On the evening of Thursday, the sixteenth
of October, the Constable of Zenda was very much out
of humor; he has since confessed as much. To
risk the peace of a palace for the sake of a lover’s
greeting had never been wisdom to his mind, and he
had been sorely impatient with “that fool Fritz’s”
yearly pilgrimage. The letter of farewell had
been an added folly, pregnant with chances of disaster.
Now disaster, or the danger of it, had come.
The curt, mysterious telegram from Wintenberg, which
told him so little, at least told him that. It
ordered him and he did not know even whose
the order was to delay Rischenheim’s
audience, or, if he could not, to get the king away
from Zenda: why he was to act thus was not disclosed
to him. But he knew as well as I that Rischenheim
was completely in Rupert’s hands, and he could
not fail to guess that something had gone wrong at
Wintenberg, and that Rischenheim came to tell the
king some news that the king must not hear. His
task sounded simple, but it was not easy; for he did
not know where Rischenheim was, and so could not prevent
his coming; besides, the king had been very pleased
to learn of the count’s approaching visit, since
he desired to talk with him on the subject of a certain
breed of dogs, which the count bred with great, his
Majesty with only indifferent success; therefore he
had declared that nothing should interfere with his
reception of Rischenheim. In vain Sapt told him
that a large boar had been seen in the forest, and
that a fine day’s sport might be expected if
he would hunt next day. “I shouldn’t
be back in time to see Rischenheim,” said the
king.
“Your Majesty would be back
by nightfall,” suggested Sapt.
“I should be too tired to talk
to him, and I’ve a great deal to discuss.”
“You could sleep at the hunting-lodge,
sire, and ride back to receive the count next morning.”
“I’m anxious to see him
as soon as may be.” Then he looked up at
Sapt with a sick man’s quick suspicion.
“Why shouldn’t I see him?” he asked.
“It’s a pity to miss the
boar, sire,” was all Sapt’s plea.
The king made light of it.
“Curse the boar!” said
he. “I want to know how he gets the dogs’
coats so fine.”
As the king spoke a servant entered,
carrying a telegram for Sapt. The colonel took
it and put it in his pocket.
“Read it,” said the king.
He had dined and was about to go to bed, it being
nearly ten o’clock.
“It will keep, sire,”
answered Sapt, who did not know but that it might
be from Wintenberg.
“Read it,” insisted the
king testily. “It may be from Rischenheim.
Perhaps he can get here sooner. I should like
to know about those dogs. Read it, I beg.”
Sapt could do nothing but read it.
He had taken to spectacles lately, and he spent a
long while adjusting them and thinking what he should
do if the message were not fit for the king’s
ear. “Be quick, man, be quick!” urged
the irritable king.
Sapt had got the envelope open at
last, and relief, mingled with perplexity, showed
in his face.
“Your Majesty guessed wonderfully
well. Rischenheim can be here at eight to-morrow
morning,” he said, looking up.
“Capital!” cried the king.
“He shall breakfast with me at nine, and I’ll
have a ride after the boar when we’ve done our
business. Now are you satisfied?”
“Perfectly, sire,” said Sapt, biting his
moustache.
The king rose with a yawn, and bade
the colonel good-night. “He must have some
trick I don’t know with those dogs,” he
remarked, as he went out. And “Damn the
dogs!” cried Colonel Sapt the moment that the
door was shut behind his Majesty.
But the colonel was not a man to accept
defeat easily. The audience that he had been
instructed to postpone was advanced; the king, whom
he had been told to get away from Zenda, would not
go till he had seen Rischenheim. Still there
are many ways of preventing a meeting. Some are
by fraud; these it is no injustice to Sapt to say that
he had tried; some are by force, and the colonel was
being driven to the conclusion that one of these must
be his resort.
“Though the king,” he
mused, with a grin, “will be furious if anything
happens to Rischenheim before he’s told him about
the dogs.”
