A TIMELY INTERVENTION
Nine o’clock found Barney Custer
pacing up and down his apartments in the palace.
No clue as to the whereabouts of Coblich, Maenck or
the king had been discovered. One by one his troopers
had returned to Butzow empty-handed, and as much at
a loss as to the hiding-place of their quarry as when
they had set out upon their search.
Peter of Blentz and his retainers
had entered the city and already had commenced to
gather at the cathedral.
Peter, at the residence of Coblich,
had succeeded in gathering about him many of the older
nobility whom he pledged to support him in case he
could prove to them that the man who occupied the royal
palace was not Leopold of Lutha.
They agreed to support him in his
regency if he produced proof that the true Leopold
was dead, and Peter of Blentz waited with growing
anxiety the coming of Coblich with word that he had
the king in custody. Peter was staking all on
a single daring move which he had decided to make
in his game of intrigue.
As Barney paced within the palace,
waiting for word that Leopold had been found, Peter
of Blentz was filled with equal apprehension as he,
too, waited for the same tidings. At last he heard
the pound of hoofs upon the pavement without and a
moment later Coblich, his clothing streaked with dirt,
blood caked upon his face from a wound across the
forehead, rushed in to the presence of the prince regent.
Peter drew him hurriedly into a small
study on the first floor.
“Well?” he whispered, as the two faced
each other.
“We have him,” replied
Coblich. But we had the devil’s own time
getting him. Stein was killed and Maenck and I
both wounded, and all morning we have spent the time
hiding from troopers who seemed to be searching for
us. Only fifteen minutes since did we reach the
hiding-place that you instructed us to use. But
we have him, your highness, and he is in such a state
of cowardly terror that he is ready to agree to anything,
if you will but spare his life and set him free across
the border.”
“It is too late for that now,
Coblich,” replied Peter. “There is
but one way that Leopold of Lutha can serve me now,
and that is dead. Were his corpse
to be carried into the cathedral of Lustadt before
noon today, and were those who fetched it to swear
that the king was killed by the impostor after being
dragged from the hospital at Tafelberg where you and
Maenck had located him, and from which you were attempting
to rescue him, I believe that the people would tear
our enemies to pieces. What say you, Coblich?”
The other stared at Peter of Blentz
for several seconds while the atrocity of his chief’s
plan filtered through his brain.
“My God!” he exclaimed
at last. “You mean that you wish me to
murder Leopold with my own hands?”
“You put it too crudely, my
dear Coblich,” replied the other.
“I cannot do it,” muttered
Coblich. “I have never killed a man in
my life. I am getting old. No, I could never
do it. I should not sleep nights.”
“If it is not done, Coblich,
and Leopold comes into his own,” said Peter
slowly, “you will be caught and hanged higher
than Haman. And if you do not do it, and the
imposter is crowned today, then you will be either
hanged officially or knifed unofficially, and without
any choice in the matter whatsoever. Nothing,
Coblich, but the dead body of the true Leopold can
save your neck. You have your choice, therefore,
of letting him live to prove your treason, or letting
him die and becoming chancellor of Lutha.”
Slowly Coblich turned toward the door.
“You are right,” he said, “but
may God have mercy on my soul. I never thought
that I should have to do it with my own hands.”
So saying he left the room and a moment
later Peter of Blentz smiled as he heard the pounding
of a horse’s hoofs upon the pavement without.
Then the Regent entered the room he
had recently quitted and spoke to the nobles of Lutha
who were gathered there.
“Coblich has found the body
of the murdered king,” he said. “I
have directed him to bring it to the cathedral.
He came upon the impostor and his confederate, Lieutenant
Butzow, as they were bearing the corpse from the hospital
at Tafelberg where the king has lain unknown since
the rumor was spread by Von der Tann that
he had been killed by bandits.
“He was not killed until last
evening, my lords, and you shall see today the fresh
wounds upon him. When the time comes that we can
present this grisly evidence of the guilt of the impostor
and those who uphold him, I shall expect you all to
stand at my side, as you have promised.”
With one accord the noblemen pledged
anew their allegiance to Peter of Blentz if he could
produce one-quarter of the evidence he claimed to
possess.
“All that we wish to know positively
is,” said one, “that the man who bears
the title of king today is really Leopold of Lutha,
or that he is not. If not then he stands convicted
of treason, and we shall know how to conduct ourselves.”
