the lines of the allies, and made my report
to General Weymarn, then commanding our division of the army.

"It proved of no use to us, as we fell back next day; but it enabled
our ally, the King of Prussia, to storm with signal success the
Heights of Buckersdorff, to drive back Count Daun, and invest
Schwiednitz.  He offered me rank in his army; but I declined, on
which the Empress sent me the commission of Captain in her Regiment
of Smolensko, thus enabling me to rank as a noble of the ninth class."

"May you soon rank as one of the sixth," said the Count, patting the
Captain on the shoulder frankly.

"Ah, Excellency, it may be long ere I become a colonel; yet," he
added, almost as if talking to himself, "when I got the letter of the
Empress addressed to me, Carl Ivanovitch Hospodeen* Balgonie, I could
not but smile at the thought of how such a title would have sounded
in the ears of my good father, old John Balgonie, of that Ilk!"


* Equivalent to Monsieur or Esquire.


"Let me repeat that you are most welcome," said the Count, who
totally failed to understand the meaning of the last remark; "and
luckily you have arrived just as the ladies and I were about to
proceed to the supper-table."

To Balgonie it had become apparent that each time he mentioned the
name of the Empress, the proud pink nostrils of Natalie seemed to
dilate, and that a decidedly dangerous expression glittered in her
splendid dark eyes.

Natalie Mierowna, whose beauty had caused such jealousy at Moscow and
St. Petersburg (two duels are spoken of concerning her), had ever
shone brilliantly in the "follow-my-leader" kind of dance, now so
well known among us as the Mazurka,--the old Sclavonian measure, in
which all succeeding couples have to imitate the motions of the
first; and the chief Russian peculiarity of the dance consists still
in the circumstance of the ladies selecting their own partners--the
brilliant Natalie, we say, having twice sportively, or in a spirit of
coquettish bravado, chosen a handsome young aide-de-camp, whom the
Empress was supposed to view with favour, led to her abrupt exile
from Court, and to the detaching of Captain Vlasfief, of the Imperial
Guards, to irksome and secluded duty at the state prison of
Schlusselburg.  This unmerited affront filled her brother, Basil
Mierowitz, with such fiery indignation, that but for the dread of
compromising his whole family, he would have cast his commission at
the feet of the imperious Catharine, and quitted the Russian army;
but flight or exile must at once have followed the act.

As it was, though detached and distant on the Livonian frontier, he
was now conceiving a scheme for vengeance, much more perilous to
himself and to all concerned, and which actually aimed at the
dethronement of the Empress Catharine!



CHAPTER III.

NATALIE.

There are few Russian ladies now, who do not speak with equal
facility, German, French, and English; but Natalie Mierowna and her
cousin were then each mistress of them all,--and this was in the
comparatively barbarous time of Catharine II.

Thus their acquaintance with European literature enabled them to
excel in an easy and well-supported conversation of which the old
bovar, their kinsman, could make nothing; and which they could
embellish by their wit and power of quotation, and with an exquisite
_finesse d'esprit_ peculiarly their own.  When this dangerous charm
was added to the great beauty of Natalie, she could not but prove a
perilous acquaintance for the young Scottish wanderer.

Her loveliness was indeed great.

She was a large, showy, and snowy-skinned beauty, almost voluptuous
yet very graceful in form, with fine dark eyes, that were dreamy or
sparkling by turns as emotion moved her; long-lashed they were, and
perhaps too heavily lidded.  Her hair was of the darkest brown,
almost black; her lips were full, but flexible, small and pouting
when in repose, almost too large when she smiled, which was
frequently.

It was when she spoke of the Empress, that her white bosom heaved,
and a fiery expression seemed to pervade her whole features.  She
said little, and that little was generally said with assumed
gentleness or real reserve, for language cannot be too guarded in
Russia; but her dark eyes flashed, her delicate nostrils dilated, her
short upper lip quivered, she threw back her proud head, and more
than once Balgonie saw her white hands clenched; for all the
dove-like softness of her nature seemed to depart, when she thought
of the affront that exile from Court had put upon her, and her whole
family, even to delaying the marriage of her cousin Mariolizza to her
brother Basil, to whom she was engaged--solemnly betrothed by a
religious ceremony.

She took the arm of Balgonie, and led the way to the dining-room,
which was lit by brilliant crystal girandoles, and heated, of course,
by a peitchka, the greatest luxury of civilised life that can be
found in a cold climate, and which warms a house more effectually
than any grate of coals can do.  Built on that side of the large,
lofty, and magnificent room which was farthest from the windows, it
was formed of solid stone, with several carved apertures, and lined
with white shining porcelain; within it, blazed a constant fire of
billets and faggots, under the care of the dvornick, or house-porter,
and these were furnished by the Count's serfs or woodsmen from the
adjacent forests.

All made a sign of the cross in the Greek fashion, and seated
themselves; but weary and exhausted by his long ride and recent
immersion in a swollen and icy river, Balgonie found it almost
impossible to partake of the supper that was pressed upon him:
caviare on slices of bread to begin with,--"caviare from the roe of
the sturgeons of the Don," as the Count informed him,--roasted capon
and jugged hare, dried figs and conserves, prunes, and pastilla of
fruit and honey compounded, together with the champagne, Rhine wine,
and vodka, in silver tankards and goblets of jewelled Venetian
crystal.

The jaded traveller could make only a pretence of eating; but he
could drink deeply, for he was athirst; and more than one foaming
goblet of sparkling Moselle was filled for him, till he became giddy
and confused.  Were the fumes of the wine mounting to his head?  What
was the Count saying in an undertone?  Was it of him that the cousins
were talking in some strange language, and covertly exchanging smiles
with their beautiful eyes?  "Courage, Charlie," thought he, "this is
a bad beginning!"

Though people were not very particular as to a bumper more or less in
those days anywhere, in Russia least of all, an emotion of shame came
over the young Scottish, officer; he felt his cheeks and forehead
burn, and he made a vigorous effort to rally his senses, but in vain:
he heard the voices of Natalie and of Mariolizza; but he knew not
what they said or what he replied, for he felt as one in a
half-waking dream.  They were talking merrily, however, in French,
which is always spoken well by the Russians; perhaps because the
tongue that can master Russ may achieve anything.

After a time he mustered sufficient energy and sense to beg that he
might be permitted to retire, as he had his journey to resume betimes
on the morrow; and he was escorted to his chamber by the Count in
person.  Its four corners seemed to be in rapid pursuit of each other
now, and the floor and the ceiling to be incessantly changing places;
then his senses reeled, and the light departed from his eyes.  He
found himself fainting.

The sudden and rapid journey from Novgorod, the lack of food and the
toil he had undergone for one night and two entire days, while
wandering with the treacherous Podatchkine, the crossing of the
Louga, and the bruises he had unconsciously received from several
pieces of floating ice, had all proved too much for his system, and
brought on a relapse of an old camp fever from which he had suffered
once when serving with the army in Silesia,--and in the morning he
was delirious.

Though weak, bewildered, scared by the prospect of loitering thus
when proceeding on urgent duty (for obedience and discipline become a
second nature to the soldier), enduring a raging thirst and a burning
pang that shot with each pulsation through his brain, stiff in every
joint and covered with livid bruises, he had still strength left as
dawning day stole through the double sashes of his windows, to
stagger from bed, and search for the dispatch, which, on the hazard
of his life, he was to place in the hands of Bernikoff, the Governor
of Schlusselburg.

He hurriedly, and with a tremor that increased, examined each of his
pockets in succession, then his sabretasche, and lastly the pocket of
the robe-de-chambre; but the dispatch--the dispatch of the
Empress--entrusted to him as a chosen man by Lieutenant-General
Weymarn was gone!

Lost, or abstracted, it was irretrievably _gone_!

Was he the victim of treachery or of a snare?  Was it a dream that
the voluptuous and beautiful Natalie, with her snowy skin, her dreamy
eyes, and her fascinating smile, had been hovering about him--a dream
or a reality?

Alas! he knew not; for again the walls and windows were whirling
round him in wild career, and he sank on the floor insensible.

Poor Charlie Balgonie knew not that the morning on which he made this
alarming discovery was that of the second day since his arrival at
the Castle of Louga.



CHAPTER IV.

CORPORAL PODATCHKINE.

Scarcely had Charlie Balgonie achieved the passage of the Louga, and,
in the dark, forced his panting horse up the wooded bank towards the
lighted windows of the castle, than his guide and orderly, Corporal
Michail Podatchkine, who, for reasons which were his own, and which
shall ultimately be explained, had decoyed him many, many versts to
the southward of his proper route and then abandoned him, while he
still cautiously followed, and watched him plunge into the perilous
stream--watched him in the hope that he might perish in its icy
current; Corporal Podatchkine, we say, had barely seen that the
officer's safety was certain and assured, than he turned his horse's
head, and with a hoarse malediction on his bearded mouth, rode away
in an opposite direction.

The lighted windows of the Castle of Louga soon darkened and vanished
in his rear; the snow-flakes came thicker and faster on the icy
blast, whitening his round bearskin cap and fur shoubah or cloak, and
the untrimmed mane of his shaggy little horse; but with his long
lance slung behind him, his knees up to his saddle-bow, and his
fierce, keen eyes peering out the way before him, the amiable
Podatchkine, who, though a Livonian by birth, had the honour to hold
the rank of corporal in a corps of Cossacks, rode on through the
dense fir forest as unerringly as if every tree therein had been
planted by his own warlike hands.

Ere long, with a grunt of satisfaction, he struck upon a track that
led to the right and left, and he unhesitatingly pursued the latter.
There were then none of those verst-posts, about ten feet high or so,
such as may now be found by the side of the Russian roads through the
forests, or along the open steppe; but Podatchkine rode steadily on,
pausing only now and then to unsling and grasp his spear, or give a
fierce gleaming glance around him, while the nostrils of his thick
snub-nose dilated, when a prolonged and melancholy howl, rising from
the woody depths into the chill drear sky of night, announced that
some wolf was rousing itself in its lair among the grass, or in its
den beside the river.

Anon he came to a place where the forest was partially cleared, and
there stood a little hut built of squared logs.  The walls of this
edifice were whitened artificially; but the roof was rendered whiter
still by a coat of the fast-freezing snow.  A single ray of smoky
light streamed from the opening (which passed for a window) near the
door, on which Podatchkine, without dismounting, struck three blows
with the butt of his lance.

"Nicholas Paulovitch," he exclaimed, "are you within?"

The door was soon unfastened, and thereat appeared a figure, not
unlike an Esquimaux, bearing a pine torch.  He was a man of great
stature and muscular development, clad in a caftan of coarse, thick,
and warm material, girt by a broad belt in which a long and rusty
knife was stuck; he had on bark shoes and long leggings of sheepskin,
which, like Bryan O'Linn's breeches, had "the skinny side out and the
hairy side in;" and he cultivated one long lock of grizzled hair
behind his right ear in the old fashion of the Black Cossacks; but
this appendage was concealed by the hood and tippet of fur which he
wore.  This man, however, did not belong to any of the nomadic
military tribes, but was a species of Russian gipsy, a half-breed.

He held up the pine torch, and its flaring light tipped with a lurid,
weird, and uncertain glow his fierce, tawny, and repulsive visage,
causing his cunning and almond-shaped eyes to gleam redly, like two
carbuncles, from under their thick and impending brows, which were
nearly as shaggy as the moustache that blended with his greasy and
uncombed beard; and in the same light the head of Podatchkine's lance
and the hafts of his sabre, dagger, and pistols glittered at times,
being the only bright parts of his remarkably dingy costume.

"Is it you, Michail Podatchkine--and _alone_?" he asked surlily.

"Yes; even so, alone.  Dost think I have the evil eye about me that
you stare so, Nicholas Paulovitch?"

"God forbid!" replied Nicholas with a shudder, for this idea is the
grossest and the greatest of all Russian superstitious; "but I
expected two--yourself and another."

"Who told you so?"

"Olga Paulowna, my sister, who yesterday saw you at Krejko."

"True, I remember.  Now listen, old friend and comrade----"

"Hush, the girl is within and may hear you."

"Well," said Podatchkine, lowering his voice, while the other
extinguished his torch, half closed the door of his hut, and drew
nearer the speaker, "by order of General Weymarn, Governor of St.
Petersburg, General of the Cavalry, Director-General of the Canals,
Bridges, and Highways----"

"And the devil knows all what more!" said the other impatiently.
"Well?"

"I am ordered to guide this Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, who is a
stranger, to the gates of Schlusselburg, as he bears to Bernikoff a
dispatch of importance; but I have been promised a heavy sum----"

"Ah! how much say you?"

"I have said nothing yet."

"But you spoke of a heavy sum."

"Two hundred silver roubles."

"Two hundred silver roubles!" exclaimed Nicholas, opening his
avaricious eyes with wonder, and then closing them again, so that
they looked like two narrow slits.

"Yes, every _denusca_, if I, by fair means or by foul, prevent the
delivery of that paper into the hands of old Bernikoff."

"He whose dagger tickled the throat of Peter III.: and by whom are
you offered this, friend Podatchkine?"

"I can trust you: well, by the Lieutenant Apollo Usakoff."

"The grandson of the Hetman Mazeppa!"

"The same; and by Basil Mierowitz----"

"Well, and what the devil have I to do with all this?" growled the
half-breed.

"Much: fifty roubles will be yours, Paulovitch, if you will assist
me," said Podatchkine in a husky whisper.

"Let us talk over this: dismount, and come in."

"Nay, there is Olga Paulowna: then I have other work to do; but give
me a drink, for I am sorely athirst."

The other speedily brought him a painted bowl full of foamy quass,
which the Cossack Corporal, for so we may term him, drained to the
dregs; though it is a liquor, to any but a Russian, horrible as the
water of Cocytus.

"Let us be wary, friend Podatchkine," said the woodman: "the knout is
not an angel, but it teaches us to tell the truth alike of ourselves
and of others."

Refreshed by his bitter draught, the Corporal shook the gathering
snow-flakes from the sleeves of his fur shoubah, and resumed somewhat
garrulously:

"My next instructions are, that the dispatch, which is from the
Empress herself (whom God and our Lady of Kazan long preserve!), and
which bears the imperial seal, shall never be delivered; but must be
obtained by me for Basil Mierowitz and the Lieutenant Usakoff, now
detached upon the Livonian frontier, and who both know as little as I
care, that its bearer is actually their own dearest and most valued
friend!  I misled the Hospodeen Balgonie, lured him to the river's
brink, and left him there, in the hope that he and his horse might
become frozen on the steppe or in the forest, where I could rob him
at ease; but the man seems made of iron, and, to my astonishment, I
saw him swim the Louga.  I thought all gone, he, the dispatch, and my
200 roubles, when he plunged his horse into the river; but he stoutly
won the opposite bank, and has made his way straight to the dwelling
of Count Mierowitz, where now, I doubt not, he is safely housed."

"It seems to me, friend Podatchkine, that you took a great deal of
useless trouble when you had your dagger and pistols," said the
other, suspiciously.

"Nay, if he was to perish thus, suspicion might too readily fall upon
me, for he is a favourite officer of the Empress, and of Weymarn too.
My plan is this: I may get the dispatch to-night in yonder castle of
Count Mierowitz."

"And if not?"

"Then I shall again lure and mislead Balgonie, and bring him here in
the night."

"What then?" asked the woodman doggedly.

"How dull we are, Paulovitch.  We shall drug and drown him; thus
shall he die without a wound.  I will take back the dispatch to
Novgorod; and you can carry the body on his horse to St. Petersburg,
where a sum will be given you for finding it.  The poor stranger,
they will say, has perished amid our keen Russian frosts, and that
will be all.  Nicholas Paulovitch, the carcass will be well worth
twenty roubles to thee."

"And thy fifty?"

"You shall receive when the affair is over, and when you come to me
at Novgorod, where I am quartered."

"By the bones of my tribe, and by the sword that flames in the hand
of the holy Michail, I am with you, Podatchkine!" exclaimed the
half-breed with ferocious joy, mingling his gipsy cant with that of
the Russian church.  Then they shook heartily their hard and dingy
hands--hands that had wrought many a deed of merciless cruelty.

"And now, Paulovitch, give me a light for my pipe, and let me begone."

A few minutes more and these worthy compatriots had separated.

Podatchkine rode somewhat leisurely to a ford that he knew of lower
down the river, believing that in time the whole onus, and perhaps
suspicion, of Balgonie's death (if it was necessary) might fall on
the woodman, whom he had resolved to cheat of the promised fifty
roubles if he could.

"He will play me false," muttered Podatchkine.  "Is not the dog a
gipsy?  Beware of the tamed wolf, of the baptized Jew, and the enemy
who has made it up; why should I not delude him who will readily
delude me?"

Our enterprising Corporal was correct in his estimate of Nicholas
Paulovitch; for, at the same moment, that personage, while wrapped in
his filthy sheepskin (caring nothing for the comfort of any other bed
than the floor), was considering how he might drug and drown both the
officer and his treacherous guide, sell both their bodies at the
nearest military post, and, by taking the dispatch to Novgorod
himself, obtain the entire reward offered for it by the Lieutenants
Mierowitz and Usakoff, or still more, perhaps, by delivering it to
the Empress!

There was a third person who had overheard the first savage plot, and
who felt her heart stirred with pity and terror for Balgonie, who had
given her a silver kopec at Krejko but yesterday,--the gipsy girl,
Olga Paulowna, the sister of Nicholas Paulovitch; and she resolved to
baffle both conspirators if she could.

It was in perfect ignorance of who might be the bearer of that
dispatch (with the contents of which a spy had acquainted them) that
the two officers, who were then engaged in an extensive and dangerous
political and military conspiracy, contrived to have Podatchkine, in
the character of a guide and orderly, sent upon the trail of one who
was really their most valued friend and comrade; though, as a
foreigner and soldier of fortune, they deemed it proper to keep him
as yet in total ignorance of their daring hopes and plans.



CHAPTER V.

THE DAGGER OF BERNIKOFF.

It may now be necessary to afford the reader a little historical
insight as to what it was that hinged on this important dispatch of
the Scottish officer, Balgonie.

When the Emperor Peter II. died of smallpox (just on the eve of his
marriage), closing a short reign of three years of stormy trouble and
dark intrigue, the whole male issue of Peter the Great of Russia
became extinct.

The Duke of Holstein, son of his eldest daughter, was entitled to the
throne; but the Russians, for certain cogent political reasons,
filled that perilous seat with Anne, Duchess of Courland, daughter of
Ivan, Peter's eldest brother.  Governed by her favourite Biron, on
whom she bestowed the duchy of Courland, she broke through all the
limits which growing civilisation had imposed upon the power of the
Czars; she engaged in many useless wars, lost vast treasures and more
than a hundred thousand men in strife with the Turks, and closing an
inglorious reign, was succeeded by one who will shortly be introduced
to the reader, Ivan Antonovitch, or John IV., son of her niece, the
Princess of Mechlenburg, an infant only six months old.  This
Princess sent Biron, the Regent, to the usual place of Muscovite
seclusion, Siberia, and assumed the administratorship during the
minority of her son.

This state of affairs was but of short duration when Elizabeth,
daughter of Peter the Great, having a strong party, seized the crown,
banished the entire family of Mechlenburg, and deposing the infant
monarch, Ivan IV., confined him for life a prisoner of state in the
great Castle of Schlusselburg, where he had been for twenty-three
years, at the period when our narrative opens.

To mention him in conversation, and still more to possess a coin
bearing his effigy, incurred the guilt and insured the punishment of
treason!  More than twenty years after the deposition of this
transitory emperor, a German tradesman, who had worked long as a
cabinet-maker at St. Petersburg, went to Cronstadt, intending then to
embark for his native city, Lubeck.  As it was not permitted to carry
out of Russia above a certain quantity of specie, an officer of
customs asked the German "what he had with him?"  "Only a few roubles
to pay for my passage," he replied; and on being commanded to show
them, one was discovered having the effigy of Ivan IV!  In vain did
the unhappy tradesman protest that he neither knew he had such a
coin, nor from whom he had received it.  Death was the penalty; but
his goods were confiscated, and he was condemned to perpetual
imprisonment in the mines of Siberia.

The Empress Elizabeth died the victim of intemperance; and while poor
Prince Ivan, an uncrowned emperor, a prisoner without a crime, was
left to pine in the Castle of Schlusselburg, the sceptre was given to
the feeble and dissipated Peter III., the husband of the beautiful,
voluptuous, and talented Catharine II., daughter of a petty prince,
but descended from the ancient house of Servestan,--a woman whom, in
three short months after their coronation, he contrived to disgust by
his political innovations, and still more by his amatory inconstancy;
so it was resolved to get rid of Peter, who was then in his
thirty-fourth year.

Peter I. had nearly lost Russia by compelling the people to cut off
the tails of their coats; and Peter III. became equally unpopular by
ordering them to trim their vast beards, and by putting his troops in
the Prussian uniform.  Crowned heads should leave such matters to
tailors and tonsors; but he certainly abolished the secret tribunal
with its contingent horrors, and recalled many a poor exile from
Siberia.

A party was formed for his dethronement; so one evening in July,
1762, when he was surrounded by his guard of Holsteiners, and amusing
himself with his flower gardens (he was a great botanist), and with
some of his beautiful mistresses at the palace of
Orienbaum,--particularly the Countess of Woronzow, to whose
allurements he had abandoned himself,--the exasperated Empress
prepared to strike a final blow for Russia and for herself.

Putting on a uniform of old Russian Guards belonging to her future
favourite, Captain Vlasfief, with the most coquettish grace, this
young and beautiful, but in some respects terrible, woman borrowed
from the nobles around her all the accessories of a complete military
toilette: of Basil Mierowitz, a hat; of Count Orloff, a scarf; of
Colonel Bernikoff, a belt; of some one else, a sword.  Over all, she
wore the blue ribbon of the first order of the Empire, which her
impolitic husband had laid aside for that of Prussia.

The drums beat to arms: in this strange guise she showed herself to
the troops, who were now mustered to the number of twenty thousand
men in the great square of St. Petersburg, where the sight of the
uniform of the old guard, which had been forced to give place to
Peter's cherished Holsteiners, raised bursts of acclamation, quite as
much as the appearance of Catharine, who was then "in the full flower
of her robust beauty, perfectly elegant in figure, and purely
feminine from her shoulders to her feet, which were remarkably
handsome, and of which she was very proud."  Her nose was aquiline,
her eyes blue with black lashes, and her hair, a brilliant auburn,
was curling on her shoulders.  Thus has an eyewitness described her.

The regiments began to file off against the Emperor, and little
knowing the end of the expedition, among the troops on this night
marched Charlie Balgonie, with the colours of the Regiment of
Smolensko on his shoulder.

Everywhere the rebellious Empress was received with enthusiasm, and
the Great Chancellor Woroslaff, who was sent against her, was among
the first to join her party.

The Emperor, abandoning his flowers and his fair ones, fled to his
yacht or galley, which was rowed to Cronstadt, of which his enemy,
the High Admiral Talizine, had already made himself master.  The
imperial galley (relates M. Rulhière in his "Histoire sur la
Révolution de Russie") came under the ramparts in the night, while
the great alarm bells rung, the drums were beaten and scarlet rockets
ascended in showers from the dark mass of the Castle of Kronslot; and
then, all along the line of fortifications, Peter saw two hundred
port-fires shedding their weird unearthly glare through the yawning
embrasures upon the twilight sea and sky--each port-fire beside a
loaded cannon--loaded against himself!

This was at ten o'clock; but ere the great oars of the galley were
laid in, or the anchor dropped, a sentinel challenged:

"Who comes there?"

"His Imperial Majesty the Emperor," replied the Captain of the
galley, who was standing on its gilded prow.

"There is no longer any Emperor!" was the stern reply of some one on
the ramparts.

"'Tis false!  I am here--I, Peter Antonovitch," said the Emperor,
growing pale at these daring and terrible words, as he stood up and
threw back his cloak to show himself and his well-known Prussian
star, by the clear, lingering twilight of the northern evening.

"Sheer off," shouted the Admiral Talizine, "or, by our Lady of Kazan,
I will fire on you!"

"We are going--give us but time," cried the Captain hopelessly,
through his speaking-trumpet.

At that moment a thousand voices on the ramparts shouted on the still
twilight air--

"Long live the Empress Catharine II.!"

On hearing this, Peter burst into tears, and fell back into the arms
of his attendants, saying--

"The conspiracy is general--from the first days of my short reign I
have seen it coming!"

He was soon after abandoned by all, even by his obnoxious Holstein
Guards, who surrendered to the Regiments of Smolensko and Valikolutz;
and then he was committed by his wife, prisoner of state, to the
Castle of Robsch, in a solitary place, eighteen miles from St.
Petersburg.  Six days afterwards had only elapsed, when it was
suggested that though young Ivan was still lingering a captive at
Schlusselburg, and some were not without hopes of replacing him on
the throne, tranquillity could not be perfectly restored while Peter
lived, though lonely and abandoned now.

His wife's lovers and favourites came to this decision speedily; so
late one afternoon, three horsemen arrived at the residence of the
fallen Emperor.  They were Count Orloff, who had in his breast a
laced handkerchief of the Empress, the grim  Colonel Bernikoff, and a
Hospodeen or gentleman, who announced that they had come to sup with
him; and, according to the Russian fashion, glasses of brandy were
served round before they sat down.

In that given to the Emperor was poison.

Whether, adds the historian we quote, they were in haste to carry
back their dark tidings, or whether the horror of the deed made them
anxious to finish it, none can know; but to hasten their terrible
work, they insisted on giving him another glass.

Already the subtle poison was diffusing itself through the vitals of
the unhappy Emperor; and now, struck by the pallor of their faces and
the ferocious expression of their eyes, he started back, refused the
proffered glass, and despairingly summoned assistance.

They then flung themselves upon him, and Count Orloff, pulling from
his breast the handkerchief he had concealed there, threw it over the
mouth of Peter, to gag him and stifle his cries.  He was dashed again
and again to the floor, where he defended himself against his
assassins with all the fury that terror of death and despair could
inspire.

Two young officers of the guard now rushed in, and, as the orders of
all were to slay Peter without a wound, they knotted the handkerchief
round his neck to strangle him, while the Count pressed his knees
upon his breast.

Still the dying Emperor struggled so fearfully that the ferocious
Bernikoff, losing all patience, plunged a dagger into his throat; and
thus, poisoned, stabbed, and strangled, he expired without further
resistance.

A few hours after this, pale, dishevelled, and covered with blood,
dust, and perspiration, with torn garments and disturbed bearing,
Count Orloff appeared before the Empress.  "She arose in silence,"
says M. Rulhière, "and passed into an inner room, whither he followed
her.  Some minutes after, she called Count Panin, who was already
named her minister, and informed him that the Emperor was dead, and
consulted with him upon the mode of announcing his demise to the
people."

It was given out that he had died a natural death.

The wound inflicted by Bernikoff's dagger was carefully sewed up; the
orifice was neatly covered by a piece of gold-beater's skin; and the
body, in an old green regimental coat, with four wax candles as a
funeral state, was exposed for three days to the people.  The
Russians were permitted to wear their beards; the Empress poured out
her afflictions in a ukase, and offered up her prayers, as became a
widow, in the church of our holy Lady of Kazan.

And it was in the service of this charming people,

    "----this new and polished nation,
  Whose names want nothing but pronounciation,"

--a people, who, in the arts of peace, were little better than the
Scots when James I. was butchered in the Black Friary at Perth, or
the men of "Merry England" when her crook-backed Dick was smothering
the royal babies in the Tower--that, by an adverse fate, our hero
found himself a soldier of fortune, when, as before stated, old
George III. was King of the British Isles, and "the first gentleman
in Europe" was a sinless infant on his mother's knee.

After Peter was laid in his grave, and Catharine was firmly seated on
his throne, her conduct was cautious and judicious, and, as even her
enemies admitted, at times magnanimous; yet frightful atrocities were
committed during her reign when she degenerated into ferocity and
debauchery.

The captivity of the young and innocent Ivan in Schlusselburg, in
charge of the unscrupulous Bernikoff, Captain Vlasfief, and a
Lieutenant named Tschekin--three officers in whom Catharine had
implicit reliance--seemed more hopeless now than ever when the
sceptre was in her firm grasp.

Now that Peter was disposed of, her only dread consisted in the
chance of Ivan's escape; so his guards were doubled, and her orders
to Bernikoff concerning him were to ensure his detention even by
death if necessary: and it was concerning this very dread that
Captain Charles Balgonie was proceeding with a dispatch from
Novgorod, where Catharine, with some of her favourites and courtiers,
was residing for a time in the ancient palace of the Czars.



CHAPTER VI.

THE PALATINE.

Corporal Podatchkine was an admirable specimen of his own type of
Russian,--one who was more afraid of neglecting Lent than of
murdering his fellow-being, especially if that fellow-being was a
foreigner; "for," saith M. L'Abbé Chappe at this time, "they do not
reckon foreigners among the number of their brethren."

His thick black scrubby hair was cut straight across the forehead in
a line with the eyebrows, and at each side it hung perpendicularly
down below the ears, in the old Russian and Mediæval fashion, and
was, moreover, cut square across the neck behind, just as the English
wore theirs in the days of Richard III.; and he kept alternately
scratching and smoothing his rugged front, nervously and assiduously,
when he removed his fur Cossack cap; and, full of affected concern,
even to exhibiting tears in his small cunning eyes, presented
himself, through the bribed auspices of the dvornick, to Natalie
Mierowna next morning, and besought her to have him "conducted to the
chamber of his brave, his beloved Captain, his comrade and brother,
who was, he now learned, seriously ill, helpless, and
delirious,"--and, in fact, just as the cunning Corporal wished him to
be.

There he found Balgonie, certainly too ill and weak either to
recognise him or understand what he was about; so the faithful
Cossack made a rapid and skilful investigation of all the officer's
pockets, and especially his sabretasche, for the dispatch.

Not a vestige of it was to be found.

"What the devil can he have done with it?" muttered the bewildered
Corporal, as he thought of his 200 silver roubles; "can he have lost
it in the river, or swallowed it?"

The truth is, that Natalie Mierowna had her doubts about the fidelity
of Podatchkine, and even of some of her own domestics, and aware of
the risk run by the stranger if he lost a dispatch of the Empress,
she had, prior to the introduction of the Corporal, secured the
document, and at that moment it was hidden in her own fair bosom
until she could secure it in a safer place.

In her bosom!  Poor Natalie!  Alas, she little knew its contents, and
the horrors they were yet to produce!

Baffled thus in his attempt to secure it, there was no resource for
the faithful warrior of the steppes now but to take up his quarters,
which he was nothing loth to do, at the Castle of the Louga, and
there quietly and comfortably to smoke his pipe by the kitchen stove;
await the recovery or the death, he cared not which, of Balgonie; and
to concert further measures with the huge gipsy, Nicholas Paulovitch,
whom he saw daily.

It was no feverish dream of Balgonie that Natalie Mierowna had been
hovering about his bedside; for she and her cousin Mariolizza had
been his especial nurses.

In less than three days the feverish delirium subsided, sense
completely returned, and the young Captain appeared to be labouring
only under a species of influenza.  A cold, as we understand that
homely but troublesome kind of ailment in foggy Britain, is almost
unknown in the latitude of St. Petersburg.  "It is," says Dr.
Granville, "indigenous to England, and, above all, to London;" yet we
fear Balgonie had a most unromantic and unmistakable cold, consequent
on his immersion in the icy Louga, together with an aguish shivering,
which rendered the quitting of his couch, and betaking himself to the
saddle, as yet quite impossible.

Balgonie had an insatiable thirst: he had visions of iced champagne;
but in lieu, got only tea-punch, if we may so call it, being tea in
the fashion still taken by the Russians (who hold that milk spoils
it), with a slice of lemon or preserved fruit; and as he got
stronger, Katinki, a strapping Polish damsel with fine black eyes,
who was Natalie's own particular follower, added thereto a dash of
rum and then _tsvetochay_, or flowery tea, with cakes, which the
Captain seemed to relish all the more when he understood them to be
made by the white hands of Natalie: an appreciation which showed a
decided improvement in that young officer's health.  But--

"My dispatch," he frequently said aloud,--"I must be gone with my
dispatch!"

"Might it not be entrusted to the Corporal Podatchkine?" asked
Natalie one morning, as she personally gave him his warm and soothing
drink with her own hand, Katinka standing demurely by with a silver
salver.

"Impossible, Hosphoza, for so I may call you: an officer alone can
carry a dispatch of the Empress.  Its contents are most urgent: this
delay, over which I have no control, may be visited by royal
disfavour, even punishment; and I fear that the air of Tobolsk or
Irkutsk would ill suit a Scotsman's lungs, Natalie Mierowna."