Yet he fell to racking his brains
to find a means by which the count might be rendered
incapable of performing the service so desired by the
king and of carrying out his own purpose in seeking
an audience. Nothing save assassination suggested
itself to the constable; a quarrel and a duel offered
no security; and Sapt was not Black Michael, and had
no band of ruffians to join him in an apparently unprovoked
kidnapping of a distinguished nobleman.
“I can think of nothing,”
muttered Sapt, rising from his chair and moving across
towards the window in search of the fresh air that
a man so often thinks will give him a fresh idea.
He was in his own quarters, that room of the new chateau
which opens on to the moat immediately to the right
of the drawbridge as you face the old castle; it was
the room which Duke Michael had occupied, and almost
opposite to the spot where the great pipe had connected
the window of the king’s dungeon with the waters
of the moat. The bridge was down now, for peaceful
days had come to Zenda; the pipe was gone, and the
dungeon’s window, though still barred, was uncovered.
The night was clear and fine, and the still water
gleamed fitfully as the moon, half-full, escaped from
or was hidden by passing clouds. Sapt stood staring
out gloomily, beating his knuckles on the stone sill.
The fresh air was there, but the fresh idea tarried.
Suddenly the constable bent forward,
craning his head out and down, far as he could stretch
it, towards the water. What he had seen, or seemed
dimly to see, is a sight common enough on the surface
of water large circular eddies, widening
from a centre; a stone thrown in makes them, or a
fish on the rise. But Sapt had thrown no stone,
and the fish in the moat were few and not rising then.
The light was behind Sapt, and threw his figure into
bold relief. The royal apartments looked out the
other way; there were no lights in the windows this
side the bridge, although beyond it the guards’
lodgings and the servants’ offices still showed
a light here and there. Sapt waited till the
eddies ceased. Then he heard the faintest sound,
as of a large body let very gently into the water;
a moment later, from the moat right below him, a man’s
head emerged.
“Sapt!” said a voice, low but distinct.
The old colonel started, and, resting
both hands on the sill, bent further out, till he
seemed in danger of overbalancing.
“Quick to the ledge
on the other side. You know,” said the voice,
and the head turned; with quick, quiet strokes the
man crossed the moat till he was hidden in the triangle
of deep shade formed by the meeting of the drawbridge
and the old castle wall. Sapt watched him go,
almost stupefied by the sudden wonder of hearing that
voice come to him out of the stillness of the night.
For the king was abed; and who spoke in that voice
save the king and one other?
Then, with a curse at himself for
his delay, he turned and walked quickly across the
room. Opening the door, he found himself in the
passage. But here he ran right into the arms of
young Bernenstein, the officer of the guard, who was
going his rounds. Sapt knew and trusted him,
for he had been with us all through the siege of Zenda,
when Michael kept the king a prisoner, and he bore
marks given him by Rupert of Hentzau’s ruffians.
He now held a commission as lieutenant in the cuirassiers
of the King’s Guard.
He noticed Sapt’s bearing, for
he cried out in a low voice, “Anything wrong,
sir?”
“Bernenstein, my boy, the castle’s
all right about here. Go round to the front,
and, hang you, stay there,” said Sapt.
The officer stared, as well he might.
Sapt caught him by the arm.
“No, stay here. See, stand
by the door there that leads to the royal apartments.
Stand there, and let nobody pass. You understand?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And whatever you hear, don’t look round.”
Bernenstein’s bewilderment grew
greater; but Sapt was constable, and on Sapt’s
shoulders lay the responsibility for the safety of
Zenda and all in it.
“Very well, sir,” he said,
with a submissive shrug, and he drew his sword and
stood by the door; he could obey, although he could
not understand.
Sapt ran on. Opening the gate
that led to the bridge, he sped across. Then,
stepping on one side and turning his face to the wall,
he descended the steps that gave foothold down to
the ledge running six or eight inches above the water.
He also was now in the triangle of deep darkness,
yet he knew that a man was there, who stood straight
and tall, rising above his own height. And he
felt his hand caught in a sudden grip. Rudolf
Rassendyll was there, in his wet drawers and socks.
