BARNEY FINDS A FRIEND
After the party had left the room
Maenck stood looking at the princess for several seconds.
A cunning expression supplanted the anger that had
shown so plainly upon his face but a moment before.
The girl had moved to one side of the apartment and
was pretending an interest in a large tapestry that
covered the wall at that point. Maenck watched
her with greedy eyes. Presently he spoke.
“Let us be friends,” he
said. “You shall be my guest at Blentz
for a long time. I doubt if Peter will care to
release you soon, for he has no love for your father and
it will be easier for both if we establish pleasant
relations from the beginning. What do you say?”
“I shall not be at Blentz long,”
she replied, not even looking in Maenck’s direction,
“though while I am it shall be as a prisoner
and not as a guest. It is incredible that one
could believe me willing to pose as the guest of a
traitor, even were he less impossible than the notorious
and infamous Captain Maenck.”
Maenck smiled. He was one of
those who rather pride themselves upon the possession
of racy reputations. He walked across the room
to a bell cord which he pulled. Then he turned
toward the girl again.
“I have given you an opportunity,”
he said, “to lighten the burdens of your captivity.
I hoped that you would be sensible and accept my advances
of friendship voluntarily,” and he emphasized
the word “voluntarily,” “but ”
He shrugged his shoulders.
A servant had entered the apartment in response to
Maenck’s summons.
“Show the Princess von
der Tann to her apartments,” he commanded
with a sinister tone.
The man, who was in the livery of
Peter of Blentz, bowed, and with a deferential sign
to the girl led the way from the room. Emma
von der Tann followed her guide up a winding
stairway which spiraled within a tower at the end
of a long passage. On the second floor of the
castle the servant led her to a large and beautifully
furnished suite of three rooms a bedroom,
dressing-room and boudoir. After showing her
the rooms that were to be hers the servant left her
alone.
As soon as he had gone the Princess
von der Tann took another turn through the
suite, looking to the doors and windows to ascertain
how securely she might barricade herself against unwelcome
visitors.
She found that the three rooms lay
in an angle of the old, moss-covered castle wall.
The bedroom and dressing-room were
connected by a doorway, and each in turn had another
door opening into the boudoir. The only connection
with the corridor without was through a single doorway
from the boudoir. This door was equipped with
a massive bolt, which, when she had shot it, gave
her a feeling of immense relief and security.
The windows were all too high above the court on one
side and the moat upon the other to cause her the
slightest apprehension of danger from the outside.
The girl found the boudoir not only
beautiful, but extremely comfortable and cozy.
A huge log-fire blazed upon the hearth, and, though
it was summer, its warmth was most welcome, for the
night was chill. Across the room from the fireplace
a full length oil of a former Blentz princess looked
down in arrogance upon the unwilling occupant of the
room. It seemed to the girl that there was an
expression of annoyance upon the painted countenance
that another, and an enemy of her house, should be
making free with her belongings. She wondered
a little, too, that this huge oil should have been
bung in a lady’s boudoir. It seemed singularly
out of place.
“If she would but smile,”
thought Emma von der Tann, “she
would detract less from the otherwise pleasant surroundings,
but I suppose she serves her purpose in some way,
whatever it may be.”
There were papers, magazines and books
upon the center table and more books upon a low tier
of shelves on either side of the fireplace. The
girl tried to amuse herself by reading, but she found
her thoughts continually reverting to the unhappy situation
of the king, and her eyes momentarily wandered to
the cold and repellent face of the Blentz princess.
Finally she wheeled a great armchair
near the fireplace, and with her back toward the portrait
made a final attempt to submerge her unhappy thoughts
in a current periodical.
When Barney and his escort reached
the apartments that had been occupied by the king
of Lutha before his escape, Butzow and the soldiers
left him in company with Dr. Stein and an old servant,
whom the doctor introduced as his new personal attendant.
“Your majesty will find him
a very attentive and faithful servant,” said
Stein. “He will remain with you and administer
your medicine at proper intervals.”
“Medicine?” ejaculated
Barney. “What in the world do I need of
medicine? There is nothing the matter with me.”
Stein smiled indulgently.