"Yet tarry here you must," said she, with a smile, the beauty of
which proved very bewildering: "the Louga is coated with ice this
morning, but not so thick, however, that it might not be broken by
throwing a five-kopec piece from here; but to travel yet would only
kill you, Carl Ivanovitch, and cannot be thought of just now."

Then as she glided away, with her beaming smile, her white hands and
taper arms, her rustling dress of scarlet silk trimmed with snowy
miniver, and all the sense of perfume that pervaded her, Balgonie
sighed wearily yet pleasantly, and half thought that beautiful figure
a dream, as he turned on his soft and luxurious pillow, and marvelled
whether his past or his present existence was the real one.

A captain in the ducal Regiment of Smolensko and not yet twenty-five!
Same ten years ago, his future seemed to point to a very different
course of life.

Far from Russian steppes and icy streams, their forests and
barbarity, his mind had been wandering home to Britain's happier
shore; and he might have said with the Bard who sang the "Course of
Time,"--

  "Nor do I of that Isle remember aught,
  Of prospect more sublime and beautiful,
  Than Scotia's northern battlement of hills,
  Which first I from my father's house beheld,
  At dawn of life; beloved in memory still,
  And standard yet of rural imagery."


His story is a brief one, and not very startling, save for its rapid
career of injustice.

Charles Balgonie, son of John Balgonie of that Ilk in Strathearn, had
come into the world during that which was perhaps the most stupid,
lifeless, and impoverished era of Scottish existence, the middle of
the reign of George II.; when the country was without trade, energy,
or enterprise, and when nothing flourished save that which prospers
there more than ever even under the rule of her present Majesty, and
will do so apparently unto the end of time,--gloomy fanaticism and
canting hypocrisy: more among the laity certainly, who make a trade
and cloak of outward religion, than among the clergy, who dare not be
liberal, even if so disposed; for without a public and noisy
exhibition of sanctity, few have ever had much chance of place or
profit north of the Tweed.

Moreover, Charlie was born at a time when to be a Scotsman or an
Irishman was almost a political crime in the eyes of their somewhat
illiberal fellow-subjects, and when for either to attain eminence in
the service of their native country was nearly an impossibility; and
hence the Scots crowded to the armies and fleets of Russia and
Holland, and the Irish to those of France and Spain.

By the early death of his parents, Charlie had been cast, in his
extreme boyhood, upon the tender mercies of a bachelor uncle, Mr.
Gamaliel Balgonie, a hard-hearted, grasping and avaricious merchant
in Dundee--one who was a noisy exhibitor of religion, a fervent
expounder of crooked texts, and, of course, an Elder of the Kirk; a
great quoter of Scripture upon unnecessary occasions; one who always
wore garments of sad-coloured broad cloth, with a spotless white
cravat, and whose quavering voice and meek but cunning eyes were
frequently uplifted against the enormities, the wickedness, and "the
temptawtions and tribulawtions of this weary world;" and who was,
moreover, a vehement despiser of that which he stigmatized as "its
wretched dross," but which he left no means, fair or foul, untried to
acquire.

In the lovely vale of Strathearn--one of the most exquisite tracts of
verdant scenery in Scotland--stood the home of Charlie Balgonie.  In
his delirium, the present had fled, and the past returned.  He had
been a boy again at his father's knee--a child with his curly head
nestling on his smiling mother's breast; again, in fancy, had her
kisses rested on his cheek, and her soft voice lingered lovingly in
his ear; again had he felt all that happiness, perfect trust, and
security which the boy feels by his father's hearth, and the man, in
after life, never more!

He heard not the hoarse Louga crashing down its ice-blocks to the
Baltic Sea; but the gentle murmur of the Earn, flowing from the
wooded hills of Comrie towards the broad blue bosom of the Tay--the
Earn, where many a time and oft he had lured the brown trout and the
speckled salmon from the deep, dark pools, near the old battle-cross
of Dupplin and the Birks of Invermay.  Again he had heard the leaves
rustle pleasantly in the summer woods, where he had nutted and
birdnested when a boy; and he had seen, in a vivid dream, his
glorious native valley where it narrows at Dunira; and far beyond,
the blue ridges of the mighty Grampians, lifting their summits, alp
on alp, to the clouds, eternal and unchanged as when the foiled
legions of Julius Agricola fled along their slopes in rout and
disorder.

On the death of his parents his small paternal estate of a few
hundreds per annum would have become, as all might have supposed, his
inheritance; but the relation before mentioned--the paternal uncle,
Gamaliel, a man of the strictest probity, and of that which was
equally valued in Scotland, extreme sanctimony; one who, on the
funeral day, had shed abundance of tears at the uncertainty of life,
and had excelled even the minister in prayer and "in warsling wi' the
diel" (_i.e.,_ wrestling with Satan)--suddenly produced a will, by
which, to the profound astonishment of all, the entire estate was
left to him as a return for certain loans and sums advanced to the
deceased, of which, however, no proof could be found; but it was a
veritable death-bed will, written accurately by a notary, and duly
signetted with the autograph of "John Balgonie of yt Ilk."

Though tremulous and shaky,--strangely so,--and rather unlike the
usual signature of the deceased laird, three men there were,
accounted good, worthy, and religious men, who solemnly deposed to
having seen "the hand of the dead man pen those four words."

It was a case which made some noise in those days, because thirty-six
hours after the alleged signature was given John Balgonie died.

The law of Scotland requires that, after framing and signing such a
deed, the testator must have been able to go once at least to church
or market.  How it came to pass we know not now, but the dispute,
though without a basis, was brought before the Supreme Court by some
friends of the orphan, for there were not a few persons in Strathearn
who alleged that John Balgonie's hand had certainly traced the
signature which was sworn to so solemnly as his,--but had done so
after death: the pen being placed in the fingers of the corpse, which
were guided by those of the pious and worthy merchant of Dundee, who
wanted his nephew's little patrimony in aid of certain speculations
of his own.

Pending a decision, the bereaved boy was removed to the busy town on
Tay side, and was left to solace his sorrows at school, prior, as he
supposed, to becoming a drudge in his affectionate uncle's
counting-house, when the last of his slender inheritance had been
frittered away in the fangs of the law.

One day--poor Charlie never forgot it--his worthy Uncle Gam returned
from Edinburgh by the packet.  The case had been decided against him,
and the Court was about to name trustees to look after the estate of
the orphan boy: so that boy learned long after.  Mr. Gamaliel
Balgonie was unusually grave, stern, and abstracted; but he
deliberately seated himself at his desk, and while humming, as was
his wont, a verse of a psalm, he penned a letter addressed to the
captain of a vessel then lying in the harbour, and gave it to his
nephew for immediate delivery, desiring him to wait for the answer.

Charlie remarked that Uncle Gam did not, according to his usual
careful custom, keep any copy of this letter, and that it was written
in a hand so unlike his usual penmanship as to be completely
disguised.

The boy, then in his fifteenth year, started on his errand with
alacrity.  It was better to be out amid the bustle of the sunlighted
quays, than drudging with a quill in the sombre merchant's office in
a narrow gloomy alley of Dundee.  He soon found the ship, which was
moored at some distance from the shore, with her fore-topsails loose,
and blue-peter flying at the fore, to indicate that she was ready for
sea; yet Charlie had no suspicion of the trap into which he was
running, or the cruel fate that awaited him.

The skipper, a rough, surly, and brutal-looking man, eyed the boy
keenly, while tearing the letter into minute fragments, after he had
perused it, with a grim smile of satisfaction.  He then went to a
locker, where he poured out a glass of something that seemed to be
port-wine.

"Drink that, my lad," said he, "while I write an answer to your
uncle."

Charlie, half afraid to refuse, though the skipper's bearing began to
inspire him with distrust, drained the glass; but scarcely had he
done so when the cabin seemed to be whirling round him; he thought
that he was becoming sea-sick, and was in the act of staggering
towards the cabin stairs, when he was felled to the floor by a blow
from the skipper's heavy hand--a blow dealt cruelly and unsparingly.

He recovered consciousness some time after, to find himself stiff,
sore, and bloody from a wound in the temple, lying on deck in the
moonlight, with some twenty-five other boys, several of whom were
still in the same state of stupor or intoxication in which they had
been brought on board.  Others were loudly lamenting their parents
and brothers or sisters they never more would see, and all were more
or less covered with blows and bruises.  To his horror and dismay,
Charlie now found that the ship was at sea, and running between the
dangerous reef known as the Bell Rock and the flat sandy shore of
Barrie, and that, through the machinations of Uncle Gamaliel, he had
been lured into the hands of one of the most notorious
plantation-crimps that ever infested the Scottish coast, Captain
Zachariah Coffin of New England, whose craft, a palatine ship, the
_Piscatona_, was a letter of marque, carrying twelve six-pounders and
fighting her own way.

Many miserable little fellows who had been lured to a certain den in
Aberdeen, and there drugged, robbed, and manacled, were brought on
board the palatine ship as she lay off Girdleness and burned three
red lights, in the night, as a private and concerted signal with the
crimps ashore: and some of these same crimps were discovered, in
after years, to have actually been the magistrates of the city!

After this, the _Piscatona_ was hauled up, in order to go north about
by Cape Wrath, having on board nearly fifty boys, who were to be sold
as slaves to the highest bidder in Virginia, for nowhere was the
infamous crime of kidnapping carried to a greater excess, even during
the early years of George the Third's reign, than in the
neighbourhood of the Granite City, where, in some instances, whole
families disappeared, and their horror-stricken and bewildered
parents died broken-hearted and insane.

Among the little Palatines--a name given by Americans to individuals
who were thus kidnapped--some there were who pined and wept for home;
and some who built castles in the air, and looked to America as a
land of promise.  Others there were who schemed out vengeance, and
were sullen.  Among the latter was our hero, who hoped yet to repay
his wrongs on Uncle Gam, but meanwhile was knocked about mercilessly
by the sullen skipper, and was so repeatedly rope's-ended by him,
that he was often a mass of blood and bruises; and then, like a poor
little victim, as he certainly was, Charlie would creep away into a
corner, or skulk between the lee-carronades, where the salt spray
flew over him, and mingled with the tears he wept so unavailingly,
for those once tender and affectionate parents who were lying side by
side in their graves, in sunny Strathearn, far, far away.

Many times, after being beaten cruelly, he was deprived of food for
hours and put in the bilboes, where the captain amused himself by
hunting a savage dog upon him.

But his time of vengeance was coming!

Storms came on when the _Piscatona_ entered the Pentland Firth; and
four days after Dunnet Head with its flinty brow, four hundred feet
in height, had vanished into the wrack and mist astern, a sudden cry
of fire caused every heart to thrill on board the lawless vessel.

Whether an act of treachery or not, it was impossible to ascertain;
but it had broken out near the ship's magazine, to which it
communicated with frightful rapidity; for suddenly, while the crew
were all running fore and aft with buckets, a dreadful explosion
seemed to rend the _Piscatona_ in two.  Half of the main-deck was
blown away with two of the boats.  A whirlwind of fragments flew in
every direction; and then the flames shot into the air in scorching
volumes, which soon set the courses and topgallant sails on fire.

Discipline, or such a system of it as Zachariah Coffin maintained on
board, was totally at an end.  Some of the crew lowered the only
remaining boat, and fought like wild beasts for possession of it,
knocking each other into the water without mercy.  Captain Coffin
cocked his pistols at the gangway, shot one man dead, and swore with
a dreadful oath that he would kill the next who dared to precede him;
but he was struck from behind by an iron marline-spike, and falling
together with his savage dog into the flaming gulf that yawned
amidships, was seen no more.

Some of the crew ultimately pushed off in the boat; others sprang
overboard and held on to spars and booms; but these and nearly all
the little Palatines perished miserably, after being half scorched.
Some were crushed to death by the falling yards and masts.  Many held
on to the fore and main chains, till these became so unbearably hot,
that they had to drop off, with screams of despair, when they sank,
faint, weary, and helpless, to the bottom at last.

How it all happened Charlie Balgonie never knew, but hours after the
whole affair was over, and the detested _Piscatona_ had burned down
to her water-line and sunk, leaving all the sea around her
discoloured and covered with floating pieces of charred wood and the
buoyant parts of her cargo, he found himself adrift in the wide and
stormy Pentland Firth; but wedged with comparative safety in a large
fragment of the fore-top, to which, the yard being still attached by
the sling, a certain amount of steadiness was given; yet his heart
leaped painfully, each time, when the fragment of wreck rose on the
summit of a green glassy wave, or went surging down into the dark and
watery trough between.

To add to the terrors of his lonely situation, the sun had sunk amid
gloomy purple clouds, and a rainy night was drawing on.  Half drowned
perhaps, the poor boy soon became faint and exhausted, and would seem
to have dropped into a species of stupor; for when roused by the
sound of strange voices, he found himself close by a great and
towering ship, which lay to, now right in the wind's eye with her
main-yard aback, and her gunports and hammock nettings full of
weatherbeaten faces, gazing at him with eagerness and curiosity in
the twilight, while a boat was lowered from the davits and pulled
steadily towards him by six sailors clad in dark green.

She proved to be a Russian 50-gun ship, the _Anne Ivanowna_,
commanded by Thomas Mackenzie, one of the many Scottish admirals who
have bravely carried the Russian flag in the Baltic and the Black
Sea, the same officer who a few years after was to build the great
harbour and forts of Sebastopol, at the little Tartar village then
known as Actiare.

His youthful countryman became his _protégé_.

The worthy admiral sought to make a sailor of the rescued Palatine;
but the latter had seen quite enough of the sea while on board the
_Piscatona_, and while he was clinging like a limpet or barnacle to
the piece of drifting wreck; so he became a soldier, and served under
General Ochterlony, of Guynd, in the Regiment of Smolensko, where, as
a cadet, his superior smartness, intelligence and education, not less
than his courage, soon distinguished him among his thick-pated
Russian comrades: thus, in less than ten years, he became, as we find
him, Captain Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, the most trusted aide-de-camp
of Lieutenant-General Weymarn, Commander-in-Chief of the City and
District of St. Petersburg.



CHAPTER VII.

THE SOLDIER OF THE CZARINA.

"You can never know, Ivanovitch Balgonie, how much I pitied you--"

"You, lady?" was the joyous response.

"That is, I and Mariolizza," said Natalie Mierowna, slightly blushing
(the Russians always speak thus, putting the personal pronoun first),
"when we found you sunk on a fever-bed, in a foreign land, so far
from your country, your friends, your mother, perhaps; for you are
young enough, I think, to miss her still, at such a time, although a
soldier."

"Far indeed, in many ways!" replied Balgonie, with a bitter smile, as
he thought of Uncle Gam and the Palatine ship, or perhaps it was
illness that had weakened him.  "I have a country to which more than
probably I shall never return; but father, mother, or friends, I have
none there: all who loved me once, have gone to the silent grave
before me."

"All?"

"Yes, lady."

"But you are making many friends in Russia," said Mariolizza,
cheerfully: "there are my cousin, Basil Mierowitz and my brother
Apollo Usakoff, who both, I know, love you as a brother."

"True; and most grateful am I to them for their regard, for both are
polished gentlemen.  I have old General Weymarn, too, though I know
not what he will think of this delay in delivering the Imperial
dispatch."

"Alas, that most tiresome dispatch!" exclaimed Natalie; "but I
forget," she added, with a curl of her short upper lip, "those who
proceed on the errands of the Empress Catharine, would need
seven-league boots, or the carpet of the prince in the fairy tale,
which transported the owner at a wish."

"Hush, cousin," said Mariolizza, glancing timidly round: but no one
was near save Corporal Podatchkine, who was stolidly smoking a huge
pipe at a little distance on the terrace, when this conversation took
place two days after Balgonie became convalescent, and fully a week
since the night of peril on which he swam the Louga.

"I cannot describe to you, ladies, the relief that came to my mind on
discovering that it had neither been lost nor stolen, but was safe--"

"In Natalie's bosom!" said Mariolizza, laughing.

"Certainly the last place, where, for her own sake, I would place a
dispatch of the widow of Peter III.," responded the other, haughtily;
but Balgonie felt his heart beat quicker as she spoke.  Her voice was
sweet and low, and had a wonderful chord in it.

The day was mild and beautiful, and truly an April one.  The last of
the ice had disappeared from the river; not a flake of snow was
visible among the woods or on the distant hills; and the bright sun
of noon shone clearly and brilliantly from a deep-blue sky flecked by
floating masses of white cloud, and cast across the bosom of the
Louga the shadows of the great fir trees that spread like a sea of
solemn cones for miles along its banks; and amid that woody sea, the
most striking feature was a white-walled monastery with its
"golden-headed church" and all its metal cupolas glittering in the
sunshine.

As they promenaded on the gravelled terrace that lay before the
Count's residence, Balgonie could see the domains of Mierowitz that
lay for miles around: the patrimonial village of the Count, nestling
among the coppice, containing a dozen or so of stone houses, and
double that number of quaint tumble-down edifices of wood, and a
church with a little gilt cupola, where his serfs said their prayers,
and thanked God and him for permission to live and breathe, and to
hoard their roubles in secret--for wealth in a serf was a sure source
of misery, extortion, and perhaps of torture, if discovered.

In the immediate foreground were wharves, where the wood for masts
and spars from his forests were launched, and formed into great rafts
for conveyance to the Gulf of Finland.  The din of axes and the crash
of falling timber, with the cheerful voices of the woodmen and
labourers, were heard rising from the echoing woods, as they lopped
and trimmed the giant pines for conveyance to the Baltic coast; for
his forest trees were one of the chief sources of revenue to Count
Mierowitz.

"Your father's mansion is indeed a noble one!" said Balgonie, who
after surveying the landscape from the terrace, ran his eyes over the
façade of the castle, as it was named, though by no means so well
fortified as his patrimonial tower in Strathearn, which dated from
the days of the Sixth James.

"So noble that the first Count of our name who built it, when Ivan
Basilovitch--Ivan the Terrible--was Czar, put out the eyes of the
architect, who was, of course, one of his serfs," said Natalie.

"For what reason?" asked Balgonie, starting.

"Lest he should repeat the work for another," replied Natalie; "but
then the Count was a fierce soldier, who had served under Yermack in
the conquest of Siberia.  I fear you think us very barbarous, Captain
Balgonie; but I can assure you, that even in the remote forests of
Yakoutsk, on the banks of the Lena, there is more regard for human
life and divine laws now, than existed when my father was a boy.  He
has, indeed, seen terrible things!"

Balgonie did not see much of the Count, who was generally occupied
among his people, to whom he was alternately a source of reverence
and of terror.

Though infinitely more civilised than the old Russian noble as
described by Clarke, "unwashed, unshaven, eating raw turnip and
drinking quass" (for according to the Doctor, in 1799, "raw turnips
were handed about in slices in the first houses, on a silver salver,
with brandy as a whet before dinner"), he was a fair average specimen
of a fine old Muscovite gentleman "all of the olden time," who had a
cat-o'-nine-tails always at hand; who generally unbuttoned his vest
when the gold cup was brought, in which he drank his pink champagne
or rare Hungarian wine, which he always had in equal plenty with his
fiery vodka and bitter quass; who reckoned his silver roubles by
sacksful, and his Sclavonian souls by thousands; and who, though by
no means a bad fellow, as his imperious and outrageous class go in
Russia, had still the somewhat czarish notion, that true nobility
"means the privilege of being treated like a human being of
intelligence and feeling, and of treating others as if they were
nothing of the kind."

Scandal said that in his wild youth he had flogged his serfs to fight
with his favourite bear, and flogged them again if they maltreated or
bit Bruin too much: Balgonie certainly saw two or three old serfs who
had lost an ear in these combats.  And when the Count took his
afternoon nap, if a cock crowed in the village, a dog barked, or a
cat mewed, the whole community were wont to tremble, when the stout
dvornick, or house-porter, was seen to issue forth with his
cat-o'-nine-tails in search of the proprietor.

A rich sash usually girt the waist of his old-fashioned tunic, which
was of fine cloth, and trimmed with fur, broad or narrow according to
the season; a square cap of crimson velvet, tasselled with gold and
edged with ermine as white as his beard, was placed diagonally on his
head, when he went abroad; and then he carried a long gold-headed
cane, with the exact weight of which most of the shoulders in the
neighbourhood were perfectly familiar.  On holy festivals the breast
of his best velvet coat was always covered by orders of the empire; a
dozen of servants usually hovered about him when he dined; and he
always went to church and confession in a clumsy old coach drawn by
six white horses, three abreast, in honour of the Holy Trinity.

He was proud of being one of the old hereditary nobles, who are
distinguished from the personal nobility by their right to possess
serfs, and to whose earthly tyranny there was no limit, save the
tomb.  All the wretched serf possessed, even his wife, was the
property of his lord.  Fear of secret murder alone protected the
latter species of property; hence no wonder is it that the land is
without a middle class.  Even in the present century, Heber, in his
Journal, mentions an instance of a Russian noble who, in his profane
cruelty and lust of power, nailed a servant on a cross, for which he
was only imprisoned in a monastery.

But in the character of Count Mierowitz, there was something of the
rough and hardy country gentleman.  He it was who caught with his own
hands, and in his own forests by the Louga, the famous team of brown
bears which, in the marriage procession of the late Empress
Elizabeth's jester, drew that jocular personage and his bride, when
the newly-wedded couple proceeded to the wonderful palace of ice
(which was built on the frozen Neva), all the ornaments of which were
icicles, and the appurtenances of which were also ice, even to the
cannon which were fired, and did not burst.

"When Peter the Great came to the throne," said he, one day, "he
found only two lawyers in all Russia; so, Captain Balgonie, he hung
one as an example to the other.  Ah, he was a truly great man, Peter!
The English admire him solely because he tried to imitate them; but,
for that very reason, we don't approve of many of his innovations.
We look from the north and south sides of the same hedge."

It is not surprising that Charlie Balgonie preferred the society of
two beautiful young girls to that of a testy old boyar.  To enhance
their natural attractions and winning manners, they were always
dressed in the most fashionable French _mode_, and wore the rich
stuffs which came from Moscow, and even from China.

They and he had many topics in common, on which they could converse,
after old Count Mierowitz had dined and dozed off to sleep--such as
the theatre erected some years before at Yaroslaff, by Volkoff, whose
troupe were now performing the tragedies of Soumorokoff at St.
Petersburg, where a government theatre had just been erected by a
ukase; while another ennobled the manager, Volkoff, who had died last
year, after appearing at Moscow in Zelmira.  Their knowledge of
French and German opened up the best literature of Europe to the two
cousins, which was fortunate; for at the period of our narrative,
Russia had almost none, save some barbarous national songs, fabulous
ecclesiastical records, and ferocious traditions: nor is she now much
advanced in letters, though certainly, two months after publication,
Charles Dickens may be read at Tobolsk--that terrible Tobolsk--where,
as we have all read in our youth, Elizabeth wept such grateful tears
on the bosom of her Smoloff.

Exiled from court, and secluded amid these forests by the Louga, a
Russian lady had few resources for amusement then; so the unexpected
visit of Captain Balgonie, with whose name and courage they were
quite familiar, proved a most welcome and fortunate circumstance to
those two handsome girls, who were merely enduring life, or simply
vegetating, in the great old mansion of Count Mierowitz.

But there was one topic in which our soldier of fortune could by no
means agree with Natalie Mierowna--her bitter and most unwise
hostility to the strongly-established power of the Empress, or, as
she styled her, "the woman who now occupied the throne of Ivan;" a
prince whom she viewed exactly as the Scottish Jacobites did "the
Young Chevalier," and a few old Frenchmen do at the present hour,
"Henry V.," the descendant of St. Louis.  These sentiments, however,
she had to utter in secret, or when none were by them; and when he
gazed into her dark and beautiful eyes, so full of romantic
enthusiasm and of dangerous light, he felt thankful that one so
peerless and so perilous was not, at all events, his enemy.

She had accompanied the Empress on her celebrated pilgrimage to the
ancient cathedral of Rostov, by the Lake of Nero, where the last of
the Princes of Jaroslav was murdered in cold blood by Ivan the
Terrible.  Her expedition had taken place in the May of the preceding
year.  Catharine and her ladies walked ten versts afoot daily, and it
was at the conclusion of this devotional journey that the final
quarrel had taken place concerning the mazurka with the Aide-de-camp
Vlasfief.

"That insult shall never be forgotten here!" said she, stamping a
little foot, in a prettily-embroidered scarlet shoe, on the carpet of
the drawing-room where, fortunately for herself, she was alone with
Balgonie: "an insult to me--to us, who have the blood of Ruric the
Varangian in our veins; and from her--this woman of Anhalt-Zerbst!"

Balgonie laughed; for the Ruric blood is to Russians what Captain
John Smith's is to the Virginians, and the Norman element to the
English.

"Yes," she continued, "'tis something novel, an insult to us, from
this Catharine, misnamed the Great, who has enslaved all the Ukraine,
and given men and women away by thousands, like herds of cattle, to
her courtiers and her lovers!"

"Oh, be wary; I pray you, be wary, or speak in French!" said Balgonie
imploringly, while laying his hand impressively--rather too
impressively, we fear--upon hers, which was so delicately smooth and
white, and was placed very temptingly within his reach, as they sat
near each other for the purpose of conversing in low and confidential
tones.

"The people are mere slaves under her rule," continued Natalie,
lowering her voice but without withdrawing that coveted hand; perhaps
she forgot it in her energy; but the omission made poor Charlie
Balgonie's honest heart beat very fast indeed, and his colour came
and went painfully while her dark and glorious eyes were bent on his:
"in her I behold only a usurper, who wields a knout in lieu of a
sceptre, and who seats herself on a throne of human skulls; but the
time is coming when all these things shall be altered!"

"And this time, Natalie Microwna--what do you mean?" asked Balgonie,
who had been long enough in Russia to feel a thrill of terror at
words so wild and dangerous.

"When it comes you will learn; if the blow fails, woe unto those on
whom it recoils!  You may escape as a stranger; but I fear me, she
will punish the whole Regiment of Smolensko--"

"My regiment--mine, say you?"

"Yes, yours, Hospodeen, even as Peter the Great did the Battalion of
Strelitz, for adherence to his sister Sophia; and that we know to be
one of the most sanguinary sacrifices on record, even in Russia."

"Heaven knows that is admitting a great deal; but you say either too
much or too little to satisfy my curiosity: explain this coming
peril--this mystery--to which you refer."

In her growing energy, Natalie's other hand was now clasped above
his, and truly "the situation had its charm."

"Let us speak of it no more," said she, recollecting herself, and
with a strange smile; "ere long you shall know all; but not now--not
now.  Alas! the best I can wish you, Ivanovitch Balgonie, is, that
your chance visit here may not also compromise you with Catharine."

They pressed each other's hands: it was done, perhaps, merely in the
energy of conversation; but, to be brief, Balgonie found himself now
hopelessly and helplessly in love with Natalie Mierowna.

Though both cousins were remarkable for their beauty--one blonde, the
other dark--he had never for a moment wavered between them; for he
had been, from the first moment he beheld her, irresistibly attracted
by the brilliant and black-eyed Natalie.  Besides, he knew well that
Mariolizza was betrothed, or, as the Russians might justly phrase it,
assigned away, to his friend and brother-officer, Basil Mierowitz.



CHAPTER VIII.

IN LOVE.

It was scarcely possible that the result of his visit could be
otherwise than it had proved; for Natalie was no common-place beauty,
but one who had subdued the hearts of many more men than Charlie
Balgonie--men, who now at Moscow and St. Petersburg were counting the
days of her exile from the Court of Catharine: and when Charlie
thought of her in after years, the calm repose of his days of
convalescence, the aspect and furniture of his chamber in the old
Castle of Louga, the genial glow of the peitchka, the double window
sashes with their bright false flowers between, the Byzantine picture
of the Holy Virgin with its shining metal halo, and the varnished
panels of the walls, were all associated, as in a pleasant dream,
with the dark and beautiful eyes, the round taper arms, the white and
delicate hands on which so many diamonds glittered, the jetty hair
that was twisted in massive braids (yet fell in ringlets too) round
the superb head,--the graceful, floating, and statuesque figure of
Natalie Mierowna, always so richly, even coquettishly attired.
Natalie, so soft, so tender, and so true, in all the relations of
life and the amenities of society; and yet who could be so keen in
her hate, so fiery in her political rancour, when thinking of her own
injuries, and the terrible wrongs of the captive Ivan, whose adherent
she had become.

Charlie Balgonie blessed the exile and choice of circumstances, all
so sudden and unforeseen, which had cast him in her path.  He loved
her with all the passionate adoration so beautiful and winning a
woman could inspire in a young and ardent heart; nor was it long
before Natalie became aware of this, and was affected by the same
emotion.  There was one glance given, by which "each read and
understood each other's soul."  Lovers soon find means to comprehend
each other, and Mariolizza, who speedily guessed their secret, which
she certainly thought a dangerous one, found many excuses to leave
them often together.

The long, long dream of his youth and early manhood,--the waking
dream of many a lonely hour of reverie in the summer woods, by the
seashore, or in the still hours of military duty, in camp and
bivouac--a fair face that would smile on him,--a girl to love, and
worship, and trust,--one who would trust and love him in return, was
embodied at last; and in Natalie he saw this hitherto imaginary
sphinx of whom he had been thinking, and for whom he had been waiting
so long.

Her voice, her smile, her presence, seemed to fill the air he
breathed with a new charm, that made every nerve thrill, investing
the most simple and common wants of every-day life with sudden
delights and joys; in short, and in common phraseology, the poor
young man was "over head and ears in love."

The declaration of his passion, and Natalie's acceptance of it, came
about just as others have done; and for three days after,--without
looking the future confidently or inquiringly in the face,--Balgonie
abandoned himself to the delight of his new and successful passion,
and forgot all about the troublesome Empress, her pressing dispatch,
and the terrors of Lieutenant-General Weymarn.

How could he think of such, when seated in the half-curtained alcove
which opened off the drawing-room, on those calm April evenings; when
the soft breeze that floated over the vast forests came laden with
the odour of the spruce and fir boughs?  Seated, with Natalie--in all
the glory of her youth, her beauty, and the flush of her first
love--by his side, often deftly and with rapid fingers weaving up the
coils of her heavy black hair (which would come down, somehow, on
these occasions); as she did so, displaying to greater advantage than
ever the magnificent contour of her bust, her white shoulders, and
taper arms, and adding even to the coquettish side glance of the
half-veiled eye, the most splendid of all her natural ornaments were
those great, heavy loose braids on which the sunlight shone.

What was to be the future of all this?

On the strong friendship of Basil Mierowitz he could fully rely; but
then Natalie was on bad terms with the vindictive Empress, and he,
Balgonie, was a soldier, and, according to the rules of the Russian
service, could not marry without permission from his colonel, who, at
present, would not dare to accord it, circumstanced as the bride
would be.

Marry?  What would the proud old Russian boyar say, or do, or think,
when he heard that the penniless Scot--the mere adventurer--the
soldier of fortune, was the accepted lover of his daughter, and that
he had dared to lift his eyes to her otherwise than in the way of
solemn and awful respect?

If his High Excellency could have but peeped into the aforesaid
alcove on some of the occasions referred to!  The mere fact of being
a Scot would not have conveyed much to the mind of the Count.  If to
any unlettered Englishman of the present day, the names of Moldavia,
Croatia, Bulgaria, Servia, Pomerania, Grodno, Mingrelia, and so
forth, give but a vague idea of their whereabouts or history, it was
perhaps worse in the Count's instance; for so far as he, worthy man,
was concerned, or for all he knew to the contrary, the Land of Cakes
might have been in the flying island of Laputa.

"He would be furious, no doubt," thought Balgonie; "but he might
soothe his troubled mind by flogging a few serfs, shooting a few
brown bears, and draining sundry horns of quass."

Charlie had been present at more than one Russian marriage and
betrothal, and the coolness of the ceremony had excited his
astonishment and repugnance; for, in that country, those
life-enduring arrangements are concluded by a mere match-maker, who
makes the proposal, not to the girl, but to her father.  He
remembered particularly the case of Lieutenant Tschekin's espousal
with the daughter of General Weymarn, who, having stated her dower to
the go-between,--a thousand peasants or so,--the gallant subaltern
was satisfied, and thus, as usual, the whole affair was settled
without the taste or inclination of the young lady being consulted or
considered.  In Russia, the papa consents, and, according to some old
custom, mamma pretends to object and weep.

"My daughter," said the General, "I have given you away in presence
of my aide-de-camp."

"To one I know, father?" she asked.

"No."

"To whom, then?" she continued, perfectly undisturbed.

"One you shall soon know--here he comes; and this is thy bridegroom,
daughter: art satisfied?"

The young lady, of course, declared she was satisfied.  She and the
Lieutenant placed their hands behind them, stretched out their necks,
pouting their lips for a very frigid kiss, and the matter was soon
concluded by a priest.

