But Joan’s punishment, which was destined to be slow as well
as dreadful, to last thirty-seven years and end in a ghastly death, was
now only beginning. All the wretched beings who were stained with
Andre’s death came in turn to her to demand the price of blood. The Catanese
and her son, who held in their hands not only the queen’s honour but
her life, now became doubly greedy and exacting. Dona Cancha no longer
put any bridle on her licentiousness, and the Empress of
Constantinople ordered her niece to marry her eldest son, Robert, Prince of
Tarentum. Joan, consumed by remorse, full of indignation and shame at the
arrogant conduct of her subjects, dared scarcely lift her head, and stooped
to entreaties, only stipulating for a few days’ delay before giving
her answer: the empress consented, on condition that her son should come
to reside at Castel Nuovo, with permission to see the queen once a
day. Joan bowed her head in silence, and Robert of Tarentum was installed
at the castle.
Charles of Durazzo, who by the death of Andre had
practically become the head of the family, and, would, by the terms of his
grandfather’s will, inherit the kingdom by right of his wife Marie in the
case of Joan’s dying without lawful issue, sent to the queen two commands:
first, that she should not dream of contracting a new marriage without
first consulting him in the choice of a husband; secondly, that she
should invest him at once with the title of Duke of Calabria. To compel
his cousin to make these two concessions, he added that if she should be
so ill advised as to refuse either of them, he should hand over to
justice the proofs of the crime and the names of the murderers. Joan,
bending beneath the weight of this new difficulty, could think of no way
to avoid it; but Catherine, who alone was stout enough to fight this
nephew of hers, insisted that they must strike at the Duke of Durazzo in
his ambition and hopes, and tell him, to begin with—what was the
fact—that the queen was pregnant. If, in spite of this news, he persisted in
his plans, she would find some means or other, she said, of causing
trouble and discord in her nephew’s family, and wounding him in his
most intimate affections or closest interests, by publicly dishonouring
him through his wife or his mother.
Charles smiled coldly when his
aunt came to tell him from the queen that she was about to bring into the
world an infant, Andre’s posthumous child. What importance could a babe yet
unborn possibly have—as a fact, it lived only a few months—in the eyes of a
man who with such admirable coolness got rid of people who stood in his wary,
and that moreover by the hand of his own enemies? He told the empress that
the happy news she had condescended to bring him in person, far from
diminishing his kindness towards his cousin, inspired him rather with more
interest and goodwill; that consequently he reiterated his suggestion, and
renewed his promise not to seek vengeance for his dear Andre, since in a
certain sense the crime was not complete should a child be destined to
survive; but in case of a refusal he declared himself inexorable. He
cleverly gave Catherine to understand that, as she had some interest herself
in the prince’s death, she ought for her own sake to persuade the queen
to stop legal proceedings.
The empress seemed to be deeply impressed
by her nephew’s threatening attitude, and promised to do her best to persuade
the queen to grant all he asked, on condition, however, that Charles should
allow the necessary time for carrying through so delicate a business. But
Catherine profited by this delay to think out her own plan of revenge, and
ensure the means of certain success. After starting several projects eagerly
and then regretfully abandoning them, she fixed upon an infernal and
unheard-of scheme, which the mind would refuse to believe but for the
unanimous testimony of historians. Poor Agnes of Duras, Charles’s mother, had
for some few days been suffering with an inexplicable weariness, a
slow painful malady with which her son’s restlessness and violence may
have had not a little to do. The empress resolved that the first effect
of her hatred was to fall upon this unhappy mother. She summoned the
Count of Terlizzi and Dona Cancha, his mistress, who by the queen’s orders
had been attending Agnes since her illness began. Catherine suggested to
the young chamberwoman, who was at that time with child, that she
should deceive the doctor by representing that certain signs of her
own condition really belonged to the sick woman, so that he, deceived by
the false indications, should be compelled to admit to Charles of
Durazzo that his mother was guilty and dishonoured. The Count of Terlizzi,
who ever since he had taken part in the regicide trembled in fear
of discovery, had nothing to oppose to the empress’s desire, and
Dona Cancha, whose head was as light as her heart was corrupt, seized with
a foolish gaiety on any chance of taking her revenge on the prudery of
the only princess of the blood who led a pure life at a court that
was renowned for its depravity. Once assured that her accomplices would
be prudent and obedient, Catherine began to spread abroad certain vague
and dubious but terribly serious rumours, only needing proof, and soon
after the cruel accusation was started it was repeated again and again
in confidence, until it reached the ears of Charles.
At this amazing
revelation the duke was seized with a fit of trembling. He sent instantly for
the doctor, and asked imperiously what was the cause of his mother’s malady.
