ds the door.
When Els saw him hesitate at the top of the few steps leading to the
entry, she gave him her arm to support him down. As he cautiously put
one foot after the other on the stairs, she wondered how it was possible
that this man, whose tall figure and handsome face were cast in so noble
a mould, could believe her to be so base; and at the same moment she
remembered the words which old Berthold Vorchtel had uttered in her
presence to his son Ulrich: "If anything obscure comes between you and a
friend, obtain a clear understanding and peace by truth."
Had the young man who had irritated his misjudged friend into crossing
swords with him followed this counsel, perhaps he would have been alive
now. She would take it herself, and frankly ask Wolff's father what
justified him in accusing her of so base a deed.
The lamps were already lighted in the hall, and the rays from the
central one fell upon Herr Casper's colourless face, which wore an
expression of despair. But just as her lips parted to ask the question
the odour of musk reached her from the death-chamber, whose door Eva
had opened. Her mother's gentle face, still in death, rose before her
memory, and she was forced to exert the utmost self-control not to
weep aloud. Without further reflection she imposed silence upon herself
and--yesterday she would not have ventured to do it--threw her arm
around Herr Casper's shoulders, gazed affectionately at him, and
whispered: "You must not despair, father. You have a faithful ally in
this house in Els."
The old man looked down at her in astonishment, but instead of drawing
her closer to him he released himself with courteous coldness, saying
bitterly: "There is no longer any bond between us and the Ortliebs,
Jungfrau Els. From this day forth I am no more your father than you
are the bride of my son. Your will may be good, but how little it can
accomplish has unfortunately been proved."
Shrugging his shoulders wearily as he spoke, he nodded a farewell and
left the house.
Four bearers were waiting outside with the sedan-chair, three servants
with torches, and two stout attendants carrying clubs over their
shoulders. All wore costly liveries of the Eysvogel colours, and when
their master had taken his seat in the gilded conveyance and the men
lifted it, Els heard a weaver's wife, who lived near by, say to her
little boy: "That's the rich Herr Eysvogel, Fritzel. He has as much
money to spend every hour as we h
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