“Ah, your majesty,” he
said, “if you could but realize the sad affliction
that clouds your life! You may never sit upon
your throne until the last trace of this sinister
mental disorder is eradicated, so take your medicine
voluntarily, or otherwise Joseph will be compelled
to administer it by force. Remember, sire, that
only through this treatment will you be able to leave
Blentz.”
After Stein had left the room Joseph
bolted the door behind him. Then he came to where
Barney stood in the center of the apartment, and dropping
to his knees took the young man’s hand in his
and kissed it.
“God has been good indeed, your
majesty,” he whispered. “It was He
who made it possible for old Joseph to deceive them
and find his way to your side.”
“Who are you, my man?” asked Barney.
“I am from Tann,” whispered
the old man, in a very low voice. “His
highness, the prince, found the means to obtain service
for me with the new retinue that has replaced the
old which permitted your majesty’s escape.
There was another from Tann among the former servants
here.
“It was through his efforts
that you escaped before, you will recall. I have
seen Fritz and learned from him the way, so that if
your majesty does not recall it it will make no difference,
for I know it well, having been over it three times
already since I came here, to be sure that when the
time came that they should recapture you I might lead
you out quickly before they could slay you.”
“You really think that they intend murdering
me?”
“There is no doubt about it,
your majesty,” replied the old man. “This
very bottle” Joseph touched the phial
which Stein had left upon the table “contains
the means whereby, through my hands, you were to be
slowly poisoned.”
“Do you know what it is?”
“Bichloride of mercury, your
majesty. One dose would have been sufficient,
and after a few days perhaps a week you
would have died in great agony.”
Barney shuddered.
“But I am not the king, Joseph,”
said the young man, “so even had they succeeded
in killing me it would have profited them nothing.”
Joseph shook his head sadly.
“Your majesty will pardon the
presumption of one who loves him,” he said,
“if he makes so bold as to suggest that your
majesty must not again deny that he is king.
That only tends to corroborate the contention of Prince
Peter that your majesty is not er, just
sane, and so, incompetent to rule Lutha. But
we of Tann know differently, and with the help of
the good God we will place your majesty upon the throne
which Peter has kept from you all these years.”
Barney sighed. They were determined
that he should be king whether he would or no.
He had often thought he would like to be a king; but
now the realization of his boyish dreaming which seemed
so imminent bade fair to be almost anything than pleasant.
Barney suddenly realized that the
old fellow was talking. He was explaining how
they might escape. It seemed that a secret passage
led from this very chamber to the vaults beneath the
castle and from there through a narrow tunnel below
the moat to a cave in the hillside far beyond the
structure.
“They will not return again
tonight to see your majesty,” said Joseph, “and
so we had best make haste to leave at once. I
have a rope and swords in readiness. We shall
need the rope to make our way down the hillside, but
let us hope that we shall not need the swords.”
“I cannot leave Blentz,”
said Barney, “unless the Princess Emma goes
with us.”
“The Princess Emma!” cried
the old man. “What Princess Emma?”
“Princess von der
Tann,” replied Barney. “Did you not
know that she was captured with me!”
The old man was visibly affected by
the knowledge that his young mistress was a prisoner
within the walls of Blentz. He seemed torn by
conflicting emotions his duty toward his
king and his love for the daughter of his old master.
So it was that he seemed much relieved when he found
that Barney insisted upon saving the girl before any
thought of their own escape should be taken into consideration.
“My first duty, your majesty,”
said Joseph, “is to bring you safely out of
the hands of your enemies, but if you command me to
try to bring your betrothed with us I am sure that
his highness, Prince Ludwig, would be the last to
censure me for deviating thus from his instructions,
for if he loves another more than he loves his king
it is his daughter, the beautiful Princess Emma.”
“What do you mean, Joseph,”
asked Barney, “by referring to the princess
as my betrothed? I never saw her before today.”
“It has slipped your majesty’s
mind,” said the old man sadly; “but you
and my young mistress were betrothed many years ago
while you were yet but children. It was the old
king’s wish that you wed the daughter of his
best friend and most loyal subject.”