Together the party rode to the cathedral,
the majority of the older nobility now openly espousing
the cause of the Regent.
At the palace Barney was about distracted.
Butzow was urging him to take the crown whether he
was Leopold or not, for the young lieutenant saw no
hope for Lutha, if either the scoundrelly Regent or
the cowardly man whom Barney had assured him was the
true king should come into power.
It was eleven o’clock.
In another hour Barney knew that he must have found
some new solution of his dilemma, for there seemed
little probability that the king would be located
in the brief interval that remained before the coronation.
He wondered what they did to people who stole thrones.
For a time he figured his chances of reaching the
border ahead of the enraged populace. All had
depended upon the finding of the king, and he had
been so sure that it could be accomplished in time,
for Coblich and Maenck had had but a few hours in
which to conceal the monarch before the search was
well under way.
Armed with the king’s warrants,
his troopers had ridden through the country, searching
houses, and questioning all whom they met. Patrols
had guarded every road that the fugitives might take
either to Lustadt, Blentz, or the border; but no king
had been found and no trace of his abductors.
Prince von der Tann, Barney
was convinced, was on the point of deserting him,
and going over to the other side. It was true
that the old man had carried out his instructions
relative to the placing of the machine guns; but they
might be used as well against him, where they stood,
as for him.
From his window he could see the broad
avenue which passes before the royal palace of Lutha.
It was crowded with throngs moving toward the cathedral.
Presently there came a knock upon the closed door of
his chamber.
At his “Enter” a functionary
announced: “His Royal Highness Ludwig,
Prince von der Tann!”
The old man was much perturbed at
the rumors he had heard relative to the assassination
of the true Leopold. Soldier-like, he blurted
out his suspicions and his ultimatum.
“None but the royal blood of
Rubinroth may reign in Lutha while there be a Rubinroth
left to reign and old Von der Tann lives,”
he cried in conclusion.
At the name “Rubinroth”
Barney started. It was his mother’s name.
Suddenly the truth flashed upon him. He understood
now the reticence of both his father and mother relative
to her early life.
“Prince Ludwig,” said
the young man earnestly, “I have only the good
of Lutha in my heart. For three weeks I have labored
and risked death a hundred times to place the legitimate
heir to the crown of Lutha upon his throne. I ”
He hesitated, not knowing just how
to commence the confession he was determined to make,
though he was positive that it would place Peter of
Blentz upon the throne, since the old prince had promised
to support the Regent could it be proved that Barney
was an impostor.
“I,” he started again,
and then there came an interruption at the door.
“A messenger, your majesty,”
announced the doorman, “who says that he must
have audience at once upon a matter of life and death
to the king.”
“We will see him in the ante-chamber,”
replied Barney, moving toward the door. “Await
us here, Prince Ludwig.”
A moment later he re-entered the apartment.
There was an expression of renewed hope upon his
face.
“As we were about to remark,
my dear prince,” he said, “I swear that
the royal blood of the Rubinroths flows in my veins,
and as God is my judge, none other than the true Leopold
of Lutha shall be crowned today. And now we must
prepare for the coronation. If there be trouble
in the cathedral, Prince Ludwig, we look to your sword
in protection of the king.”
“When I am with you, sire,”
said Von der Tann, “I know that you
are king. When I saw how you led the troops in
battle, I prayed that there could be no mistake.
God give that I am right. But God help you if
you are playing with old Ludwig von der
Tann.”
When the old man had left the apartment
Barney summoned an aide and sent for Butzow.
Then he hurried to the bath that adjoined the apartment,
and when the lieutenant of horse was announced Barney
called through a soapy lather for his confederate to
enter.
“What are you doing, sire?” cried Butzow
in amazement.
“Cut out the ‘sire,’
old man,” shouted Barney Custer of Beatrice.
“this is the fifth of November and I am shaving
off this alfalfa. The king is found!”
“What?” cried Butzow,
and upon his face there was little to indicate the
rejoicing that a loyal subject of Leopold of Lutha
should have felt at that announcement.
“There is a man in the next
room,” went on Barney, “who can lead us
to the spot where Coblich and Maenck guard the king.
Get him in here.”
Butzow hastened to comply with the
American’s instructions, and a moment later
returned to the apartment with the old shopkeeper of
Tafelberg.