The doctor turned pale and stammered; but when Charles grew threatening he
admitted that he had certain grounds for suspecting that the duchess was
enceinte, but as he might easily have been deceived the first time, he would
make a second investigation before pronouncing his opinion in so serious a
matter. The next day, as the doctor came out of the bedroom, the duke met
him, and interrogating him with an agonised gesture, could only judge by the
silence that his fears were too well confirmed. But the doctor, with excess
of caution, declared that he would make a third trial. Condemned criminals
can suffer no worse than Charles in the long hours that passed before
that fatal moment when he learned that his mother was indeed guilty. On
the third day the doctor stated on his soul and conscience that Agnes
of Durazzo was pregnant.
"Very good," said Charles, dismissing the
doctor with no sign of emotion.
That evening the duchess took a
medicine ordered by the doctor; and when, half an hour later, she was
assailed with violent pains, the duke was warned that perhaps other
physicians ought to be consulted, as the prescription of the ordinary doctor,
instead of bringing about an improvement in her state, had only made her
worse.
Charles slowly went up to the duchess’s room, and sending away all
the people who were standing round her bed, on the pretext that they
were clumsy and made his mother worse, he shut the door, and they were
alone. Then poor Agnes, forgetting her internal agony when she saw her
son, pressed his hand tenderly and smiled through her tears.
Charles,
pale beneath his bronzed complexion, his forehead moist with a cold sweat,
and his eyes horribly dilated, bent over the sick woman and asked her
gloomily—
"Are you a little better, mother?"
"Ah, I am in pain, in
frightful pain, my poor Charles. I feel as though I have molten lead in my
veins. O my son, call your brothers, so that I may give you all my blessing
for the last time, for I cannot hold out long against this pain. I am
burning. Mercy! Call a doctor: I know I have been poisoned."
Charles
did not stir from the bedside.
"Water!" cried the dying woman in a broken
voice,—"water! A doctor, a confessor! My children—I want my
children!"
And as the duke paid no heed, but stood moodily silent, the
poor mother, prostrated by pain, fancied that grief had robbed her son of all
power of speech or movement, and so, by a desperate effort, sat up,
and seizing him by the arm, cried with all the strength she could
muster—
"Charles, my son, what is it? My poor boy, courage; it is
nothing, I hope. But quick, call for help, call a doctor. Ah, you have no
idea of what I suffer."
"Your doctor," said Charles slowly and coldly,
each word piercing his mother’s heart like a dagger,—"your doctor cannot
come."
"Oh why?" asked Agnes, stupefied.
"Because no one ought to
live who knows the secret of our shame."
"Unhappy man!" she cried,
overwhelmed with, pain and terror, "you have murdered him! Perhaps you have
poisoned your mother too! Charles, Charles, have mercy on your own
soul!"
"It is your doing," said Charles, without show of emotion: "you
have driven me into crime and despair; you have caused my dishonour in
this world and my damnation in the next."
"What are you saying? My own
Charles, have mercy! Do not let me die in this horrible uncertainty; what
fatal delusion is blinding you? Speak, my son, speak: I am not feeling the
poison now. What have I done? Of what have I been accused?"
She looked
with haggard eyes at her son: her maternal love still struggled against the
awful thought of matricide; at last, seeing that Charles remained speechless
in spite of her entreaties, she repeated, with a piercing cry—
"Speak,
in God’s name, speak before I die!"
"Mother, you are with
child."
"What!" cried Agnes, with a loud cry, which broke her very heart.
"O God, forgive him! Charles, your mother forgives and blesses you
in death."
Charles fell upon her neck, desperately crying for help: he
would now have gladly saved her at the cost of his life, but it was too late.
He uttered one cry that came from his heart, and was found stretched
out upon his mother’s corpse.
Strange comments were made at the court
on the death of the Duchess of Durazzo and her doctor’s disappearance; but
there was no doubt at all that grief and gloom were furrowing wrinkles on
Charles’s brow, which was already sad enough. Catherine alone knew the
terrible cause of her nephew’s depression, for to her it was very plain that
the duke at one blow had killed his mother and her physician. But she had
never expected a reaction so sudden and violent in a man who shrank before no
crime. She had thought Charles capable of everything except remorse.
His gloomy, self absorbed silence seemed a bad augury for her plans. She
had desired to cause trouble for him in his own family, so that he
might have no time to oppose the marriage of her son with the queen; but
she had shot beyond her mark, and Charles, started thus on the terrible
path of crime, had now broken through the bonds of his holiest
affections, and gave himself up to his bad passions with feverish ardour and
a savage desire for revenge. Then Catherine had recourse to gentleness
and submission. She gave her son to understand that there was only one
way of obtaining the queen’s hand, and that was by flattering the
ambition of Charles and in some sort submitting himself to his patronage.
Robert of Tarentum understood this, and ceased making court to Joan,
who received his devotion with cool kindness, and attached himself
closely to Charles, paying him much the same sort of respect and deference
that he himself had affected for Andre, when the thought was first in
his mind of causing his ruin. But the Duke of Durazzo was by no
means deceived as to the devoted friendship shown towards him by the heir
of the house of Tarentum, and pretending to be deeply touched by
the unexpected change of feeling, he all the time kept a strict guard
on Robert’s actions.
