By A TH Y H-PE
CHAPTER I
RUDOLPH OF TRULYRURALANIA
When I state that I was own brother
to Lord Burleydon, had an income of two thousand a
year, could speak all the polite languages fluently,
was a powerful swordsman, a good shot, and could ride
anything from an elephant to a clotheshorse, I really
think I have said enough to satisfy any feminine novel-reader
of Bayswater or South Kensington that I was a hero.
My brother’s wife, however, did not seem to
incline to this belief.
“A more conceited, self-satisfied
little cad I never met than you,” she said.
“Why don’t you try to do something instead
of sneering at others who do? You never take
anything seriously except yourself, which
isn’t worth it. You are proud of your red
hair and peaked nose just because you fondly believe
that you got them from the Prince of Trulyruralania,
and are willing to think evil of your ancestress to
satisfy your snobbish little soul. Let me tell
you, sir, that there was no more truth about that
than there was in that silly talk of her partiality
for her husband’s red-haired gamekeeper in Scotland.
Ah! that makes you start don’t it?
But I have always observed that a mule is apt to
remember only the horse side of his ancestry!”
Whenever my pretty sister-in-law talks
in this way I always try to forget that she came of
a family far inferior to our own, the Razorbills.
Indeed, her people of the Nonconformist
stock really had nothing but wealth and
rectitude, and I think my brother Bob, in his genuine
love for her, was willing to overlook the latter for
the sake of the former.
My pretty sister-in-law’s interest
in my affairs always made me believe that she secretly
worshiped me although it was a fact, as
will be seen in the progress of this story, that most
women blushed on my addressing them. I used
to say it “was the reflection of my red hair
on a transparent complexion,” which was rather
neat wasn’t it? And subtle?
But then, I was always saying such subtle things.
“My dear Rose,” I said,
laying down my egg spoon (the egg spoon really had
nothing to do with this speech, but it imparted such
a delightfully realistic flavor to the scene), “I’m
not to blame if I resemble the S’helpburgs.”
“It’s your being so beastly
proud of it that I object to!” she replied.
“And for Heaven’s sake, try to be
something, and not merely resemble things! The
fact is you resemble too much you’re
always resembling. You resemble a man of
fashion, and you’re not; a wit, and you’re
not; a soldier, a sportsman, a hero and
you’re none of ’em. Altogether,
you’re not in the least convincing. Now,
listen! There’s a good chance for you
to go as our attache with Lord Mumblepeg, the new
Ambassador to Cochin China. In all the novels,
you know, attaches are always the confidants of Grand
Duchesses, and know more state secrets than their
chiefs; in real life, I believe they are something
like a city clerk with a leaning to private theatricals.
Say you’ll go! Do!”
“I’ll take a few months’
holiday first,” I replied, “and then,”
I added in my gay, dashing way, “if the place
is open hang it if I don’t go!”
“Good old bounder!” she
said, “and don’t think too much of that
precious Prince Rupert. He was a bad lot.”
She blushed again at me as her husband
entered.
“Take Rose’s advice, Rupert, my boy,”
he said, “and go!”
And that is how I came to go to Trulyruralania.
For I secretly resolved to take my holiday in traveling
in that country and trying, as dear Lady Burleydon
put it, really to be somebody, instead of resembling
anybody in particular. A precious lot she
knew about it!
CHAPTER II
IN WHICH MY HAIR CAUSES A LOT OF THINGS
You go to Trulyruralania from Charing
Cross. In passing through Paris we picked up
Mlle. Beljambe, who was going to Kohlslau, the
capital of Trulyruralania, to marry the Grand Duke
Michael, who, however, as I was informed, was in love
with the Princess Flirtia. She blushed on seeing
me but, I was told afterwards, declined
being introduced to me on any account. However,
I thought nothing of this, and went on to Bock, the
next station to Kohlslau. At the little inn in
the forest I was informed I was just in time to see
the coronation of the new king the next day.
The landlady and her daughter were very communicative,
and, after the fashion of the simple, guileless stage
peasant, instantly informed me what everybody was
doing, and at once explained the situation.