Here was a pretty pass, indeed, thought
Barney. It was sufficiently embarrassing to
be mistaken for the king, but to be thrown into this
false position in company with a beautiful young woman
to whom the king was engaged to be married, and who,
with the others, thought him to be the king, was quite
the last word in impossible positions.
Following this knowledge there came
to Barney the first pangs of regret that he was not
really the king, and then the realization, so sudden
that it almost took his breath away, that the girl
was very beautiful and very much to be desired.
He had not thought about the matter until her utter
impossibility was forced upon him.
It was decided that Joseph should
leave the king’s apartment at once and discover
in what part of the castle Emma von der
Tann was imprisoned. Their further plans were
to depend upon the information gained by the old man
during his tour of investigation of the castle.
In the interval of his absence Barney
paced the length of his prison time and time again.
He thought the fellow would never return. Perhaps
he had been detected in the act of spying, and was
himself a prisoner in some other part of the castle!
The thought came to Barney like a blow in the face,
for he realized that then he would be entirely at
the mercy of his captors, and that there would be
none to champion the cause of the Princess von
der Tann.
When his nervous tension had about
reached the breaking point there came a sound of stealthy
movement just outside the door of his room. Barney
halted close to the massive panels. He heard a
key fitted quietly and then the lock grated as it
turned.
Barney thought that they had surely
detected Joseph’s duplicity and had come to
make short work of the king before other traitors arose
in their midst entirely to frustrate their plans.
The young American stepped to the wall behind the
door that he might be out of sight of whoever entered.
Should it prove other than Joseph, might the Lord
help them! The clenched fists, square-set chin,
and gleaming gray eyes of the prisoner presaged no
good for any incoming enemy.
Slowly the door swung open and a man
entered the room. Barney breathed a deep sigh
of relief it was Joseph.
“Well?” cried the young
man from behind him, and Joseph started as though
Peter of Blentz himself had laid an accusing finger
upon his shoulder. “What news?”
“Your majesty,” gasped
Joseph, “how you did startle me! I found
the apartments of the princess, sire. There is
a bare chance that we may succeed in rescuing her,
but a very bare one, indeed.
“We must traverse a main corridor
of the castle to reach her suite, and then return
by the same way. It will be a miracle if we are
not discovered; but the worst of it is that next to
her apartments, and between them and your majesty’s,
are the apartments of Captain Maenck.
“He is sure to be there and
officers and servants may be coming and going throughout
the entire night, for the man is a convivial fellow,
sitting at cards and drink until sunrise nearly every
day.”
“And when we have brought the
princess in safety to my quarters,” asked Barney,
“what then? How shall we conduct her from
the castle? You have not told me that as yet.”
The old man explained then the plan
of escape. It seemed that one of the two huge
tile panels that flanked the fireplace on either side
was in reality a door hiding the entrance to a shaft
that rose from the vaults beneath the castle to the
roof. At each floor there was a similar secret
door concealing the mouth of the passage. From
the vaults a corridor led through another secret panel
to the tunnel that wound downward to the cave in the
hillside.
“Beyond that we shall find horses,
your majesty,” concluded the old man. “They
have been hidden in the woods since I came to Blentz.
Each day I go there to water and feed them.”
During the servant’s explanation
Barney had been casting about in his mind for some
means of rescuing the princess without so great risk
of detection, and as the plan of the secret passageway
became clear to him he thought that he saw a way to
accomplish the thing with comparative safety in so
far as detection was concerned.
“Who occupies the floor above us, Joseph?”
he asked.
“It is vacant,” replied the old man.
“Good! Come, show me the entrance to the
shaft,” directed Barney.
“You will go without attempting
to succor the Princess Emma?” exclaimed the
old fellow in ill-concealed chagrin.
“Far from it,” replied
Barney. “Bring your rope and the swords.
I think we are going to find the rescuing of the
Princess Emma the easiest part of our adventure.”
The old man shook his head, but went
to another room of the suite, from which he presently
emerged with a stout rope about fifty feet in length
and two swords. As he buckled one of the weapons
to Barney his eyes fell upon the American’s
seal ring that encircled the third finger of his left
hand.
