Pushkin entered.
"Not ready yet?"
"Leave us alone! I am just about to spoil your wife. I am advising her how to keep you under her thumb. You are not to listen."
"All very fine. The first hour we are together she will tell me all about it."
The choristers in the chamber of death now began their solemn chant. It was a long ceremony, but it, too, came to an end. The priest, taking the two candlesticks, held them over the cross while he spake the blessing, walked three times round the coffin waving incense, then placed the parchment containing the list of sins, at the end of which was inscribed the absolution, into the dead child"s hands as her pa.s.sport into eternity; after which the candles on the catafalque were extinguished.
The two doves upon the crucifix continued their billing and cooing.
They carried out the coffin to the barge draped with funereal hangings.
Many blossoms from the garden accompanied it; it was covered with wreaths. The blue, green, and red lights glared in the twilight. The choristers continued their chant, the gentle plash of the oars marking time to it. Long those left behind gazed after the departing boat, until the next wooded island hid it from their view.
"She has gone on her journey!" said Zeneida; there were no tears in her eyes. "Now it is your turn. Quick! No leave-takings; they are so wearisome. Be off with you! I have my guests to see to, a right merry company. I must hurry back. One kiss is enough, Bethsaba; you may give the others to your Aleko. Take quickly with you what is yours."
"Alas! that is impossible," sighed Pushkin, who had the bad habit of being unable to keep back what was in his mind. "One part she who is gliding away in that gondola has taken with her; a second part you take; to this poor child belongs only the remainder."
"That is not true," returned Zeneida, with proud, radiant face. "She who has gone back to heaven has bequeathed her part in you to your wife; she who is here has, even now, given up to her that which she might have possessed. Bethsaba knows all about it. You are hers, wholly, entirely.
And now, G.o.d be with you!"
And she held out her hand to him. The allies of the new epoch did not kiss in greeting.
And as Pushkin pressed the hand she held out to him, a ray of joy pa.s.sed over Zeneida"s countenance. Freemasons have a sign by which they recognize each other in hand pressure. _Pushkin had not given the sign this time._
Already he had forgotten his former love. To the new one, to whom he had plighted his marital troth, he belonged wholly, entirely.
It was as "she" had desired; and smilingly Zeneida waved her white handkerchief to the vanishing gondola, which a troika awaited on the opposite bank. Only when she could see it no longer did she hide her face in the said white handkerchief, and whether it was bedewed with tears or not that handkerchief alone can tell. She did not remove it from her eyes until her gondolier addressed her.
"If you please, madame, the rockets on Kreskowsky Island have begun."
"Ah yes. You are right. The third funeral awaits me!"
With that she hastened into her gondola, and within its closed curtains sang, in a low voice:
"By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept; For they that led us away captive required of us a song, Saying, Sing us one of the songs of Zion.
If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning."
CHAPTER x.x.xV
SPARKS AND ASHES
Zeneida"s gondola glided quickly past the funeral barge back to Kreskowsky Island. Her guests were entertaining themselves without her.
They were used to do so.
The conspirators were largely represented; even Pestel, from far-off Nikolajevsk, was there. To-night the conflicting parties were to measure themselves; the decision was to be made which plan should be the accepted one: the one which should give freedom by means of the Czar; or that which, regardless of him, living or dead, should carry the work to its completion.
As the fireworks commenced, the Bojars withdrew from the gay scene to the roulette chamber.
There were three-and-twenty men and Zeneida. Prince Ghedimin alone was still expected; he was to come direct from the Czar.
He came.
He had a long envelope, sealed with five seals, in his hand.
In extreme agitation all awaited the opening of the doc.u.ment. The Prince cut the seals with a pair of scissors, opened the envelope, and there fell from it the ashes of some burned sheets of paper, as they had been reclaimed from the fire. It was the anxiously awaited _charta_--reduced to ashes.
"I said so!" exclaimed Pestel, with triumphant countenance. "The whole thing was a comedy. Scarce three months has it lasted. There"s an end of fine words. Now to dark deeds!"
Nothing was left but to decide if _the deed_ should be consummated.
They voted openly and by name.
There were twelve ayes and twelve noes.
"There is still one to give the casting vote," said Pestel. "Here is the "Votum Minervae." Here is Zeneida. Her vote shall decide it."
Zeneida saw the deadly pallor which had overspread Ghedimin"s face.
With calm voice she said, "Aye."
Thirteen to twelve the majority for the deed. But when? That was the next question.
Pestel said, "At once."
Ryleieff moved that in September would be their best opportunity, at the concentration of the army.
"To-day," growled Jakuskin. "Not to-morrow!"
Fresh votes had to be taken.
"At once, or in September?"
Once more the votes were twelve to twelve. Once more Zeneida was called upon to give the casting vote.
Upon her breath hung the decision whether the world at that very hour should be shattered to its foundations.
"In September," she said; and Ghedimin gave a deep breath of relief.
Pestel shrugged his shoulders wrathfully.
"Then it were better to put it off until May, to try the success of the concentration of the army in Kiew. There in the South we are the masters."
"Shame upon us!" growled Jakuskin. "We are twelve to their twelve, and dare not do the deed. Every one of us a Brutus! More than an Armada!
Were I alone I would do it myself."