An event outside all human foresight occurred to
upset the calculations of the two cousins. One day while they were out
together on horseback, as they often were since their pretended
reconciliation, Louis of Tarentum, Robert’s youngest brother, who had always
felt for Joan a chivalrous, innocent love,—a love which a young man of twenty
is apt to lock up in his heart as a secret treasure,—Louis, we say, who had
held aloof from the infamous family conspiracy and had not soiled his
hands with Andre’s blood, drawn on by an irrepressible passion, all at
once appeared at the gates of Castel Nuovo; and while his brother was
wasting precious hours in asking for a promise of marriage, had the
bridge raised and gave the soldiers strict orders to admit no one. Then,
never troubling himself about Charles’s anger or Robert’s jealousy, he
hurried to the queen’s room, and there, says Domenico Gravina, without
any preamble, the union was consummated.
On returning from his ride,
Robert, astonished that the bridge was not at once lowered for him, at first
loudly called upon the soldiers on guard at the fortress, threatening severe
punishment for their unpardonable negligence; but as the gates did not open
and the soldiers made no sign of fear or regret, he fell into a violent fit
of rage, and swore he would hang the wretches like dogs for hindering his
return home. But the Empress of Constantinople, terrified at the bloody
quarrel beginning between the two brothers, went alone and on foot to her
son, and making use of her maternal authority to beg him to master
his feelings, there in the presence of the crowd that had come up hastily
to witness the strange scene, she related in a low voice all that
had passed in his absence.
A roar as of a wounded tiger escaped from
Robert’s breast: all but blind with rage, he nearly trampled his mother under
the feet of his horse, which seemed to feel his master’s anger, and plunging
violently, breathed blood from his nostrils. When the prince had poured
every possible execration on his brother’s head, he turned and galloped
away from the accursed castle, flying to the Duke of Durazzo, whom he
had only just left, to tell him of this outrage and stir him to
revenge. Charles was talking carelessly with his young wife, who was but
little used to such tranquil conversation and expansiveness, when the Prince
of Tarentum, exhausted, out of breath, bathed in perspiration, came up
with his incredible tale. Charles made him say it twice over, so
impossible did Louis’s audacious enterprise appear to him. Then quickly
changing from doubt to fury, he struck his brow with his iron glove, saying
that as the queen defied him he would make her tremble even in her castle
and in her lover’s arms. He threw one withering look on Marie,
who interceded tearfully for her sister, and pressing Robert’s hand
with warmth, vowed that so long as he lived Louis should never be
Joan’s husband.
That same evening he shut himself up in his study, and
wrote letters whose effect soon appeared. A bull, dated June 2, 1346, was
addressed to Bertram de Baux, chief-justice of the kingdom of Sicily and
Count of Monte Scaglioso, with orders to make the most strict
inquiries concerning Andre’s murderers, whom the pope likewise laid under
his anathema, and to punish them with the utmost rigour of the law. But
a secret note was appended to the bull which was quite at variance
with the designs of Charles: the sovereign pontiff expressly bade
the chief-justice not to implicate the queen in the proceedings or
the princes of the blood, so as to avoid worse disturbances, reserving,
as supreme head of the Church and lord of the kingdom, the right of
judging them later on, as his wisdom might dictate.
For this imposing
trial Bertram de Baux made great preparations. A platform was erected in the
great hall of tribunal, and all the officers of the crown and great state
dignitaries, and all the chief barons, had a place behind the enclosure where
the magistrates sat. Three days after Clement VI’s bull had been published in
the capital, the chief-justice was ready for a public examination of two
accused persons. The two culprits who had first fallen into the hands of
justice were, as one may easily suppose, those whose condition was least
exalted, whose lives were least valuable, Tommaso Pace and Nicholas of
Melazzo. They were led before the tribunal to be first of all tortured, as
the custom was. As they approached the judges, the notary passing by Charles
in the street had time to say in a low voice—
"My lord, the time has
come to give my life for you: I will do my duty; I commend my wife and
children to you."
Encouraged by a nod from his patron, he walked on
firmly and deliberately. The chief-justice, after establishing the identity
of the accused, gave them over to the executioner and his men to be tortured
in the public square, so that their sufferings might serve as a show and
an example to the crowd. But no sooner was Tommaso Pace tied to the
rope, when to the great disappointment of all he declared that he
would confess everything, and asked accordingly to be taken back before
his judges. At these words, the Count of Terlizzi, who was following
every movement of the two men with mortal anxiety, thought it was all over
now with him and his accomplices; and so, when Tommaso Pace was turning
his steps towards the great hall, led by two guards, his hands tied
behind his back, and followed by the notary, he contrived to take him into
a secluded house, and squeezing his throat with great force, made him
thus put his tongue out, whereupon he cut it off with a sharp
razor.