When Balgonie thought of the delicacy and gentleness of Natalie, and
remembered the marriage of the Lieutenant Tschekin, he shrunk alike
from the idea of seeing her subjected to the mummery of a Greek
espousal and the vulgar horrors of a wedding feast and drinking bout
_à la Russe_.

At last he began to wake from his dream, to find the stern necessity
of departing; and, indeed, the snub-nosed Podatchkine, who was always
hovering about, seemed as a perpetual reminder of the duty he was
neglecting.  The lovers were solemnly betrothed in
secret,--Mariolizza was their only confidant,--and at present they
could but arrange to wait until they could mutually confide in Basil
Mierowitz, whom Natalie, ere long, expected to see.  To write to each
other, save by special messenger, was deemed at present unwise; but
Balgonie would visit her as he returned again to Novgorod.

So the last evening they were to spend together came; and they were
seated, wreathed in each other's arms, with Natalie's cheek resting
on Balgonie's shoulder, in an embowered rustic seat, not far from the
very place where he had so boldly crossed the swollen river on that
eventful night.

Charlie's heart was full of sadness and bewilderment; he could but
mutter and whisper of his love and their hopes, and again and again
kiss Natalie on the cheek, on the lips and snowy neck, her hands and
arms, while her tears flowed fast; for she had all the cooing
tenderness of a ringdove now, and could only murmur from time to
time:--

"Oh, Carl, Carl--my own Carl!" and so forth; and, like other young
ladies similarly circumstanced on the eve of separation, believed
herself to be the most miserable being in the world.  But amid all
this, she suddenly started and grew pale, on seeing a figure approach.

"See, Carl, see!" she exclaimed: "that horrible woman must be ominous
of evil at such a time.  Why has she been permitted to approach?"

Balgonie saw, at a little distance, only a Russian gipsy girl,
possessed evidently of considerable personal attractions.  She stood
timidly, and irresolute whether to advance or retire; and bowed her
head with great humility, while crossing her fine but dusky hands and
arms upon her breast.  In old age the Russian female gipsies are as
remarkable for their extreme hideousness, as in youth they are famous
for personal beauty; so this young girl was full of picturesque
loveliness, and instead of being clothed in rags, as the wanderers of
her race are elsewhere, her costume was brilliant in colours and rich
in material.  She had large glittering ear-rings; a gaudy kerchief
bound her black tresses; and her rounded cheeks being freely rouged,
added to the wonderful lustre of her dark and dusky eyes, and to the
generally theatrical character of her singular beauty and bearing.

"Oh!" resumed Natalie, with something of a shudder, "'tis Olga
Paulowna: don't let her speak to us in our parting hour, Carl, lest
we be compelled to hear her sing, and that may perhaps bode evil.
The dvornick, I understand, has thrice by dog and whip driven away
this gipsy girl, who has come to the house again and again,
ostensibly to seek alms, but doubtless only to steal or work mischief
by her cunning; for though our Russian gipsies are not allowed to
pitch their tents on any land without the express consent of the
owner, this girl's brother, Nicholas Paulovitch (as he calls
himself), a half-blood, has permanently settled on our estate,
somewhere in the forests, though he is despised and loathed by the
peasantry, whom, doubtless, he loathes and hates most cordially in
turn.  I do wish she would go away without being ordered to do so."

Little did Natalie know that those ill-requited visits of the poor
gipsy girl had direct reference to the life and safety of him whose
hand clasped hers so tenderly and confidingly.

"Faugh!" said Natalie, with increasing annoyance; "she is about to
sing,--something naughty no doubt,--but her voice will soon summon
the dvornick."

Many of those female wanderers in Russia can sing divinely; and it is
on record that even the great Catalani was so enchanted by the
melodious voice of a gipsy girl at Moscow, that she took from her own
shoulders a superb shawl, which had been given to her by the Empress,
and placed it on those of the nomadic singer, "as a tribute from art
to nature."

And Olga now began to sing with great sweetness one of those Russian
songs, by which the gipsies, to flatter the people, sought to
foretell the downfall of the Crescent; and many such prophetic
strains were current even during the war in the Crimea, as
foreshadowing the fate of the "sick man" at Constantinople.

  "Years after years shall roll,
    Ages o'er ages glide.
  Before the world's control
    Shall check the Crescent's pride.
  Banished from place to place,
    Where'er the ocean's roar,
  The mighty gipsy race,
    Shall visit every shore.

  "But when the hundredth year
    Shall three times doubled be,
  Then shall the end appear
    Of all their slavery.
  Then shall the warlike powers
    From distant climes return,
  Egypt again be ours,
    While the Turkish domes shall burn!

  "Again the Christian's cross
    Shall over Stamboul wave,
  And ruin, weeds, and moss,
    Mark the last Sooltan's grave!
  Again shall Christian bells
    Ring where the Muezzins cry,
  When across the Dardanelles
    The Moslem hordes shall fly!

  "So Egypt shall be freed,
    Her tribes return once more,
  Their flocks and herds to feed
    Where their fathers dwelt of yore:
  When all our warlike powers
    From distant climes return,
  Then Egypt shall be ours,
    While the Turkish turrets burn!"


The last line ended in a shriek, with which a cry from Natalie
mingled; for the cruel dvornick had been stealing through the thicket
unperceived, and now bestowed a heavy lash across the tender
shoulders of the cowering and shrinking girl; but ere he could repeat
it, Balgonie sprang forward, arrested the descending whip, and then,
placing in the hand of the singer a few Livonian groschen, bade her
hasten away, on which she departed, with tears of pain and gratitude,
after pressing his fingers to her lips; and, in her terror and
confusion, leaving her task undone--her warning of coming treachery
untold.

"Oh, Carl!" said Natalie, laying her head again on Balgonie's breast,
"dearest Carl, I am so glad she has gone without anathematizing
us--or, or weaving some mischievous spell; for, smile as you may, I
can't help fearing those people!  I am a true Russian, and dread the
evil eye!"

Richer by a lock of dark and silky hair and a diamond ring (both the
objects of many a secret kiss), but leaving his heart behind him, in
one swift hour after this little episode, Balgonie had departed to
meet, and, for greater security, to travel in consort with, a caravan
of a hundred and fifty boors, who were conveying sugar from Moscow to
St. Petersburg.

He was guided again by the sly Podatchkine, who had resolved to take
especial good care that the said caravan should be avoided.

"God be with you, Hospodeen--God be with you--adieu," said the old
Count, lifting his square velvet cap courteously, as he bade farewell
to his guest at the porte-cochère.

Balgonie so respectfully kissed the hands of Natalie and Mariolizza,
that none could have detected a difference in his manner to either;
and certainly none could have suspected that the tears of the former
were yet wet upon his cheek--her kisses lingering on his lip, that he
seemed to leave his soul upon her hand, and that the wrung hearts of
both were swollen with concealed emotion.

"Uich!" thought Corporal Michail Podatchkine as he rode after the
officer into the deep forest, "I'd as soon think of kissing the foot
as the hand; who knows among what carrion either may have been stuck?
By St. Nicholas, I would rather eat a sheep's tail or a rump steak
from an old troop mare than kiss either."

Some hours after Balgonie's departure, and when Natalie in the
solitude of her own room was abandoned to tears and unavailing
regrets, a trusted messenger from her brother arrived with a brief
note, written so enigmatically that none save herself could have
understood or deciphered it; but the spirit of it was briefly this:--

"All is arranged for freeing the prisoner of S. (chlusselburg) by a
stratagem.  A dispatch that may counteract, if not baffle our plans,
and fatally compromise us all, has been sent by old Weymarn to St.
Petersburg.  I know not who the bearer is; but be assured of this,
_he will never reach it alive_.  We have set Podatchkine on his
track, and he, worthy Livonian, for two hundred roubles, would skin
his own father alive."

After reading this pleasant epistle, little wonder is it that Natalie
was found by Mariolizza, as the twilight deepened, half senseless
upon her bed, cold, in tears, and utterly miserable.



CHAPTER IX.

DELUDED.

A lover has occasionally been likened to a fool, as being a man
possessed by one idea, his mistress.  This was certainly somewhat of
poor Charlie Balgonie's state of mind.  He saw only the dark eyes,
the half drooped lids, and the farewell glance of Natalie; so full of
hidden and tender meaning; and while thinking of her and of her last
words and promises, their mutual hopes of the future, based almost
entirely on Basil, he fell an easy prey to the plans and schemes of
the wily Corporal Podatchkine, who saw only his anticipated two
hundred silver roubles; and who, knowing the country as well as if it
had been every acre, rood, and verst his own property, led him on and
on he knew not where; but, at all events, two hours after they should
have met the caravan, they found themselves, to all appearance, lost
in a dense forest of dark pine trees.

Failing the caravan, having now proceeded, as he believed, some
twenty miles or so, Balgonie had thoughts of passing the night at the
house of a friend of Count Mierowitz, a _duornin_, of whom he had
been told by Mariolizza, who laughingly assured him, that this
personage was "a fine Russian gentleman of the old school, who beat
his wife regularly every Thursday and Saturday with a whip of
thongs," and was seldom sober.

Those duornins were country gentlemen, who held their lands by
knights' service, and were bound to attend the Czar on horseback in
time of war.  Formerly it was sufficient to send a man well armed and
mounted; but Peter the Great first compelled them or their sons to
serve in person, if they could not pay for a substitute.

In short, though he knew it not, Balgonie had been for the last two
hours riding merely in a wide circle, and, by the careful guidance of
Podatchkine, was now not many miles from the hut of the gipsy
woodman, Nicholas Paulovitch; and, consequently, he was much nearer
the Castle of Louga than he had the least idea of.

On this night there was a glorious Aurora in the north, and full of
his love, his own tender thoughts, and inspired by the beauty of the
scene, it seemed to the somewhat provoked Podatchkine, that the
dreaming Captain was quite disposed to pass the night where he was.

When the dense wood of stupendous pines opened into long vistas, the
whole northern quarter of the sky could be seen, illuminated from the
horizon to the zenith.  Gloriously bright as the most brilliant
phosphorus, masses of fire arose in the form of columns that waved,
towered, and shot into the air, with streaks of fainter light
between.  Anon they all blended and merged into each other with
renewed grandeur, aslant, or radiating from a centre, like the sticks
of a mighty fan.  All that portion of the heavens seemed a mass of
shining gold, rubies, and sapphires, with a wondrous light streaming
over them, broadening, brightening, and deepening, then fading away,
to flash forth again in greater beauty and glory, while, as if to
enhance the magnificence of this illumination, many falling stars
shot across it, leaving in their train sparkles of light, more
brilliant even than the glory that blazed beyond.  In black outline
between, and in the immediate foreground, towered the dark and solemn
pines, in solitude and silence.

Not a sound was heard but the occasional snort of their horses, or
the cry of a distant wolf.

Balgonie was surmising whether Natalie would be surveying the
beautiful natural illumination from her window, or from the terrace:
he forgot that it was nothing new to her.  Certainly it proved of
little interest to Michail Podatchkine, who, under his thick beard,
growled at the officer for loitering.

The Scottish islesmen call the streamers of the Aurora "the merry
dancers;" but the Siberians name them "the raging host:" and Balgonie
was reflecting what a relief their brilliance must prove to the
lonely hunters, who at that very time were pursuing the white bear
and the blue fox, far beyond the Lena, and along the shores of the
Icy Sea, when his attendant disturbed his reverie.

"Well, Michail," said he, in reply to some remark in which the
Corporal, who saw nothing wonderful in the matter, urged that they
should proceed, "we have missed the sugar caravan, and cannot
discover the residence of the duornin I spoke of, so I am rather
provoked with you."

"Oh, Excellency, who can withstand God or the Great Novgorod?" whined
the fellow, using an old Russian proverb.

Jean Paul Richter says, "the more weakness, the more lying; force
goes straight, but any cannon-ball with cavities in it goes crooked."
Some such thought as this occurred to Balgonie, as he checked his
horse, and half turning round, with a stern expression in his face,
which the light in the north made sufficiently plain, he said:--

"Rascal!  I fear you are deceiving me again!"

Hustled up on his saddle, rather than in it, with his knees on his
holsters and his lance slung behind him, Podatchkine made many signs
of the cross, and called on St. Sergius and all the other
_moshtschi_, or saints of Russia, to bear witness that he was as
innocent as a young bear of any such foul idea; but only begged that
his Excellency would proceed, and assured him that the track they
were on must assuredly bring them, ere long, to some woodman's
dwelling.

At this time, such is the slavish influence of superstition, that
Podatchkine, for mere fellowship, kept close to the very man against
whom he had formed the most fiendish schemes; for stories of the Wood
Fairies,--of the _Leechie_, or Forest-demon, whose fangs tore the
benighted asunder,--of the _Domovoi_, or mischievous Russian
Brownie,--of the _Vodianoi_, or smiling River-spirit, who lured
travellers to a watery doom,--of wolves and bears in ravening herds,
came fast upon his memory; for the forest was growing denser, and the
darkness deepened painfully after the Aurora faded away, and a few
solitary stars alone glinted through the openings between the broad,
flat, pendant branches of the intertwisted pines.

The silence of the night was now broken only by the whistling croak
of the _valdchnep_, or great woodcock, as he darted from amid the
black gloom of a pine tree, or the lighter shadow of the graceful,
but, as yet, leafless birch; and the craven and clamorous anxiety
that had been giving real pangs, and even qualms of conscience, to
the superstitious Podatchkine began to subside, when the wood opened
a little, a red light appeared, and they approached the cottage of
Nicholas Paulovitch, the half-bred.

It was, as already stated, built of logs, squared by the hatchet
outside and inside, and whitened by chalk: before it yawned a deep
draw-well, with a bucket, handle, and winch.

"'Tis the cottage of a man I know.  Here, Excellency, we can pass the
night," said Podatchkine, leaping from his horse and dutifully taking
Balgonie's bridle, as if to anticipate any proposition of proceeding
further.  "There is a shed behind where I shall stable our horses:
Nicholas, I know, will make us welcome to his lodge."

In a few minutes more, Balgonie found himself seated in the cottage,
the aspect of which struck him as being peculiarly comfortless,
dingy, and squalid, as he viewed it by the light of a _loutchin_, or
species of pine torch, which stood in a rusty iron holder on the
rough deal table, whereon lay a pack of frayed and dog-eared cards.

On the walls were some rude images, stuck over with crumbs of black
bread, which attracted the flies in summer and the dirt at all times.
In a place of honour was a holy effigy, with some train oil flaring
before it in a tin sconce, as a species of votive lamp; for the
proprietor affected religion quite as much as Mr. Gamaliel Balgonie
did in a more civilised part of the world.

The furniture consisted of a few plain stools, and some very dirty
bearskins spread on the floor in the corners, as beds; and on the
table was a pitcher of foaming and seething quass, with wooden bowls
to drink it by.

Balgonie took in all these details at a glance.

How great would have been his surprise, if he had known that after
riding so many miles, he was only a short distance from _her_, from
Natalie, who was now weeping bitterly and sleeplessly on the bosom of
her cousin for him, and for the fate she dreaded, and yet had not the
power to avert, or from which to save him.

In addition to Podatchkine and the host, Nicholas Paulovitch, who
stood respectfully at a little distance from Balgonie, and was
appraising the exact value of his costume, arms, and ornaments, even
to Natalie's diamond ring, there was present another ill-visaged
fellow, with a powerful figure, square shoulders, and giant beard,
like every Russian of the lower order; eyes that were small and
piercing, like those of a mouse; a long, fierce nose and jagged
teeth, hair shorn off close above the eyebrows and brushed all down
straight from the crown of his head, which in form resembled a cone
or a pine-apple.

This barbarian, who was dressed chiefly in a shoubah of sheepskin,
and had a small, but sharp, hatchet and dagger in his girdle, was a
Stepniak, from a district where nothing like a town was ever seen or
known, but whose aid and strength Paulovitch thought might be useful
and necessary in the work he and Podatchkine had cut out for
themselves in the night.



CHAPTER X.

THE CORPORAL IN HIS OWN TRAP.

Balgonie was rather weary after his long and desultory ride by rough
and unfrequented roads, chiefly devious forest paths; he felt
thirsty, and looked at the pitcher of quass.

"Will his Excellency drink?" asked Nicholas Paulovitch, in his hoarse
and husky voice.

Now as quass is simply a species of sour beer, made of rye and
oatmeal, coloured by a red berry, and is generally the beverage by
which the Russians wash down their coarse bread and salt, Balgonie
declined: the Stepniak proposed to add thereto a dash of train oil;
but the suggestion made the young officer shudder.

"I have fortunately one bottle of Rhine wine," said the woodman, with
a rapid and furtive glance at his comrades; "his Excellency will
doubtless honour us by taking it with his supper, at least with such
fare as the forest produces, a stewed rabbit or so."

"I thank you, good fellow.  Where is this cottage situated?"

"Situated," repeated Nicholas, with a quick and uneasy glance at the
Corporal, fearing there might be some discrepancy in their
information.

"Yes, in what part of the country?" said Podatchkine; "for we
naturally wish to know."

"Near Velie."

"Then I am somewhere about forty versts from the Louga?"

"Yes, Excellency, precisely," replied the rascal.

"Hence, if my horse is fresh, I may reach Schlusselburg to-morrow?"

"Scarcely, as it lies fully a hundred versts beyond Velie," said
Nicholas.

"Is the distance so great?" exclaimed Balgonie, little knowing that
it was even more, and all unsuspicious of how these wretches were
deluding him.*


* The cottage of those assassins is said to have been situated ten
versts, or about eight miles distant from Louga on the road to Velie.
_Vide_ dispatch from General Weymarn to the Empress, dated 8th
August, "concerning Carl Ivanovitoh Balgonie, a Scottish Captain in
the Regiment of Smolensko."--_Utrecht Gazette_.


"But, Excellency, we may prove more able guides than Michail
Podatchkine," said the gipsy woodman; "for we--that is the Stepniak
and I--must proceed to St. Petersburg to-morrow, on a little piece of
business we shall have to perform together."

"Poor devils!" thought Podatchkine, "if you take his body to St.
Petersburg, you will both be accused of murder and knouted, as sure
as my name is Michail; so I shall save my fifty silver roubles."

Even at the present day in Russia, few will venture to receive or
meddle with a dead body, or attempt to succour a dying or a drowning
person, in dread of the dangerous accusations and extortions of the
police.

A sound, as of footsteps, and of something like a drinking vessel
falling on the floor of an upper apartment, made the woodman start up
with an oath of astonishment and alarm.  He hurriedly applied a
ladder to the trap which gave admission to this place, and ascended
into it; but returned almost immediately to say, "there was no one
there."  The evident surprise and alarm of the three men at this
trivial occurrence, is said to have been the first cause of exciting
Balgonie's suspicion.

He glanced at the Stepniak, who sat silently observant in a corner,
drinking his quass, with his feet resting against the rude peitchka,
or stone stove, which was built into the log wall of the cottage, and
when surveying his vast bulk and colossal stature, together with his
singularly ferocious aspect, the reflection occurred to him, that he
should have placed his pistols in his girdle instead of leaving them
in the holsters of the saddle.

He was the reverse of timid; he was "brave even to rashness, and had
faced death many times" (to quote General Weymarn) since his career
of wandering began; but the idea certainly did flash upon his mind,
that his situation in that lonely forest had its perils, and that two
men more repulsive in aspect and in bearing than the gipsy and
Stepniak, he had never seen, even in Russia.

Was it some mysterious and intuitive sense of danger drawing near
that made such thoughts pass through the steady mind of Balgonie?

He and Podatchkine were both armed, and even were these men outlaws,
they would scarcely, he believed, dare to assault an officer on
military duty; besides, the very name of Schlusselburg, whither he
was proceeding, carried a wholesome terror with it; so dismissing his
casual suspicions, Charlie unbuckled his sword, and seated himself at
the table, on which a cold supper of stewed rabbits and coarse rye
bread was laid for the four who were present.

A platter was placed for a fifth person whom Nicholas remarked to
Podatchkine in a growling tone was still abroad in the forest, or had
not returned from some place which was named in a whisper.

With an affectation of extreme respect and courtesy, none of the
three worthies would seat themselves at the table, until Balgonie
specially invited and urged them in succession to do so.

The bottle of Rhine wine was produced from the apartment above and
opened.  The length of the cork and the dust on the bottle (wherever
it came from originally) argued well of the contents, and two horns,
one of which, had a handsome silver rim, were placed for the Captain
and the Corporal.

The former was rather surprised to find such a drinking vessel as
this silver mounted cup in a place so squalid, and he was about to
lift and examine it, when Nicholas Paulovitch, with almost nervous
haste, filled it, and also that of the Corporal, to the brim.

To the surprise of Balgonie, the latter exhibited some undisguised
alarm on seeing wine placed before _him_; it was an attention under
all the circumstances he neither wished nor expected; and so he
declined to drink of it, saying that he was "a true Russ, and would
adhere to the quass."

"Nay, fear not, friend Michail," said the woodman, "'tis the best of
Rhine wine.  The cup with the silver mounting is of course for his
Excellency the Hospodeen," he added with a quiet but grim
significance, which the wily Cossack quite understood, so he drained
the wine horn without further objection.

Soon after having supped, and imbibed his full share of the wine
bottle, Balgonie expressed a desire for repose, as he wished to
depart by daybreak; but he had other reasons for retiring so early.
He did not much relish the society of the gipsy, the Stepniak, and
the Corporal of Cossacks; and he wished to indulge in reverie, to
commune with himself, and let the current of his thoughts run
undisturbed on Natalie and their adieus.

"This way, Excellency," said Nicholas, with alacrity, lifting the
pine torch in its iron loutchin, and ushering him up the stair, a
mere common ladder, and through the trap-door into the little
apartment above, where his couch, composed merely of skins of the
bear and sheep awaited him, and where he could see the dark forest
and the occasional stars through a small window that gave light and
air to the place, which was so limited in size, that it somewhat
resembled a little cabin in a ship.

Left in this miserable den to his own reflections and to
darkness--when Nicholas descended with the pine torch, carefully
closed the trap-door and secured it on the lower side by a wooden
bolt, moreover, softly removing the ladder--Charlie Balgonie placed
his sword conveniently at hand, and cast himself upon the pile of
skins that were to form his bed, and thought he had often fared worse
in the bivouacs of Silesia and Bavaria.

"So--he is safe," said Nicholas Paulovitch, looking upward with a
grin of savage satisfaction at the closed trap, as he replaced the
loutchin on the table, and then closely scrutinised the Corporal,
whose eyes had already become red and inflamed.

"Hush!" said Podatchkine, "take care."

"Why?" asked Nicholas, in a hoarse whisper.

"Because all may not be yet as you wish it, and in Russia sometimes
the tongue flays the shoulders and cuts off the head."

"True," said the hitherto taciturn Stepniak, who was carefully
feeling the keen edge of his hatchet; "as the Tartars have it, 'when
you have spoken the word, it rules over you; while it is yet
unspoken, you rule over it.'  But it seems to me, Michail
Podatchkine, that you have taken a great deal of trouble, and wasted
much time in the matter of this dispatch.  As you passed through the
forest together, why the devil did you not give him a good
_tzchick_"--(which we can only render "prod")--"in the back with your
lance?"

"Because, if a wound is found on him, folks might say he had been
murdered; and he must bear not a scar."

"And neither shall you, friend Podatchkine," said Paulovitch with a
cruel grin.

"Come--don't make unpleasant jests," growled the Corporal, with a
yawn and a shudder; "wounds have not been fashionable since Orloff
and Bernikoff supped with Peter III."

"You grow wary as you grow older, Corporal."

"I have no desire to travel with the next caravan to Siberia, with
one side of my head and face shaved, and an iron rosary, some five
pound weight, at my wrists."

"Fear not--you will never see Siberia."

"Then you have made all sure about this Ivanovitch Balgonie?" said
Podatchkine, whose utterance was becoming somewhat inarticulate.

"Ay, sure enough; the cups were----"

"The cups!"

"The cup, I mean, was drugged with those black berries which grow in
the forest hereabout; the same stuff used by fine ladies to whiten
their hands."

"But why the cup and not the wine?"

"For this reason: I might have been constrained to drink with him;
and I had no desire to fall, like some one else, into a trap of my
own baiting."

Podatchkine, on whom the powerful soporific with which his cup had
been drugged--the sleepy nightshade--had been rapidly taking effect,
and whose small cunning eyes had been opening and shutting
alternately, while a numbness stole with a weariness over all his
faculties, seemed suddenly to grasp at the terrible meaning of the
speaker.  He gave a start--he essayed to rouse himself and shout, but
in doing so, toppled off his stool, and sank on the clay floor in a
profound slumber.

"At last!" said the half-breed, administering a kick to the prostrate
figure; "at last he has gone to sleep; now to make sure that he shall
never waken more.  Ah! the Asiatic! he was just getting suspicious at
the end."

"There are two kopecs in his pocket," said the Stepniak, after
investigating the garments of the snorting Podatchkine, who was now
breathing heavily through his red snub nose, which between his
scrubby beard and his shock of hair, was almost the only feature of
his face that was visible.

"Leave the kopecs where you found them!" said Nicholas, with a gipsy
oath.

"Wherefore?" asked the Stepniak with surprise.

"It will seem all the more honest in thee, my good Stepniak, when you
take the body--bodies, I should say--to the nearest military post.
You have but to say you found them dead in the forest."

"And the wet clothing?"

"Dew or rain--what a head you have!"

"True--true; ah! what a man you are, Nicholas Paulovitch, so full of
bright thoughts!  That idea would never have occurred to me."

"Nor the other either.  Quick, now; we have not a moment to lose!"

They extinguished the pine torch, and tying the Corporal's hands
securely with a cord, carried him forth to the draw-well before the
cottage.  Then they substituted that worthy warrior's heels for the
bucket which was usually appended to the rope, and permitting the
winch to revolve softly and gently, lowered him down, snorting and
gasping in his unnatural slumber, head foremost, into the deep dark
water below!

The Stepniak turned the iron handle of the winch or windlass, while
the gipsy guided the rope with its heavy burden.  He was deliberately
lowered down until only his heels remained above water, as the two
wretches could see by the starlight when stooping and peering into
the darkness below.

The snorting had ceased now!

The dying Corporal was heard to struggle with his hands, as if he
sought to free them from the cords; a few babbles filled with air
rose to the surface and burst.  This continued for a minute, during
which all was silent elsewhere, save the half-suppressed breathing of
the two assassins, and the dreary sound of the night wind, as it
shook the dark branches of the giant pines that towered in solemn
gloom around them.

Nicholas Paulovitch listened intently, and kept his eyes fixed on the
cottage where their other victim lay, as he doubted not, sunk in what
was intended to be his last sleep.

Anon, all became still--deathly still--in the depths of the dark
well; the rope ceased to vibrate, and the bubbles came no more.

"Let us leave him here for a few minutes, and now for the Captain and
his dispatch!  By the time that we return, the Corporal will be as
stiff as if he stood for sale in the frozen market on the fête of St.
Nicholas!" said the gipsy, with one of his diabolical grins; while
the Stepniak, with a smile of satisfaction that showed all his huge
yellow teeth, smoothed down to his eyebrows the thick coarse black
hair that grew from the apex of his conical caput.

They now re-entered the cottage, and again lighted the torch in its
iron loutchin.  All remained just as they had left it; the quass
pitcher, the wooden bowls, the two cups, and the empty wine bottle
were on the table, and the platters, with the débris of their rustic
supper; but the superstitious gipsy felt a species of shudder come
over him, for when the torch flared up in the night wind and cast
strange shadows on the dingy and discoloured walls of the log-hut, it
seemed to his diseased imagination, for a moment, as if the outline
of the drowned Corporal still occupied the stool on which he had been
seated.

"Come," said he huskily, "the dispatch!--and then for the other!"

They listened intently, and placed the ladder against the trap-door.
All was still--not even the breathing of Balgonie was heard.
Ascending first, with a knife in his teeth, in case of unexpected
resistance, the gipsy knocked thrice on the trap without receiving
any response.  He then withdrew the wooden bolt, pushed it up, and
introducing his head and shoulders, held aloft the pine torch, and
turned towards the bed of skins.

It was unoccupied; and in a moment he saw that the bare and desolate
chamber was without a tenant!

"Malediction!" he shouted; "he has escaped us--but how?
Search--search!  He cannot be far off, after the dose I have given
him; search--and we must use our hatchets now!"



CHAPTER XI.

OLGA, THE GIPSY.

Balgonie had scarcely thrown himself at length on the soft, but not
very odorous, pile of skins which formed his couch, when a face
appeared at the little window, which was pulled open, and a voice
called to him in a low and earnest whisper:

"Hospodeen--Carl Ivanovitch!  Hospodeen, attend to me; but oh, be
silent, as you value your life!"

He started up, softly approached the window, and saw, by the dim
starlight, a fair female face with very dark eyes, white and regular
teeth, and long, glittering ear-rings.

"I have seen this face before," thought he; "but when, and where?"

Balgonie, in truth, was too much of a lover to have more than one
female face ever before his eyes--that of Natalie Mierowna.

"I am Olga, the gipsy," said the girl, humbly.

"Olga!  Olga! whom I saw at the house of Count Mierowitz this
evening?"

"The same, Hospodeen!" (Balgonie expressed an exclamation of
astonishment to find her, as he thought, so far from that place.)
"You gave me a silver kopec once upon a time, at Krejko, when passing
through that town with Michail Podatchkine; and, this evening you
saved me from the whip of the dvornick, when for the third time I had
ventured near the Count's mansion, in a vain search for you, or the
Hospoza Mierowna."

"In search of us--and for what purpose, girl?"

"To warn you, that for nearly a month past, a plot has been formed to
deprive you of a valuable paper, and even of your life."

"My life--when?"

"On the first opportunity."

"By whom--and where, girl--where?"

"Here in this solitary hut--even now your assassins are in
consultation--listen."

He placed his ear to the trap-door, and heard the murmur of hoarse
whispers below.

"Hush," said Podatchkine, as already related, "take care!"  Then
followed the question of the subtle and ferocious Stepniak, as to why
he had not given Balgonie a "prod" with his lance in the forest; and
the whole conversation in all its horrible details, up to the moment
when the wretched Corporal with death and terror mingling in his
soul, fell from his seat in a stupor.

"Father in heaven!" exclaimed Balgonie, full of despair and horror,
as he mechanically felt for his fatal dispatch, to ascertain that it
was yet safe, "I have drunk of this drugged stuff, and am also lost!"

"Nay," said the gipsy, hurriedly, "nay----"

"I drank the accursed wine from a cup----"

"True; but not from the cup which was intended for you."

"How?--speak!--speak!"

"The wine and the cups too were all stolen by Podatchkine, with many
other things, at different times, from the household of Count
Mierowitz.  This night you were duly expected here, and thus a plan
was laid to destroy both you and your treacherous guide.  Two cups
were fully and deeply drugged by my brother Nicholas: one was richly
mounted with silver; and knowing well that it was to be set before
you, I abstracted it barely an hour ago, substituting another of the
same kind, and now I have it here.  Oh, Hospodeen, a narrow escape
you have had!"

Balgonie began to breathe more freely; but, assured that never had he
run so narrow a risk of death, he felt, though enraged and furious,
his blood run cold, when contemplating the fate intended for him.
Peeping through a chink of the hatch or trap-door, he saw that the
ladder of access had been removed, and that the door of the squalid
cottage was open now, for the loutchin flared more than ever in the
night wind.  It was then extinguished; but still he could see, and
hear them dragging forth the passive form of Corporal Podatchkine,
whom he supposed to be dead.

Personally, Balgonie felt that he was no match for either of the
powerful giants below--men whose bodily strength was quite equal to
their ferocity, and whose daggers and hatchets might make mince-meat
of him.  Moreover, they had now deprived Podatchkine of his sabre and
loaded pistols, and were thus more completely armed.  Charlie had his
hand on his sword--a handsome Turkish sabre; but relinquishing the
ideas either of attack or defence, while the glow of rage rose in his
breast and cheek, he thought only of immediate flight.

"If you would save your life and the dispatch of the Empress, follow
me this instant, and get your horse before they return: you have not
a moment to lose."

It was the gipsy girl who spoke again, in her low earnest whisper,
and with perfect decision.

"Then I owe my escape--my safety----"

"To my gratitude.  Pass through the window and descend by the wall."

"Women," says a certain philosopher, "are not at all inferior to men
in coolness and courage, and perhaps much less in resolution than is
commonly imagined; the reason they appear so is, because women affect
to be more afraid than they really are, and men pretend to be less."

Balgonie found that the courageous girl to whose guidance he now
trusted himself, had been enabled to reach the window by standing on
the roof of the outhouse, or shed, in which Podatchkine had stabled
their horses.  The whole edifice being built of squared logs, was not
very high, and it afforded easy means of ascent and descent, by the
interstices consequent to its rude construction by the hatchet.  He
soon leaped to the ground, and softly assisted her to descend.