She told me that the Grand Duke Michael or
Black Michael as he was called himself
aspired to the throne, as well as to the hand of the
Princess Flirtia, but was hated by the populace, who
preferred the young heir, Prince Rupert; because he
had the hair and features of the dynasty of the S’helpburgs,
“which,” she added, “are singularly
like your own.”
“But is red hair so very peculiar here?”
I asked.
“Among the Jews yes,
sire! I mean yes, sir,” she corrected
herself. “You seldom see a red-headed Jew.”
“The Jews!” I repeated in astonishment.
“Of course you know the S’helpburgs
are descended directly from Solomon and
have indeed some of his matrimonial peculiarities,”
she said, blushing.
I was amazed but recalled
myself. “But why do they call the Duke
of Kohlslau Black Michael?” I asked carelessly.
“Because he is nearly black,
sir. You see, when the great Prince Rupert went
abroad in the old time he visited England, Scotland,
and Africa. They say he married an African lady
there and that the Duke is really more
in the direct line of succession than Prince Rupert.”
But here the daughter showed me to
my room. She blushed, of course, and apologized
for not bringing a candle, as she thought my hair was
sufficiently illuminating. “But,”
she added with another blush, “I do so
like it.”
I replied by giving her something
of no value, a Belgian nickel which wouldn’t
pass in Bock, as I had found to my cost. But
my hair had evidently attracted attention from others,
for on my return to the guest-room a stranger approached
me, and in the purest and most precise German the
Court or ’Olland Hof speech addressed
me:
“Have you the red hair of the
fair King or the hair of your father?”
Luckily I was able to reply with the
same purity and precision: “I have both
the hair of the fair King and my own. But I have
not the hair of my father nor of Black Michael, nor
of the innkeeper nor the innkeeper’s wife.
The red heir of the fair King would be a son.”
Possibly this delicate mot on the
approaching marriage of the King was lost in the translation,
for the stranger strode abruptly away. I learned,
however, that the King was actually then in Bock, at
the castle a few miles distant, in the woods.
I resolved to stroll thither.
It was a fine old mediaeval structure.
But as the singular incidents I am about to relate
combine the romantic and adventurous atmosphere of
the middle ages with all the appliances of modern times,
I may briefly state that the castle was lit by electricity,
bad fire-escapes on each of the turrets, four lifts,
and was fitted up by one of the best West End establishments.
The sanitary arrangements were excellent, and the
drainage of the most perfect order, as I had reason
to know personally later. I was so affected
by the peaceful solitude that I lay down under a tree
and presently fell asleep. I was awakened by
the sound of voices, and, looking up, beheld two men
bending over me. One was a grizzled veteran,
and the other a younger dandyfied man; both were dressed
in shooting suits.
“Never saw such a resemblance
before in all my life,” said the elder man.
“’Pon my soul! if the King hadn’t
got shaved yesterday because the Princess Flirtia
said his beard tickled her, I’d swear it was
he!”
I could not help thinking how lucky
it was for this narrative that
the King had shaved, otherwise my story would
have degenerated into a mere Comedy of Errors.
Opening my eyes, I said boldly:
“Now that you are satisfied
who I resemble, gentlemen, perhaps you will tell me
who you are?”
“Certainly,” said the
elder curtly. “I am Spitz a
simple colonel of his Majesty’s, yet, nevertheless,
the one man who runs this whole dynasty and
this young gentleman is Fritz, my lieutenant.
And you are ?”
“My name is Razorbill brother
to Lord Burleydon,” I replied calmly.
“Good heavens! another of the
lot!” he muttered. Then, correcting himself,
he said brusquely: “Any relation to that
Englishwoman who was so sweet on the old Rupert centuries
ago?”
Here, again, I suppose my sister-in-law
would have had me knock down the foreign insulter
of my English ancestress but I colored to
the roots of my hair, and even farther with
pleasure at this proof of my royal descent!
And then a cheery voice was heard calling “Spitz!”
and “Fritz!” through the woods.
“The King!” said Spitz
to Fritz quickly. “He must not see him.”
“Too late,” said Fritz,
as a young man bounded lightly out of the bushes.