“The Royal Ring of Lutha!”
exclaimed Joseph. “Where is it, your majesty?
What has become of the Royal Ring of the Kings of Lutha?”
“I’m sure I don’t
know, Joseph,” replied the young man. “Should
I be wearing a royal ring?”
“The profaning miscreants!”
cried Joseph. “They have dared to filch
from you the great ring that has been handed down from
king to king for three hundred years. When did
they take it from you?”
“I have never seen it, Joseph,”
replied the young man, “and possibly this fact
may assure you where all else has failed that I am
no true king of Lutha, after all.”
“Ah, no, your majesty,”
replied the old servitor; “it but makes assurance
doubly sure as to your true identity, for the fact
that you have not the ring is positive proof that
you are king and that they have sought to hide the
fact by removing the insignia of your divine right
to rule in Lutha.”
Barney could not but smile at the
old fellow’s remarkable logic. He saw
that nothing short of a miracle would ever convince
Joseph that he was not the real monarch, and so, as
matters of greater importance were to the fore, he
would have allowed the subject to drop had not the
man attempted to recall to the impoverished memory
of his king a recollection of the historic and venerated
relic of the dead monarchs of Lutha.
“Do you not remember, sir,”
he asked, “the great ruby that glared, blood-red
from its center, and the four sets of golden wings
that formed the setting? From the blood of Charlemagne
was the ruby made, so history tells us, and the setting
represented the protecting wings of the power of the
kings of Lutha spread to the four points of the compass.
Now your majesty must recall the royal ring, I am
sure.”
Barney only shook his head, much to
Joseph’s evident sorrow.
“Never mind the ring, Joseph,”
said the young man. “Bring your rope and
lead me to the floor above.”
“The floor above? But,
your majesty, we cannot reach the vaults and tunnel
by going upward!”
“You forget, Joseph, that we
are going to fetch the Princess Emma first.”
“But she is not on the floor
above us, sire; she is upon the same floor as we are,”
insisted the old man, hesitating.
“Joseph, who do you think I am?” asked
Barney.
“You are the king, my lord,” replied the
old man.
“Then do as your king commands,” said
the American sharply.
Joseph turned with dubious mutterings
and approached the tiled panel at the left of the
fireplace. Here he fumbled about for a moment
until his fingers found the hidden catch that held
the cunningly devised door in place. An instant
later the panel swung inward before his touch, and
standing to one side, the old fellow bowed low as
he ushered Barney into the Stygian darkness of the
space beyond their vision.
Joseph halted the young man just within
the doorway, cautioning him against the danger of
falling into the shaft, then he closed the panel,
and a moment later had found the lantern he had hidden
there and lighted it. The rays disclosed to the
American the rough masonry of the interior of a narrow,
well-built shaft. A rude ladder standing upon
a narrow ledge beside him extended upward to lose
itself in the shadows above. At its foot the top
of another ladder was visible protruding through the
opening from the floor beneath.
No sooner had Joseph’s lantern
shown him the way than Barney was ascending the ladder
toward the floor above. At the next landing he
waited for the old man.
Joseph put out the light and placed
the lantern where they could easily find it upon their
return. Then he cautiously slipped the catch
that held the panel in place and slowly opened the
door until a narrow line of lesser darkness showed
from without.
For a moment they stood in silence
listening for any sound from the chamber beyond, but
as nothing occurred to indicate that the apartment
was occupied the old man opened the portal a trifle
further, and finally far enough to permit his body
to pass through. Barney followed him. They
found themselves in a large, empty chamber, identical
in size and shape with that which they had just quitted
upon the floor below.
From this the two passed into the
corridor beyond, and thence to the apartments at the
far end of the wing, directly over those occupied
by Emma von der Tann.
Barney hastened to a window overlooking
the moat. By leaning far out he could see the
light from the princess’s chamber shining upon
the sill. He wished that the light was not there,
for the window was in plain view of the guard on the
lookout upon the barbican.
Suddenly he caught the sound of voices
from the chamber beneath. For an instant he listened,
and then, catching a few words of the dialogue, he
turned hurriedly toward his companion.
“The rope, Joseph! And
for God’s sake be quick about it.”