As Barney shaved he issued directions
to the two. Within the room to the east, he
said, there were the king’s coronation robes,
and in a smaller dressingroom beyond they would find
a long gray cloak.
They were to wrap all these in a bundle
which the old shopkeeper was to carry.
“And, Butzow,” added Barney,
“look to my revolvers and your own, and lay
my sword out as well. The chances are that we
shall have to use them before we are ten minutes older.”
In an incredibly short space of time
the young man emerged from the bath, his luxuriant
beard gone forever, he hoped. Butzow looked at
him with a smile.
“I must say that the beard did
not add greatly to your majesty’s good looks,”
he said.
“Never mind the bouquets, old
man,” cried Barney, cramming his arms into the
sleeves of his khaki jacket and buckling sword and
revolver about him, as he hurried toward a small door
that opened upon the opposite side of the apartment
to that through which his visitors had been conducted.
Together the three hastened through
a narrow, little-used corridor and down a flight of
well-worn stone steps to a door that let upon the
rear court of the palace.
There were grooms and servants there,
and soldiers too, who saluted Butzow, according the
old shopkeeper and the smooth-faced young stranger
only cursory glances. It was evident that without
his beard it was not likely that Barney would be again
mistaken for the king.
At the stables Butzow requisitioned
three horses, and soon the trio was galloping through
a little-frequented street toward the northern, hilly
environs of Lustadt. They rode in silence until
they came to an old stone building, whose boarded
windows and general appearance of dilapidation proclaimed
its long tenantless condition. Rank weeds, now
rustling dry and yellow in the November wind, choked
what once might have been a luxuriant garden.
A stone wall, which had at one time entirely surrounded
the grounds, had been almost completely removed from
the front to serve as foundation stone for a smaller
edifice farther down the mountainside.
The horsemen avoided this break in
the wall, coming up instead upon the rear side where
their approach was wholly screened from the building
by the wall upon that exposure.
Close in they dismounted, and leaving
the animals in charge of the shopkeeper of Tafelberg,
Barney and Butzow hastened toward a small postern-gate
which swung, groaning, upon a single rusted hinge.
Each felt that there was no time for caution or stratagem.
Instead all depended upon the very boldness and rashness
of their attack, and so as they came through into
the courtyard the two dashed headlong for the building.
Chance accomplished for them what
no amount of careful execution might have done, and
they came within the ruin unnoticed by the four who
occupied the old, darkened library.
Possibly the fact that one of the
men had himself just entered and was excitedly talking
to the others may have drowned the noisy approach
of the two. However that may be, it is a fact
that Barney and the cavalry officer came to the very
door of the library unheard.
There they halted, listening. Coblich was speaking.
“The Regent commands it, Maenck,”
he was saying. “It is the only thing that
can save our necks. He said that you had better
be the one to do it, since it was your carelessness
that permitted the fellow to escape from Blentz.”
Huddled in a far corner of the room
was an abject figure trembling in terror. At
the words of Coblich it staggered to its feet.
It was the king.
“Have pity have pity!”
he cried. “Do not kill me, and I will go
away where none will ever know that I live. You
can tell Peter that I am dead. Tell him anything,
only spare my life. Oh, why did I ever listen
to the cursed fool who tempted me to think of regaining
the crown that has brought me only misery and suffering the
crown that has now placed the sentence of death upon
me.”
“Why not let him go?”
suggested the trooper, who up to this time had not
spoken. “If we don’t kill him, we
can’t be hanged for his murder.”
“Don’t be too sure of
that,” exclaimed Maenck. “If he goes
away and never returns, what proof can we offer that
we did not kill him, should we be charged with the
crime? And if we let him go, and later he returns
and gains his throne, he will see that we are hanged
anyway for treason.
“The safest thing to do is to
put him where he at least cannot come back to threaten
us, and having done so upon the orders of Peter, let
the king’s blood be upon Peter’s head.
I, at least, shall obey my master, and let you two
bear witness that I did the thing with my own hand.”
So saying he drew his sword and crossed toward the
king.
But Captain Ernst Maenck never reached his sovereign.
As the terrified shriek of the sorry
monarch rang through the interior of the desolate
ruin another sound mingled with it, half-drowning
the piercing wail of terror.
It was the sharp crack of a revolver,
and even as it spoke Maenck lunged awkwardly forward,
stumbled, and collapsed at Leopold’s feet.