I was thunderstruck! It was
as if I had suddenly been confronted with a mirror and
beheld myself! Of course he was not quite so
good-looking, or so tall, but he was still a colorable
imitation! I was delighted.
Nevertheless, for a moment he did
not seem to reciprocate my feeling. He stared
at me, staggered back and passed his hand across his
forehead. “Can it be,” he muttered
thickly, “that I’ve got ’em agin?
Yet I only had shingle glash!”
But Fritz quickly interposed.
“Your Majesty is all right though,”
he added in a lower voice, “let this be a warning
to you for to-morrow! This gentleman is Mr.
Razorbill you know the old story of the
Razorbills? Ha! ha!”
But the King did not laugh; he extended
his hand and said gently, “You are welcome my
cousin!” Indeed, my sister-in-law would have
probably said that dissipated though he
was he was the only gentleman there.
“I have come to see the coronation,
your Majesty,” I said.
“And you shall,” said
the King heartily, “and shall go with us!
The show can’t begin without us eh,
Spitz?” he added playfully, poking the veteran
in the ribs, “whatever Michael may do!”
Then he linked his arms in Spitz’s
and mine. “Let’s go to the hut and
have some supper and fizz,” he said gayly.
We went to the hut. We had supper.
We ate and drank heavily. We danced madly around
the table. Nevertheless I thought that Spitz
and Fritz were worried by the King’s potations,
and Spitz at last went so far as to remind his Majesty
that they were to start early in the morning for Kohlslau.
I noticed also that as the King drank his speech
grew thicker and Spitz and Fritz exchanged glances.
At last Spitz said with stern significance:
“Your Majesty has not forgotten
the test invariably submitted to the King at his coronation?”
“Shertenly not,” replied
the King, with his reckless laugh. “The
King mush be able to pronounsh name of
his country intel-lillil-gibly: mush
shay (hic!): ‘I’m King of King
of Tootoo-tooral-looral-anyer.’”
He staggered, laughed, and fell under the table.
“He cannot say it!” gasped
Fritz and Spitz in one voice. “He is lost!”
“Unless,” said Fritz suddenly,
pointing at me with a flash of intelligence, “He
can personate him, and say it. Can you?”
he turned to me brusquely.
It was an awful moment. I had
been drinking heavily too, but I resolved to succeed.
“I’m King of Trooly-rooly ”
I murmured; but I could not master it I
staggered and followed the King under the table.
“Is there no one here,”
roared Spitz, “who can shave thish dynasty, and
shay ‘Tooral ’? No!
it! I mean ‘Trularlooral ’”
but he, too, lurched hopelessly forward.
“No one can say ‘Tooral-looral ’”
muttered Fritz; and, grasping Spitz in despair, they
both rolled under the table.
How long we lay there, Heaven knows!
I was awakened by Spitz playing the garden hose on
me. He was booted and spurred, with Fritz by
his side. The King was lying on a bench, saying
feebly: “Blesh you, my chillen.”
“By politely acceding to Black
Michael’s request to ’try our one-and-six
sherry,’ he has been brought to this condition,”
said Spitz bitterly. “It’s a trick
to keep him from being crowned. In this country
if the King is crowned while drunk, the kingdom instantly
reverts to a villain no matter who.
But in this case the villain is Black Michael.
Ha! What say you, lad? Shall we frustrate
the rascal, by having you personate the King?”
I was well! intoxicated
at the thought! But what would my sister-in-law
say? Would she in her Nonconformist
conscience consider it strictly honorable?
But I swept all scruples aside. A King was
to be saved! “I will go,” I said.
“Let us on to Kohlslau riding like
the wind!” We rode like the wind, furiously,
madly. Mounted on a wild, dashing bay known
familiarly as the “Bay of Biscay” from
its rough turbulence I easily kept the lead.
But our horses began to fail. Suddenly Spitz
halted, clapped his hand to his head, and threw himself
from his horse. “Fools!” he said,
“we should have taken the train! It will
get there an hour before we will!” He pointed
to a wayside station where the 7.15 excursion train
for Kohlslau was waiting.