"Here is your horse: you see, Hospodeen, that your kindness to the
poor gipsy girl was not thrown away."

Balgonie looked rapidly to his bit and girth, adjusted himself in his
saddle, hooked up the hilt of his sabre, and shortened his rein,
almost unaware of the black tragedy being so coolly and deliberately
acted on the other side of the cottage.

"Ten versts farther from this will bring you to the monastery of the
Troitza, which you will know by its three domes.  You have but to
ride straight westward by the forest path; God keep you, and may you
and the beautiful Hospoza be happy in your loves!"

"Tell me, gipsy girl----"

"Ah, I can foretell nothing, save that in love mere merit is of
little matter."

"What is of most importance--beauty?"

"No."

"What then?"

"Success, Hospodeen."

He almost laughed, as he slipped into her hand two xervonitz (the
largest coins he had), and in a moment more was galloping over the
soft grass of the forest path she had indicated.

"By Jove," thought he, as he spurred on, "I shall not be sorry when
this infernal dispatch is safe in the hands of old Bernikoff; and to
think of that wretch of a Podatchkine!  I always expected the fellow
to be a rogue, but not of so deep a dye!"

The unfortunate Corporal, now, as he deserved, hanging head foremost
downward in the draw-well, stark and stiff and cold, had been to all
appearance a good Russian, Balgonie reflected: he neither confessed,
fasted, nor did penance (too much bother all that would have been for
the Corporal of Cossacks); but he kept Lent regularly to all
appearance; made a sign of the cross fussily before and after every
meal; always went to church when in camp or quarters; and never
omitted his prayers and genuflexions at night, if in haunted places
or when passing a wayside cross, especially if any one was by.  All
this was no doubt studiously hypocritical; and Charlie remembered
that his worthy Uncle Gram kept Fast-days and "Sabbaths" with stern
and gloomy rigour; that he said a long and sonorous prayer before
meals--a longer prayer after them; that he went thrice daily to kirk
at the ordained periods, and had nightly a noisy expounding and
out-pouring of the spirit that would have put the great John of
Geneva himself to the blush.

"Ah," thought poor Charlie, as he trotted on his lonely way through
the darkened forest, "decidedly there are Podatchkines in Scotland as
well as elsewhere, and in Russia."

The light was beginning to dawn, for it was the morning of one of the
first days of May, so long had he been detained by illness--shall we
say by love?--at the castle by the Louga, that Muscovite Eden, as now
it seemed to him.  The birds were chirping merrily in the woods; and
in some places he saw the brown rocks shaded by a species of graceful
silver birch and dark rowan tree, similar to those that grew in his
native strath at home.

By midsummer he knew that the birchen glades he traversed would be in
full foliage, and that the rowan berries would hang in ripe red
clusters among the thick green leaves; and that there, too, would be
grey lichens on the granite cliffs, and in their clefts soft emerald
moss, the wild strawberries, and the drooping bells of the purple
foxglove, just as he had seen them where the Earn "gurgling kissed
her pebbled shore" as it flowed towards the Tay.

They seemed like old friends in that strange place, and with a sigh
of gratitude for his escape from a perilous and deadly snare was
mingled one of hope--a wish--a bootless wish, that one day he might
sit by the banks of the lovely Earn with Natalie by his side, amid
all the security his native land afforded, and under the white
blooming hawthorns that cast their sweet fragrance to the soft winds
of the Perthshire valley.

Beloved Natalie--so fair and delicate, so dark haired and so
bright-eyed!  Her diamond ring, and still more her lock of soft and
silky hair, brought all the charm and sense of her presence vividly
before him.  He counted the brief hours since they had parted, and
sighed to think how many hours and days and weeks must inevitably
elapse before they met again.

In memory and imagination, he conned over and over again each tender
speech and glance, each mute caress and passionate kiss, with every
circumstance and minutiæ of their occurrence and bestowal; and what
lover has not done so since time began, and apples grew, and roses
bloomed in Eden!  Even his recent narrow escape and the gipsy's
gratitude were forgotten in the ardour of his thoughts.

And he sighed again, when thinking how wild and insane were the
dreams in which he was indulging, as he touched his horse with the
spurs, on seeing the three shining domes of the Troitza, or monastery
of the Holy Trinity, rise before him amid the green woodlands.



CHAPTER XII.

ST. PETERSBURG.

After traversing a green valley some five or six miles in length,
bordered on each side by forests of fir trees, dark, solemn and
acutely conical, where the sunlight could scarcely ever penetrate to
the thick rank grass and herbage that grew below, and where a merry
gurgling brook rushed noisily along by the side of the narrow
horseway, Charlie Balgonie drew his bridle at the gates of the
Troitza monastery, when its white walls, its three great cupolas,
shaped each like a gigantic onion inverted, covered with plates of
burnished copper, and all painted and bestarred, were shining gaily
in the morning sun.

There he was made welcome by the monks--quaint-looking men, in long
black caftans, with high black caps, fashioned like our modern hats,
but without brims, and having black veils floating behind over their
long, straight hair.  He deposited some money with the treasurer,
declined the invitation of the sacristan to see the uncorrupted body
of some saint with an unpronounceable name, reposing in its shrine
like a silver bedstead, and its head begirt by a diadem with pearls
as large as pistol bullets; for the saint had been a martyr, who, in
the days of Ivan Basilovitch, the Tartars had rewarded for his
attempts to convert them by knocking out his brains; and now he was a
miserable mummified relic of humanity, before which, for many ages,
thousands of devotees had knelt and wept and smote their breasts in
paroxysms of prayer.  Charlie waived the invitation; and after having
a good breakfast in the refectory, and there telling his story to the
monks, he was somewhat bewildered when informed by them, that after
all his (certainly circuitous) journey with Podatchkine on the
preceding evening and night, and after his riding since he had left
the cottage of the gipsy, he was still barely twenty miles from the
Louga!

Was a spell cast upon him? was his horse bewitched, that he was to
continue travelling thus, and yet never make progress?  It almost
seemed so; but one of the monks, a more shrewd man than his brothers,
explained the whole affair as being consequent to the cunning of
Podatchkine, and his scheme for destroying the dispatch-bearer.

A large party of pilgrims on horse and foot were returning to St.
Petersburg that afternoon.  With them Balgonie travelled for the
remainder of his journey; and, after traversing a wild and desert
tract of country, on the evening of the next day he had the pleasure
of beholding, in the distance before him, that new but vast and
splendid capital,--

  "Proud city!  Sovereign mother thou
  Of all Sclavonian cities now,"--

covering the once wild waste whereon, before the time of Peter the
Great, the father of his country, a few wretched fishermen were wont
to contend with the wolves and bears for a spot to erect their
huts--where, as Count Segur says, winter reigned for eight months of
the year, rye was an article of garden culture, and a bee-hive a
curiosity.

Its bulbous-shaped Byzantine domes, and tall needle-like spires, and
all its countless roofs, that rose beyond each other in ridgy
succession like the waves of the sea, and are generally like the sea
in colour, being of a brilliant green or an ashy hue, were now all
tinted redly by the rays of the setting sun, which cast the shadows
of its many bridges on the waters of the Neva and of the canals that
glided silently and darkly beneath them.

As the sun sank beyond the Gulf of Finland, and the shadows deepened
on every plated dome and granite rampart, the great gilt crosses of
our Lady of Kazan (a fane which was ten years in building) and of
many other noble churches glittered, or rather seemed to burn like
stars, amid the deep blue of the cloudless sky beyond.

Balgonie's satisfaction, on finding himself so near the end of his
journey, was somewhat clouded by a trivial circumstance.

After entering the city by a palisaded barrier, where stood a guard
of the Regiment of Valikolutz, he checked his horse's pace, while the
caravan of pilgrims, whom he now wished to quit, traversed a long
street of small wooden houses that lay beyond.  Here, close by the
margin of the Neva, lay a man with his loose caftan wet and dripping,
and a piece of sack or old canvas spread over his face.  On his
breast lay his fur cap, as if to receive alms for his burial; for
none doubted that he was a poor drowned fellow just fished up from
the Neva, and that money was required of the religious and charitable
alike for his obsequies and masses for the repose of his soul.  So
all the pilgrims from the Troitza threw something into the fur cap,
where denuscas, kopecs, even roubles and Polish ducats, jingled fast
together, while the passers muttered prayers and made signs of the
cross.

All the caravan had passed, so the clatter of Balgonie's charger,
steel-scabbard, and accoutrements, seemed to create a different
effect on the attentive ear of the seemingly drowned man; for the
knave, who had only been acting, started up, and, with his spoil,
fled like a hare down one of the little alleys that opened off the
wooden street.  He vanished in the twilight, yet not so quickly but
that Balgonie was able to recognise in his face and form, the bulky
and muscular half-bred, the gipsy, Nicholas Paulovitch.

What had brought him to St. Petersburg?  Was he still dogging the
luckless dispatch-bearer, or had he only fled thither that, among its
thousands, he might elude the punishment with which Count Mierowitz
would be sure to visit him, if the murder of the Corporal was
discovered?

This episode made Balgonie feel uncomfortable, and suspicious that
other and hidden dangers yet menaced him, as he rode steadily but
watchfully through the densely crowded, but monotonously regular
streets of houses, which are stuccoed, white-washed, and decorated
with different colours, roofed with wood and iron, painted in most
instances green, and nearly all pillared and piazzaed--each long
vista, with its oil lamps, being terminated by domes and spires; and
erelong he saw the lights shining in the lofty windows of that
magnificent crescent, which, for a time, was the palace of
Catharine's most cherished favourite, "the fair-faced Lanskoi," as
Byron has it--

  "A lover who had cost her many a tear,
  And yet but made a middling Grenadier."


And now the melodious bells were ringing for vespers in the towers of
our Lady of Kazan--a Greek cruciform fane, which was founded as a
rival to St. Peter's at Rome, and named after the Tartar kingdom of
Kazan.  It is the greatest church in the city, and one of high
sanctity.

Along the northern margin of the Neva, a river broad as the Thames at
London Bridge, but (unlike the Thames) deep, blue, and transparent as
crystal, lined with solid granite quays, and bordered by many stately
palatial edifices, Balgonie pursued his way; but the stars were
shining at midnight on the vast sheet of water called the Lake of
Ladoga, before he, weary and worn with fatigue, dismounted beneath
the formidable gates of the castellated prison of Schlusselburg,
which had been strengthened and fortified anew by General Count
Todleben, whose arrest and quarrel with the Empress had made so much
noise three years before the time our story opens.



CHAPTER XIII.

WHAT THE SECRET DISPATCH CONTAINED.

Twenty-four miles eastward of the city, the small town and fortress
of Schlusselburg stand, at a point where the Neva issues from the
Lake of Ladoga, and on the left bank of the river.  The little town
had then somewhere about three thousand inhabitants, who chiefly
lived by the manufacture of cotton and porcelain.

On an island, where the river joins the lake and moats it round, is
built the fort, which is about four hundred yards square: its walls
are of stone, massive, and fifty feet in height, terminating in
battlements and turrets of antique form.

The passage to this island is by a long drawbridge.

The guard which kept this formidable state prison, where many a
hopeless sigh was wafted through the rusty bars of its prison grilles
across the waters of Ladoga, was composed entirely of a body of
dismounted Cossacks, selected for the purpose, as the task of keeping
or secluding the dethroned Emperor Ivan was one of no small
responsibility and importance; so these men were all Cossacks of a
high class, and were rather richly dressed.

Their short blue jackets were elaborately embroidered with yellow
lace, and a multitude of gilt buttons, but were hooked across the
chest; their trowsers of scarlet cloth were loose, long, and gathered
into their boots, which were of brown Russian leather, and reached to
six inches above the ankle.  Their busbies of black shining fur had
bright scarlet bags, tall white feathers, a cockade, and tasselled
cord.  They were all clean and soldier-like men, well moustached, and
sternly resolute in bearing; and all were armed with musketoons,
short sabres, and brass pistols.

A guard of these men received Balgonie at the gate and drawbridge
with a profound military salute; and a picturesque aspect they
presented, as their arms flashed in the murky light of the great oil
lantern that swung in the dark, weird, and deep-mouthed archway,
where a massive portcullis showed its iron teeth, all red and rusted
by the mists of the Neva and the stormy blasts that swept across the
Lake of Ladoga.

The great masses of the fortress, ghostly and shrouded, with faint
red lights gleaming out here and there; the enormous strength of the
gates, their planking, bolts, and bars; the thickness of the walls;
the number of embrasures and loopholes for cannon and musketry, all
converging to one point, the approach or river entrance; the number
of sentinels, and, more than all, the vast strength of the portcullis
and double gates, together with the difficulties he experienced in
procuring admission, though in uniform, and though a staff officer
bearing a dispatch of the Empress, all served to impress unpleasantly
on the mind of Charlie Balgonie a state of extreme watchfulness, of
suspicion, and mistrust; and also a sense of the vast responsibility
of the charge confided by Catharine to Colonel Bernikoff.

That gallant officer and estimable personage had retired long since,
after a deep drinking bout, and would be--as Lieutenant Tschekin (the
son-in-law of General Weymarn), who was third in command of the
fortress, informed Balgonie--quite invisible till breakfast time
to-morrow, when the dispatch would be delivered to him: and a sigh of
real annoyance escaped Charlie, when he found that this odious paper
was to be yet some eight hours or more in his secret pocket.

He repaired to the officers' guard-room at the barrier gate, and
there, wrapped in his cloak, without undressing (as he hoped next day
to exchange the atmosphere of Schlusselburg for that of some hotel in
the Vasili-Ostrov), lay down to sleep, and if possible to dream of
Natalie; but he had undergone too much toil for such gentle
phantasms, so he slept like a dormouse, till the sun was high in
heaven, unawakened even by the deep boom of the morning gun, a
36-pounder, as it pealed across the Lake of Ladoga; but ultimately he
was roused by Tschekin and Captain Vlasfief, a very handsome young
man, but a cruel and heartless _roué_, whom ultimately he detested.
These, after shaking him heartily, announced that Colonel Bernikoff
awaited him at breakfast, and was not in a mood to brook much delay.

His hasty toilette was soon complete, and he was speedily ushered
into a plain, almost naked whitewashed apartment arched with stone.
Through its grated windows the morning sun shone cheerily, and the
blue waters of the lake could be seen with the white sails of many a
tiny coasting vessel.

Here, at a table of plain Memel timber, destitute of cloth, but on
which massive silver vessels with rudely formed wooden bowls and
platters were oddly intermingled, was seated the Governor, who, like
the czars and boyars of old, still took quass for breakfast with
roasted beef or bear's ham, bread with caviare, greens with vinegar,
salted plums and other abominations.  But Balgonie saw that coffee
and even tea, with ham, eggs, and kippered salmon, were prepared,
with other condiments, for those who, like himself, had nothing of
the Tartar in their blood.

"Hail to you--I wish you health," said Bernikoff, courteously enough,
in the old Russian fashion, and presenting his hand to Charlie, who
took it, shuddering as he remembered the fate of Peter III.; "welcome
to Schlusselburg, Captain Ivanovitch Balgonie."

Bernikoff, who wore a dark-green undress uniform faced with scarlet,
was a man well up in years; he had fierce and shining black eyes that
made soldier and serf alike quail beneath their gaze; yet they were
small, cunning, and twinkling eyes, the lashes of which were half
closed--the eyes of one who could act the cruel tyrant on one hand,
and the cringing slave on the other.  He had a massive, square, and
brutal jaw, thin wicked lips, a nose as round as a grape-shot, close
short grizzled hair, and long snaky mustachioes.

He was of Tartar blood, and came of those "warlike and merciless
tribes who studied nothing but the use of arms; who passed their
lives on horseback; who even lived on their horses in this sense,
that their chief food was horseflesh and the milk of mares; who, at
the same time, could go for days without food; and who, when they
took a city by storm, put all the inhabitants to the sword except the
working men."

"Seat yourself, Captain, and proceed to breakfast, while I read your
dispatch," said the Governor.  "Holy Sergius! it is from Catharine
Christianowna herself!  The Czarina is great, but Heaven is higher!"
he added, placing the paper on his forehead, as he bowed over it; and
then taking an enormous pinch of Beresovski snuff, a most pungent
compound, from a gold box said to have been found in the pocket of
Peter III., he proceeded to peruse that document which had proved of
such trouble to the bearer.

The eyes of Balgonie, Tschekin, and Vlasfief, who alone were present,
were fixed inquiringly upon him, and they could see that the contents
disturbed him greatly; he grew pale and flushed by turns; his brows
contracted to a terrible frown; a red spark of devilish light
glittered in his eyes, and his lips were compressed.

"Ah, the Asiatics! the accursed Asiatics!" he muttered.  This is a
most opprobrious epithet in Russia, and excited some surprise in his
hearers.

He carefully folded the dispatch, and turning sternly to Charlie, who
was keeping his eyes on him and drinking his coffee the while, he
said:--

"Ivanovitch Balgonie, there is a feather in the seal--the usual sign
of _haste_ among us here in Russia; yet you have not troubled
yourself much with speed, for this dispatch is dated at Novgorod more
than a month back!"

"Permit me to explain, Excellency," said Balgonie eagerly, and
anxiously too.

"I shall be glad if you _can_ explain it," replied Bernikoff, with
increasing sternness.  "I have known a general, a leader in ten
battles, degraded, knouted, and sent to hunt the ermine with a cannon
ball at his heels for a smaller dereliction of duty than this."

Balgonie's heart beat very fast while he related his story--of his
being misled by a traitor twice; of the passage of the Louga at such
terrible hazard; of his subsequent illness; and the episode at that
log hut.

"That you were in the guidance of a traitor, I knew before your
arrival; and I am extremely glad that he fell into his own snare,"
replied Bernikoff, a little more calmly; "but this matter is
extremely awkward for you, and becomes more complicated every hour."

After glancing again at the dispatch, and bending his keen, rat-like
eyes on Balgonie, he asked:

"Were Basil Mierowitz or Usakoff, the grandson of Mazeppa, at the
Castle of Louga any time during your sojourn there?"

"No, Excellency, neither of them were."

"Spies say differently--but you can swear it?"

"On my honour do I swear it!  But why?"

"I have had bad news from the head-quarters of your regiment, and
from Lieutenant-General Weymarn, since you left Novgorod."

"And these tidings, Excellency?"

"Are to the effect that your friends, the two subalterns, have both
deserted, with several soldiers, all of whom are natives of the
Ukraine."

"Deserted!"

"And are nowhere to be found, though pursued by a whole sotnia of
Cossacks."

"Deserted!" reiterated Balgonie with real concern.

"Yes--the cursed Asiatics!" replied Bernikoff, expectorating with
great vehemence, and thoroughly believing that each time he did so,
he cast out a devil.

For some moments intense anxiety and alarm bewildered Balgonie, and
he felt himself grow pale at a time when six searching eyes were bent
with a doubtful expression upon him.  He remembered the hostility,
the threatening and mysterious words of Natalie, and grew almost sick
with apprehension of he knew not what, as he muttered inaudibly--

"Basil deserted--and his cousin too!  The whole family will be
inculpated and degraded.  Oh, Natalie, my hapless love!  Did General
Weymarn state this in _his_ dispatch?" he asked aloud.

"He did, and at its end referred to you."

"To me, Excellency?"

"Yes; here is the document, and it concludes thus: 'as I and the
Regiment of Smolensko will shortly march into St. Petersburg, Captain
Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie need not return to Novgorod; but until then,
shall attach himself to your staff, and remain in Schlusselburg,
where, erelong, you may require all the good service he can render
you.--WEYMARN.'"

Great were the mortification and disgust of Balgonie on learning that
he was to remain for an indefinite period in a place so revolting and
uncomfortable, and with no other society than that of three military
jailers,--cruel, hard-hearted, and avaricious Muscovites of the worst
kind; and with these orders died his hopes of revisiting, as he
intended, Louga, on his return, and of seeing Natalie again.

Under ban as all the household of Mierowitz would be now, should he
ever see her more?  Every way fate and the tide of events seemed to
be against him and her, already in the very dawn of their love.

"And now, gentlemen," said the Governor, lowering his voice, "the
Empress's dispatch contains only two lines, thus: 'A scheme is formed
to free Prince Ivan.  _Let him not fall alive into the hands of those
who come to seek for him!_'  Nor shall he!" exclaimed Bernikoff with
ferocious enthusiasm, as he dashed a cup of vodka among his quass,
and drained the goblet, after shouting, "The health of Her Imperial
Majesty Catharine Christianowna--hurrah!"

"Hurrah, hurrah!" added Vlasfief and the Lieutenant.

Balgonie also, as in duty bound, essayed to "hurrah," but the sound
died away on his lips.



CHAPTER XIV.

CHARLIE'S FIRST DAY IN SCHLUSSELBERG.

Full of anxious thoughts, he passed more than half of the succeeding
day on the ramparts of the castled-prison, alone, avoiding Colonel
Bernikoff, Captain Vlasfief, and their subaltern, Tschekin, none of
whom were consonant to his taste, for all were deep gamblers and
heavy drinkers.

His mind was full of care for Natalie and all her family.  Some
desperate and revengeful plot, of which the desertion of her brother
and of his cousin Usakoff was but the beginning, the means to an end,
was certainly hatching--a plot that might too surely end in
bloodshed, in the savage punishment and the ruin of all.

He sorrowed keenly for his two friends Basil Mierowitz and Apollo
Usakoff, for both were polished and educated gentlemen, men of a
class and style more common in some corps of the Russian army now,
than in those days.  And there was poor Mariolizza, too--so brightly
beautiful, so happy, and so merry!  Her love, her hopes and schemes,
would all be crushed and blighted, as well as his own.

Balgonie was not without fears for himself, and of being compromised
in the affair; or, perhaps, lured into subtle state intrigues and
deep plots, in the failure or success of which he could have no
interest politically or personally, save in his love for Natalie--a
love that had changed the whole current of his ideas and opened up a
new realm of thought and incentive to action.

Already he was beginning to revolt at the Russian service, and yet he
had been happy in the Regiment of Smolensko, and had found in the
land of his adoption, like every Scottish adventurer that has trod
the Russian soil, honours scarcely to be won at home.

How long was he to be on the staff of this ferocious Commandant, and
in this horrible prison, where many an innocent victim was pining
hopelessly in chains and misery?  "The mutual distrust in which
people live in Russia," says the Abbé Chappe D'Auteroche in his
scarce travels about this time, "and the total silence of the nation
upon everything which may have the least relation either to the
government or the sovereign, arise chiefly from the privilege every
Russian has, without distinction, of crying out in public, _slowo
dielo_; that is to say, 'I declare you are guilty of high treason,
both in words and actions.'  All the bystanders are then obliged to
assist in arresting the person so accused; a father his son, and the
son his father, while nature suffers in silence.  The accuser and
accused are at once conveyed to prison, and afterwards to St.
Petersburg, where they are tried by the Secret Court of Chancery."

Thanks to this pleasant state of society, the chambers and chains of
Schlusselburg were seldom unoccupied.

Vlasfief was hollow-hearted, avaricious, and sensual; Tschekin, the
Lieutenant, a slimy, cruel, reckless, and ignorant Muscovite; but old
Bernikoff was really a character whom Balgonie equally dreaded and
despised.

His subtlety and oppression had been the means of reducing, at
different times, some thirty officers to the ranks, with permission
to serve and work their way up again; and many more were now cursing
him and their fate, at Irkutsk and remoter Siberia, for their
inability to purchase his mercy or good-will.  When commanding at
Cronstadt, he had been detected once in the act of transmitting whole
sledge loads of government shot, shell, lead, and ropes, across the
frozen gulf for sale in Sweden; and also in buying at a cheap rate
base denuscas to pay the troops: but so trusted was the old rascal by
the Empress, that he always escaped the degradation, the hanging or
shooting, which, on those discoveries, were so freely meted out to
his subalterns.

On the estate of Bernikoff a serf once amassed ten thousand roubles,
and offered them for the freedom of his daughter, who was about to be
married.

"Let me see the girl!" was the reply.

As a serf can possess nothing, the father trembled in his soul at
this demand, as his daughter, unfortunately for herself, was
beautiful.

"Holy Sergius!" exclaimed Bernikoff, "what business has a serf with
ten thousand roubles; the girl and the money are alike mine!"

And so he literally and lawfully seized them both.

Though a savage soldier, like every old Muscovite, he was the slave
of mechanical devotion.  No statue or picture of the Holy Virgin, of
St. Sergius, or St. Alexander Newski, was ever passed by him without
a profound reverence and a sign of the cross.  To such effigies he
would address himself before he knelt even to the Empress: and before
them he had been known to kneel and kiss the ground five minutes
before or after he had knouted a miserable boor (whose pockets were
empty), or nearly slain a soldier by making him run the gauntlet, for
merely having the seams of his gloves sewn outward instead of in; for
wearing his hat on the left side of his head instead of the right; or
for some other offence equally heinous.

And it was on the staff of this distinguished officer (temporarily,
however) that Charlie now, to his great disgust, found himself.

On three sides, far around this island prison, stretched the waters
of Ladoga--the largest lake in Europe, being one hundred and thirty
miles long, by nearly ninety broad; full of rocky isles and dangerous
quicksands, over which, from its flat shores, sweep frequent and
perilous storms.

From the somewhat dreary view of this small inland sea, whose
northern and eastern coast could not be discerned, he turned to
survey the fortress, with all its strength of gloomy walls, grated
windows, and frowning cannon, till suddenly his eye was arrested by a
very remarkable face, which was observing him from the sombre depth
of a strongly barred and arched window of the great tower.

It was a pale face, but singularly handsome--grave, and even sad in
expression--a young man's face with the slightest indication of a
moustache, but for which, in its paleness and extreme delicacy of
feature and tint, it might have passed for that of a twin brother of
Natalie Mierowna!

Suddenly it was detected by a Cossack sentinel, who shouted shrilly,
and slapped the butt-end of his loaded musketoon: on this, the face
instantly disappeared.

This was he concerning whom Balgonie had brought that terrible
dispatch--Ivan, the deposed Emperor--the prisoner of Schlusselburg!

"Twenty-three years!" thought Balgonie with a shudder; "twenty-three
years in that tower--since his very babyhood--oh, it is terrible!"

Other ears had heard the shout of the sentinel; for now a man, who in
a boat had been fishing near the fortress, suddenly shipped a pair of
sculls, and pulled away towards the town with an air of alarm that
seemed equalled only by his dexterity.  This fisher had been hovering
about the fortress all day.  "Can he be the gipsy--the half-breed?"
thought Charlie: "ah! the dispatch is out of my hands now."

Lieutenant Tschekin now approached with an invitation from Bernikoff
to join him at dinner, adding, "remember that with the Colonel,
eating is indeed a science, and temperance he views as mere want of
spirit."

As they proceeded together through various archways and gates, the
shrieks and entreaties of a man apparently in mortal agony rang
through the echoing prisons with a horrible cadence, that chilled the
free blood in Balgonie's veins.

A court through which they had to pass was crowded by soldiers,
formed in hollow square, and Balgonie was compelled to linger and
look on with Tschekin, who seemed rather to enjoy the spectacle.

"Hah," said he, "the punishment is nearly ended--let us wait and see
the _batogg_!"

It was a soldier being knouted, which is simply the Russian word for
"whipped."

Stripped to the loins, he was strapped to an erect board, formed like
an inverted cone, and having three notches at the upper end, one to
receive his chin, and the other two his wrists, while the torturer
wielded a knout, the handle of which is usually eighteen inches long
with a thong of thirty-six inches.  This is always boiled in milk, by
which process it swells and the edges become sharp, hard, and more
destructive.

The whipper was skilful: he laid on his lashes from the neck to the
loins, so as to deal them at intervals of one inch artistically
apart, leaving a stripe of flesh between each; but these regulated
and omitted stripes, after receiving a fresh knout, he proceeded to
take off in succession, with wonderful and terrible precision, till
the man's entire back was a mass of blood, and he hung, fainting and
well-nigh speechless, by the wrists.

"Oh, Excellency," he said, in an imploring voice, "remember that my
brother, Alexis Jagouski, aided you in escaping from the battle of
Zorndorff!"

This was most true, but the story was a terrible one.  At Zorndorff,
where the Russians were defeated with such slaughter and driven
towards the frontiers of Poland, the horse of Bernikoff was shot
under him, and he was in danger of being cut down by the Prussian
Hussars.  In this sore extremity a Cossack named Alexis Jagouski took
his leader behind him on his crupper; but that personage, finding
that the double weight impeded the horse's speed, and that the
Hussars were close behind, shortened his sabre in his hand, and
plunging the blade into the body of his preserver, flung the corpse
from the saddle, and escaped alone.

At this reminiscence Bernikoff only scowled more deeply; and now the
lacerated back of the sufferer was strewed with coarse gunpowder, to
which a match was applied.  This is technically known as the
_batogg_, and the agony it produced is indescribable.

The culprit was now cast loose, but was still able, according to the
slavish usage of the country, to crawl on his hands and knees towards
Bernikoff, and he gasped out:--

"Hospodeen--Excellency, I thank you humbly for this most merciful
punishment."

"Begone, dog of an Asiatic!" replied the governor, kicking him in the
face; "when next you seek to fill your pipe, this will teach you to
keep your filthy fingers out of my tobacco pouch."

These were the defenders of their country, the Holy Russia, among
whom a wayward fate had cast the Scottish palatine: the blood of the
latter boiled within him; but he knew too well that to expostulate
would be but to excite suspicion, and to court degradation and the
musket.  Something, however, in the expression of his face did not
escape Bernikoff's keen and angry eyes.

"Ivanovitch Balgonie, a superior can never act unjustly to his
inferior," said he sternly; and these words terribly embodied the
genuine spirit of the true Russian _Tchinnovnik_, or noble class.  "I
am in the service of the state," he added; "and the state is the
Czarina!"

Yet this upright Governor, who knouted the poor Cossack for pilfering
a pipeful of tobacco, had always a garrison double its actual
strength on paper, the pay and rations of the men of straw forming a
pleasant addition to his many secret perquisites, while his soldiers
starved and frequently begged food from the very prisoners they
guarded.

It was neither hospitality nor love of society which had procured the
honour of an invitation for Balgonie; but Bernikoff shrewdly
suspecting that he might have some loose cash, resolved to possess
himself thereof at cards; so barely was a dinner of _shee_ (which is
identically Scotch broth), croquettes, with _purée_ of beet-root,
beef in the Hussar style, with salad of baked beet-root and biscuits,
dismissed, than champagne-cup, and vodka (or corn-brandy) punch
became the order of the evening; and Bernikoff, who was a great
gourmand, with his face flushed and his uniform open, after signing
the cross and bowing thrice to a picture of St. Sergius, sat down to
cards with Vlasfief and Tschekin, who were quite as sharp as himself,
and with poor simple-hearted Charlie Balgonie, who dreaded to
decline, circumstanced as he was on all hands; and who was glad when
allowed to quit the table with the loss, he never could understand
how, of twenty xervonitz, or pieces worth nine shillings sterling
each.

"Now, Vlasfief--'tis you and I; rouge-et-noir!" exclaimed Bernikoff,
draining a goblet of vodka punch at a draught.

"I am too weary to play, most excellent Colonel; pray excuse me,"
urged the Captain, who had lost considerably to his senior also.

"You, then, Tschekin?" said Bernikoff savagely.

"I hav'n't a kopec to spare, Excellency!"

"Well--I saw a pretty housemaid at your mansion in the town
yesterday--the daughter of a serf apparently."

"Feodorowna?"

"Very likely--with red hair and brawn eyes."

"Ah! the same; she came with Madame Tschekin from the household of
her father, General Weymarn."

"By all the devils, she is very like old Weymarn!"

"She is the daughter of my old nurse, Colonel," said Tschekin
gravely, with an air of annoyance.

"I don't care whose daughter she is!"

"Well?"

"I'll put a hundred silver roubles on her."

"Done!  I put her on the ace."

"The ace hath lost!" exclaimed Bernikoff, with a shout of laughter.
"Holy Sergius! the girl is mine.  To-morrow," he added, "I'll send a
corporal and a file of men for her, with a covered kabitka.  See that
all her things are packed and ready, friend Tschekin, or write to
your wife about it, and say you have lost her at cards."

"The devil!--Excellency--this can't be."

"Why?  I won her fairly."

"But the girl is about to be married to her cousin."

"_Was_, you mean; the cards have changed her destiny, like that of
the serfs whom Vlasfief drank away in champagne last night."

So passed Charlie's first day at Schlusselburg.



CHAPTER XV.

THE IMPERIAL PRISONER.