“Is it you?” he whispered.
“Yes,” answered Rudolf;
“I swam round from the other side and got here.
Then I threw in a bit of mortar, but I wasn’t
sure I’d roused you, and I didn’t dare
shout, so I followed it myself. Lay hold of me
a minute while I get on my breeches: I didn’t
want to get wet, so I carried my clothes in a bundle.
Hold me tight, it’s slippery.”
“In God’s name what brings
you here?” whispered Sapt, catching Rudolf by
the arm as he was directed.
“The queen’s service. When does Rischenheim
come?”
“To-morrow at eight.”
“The deuce! That’s earlier than I
thought. And the king?”
“Is here and determined to see
him. It’s impossible to move him from it.”
There was a moment’s silence;
Rudolf drew his shirt over his head and tucked it
into his trousers. “Give me the jacket and
waistcoat,” he said. “I feel deuced
damp underneath, though.”
“You’ll soon get dry,”
grinned Sapt. “You’ll be kept moving,
you see.”
“I’ve lost my hat.”
“Seems to me you’ve lost your head too.”
“You’ll find me both, eh, Sapt?”
“As good as your own, anyhow,” growled
the constable.
“Now the boots, and I’m
ready.” Then he asked quickly, “Has
the king seen or heard from Rischenheim?”
“Neither, except through me.”
“Then why is he so set on seeing him?”
“To find out what gives dogs smooth coats.”
“You’re serious? Hang you, I can’t
see your face.”
“Absolutely.”
“All’s well, then. Has he got a beard
now?”
“Yes.”
“Confound him! Can’t you take me
anywhere to talk?”
“What the deuce are you here at all for?”
“To meet Rischenheim.”
“To meet?”
“Yes. Sapt, he’s got a copy of the
queen’s letter.”
Sapt twirled his moustache.
“I’ve always said as much,”
he remarked in tones of satisfaction. He need
not have said it; he would have been more than human
not to think it.
“Where can you take me to?” asked Rudolf
impatiently.
“Any room with a door and a
lock to it,” answered old Sapt. “I
command here, and when I say ’Stay out’ well,
they don’t come in.”
“Not the king?”
“The king is in bed. Come
along,” and the constable set his toe on the
lowest step.
“Is there nobody about?” asked Rudolf,
catching his arm.
“Bernenstein; but he will keep his back toward
us.”
“Your discipline is still good, then, Colonel?”
“Pretty well for these days,
your Majesty,” grunted Sapt, as he reached the
level of the bridge.
Having crossed, they entered the chateau.
The passage was empty, save for Bernenstein, whose
broad back barred the way from the royal apartments.
“In here,” whispered Sapt,
laying his hand on the door of the room whence he
had come.
“All right,” answered
Rudolf. Bernenstein’s hand twitched, but
he did not look round. There was discipline in
the castle of Zenda.
But as Sapt was half-way through the
door and Rudolf about to follow him, the other door,
that which Bernenstein guarded, was softly yet swiftly
opened. Bernenstein’s sword was in rest
in an instant. A muttered oath from Sapt and
Rudolf’s quick snatch at his breath greeted
the interruption. Bernenstein did not look round,
but his sword fell to his side. In the doorway
stood Queen Flavia, all in white; and now her face
turned white as her dress. For her eyes had fallen
on Rudolf Rassendyll. For a moment the four stood
thus; then Rudolf passed Sapt, thrust Bernenstein’s
brawny shoulders (the young man had not looked round)
out of the way, and, falling on his knee before the
queen, seized her hand and kissed it. Bernenstein
could see now without looking round, and if astonishment
could kill, he would have been a dead man that instant.
He fairly reeled and leant against the wall, his mouth
hanging open. For the king was in bed, and had
a beard; yet there was the king, fully dressed and
clean shaven, and he was kissing the queen’s
hand, while she gazed down on him in a struggle between
amazement, fright, and joy. A soldier should
be prepared for anything, but I cannot be hard on
young Bernenstein’s bewilderment.