With a moan the king shrank back from the grisly thing
that touched his boot, and then two men were in the
center of the room, and things were happening with
a rapidity that was bewildering.
About all that he could afterward
recall with any distinctness was the terrified face
of Coblich, as he rushed past him toward a door in
the opposite side of the room, and the horrid leer
upon the face of the dead trooper, who foolishly,
had made a move to draw his revolver.
Within the cathedral at Lustadt excitement
was at fever heat. It lacked but two minutes
of noon, and as yet no king had come to claim the
crown. Rumors were running riot through the close-packed
audience.
One man had heard the king’s
chamberlain report to Prince von der Tann
that the master of ceremonies had found the king’s
apartments vacant when he had gone to urge the monarch
to hasten his preparations for the coronation.
Another had seen Butzow and two strangers
galloping north through the city. A third told
of a little old man who had come to the king with
an urgent message.
Peter of Blentz and Prince Ludwig
were talking in whispers at the foot of the chancel
steps. Peter ascended the steps and facing the
assemblage raised a silencing hand.
“He who claimed to be Leopold
of Lutha,” he said, “was but a mad adventurer.
He would have seized the throne of the Rubinroths had
his nerve not failed him at the last moment. He
has fled. The true king is dead. Now I,
Prince Regent of Lutha, declare the throne vacant,
and announce myself king!”
There were a few scattered cheers
and some hissing. A score of the nobles rose
as though to protest, but before any could take a step
the attention of all was directed toward the sorry
figure of a white-faced man who scurried up the broad
center aisle.
It was Coblich.
He ran to Peter’s side, and
though he attempted to speak in a whisper, so out
of breath, and so filled with hysterical terror was
he that his words came out in gasps that were audible
to many of those who stood near by.
“Maenck is dead,” he cried.
“The impostor has stolen the king.”
Peter of Blentz went white as his
lieutenant. Von der Tann heard and
demanded an explanation.
“You said that Leopold was dead,” he said
accusingly.
Peter regained his self-control quickly.
“Coblich is excited,”
he explained. “He means that the impostor
has stolen the body of the king that Coblich and Maenck
had discovered and were bring to Lustadt.”
Von der Tann looked troubled.
He knew not what to make of the series
of wild tales that had come to his ears within the
past hour. He had hoped that the young man whom
he had last seen in the king’s apartments was
the true Leopold. He would have been glad to
have served such a one, but there had been many inexplicable
occurrences which tended to cast a doubt upon the
man’s claims and yet, had he ever
claimed to be the king? It suddenly occurred
to the old prince that he had not. On the contrary
he had repeatedly stated to Prince Ludwig’s daughter
and to Lieutenant Butzow that he was not Leopold.
It seemed that they had all been so
anxious to believe him king that they had forced the
false position upon him, and now if he had indeed
committed the atrocity that Coblich charged against
him, who could wonder? With less provocation
men had before attempted to seize thrones by more
dastardly means.
Peter of Blentz was speaking.
“Let the coronation proceed,”
he cried, “that Lutha may have a true king to
frustrate the plans of the impostor and the traitors
who had supported him.”
He cast a meaning glance at Prince von der
Tann.
There were many cries for Peter of
Blentz. “Let’s have done with treason,
and place upon the throne of Lutha one whom we know
to be both a Luthanian and sane. Down with the
mad king! Down with the impostor!”
Peter turned to ascend the chancel steps.
Von der Tann still hesitated.
Below him upon one side of the aisle were massed
his own retainers. Opposite them were the men
of the Regent, and dividing the two the parallel ranks
of Horse Guards stretched from the chancel down the
broad aisle to the great doors. These were strongly
for the impostor, if impostor he was, who had led
them to victory over the men of the Blentz faction.
Von der Tann knew that they
would fight to the last ditch for their hero should
he come to claim the crown. Yet how would they
fight to which side would they cleave,
were he to attempt to frustrate the design of the
Regent to seize the throne of Lutha?
Already Peter of Blentz had approached
the bishop, who, eager to propitiate whoever seemed
most likely to become king, gave the signal for the
procession that was to mark the solemn bearing of the
crown of Lutha up the aisle to the chancel.
Outside the cathedral there was the
sudden blare of trumpets. The great doors swung
violently open, and the entire throng were upon their
feet in an instant as a trooper of the Royal Horse
shouted: “The king! The king!
Make way for Leopold of Lutha!”