Fortunately for Balgonie, there was a chaplain, or priest, of the
Russian Greek Church, attached to the fortress; and his society, at
times, tended to alleviate what he endured from having to associate
with such a human bear as Colonel Bernikoff,--an annoyance from which
he would only be relieved by the longed-for return of General Weymarn
and the Regiment of Smolensko to St. Petersburg.

The ceremonies of religion retain in Russia all their pristine
influence, and afford the miserable and unlettered serf a short
season of relaxation from labour and severity during festivals, when
he may enjoy his can of fiery vodka and revel in intoxication.
Unlike many of the Russian clergy, who adopt the cowl merely as the
means of evading slavery in civil life, or slavery added to peril in
the army, and also as a chance of attaining to power and nobility,
Father Chrysostom, the Chaplain of Schlusselburg, was a humane,
gentle, and learned old priest, whom the Commandant had been depraved
enough to strike with his clenched hand on more than one occasion;
but prior to doing so, he had always contrived, oddly and
superstitiously enough, to have the chief badge of the father's
sacred office, his baretta abstracted and hidden.

Through the good offices of the Chaplain, with the permission of the
Governor, which was yielded very unwillingly, Balgonie (whose
curiosity and commiseration were greatly excited) was presented one
evening to the deposed Emperor Ivan, and the particulars and
incidents of that interview made a deep and sad impression upon him.

The entrance-door of the central tower was small, arched, and of
great strength. Above it were carved the Russian arms, first adopted
by Ivan Basilovitch in the sixteenth century: a spread-eagle, having
on its breast an escutcheon bearing St. Michael and a dragon, with
three crowns in chief for Muscovy and the two Tartar kingdoms of
Kazan and Astracan.

On passing through a little paved court, grated over with iron, where
the royal recluse was permitted to breathe the external air, while a
sentinel trod to and fro above his head; another door-way, secured by
a portcullis grooved into the wall, gave access to the narrow stair
which led to his apartments.  These were two in number: their windows
and doors were all grated with iron; and sentinels, with loaded arms,
watched every avenue by day and night.

His sitting-room was plainly, even neatly furnished: its chief
ornaments being a pretty Madonna and some gaudy pictures of Muscovite
saints; and it had one window, which opened towards the vast expanse
of the Lake of Ladoga.

Pale, handsome, and resigned, gentle in eye and manner, the poor
young Prince had grown to manhood in total ignorance of the outer
world and of all he had lost.  He knew only the four walls of the
prison, the changing hues of the waves and clouds, the wild swans and
the waters of Ladoga.

As related in our fifth chapter, the Prisoner of Schlusselburg was
the eldest son of the Princess of of Mecklenburg,
Elizabeth-Catharine, niece of the Empress Anne.  His father was
Anthony Ulric, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, whose whole family was
banished Russia by the usurping Empress Elizabeth.

The infant Ivan had been dethroned, after being a king for exactly
one year.

During the reign of the Empress Catharine, he was detained in
Schlusselburg "under the denomination of a _Person Unknown_, and it
was given out that his senses were impaired, though it is pretty well
understood that this is without foundation."  "His fate has been
particularly lamentable," continues a newspaper of the period; "torn
from the bosom of his family, he has now passed twenty-three years in
close captivity.  The late Empress Elizabeth, towards the latter end
of her life, seemed disposed to treat this noble captive with
clemency and favour, either from sentiments of justice and
compassion, or to render two great personages more circumspect and
submissive."

These personages were her successors, the unfortunate Peter III. and
Catharine II.

Ivan's mother is said to have died of grief; but Duke Anthony Ulric
and his four other children were all confined for life in a house at
Horsens, a town of Jutland, at the extremity of the Baltic, where
they had a precinct of a mile English; but it was surrounded by high
palisades, beyond which they dared not venture under pain of death;
and there the Duke, old and blind, passed the last years of his
melancholy life.

His youngest daughter, Elizabeth, "was a woman of high spirit and
elegant manners," according to Coxe, the traveller, who visited her;
"she possessed portraits of her father and mother, and even contrived
to procure a rouble of her brother Ivan, struck during his short
reign.  It is difficult to conjecture how she could obtain a coin,
the possession of which was more than once punished by the Empress
Elizabeth as high-treason, and it is still more difficult to imagine
how she could secret it from the knowledge of her guards during her
long imprisonment."

Confinement had rendered Ivan's features unnaturally pale and
delicate; and, by years of systematic constraint and oppression, his
fine, clear, and very beautiful dark eyes had a soft, subdued, and
chastened expression, that was singularly touching and winning.

The tone of his voice was also gentle and alluring.

"Hospodeen," said he, presenting his hand to Balgonie, "I rejoice to
meet you, if one who leads a life so strange as mine can be said to
rejoice; but you are one to whom I may talk a little without
danger--eh, Father Chrysostom?  And he has told me, Hospodeen, that
you are not a Russian, but a native of some island that is far away
in the sea.  What are you?  A Tartar--a Tcherkesse?  Oh no, you
cannot be either.  I know them; for they guard me," he added, with a
little shudder.

"I am your friend, believe me, Ivan Antonovitch," replied Balgonie,
who was touched by the childlike simplicity of the poor recluse, who
was plainly attired in a caftan of fine green cloth, edged with a
narrow trimming of yellow fur; the square crowned cap, which he only
wore when in the grated court, was of the same materials.  A small
gold cross was at his neck, a rosary of amber hung at his right
wrist, and a little pipe, the only luxury allowed him, was dangling
from one of his breast buttons.

When in his presence, Balgonie always thought with horror of the
cruel tenor of the dispatch he had brought, and trembled for the
result of his friends' conspiracy.

To teach Ivan anything, even to read or to write, was treason; yet he
had gleaned a little of his own history, and that of his family, from
the casual remarks of his guards and from the Chaplain, during the
long, long years of his captivity, the reason for which he failed to
understand, but the system of which had become as a second nature to
him; and the little he learned, made a deep, rather than a bitter
impression upon him.

The whole energies of each successive Chaplain had been given to
preparing him for another and a brighter state of existence, and to
turning his hope's and wishes towards it, rather than to this world,
of which he was well-nigh weary if not utterly ignorant; and so much
was he impressed by the uncertainty of human life in general, and of
his own in particular, that daily, for years, he had seen the sun
rise from the waters of Ladoga in doubt whether he would see it set;
and nightly had he laid down his head without the assurance of being
a live man in the morning.

Life had no charm--death no terror for Ivan.

In his visits, which were frequent, as the young Prince had conceived
a great regard for him, Charlie Balgonie knew not upon what topics to
converse; for he experienced great difficulty in fashioning his
sentences and observations to suit a listener whose knowledge of the
external world and of all the machinery of life was so limited.  In
those visits, Balgonie was always accompanied by the Chaplain, or
Captain Vlasfief, as the watchful and suspicious Bernikoff would by
no means permit them to have an interview alone.

"I am so glad to have you for a friend, Ivanovitch Balgonie," the
Prince would say sometimes; "though Father Chrysostom assures me that
kings may have peers and soldiers, serfs and slaves, but, alas! they
can never have a friend!  I have heard my guards say that I was once
a King--an Emperor; but I cannot remember when.  It must have been
long, long ago, as Russia has had four monarchs since.  I have not
even a dream of it--an Emperor?  Yet I shall too probably die even as
Demetrius did.  I cannot remember even my mother; for they tell me
that she died of sorrow, when I was brought here from a place called
Moscow.  Do you, Hospodeen, remember yours?"

"When I was but a child she died, to my sorrow.  Had she lived, I
might not have been here in Russia to-day," replied Balgonie.

"Well--but you may remember," persisted the young Prince.

"True, your Highness; memories I have of a soft fair face that bent
over my little bed at night; of one who kissed and hushed me to
sleep; but those memories are faint or vivid, broken and uncertain,
according to my mood of mind; and strange it is that they come to me
more in dreams by night than thoughts by day, especially as I grow
older."

"I should like to have some such dreams, but then I have nothing to
remember; I know not even my own age or when I came here," said Ivan
thoughtfully.  "If I do dream, by night, I seem to hear only what I
hear by day--the voices of the Cossack sentinels, the screams of the
sea-birds, the dashing of the waves when the wind crosses the lake,
or the clanging of the castle bell.  Then there are times when I
dream that I see Demetrius, and then I awake in a cold perspiration.
Tell me of the things that are being acted in the great world that
lies beyond the Lake of Ladoga, for Father Chrysostom speaks to me
only of Heaven."

"It is said that the King of Prussia has agreed to the proposal
of--of--the Empress, about the county of Wirtemberg, in Silesia."

"How, agreed?"

"Count Biron is to have the estate as Duke of Courland, on paying
eight thousand guineas to Field-Marshal Count Munich," said Balgonie.

The Prince sighed with a bewildered air, for all those names were
quite new to him.

"And who is Count Biron?" he asked.

"A friend of the Empress," said Father Chrysostom rather hastily, to
anticipate the reply of Balgonie.

"Tell me something more.  Nay, Father Chrysostom, don't chide us,
pray," said he, seeing that the white bearded chaplain looked uneasy
and rose to retire.

"Conversation of this kind is strictly forbidden," said he; "and if
Captain Vlasfief was here----"

"Oh!" exclaimed the Prince, with a shudder, but not of anger (he
seemed too gentle for that emotion), "don't talk of Vlasfief I
implore you.  Pray tell me more news, Hospodeen; I shall learn all
the names in time, and try to remember them."

"There are strange tidings from Warsaw," replied Balgonie, who began
to get bewildered and knew not on what to converse, if the most
simple topics of the day were forbidden; "a battle has been fought at
Slonim, between Prince Radzivil and the Russians, who defeated him
after a five hours' engagement, and the Princess Radzivil, who is
newly married and remarkably beautiful, fought on horseback among the
Polish troops."

"Ah, Demetrius fought on horseback too," said the Prince, as if
speaking to himself, and a gesture of undisguised impatience escaped
the chaplain; "pray tell me something more, for no one ever speaks of
such things to me."

"A new theatre has been opened at St. Petersburg," replied Balgonie
(who thought to himself, "the devil is in it, if I cannot speak of
_that_!"), "and there was represented an opera, entitled _Charles the
Great_."

"Ah, I don't quite understand all that; say it again."

Indeed, Balgonie might as well have spoken of carbonic gas or the
Atlantic cable, had he ever heard of such things; for the mind of the
young Prince could not comprehend the most simple matters of every
day-life.  This was merely the result of his entire seclusion; but
the adherents of the Empress, her favourites and lovers,
industriously circulated through Russia the report that he was in a
state of idiotcy.

"And this place that you spoke of?" he resumed enquiringly.

"The theatre?"

"Yes, Hospodeen; who lives in it?"

"One of the actresses performed a magnificent cantata, in honour of
the Empress."

"Ah! 'tis she, I understand, who keeps me here," said the Prince,
with a sad smile; and now in real terror, and quite repenting the
introduction he had brought about, Father Chrysostom rose to hurry
Balgonie away.

As they were retiring, the Prince said:--

"Hospodeen, you have dropped something."

It was the locket with Natalie's hair.

"What is in this?" asked Ivan, with childlike interest.

"A lock of hair, your Highness."

"How odd! and you wear it, just as I wear my cross?"

"It is the gift, the souvenir of a lady I love, and who loves me: a
countrywoman of your own."

"A woman?" said Ivan, ponderingly.

"Yes, Excellency."

"I have never looked upon a woman's face, and know not what it is
like, though the Empress (whom God long preserve!) visited me when a
child, as I have been told.  I have heard that they are not bearded
like men.  I shall never see one, it is forbidden; yet--yet--as I
often tell Father Chrysostom, I have dreams by day--dreams of
something else than wild swans and bearded Cossacks--of something to
cling to, some one to love and be loved by.  It must be this kind of
love you speak of--oh yes, it must!" said Ivan, as he gazed with
stupid, but reverent wonder at the lock of hair, ere he returned it
to Balgonie.

"Poor young Prince!" exclaimed the latter, as the chaplain hurried
him away, and the portcullis clanged behind them in its grooves of
stone.

The priest now urged upon Balgonie, that if his visits were to be
continued, the affairs of the outer world must in no way be referred
to, or the result might be most disastrous for all concerned.

"The seclusion in which the prisoner is kept, has, I fear, impaired
his understanding," said Balgonie.

"Hah! do you think so?" grunted Colonel Bernikoff, who overheard the
remark, as they issued from the tower of Ivan.  "You must know, that
your genuine Russian is like a tiger, as some writer has it--a tiger
who licks the hand of his keeper, so long as he is chained; but who
tears him asunder when loose.  The Empress quite understands this!"

"How is it that you intrust me so freely to visit your prisoner?"
asked Charlie, who began to fear that Bernikoff might be laying some
snare for him, by according this hitherto unwonted permission.

"Do you really wish to know?"

"Yes, Colonel--why I in particular--I only?"

"Because you are the safest man in Russia to have this liberty."

"How?"

"As a soldier of fortune,--a stranger among us,--you can have no
sympathy with anything but the strict and steady execution of your
duty; and the line of that," added Bernikoff, darting a keen glance
at the Scot, "as with us all, lies in fidelity to the Empress."

"True," replied Balgonie, with something of sadness in his tone, and
very little of enthusiasm.

"Thus, were I to order you to blow Ivan Antonovitch from the mouth of
a cannon, I should expect you to obey!"

"I trust that no such test of my obedience will ever be necessary,"
replied Balgonie, with a hauteur which Bernikoff was somewhat unused
to see among his subordinates.

"We shall have some other and more troublesome prisoners in
Schlusselburg ere long," said the Governor, with knitted brows.

"Whom do you mean?"

"Old Count Mierowitz and his family.  Warrants have been issued by
the Chancellor to arrest them all."

"All!" said Balgonie, in a faint voice.

"Yes, women as well as men: an escort of the Regiment of Smolensko
arrived at St. Petersburg yesterday with the Count and the Hospoza
Mariolizza.  His daughter, who seems to be deeply involved in some
plot, has for the time effected her escape.  But they will soon be
all before the Secret Chancery, and then the knout and the wheel will
be at work with a vengeance!"

The reader may judge how these and similar remarks affected poor
Charlie, while the Governor, as if pleased that he could thus inflict
pain, walked away with a malicious smile on his sombre visage,
cramming tobacco into the bowl of his pipe.

There were times, however, when the captive Prince, after his
acquaintance with Balgonie, was a little less resigned, and had
strange longings to see something of the great world that lay beyond
his prison walls, and the waves that lashed them; to see other faces
than those of the fierce and bearded Tchernemoski and Volga Cossacks
who guarded him; a longing even to do something great and daring, to
be remembered in after years with love and reverence; to be
remembered, as he said, "in tradition, like Demetrius."  Then,
feeling all the utter hopelessness of such new aspirations, he would
strive to be contented, to repeat with fresh energy the daily prayers
set for him by Father Chrysostom, and to be grateful for life, lest
he should die even as Demetrius died.

"Who is this Demetrius, of whom he constantly speaks, and whose fate
he fears so much may be his own?" asked Balgonie one day.

"It is an old, but a strange and terrible story," replied the
chaplain.  "When Ivan Basilovitch died about the end of the sixteenth
century, his widow was banished to Northern Russia by the new Czar
Feodor, whose Prime Minister urged that he could never reign in peace
or security unless he imitated the Turks by sacrificing all who were
nearly allied to the throne; so he exiled his mother, as I have said,
and ordered an officer to assassinate his younger brother Demetrius.

"The officer, being a humane man, was filled with horror on receiving
an order so barbarous; but fearing alike to disobey, or to leave the
terrible task to be fulfilled by one less scrupulous, he took the
child with him to a remote district, travelling many days' journey
from Moscow.  Then he wrote some words indelibly on the skin of the
little Prince, tied a cross of brilliants about his neck, laid him at
the door of a peasant's hut, and galloped away.

"To the tyrant Feodor he gave a circumstantial detail of how and
where he had killed the infant Prince, and sought the promised reward.

"'Receive it _thus_!' replied Feodor, who plunged a sword into his
heart, the further to suppress all proof of guilt.

"The young tyrant died of a poison administered by his Chancellor,
and others inherited his crown; but all to perish miserably in
succession.  And no less than four pretenders all appeared, each
calling himself Demetrius, to contest for the throne; and all the
land was deluged with blood.

"Some twenty years after the alleged death of the brother of Ivan, a
young Cossack of the Volga was bathing in that river with some of his
companions, who saw with surprise that he had chained round his neck
a cross of brilliants, and that certain words in the old Muscovite
character were pricked upon his back.  They were examined by a
neighbouring priest and found to be---

  '_This is Demetrius, son of the Czar._'


"Then all exclaimed that the true Demetrius had been found at last,
and that a miracle from Heaven had saved him.  His life was soon in
peril, so he fled to Holstein, the Duke of which, after keeping him
long in prison, sold him to the Emperor Michael, by whom he was
savagely quartered alive.  And it is the fate of this hapless heir of
Russia, whose story he thinks in some points resembles his own
(although he really knows but little of his own annals), that haunts
the unfortunate Ivan in his gloomiest hours."



CHAPTER XVI.

THE TRATKIR.

With evident suspicion and mistrust, Bernikoff viewed the growing
intimacy between his prisoner Ivan and the Scottish Captain; and
though he neither recommended that it should cease or interdicted it,
as he might and perhaps ought to have done, he made many mental notes
thereof.

Though Balgonie sympathised with Ivan to the fullest extent, he knew
too well the danger of doing more; and he felt that he had his own
share of secret sorrow and anxiety, and might yet have greater to
endure.  The girl he loved with all the strength of a first and
romantic passion was already a political fugitive; her father and
cousin were prisoners, and perhaps in chains; her brother and his
kinsman, Usakoff, already viewed as criminals; and with the terrors
of despotism hanging over them all.

Natalie a fugitive--and where?  In the wild forests, perhaps, where
wolves and outlaws lurked: what perils and privations might she not
be suffering!  Natalie so delicate, so pure, so gently nurtured, and
so highly bred.

Balgonie was aware, also, that intimacy with the family of Count
Mierowitz, and the deep interest he had in their fate, was fraught
with personal peril to himself in such a land of tyranny as Russia.
Full of such thoughts as these one forenoon, he was leaning on a
cannon in one of those deep embrasures of the fortress which faced
the drawbridge communicating with the land.  The guard was in the act
of lowering the bridge to permit a man to pass out.  This person was
just parting from Bernikoff, with whom he had been for some time in
close and earnest conversation, and from whom he was evidently
receiving money--an unusual circumstance, as that distinguished
field-officer generally lavished more kicks and cuffs than thanks or
kopecs.

On beholding this man, as he bowed humbly, cap in hand, cross the
bridge and disappear among the houses of the town beyond, Balgonie
experienced a species of nervous shock.  He could not doubt that this
fellow, so gigantic in stature and powerful in muscular development,
in the coarse caftan and leathern girdle, with the long lock of
grizzled hair dangling behind his right ear, was Nicholas Paulovitch,
the murderer of Podatchkine, the gipsy woodman, and the swindling
mendicant of the barrier at the Neva.

"This man here in Schlusselburg," thought Balgonie, with indignation
and alarm; "here in earnest conversation with Bernikoff!  The spirit
of mischief seems to pervade the air again!"

A few minutes afterwards the Cossack Jagouski who, as related, had
been so severely knouted by Bernikoff for pilfering a pipeful of
tobacco, came forward with tottering steps, and looking painfully
thin and feeble from recent suffering; and with the crouching bearing
of the Muscovite towards a superior, said that his Excellency the
Governor wished to speak with him in his quarters, whither Balgonie
at once repaired, after having, as military etiquette required,
buckled on his sword.

"Carl Ivanovitch," said Bernikoff, who certainly had rather a
perturbed air, "some suspicious characters are in our vicinity, and
have actually been hovering in boats about the fortress.  What think
you of that?"

"Suspicious characters, Excellency--how?"

"In a Tratkir of the town, one dropped this coin--a silver rouble of
the prisoner Ivan--Ivan the Unknown Person.  To possess one, unless
as I do this, for proof of treason, is to court death or Siberia."

"And from whom had you this?"

"A spy," replied the Colonel curtly.

"The man who has just left you?"

"The same."

"Nicholas Paulovitch," continued Balgonie, with increasing
astonishment at the other's coolness; "the assassin of the
Corporal--the wretch of whom I told you when I first arrived here!"

"All that may, or may not be," replied Bernikoff, with a stern air,
almost amounting to rudeness: "when I require this devil of a fellow
no more, you may impale him, if you please; but molest him not at
present."

"I do not see, Excellency, that all this in any way concerns me,"
said Balgonie haughtily, as he lifted his hat, and put his sabre
under his arm, as if about to retire.

"It does concern you thus far.  I shall anticipate any attempt that
be made by those lurkers, whoever they may be.  You must remember,"
he added, lowering his voice, "the tenor of the dispatch you brought
me?"

"Perfectly," replied Charlie, in a somewhat faint voice, as he knew
not how terrible or repugnant might be the duty assigned him by this
military despot.

"Well, you shall pass forth into the town tonight, with a patrol of
twenty men, armed with sabres and carbines.  Surround and search the
Tratkir in the main street, and compel all therein, who seem
suspicious, to produce their papers; and if they are without such,
bring them to me, and I shall question them, in a fashion of my own."

By the laws of Russia, at that time, persons could not travel from
St. Petersburg, or even from place to place, without a passport,
describing their occupation, appearance, and route, which they were
not at liberty to alter; and in the rural districts, travellers
required a pass from the lord whose estate they may have been upon,
before they were at liberty to quit it.  Without such a document, no
one would dare to furnish them with food or shelter, nor could a
postmaster give them horses, however high their rank, or great their
of reward. [Transcriber's note: the rest of this paragraph illegible
in scan.]

"And I am to take twenty men with me?" said Balgonie, after an
unpleasant pause.

"Yes! the bridge will be lowered for you after sunset.  Whoever these
lurkers are, they have been seen and overheard; and this coin is
proof sufficient to warrant the transportation of a whole province.
Be they who they may, by every dome in sacred Mother Moscow, they
shall find me ready for them!"

And Bernikoff grimly touched his small dagger, a species of weapon
which a Russian officer is seldom or never without, even in the
present day; and when Charlie Balgonie remembered how that same
dagger had been thrust into the throat of the half-strangled Peter
III., a flush of indignant hate and aversion crossed his honest face.
To him it was evident that the spirit of mischief or malevolence made
Bernikoff select him, as one whom he suspected of a friendly interest
in the family of Count Mierowitz, for this unpleasant duty, instead
of Captain Vlasfief, the Lieutenant of Schlusselburg, or any other
officer, who must have been better acquainted with the adjacent town
and all its places of entertainment, than he, a total stranger, could
ever be.

But he was a soldier; he had no resource but to obey in silence; and
an angry sigh escaped him, as he stuck his loaded pistols in his
girdle, when the sun sank behind the green painted roofs of the
wooden town, and the evening gun boomed from the ramparts across the
Lake of Ladoga.

Defiling in the twilight through the streets of Schlusselburg, he
marched straight to where he knew that the principal Tratkir, or
tea-house, was situated; and while his heart sank within him in fear
of _whom_ he might arrest,--perhaps Natalie herself,--he at once
surrounded the building, to prevent all egress, and to the evident
alarm and perturbation of all who were within.

These tea-houses are no longer to be found in the capital of Russia
now, for there all the _restaurants_ are constituted and arranged
upon the French and German models; but they still exist in Moscow and
elsewhere; and under their roofs, the genuine Muscovite consumes what
would seem a fabulous amount of the Chinese plant.  They are chiefly
the resort of soldiers, porters, and droski drivers, all of whom must
behave in a polite and orderly manner while there.  All must enter
the great room where the tea is served, cap in hand, alike out of
respect for the company, and to the holy pictures, Souzdal daubs of
SS. Sergius, Alexander Newski, and so forth, which decorate the
walls; and all must salute the bar-keeper, after first saluting the
Holy Image, which is to be found in every Russian apartment, and
before which, a lamp of train oil is frequently burning.

When the crooked sabres of the dismounted Cossacks were seen flashing
in the porch, and when Balgonie entered with his sword drawn, passing
along the narrow way between the numerous tables, at which the groups
were seated, amid an oppressive odour of strong tea, coarse tobacco,
and Russian leather from boots, caps, and girdles; many a peasant in
his canvas caftan, and many a stout moujik in his fur shoubah, felt
his heart quail with apprehension, he knew not of what; and every
saucer--the tea is not drunk from cups--was set down untasted, while
one or two men nearly choked themselves with their lumps of sugar;
for usually it is not put into the tea, but is retained in the mouth
of the drinker, so that, in a spirit of economy, the poor Muscovite
may indulge in two, perhaps three cups of his favourite beverage, and
use thereto but one piece of sugar.

For his intrusion Balgonie apologised; this, though a very unusual
proceeding in a country so despotic, failed to reassure the tea
drinkers, who were all hushed in silence and expectation; and a girl
who had been singing for their amusement, crouched down in a corner
for concealment.

Balgonie counted the number of persons in the Tratkir, and noted the
exact hour by his watch; he then proceeded, with a heart full of
anxiety and dread, to examine each person in succession, in reality
looking for those he had no wish to find.

All who possessed the requisite papers, showed them; others proved,
all in succession, to be soldiers in uniform, moujiks, and droski
drivers, with their brass badges, sailors, and serfs; thus, after a
time, a load seemed to be lifted from the mind of the young officer.
As he turned to leave the apartment without a prisoner, the Cossack
Jagouski rather roughly dragged the singing girl from the nook where
she had sought concealment, and then Balgonie recognised the fine
dark face, the black eyes, and the large glittering ear-rings of Olga
Paulowna, the gipsy girl whom he had befriended at Louga--she who
saved him from a terrible fate in the forest.

"Let the girl go free, Jagouski," said Balgonie; "I shall answer for
her if required."

Olga drew a paper from her bosom and showed that it was her passport
from the Commandant of Krejko, permitting her to travel to and from
Schlusselburg.

Jagouski saluted and withdrew a few paces; and now, as if the cloud
of doubt and dread Balgonie's arrival had cast over all was
dispersed, again the noisy hum of voices pervaded the long room of
the tea-house, and laughter even broke forth at intervals.

"Olga," said Balgonie, "you here--so far from home?"

"Yes, Hospodeen, for my home is anywhere, or wherever night finds me;
but I have news for you."

"News--and for me?"

"Yes," said she, sinking her voice to a whisper; "I have news of
Natalie Mierowna----"

"Hush, for heaven's sake, girl!--hush!" said Balgonie with a nervous
start.

"She is here----"

"Here in this house?"

"No, Hospodeen."

"Where then?--oh, speak quickly!"

"In the neighbourhood of Schlusselburg."

Charlie felt his heart die within him at this intelligence, for such
a vicinity was full of peril.

"Be to-morrow at noon on the road that leads to Tosna, and you shall
learn more; but do you know it, Hospodeen?"

"I shall soon discover it--and the place?"

"The skirts of the wood four versts from this."

"Good--till then, adieu; and God be with you."

Balgonie retired all unaware or heedless that his Cossacks were
secretly jesting at his whispering with the pretty gipsy; and through
the dark streets he marched them towards the great and sombre masses
of the fort which loomed between him and the star-lighted sky, his
heart the while being literally sick with alarm and dismay, in the
conviction, that the long-dreaded crisis was coming--that Natalie was
near, and the place of her concealment was known to a vagrant gipsy
girl, the sister of Nicholas Paulovitch, who, if he knew it not
already, might wrest the secret from her with the point of his knife,
for the information of him whose spy he was--the hateful Bernikoff!

Ruin and sorrow were close at hand, indeed.

On receiving the official but verbal report of Balgonie, and learning
that the visit to the identical tea-house where the dangerous rouble
was found had proved abortive, and that there was no one to be
knouted or hanged in the morning, Colonel Bernikoff became
transported with rage, and lifted his cane somewhat threateningly.
On this, Balgonie's hand was instantly laid on the hilt of his sword.

"Beware, Excellency," said he firmly: "a blow to an equal is a foul
insult; to an inferior it is mean tyranny; and, in either instance,
blood alone should wash it out."

On this the Colonel's rage assumed a new phase; he trod on his cocked
hat, and ordered the wax candles which he had always burning before
the image of his patron, St. Sergius, to be extinguished.  He loaded
the effigy with the bitterest reproaches, and for that night left the
poor saint in total darkness, despite the intercession of Father
Chrysostom.



CHAPTER XVII.

THE WOOD OF THE HONEY TREE.

The noon of the following day saw Charlie Balgonie--after an anxious
and almost sleepless night--proceeding on foot along the road that
leads southward to Tosna, a little town which stands on a stream of
the same name, a tributary of the Neva, but some thirty versts
distant from Schlusselburg.

His military ardour was already fading, so far as the Russian service
was concerned, amid his pressing anxiety for the dangers that menaced
Natalie; and he felt himself only a species of serf in an imperial
uniform.  Unlike the Admirals Douglas, Mackenzie, Count Balmaine, and
hundreds of other Scotsmen who served the Empress by sea and land, he
had thoughtlessly omitted to stipulate, as they had more warily done,
that he was to be at perfect liberty, as a British subject, to return
to his native land whenever he felt disposed to do so.  The poor
friendless boy--the kidnapped palatine, who had been rescued from the
burning wreck of the _Piscatona_, while floating adrift in the North
Sea--could know little how necessary such stipulations were when he
joined the Regiment of Smolensko as a cadet; and now he felt himself
literally a military slave of the ambitious and lascivious Catharine
II.

Before him rose the tall fir trees of the forest where he was to meet
Olga--the Wood of the Honey Tree, as it was named from an episode
(related by Demetrius, the ambassador, in his History of Muscovy)
which occurred to a serf of Bernikoff's, Alexis Jagouski, father of
the same man whom he slew so wickedly and ungratefully in the flight
from Zorndorf; and the whole anecdote reads so very like one of the
adventures of Baron Munchausen, or Sir Jonah Barrington's "bounces,"
that we may be pardoned translating it here.

"This man," says Demetrius, "when seeking honey, got into a hollow
tree, where the bees had concealed such a quantity thereof, that it
sucked him up to the breast, and being unable to extricate himself,
he subsisted for two day upon honey alone, and finding that his
shouts were answered only by the echoes of the vast forest, he began
to despair of being freed from his sweet captivity.  At last, to his
terror, there came a large brown bear from the Neva, to eat of the
honey which the old tree contained, and of which these animals are
greedily fond.  As the bear was descending with hinder part foremost,
the poor serf caught hold of his loins.  This sudden grasp among his
fur so terrified the bear, that he started and fled, and in doing so,
drew the peasant from that sweet prison, which otherwise had proved
his grave: hence was the forest named, the Wood of the Honey Tree."

There, as Balgonie approached, all was still save the voice of the
valdchnep, or woodcock, and the hum of insects; he lingered for a few
minutes on the outskirts, just where the highway to Tosna dipped down
into a deep and gloomy dingle of intertwisted branches, which formed
a species of leafy tunnel overhead.

Three miles distant to the northward, he could see the place he had
left, the gloomy Castle of Schlusselburg, moated round by the Neva
and Lake of Ladoga, jutting into the latter on its rock, its towers
wearing a sombre brown tint even in the noonday sunshine, as if no
light could brighten them; and the white flag of Russia was
fluttering on the summit of the keep, where Ivan was pining away the
years of youth in silence and seclusion.

Balgonie heard a voice waking the echoes of the dingle; three notes
were struck on a tambourine, as a signal to him, and Olga approached
singing a verse of that prophetic song, which is so soothing to
Russian military and religious vanity:--

  "But when the hundredth year
    Shall three times doubled be;
  Then shall the end appear
    Of all our slavery.
  Then shall the warlike powers
    From distant climes return,
  Egypt again be ours,
    While the Turkish domes shall burn!"


"I have kept my appointment, Olga," said he.

"And I mine," she replied gaily, while tripping towards him in a
playful manner; "now follow me, Hospodeen, and I shall take you to
those who will be right glad to see you."

"First let us be sure that we are unwatched."

"Right," said she; and stooping in her earnestness, her keen, dark,
and glittering eyes swept the whole landscape that lay between the
wood and Schlusselburg, and glanced keenly beyond the stems of the
trees into the dingles and vistas; but, save the birds on the
branches and the gnats revolving in the sunshine, no living thing was
visible.

"Follow me, Hospodeen," said the gipsy; "we have not far to go."

They descended into the dark dingle, or hollow, and then quitted the
highway; Olga gathering up her skirts that she might tread with
greater facility among the thick gorse and long rank grass,
displaying, as she did so, two very handsome and taper ankles cased
in scarlet stockings with elaborate clocks of yellow braid.

She explained to Balgonie that, as there was no path to guide them,
her chief clues were a set of notches, cut to all appearance
carelessly, as if with a woodman's axe, on the bark of the great pine
trees.

"These marks seem fresh, and recently cut--who made them?" asked
Balgonie.

"The Hospodeen, Basil Mierowitz," she whispered.

