on board the vessel, where he was welcomed
cordially by the skipper. Peter threw his portmanteau and bag over the
bulwarks, and giving him his blessing, pulled back to the town.
CHAPTER TWO.
AN UNWELCOME SUITOR--GRETCHEN REFUSES TO ACCEPT
CASPAR GAILL--CASPAR PLOTS WITH FATHER QUIXADA TO
BETRAY THE PROTESTANTS--THE MONK'S TREACHERY.
Gretchen was seated in the parlour of her father's house, busily
employed in tapestry work--the constant occupation of young ladies in
those days, as at present. The merchant Hopper came in; care and
thought sat on his brow. His daughter affectionately inquired the cause
of his anxiety.
"I cannot tell you, my child," he answered. "It is enough to know that
so many of my friends, in various parts of our unhappy land, have been
put to death by fire, and sword, and drowning, through the mandates of
the tyrant Alva, and who knows what may be our fate in this city?
Hitherto we have escaped, but the priests are busy, and are even now
trying to ferret out the Protestants. I am thankful that our friend
Diedrich escaped; he would certainly otherwise have been seized."
"Oh, Father! I wish you would try and escape too," said Gretchen; "I
will accompany you. We can go to England, that land of liberty. If you
cannot take any of your wealth with you, I will labour for you there.
Surely we shall find friends there, and need not have any fear of
starving."
Their conversation was interrupted by a knock at the door, and Caspar
Gaill was announced. Both the merchant and his daughter received him
coldly. He came dressed in gay attire, and seemed to consider himself
in the light of a favoured suitor. Now he spoke to Gretchen, now he
turned to her father. Again he turned to the young lady, and urged her
to promise to be his.
"You know not the danger to which you are exposed," he observed. "As
the wife of a well-known Catholic you will be safe, and I may be able
to protect your father. At present he is in great peril. I do not hesitate to
tell him so."
The merchant, thanking Caspar for his offer, assured him that he would
not bias his daughter.
"My being in peril must not compel her to give her hand where she
cannot also bestow her heart. You will not take amiss what I have said,
as it arises from no personal ill-feeling towards you."
In vain Caspar pleaded his cause, and at length, with a frown on his
brow, and an angry glance in his eye, although honeyed words were on
his lips, he took his departure.
Caspar Gaill left the house of the merchant Hopper in no enviable
mood. He took his way through the street till he reached the door of a
certain religious house or monastery, as it was called, and inquired for a
Father Quixada. He was shown into a cell inhabited by a Spanish monk
who acted as his father confessor.
"How fares your suit with the pretty Gretchen, my son?" asked the
father, who at the same time, however, had observed Caspar's angry
look.
The young man shook his head, and replied briefly that he had been
refused.
"No hope?" asked the father.
"None," answered Caspar.
"You would have a better chance if the merchant was out of the way,"
observed the priest.
"Very likely, but he is cautious. It may be no easy matter to get rid of
him," answered Caspar.
"Follow my advice, my son, and it can be managed. You have strong
suspicions that he is a Protestant. Pretend that you have given up his
daughter, but that you desire to be instructed in the new faith. In a short
time he will trust you, and if he attends any place of meeting where the
Protestants meet, you can introduce me among them. I can disguise
myself so that they shall not know me, and I may then not only mark
him, but all others who may be present, and inform against them as
may be most convenient."
CHAPTER THREE.
CASPAR PROFESSES THE PROTESTANT FAITH--ATTENDS A
MEETING--EFFECT OF THE GOSPEL ON CASPAR--CASPAR,
HOWEVER, KEEPS HIS ENGAGEMENT WITH FATHER
QUIXADA--DOUBTS AND FEARS--THE MONK ATTENDS THE
NEXT MEETING, AND NOTES ALL PRESENT--CASPAR'S
REMORSE--THE SPY AGAIN IN THE LITTLE COMPANY--
CASPAR WARNS THE INTENDED VICTIMS--TOO
LATE--FATHER AND DAUGHTER IN THE HANDS OF THE
INQUISITION--CONDEMNED--CASPAR DESPAIRS OF THE
RESULT OF HIS WORK--CONSULTS THE FERRYMAN--BUT
NEW PLANS FAIL.
Caspar did not at first like this plan. It was treacherous and deceitful,
and he must act the part of a spy and a hypocrite to carry it out; but as it
was proposed to him by his father confessor, he came to the conclusion
that he ought not to hesitate about it.
The merchant
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