Greeks of southern Italy, and in these the young soldier so greatly 
distinguished himself that on the death of Arigil he succeeded him as 
Duke of Benevento. 
Meanwhile, troubles arose in Lombardy. Tafo had been falsely accused, 
by an enemy of the queen, of criminal relations with her, and was put to 
death by the king. Her innocence was afterwards proved, and on the 
death of Ariowald the Lombards treated her with the greatest respect, 
and raised Rotharis, her second husband, to the throne. He, too, died, 
and Aribert, uncle of the queen, was next made king. On his death, his 
two sons, Bertarit and Godebert, disputed the succession. A struggle 
ensued between the rival brothers, in the course of which Grimoald was 
brought into the dispute. 
The events here briefly described had taken place while Grimoald was 
engaged in the Greek wars of his patron, Duke Arigil. When he 
succeeded the latter in the ducal chair, the struggle between Bertarit 
and Godebert was going on, and the new Duke of Benevento declared 
in favor of the latter, who was his personal friend. 
A scheme of treachery, of a singular character, put an end to their 
friendship and to the life of Godebert. A man who was skilled in the 
arts of dissimulation, and who was secretly in the pay of Bertarit, 
persuaded Godebert that his seeming friend, Duke Grimoald, was really 
his enemy, and was plotting his destruction. He told the same story to 
Grimoald, making him believe that Godebert was his secret foe. In 
proof of his words he told each of them that the other wore armor 
beneath his clothes, through fear of assassination by his assumed 
friend.
The suspicion thus artfully aroused produced the very state of things 
which the agent of mischief had declared to exist. Each of the friends 
put on armor, as a protection against treachery from the other, and 
when they sought to test the truth of the spy's story it seemed fully 
confirmed. Each discovered that the other wore secret armor, without 
learning that it had just been assumed. 
The two close friends were thus converted by a plotting Iago into 
distrustful enemies, each fearing and on guard against assassination by 
the other. The affair ended tragically. Grimoald was no sooner fully 
convinced of the truth of what had been told him than he slew his 
supposed enemy, deeming it necessary to save his own life. The dark 
scheme had succeeded. Treason and falsehood had sown death between 
two friends. 
Bertarit, his rival removed, deemed the throne now securely his. But 
the truth underlying the tragedy we have described became known, and 
the Lombards, convinced of the innocence of Grimoald, and scorning 
the treachery by which he had been led on to murder, dismissed 
Bertarit's pretensions and placed Grimoald on the throne. His career 
had been a strange but highly successful one. From his childhood 
captivity to the Avars he had risen to the high station of King of 
Lombardy, a position fairly earned by his courage and ability. 
We are not yet done with the story of this distinguished warrior. 
Bertarit had taken the field against him, and civil war desolated 
Lombardy, an unhappy state of affairs which was soon taken advantage 
of by the foes of the distracted kingdom. The enemy who now appeared 
in the field was Constans, the Greek emperor, who laid siege to 
Benevento, hoping to capture it while Grimoald was engaged in 
hostilities with Bertarit in the north. 
Grimoald had left his son, Romuald, in charge of the city. On learning 
of the siege he despatched a trusty friend and officer, Sesuald by name, 
with some troops, to the relief of the beleaguered stronghold, proposing 
to follow quickly himself with the main body of his army. 
And now occurred an event nobly worthy of being recorded in the
annals of human probity and faithfulness, one little known, but 
deserving to be classed with those that have become famous in history. 
When men erect monuments to courage and virtue, the noble Sesuald 
should not be forgotten. 
This brave man fell into the hands of the emperor, who sought to use 
him in a stratagem to obtain possession of Benevento. He promised him 
an abundance of wealth and honors if he would tell Romuald that his 
father had died in battle, and persuade him to surrender the city. 
Sesuald seems to have agreed, for he was led to the walls of the city 
that he might hold the desired conference with Romuald. Instead, 
however, of carrying out the emperor's design, he cried out to the 
young chief, "Be firm, Grimoald approaches"; then, hastily telling him 
that he had forfeited his life by those words, he begged him in return to 
protect his wife and children, as the last service    
    
		
	
	
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