Yet there was in truth nothing strange
in the queen seeking to see old Sapt that night, nor
in her guessing where he would most probably be found.
For she had asked him three times whether news had
come from Wintenberg and each time he had put her
off with excuses. Quick to forbode evil, and
conscious of the pledge to fortune that she had given
in her letter, she had determined to know from him
whether there were really cause for alarm, and had
stolen, undetected, from her apartments to seek him.
What filled her at once with unbearable apprehension
and incredulous joy was to find Rudolf present in
actual flesh and blood, no longer in sad longing dreams
or visions, and to feel his live lips on her hand.
Lovers count neither time nor danger;
but Sapt counted both, and no more than a moment had
passed before, with eager imperative gestures, he
beckoned them to enter the room. The queen obeyed,
and Rudolf followed her.
“Let nobody in, and don’t
say a word to anybody,” whispered Sapt, as he
entered, leaving Bernenstein outside. The young
man was half-dazed still, but he had sense to read
the expression in the constable’s eyes and to
learn from it that he must give his life sooner than
let the door be opened. So with drawn sword he
stood on guard.
It was eleven o’clock when the
queen came, and midnight had struck from the great
clock of the castle before the door opened again and
Sapt came out. His sword was not drawn, but he
had his revolver in his hand. He shut the door
silently after him and began at once to talk in low,
earnest, quick tones to Bernenstein. Bernenstein
listened intently and without interrupting. Sapt’s
story ran on for eight or nine minutes. Then
he paused, before asking:
“You understand now?”
“Yes, it is wonderful,” said the young
man, drawing in his breath.
“Pooh!” said Sapt. “Nothing
is wonderful: some things are unusual.”
Bernenstein was not convinced, and shrugged his shoulders
in protest.
“Well?” said the constable, with a quick
glance at him.
“I would die for the queen,
sir,” he answered, clicking his heels together
as though on parade.
“Good,” said Sapt.
“Then listen,” and he began again to talk.
Bernenstein nodded from time to time. “You’ll
meet him at the gate,” said the constable, “and
bring him straight here. He’s not to go
anywhere else, you understand me?”
“Perfectly, Colonel,” smiled young Bernenstein.
“The king will be in this room the
king. You know who is the king?”
“Perfectly, Colonel.”
“And when the interview is ended, and we go
to breakfast ”
“I know who will be the king then. Yes,
Colonel.”
“Good. But we do him no harm unless ”
“It is necessary.”
“Precisely.”
Sapt turned away with a little sigh.
Bernenstein was an apt pupil, but the colonel was
exhausted by so much explanation. He knocked softly
at the door of the room. The queen’s voice
bade him enter, and he passed in. Bernenstein
was left alone again in the passage, pondering over
what he had heard and rehearsing the part that it
now fell to him to play. As he thought he may
well have raised his head proudly. The service
seemed so great and the honor so high, that he almost
wished he could die in the performing of his rôle.
It would be a finer death than his soldier’s
dreams had dared to picture.
At one o’clock Colonel Sapt
came out. “Go to bed till six,” said
he to Bernenstein.
“I’m not sleepy.”
“No, but you will be at eight if you don’t
sleep now.”
“Is the queen coming out, Colonel?”
“In a minute, Lieutenant.”
“I should like to kiss her hand.”
“Well, if you think it worth
waiting a quarter of an hour for!” said Sapt,
with a slight smile.
“You said a minute, sir.”
“So did she,” answered the constable.
Nevertheless it was a quarter of an
hour before Rudolf Rassendyll opened the door and
the queen appeared on the threshold. She was very
pale, and she had been crying, but her eyes were happy
and her air firm. The moment he saw her, young
Bernenstein fell on his knee and raised her hand to
his lips.
“To the death, madame,” said he,
in a trembling voice.
