Clementina - Page 159/200

Wogan had risen from his seat; with a violent gesture he had thrown back

his cloak, and his coat beneath was stained and dark with blood.

Clementina stood opposite to him, all her quiet and her calmness gone.

There was no longer any mystery in her eyes. Her bosom rose and fell;

she pointed a trembling hand towards his breast.

"You are hurt. Again for love of me you are hurt."

"It is not my wound," he answered. "It is blood I spilt for you;" he

took a step towards her, and in a second she was between his arms,

sobbing with all the violence of passion which she had so long

restrained. Wogan was wrung by it. That she should weep at all was a

thought strange to him; that he should cause the tears was a sorrow

which tortured him. He touched her hair with his lips, he took her by

the arms and would have set her apart; but she clung to him, hiding her

face, and the sobs shook her. Her breast was strained against him, he

felt the beating of her heart, a fever ran through all his blood. And as

he held her close, a queer inconsequential thought came into his mind.

It shocked him, and he suddenly held her off.

"The blood upon my coat is wet," he cried. The odium, the scandal of a

flight which would make her name a byword from London to Budapest, that

he could envisage; but that this blood upon his coat should stain the

dress she wore--no! He saw indeed that the bodice was smeared a dark

red.

"See, the blood stains you!" he cried.

"Why, then, I share it," she answered with a ringing voice of pride. "I

share it with you;" and she smiled through her tears and a glowing blush

brightened upon her face. She stood before him, erect and beautiful.

Through Wogan's mind there tripped a procession of delicate ladies who

would swoon gracefully at the sight of a pricked finger.

"That's John Sobieski speaking," he exclaimed, and with an emphasis of

despair, "Poland's King! But I was mad! Indeed, I blame myself."

"Blame!" she cried passionately, her whole nature rising in revolt

against the word. "Are we to blame? We are man and woman. Who shall cast

the stone? Are you to blame for that you love me? Who shall blame you?

Not I, who thank you from my heart. Am I to blame? What have we hearts

for, then, if not to love? I have a thought--it may be very wrong. I do

not know. I do not trouble to think--that I should be much more to blame

did I not love you too. There's the word spoken at the last," and she

lowered her head.