“But how dreadfully unmediaeval! What
will the public say?” I began.
“Bother the public!” he
said gruffly. “Who’s running this
dynasty you or I? Come!” With
the assistance of Fritz he tied up my face with a
handkerchief to simulate toothache, and then, with
a shout of defiance, we three rushed madly into a
closely packed third-class carriage.
Never shall I forget the perils, the
fatigue, the hopes and fears of that mad journey.
Panting, perspiring, packed together with cheap trippers,
but exalted with the one hope of saving the King, we
at last staggered out on the Kohlslau platform utterly
exhausted. As we did so we heard a distant roar
from the city. Fritz turned an ashen gray, Spitz
a livid blue. “Are we too late?”
he gasped, as we madly fought our way into the street,
where shouts of “The King! The King!”
were rending the air. “Can it be Black
Michael?” But here the crowd parted, and a
procession, preceded by outriders, flashed into the
square. And there, seated in a carriage beside
the most beautiful red-haired girl I had ever seen,
was the King, the King whom we had left
two hours ago, dead drunk in the hut in the forest!
CHAPTERS III
IN WHICH THINGS GET MIXED
We reeled against each other aghast!
Spitz recovered himself first. “We must
fly!” he said hoarsely. “If the King
has discovered our trick we are lost!”
“But where shall we go?” I asked.
“Back to the hut.”
We caught the next train to Bock.
An hour later we stood panting within the hut.
Its walls and ceiling were splashed with sinister
red stains. “Blood!” I exclaimed
joyfully. “At last we have a real mediaeval
adventure!”
“It’s Burgundy, you fool,”
growled Spitz; “good Burgundy wasted!”
At this moment Fritz appeared dragging in the hut-keeper.
“Where is the King?” demanded
Spitz fiercely of the trembling peasant.
“He was carried away an hour
ago by Black Michael and taken to the castle.”
“And when did he leave the castle?”
roared Spitz.
“He never left the castle, sir,
and, alas! I fear never will, alive!” replied
the man, shuddering.
We stared at each other! Spitz
bit his grizzled mustache. “So,”
he said bitterly, “Black Michael has simply
anticipated us with the same game! We have been
tricked. I knew it could not be the King whom
they crowned! No!” he added quickly, “I
see it all it was Rupert of Glasgow!”
“Who is Rupert of Glasgow?” I cried.
“Oh, I really can’t go
over all that family rot again,” grunted Spitz.
“Tell him, Fritz.”
Then, taking me aside, Fritz delicately
informed me that Rupert of Glasgow a young
Scotchman claimed equally with myself descent
from the old Rupert, and that equally with myself
he resembled the King. That Michael had got possession
of him on his arrival in the country, kept him closely
guarded in the castle, and had hid his resemblance
in a black wig and false mustache; that the young
Scotchman, however, seemed apparently devoted to Michael
and his plots; and there was undoubtedly some secret
understanding between them. That it was evidently
Michael’s trick to have the pretender crowned,
and then, by exposing the fraud and the condition
of the real King, excite the indignation of the duped
people, and seat himself on the throne! “But,”
I burst out, “shall this base-born pretender
remain at Kohlslau beside the beautiful Princess Flirtia?
Let us to Kohlslau at once and hurl him from the throne!”
“One pretender is as good as
another,” said Spitz dryly. “But
leave him to me. ’Tis the King we
must protect and succor! As for that Scotch
springald, before midnight I shall have him kidnaped,
brought back to his master in a close carriage, and
you you shall take his place at Kohlslau.”
“I will,” I said enthusiastically,
drawing my sword; “but I have done nothing yet.
Please let me kill something!”
“Aye, lad!” said Spitz,
with a grim smile at my enthusiasm. “There’s
a sheep in your path. Go out and cleave it to
the saddle. And bring the saddle home!”
My sister-in-law might have thought
me cruel but I did it.
CHAPTER IV
I know not how it was compassed, but
that night Rupert of Glasgow was left bound and gagged
against the door of the castle, and the night-bell
pulled. And that night I was seated on the throne
of the S’helpburgs. As I gazed at the
Princess Flirtia, glowing in the characteristic beauty
of the S’helpburgs, and admired her striking
profile, I murmured softly and half audibly: “Her
nose is as a tower that looketh toward Damascus.”