The yells of the poor wretch so cruelly mutilated fell on the ears
of the Duke of Durazzo: he found his way into the room where the
barbarous act had been committed just as the Count of Terlizzi was coming
out, and approached the notary, who had been present at the dreadful
spectacle and had not given the least sign of fear or emotion. Master
Nicholas, thinking the same fate was in store for him, turned calmly to the
duke, saying with a sad smile—
"My lord, the precaution is useless;
there is no need for you to cut out my tongue, as the noble count has done to
my poor companion. The last scrap of my flesh may be torn off without one
word being dragged from my mouth. I have promised, my lord, and you have the
life of my wife and the future of my children as guarantee for my
word."
"I do not ask for silence," said the duke solemnly; "you can free
me from all my enemies at once, and I order you to denounce them at
the tribunal."
The notary bowed his head with mournful resignation;
then raising it in affright, made one step up to the duke and murmured in a
choking voice—
"And the queen?"
"No one would believe you if you
ventured to denounce her; but when the Catanese and her son, the Count of
Terlizzi and his wife and her most intimate friends, have been accused by
you, when they fail to endure the torture, and when they denounce her
unanimously—"
"I see, my lord. You do not only want my life; you would
have my soul too. Very well; once more I commend to you my
children."
With a deep sigh he walked up to the tribunal. The
chief-justice asked Tommaso Pace the usual questions, and a shudder of horror
passed through the assembly when they saw the poor wretch in desperation
opening his mouth, which streamed with blood. But surprise and terror reached
their height when Nicholas of Melazzo slowly and firmly gave a list of
Andre’s murderers, all except the queen and the princes of the blood, and
went on to give all details of the assassination.
Proceedings were at
once taken for the arrest of the grand seneschal, Robert of Cabane, and the
Counts of Terlizzi and Morcone, who were present and had not ventured to make
any movement in self-defence. An hour later, Philippa, her two daughters, and
Dona Cancha joined them in prison, after vainly imploring the queen’s
protection. Charles and Bertrand of Artois, shut up in their fortress of
Saint Agatha, bade defiance to justice, and several others, among them the
Counts of Meleto and Catanzaro, escaped by flight.
As soon as Master
Nicholas said he had nothing further to confess, and that he had spoken the
whole truth and nothing but the truth, the chief-justice pronounced sentence
amid a profound silence; and without delay Tommaso Pace and the notary were
tied to the tails of two horses, dragged through the chief streets of the
town, and hanged in the market place.
The other prisoners were thrown
into a subterranean vault, to be questioned and put to the torture on the
following day. In the evening, finding themselves in the same dungeon, they
reproached one another, each pretending he had been dragged into the crime by
someone else. Then Dona Cancha, whose strange character knew no
inconsistencies, even face to face with death and torture, drowned with a
great burst of laughter the lamentations of her companions, and joyously
exclaimed—
"Look here, friends, why these bitter recriminations—this
ill-mannered raving? We have no excuses to make, and we are all equally
guilty. I am the youngest of all, and not the ugliest, by your leave, ladies,
but if I am condemned, at least I will die cheerfully. For I have never
denied myself any pleasure I could get in this world, and I can boast that
much will be forgiven me, for I have loved much: of that you, gentlemen,
know something. You, bad old man," she continued to the Count of
Terlizzi, "do you not remember lying by my side in the queen’s ante-chamber?
Come, no blushes before your noble family; confess, my lord, that I am
with child by your Excellency; and you know how we managed to make up
the story of poor Agnes of Durazzo and her pregnancy—God rest her soul!
For my part, I never supposed the joke would take such a serious turn all
at once. You know all this and much more; spare your lamentations, for,
by my word, they are getting very tiresome: let us prepare to die
joyously, as we have lived."
With these words she yawned slightly,
and, lying down on the straw, fell into a deep sleep, and dreamed as happy
dreams as she had ever dreamed in her life.
On the morrow from break
of day there was an immense crowd on the sea front. During the night an
enormous palisade had been put up to keep the people away far enough for them
to see the accused without hearing anything. Charles of Durazzo, at the head
of a brilliant cortege of knights and pages, mounted on a magnificent horse,
all in black, as a sign of mourning, waited near the enclosure. Ferocious joy
shone in his eyes as the accused made their way through the crowd, two by
two, their wrists tied with ropes; for the duke every minute expected to hear
the queen’s name spoken. But the chief-justice, a man of experience,
had prevented indiscretion of any kind by fixing a hook in the tongue
of each one. The poor creatures were tortured on a ship, so that
nobody should hear the terrible confessions their sufferings dragged from
them.
But Joan, in spite of the wrongs that most of the conspirators had
done her, felt a renewal of pity for the woman she had once respected as
a mother, for her childish companions and her friends, and possibly
also some remains of love for Robert of Cabane, and sent two messengers
to beg Bertram de Baux to show mercy to the culprits. But the
chief-justice seized these men and had them tortured; and on their confession
that they also were implicated in Andre’s murder, he condemned them to
the same punishment as the others. Dona Cancha alone, by reason of
her situation, escaped the torture, and her sentence was deferred till
the day of her confinement.
