The Witch of Prague eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 497 pages of information about The Witch of Prague.

The Witch of Prague eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 497 pages of information about The Witch of Prague.

“He seems very ill,” he said, in a tone of compassion.

But Unorna was pitiless.  She knew what her companion could not know, namely, that Kafka must have followed them through the streets to the cemetery and must have overheard Unorna’s passionate appeal and must have seen and understood the means she was using to win the Wanderer’s love.  Her anger was terrible.  She had suffered enough secret shame already in stooping to the use of her arts in such a course.  It had cost her one of the greatest struggles of her life, and her disappointment at the result had been proportionately bitter.  In that alone she had endured almost as much pain as she could bear.  But to find suddenly that her humiliation, her hot speech, her failure, the look which she knew had been on her face until the moment when the Wanderer awoke, that all this had been seen and heard by Israel Kafka was intolerable.  Even Keyork’s unexpected appearance could not have so fired her wrath.  Keyork might have laughed at her afterwards, but her failure would have been no triumph to him.  Was not Keyork enlisted on her side, ready to help her at all times, by word or deed, in accordance with the terms of their agreement?  But of all men Kafka, whom she had so wronged, was the one man who should have been ignorant of her defeat and miserable shame.

“Go!” she cried, with a gesture of command.  Her eyes flashed and her extended hand trembled.

There was such concentrated fury in a single word that the Wanderer started in surprise, ignorant as he was of the true state of things.

“You are uselessly unkind,” he said gravely.  “The poor man is mad.  Let me take him away.”

“Leave him to me,” she answered imperiously.  “He will obey me.”

But Israel Kafka did not turn.  He rested one hand upon the slab and faced her.  As when many different forces act together at one point, producing after the first shock a resultant little expected, so the many passions that were at work in his face finally twisted his lips into a smile.

“Yes,” he said, in a low tone, which did not express submission.  “Leave me to her!  Leave me to the Witch and to her mercy.  It will be the end this time.  She is drunk with her love of you and mad with her hatred of me.”

Unorna grew suddenly pale, and would have again sprung forward.  But the Wanderer stopped her and held her arm.  At the same time he looked into Kafka’s eyes and raised one hand as though in warning.

“Be silent!” he exclaimed.

“And if I speak, what then?” asked the Moravian with his evil smile.

“I will silence you,” answered the Wanderer coldly.  “Your madness excuses you, perhaps, but it does not justify me in allowing you to insult a woman.”

Kafka’s anger took a new direction.  Even madmen are often calmed by the quiet opposition of a strong and self-possessed man.  And Kafka was not mad.  He was no coward either, but the subtlety of his race was in him.  As oil dropped by the board in a wild tempest does not calm the waves, but momentarily prevents their angry crests from breaking, so the Israelite’s quick tact veiled the rough face of his dangerous humour.

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The Witch of Prague from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.