"Poor Basil!" responded Charlie, in a low tone.

After toiling through the dense forest for more than half an hour,
pausing ever and anon to listen and watch whether they were observed,
they arrived at the foot of a grey granite cliff, the face of which
was screened, or nearly covered, by masses of depending ivy,
creepers, and green lichens, forming a background which, at a little
distance, blended with the greenery of the woods.

"We have arrived," said she, turning, with a flush on her dark face
which made it radiantly beautiful.  She struck three strokes on her
tambourine, and shook its bells.

Charlie thought of her kinsman, Nicholas Paulovitch, and
instinctively grasped one of the pistols at his girdle, on seeing the
dark and bearded face of a man appear among the ivy leaves some
twenty feet above him.  A rope ladder was lowered, and whatever
doubts or misgivings were in his mind, he felt himself constrained
now to go through the adventure to its end.

He clambered up, and on the great screen of ivy being lifted aside,
found himself face to face with his old friend Basil Mierowitz, the
subaltern of his company, who, grasping both his hands with kindly
warmth of manner, led him into a cavern or grotto, one of a series of
many, into which the granite rocks had there been hollowed by some
long past convulsion of nature.

Another hand was instantly laid on his,--a smaller and softer
one,--and two beautiful dark eyes were bending tenderly on his face.

"Natalie!" he exclaimed, in a tremulous voice, and would have pressed
her to his breast, but for the presence of Basil and several other
men.

Amid the twilight of the cavern, he could perceive its rough natural
walls and arch, with hazy but sunny rays that streamed faintly in the
background, athwart the obscurity, as if the vault communicated with
other galleries in the rock, through which the upper light of day
stole in by the crannies and chasms.  He was also enabled to see,
that with Natalie, her brother Basil, and her cousin Usakoff, who had
been a Lieutenant of the Valikolutz Grenadiers, there were about
twenty men in the place, all clad in sheepskin shoubahs, canvas
doublets, or the caftan, the invariable dress of the Russian peasant,
and nearly all had red serge breeches, rough boots, and girdles of
rope or untanned leather.

Though attired like woodmen or labouring serfs, all these men had
unmistakably the bearing of well-trained soldiers: all were strong,
active, and resolute in aspect; and Balgonie had no doubt that they
were those natives of the Ukraine, the deserters from the Livonian
frontier, of whom Bernikoff had spoken; for against the walls of the
cavern were ranged a number of muskets and bayonets, with sets of
accoutrements, sabres, and pistols.  There, too, stood a regimental
drum, decorated with the imperial arms, and the forbidden name of the
Emperor _Ivan_!

Every moment seemed to increase the perils that surrounded the
luckless Balgonie, for now he was in the very den of the conspirators.

All carried in their girdles a dagger or knife and double brace of
pistols.  They seemed to be chiefly soldiers of the Regiment of
Valikolutz: and his sudden appearance among them, in the full uniform
of the Smolensko Infantry, evidently excited, if it did not alarm
them; for discipline becomes so completely a habit--a second nature;
and, as if the presence of an epaulette rendered them uneasy, they
all withdrew into the back or more obscure portion of the cavern,
leaving him and their two leaders together.

"Oh!  Basil--Usakoff--my friends, if indeed I may yet dare to call
you so, and live," said Balgonie, in a voice that was broken by
emotion, "for what rash and dreadful purpose do I find you and these
unfortunate fellows here?"

"You, and all Russia too, shall learn ere long," replied Mierowitz
calmly and sternly, yet with a grave and noble air, with which his
coarse canvas caftan assorted oddly.

"And poor Natalie!" exclaimed Balgonie, in a tone of grief and
reproach; "have you no pity for her?"

"Until Natalie informed me, I knew not, my friend, Carl Ivanovitch,
that _you_ were the bearer of that secret dispatch, which might have
cost you limb or life, when it was too late to arrest those I had set
upon your track."

"Well, certainly, I was not much indebted to the good offices of your
rogue, Podatchkine."

"The Corporal's orders were simply to abstract the document, and
bring it to me; not to slay its bearer, unless such a catastrophe
became unavoidable."

"He fell into his own snare--a dark and deadly one."

"Happily you escaped it; and I have saved two hundred silver roubles,
for the service of the Emperor."

"Who do you mean?" asked Balgonie, in a whisper.

"Ivan--the Prisoner of Schlusselburg!" exclaimed Usakoff, with
enthusiasm.

"Alas!" added Balgonie, "you court but your own destruction."

"Think not so; but join us, and share our perils and our glory,"
replied the other.

"I am bound by allegiance to the Empress."

"You are but a tool in her hands, Carl Balgonie."

"Perhaps so; but one with a devilish sharp edge, I hope," replied
Balgonie, who felt only genuine sorrow; and a silence of nearly a
minute ensued.

The manner and voice of Basil Mierowitz were singularly soft and
winning, yet he was bold and resolute; and though a young man, he had
all the free and easy bearing of a courtly soldier, blended with
something of the calm severity of a priest--a manner that was very
impressive.

The Polish and Cossack blood that mingled in the veins of Apollo
Usakoff gave a freer and bolder, perhaps a wilder, bearing and style
of language; his nose was aquiline, and expressed fierceness of
disposition; yet his features otherwise were essentially delicate and
noble, and his eyes were strangely beautiful in colour and variety of
expression.  They were dark grey, encircled by a ring of light, clear
brown; and when he spoke, or became excited, the iris contracted and
expanded, as the blood flowed and ebbed in his fiery and enthusiastic
heart, for he was a grandson of the Hetman Mazeppa--that Pole, whose
story is so well known, and who, after being bound naked on a wild
and maddened horse, to punish him for having an intrigue with a noble
lady of his own country, was carried by his steed through woods and
wastes, and herds of wolves and bears, into the heart of the Ukraine,
where he lived to become the prince and leader of those wild Cossacks
who dwell upon the banks of the Dnieper.

Sleeping in a cavern, among rough soldiers, on a bed of dried leaves
and moss, had not improved either the costume or the appearance of
Natalie Mierowna.  With pain and sorrow,--almost with agony,--Charlie
Balgonie could perceive how her once rich dress of yellow silk, with
its trimmings of narrow ermine, was faded and soiled--even tattered
and worn; her laces and her soft hair alike dishevelled and uncared
for; and that already had a hunted and haggard expression been
imparted to her beautiful eyes, and soft, pale, delicate face.  Anger
and pride alone remained; but both were for a time subdued by the
sudden presence of Balgonie, and the love she was compelled to
repress outwardly, at least, when before so many eyes.

Katinka, the sturdy Polish attendant, who loved Natalie dearly, alone
seemed unimpaired by the hardships of a forest life.

"Concerning the secret dispatch of the woman, Catharine
Christianowna, to the Governor of Schlusselburg," said Usakoff,
resuming the subject of conversation, "you, Carl, are perhaps aware
of its contents?"

"Yes," replied Balgonie, and then paused.

"Say on, my friend," said Usakoff; "we can hear anything now."

"They were to the effect, that a scheme had been formed to free the
Unknown Person in Schlusselburg, and that he was not to be permitted
to fall _alive into the hands of any one who came to seek him_."

"Savage orders, which there can be no mistaking."

"Orders which Bernikoff is quite capable of fulfilling," added
Mierowitz in a sad and stern voice, while their listening followers
burst into low and whispered, but fierce imprecations against the
Empress.

"Bernikoff is a man without one human sympathy," said Basil.

"And no marvel is it?" exclaimed Usakoff, while the strange light
already described gleamed in his dark grey eyes; "his mother, like a
true Tartar woman, is said to have anointed her breasts daily with
blood, as she suckled him, even as Dion tells us the mother of
Caligula did, that her child might, in manhood, be merciless."

Vlasfief they stigmatised as "the son of a goat," being originally a
boy of the great foundling Hospital at Moscow, where, when the
increase of children became so great that nurses could not be found,
the lacteal food of animals was introduced, and a herd of goats
adopted as wet-nurses for the establishment.

"Carl," said Basil, taking the hand of Balgonie, "Natalie has told me
all."

"All!"

"Yes--all that passed in Louga.  Dear Natalie has never had a secret
from me."

"And you forgive me?" said Balgonie earnestly.

"I do--but on this condition."

"Oh name it, Basil!"

"That if you do not join us, you will, at least, not actively oppose
our scheme."

"I scarcely know what it is."

"Know this then," replied the other emphatically, yet softly, "that
on its success depends the success of your love; for if it fails,
then all our lives are lost!"

"You say that you love my cousin Natalie?" said young Usakoff, in a
somewhat loftier tone.

"With all my heart--with all my soul, I do!" replied Balgonie,
pressing a hand of Natalie between his own.

"Yet, Carl, if you valued generosity and loved pity--if you loved
glory and honour, as a soldier should, you would risk the loss even
of _her_,--yea, give her up, if necessary,--and join us!"

"What would either life or glory be after such a sacrifice?  Ah, my
friend, you never loved as I do!" replied Charlie, with some
irritation of manner.

"Perhaps; but I have always thought how grandly terrible a figure was
made by Mohammed the Great, when, on a stage, before his discontented
army, he struck off the head of a favourite Sultana to convince his
soldiers that he preferred glory to love."

"Cousin, cousin," said Natalie, who felt all the peril and delicacy
of her lover's position, "you talk thus to-day, when last night you
shed tears--yes, bitter tears for the loss of your sister.  We were
all taken prisoners together, Carl--my poor father, Mariolizza, and
I.  Bound with cords,--see, the marks are on me still," she added,
showing her white wrists, while her dark eyes filled with a dusky
fire,--"we were conveyed in a covered kabitka towards St. Petersburg,
on the way to which it broke down, in a wood near Paulovsk, not far
from the outer walls of the imperial gardens.  There, in the
confusion, I was enabled to escape, by the aid of the gipsy girl
Olga, who, hoping some such chance might occur, had followed us afoot
from Louga; and through her further knowledge and assistance, I was
enabled to join my brother Basil here."

"My dear old father--and my soft and tender Mariolizza--a blow must
be rapidly struck, if we would save them from greater horrors than
those they now endure!" exclaimed Basil: "the die has been cast now;
and if I cannot save them and our legitimate Emperor, we can at least
all perish together."

"Dangers menace you closely; the roads around the fortress are
patrolled, and gun-boats watch the shores of the lake.  A coin of
Ivan found in a tea-house----"

"Malediction--yes! 'twas I, Carl, who dropped it there," exclaimed
Basil: "well, and this coin?"

"Has roused all the suspicions of Bernikoff; and he knows that you
and your cousin have deserted from your posts in Livonia."

"Already, does he know of this?"

"Yes, with many other details."

"Then," replied Basil Mierowitz, with growing sternness, "we have not
an hour to lose.  Who informed him?"

"Lieutenant-General Weymarn, by a special messenger, while I was
loitering at Louga."

"So, so!  By our Lady of Kazan, we must be prompt in action.  I have
cruised thrice round Schlusselburg disguised as a fisherman, and know
well all the approaches."

"Basil, Usakoff, I implore you by all you hold dear on earth and
sacred in Heaven to pause while there is yet time--to abandon your
wild scheme, and make your peace, if possible, with the Empress."

"You were right to add 'if possible,' my friend," replied the other
calmly but bitterly.  "Already compromised by desertion, my father
and betrothed wife chained in a fortress by the Neva, what terms
would Catharine offer us?  Carl Ivanovitch," he added, with a lofty
smile, "I do not press you to join us, or seek to lure you into the
dangers of an enterprise the enthusiasm of which you cannot share.  I
do not seek even to turn your presence as a trusted staff officer in
Schlusselburg to account, though it might further our objects, and be
the means, perhaps, by strategy, of saving many a valuable life.
Still less do I desire to turn to account your intimacy with the
young Emperor Ivan, though I envy you that great privilege.  Even in
the love I bear my sister (though it might tempt you to cast your lot
with us--_with her_ shall I say?), I leave you unquestioned and free."

"I thank you, Basil," said Balgonie sadly, and with a heightened
colour, caused by irrepressible annoyance at the last remark of
Mierowitz.

"But we have all sworn before the altar of our Lady of Kazan, and the
image of St. Sergius, to devote our lives to the matter in hand; so
retreat is impossible--advice and entreaty alike unavailing."

Balgonie felt an acute pang on hearing this; for he knew that in
Russia no place was esteemed as more holy than the church of our Lady
of Kazan in St. Petersburg.  Around its shrine--the _sanctum
sanctorum_ of which no woman has ever entered--are the keys of
conquered cities, the banners of a thousand slaughtered armies, and
the batons and sabres of their leaders, the Frenchman, the Turk, the
Pole, the Persian, and the Dane, the Swede and the German; and he
knew, too, that no image, to the Muscovite mind, is more sacred than
that of St. Sergius--the same absurd idol which the Kazan column bore
with them at the battle of the Alma, and displayed in vain to the
advancing bayonets of old Sir Colin's Highland Brigade.

"The blow once struck," resumed Basil, "we shall be joined by the
Cossacks of the Ukraine and the Don, among whom we have many
impatient adherents, and by all who hold of the Houses of
Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, of Holstein Grottorp, and of all who hate
Anhalt Zerbst; all Russia will soon follow, from the shores of the
Black Sea to those of the White--from Revel to the Ural Mountains.
We have not forgotten the reign of Elizabeth: how many noses were
slit, how many foreheads were branded, how many ears cropped, and
tongues shortened, and how many eyes were darkened for ever during
that time of tyranny; how many backs flayed by the knout; how many
nobles banished to Siberia, or drowned in prison vaults by the
swollen waters of the Neva.  Pure nationality is dying now; but we
must revive Russia--not as it is ruled by a lascivious woman and her
jealous lovers, but Holy Russia of Peter the Great--strong,
invincible, and the terror alike of the Eastern and Western world.
Let us save our country from those who oppress it, and replace upon
its throne the Grand Duke, the Czar--the Emperor Ivan; for the right
given by God and by inheritance can never be destroyed!"

A murmur of applause from his followers succeeded this outburst
(which we can render but feebly in English), and they clashed their
weapons in approval, while, fired by her brother's energy, Natalie
sung a verse of a well known Russian song:--

  "Now, as of old, the sabre's ready,
    And its might they'll feel afar,
  When but three short words are utter'd,
    God, our Country, and the Czar!"


"Without cannon, you cannot mean to assault a place so strong as
Schlusselburg, fortified as it has been by all the skill of
Todleben?" said Balgonie, after a pause.

"Ask me not what we mean to do, Carl: for your own sake, my dear
friend, the less you know of us, and of our plans, the better.  We
shall come upon you all when you least expect us, and in that hour
take no heed of what you see or hear.  Mix yourself up with it as
little as you can: if we fail, we perish in our failure; if we
triumph, and Ivan is replaced upon his throne, be assured that Basil
Mierowitz will not forget the lover of his sister--the comrade of
many a brave and happy day with the Regiment of Smolensko.  Now
adieu--and come hither no more, lest your steps be watched."

Balgonie pressed the hands of his two friends, whom he viewed as
fated and foredoomed men; he kissed Natalie with a tenderness that
was alike sorrowful and despairing, for he trembled in his heart lest
he should never see her more; and, in another moment or so, like one
in a bewildering dream, he had descended the rope ladder, and was
traversing the forest--the Wood of the Honey Tree--forgetful or
oblivious of whether he was watched or not.

He foresaw but woe and ruin now; and proceeded slowly back to
Schlusselburg, with his mind a prey to doubt, anxiety, and dread of
what might be the sequel to the impending catastrophe.  He felt
assured of one thing only--that a deed, bold, reckless, and
desperate, would be the result of his friend's desertion from
Livonia, their political rancour, and personal desire for vengeance
on the Empress and her favourites.

In that deed, and its too probable failure, he foresaw the
destruction of his love; and he felt bitterly that rather than have
known and lost Natalie, it would have been better had fate drowned
him when the Palatine ship was burned, or shot him when warring in
Silesia!



CHAPTER XVIII.

DOUBT AND DREAD.

Nearly all the events which followed the secret visit of Balgonie to
the conspirators will be found in the more recent histories of
Russia, and in the manifestoes published by the Empress Catharine at
the time--especially her _oukaz_ subsequent to the revolt of Basil
Mierowitz.

On returning to Schlusselburg, Balgonie found the Governor, Colonel
Bernikoff, in a very bad humour indeed.  The Grand Chancellor had
recently sent him a prisoner, with a note to the effect that he wrote
verses, and was otherwise a dangerous fellow--to keep him for a week
or two, and then get rid of him.  He had thrice sent to the
Chancellor, to learn under what name the man was to be _buried_, for
the fellow was dead now--so much had the damp atmosphere of the lower
vaults disagreed with his poetical temperament; but no answer had
been returned, which was very annoying.  So Bernikoff, whose patience
was never very extensive, was furious; but he strove to soothe his
ruffled feelings by several enormous pinches of the sharp snuff of
Beresovski, from the box which--as we have before hinted--had been
found in the fob of the late Peter III.; and by batooning, or beating
with his cane, the Cossack Jagouski, whom he had suddenly detected in
the act of praying secretly before the little image of St. Sergius,
which was his--Colonel Bernikoff's--own peculiar and particular
property.

By the old laws of Muscovy, to be found worshipping at an image,
erected by, or the property of another, designing thereby to have a
share in the favour of the saint it represented, without being at any
expense, was punishable by a fine, to refund "the owner some part of
the money laid out for the said image;" but as the poor Cossack had
not a copper denusca wherewith to bless himself, the Governor took it
out of his back and shoulders (scarcely healed after his recent
knouting), with the aid of a knotted walking cane.

"'To steal and to lie,' according to Bulharyn, a famous Russian
writer, 'are the two auxiliary verbs of our language,'" said the
Colonel, panting with exertion, as the Cossack crept away with a
glance of subdued ferocity in his stealthy eyes; "we take all that
for granted; but this slave has been stealing the interest of my
saint for himself!"

He ordered an extra supply of wax candles to be lighted before the
image, and then he knelt, bowed, and muttered:--

"Holy St. Sergius, heed not the prayers of that rascal, he is only a
vile serf, a slave, a Cossack from the Ukraine.  Thou hast been very
good to me, and shalt be treated handsomely.  Candles of the finest
wax shall burn before thee all night.  I will love and pray for thee,
so do thou protect and intercede for me, most holy Sergius!"

And so he prayed till the dinner drum beat; and then, muttering an
oath as he tripped over his sabre, the old savage hobbled away, to
commit at least two of the seven deadly sins at table.

"No tidings yet, Carl Ivanovitch, of those traitors!" said Bernikoff,
when he had somewhat recovered his breath, after a deep draught of
quass, the froth of which adhered to his grisly mustachio: "the
Captain Vlasfief, and my faithful friend Tschekin, with forty picked
Cossacks, and a clever guide----"

"Nicholas Paulovitch, I presume."

"The same," continued Bernikoff, with a fierce grimace on his lips
and a cruel leer in his eyes, as he masticated a huge mouthful of
green borsch with beef and eggs; "the same, sir,--and what then?"

"Nothing, Excellency: but this oukha of sterlet is excellent.  Well,
these and the forty Cossacks----"

"Are scouring all the roads between this and St. Petersburg on one
flank, and between this and North Ladoga on the other; so the cursed
Asiatics cannot escape me."

"Who will betray them to you?" asked Balgonie, making a terrible
effort to appear calm and unconcerned, as he played with his sword
knot and the tassels of his sash, and forgot to eat.

"Who?" exclaimed Bernikoff, grinding his teeth, and eating very fast.
"Their own friends--their own dear comrades--adherents, which you
will.  Russia is full of people, yea of many nations.  The Empress
can reckon her faithful slaves by millions; yet, when a Russian hath
his hat on his head, its rim contains the only friend on whom he can
rely."

"This is a severe libel on your country surely, Excellency."

"'Tis truth though; so Basil Mierowitz, Usakoff, and the rest, are
all doomed men.  No one was ever lost on a straight road; thus the
soldier who diverges from the straight line of duty must speedily
find himself face to face with degradation and death.  Punishment to
those traitors will be swift and sure!  So, I only fear that the
Grand Chancellor will never give me the pleasure of having them under
my judicious care in Schlusselburg.  We have certain old vaults,
built below the tide mark by Ivan the Terrible, for some of those
people of Novgorod who leagued with the King of Poland.  They are
always full of fog; and I am curious to know how long an able-bodied
prisoner might live there, or rather how long he would be in dying.
But excuse me, Hospodeen, I confess me to-morrow, and there rings the
bell for vespers already;" and making many Greek signs of the cross
and other genuflexions, Bernikoff, after having gorged himself at
table, hurried away to the chapel, where Father Chrysostom officiated.

Charlie gladly sought the solitude afforded by the stockades and
outworks of the fortress on the side towards the Lake of Ladoga.
There, as elsewhere, was of course, a chain of sentinels; but they
did not interrupt his lonely communing with himself.

By his interest in Natalie, by his deep love for her, and more than
all, perhaps, by his recent visit and interview, he already felt
himself "art and part" (to use a Scottish legal phrase), or
_particeps criminis_, with the rash adherents of Ivan.  If one of
these deserted the cause in which they had embarked, then would their
lurking place be at once discovered, and the story of his recent
visit be revealed.

He dreaded lest Bernikoff and others suspected his friendly interest
in the family of Count Mierowitz, and that more might yet be learned
of it; thus he would have experienced neither shock nor surprise, had
he, at any hour, in that land of treachery and espionage, seen either
Captain Vlasfief, Lieutenant Tschekin, or any other officer of the
fortress, advancing towards him sabre in hand, with an armed party,
to demand his sword, to make him a prisoner, and march him off to the
same prison which already held the old Count and Mariolizza, the
innocent betrothed of Basil, and might soon hold another, who was
dearer still--Natalie!

"If I love her," he would say to himself at times, "why should I
shrink from sharing all that she suffers now--all she may yet endure?
Yet it would be wiser to watch well for her sake, and seek to save,
or bear her away; but how--and where to?" was the next bewildering
thought.

And the generous Basil, the fiery and chivalrous Usakoff, oh that he
might save them too!  He mourned for Usakoff, who was the very soul
of honour and heroism, the worthy grandson of that Mazeppa who, when
Charles the XII. was retreating from Pultowa, swam the Borysthenes by
the side of the fugitive king, and of whom the latter said in the
words of the bard;--

                      "Of all our band,
  Though firm of heart and strong of hand,
  In skirmish, march, or forage, none
  Can less have said or more have done
  Than thee, Mazeppa! on the earth
  So fit a pair had never birth,
  Since Alexander's day till now,
  As thy Bucephalus and thou;
  All Scythia's fame to thine should yield,
  For pricking on o'er flood and field."


So worthy of such an ancestor, was he, too, to perish?

This was, indeed, a miserable mood of mind in which to pass the
nights and days of inactivity--of suspense and anxiety in which none
could share, in that strong, guarded, and somewhat lonely fortress,
which was washed, as we have said, on one side by the Neva, and on
the other by the Lake of Ladoga, the very ripples of whose waves
sounded hatefully in the ears of Balgonie.

"Oh," thought he, "to be with Natalie on the side of a green and
breezy Scottish mountain--on any part of the shore of free and happy
Britain! to be with her there in peace and security, far, far from
this land of suspicion and ferocious despotism, of state intrigues
and savage punishments, where every second man is the spy upon, and
the betrayer of, his fellow."

Britain he might never see more: and now he found himself vaguely
speculating on the probable comforts and public amusements afforded
by Siberia, and those growing cities of the sorrowing and the
banished, Tobolsk and Irkutsk, on the banks of the Lower Angara.

He feared to look much, or often, towards the distant Wood of the
Honey Tree, lest watchful eyes might be upon him to gather hints
therefrom; still more did he fear to visit Natalie again, lest, by
doing so, he might lead to the discovery and arrest of all: so the
days and nights of dread, of longing, and suspense, passed slowly
after each other now.

The barriers of rank and wealth--the wealth afforded by the Count's
estates and mines, his populous villages of serfs, and vast forests
of timber--had all been removed now, and Natalie was reduced to a
level lower even than her lover's; yet he cursed the mad schemes that
had brought about such a revolution, and tossed feverishly and
sleeplessly on his bed, when he thought of Natalie Mierowna,--his own
loving and beloved Natalie,--so delicate and so tender, with her
white soft skin and silky hair, her earnest and beautiful eyes,
lurking among stern and outlawed soldiers in yonder damp cavern of
the rocks, upon her bed of leaves and moss, at the mercy, perhaps, of
any adherent of Basil's, who, to save his own head, might prove a
traitor to them all!  This dread was ever before him.

The whole affair reminded him of some of the old Scottish raids or
Jacobite plots, of years long passed away; and it was fated to
resemble the former more strongly in some of its features, as the
dark sequel will show.

The guards and sentinels at Schlusselburg were doubled; the patrols
were incessant by land, while on the lake the gun-boats of Admiral
Mackenzie cruised near the walls; the cannons were loaded; the
watch-words changed sometimes twice within four-and-twenty hours; and
the general state of preparation for a sudden attack was unremitting:
but time passed on quietly until the night of the fifteenth of
September, when the crowning catastrophe came.



CHAPTER XIX.

THE NIGHT OF THE 15TH SEPTEMBER.

The past day had been unusually gloomy for the season.  The sun had
set in fiery clouds beyond the spires of St. Petersburg.  The night
was without a moon, and a strong east wind rolled the waters of
Ladoga in billows of inky hue against the massive walls of the
fortress in foam and fury on one side, while on the other, the waters
of the Neva, swollen by recent rains, gurgled and chafed round the
mouldy and moss-grown piers of the drawbridge.

The wind moaned with a sullen sound past the mouths of the cannon,
and whistled drearily through the deep embrasures and the loopholes
for musketry in the casemates.  Thunder had been heard at times, but
afar; Elias, as the Russians poetically phrase it, was driving his
chariot among the stars.  Lightning had reddened all the lake, and
cast the weird shadow of the castle athwart it for an instant; and,
that a complete and melodramatic omen of impending evil might not be
wanting, a huge sea-bird had perched upon the castle clock, and
forcing round the hands, struck midnight four hours before the proper
time.

Since morning roll-call, Jagouski, the knouted, beaten, and ill-used
Cossack, had been missing; he had quitted the fortress on some
trivial pretence and had not since returned; patrols had seen nothing
of him.  Then Colonel Bernikoff was more than ever on the alert; but
Balgonie, who now deemed anything better than the torture of
suspense, had gone weary and feverishly to bed, to court for a time
the happiness of oblivion, after having spent nearly the entire day
upon the lake with an armed boat's crew, patrolling by water.

From sleep, however, a sudden sound aroused him: he looked at his
watch, and saw that the hands indicated twelve o'clock, midnight.

What had he heard?

In another moment the sound came again--the drums were beating to
arms!  He heard the clamour of hoarse Muscovite voices in court and
corridor; the clanging of the castle bell; and he saw the gleam of
torches reddening the old black walls and towers, and flaring on the
grated windows as they were borne to and fro.

His heart was beating with wild anxiety as he threw on his staff
uniform, belted his sabre about him, placed his pistols in his
girdle, and hurried forth to meet--it might be to cross blades--with
the only friends he had in Russia!

As he crossed the castle-yard by torchlight, he could perceive that
the Cossacks, clad in their short blue jackets, red loose breeches,
short boots, and tall, black, woollen busbies, were falling into
their ranks with musketoon and sabre; and that the gunners were
standing by their cannon with port-fires lighted: the latter casting
a pale, ghastly, and unearthly glare upon the yawning embrasures, the
walls of the fortress, and on their own stolid visages, which were
pale and cadaverous as those of people usually who are hastily
summoned from sleep in the night.

As a staff officer who had no particular post, Charlie Balgonie knew
that his duty attached him chiefly to Bernikoff, whom he now met
hurrying forth in uniform, with a great cocked hat thrust angrily
over his cunning and twinkling eyes, which were sparkling with anger,
while every hair of his grizzled mustachioes, though these were long
and snaky, bristled with excitement.  There was a dangerous pallor in
his visage; his square jaw looked still more tiger-like in contour,
as his teeth were clenched; and he had his sabre drawn.

By his side were his two favourite brother officers, who in face,
form, and bearing, bore indications of being each, originally, a serf
of the lowest, basest, and most unthinking kind--Captain Vlasfief,
cruel and hollow-hearted, with his unfathomable smile; and Lieutenant
Tschekin, the slimy, savage, and unscrupulous Muscovite.  With these
came several officers of the Cossack guard, with their elevated
eyebrows, black mustachioes, their keen features, the plumes and
cockades in their black fur caps, and their glittering costumes,
forming altogether a striking and picturesque group, when seen by the
light of several torches, which streamed through the deep and small
arch, or doorway, of the keep in which Ivan was confined.

The portcullis of this tower was up; and Balgonie could perceive its
row of lower bars, like a line of black fangs in an open jaw, between
him and the outline of the lighted archway.

"What is the matter, Colonel Bernikoff," asked Balgonie; "what is the
cause of all this alarm?"

"Matter enough!  We have had an _alerte_--the place seems to be
invested by troops--Infantry of the Line, by all the devils--the head
of a column--look for yourself, Balgonie!" exclaimed Bernikoff, with
an oath.

To omit the Christian name of a person addressed, and that of his
father also, is a direct insult in Russia; but Balgonie heeded it not
then.  He hurried to the curtain wall which faced the landside, the
outer gate, and drawbridge, and then, by the light of a torch, he
could see that which certainly seemed to be the head of a column--a
front rank of nearly fifty men, clad in the hideous uniform then worn
by the Russian army, before it was altered, a few years after, by the
superior taste of the notorious Major Semple Lisle, a Scottish
adventurer,* who was well known as a lounger about St. James's Park,
London, in 1804.  Their coats were green, lined and faced with red,
very tight in the body, with preposterously long skirts, tight
breeches, and boots to the knee, with small cocked hats, having long
flannel flaps to cover the ears in winter.


* _Vide_ "Life of Major J. G. Semple Lisle, written by himself.
London, 1800.  Printed for W. Stewart, 194, Piccadilly."


By the light of the same torch, Balgonie could see the bayonets
fixed, and that two officers, with their sabres drawn, and a drummer,
were in front of their little line.  Having possession of the parole
and countersign, which, no doubt, had been betrayed to them by the
absent Jagouski, the whole party had contrived to delude the
_Putparooschick_ (sub-lieutenant) in charge of the outer guard, and
were now past the first barrier, and had actually taken possession of
the drawbridge, which they had lowered across the Neva.  The gate and
guns of the second barrier were yet to be forced or passed; and thus
these midnight visitors were in a species of trap.

Too well could Balgonie recognise in the two officers--Basil
Mierowitz, wearing the familiar uniform of the Regiment of Smolensko;
and Usakoff, in the gay trappings of the Grenadiers of Valikolutz;
and now, for the second time, their drummer beat a _chamade_, or
summons for a parley, but as yet there was no response.

Balgonie hastened after Bernikoff and the other officers.  They had
now ascended to the chamber of the unfortunate Ivan, from whose
presence they had somewhat roughly expelled the chaplain, Father
Chrysostom.  On entering, he found that the royal recluse had sprung
from bed, inspired by natural alarm, on finding his chamber suddenly
entered at midnight, and full of armed men; but Ivan manifested no
indignation--he was too gentle, too subdued, and completely broken in
spirit for that.

His singularly beautiful face was very pale; there was a strange
calmness in his manner; and whatever he thought or anticipated, there
was more of calm inquiry than of fear in his tone and in the
expression of his fine soft eyes.  Over his night-dress he had thrown
a _robe-de-chambre_ of fine scarlet cloth edged with white ermine;
and in this attire, with his long hair and delicate features, so
chastened in expression by long solitude and complete seclusion from
the outer world, he seemed more like a tall handsome woman, than a
young man of three and twenty years.

"What is this you tell me, Colonel Bernikoff," he was asking, as
Balgonie entered; "my unhappy life threatened say you?"

"Even so," said Bernikoff hoarsely, while averting his stealthy eyes
from the young man's open and earnest face; "even so, Ivan
Antonovitch; but your death will not be of our seeking."

"Whose then, whose then?"

"Your friends."

"Oh, what dreadful paradox is this?" asked the Prince calmly; "must I
die, even as Demetrius died?"

"Yes," replied the other hoarsely.

"And wherefore?"

"There are those without the gates who seek you, and you must not
fall alive into their hands," said Captain Vlasfief sternly, as he
felt the point of his sabre with a finger.

"Alas!  I do not understand who can come to seek me!" replied the
poor Prince, shuddering now, while an expression of horror began to
spread over his fine face,--a horror gathered from the fierce and
relentless aspect he read in the visages of those around him,--and he
withdrew a pace or so towards his bed, saying, in a touching voice:--

"Ah, do not leave me, good Colonel Bernikoff, or at least give me a
sword--a sword----"

"Fool--child--dolt! thou with a sword, and for what purpose?"
thundered Bernikoff, as he sought to lash himself into the requisite
pitch of fury; "for what purpose, I say?"