As this beautiful girl was returning to
prison, with many a smile for all the handsomest cavaliers she could see in
the crowd, she gave a sign to Charles of Durazzo as she neared him to come
forward, and since her tongue had not been pierced (for the same reason) with
an iron instrument, she said some words to him a while in a low
voice.
Charles turned fearfully pale, and putting his hand to his sword,
cried—
"Wretched woman!"
"You forget, my lord, I am under the
protection of the law."
"My mother!—oh, my poor mother!" murmured Charles
in a choked voice, and he fell backward.
The next morning the people
were beforehand with the executioner, loudly demanding their prey. All the
national troops and mercenaries that the judicial authorities could command
were echelonned in the streets, opposing a sort of dam to the torrent of the
raging crowd. The sudden insatiable cruelty that too often degrades human
nature had awaked in the populace: all heads were turned with hatred and
frenzy; all imaginations inflamed with the passion for revenge; groups of men
and women, roaring like wild beasts, threatened to knock down the walls
of the prison, if the condemned were not handed over to them to take to
the place of punishment: a great murmur arose, continuous, ever the
same, like the growling of thunder: the queen’s heart was petrified
with terror.
But, in spite of the desire of Bertram de Baux to satisfy
the popular wish, the preparations for the solemn execution were not
completed till midday, when the sun’s rays fell scorchingly upon the town.
There went up a mighty cry from ten thousand palpitating breasts when a
report first ran through the crowd that the prisoners were about to
appear. There was a moment of silence, and the prison doors rolled slowly
back on their hinges with a rusty, grating noise. A triple row of
horsemen, with lowered visor and lance in rest, started the procession, and
amid yells and curses the condemned prisoners came out one by one, each
tied upon a cart, gagged and naked to the waist, in charge of
two executioners, whose orders were to torture them the whole length
of their way. On the first cart was the former laundress of
Catana, afterwards wife of the grand seneschal and governess to the
queen, Philippa of Cabane: the two executioners at right and left of
her scourged her with such fury that the blood spurting up from the
wounds left a long track in all the streets passed by the
cortege.
Immediately following their mother on separate carts came the
Countesses of Terlizzi and Morcone, the elder no more than eighteen years of
age. The two sisters were so marvellously beautiful that in the crowd
a murmur of surprise was heard, and greedy eyes were fixed upon
their naked trembling shoulders. But the men charged to torture them
gazed with ferocious smiles upon their forms of seductive beauty, and,
armed with sharp knives, cut off pieces of their flesh with a
deliberate enjoyment and threw them out to the crowd, who eagerly struggled
to get them, signing to the executioners to show which part of the
victims’ bodies they preferred.
Robert of Cabane, the grand seneschal,
the Counts of Terlizzi and Morcone, Raymond Pace, brother of the old valet
who had been executed the day before, and many more, were dragged on similar
carts, and both scourged with ropes and slashed with knives; their flesh was
torn out with red-hot pincers, and flung upon brazen chafing-dishes. No cry
of pain was heard from the grand seneschal, he never stirred once in
his frightful agony; yet the torturers put such fury into their work
that the poor wretch was dead before the goal was reached.
In the
centre of the square of Saint Eligius an immense stake was set up: there the
prisoners were taken, and what was left of their mutilated bodies was thrown
into the flames. The Count of Terlizzi and the grand seneschal’s widow were
still alive, and two tears of blood ran down the cheeks of the miserable
mother as she saw her son’s corpse and the palpitating remains of her two
daughters cast upon the fire—they by their stifled cries showed that they had
not ceased to suffer. But suddenly a fearful noise overpowered the groans of
the victims; the enclosure was broken and overturned by the mob. Like madmen,
they rushed at the burning pile,—armed with sabres, axes, and knives, and
snatching the bodies dead or alive from the flames, tore them to pieces,
carrying off the bones to make whistles or handles for their daggers as
a souvenir of this horrible day.
CHAPTER VI
The
spectacle of this frightful punishment did not satisfy the revenge of Charles
of Durazzo. Seconded by the chief-justice, he daily brought about fresh
executions, till Andre’s death came to be no more than a pretext for the
legal murder of all who opposed his projects. But Louis of Tarentum, who had
won Joan’s heart, and was eagerly trying to get the necessary dispensation
for legalising the marriage, from this time forward took as a personal insult
every act of the high court of justice which was performed against his will
and against the queen’s prerogative: he armed all his adherents, increasing
their number by all the adventurers he could get together, and so put on foot
a strong enough force to support his own party and resist his cousin. Naples
was thus split up into hostile camps, ready to come to blows on the
smallest pretext, whose daily skirmishes, moreover, were always followed by
some scene of pillage or death.