She looked puzzled, and knitted her
pretty brows. “Is that poetry?”
she asked.
“No” I said promptly.
“It’s only part of a song of our great
Ancestor.” As she blushed slightly, I playfully
flung around her fair neck the jeweled collar of the
Order of the S’helpburgs three golden
spheres pendant, quartered from the arms of Lombardy –with
the ancient Syric motto, El Ess Dee.
She toyed with it a moment, and then
said softly: “You have changed, Rupert.
Do ye no ken hoo?”
I looked at her as surprised
at her dialect as at the imputation.
“You don’t talk that way,
as you did. And you don’t say, ’It
will be twelve o’clock,’ when you
mean, ‘It is twelve o’clock,’
nor ’I will be going out,’ when you mean
‘I am.’ And you didn’t
say, ‘Eh, sirs!’ or ‘Eh, mon,’
to any of the Court nor ‘Hoot awa!’
nor any of those things. And,” she added
with a divine little pout, “you haven’t
told me I was ‘sonsie’ or ‘bonnie’
once.”
I could with difficulty restrain myself.
Rage, indignation, and jealousy filled my heart almost
to bursting. I understood it all; that rascally
Scotchman had made the most of his time, and dared
to get ahead of me! I did not mind being taken
for the King, but to be confounded with this infernal
descendant of a gamekeeper was too much!
Yet with a superhuman effort I remained calm and
even smiled.
“You are not well?” said
the Princess earnestly. “I thought you
were taking too much of the Strasbourg pie at supper!
And you are not going, surely so soon?”
she added, as I rose.
“I must go at once,” I
said. “I have forgotten some important
business at Bock.”
“Not boar hunting again?” she said poutingly.
“No, I’m hunting a red
dear,” I said with that playful subtlety which
would make her take it as a personal compliment, though
I was only thinking of that impostor, and longing
to get at him, as I bowed and withdrew.
In another hour I was before Black
Michael’s castle at Bock. These are lightning
changes, I know and the sovereignty of Trulyruralania
was somewhat itinerant but when a
kingdom and a beautiful Princess are at stake, what
are you to do? Fritz had begged me to take him
along, but I arranged that he should come later, and
go up unostentatiously in the lift. I was going
by way of the moat. I was to succor the King,
but I fear my real object was to get at Rupert of
Glasgow.
I had noticed the day before that
a large outside drain pipe, decreed by the Bock County
Council, ran from the moat to the third floor of the
donjon keep. I surmised that the King was imprisoned
on that floor. Examining the pipe closely, I
saw that it was really a pneumatic dispatch tube,
for secretly conveying letters and dispatches from
the castle through the moat beyond the castle walls.
Its extraordinary size, however, gave me the horrible
conviction that it was to be used to convey the dead
body of the King to the moat. I grew cold with
horror but I was determined.
I crept up the pipe. As I expected,
it opened funnel-wise into a room where the poor King
was playing poker with Black Michael. It took
me but a moment to dash through the window into the
room, push the King aside, gag and bind Black Michael,
and lower him by a stout rope into the pipe he had
destined for another. Having him in my power,
I lowered him until I heard his body splash in the
water in the lower part of the pipe. Then I
proceeded to draw him up again, intending to question
him in regard to Rupert of Glasgow. But this was
difficult, as his saturated clothing made him fit
the smooth pipe closely. At last I had him partly
up, when I was amazed at a rush of water from the pipe
which flooded the room. I dropped him and pulled
him up again with the same result. Then in a
flash I saw it all. His body, acting like a
piston in the pipe, had converted it into a powerful
pump. Mad with joy, I rapidly lowered and pulled
him up again and again, until the castle was flooded and
the moat completely drained! I had created the
diversion I wished; the tenants of the castle were
disorganized and bewildered in trying to escape from
the deluge, and the moat was accessible to my friends.