"That I may defend myself."

"'Tis needless," said Tschekin, with a cold smile; "we shall take
every care of you."

"Oh, Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, my friend, my good friend! you I can
trust--you I can command--come hither, and remain by my side," said
the Prince, in an imploring accent, as a solemn foreboding came upon
him when he saw the sabres stealthily drawn from their scabbards on
every side, and even the terrible Nicholas Paulovitch drawing near,
dagger in hand, with his long lock of hair, his scowling front, and a
cruel expression, the very lust of blood, in his deep-set stony eyes.
"Carl, Carl," cried Ivan; "your hand!"

"Captain Balgonie--_he_ here!" roared Bernikoff, with one of his
terrible maledictions.

"Oh Excellency!" implored Balgonie, scarcely knowing what he should
ask or urge.

"Begone, sir, to the barrier gate, and keep the guard there to their
duty--begone, sir, I command you, on your allegiance to the Empress!"

To refuse or linger were alike impossible, though a wild cry of
entreaty escaped the lips of the young Prince, who sprang forward,
but was thrust roughly back towards his couch by many hands and many
levelled weapons.

The sword of Damocles, which had hung over his unhappy head so long,
was about to descend at last!

Balgonie, his heart swollen almost to bursting with shame, rage, and
grief, rushed down the stair of the keep; but at the foot, and just
as he passed where the old Chaplain Chrysostom was saying devoutly on
his knees the prayers for the _dying_, he heard a shrill and
protracted cry of agony ring through the vaulted tower--a cry that
made his blood run cold!

Humanity, generosity, and all his own good impulses would have drawn
him back to the side, and, if possible, to the aid, of Ivan; but the
force of discipline, and a knowledge of his own utter powerlessness,
made him pause: for he was but one man--a young officer--a foreigner,
too, opposed to a whole garrison of ferocious and unscrupulous
soldiers.

When, from the inner barrier gate, he looked up to the window of
Ivan's room, he saw that the lights had been extinguished and all was
darkness now.



CHAPTER XX.

MORNING OF THE 16TH SEPTEMBER.

When Bernikoff appeared with his group of officers, Charlie Balgonie
perceived that there were spots of blood upon his long, white leather
gauntlets, that his sabre blade was broken off within six inches of
the hilt, and that a terrible expression of ferocity clouded his
features and those of all around him, the glare of the uplifted
torches now paling as the light of day stole in, adding to the
sinister significance of their faces.

At that moment the drummer of the summoners beat a _chamade_ for the
third time, and Bernikoff, advancing to the klinket, or wicket, in
the palisades of the second inner gate, opened it, and, with a great
sternness of manner, demanded what they required.

"The release of His Imperial Majesty Ivan IV.," replied Basil
Mierowitz, in a firm voice, while courteously saluting Bernikoff, in
recognition of his superior rank.

"If I refuse----"

"You do so at your own peril," replied Basil, as sternly and as
proudly as if, instead of a few discontented deserters and
enthusiasts, the whole armies of Russia were at his back.

"You cannot be mad enough, Basil Mierowitz, to think of assaulting
us?"

"That may or may not be, Excellency, according to circumstances," was
the reply.

"What troops are these under your orders?"

"A guard of honour for the Emperor, if you peacefully comply--the
first portion of an investing force, if you refuse," replied
Mierowitz; but a sinister gleam of triumph flashed in the malicious
eyes of Bernikoff, who gathered more of his real weakness from this
evasive reply, than the rash young noble intended.

"Listen, Colonel Bernikoff," he continued, while drawing from his
breast a long paper of official aspect, to which several green and
scarlet seals were attached: "Her Majesty Catharine II.--for a time
of all the Russias--having come to the conclusion of resigning the
imperial crown (convinced at last that she has no claim, thereto),
and of replacing it on the head of the Emperor Ivan (son of Anthony
Ulric, Duke of Wolfenbuttel), whom she now feels herself compelled to
acknowledge as her lawful sovereign, though basely deposed in infancy
by her predecessors, the Empress Elizabeth, and the Emperor Peter
III.; therefore she hereby commands you, Colonel Bernikoff, Governor
of her Castle of Schlusselburg, to set the Prince at liberty, with
all speed and honour."

For a document and summons of this artful and remarkable nature,
Bernikoff was altogether unprepared.  For a moment he grew deadly
pale, but for a moment only, and glanced at the startled faces of
those around him.  Had he been too precipitate in bloodshed?

"Where is Her Majesty just now?" he asked.

"In the palace of the Czars, at Novgorod."

"Was Novgorod so empty of all the great nobles and officers of
Russia, that a document of such a nature was entrusted to a mere
Lieutenant of Infantry--a deserter from Livonia?" said Bernikoff,
with sudden rage.  "'Tis an imposture--a forgery; there is but one
God in Heaven--one monarch on earth, the Empress Catharine; and you,
Mierowitz, and all who league with you, are but base dogs and
traitors!"

"Forward!" cried Basil, brandishing his sabre; "storm the
gate--bayonet all who oppose us!"

"Long live Ivan Antonovitch--long live the Emperor!" exclaimed his
soldiers, rushing forward.  But the klinket in the palisades was at
once closed, and secured against them by an enormous transverse beam
of wood; and though a confused volley of musketry was exchanged
between them and the main guard, no one was struck, save Bernikoff,
who staggered back into the arms of Vlasfief, having been bayoneted
in the breast by the deserter Jagouski, who drove his weapon between
the palisades, nearly finishing what Basil had begun by the blow of a
musket but, which crushed the Colonel's hat, and nearly fractured his
skull.

"Ah! dogs and Asiatics, you have struck me!" shouted Bernikoff, whose
voice was hoarse with rage and pain.  "Dost know the penalty of
wounding an officer--of striking a soldier who wears a decoration?"

"Accursed Tartar, I neither know nor care.  I revenge my brother's
death at Zorndorf, my own wrongs, and the murder of Peter III.!"
replied the exulting Cossack, with a bitter laugh.

"May my right hand wither, and my tongue cleave to the roof of my
mouth, when most I need them both, if I have not a terrible vengeance
for all this work!" cried Bernikoff.  "Vlasfief, Tschekin, show them
their Prince!"

While the undaunted Basil and his friend Usakoff, with their
soldiers, proceeded to wheel round a cannon of the outworks, a
32-pounder, for the purpose of blowing open the klinket of the inner
barrier; and while Balgonie, a silent but excited and sick-hearted
spectator of the whole affair, lingered close by, heedless whether
the round-shot and grape, with which they were charging the gun, came
his way, or not,--a window in the first story of the keep was dashed
open, and while every torch and every eye were uplifted to the place,
a terrible spectacle, which hushed all into momentary silence, was
exhibited.

It was the dead body of the young and handsome Ivan, suspended by the
neck, at the end of a rope, stripped even of his night-dress, cold
and white as the marble of Paros, and gashed with ten gaping wounds;
for, as we are told in the newspapers of the period, "the unfortunate
prince had struggled some time for his life, and even broke the
Governor's sword in the conflict; but assistance was called for, and
another bloody assassin (Vlasfief) appeared, who finished the horrid
work."

An exclamation of dismay and grief escaped Balgonie, on beholding
this appalling spectacle; the weird and ghastly horror of which was
enhanced by the uncertain light in which it was exhibited, and which
imparted a wavering and almost life-like action to the corpse, as
with its long hair floating, head and arms pendent, it swayed to and
fro in the morning wind against the castle wall.

"_Hospodi pomilui!  Hospodi pomilui!_"* cried Basil Mierowitz,
covering his face with his hands, and permitting the musket with
which he had armed himself to fall to the ground with a clash, which,
together with his most mournful exclamation, alone broke the silence.


* Lord have mercy upon us!


"'Behold,' said Bernikoff, in cruel triumph, while blasphemously
using the words of Ezekiel--"'behold, I take away from thee the
desire of thine eyes with a stroke!'  Glory to God and to the
Empress!  This is your Emperor--now let him head your troops.
Doubtless he will make a fine figure on the Imperial throne."

"Oh!  Bernikoff," exclaimed Basil, "you are like Judas, as we may see
him at the Kazan church--one hand on the mouth denoting treachery,
and the other on a bag of money."

"Thou liest, Lieutenant! my fingers know more of the grip of steel
than of gold," said the other furiously, as he hurled the hilt of his
broken sabre at the speaker.

"So--so--this has been your work and decision?"

"Yes--how do you like it?" was the mocking reply.

"Thou art a cruel judge; but remember the law of Peter the Great----"

"Which makes the judge answerable for his decision?"

"Yes."

"Then shall I content me, traitor, and be answerable for my decision
as well as for its execution.  I have done my duty to the Czarina."

"You have done a deed for which hell must blush and angels weep," was
the forcible reply of Mierowitz, who seemed so overcome by grief and
horror as to lose all self-possession; for he now ordered his men to
disperse to the woods--to seek safety in flight; and then calmly
taking off his sword-belt and sash, he threw them on the ground
saying--

"Since my Imperial master is dead, further resistance would be vain
in me."

He was almost immediately afterwards struck to the earth, and made
prisoner by Lieutenant Tschekin, who, with a party of dismounted
Cossacks, had stolen through the casemates and galleries to a postern
opening on the rear of the drawbridge, and these, after firing a
confused volley with their pistols and musketoons, fell with their
sharp crooked sabres upon the now thoroughly disheartened adherents
of Mierowitz.  Lieutenant Usakoff and Jagouski alone made any
vigorous resistance, resolving not to be taken alive.

Fighting desperately, almost back to back, the former armed with the
sabre of Mazeppa, and the latter with a musket, and both bleeding
from many wounds, they were driven through the outer barrier towards
the town.  On the pathway Jagouski stumbled over a comrade, and was
taken; but Apollo Usakoff, with a shout in which triumph and despair
were mingled, leaped into the Neva, the waters of which swept him
away, and he was seen no more by his pursuers.

When Tschekin's Cossacks joined in the _mêlée_ with the fugitives,
Balgonie sprang through the klinket, sword in hand, resolved to
succour his friend at all hazards, and fortunately arrived just in
time to save him (when struck down and trod under foot) from the
bulky giant Nicholas Paulovitch, who, with a clubbed musket, was
about to give him a blow that must inevitably have proved fatal.

Paulovitch he ran through the heart--or at least the place where his
heart might be supposed to have been--and spurning him off the blade
with his foot, hurled the snorting ruffian to the ground, and raised
his friend, with the assistance of a soldier and Lieutenant Tschekin.

"Made prisoner, and by you too, Carl!" said Basil, reproachfully and
in a low voice, for he was faint with wounds and bruises.

"By me, but to save you."

"Seek rather to save Natalie, if you can," he whispered; "she is, she
is--"

"Where, _where_?" said Balgonie, impetuously and imploringly.

But there was no reply.  Basil had fainted, and was borne into the
Castle of Schlusselburg, a prisoner of State.

Balgonie never saw the face of his friend again!

So ended, for a time, a scheme, the importance of which was only
equalled by its bold recklessness--the scheme of two subaltern
officers to revolutionise the vast empire of Russia, and to subvert
the firm dominion of Catharine II., one of the most powerful and
popular, though licentious, monarchs that ever sat on the barbarous
throne of the Czars; and such was the terrible sequel to the _Secret
Dispatch_ of Balgonie.

Day had completely broken when he was summoned by Bernikoff.
Shuddering as he passed through the court of the Castle and under the
very window where the corpse was yet swaying mournfully to and fro in
the morning breeze that swept from the broad waters of the vast lake,
whose ripples were shining like gold in the first beams of the
autumnal sun, Charlie sought the presence of this detestable
personage, the thunder of whose wrath he feared was about to descend
upon himself.

He found the Colonel in his shirt sleeves, and almost covered with
blood, which was flowing from a wound in his breast and another on
the head, from whence it was trickling to the ends of his long and
snaky grey mustaches.  To both of these cuts the barber was about to
apply dressings, while the patient solaced himself by scheming out
some dreadful punishment for Jagouski, who, with several others, had
fallen into his gentle hands, and by uttering deep oaths, and
imbibing deep draughts from a great wooden bowl of quass, dashed with
fiery vodka.

Balgonie, whose thoughts ran chiefly upon how to discover and succour
Natalie, was roused to attention by Bernikoff saying grimly--

"Carl Ivanovitch Balgonie, for aiding in the capture of the rebel
Mierowitz, I thank you; suspicions I had, but they are gone.  You are
now, perhaps, to rejoin the Regiment of Smolensko, and shall bear a
dispatch from me to Lieutenant-General Weymarn and Lieutenant-Colonel
Caschkin (who are both in St. Petersburg), relating the affair of the
last twelve hours.  Vlasfief shall prepare it, and I will sign it.
Place a feather in the seal, lest the Captain lingers as he did at
Louga!  Here, Carl Ivanovitch, taste the quass; 'tis the _trisna_ of
Ivan the Unknown Person!"

There was something so horrible in this levity and impiety to the
Cossacks, that even they exchanged uneasy glances, for the trisna at
funeral feasts is a mixture of rum, beer, and wine, and is an ancient
Sclavonian beverage.  When it is handed round, all stand up
uncovered, the clergy recite a solemn prayer, and at its close the
trisna is drunk to the health of the departed Christian soul; so
Balgonie shuddered, as he thought of the gashed and dishonoured
corpse that swung by the neck without the castle wall.

This emotion did not escape the fierce eyes of Bernikoff, though his
wounds were most severe, and his mind was wandering.

"Nay, look not at me thus, Scot," said the genuine old Russian
fatalist; "God willed it that Prince Ivan should be put in my charge;
and the devil, together with my duty to the Empress, inspired me to
destroy him.  What is done, is done, and is the will of God; and you
know, or ought to know, our Muscovite proverb--the Czar is high, and
God is everywhere!"

"Three times has this old reprobate mentioned that terrible Name, and
each time bowing his sinful head!" thought Charlie, with disgust and
wonder.

"Hah!" resumed Bernikoff, pursuing his own thoughts, and clenching
his teeth in rage and pain, "did that suckling of a Lieutenant think
to deceive me--I, who have been forty years in the Russian army, and
have to deal with the most cunning scoundrels between the Black Sea
and the Baltic!  Jagouski, too, I'll fill his mouth with gunpowder,
put a fuse between his teeth, and blow his head off.  By St. Sergius,
I will!  But, holy Saint, alleviate these pangs, by ever so little,
and this night six pounds of the finest white wax shall burn before
thee."  He gnashed his teeth with pain, and added, "Be ready to ride
in an hour, Captain; till then, leave me."



CHAPTER XXI.

UNDERGROUND.

The Empress's court of Secret Chancery soon decided on the fate of
Basil Mierowitz; the Count, his father, and his cousin Mariolizza,
who had been passive, though suspected in the matter, had their cases
taken into future consideration, so they were kept close prisoners
while their properties and possessions were given up to pillage and
military execution.  Basil was condemned to be broken alive upon the
wheel; but the Empress, who had a particular tenderness for handsome
men, "mitigated his punishment to the less severe one of being
beheaded."

A brief paragraph in the _London Gazette_ of the 23rd October records
this brave fellow's death, just fourteen days after his rash affair
at Schlusselburg:

"M. Mierowitz, in pursuance of his sentence, was publicly beheaded on
Wednesday last; he behaved at his execution, as he had done
throughout the whole transaction, with the greatest resignation.  Six
of the soldiers and under-officers who were engaged with him ran the
gantelope the same day; they were so severely whipped that it is said
three of them are since dead.  Many more are to be punished.  One,
Usakoff, a Lieutenant in the Regiment of Welikolutz (_sic_) who was
privy to the design, was accidentally drowned."

Notwithstanding his rank and years, old Count Mierowitz was retained
in a dungeon among a number of miserable Russian rogues and Polish
prisoners, clad in filthy sheepskin shoubahs, many of them being
afflicted with the terrible disease known as _plica polonica_, or
matted hair, which hung over their necks in clotted lumps, every tube
being swollen and dilated with globules of blood.

The lower vaults of Schlusselburg were those built by Ivan the
Terrible, for the reception of a few of the revolters of Novgorod,
after he had put twenty-five thousand of her citizens to the sword.
They were such prisons as--let us hope--are no longer in use, even in
Russia, although the London press has asserted that, until lately,
exactly such _oubliettes_ or dungeons were in active operation, and
never without tenants, under the royal rule of the deposed Francis
II., and prior to the remodelling of Italy by Victor Emmanuel.

They were like the frightful cells of the Bastile, which Victor Hugo
has described in "Notre Dame;" those of the Inquisition at Goa or
Madrid, or of old castles of the middle ages; but apart from the
happily departed horrors of such places, even English jails have been
little better than living graves within the memory of many now alive;
for one of the greatest glories of modern civilisation, in all
countries, has been the amelioration of prisons and their government,
and the substitution of mercy and protection in their general economy
for that irresponsible despotism and wanton cruelty which have formed
such ample materials for the romancer and novelist to excite
compassion and even dismay.

Yet it is exactly such a place--a prison of the middle ages--a rival
to that Chillon to which Byron's genius has given a greater name than
ever its terrors won it--we are now about to describe: one of the
lower vaults of Schlusselburg, a den, the floor of which was below
the rocks whereon the seals of Ladoga basked in the sunshine, and
which was consequently liable to be flooded during those inundations
that at certain seasons, overflow all the country for a great way
north, so that no crops will grow save upon the eminences.

Vaulted with stone, it was nearly square, and measured twelve feet
each way, with a floor that sloped down at one end, having been
unevenly hewn out when the rock was pierced; and from a portion of
this rock sprang the solid arch of granite blocks which formed the
roof.  A narrow slit, six inches broad by twelve high, and having
even in that small space a thick iron bar, admitted to the interior a
feeble ray of light.  This slit was partly built of stone, but its
sill was the living rock of Schlusselburg.  It opened towards the
lake, but gave no prospect save the clouds, for it was high up in the
wall; yet the melancholy cries of the waterfowl and of the seabirds,
which often came up the Neva from the Baltic, were heard through it
at times.

The prisoner, when seated on the stone bench which formed a bed or
seat alternately, could only see the changing hues of the sky and
patches of cloud, and know by the darkness which gradually obscured
this mere shot-hole that day was passing away, and that another
night, chill, dark, dreary, and hopeless, was at hand.

As the floor sloped down some twelve inches or more, the lower end
was always full of water, into which the slime that gathered on the
vault of the arch fell at intervals with a regular plash that, to the
silent and apparently forgotten prisoner, became maddening in its
monotony of sound, by day and night, by morning and evening, by dawn
and sunset.  Then, as the tides rose and fell, or as the waters of
the vast inland lake of Ladoga are affected by the Baltic stopping
the downward flow of the Neva, or by rains flooding the many
tributaries that join them, so did this dark pool in the dungeon rise
and fall, when the current oozed through secret and unknown channels
or crannies in the granite rocks.

It was in this vault, or one of those adjoining--such a den as that
in which Dante placed his Demon--that the betrayed wife of Count
Orloff, the beautiful daughter of the Empress Elizabeth, was drowned,
ten years after the date of this history, when the waters of the Neva
rose ten feet; and, as they subsided, bore her body to the Gulf of
Finland.

No one could live very long in such a place--low, damp, cold, and
horrible.  And well did Bernikoff know this, when, in the blind
transports of rage and agony resulting from his double wounds, he
barbarously consigned Natalie Mierowna to such a place--ay, even
Natalie, the soft and delicate, the highly-bred and tenderly-nurtured
daughter of Count Mierowitz; and she had now been in the underground
vault for three days and nights,--seventy-two hours,--which to her
had resembled a horrible and protracted nightmare.

She was ignorant as yet of her brother's execution, a week before.
Betrayed by one of their most trusted adherents as the price of his
own liberty, she and Katinka had been taken.  Of the fate of the
latter she knew nothing: a mere Polish waiting-maid, a pretty
soubrette, she had too probably become the lawful prey of the
Cossacks, whom Natalie had last seen in the forest, with terrible
significance rattling their dice on a kettle-drum head.

For herself, the poor girl only knew that she was placed there to
await the pleasure of the Empress and the Grand Chancellor.

Hope was dead completely in her heart; and though the desire to live
was strong, her former life seemed all a dream, or something that had
happened long, long ago!

Crouching on a damp pallet that lay on the couch of stone, her hair
dishevelled, her dress more than ever torn, discoloured, and
disordered, her snowy arms and hands stripped of every ornament and
ring, her tender feet well-nigh shoeless, her eyes half closed and
surrounded by dark inflamed circles, her cheeks sunk and haggard,--it
would be difficult to recognise in her the once beautiful and
brilliant Natalie, whose coquetry had excited the ready jealousy of
Catharine in that fatal Mazurka; the Natalie of the imperial _salons_
at Moscow, at Oranienbaum, or the palace of Tsarsky Selo; or the
Natalie of that princely old château near the Louga--the proud,
bright-eyed, and beautiful girl whom Charlie Balgonie had loved, and
worshipped as a goddess.

As she crouched in a species of stupor beside a wooden bowl of stale
water and a mouldy loaf of black bread, there seemed to be no breath
in her tender nostrils, no sound in those little ears over which the
black hair rolled in unheeded masses--no sound save the monotonous
plash of the dropping slime.  She was pale as white marble,--cold as
death,--a prey to utter confusion rather than profound grief.  There
were times when she felt and thought and knew of nothing: but there
were others when all the past--the memory of her ruined house, her
shattered love, her slaughtered friends, their fatal project, and her
lost position in society--brought a cruel and keen pang to her heart,
and made her writhe and start and wring her hands, but not weep; for
she had not a tear left; and her hard dry eyeballs were the only warm
part of her shuddering frame.

Seventy-two hours had she been there, yet the time seemed so long
already, that she knew not whether it were seventy-two days or the
same number of weeks.

When she did rouse herself to steady reflection and the realities of
her position, thought well-nigh drove her mad.

Her old father--his sturdy figure, his venerable beard and white
eyebrows, his silver hair queued by a simple ribbon, his quaint
old-fashioned costume of the first Peter's time, rose vividly before
her; and with a gush of memory came all his peculiarities of
disposition, his warmth of heart and temper, his kindness and
irritability, his pride of race and family.  Where were all these now?

Her lover too--his voice, and eyes, and gentle manner came next, to
add to her pangs; for him too must she relinquish for ever: no
shelter was there now for her save the cold grave, which was perhaps
to receive them all!  Basil, Usakoff, and Mariolizza--alas! terrible
though her own sufferings, she little knew those to which the fairer
beauty and more unwary tongue of Mariolizza had subjected that
unhappy girl.

The excellent taste, the polished education, and high accomplishments
of Natalie, which were so far superior to those of most ladies of her
own rank and country then, gave a greater poignancy to the horrors of
reality and imagination; yet imagination could supply no horror but
what was real and sternly so.

Their princely old dwelling amid the pine forests--never more would
she see its dome of polished copper shining in the sun, or the wooded
domain that stretched for uncounted versts around it; or her father's
patrimonial village, nestling by the Louga, which bore his rafts of
timber to the sea, and by night reflected the glare of those furnaces
which were another source of his vast wealth, and the means of
procuring a thousand luxuries.

Better would it have been, had she and they and all succumbed to
Catharine's iron rule, than sought the freedom of Ivan IV; but it was
too late--too late, now!

Was it all a dream from, which she must awaken?  Strange it was, that
as weariness, sleep, or a stupor stole over her, scraps of songs,
frivolous ones especially, airs from operas, and so forth, occurred
to her drowsy ear, as if her brain was turning; and to these the
filtering plash and the sound of the rising waves and wind without
seemed to mark a cadence.

Suddenly a scream escaped her: she was in total darkness.  Amid her
sleep or stupor, a fourth night had come on--a night of storm too;
for she heard the roar of the autumn rain, as it descended like a
vast sheet upon the lake without.

Cold and slimy things had often crossed her slender ankles, making
her shrink and shudder: but now she became sensible that her feet
were completely immersed in water; that the wind was bellowing
without and rolling the waves against the rocks; and that the current
of the lake was flooding the floor of her vault, and rising fast
within it.

It rose with appalling rapidity: and now the terror of a dreadful
death made Natalie utter a succession of piercing shrieks, mingled
with prayers to heaven.  But her cries were unheard; for the same
cold, icy tide that flooded her cell, filled all the corridors by
which it and others on the same floor were approached.

Rapidly it rose, this dark, silent, and terrible tide--rapidly and
without a sound.

She sprang upon her stone couch, but already the pallet was floated
away.  Up yet rose the invading water, and it was soon nearly to her
waist; and gasping and shuddering cries were mingled with her
prayers.  A little more, and the narrow slit through which she could
hear the bellowing wind and see the black clouds careering past one
red and fiery northern star--the last gleam of life and of the outer
world--would vanish from her eyes, as she perished in that miserable
tomb: even as the Princess Orloff and many others have done, helpless
and unheeded in their dying agony--drowned miserably, like the prison
rats that swam around them.

In the last energies of her despair, she made her way to the
enormously thick door which closed this trap of stone, and, applying
her lips to the joints, shrieked loudly again and again for succour,
and beat wildly and fruitlessly with her tender hands upon its
massive planks and iron bolts.

Her brain seemed bursting, for she was suffocating as the air
lessened.  She thought she saw a red light shining through the
crannies of the doorway; but whether this were fancy or reality, it
was impossible to say, as a faintness came over her, and she sank
down choking and drowning in the dark flood that rose within the
walls and against the door of the prison.



CHAPTER XXII.

OVER THEIR WINE.

Heavy and sad was the heart of Charlie Balgonie when, on the evening
of the 16th September, that which was subsequent to the episode at
Schlusselburg, he saw the domes and towers of St. Petersburg
glittering in gold and bronze, in green and fiery or fantastic
colours, amid the rich glow of a ruddy sunset; and where rising from
the haze of the vast city, the polished cupola of St. Isaac's
Cathedral, and the slender spire of the Admiralty, like a needle of
flame, seemed to float in mid air.

As he entered the first guarded barrier, he met a party of Lancers
riding at a trot, their tall fur caps having scarlet kalpecs and
large plumes, their lances, each with a long bannerole of the same
colour, waving in the wind.  They escorted a covered kabitka, or
waggon, and were led by the Count de Balmain, a Scottish officer,
who, in after years, stormed Kaffa, in the Crimea.

"Whither go you, Count?" he asked.

"For Schlusselburg--the place of sorrow."

"With a prisoner, of course?"

"Yes, I regret to say, with the niece of Count Mierowitz, with
Mademoiselle Mariolizza.  She is to be confined under a warrant from
the Grand Chancellor--poor girl!"

Sadder and heavier grew the honest heart of Balgonie, as the escort
and its hearse-like carriage passed on; and, as he looked after it,
the fair merry face, the full and voluptuous figure, the gay manner,
and remarkable _finesse d'esprit_ of the betrothed of poor Basil, as
he had last seen her at Louga, came back vividly to memory now.

Balgonie was at St. Petersburg when Mierowitz was executed, and when
other horrors followed.  Moreover, he was closely and repeatedly
interrogated by the Grand Chancellor, the Privy Councillor, Count
Panim, by Count Orloff (the present lover of the Empress), and by
General Weymarn, as to all he knew and had seen of the
conspirators--so closely, that nothing surprised him so much as to
find that no suspicion was attached to himself.  But being a soldier
of fortune, who possessed nothing in the world but his sword and his
epaulettes, he was not worth suspecting by the Imperial Government.

Ere long, the name of Natalie came before the Secret Chancery, as a
prisoner in Schlusselburg; and, like the rest, she was tried and
condemned in absence, undefended and unheard; and sentenced, too,
amid the solitude of her prison.

To Balgonie the charm of life seemed to have passed away; and, during
the week or two that followed his return to St. Petersburg, dreary,
weary, and unmeaning, indeed, seemed the routine of his duties as
aide-de-camp at the vast parades, the brilliant receptions, the
courts-martial, and other public affairs to which he followed his
_chef_, General Weymarn, at the palaces of Tsarsky Selo or
Oranienbaum, and elsewhere, while ignorant of the fate of
Natalie--while the very life of her he loved hung in the balance.

When compared with their fate, how happy seemed those lovers, who,
though separated for a period, could look confidently forward through
the long succession of hours, of days and nights, of weeks, and
months, or even years, and reckon with certainty on the time of
reunion!  With him and Natalie, time stretched into a length that
seemed interminable: their future had no background; their separation
was one without hope.

Charlie, in his desperation, applied to the Marquis de Bausset and to
Sir George Macartney, then the Ambassadors from France and Britain;
and both received his verbal prayers--he dared not write on such a
subject--for mercy to the Count's family: but they were unheeded; and
the Ministers replied only by bows, grimaces, and shrugs of their
diplomatic shoulders.  Their interference was impossible--quite; and,
unfortunately, his old patron, Admiral Thomas Mackenzie, was with the
fleet in the Black Sea.

The suspicions excited against his Regiment and the Grenadiers of
Valikolutz, might procure the banishment of both; he feared it in the
form of service in Siberia, or at the Crimean lines of Perecop.  In
either case, unless Weymarn stood his friend, how could he hope to
succour Natalie!

At every tea-house, hotel, and café, his uniform of the Smolensko
Infantry, and the knowledge that he was the staff officer who had
been in Schlusselburg, and who brought the first tidings of the late
affair, made him an object of special interest; but the subject was
alike a perilous and painful one.  Walls have many ears in Russia; so
he was compelled to be silent, or discreet, even to rudeness, though
the following declaration, which was issued by the Empress, might
have allayed his fears:--


"We, Catharine the Second, by the Grace of God, Empress and Sovereign
of all the Russias, &c., &c., make known to our Regiment of Smolensko
Infantry that, according to the equity which we exert towards our
faithful subjects, we cannot represent to ourselves, without profound
grief, how much that regiment must be afflicted, for having among its
officers a wretch in the person of Mierowitz: nevertheless, as the
crime of one man cannot affect those who had no part in it, and that,
besides, we know the bravery with which the regiment has
distinguished itself upon all occasions, its attachment to strict
discipline, and its exactness in the military duty of our empire;
therefore we grant it, through our imperial good-will, the same
assurances of protection which it has in all times deserved.  In
consequence, we forbid all and every one, to reproach or upbraid the
said regiment concerning the treason of Mierowitz, under pain of
incurring our indignation, and drawing on themselves the effects of
our just resentment.

(_Signed_) "CATHARINE."


Hope seemed to revive a little after the issue of this conciliatory
oukaz; but it was speedily dashed, when Balgonie, on returning from
Cronstadt, whither he had been sent by General Weymarn, suddenly met
Captain Vlasfief face to face, near the palace of the favourite
Lanskoi.

This personage he would have avoided like a toad or a leper; but from
him only might he learn something of her he loved in Schlusselburg,
that hateful place to which the Captain was returning; so,
overcoming, or rather concealing, his repugnance, he adjourned with
him to a café, and ordered wine.

"I dare say you have heard," said Vlasfief, with a strange leer in
his eyes, as he tossed his hat and sabre on one sofa and deposited
his jack-booted limbs on another, "how the estates of the Count and
those of Usakoff have been sold or gifted away; pillaged and ravaged
by Lanskoi with a party of Tchernemoski Cossacks; and that the
plunder has been stored up in Schlusselburg?"

"Something of all this I have heard," replied Balgonie, when the
waiter had filled their glasses and withdrawn, "and--and--but you
have there two ladies of the Count's family?"

"True--Mademoiselle Mariolizza, who was engaged to Mierowitz, and the
Count's daughter: one beautifully fair, the other black-haired like a
Pole.  Poor girls!" he continued, while leisurely filling the large
china bowl of a tasselled pipe, which suspiciously resembled one
Charlie had often seen the old Count smoking, "I remember them both
in happier and brighter times; but those who play with fire will, you
know, be burned.  The sentences on all have been found, recorded,
and, in two instances, executed; and they are truly terrible!"

"Executed--the sentence!" repeated Balgonie, in a faint voice.

"Yes; you have been four days at Cronstadt: well, in those four days
many things have been done--a light; thank you.  The Count is now
travelling towards Tobolsk under an escort of Balmain's Lancers.
There he will have to hunt the ermine, cultivate asafœtida, or dig
in the mines, with a collar at his neck, for the remainder of his
days; but for the ladies of his family, a more severe punishment was
reserved: ah! he is a stern fellow, old Panim!"

"How--what?  Vlasfief, you jest?"

"'Tis no jest: we don't jest on such matters in Russia," replied
Vlasfief, who was too thorough a _roué_--too "used up," in fact--to
care for what any woman might suffer or undergo; for every human
emotion and sympathy were dead in this man now.

"What new horrors am I to hear?" exclaimed Balgonie, with passionate
vehemence, as he dashed his heavy Turkish sabre on the table.