But Louis had need of money both to
pay his mercenaries and to hold his own against the Duke of Durazzo and his
own brother Robert, and one day he discovered that the queen’s coffers were
empty. Joan was wretched and desperate, and her lover, though generous and
brave and anxious to reassure her so far as he could, did not very clearly
see how to extricate himself from such a difficult situation. But his
mother Catherine, whose ambition was satisfied in seeing one of her sons,
no matter which, attain to the throne of Naples, came unexpectedly to
their aid, promising solemnly that it would only take her a few days to
be able to lay at her niece’s feet a treasure richer than anything she
had ever dreamed of, queen as she was.
The empress then took half her
son’s troops, made for Saint Agatha, and besieged the fortress where Charles
and Bertrand of Artois had taken refuge when they fled from justice. The old
count, astonished at the sight of this woman, who had been the very soul of
the conspiracy, and not in the least understanding her arrival as an enemy,
sent out to ask the intention of this display of military force. To which
Catherine replied in words which we translate literally:
"My friends,
tell Charles, our faithful friend, that we desire to speak with him privately
and alone concerning a matter equally interesting to us both, and he is not
to be alarmed at our arriving in the guise of an enemy, for this we have done
designedly, as we shall explain in the course of our interview. We know he is
confined to bed by the gout, and therefore feel no surprise at his not coming
out to meet us. Have the goodness to salute him on our part and reassure him,
telling him that we desire to come in, if such is his good pleasure, with our
intimate counsellor, Nicholas Acciajuoli, and ten soldiers only, to speak
with him concerning an important matter that cannot be entrusted
to go-betweens."
Entirely reassured by these frank, friendly
explanations, Charles of Artois sent out his son Bertrand to the empress to
receive her with the respect due to her rank and high position at the court
of Naples. Catherine went promptly to the castle with many signs of joy,
and inquiring after the count’s health and expressing her affection, as
soon as they were alone, she mysteriously lowered her voice and
explained that the object of her visit was to consult a man of tried
experience on the affairs of Naples, and to beg his active cooperation in the
queen’s favour. As, however, she was not pressed for time, she could wait
at Saint Agatha for the count’s recovery to hear his views and tell him
of the march of events since he left the court. She succeeded so well
in gaining the old man’s confidence and banishing his suspicions, that
he begged her to honour them with her presence as long as she was able,
and little by little received all her men within the walls. This was
what Catherine was waiting for: on the very day when her army was
installed at Saint Agatha, she suddenly entered the count’s room, followed by
four soldiers, and seizing the old man by the throat, exclaimed
wrathfully—
"Miserable traitor, you will not escape from our hands before
you have received the punishment you deserve. In the meanwhile, show me
where your treasure is hidden, if you would not have me throw your body out
to feed the crows that are swooping around these dungeons."
The count,
half choking, the dagger at his breast, did not even attempt to call for
help; he fell on his knees, begging the empress to save at least the life of
his son, who was not yet well from the terrible attack of melancholia that
had shaken his reason ever since the catastrophe. Then he painfully dragged
himself to the place where he had hidden his treasure, and pointing with his
finger, cried—
"Take all; take my life; but spare my
son."
Catherine could not contain herself for joy when she saw spread out
at her feet exquisite and incredibly valuable cups, caskets of
pearls, diamonds and rubies of marvellous value, coffers full of gold
ingots, and all the wonders of Asia that surpass the wildest imagination.
But when the old man, trembling, begged for the liberty of his son as
the price of his fortune and his own life, the empress resumed her
cold, pitiless manner, and harshly replied—
"I have already given
orders for your son to be brought here; but prepare for an eternal farewell,
for he is to be taken to the fortress of Melfi, and you in all probability
will end your days beneath the castle of Saint Agatha."
The grief of
the poor count at this violent separation was so great, that a few days later
he was found dead in his dungeon, his lips covered with a bloody froth, his
hands gnawed in despair. Bertrand did not long survive him. He actually lost
his reason when he heard of his father’s death, and hanged himself on the
prison grating. Thus did the murderers of Andre destroy one another, like
venomous animals shut up in the same cage.
Catherine of Tarentum,
carrying off the treasure she had so gained, arrived at the court of Naples,
proud of her triumph and contemplating vast schemes. But new troubles had
come about in her absence. Charles of Durazzo, for the last time desiring the
queen to give him the duchy of Calabria, a title which had always belonged to
the heir presumptive, and angered by her refusal, had written to Louis of
Hungary, inviting him to take possession of the kingdom, and promising to
help in the enterprise with all his own forces, and to give up the principal
authors of his brother’s death, who till now had escaped justice.