Placing the poor King on a table to be out of the
water, and tying up his head in my handkerchief to
disguise him from Michael’s guards, I drew my
sword and plunged downstairs with the cataract in
search of the miscreant Rupert. I reached the
drawbridge, when I heard the sounds of tumult and
was twice fired at, once, as I have since
learned, by my friends, under the impression that I
was the escaping Rupert of Glasgow, and once by Black
Michael’s myrmidons, under the belief that
I was the King. I was struck by the fact that
these resemblances were confusing and unfortunate!
At this moment, however, I caught sight of a kilted
figure leaping from a lower window into the moat.
Some instinct impelled me to follow it. It rapidly
crossed the moat and plunged into the forest, with
me in pursuit. I gained upon it; suddenly it
turned, and I found myself again confronted with myself and
apparently the King! But that very resemblance
made me recognize the Scotch pretender, Rupert of
Glasgow. Yet he would have been called a “braw
laddie,” and his handsome face showed a laughing
good humor, even while he opposed me, claymore in hand.
“Bide a wee, Maister Rupert
Razorbill,” he said lightly, lowering his sword,
“before we slit ane anither’s weasands.
I’m no claimin’ any descent frae kings,
and I’m no acceptin’ any auld wife’s
clavers against my women forbears, as ye are!
I’m just paid gude honest siller by Black Michael
for the using of ma face and figure sic
time as his Majesty is tae worse frae trink!
And I’m commeesioned frae Michael to ask ye
what price ye would take to join me in performing
these duties turn and turn aboot.
Eh, laddie but he would pay ye mair than
that daft beggar, Spitz.”
Rage and disgust overpowered me.
“And this is my answer,” I said,
rushing upon him.
I have said earlier in these pages
that I was a “strong” swordsman. In
point of fact, I had carefully studied in the transpontine
theatres that form of melodramatic mediaeval sword-play
known as “two up and two down.”
To my disgust, however, this wretched Scotchman did
not seem to understand it, but in a twinkling sent
my sword flying over my head. Before I could
recover it, he had mounted a horse ready saddled in
the wood, and, shouting to me that he would take my
“compleements” to the Princess, galloped
away. Even then I would have pursued him afoot,
but, hearing shouts behind me, I turned as Spitz and
Fritz rode up.
“Has the King escaped to Kohlslau?”
asked Fritz, staring at me.
“No,” I said, “but Rupert of Glasgow”
“ Rupert of Glasgow,”
growled Spitz. “We’ve settled him!
He’s gagged and bound and is now on his way
to the frontier in a close carriage.”
“Rupert on his way to the frontier?”
I gasped.
“Yes. Two of my men found
him, disguised with a handkerchief over his face,
trying to escape from the castle. And while we
were looking for the King, whom we supposed was with
you, they have sent the rascally Scotchman home.”
“Fool!” I gasped.
“Rupert of Glasgow has just left me! You
have deported your own king.”
And overcome by my superhuman exertions, I sank unconscious
to the ground.
When I came to, I found myself in
a wagon lit, speeding beyond the Trulyruralania frontier.
On my berth was lying a missive with the seal of
the S’helpburgs. Tearing it open I recognized
the handwriting of the Princess Flirtia.
My dear Rupert, Owing
to the confusion that arises from there being so many
of you, I have concluded to accept the hand of the
Duke Michael. I may not become a Queen, but I
shall bring rest to my country, and Michael assures
me in his playful manner that “three of a kind,”
“even of the same color,” do not always
win at poker. It will tranquilize you somewhat
to know that the Lord Chancellor assures me that on
examining the records of the dynasty he finds that
my ancestor Rupert never left his kingdom during his
entire reign, and that consequently your ancestress
has been grossly maligned. I am sending typewritten
copies of this to Rupert of Glasgow and the King.
Farewell.
Flirtia.
Once a year, at Christmastide, I receive
a simple foreign hamper via Charing Cross, marked
“Return empty.” I take it in silence
to my own room, and there, opening it, I find unseen
by any other eyes but my own a modest pate
de foie gras, of the kind I ate with the Princess
Flirtia. I take out the pate, replace the label,
and have the hamper reconveyed to Charing Cross.