Vlasfief smiled sourly, and his cunning eyes twinkled.

"You are a Scot, like Balmain," said he disdainfully; "and as the
Turks--those accursed unbelievers--say, but truly, 'Those who have
never seen the world think it is all like their father's house.'
Pass the bottle--'tis Cracow wine this, and not worth four ducats the
flask.  In short, the--the two ladies of the Count's family, in the
wildness of their grief,--Mariolizza especially,--on hearing of the
death of Mierowitz, permitted their tongues to run riot, and to say
such things of Her Imperial Majesty and some of her favourites, such
as Count Orloff, Lanskoi, the Grenadier, and so forth, as no woman
would pardon, you understand; so they are to be given in succession
to _le maître d'entre les épaules_--the master of the shoulders,"
added Vlasfief, with a species of laugh at the strange expression
which he saw gathering in Balgonie's face.

"Explain, I implore you, explain!" asked the latter, with quivering
lips, as he set down a crystal goblet of Hungarian wine untasted on
the table.

"Mademoiselle Mariolizza--but you don't drink fairly, Ivanovitch--has
received six blows of the knout.  The torturer is a new man, and
mangled her cruelly.  She has had her tongue cut out, and her
forehead branded with the executioner's mark;* and she goes to
Siberia as soon as she recovers: but she will never reach it alive,
even if she escapes the fever that has now seized her; for as the
whole family has been degraded,--declared infamous and without
protection,--being tongueless, she will become the prey of the
Cossacks en route.  Once beyond the Volga, we never know what
happens.  The Count's daughter will undergo exactly similar
punishment; and, if she survives it, they will be mercifully
permitted to travel together: and there ends the House of Mierowitz,
which boasts of its descent from Ruric of Kiev--Ruric the Varagian of
Old Ladoga!"


* The latter punishment is abolished now.


With wonderful coolness of manner, over his wine and pipe, almost
with an occasional jest, the cruel and snakelike Vlasfief--who, as a
parvenu of the foundling hospital (the son of a goat), hated the
hereditary aristocracy--detailed these matters; and Balgonie felt as
if a black cloud enveloped him.  He heard the Captain talking; but
his mind and thoughts were far, far away; and, after a time, he found
himself alone.

Vlasfief had mounted and ridden off; and mechanically, like an
automaton, Balgonie had bidden him adieu at the portico of the café,
and returned to finish his wine, as one in a waking dream: nor was it
until the bell of St. Isaac's tolled midnight, when the lights were
burned low, the fire in the peitchka had died away, the decanters
were empty, and he saw a drowsy waiter hovering near him, that he
rose to depart; for to him, now, all places seemed alike.

In the street a shower of tears revived him; and he wept unseen, like
a great boy, while grinding his teeth and twisting his mustaches like
a furious and desperate man.  Russia, her laws, her rulers, her very
air, he loathed and detested.  But what was he to do?--which way was
he to turn?--was he to permit these horrors, and live?

He had been present when the Regiment of Smolensko guarded the
punishment of Madame Lapouchin, one of the most beautiful women of
the Imperial Court, where she shone like a planet, was loved,
admired, and more than once was fought for.  An alleged conspiracy
brought her to the knout in all her nude loveliness, in the light of
open day; and Charlie remembered that sickening scene, before the
eyes of assembled thousands, and how, as the Abbé d'Anterroche
records, "in a few moments all the skin of her tender back was cut
away in small slips, most of which remained hanging on her shift.
Her tongue was cut out immediately after; and she was banished into
Siberia."

"Oh Natalie, Natalie!" he could but repeat, while he wrung his hands;
and thus the dawn of day found him.

After mature consideration of his position, his powerlessness, and
the difficulties that beset him, with the horrors impending over
Natalie, poor Charlie Balgonie felt maddened, crushed, and
heart-broken.  Could he see her perish without a struggle, an effort,
however reckless, fruitless, and futile, on her behalf, even if he
pistoled the executioner?  Could he know that she too, probably,
would die, in agony and mutilation, a horrible and ignominious
death,--she, so gentle, delicate, and pure,--and would he survive it?

"Hearts will break in this life," says a recent writer; "it is the
nature of them; but if God wills it, and it were possible, it is
honester, braver, and nobler to live than to die."  Most true; but to
live is to hope.  Balgonie vaguely, but sternly, resolved that he
would do something, or--like the hero of a melodrama--"die in the
attempt;" but being a poor, bewildered, loving young fellow, he could
in no way practically see what that something might be.

Let not the reader flatter himself or herself that their own beloved
country was entirely free from legal barbarism at this time; for in
the very year of Ivan's murder,--the fourth year of the reign of His
Majesty George III.,--a woman was burned at the stake in Ilchester
for poisoning her husband.  During the reign of his son, more than
one head was chopped off for treason; and women were flogged by tap
of drum, for petty theft, at the Market Cross of Edinburgh.  Neither
need the superstitions of the poor Muscovites excite surprise, when
we find, in 1867, Highlanders in Scotland putting clay figures into
running streams to bring consumption and wasting upon their enemies;
burying a living cock (as the Pagan sacrificed to Hermes) to cure
epilepsy; and a woman in Somersetshire* cooking toads in a pan,
exactly as the "black and midnight hags" did in the days of Macbeth,
for the amiable purpose of bewitching her neighbours.  So truly does
the world reproduce itself, in spite of its boasted civilisation.


* Western Gazette, September, 1867.


The next day was not far advanced when Balgonie was summoned by
General Weymarn, whose staff he had been resolving to quit; but for
what purpose, or whither to go, he knew not.  With something of a
shudder, he beheld the Stepniak--the comrade and confederate of the
late Nicholas Paulovitch--leaving the General's quarters.

Save that he wore the scarlet livery of his new trade,--torture and
death,--he was unchanged, and was the same hideous and ill-visaged
giant--with square shoulders, enormous beard, mouse-like eyes, hair
shorn off straight across the beetlebrows, and the pine-apple shaped
head--whom Balgonie had seen in the hut where the wretched
Podatchkine perished.  He was now public executioner of St.
Petersburg: under his felon hands had poor Mierowitz and Mariolizza
been, and erelong would Natalie be!

Weymarn was a grave and stern, yet not unkind, old soldier; and, on
perceiving that his young aide-de-camp looked pale, he spoke to him
with unusual kindness, and added:--

"I am sorry to say, that I have a new duty of importance for you to
perform."

"Thanks, General; any excitement is better than--than idleness."

"True.  You will have to ride to Schlusselburg with an escort,
composed of six Cossacks of the Imperial Guard, and bring hither in a
kabitka the sum of eighty thousand roubles, which are there in canvas
bags, _sealed_.  They have been levied on the estates of the Count
Mierowitz.  You will receive them from the officer commanding there:
give a signed receipt, and deliver them into the Imperial Treasury."

Balgonie bowed in silence.

The General, who, of course, knew well the corrupt venality of the
Russian service, added:--

"If the sum is brought entire to the Treasury, Carl Ivanovitch, a
reasonable gratuity will, of course, be paid you."

"Excellency, I require none for doing my duty, either in this or any
other matter," replied Balgonie coldly, even haughtily.

"As you please, sir,--as you please.  Some among us might be less
particular," said the old General, tugging his grisly mustaches.
"And stay; by-the-bye, there is a prisoner in Schlusselburg, whose
sentence is to be executed to-morrow, in presence of the assembled
troops and people here----"

Balgonie thought of but _one_ prisoner there; and an icy chill came
over him, as Weymarn said--

"With the escort and the kabitka, Captain, you will, at the same
time, bring the culprit here."

"And--and this pris--on--oner, Excellency?" faltered the poor fellow.

"Is Jagouski, the Cossack, who so severely wounded Colonel Bernikoff
when in the execution of his duty."

Charlie breathed more freely.

"An order will be necessary for you--a special order: since the
affair of that wretched young fellow Mierowitz, we cannot be too
particular, so take this:--


"'_To the officer commanding in Schlusselburg._

"'You are hereby directed to deliver to Captain Carl Ivanovitch
Balgonie, of the Smolensko Regiment, the prisoner who is to be
executed to-morrow.

"'WEYMARN, _Lieutenant-General._'


"For the delivery of the money, here is a separate order from the
Treasurer--adieu."



CHAPTER XXIII.

WILL HE SUCCEED?

As Balgonie left the presence of General Weymarn, a sudden light
broke through the darkness of his mind--an unlooked-for thought and
hope suddenly inspired him, and a prayer of thanks to Heaven rose to
his lips therefore.  No prisoner was actually designated by name in
the written order of the General!

Thus, in lieu of the Cossack Jagouski, he would demand that Natalie
Mierowna be given into his custody; and with her he would escape,
quit Russia and the service of the Empress at all risks.

He had no papers--no leave of absence, or passport; but, as the
epaulette is an all-powerful badge in Russia, his uniform and his
sabre would be passports enough.  For the rest, he must trust to his
own love and courage, and to his knowledge of the country.  But then
there was the Cossack escort--how was he to rid himself of it?  The
same kind Heaven which favoured and inspired him now, would not fail
to do so, he hoped, when the crisis came.

While his best horse was being saddled and accoutred, and even when
the escort was at the door, he consulted, till the last moment, the
map of Russia, and also that of Finland, which was not ceded to the
latter till forty-four years after; and he made notes of his proposed
route.  Escape by sea, by the Lake of Ladoga, or by the shores of the
Gulf, were alike impossible.

There was no way for it but to ride, at all hazards, towards the
frontier of Finland, or the shores of the Lake of Saima; they would
there be safe beyond pursuit--safe among the hospitable Swedes, who
are always hostile to the grasping and aggressive Russians.  And so
for nearly an hour he sat, compass in hand, calculating the chances
and measuring the distances, while his brain grew giddy, and his
heart was sick, with mingled hope, anxiety, and a love that was full
of terror and compassion.

At last he saw his way clearly, as he thought, through Viborg, from
Schlusselburg, north-westward, in safety.  He put all the money he
possessed--not much, certainly--about his person in gold; filled his
cartridge-box with ammunition, and buckled on his sabre.

"By this time to-morrow," he muttered, as he glanced at his watch,
"the game will have been won or--lost!"

He then mounted, with a resolute heart, and set forth, having with
him a light kabitka, or covered waggon, drawn by a single horse, and
attended by his escort--six Malo-Russian Cossacks who wore the
uniform of Hussars, and who were all stout, athletic, and
noble-looking fellows, whose clean-limbed, active, and hardy little
horses, unmatched for strength and speed, made Balgonie speculate
painfully and anxiously on his slender chance of outstripping them,
if pursued.

It was considerably past the noon of an October day--a dark,
lowering, and ominous day--when they set out for Schlusselburg, and
erelong the rain began to fall heavily, soaking the Hussar finery of
the Cossacks of the Guard; but Charlie Balgonie rode silently on at
their head, heedless of the blinding torrents and the bellowing wind;
though he little knew that as the darkness increased, and the early
night drew on, that the waters of the lake and river were rising
fast, and that a peril, of which he had no conception, already
menaced the existence of Natalie.

But her voice seemed to be ever whispering in his ear--

"Carl, Carl--my beloved Carl, come to my aid--save me--help me, if
you love me!"

When they were mid-way to Schlusselburg, the kabitka driver, who was
either sleepy or tipsy, fell awkwardly from his seat, and broke his
right arm.  What was to be done now?

No Cossack of the Guard would condescend to supply his place, and for
more than an hour the party remained halted in a desolate spot, near
a pine wood, while looking about to capture the first peasant, serf,
or civilian of any kind, whom they might meet, and press him into the
service, as a temporary whip, in the employ of the Empress.

A skulking and somewhat sulky boor, in a fur cap and canvas caftan,
leather leggings and bark shoes, who had been smoking his pipe under
a great tree, was, erelong, discovered, dragged forward, and, with
sundry oaths and threats, commanded to mount the shaft and act as
driver, which he did, with a reluctance he was at no pains to conceal.

Knowing how necessary it was to control or to conciliate this new
acquisition, Balgonie asked him a few questions, with sternness, but
yet with politeness.

The serf was a singularly handsome young man, with eagle-like eyes,
and an aquiline nose, that was almost hooked; he was without his
mustache, which seemed to have been recently shaved off; but he had a
curly red beard, with a complexion of well-nigh Asiatic darkness.

"Trust me, dear Carl Ivanovitch," said he, in a low and impressive
voice, that was strangely familiar to Balgonie.  "My disguise, I
find, is complete indeed, when it deceives even you; but speak in
French."

"Your disguise--yours?"

"Yes,--I am Apollo Usakoff," he added through his teeth.

"Heaven be blessed for this new omen of success!" exclaimed Balgonie,
in French.  "And you were not drowned?"

"No; I swam down the Neva, under water, escaping many a bullet--got
ashore, and reached the old place in the wood, where Olga, the gipsy,
stained my face, trimmed and dyed my beard, as you see.  She is quite
an artist, that girl!  Even Mariolizza would not know me now."

Balgonie sighed as the poor fellow spoke.  Mutilated and disfigured
as she was now, would he have known _her_?  He evidently knew nothing
of the barbarities to which she had been subjected, so Balgonie
resolved, mercifully, to keep him in ignorance; and they proceeded at
an easy pace together, he keeping his horse close by the shaft of the
kabitka, on which the pretended peasant rode; and, as they spoke in
French, a language unknown to their ignorant and half-savage escort,
Usakoff, in referring to the late event and its failure, poured out
all the bitterness, the hate, and fury of his soul, against the
Government, the Councillors, and the rule of the Empress; and, of
course, entered with fervour into the scheme of an escape with
Natalie.  But still their ultimate plans were undecided, when they
saw the red flash of the evening gun, as it pealed from
Schlusselburg, amid the murky haze of a wet and stormy sunset; and
erelong they saw the lights that glittered at times from amid the
massive towers and black outline of that old castle (the scene of so
many terrors, sufferings, and atrocities) streaming and wavering on
the turbulent waters of the lake, and the wet slime of the sluices
and ditches.

When, all dripping and jaded, the escort halted and dismounted under
the castle arch, Balgonie found that some changes were taking place
in the executive of the fortress.

Bernikoff, whose wounds had been inflamed to gangrene, by passion,
rage, and vodka, was at that moment actually on his death-bed, with
Father Chrysostom kneeling by his side.  The old sinner was in all
the agonies and terrors of reviewing his past life on one hand, and
anticipating the coming change on the other.  Many pounds of perfumed
wax candles were flaming now round the effigy of St. Sergius, whom,
in weak and querulous accents, he implored for intercession,
alternately with the Chaplain, to whose cassock he clung tenaciously,
and to whom he was mingling threats of punishment, if he permitted
him to fare ill in the other world, or omitted masses for his soul's
repose.  And that superstition and absurdity might not be wanting
amid this solemn but repulsive scene, from which Balgonie hurried
away with more disgust than pity, Bernikoff was dying in the habit of
a _friar_, with cowl, cord, beads, and sandals, hoping even on his
death-bed, as Ivan the Terrible hoped, when similarly arrayed and
disguised, to cheat the devil, if that dread personage came for his
sinful soul.

The cowl and other paraphernalia he had obtained from the
Chamberlain, or wardrobe-keeper, of the Troitza monastery near the
Louga--a cowl that had lain on the mummy of the uncorrupted saint in
the silver shrine;--and almost with his last breath, he threatened
Father Chrysostom with a drum-head court-martial for venturing to
hint that this attempt to mask his past life was vain without true
repentance.

Leaving this scene, Balgonie presented the order of General Weymarn
and that of the Treasurer, to Captain Vlasfief, who was now in
command, and to whom he stated that "the prisoner referred to was
Mademoiselle Natalie Mierowna."

"Carl Ivanovitch," said the Captain, "you cannot think of leaving
to-night in such a storm of wind and rain?"

"I've seen worse in Silesia," said Balgonie, looking to the locks of
his pistols.

"What of that?"

"But the _verbal_ order of the General was most peremptory."

"Ah!--and you have brought a kabitka for the money?"

"A kabitka for the prisoner also--so be quick, Captain."

"'Tis a large sum in roubles," mused the other.

"I am in haste to be gone!--the prisoner--you hear me, sir?" said
Balgonie impatiently.

"By all the devils, you seem more anxious about the prisoner than the
treasure!" responded Vlasfief sulkily, as he knocked the ashes from
his pipe, but still delayed to move.

"You have my orders--I come in the name of the Empress--let there be
no delay, Captain Vlasfief," was the curt reply.

"Bring in two Cossacks of the escort; the money is here in seventy
bags, each containing a thousand roubles."

"Excuse me, but the order of the Imperial Treasurer says expressly
_eighty_ sealed bags of a thousand each," said Balgonie, trembling
with anxiety, yet compelled to appear to take an interest when he
really felt none.

"Ten thousand are missing," said Vlasfief, leisurely, refilling his
pipe.

"Missing!"

"Yes.  Suppose," he added in a whisper, "suppose we divide the lost
sum between us, and offer a thousand to the Treasurer."

"Impossible, sir!" said Balgonie, with a fiery and impatient manner.

"Well, well--there are the other ten sealed bags," added Captain
Vlasfief, with a dark and stealthy frown of greed and hate, as the
Cossacks tossed the whole among the straw of the kabitka: "it matters
little; but I hope you may not find the road beset, and so lose the
whole."

"To be forewarned, sir, is to be forearmed," said Balgonie, touching
his pistols; for he quite understood the treachery implied, and only
trembled lest it might mar his dearest plans.  "And now, sir, for my
prisoner."

"If she be not drowned; for the lower vaults are apt to be flooded on
such a night as this," said Vlasfief spitefully.

Writhing under the keen glances of this low-born Muscovite, Balgonie
felt that all now depended upon his outward and assumed bearing of
coolness and carelessness.  Night favoured him in this, and his face
was almost concealed.  Could any one then have read his heart, as he,
Usakoff, two Cossacks, and two soldiers of the main-guard made their
way down, down through dark and slimy passages and stairs, till they
were foot deep and then knee deep in the water that flooded the low
and humid corridors, off which were the arched doors of numerous
cells--corridors where spiders spun their webs, rats were swimming,
and terrified bats flew wildly to and fro!

Erelong they reached the door, through the crannies of which
despairing cries and painful gaspings had been heard, and, after
unlocking, forced it open by main strength.

"A great flood of water poured from the aperture amid the darkness,"
says the _Utrecht Gazette_, "and with it came the body of the poor
lady, who was well-nigh drowned."

So the red light seen by Natalie was no fancy, but that of the lamp
which was borne by one of those who came just in time to save her
from the same terrible death by which the Princess Orloff perished.

Lest all might be perilled by a recognition, Balgonie was compelled
to retire and leave her in the Chaplain's hands till she was restored
to consciousness, to warmth, and till she was habited anew; and he
passed three dreadful hours of doubt and anxiety, while pacing to and
fro in the cold and gloomy archways of the fortress, and having to
conceal his face when she was brought forth and supported into the
kabitka, to which two _fresh_ horses were now traced.  Usakoff sprang
on the shaft and flourished his whip; then the Cossacks and Balgonie
put spurs to their chargers, and clattered over the wet drawbridge,
just as the passing bell for the departure of Bernikoff's tortured
spirit rang ominously and solemnly on the stormy gusts of that black
and gloomy night.

Balgonie, instead of proceeding by the way he had come, avoided the
town of Schlusselburg, and wheeled off to the right, committing
himself partly to the guidance of Usakoff, and quite in ignorance
that, about an hour before, Vlasfief, who could by no means let so
many roubles escape without paying toll, had beset two of the roads
by chosen followers of his own--men whom he hoped might pass for some
of the adherents of the late Prince Ivan, rescuing the daughter of
the exiled Count Mierowitz.

A strange incident occurred before the interment of old Bernikoff,
who had a pompous military funeral.  The bottom of his grave was
found to be on fire!

A Scottish doctor (named Rogerson, we believe) at Catharine's Court
attempted to explain this phenomenon, as resulting from a species of
ironstone which was saturated with the phosphorus supplied by the
bones of old interments, and which had been ignited by the friction
of the sexton's shovel; but the superstitious Russians took a very
different and much more diabolical view of the matter, and laughed to
scorn the learned opinion of the Scottish pundit.



CHAPTER XXIV.

CONCLUSION.

Their horses were tolerably refreshed by the halt at Schlusselburg,
and the nags which drew the light kabitka had been quite unused, so
the whole party pushed on at a brisk pace, by the road towards the
frontiers of Finland, the Cossacks of the escort, whatever they
thought, making neither remark nor inquiry, as they trusted
obediently and implicitly to the officer who led them; but the
darkness of the October morning, the deep and muddy, stony and rough,
nature of the roads, and the violence of the storm, erelong began to
have a severe effect upon their cattle, and, to the great
satisfaction of Balgonie, two of the troopers gradually dropped to
the rear, and were seen no more.

Now the Corporal of the Cossacks ventured to hint, that "perhaps they
were not pursuing the way they had come, as the lights in St. Isaac's
Cathedral must have been visible long ago;" but Balgonie replied,
haughtily and briefly, that he "had _special_ orders."

Then the Corporal urged a short halt, as the horses were sinking; but
again Balgonie replied, that he "had peculiar orders, and must push
on."

After passing a little village with a windmill, several miles from
the shore of the Lake of Ladoga, the road dipped down into a dark
hollow, between impending crags of granite, the grey faces of which
were already beginning to brighten in the first light of the lagging
October sun.  The rain and wind were over; the hollow way was fall of
rolling and perplexing mist; but Usakoff affirmed with confidence
that he knew the country well.

Out of the grey vapour, from both sides of the path, there flashed,
redly and luridly, five or six muskets!  One bullet struck white
splinters from the kabitka eliciting a shriek from its occupant;
another whistled through the mane of Charlie's horse; and a third
killed one of the Cossacks, who died without a groan, for it passed
fairly through his temples.

The way was beset by armed men, whose numbers and disposition the dim
light, or, rather, the darkness and the mist, alike served to conceal.

"Make way, in the name of the Empress!" cried Balgonie, dashing
forward, with his sabre drawn; "Nay, I command you, on your peril and
allegiance!" he added, as the threatening words of Vlasfief occurred
to him; and, to his astonishment and dismay, he saw that personage
actually appear, mounted and armed, wearing a regimental hat and
plume, with a kind of dark green tunic, or patrol jacket, richly
braided with gold, and trimmed heavily with black fur.  His party,
who seemed all on foot, were clad like peasants, but were armed with
muskets, which they were rapidly casting about and reloading.

"Halt, in the name of the Empress--halt, I command you! for this is
_not_ the way to St. Petersburg, whither the prisoner and treasure
were to be conveyed.  Treason! treason!" shouted the Staff Captain
Vlasfief.

Balgonie fired a pistol at his head; but the Captain's horse reared,
or was compelled to do so by bit and spur, for the bullet pierced its
throat; and with an oath, Vlasfief fell on the pathway, entangled in
the stirrups as the animal sank under him.

The three remaining Cossacks, who were somewhat bewildered by the
attack, by the appearance of Vlasfief, whom they knew, and whose
confident bearing confirmed certain gathering suspicions that
something was wrong as to their route, now drew their sabres, aimed
several blows at Usakoff's head, and endeavoured to cut the reins of
his horse, or stab it between the shafts, as he lashed the animal
almost to racing speed, and the light kabitka jolted, rolled, and
bounded along the rough road behind it.

By another pistol-shot Balgonie rid himself of the Cossack Corporal,
whose bridle arm he broke, while facing about and galloping in rear
of the kabitka; and now with wild hallooes, the entire party of armed
men followed it on foot, with all speed, up a steep slope, over which
the path wound.

Usakoff ground his teeth, for he was without weapons, and passive in
the flying combat; but, being fertile in expedients, he tore open a
bag of roubles, and scattered them on the upland road with a ready
and reckless hand.

The bright silver coins proved too exciting for the cupidity of the
pursuers, who loitered to pick them up, tumbling, scrambling, rising
and falling over each other, with shouts, curses, and maledictions,
their fire-arms sometimes exploding the while; and so the whole were
speedily left behind, as the kabitka, guarded now by Balgonie alone,
was driven along a lonely and unfrequented road, that led to the
little town of Pomphela.

"Thanks, dear Usakoff--thanks for your presence of mind," said
Balgonie; "I had forgot all about those roubles."

"Silver has achieved for us what neither our lead or steel would have
done!"

"But, to lighten the kabitka, let us throw out those remaining
bags--this perilous lumber, the intended recapture of which has
nearly cost us our lives--honour--all, at the hands of Vlasfief."

"Nay, nay, never!  Lumber, say you?  The roubles are Natalie's--hers
and mine--hers and yours, when you wed her; they have saved us once,
and may do so again," replied Usakoff cheerfully, as the sun burst
forth in his clear October splendour, and they saw the dome-shaped
cupola of the Church of Pomphela rising with a golden gleam from amid
the white morning haze.

There Balgonie's uniform and a display of gold and roubles operated
powerfully on the Postmaster, who, without asking for passports or
other papers, at once, and in the name of the Empress, supplied them
with fresh horses for the frontier, towards which, after procuring
some proper nourishment and restoratives for Natalie, they pushed on
without a moment of unnecessary delay.

"Ah," thought Balgonie, with a shudder and a prayer; "had Jagouski's
name not been omitted in that order of Weymarn, where would she have
been now?"

Pale with sorrow and long suffering, her face was still beautiful,
though sorely wasted; the deep thoughtful eyes had yet a wealth--a
world of tenderness in their liquid depths; and the long dark hair
was thick, soft, and wavy as ever, as it fell in masses behind the
small, compact, and finely-formed head.

Yet withal, her wretchedness had been extreme, having been so
suddenly and rudely rent from all those habits of luxury and tender
nurture, which had become, as it were, a second nature; and often,
very often, had it occurred to her in her later misery of soul "that
the repose of the grave is sweet, and that there cometh after death a
levelling and making even of things which would at last cure all her
evils."

But all was changed now; and, as she laid her head on Charlie's
breast, she felt content--almost happy; and the horrors that hung
over her family alone prevented her, as yet, from being completely so.

No trace of pursuers were behind them now, though their flight must
by this time have been known both in the capital and at
Schlusselburg.  But in those days there were neither railroads nor
electric telegraphs; so, riding on more leisurely, Balgonie changed
horses again near Viborg, and erelong the great Lake of Saima
appeared before them, with the distant hills of Swedish Finland
beyond its friendly waters.

A boat was procured there; the kabitka was abandoned; and, with a
shout of joy, Usakoff assisted the Finnish boatman to hoist the great
lug-sail to catch the breeze of a balmy and beautiful evening, as
they bade a long farewell to Russia and all its terrors.

In a quaint old Church of Finland, by the eastern shore of the Lake
of Saima, and in view of its little archipelago of granite isles,--a
lonely little fane, buried amid groves of plum and cherry trees,
built of wood and painted red, with a little holy bell jangling in
its humble belfry,--Charlie Balgonie and his fugitive bride were
united by the old Curate, with the consent of the Lutheran Bishop of
Heinola; and there a thousand roubles spent among the poor spread in
the primitive district a happiness, the tradition of which is still
remembered with many a grateful exaggeration.

After this, poor Usakoff, finding himself perhaps, as a third person,
rather in the way, left them to become a soldier of fortune; and he
is supposed to have perished in one of the Polish struggles for
freedom; at least, they heard of him no more, after their final
journey to Scotland.

Two years before these events, it would appear that Charlie's uncle,
"the godly and upright" Gamaliel Balgonie, merchant, magistrate, and
elder, had departed in peace to sin no more, leaving the lands and
possessions of Balgonie unimpaired; and a long tombstone in that
famous city of the dead, the Howff of Dundee, records at length all
the virtues which his contemporaries in general and the Presbytery in
particular believed him to possess.

So Carl Ivanovitch became once more Balgonie of that Ilk; and the
roubles of Natalie added many a turret and many an acre to his
patrimonial dwelling in beautiful Strathearn.



L'ENVOI.--ILLUSTRATIVE NOTE.

To convince the reader how nearly History has been followed in the
previous pages, we shall take the liberty of inserting the subsequent
manifesto, published with reference to the death of Ivan IV.


"By the Grace of God, we, Catharine the Second, Empress and
Autocratrice of all the Russias, &c., &c., to all whom these presents
may concern:

When by the divine will, and in compliance with the unanimous desires
of our faithful subjects, we ascended the throne of Russia, we were
not ignorant that Ivan, son of Anthony, Prince of
Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, and of the Princess Anne of Mecklenburg was
still alive.  This Prince, as is well known, was immediately after
his birth unlawfully declared heir to the imperial crown; _but_, by
the decrees of Providence, he was soon after irrevocably excluded
from that high dignity, and the sceptre was placed in the hands of
the lawful heiress, Elizabeth (daughter of Peter the Great), our
beloved aunt of glorious memory.

"After we had ascended the throne, and offered up to Heaven our just
thanksgivings, the first object that employed our thoughts, in
consequence of _that humanity which is so natural to us_, was the
unhappy situation of that Prince, who was _dethroned_ by _divine
Providence_, and had been unfortunate since his birth.

"To prevent, therefore, ill-intentioned persons from giving him any
trouble, or from making use of his name to disturb the public
tranquillity, we gave him a guard, and placed about his person two
officers, in whose fidelity and integrity we could confide.  These
were Captain Vlasfief and Lieutenant Tschekin, who by their long
military services deserved a suitable recompense, and a station in
which they might pass quietly the remainder of their days.  They were
accordingly charged with the care of the Prince, and were strictly
enjoined to let none approach him.  Yet all these precautions were
not sufficient....

"A _Put-parooschick_ (a sub-lieutenant) of the Regiment of Smolensko,
a native of the Ukraine, Basil Mierowitz (grandson of the first rebel
that followed Mazeppa), took it into his head to make use of this
Prince, to advance his fortune at all events, without being
restrained by a consideration of the bloody scene that such an
attempt might occasion.  In order to execute this detestable,
dangerous, and desperate project, he contrived, during our absence in
Livonia, to be upon guard in the fortress of Schlusselburg, where the
guard is relieved every eight days; and the 15th of last month, about
two in the morning, he called out the main guard, formed it in line,
and ordered the soldiers to load with ball.  Bernikoff, Governor of
the fortress, came out of his apartment, and asked Mierowitz the
reason of the disturbance, but received no other answer from this
rebel than a blow with the butt-end of his musket.

"Captain Vlasfief and Lieutenant Tschekin seeing that it was
impossible to resist such a superior force, and considering the
unhappy consequences that must ensue from the deliverance of THE
PERSOX who was committed to their care, after deliberating together,
took the only step that they thought proper to maintain public
tranquillity, which was to _cut short the days of the unfortunate
Ivan_.  Mierowitz, on seeing the dead body of the Prince, was so
confounded by a sight he so little expected, that he acknowledged his
temerity and guilt, and discovered his repentance to the troops,
whom, about an hour before, he had seduced from their duty, and
rendered the accomplices of his crime.

"Then it was that the two officers who had nipped this rebellion in
the bud, joined the Governor of the fortress in securing this rebel,
and bringing back the soldiers to their duty.  They also sent to our
Privy Councillor Count Fanin, _under whose orders they acted_, a
relation of this event, which, though unhappy, has nevertheless,
_under the protection of Heaven_, prevented still greater calamities.
This Senator despatched immediately _Pulovnick_ (Colonel) Caschkin,
with sufficient instructions to maintain tranquillity on the spot (or
where the assassination was committed), and sent us, at the same
time, a circumstantial account of the whole affair.  In consequence
of this, we ordered Lieutenant-General Weymarn, of the division of
St. Petersburg, to take the necessary information on the spot; and
the confession of the villain himself, who has acknowledged his crime.

"Sensible of its enormity and consequences with regard to the peace
of our country, we have referred the whole affair to the
consideration of our Senate, which we have ordered, jointly with the
Synod, to invite the three first classes and the Presidents of all
the Colleges to hear the verbal relation of General Weymarn, who has
taken the proper informations, to pronounce sentence in consequence
thereof, and to present it to us, for confirmation of the same.

"CATHARINE."


By a singular species of sophistry, the guilt of Ivan's death is
thus, by a subsequent document, transferred to Basil Mierowitz:--

"As the violent death of the unfortunate Prince Ivan was the
immediate consequence of the desperate attempt of Mierowitz, so must
this officer be considered as the principal cause of this
assassination--nay, even regarded as _the murderer of that unhappy
Prince_."

To this, five Russian Bishops appended their signatures.

Vlasfief was made a General, and his Lieutenant a Colonel, in the
following year, with a pension of ten thousand roubles each.



THE END.



PRINTED BY W. H. SMITH AND SON, 186, STRAND, LONDON.

9-8-69.





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "The Secret Dispatch - or, The Adventures of Captain Balgonie" ***

Copyright 2023 LibraryBlog. All rights reserved.



Home