The
King of Hungary eagerly accepted these offers, and got ready an army to
avenge Andre’s death and proceed to the conquest of Naples. The tears of his
mother Elizabeth and the advice of Friar Robert, the old minister, who had
fled to Buda, confirmed him in his projects of vengeance. He had already
lodged a bitter complaint at the court of Avignon that, while the inferior
assassins had been punished, she who was above all others guilty had been
shamefully let off scot free, and though still stained with her husband’s
blood, continued to live a life of debauchery and adultery. The pope replied
soothingly that, so far as it depended upon him, he would not be found slow
to give satisfaction to a lawful grievance; but the accusation ought to be
properly formulated and supported by proof; that no doubt Joan’s conduct
during and after her husband’s death was blamable; but His Majesty must
consider that the Church of Rome, which before all things seeks truth and
justice, always proceeds with the utmost circumspection, and in so grave a
matter more especially must not judge by appearances only.
Joan,
frightened by the preparations for war, sent ambassadors to the Florentine
Republic, to assert her innocence of the crime imputed to her by public
opinion, and did not hesitate to send excuses even to the Hungarian court;
but Andre’s brother replied in a letter laconic
and threatening:—
"Your former disorderly life, the arrogation to
yourself of exclusive power, your neglect to punish your husband’s murderers,
your marriage to another husband, moreover your own excuses, are all
sufficient proofs that you were an accomplice in the
murder."
Catherine would not be put out of heart by the King of
Hungary’s threats, and looking at the position of the queen and her son with
a coolness that was never deceived, she was convinced that there was
no other means of safety except a reconciliation with Charles, their
mortal foe, which could only be brought about by giving him all he wanted.
It was one of two things: either he would help them to repulse the King
of Hungary, and later on they would pay the cost when the dangers were
less pressing, or he would be beaten himself, and thus they would at
least have the pleasure of drawing him down with them in their
own destruction.
The agreement was made in the gardens of Castel
Nuovo, whither Charles had repaired on the invitation of the queen and her
aunt. To her cousin of Durazzo Joan accorded the title so much desired of
Duke of Calabria, and Charles, feeling that he was hereby made heir to the
kingdom, marched at once on Aquila, which town already was flying the
Hungarian colours. The wretched man did not foresee that he was going
straight to his destruction.
When the Empress of Constantinople saw
this man, whom she hated above all others, depart in joy, she looked
contemptuously upon him, divining by a woman’s instinct that mischief would
befall him; then, having no further mischief to do, no further treachery on
earth, no further revenge to satisfy, she all at once succumbed to some
unknown malady, and died suddenly, without uttering a cry or exciting a
single regret.
But the King of Hungary, who had crossed Italy with a
formidable army, now entered the kingdom from the side of Aquila: on his way
he had everywhere received marks of interest and sympathy; and Alberto
and Mertino delta Scala, lords of Verona, had given him three hundred
horse to prove that all their goodwill was with him in his enterprise.
The news of the arrival of the Hungarians threw the court into a state
of confusion impossible to describe. They had hoped that the king would
be stopped by the pope’s legate, who had come to Foligno to forbid him,
in the name of the Holy Father, and on pain of excommunication to
proceed any further without his consent; but Louis of Hungary replied to
the pope’s legate that, once master of Naples, he should consider himself
a feudatory of the Church, but till then he had no obligations except
to God and his own conscience. Thus the avenging army fell like
a thunderbolt upon the heart of the kingdom, before there was any
thought of taking serious measures for defence. There was only one
plan possible: the queen assembled the barons who were most strongly
attached to her, made them swear homage and fidelity to Louis of Tarentum,
whom she presented to them as her husband, and then leaving with many
tears her most faithful subjects, she embarked secretly, in the middle of
the night, on a ship of Provence, and made for Marseilles. Louis
of Tarentum, following the prompting of his adventure-loving
character, left Naples at the head of three thousand horse and a
considerable number of foot, and took up his post on the banks of the
Voltorno, there to contest the enemy’s passage; but the King of Hungary
foresaw the stratagem, and while his adversary was waiting for him at Capua,
he arrived at Beneventum by the mountains of Alife and Morcone, and on
the same day received Neapolitan envoys: they in a magnificent display
of eloquence congratulated him on his entrance, offered the keys of
the town, and swore obedience to him as being the legitimate successor
of Charles of Anjou. The news of the surrender of Naples soon reached
the queen’s camp, and all the princes of the blood and the generals
left Louis of Tarentum and took refuge in the capital. Resistance
was impossible. Louis, accompanied by his counsellor, Nicholas
Acciajuoli, went to Naples on the same evening on which his relatives quitted
the town to get away from the enemy. Every hope of safety was vanishing
as the hours passed by; his brothers and cousins begged him to go at
once, so as not to draw down upon the town the king’s vengeance, but
unluckily there was no ship in the harbour that was ready to set sail. The
terror of the princes was at its height; but Louis, trusting in his
luck, started with the brave Acciajuoli in an unseaworthy boat, and
ordering four sailors to row with all their might, in a few minutes
disappeared, leaving his family in a great state of anxiety till they learned
that he had reached Pisa, whither he had gone to join the queen in
Provence. Charles of Durazzo and Robert of Tarentum, who were the
eldest respectively of the two branches of the royal family, after
hastily consulting, decided to soften the Hungarian monarch’s wrath by
a complete submission. Leaving their young brothers at Naples,
they accordingly set off for Aversa, where the king was. Louis received
them with every mark of friendship, and asked with much interest why
their brothers were not with them. The princes replied that their
young brothers had stayed at Naples to prepare a worthy reception for
His Majesty. Louis thanked them for their kind intentions, but begged
them to invite the young princes now, saying that it would be infinitely
more pleasant to enter Naples with all his family, and that he was
most anxious to see his cousins. Charles and Robert, to please the king,
sent equerries to bid their brothers come to Aversa; but Louis of
Durazzo, the eldest of the boys, with many tears begged the others not to
obey, and sent a message that he was prevented by a violent headache
from leaving Naples. So puerile an excuse could not fail to annoy
Charles, and the same day he compelled the unfortunate boys to appear before
the king, sending a formal order which admitted of no delay. Louis
of Hungary embraced them warmly one after the other, asked them
several questions in an affectionate way, kept them to supper, and only let
them go quite late at night.