“I knew it, sir,” she
answered graciously. Then she looked round on
the three of them. “Gentlemen,” said
she, “my servants and dear friends, with you,
and with Fritz who lies wounded in Wintenberg, rest
my honor and my life; for I will not live if the letter
reaches the king.”
“The king shall not have it,
madame,” said Colonel Sapt. He took
her hand in his and patted it with a clumsy gentleness;
smiling, she extended it again to young Bernenstein,
in mark of her favor. They two then stood at
the salute, while Rudolf walked with her to the end
of the passage. There for a moment she and he
stood together; the others turned their eyes away
and thus did not see her suddenly stoop and cover his
hand with her kisses. He tried to draw it away,
not thinking it fit that she should kiss his hand,
but she seemed as though she could not let it go.
Yet at last, still with her eyes on his, she passed
backwards through the door, and he shut it after her.
“Now to business,” said
Colonel Sapt dryly; and Rudolf laughed a little.
Rudolf passed into the room.
Sapt went to the king’s apartments, and asked
the physician whether his Majesty were sleeping well.
Receiving reassuring news of the royal slumbers, he
proceeded to the quarters of the king’s body-servant,
knocked up the sleepy wretch, and ordered breakfast
for the king and the Count of Luzau-Rischenheim at
nine o’clock precisely, in the morning-room
that looked out over the avenue leading to the entrance
to the new chateau. This done, he returned to
the room where Rudolf was, carried a chair into the
passage, bade Rudolf lock the door, sat down, revolver
in hand, and himself went to sleep. Young Bernenstein
was in bed just now, taken faint, and the constable
himself was acting as his substitute; that was to be
the story, if a story were needed. Thus the hours
from two to six passed that morning in the castle
of Zenda.
At six the constable awoke and knocked
at the door; Rudolf Rassendyll opened it.
“Slept well?” asked Sapt.
“Not a wink,” answered Rudolf cheerfully.
“I thought you had more nerve.”
“It wasn’t want of nerve that kept me
awake,” said Mr. Rassendyll.
Sapt, with a pitying shrug, looked
round. The curtains of the window were half-drawn.
The table was moved near to the wall, and the arm-chair
by it was well in shadow, being quite close to the
curtains.
“There’s plenty of room
for you behind,” said Rudolf; “And when
Rischenheim is seated in his chair opposite to mine,
you can put your barrel against his head by just stretching
out your hand. And of course I can do the same.”
“Yes, it looks well enough,”
said Sapt, with an approving nod. “What
about the beard?”
“Bernenstein is to tell him you’ve shaved
this morning.”
“Will he believe that?”
“Why not? For his own sake he’d better
believe everything.”
“And if we have to kill him?”
“We must run for it. The king would be
furious.”
“He’s fond of him?”
“You forget. He wants to know about the
dogs.”
“True. You’ll be in your place in
time?”
“Of course.”
Rudolf Rassendyll took a turn up and
down the room. It was easy to see that the events
of the night had disturbed him. Sapt’s thoughts
were running in a different channel.
“When we’ve done with this fellow, we
must find Rupert,” said he.
Rudolf started.
“Rupert? Rupert? True; I forgot.
Of course we must,” said he confusedly.
Sapt looked scornful; he knew that
his companion’s mind had been occupied with
the queen. But his remarks if he had
meditated any were interrupted by the clock
striking seven.
“He’ll be here in an hour,” said
he.
“We’re ready for him,”
answered Rudolf Rassendyll. With the thought of
action his eyes grew bright and his brow smooth again.
He and old Sapt looked at one another, and they both
smiled.
“Like old times, isn’t it, Sapt?”
“Aye, sire, like the reign of good King Rudolf.”
Thus they made ready for the Count
of Luzau-Rischenheim, while my cursed wound held me
a prisoner at Wintenberg. It is still a sorrow
to me that I know what passed that morning only by
report, and had not the honor of bearing a part in
it. Still, her Majesty did not forget me, but
remembered that I would have taken my share, had fortune
allowed. Indeed I would most eagerly.