When the Duke of Durazzo reached his
room, Lello of Aquila and the Count of Fondi slipped mysteriously to the side
of his bed, and making sure that no one could hear, told him that the king in
a council held that morning had decided to kill him and to imprison the other
princes. Charles heard them out, but incredulously: suspecting treachery,
he dryly replied that he had too much confidence in his cousin’s loyalty
to believe such a black calumny. Lello insisted, begging him in the name
of his dearest friends to listen; but the duke was impatient, and
harshly ordered him to depart.
The next day there was the same
kindness on the king’s part, the same affection shown to the children, the
same invitation to supper. The banquet was magnificent; the room was
brilliantly lighted, and the reflections were dazzling: vessels of gold shone
on the table; the intoxicating perfume of flowers filled the air; wine foamed
in the goblets and flowed from the flagons in ruby streams;
conversation, excited and discursive, was heard on every side; all faces
beamed with joy.
Charles of Durazzo sat opposite the king, at a
separate table among his brothers. Little by little his look grew fixed, his
brow pensive. He was fancying that Andre might have supped in this very hall
on the eve of his tragic end, and he thought how all concerned in that death
had either died in torment or were now languishing in prison; the queen,
an exile and a fugitive, was begging pity from strangers: he alone
was free. The thought made him tremble; but admiring his own cleverness
in pursuing his infernal schemes, and putting away his sad looks, he
smiled again with an expression of indefinable pride. The madman at this
moment was scoffing at the justice of God. But Lello of Aquila, who was
waiting at the table, bent down, whispering gloomily—
"Unhappy duke,
why did you refuse to believe me? Fly, while there is
yet time."
Charles, angered by the man’s obstinacy, threatened that if
he were such a fool as to say any more, he would repeat every word
aloud.
"I have done my duty," murmured Lello, bowing his head; "now it
must happen as God wills."
As he left off speaking, the king rose, and
as the duke went up to take his leave, his face suddenly changed, and he
cried in an awful voice—
"Traitor! At length you are in my hands, and you
shall die as you deserve; but before you are handed over to the executioner,
confess with your own lips your deeds of treachery towards our royal majesty:
so shall we need no other witness to condemn you to a
punishment proportioned to your crimes. Between our two selves, Duke of
Durazzo, tell me first why, by your infamous manoeuvring, you aided your
uncle, the Cardinal of Perigord, to hinder the coronation of my brother, and
so led him on, since he had no royal prerogative of his own, to
his miserable end? Oh, make no attempt to deny it. Here is the letter
sealed with your seal; in secret you wrote it, but it accuses you in
public. Then why, after bringing us hither to avenge our brother’s death,
of which you beyond all doubt were the cause,—why did you suddenly turn
to the queen’s party and march against our town of Aquila, daring to
raise an army against our faithful subjects? You hoped, traitor, to make
use of us as a footstool to mount the throne withal, as soon as you
were free from every other rival. Then you would but have awaited
our departure to kill the viceroy we should have left in our place, and
so seize the kingdom. But this time your foresight has been at fault.
There is yet another crime worse than all the rest, a crime of high
treason, which I shall remorselessly punish. You carried off the bride that
our ancestor King Robert designed for me, as you knew, by his will.
Answer, wretch what excuse can you make for the rape of the Princess
Marie?"
Anger had so changed Louis’s voice that the last words sounded
like the roar of a wild beast: his eyes glittered with a feverish light, his
lips were pale and trembling. Charles and his brothers fell upon their
knees, frozen by mortal terror, and the unhappy duke twice tried to speak,
but his teeth were chattering so violently that he could not articulate
a single word. At last, casting his eyes about him and seeing his
poor brothers, innocent and ruined by his fault, he regained some sort of
courage, and said— |
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