THE CAPTURE
The capture of Princess Emma
von der Tann and Barney Custer was a relatively
simple matter. Open fields spread in all directions
about the crossroads at which their car had come to
its humiliating stop. There was no cover.
To have sought escape by flight, thus in the open,
would have been to expose the princess to the fire
of the troopers. Barney could not do this.
He preferred to surrender and trust to chance to open
the way to escape later.
When Captain Ernst Maenck drove up
he found the prisoners disarmed, standing beside the
now-useless car. He alighted from his own machine
and with a low bow saluted the princess, an ironical
smile upon his thin lips. Then he turned his
attention toward her companion.
“Who are you?” he demanded
gruffly. In the darkness he failed to recognize
the American whom he thought dead in Austria.
“A servant of the house of Von
der Tann,” replied Barney.
“You deserve shooting,”
growled the officer, “but we’ll leave that
to Prince Peter and the king. When I tell them
the trouble you have caused us well, God
help you.”
The journey to Blentz was a short
one. They had been much nearer that grim fortress
than either had guessed. At the outskirts of the
town they were challenged by Austrian sentries, through
which Maenck passed with ease after the sentinel had
summoned an officer. From this man Maenck received
the password that would carry them through the line
of outposts between the town and the castle “Slankamen.”
Barney, who overheard the word, made a mental note
of it.
At last they reached the dreary castle
of Peter of Blentz. In the courtyard Austrian
soldiers mingled with the men of the bodyguard of
the king of Lutha. Within, the king’s officers
fraternized with the officers of the emperor.
Maenck led his prisoners to the great hall which was
filled with officers and officials of both Austria
and Lutha.
The king was not there. Maenck
learned that he had retired to his apartments a few
minutes earlier in company with Prince Peter of Blentz
and Von Coblich. He sent a servant to announce
his return with the Princess von der Tann
and a man who had attempted to prevent her being brought
to Blentz.
Barney had, as far as possible, kept
his face averted from Maenck since they had entered
the lighted castle. He hoped to escape recognition,
for he knew that if his identity were guessed it might
go hard with the princess. As for himself, it
might go even harder, but of that he gave scarcely
a thought the safety of the princess was
paramount.
After a few minutes of waiting the
servant returned with the king’s command to
fetch the prisoners to his apartments. The face
of the Princess Emma was haggard. For the first
time Barney saw signs of fear upon her countenance.
With leaden steps they accompanied their guard up
the winding stairway to the tower rooms that had been
furnished for the king. They were the same in
which Emma von der Tann had been imprisoned
two years before.
On either side of the doorway stood
a soldier of the king’s bodyguard. As Captain
Maenck approached they saluted. A servant opened
the door and they passed into the room. Before
them were Peter of Blentz and Von Coblich standing
beside a table at which Leopold of Lutha was sitting.
The eyes of the three men were upon the doorway as
the little party entered. The king’s face
was flushed with wine. He rose as his eyes rested
upon the face of the princess.
“Greetings, your highness,”
he cried with an attempt at cordiality.
The girl looked straight into his
eyes, coldly, and then bent her knee in formal curtsy.
The king was about to speak again when his eyes wandered
to the face of the American. Instantly his own
went white and then scarlet. The eyes of Peter
of Blentz followed those of the king, widening in
astonishment as they rested upon the features of Barney
Custer.
“You told me he was dead,”
shouted the king. “What is the meaning
of this, Captain Maenck?”
Maenck looked at his male prisoner
and staggered back as though struck between the eyes.
“Mein Gott,” he exclaimed, “the
impostor!”
“You told me he was dead,” repeated the
king accusingly.
“As God is my judge, your majesty,”
cried Peter of Blentz, “this man was shot by
an Austrian firing squad in Burgova over a week ago.”
“Sire,” exclaimed Maenck,
“this is the first sight I have had of the prisoners
except in the darkness of the night; until this instant
I had not the remotest suspicion of his identity.
He told me that he was a servant of the house of Von
der Tann.”
“I told you the truth, then,” interjected
Barney.
“Silence, you ingrate!” cried the king.
“Ingrate?” repeated Barney.
“You have the effrontery to call me an ingrate?
You miserable puppy.”
A silence, menacing in its intensity,
fell upon the little assemblage. The king trembled.
His rage choked him. The others looked as though
they scarce could believe the testimony of their own
ears. All there, with the possible exception of
the king, knew that he deserved even more degrading
appellations; but they were Europeans, and to
Europeans a king is a king that they can
never forget. It had been the inherent suggestion
of kingship that had bent the knee of the Princess
Emma before the man she despised.
But to the American a king was only
what he made himself. In this instance he was
not even a man in the estimation of Barney Custer.
Maenck took a step toward the prisoner a
menacing step, for his hand had gone to his sword.
Barney met him with a level look from between narrowed
lids. Maenck hesitated, for he was a great coward.
Peter of Blentz spoke:
“Sire,” he said, “the
fellow knows that he is already as good as dead, and
so in his bravado he dares affront you. He has
been convicted of spying by the Austrians. He
is still a spy. It is unnecessary to repeat the
formality of a trial.”
Leopold at last found his voice, though
it trembled and broke as he spoke.
“Carry out the sentence of the
Austrian court in the morning,” he said.
“A volley now might arouse the garrison in the
town and be misconstrued.”
Maenck ordered Barney escorted from
the apartment, then he turned toward the king.
“And the other prisoner, sire?” he inquired.
“There is no other prisoner,”
he said. “Her highness, the Princess von
der Tann, is a guest of Prince Peter. She
will be escorted to her apartment at once.”
“Her highness, the Princess
von der Tann, is not a guest of Prince Peter.”
The girl’s voice was low and cold. “If
Mr. Custer is a prisoner, her highness, too, is a
prisoner. If he is to be shot, she demands a
like fate. To die by the side of a man would
be infinitely preferable to living by the side of
your majesty.”
Once again Leopold of Lutha reddened.
For a moment he paced the room angrily to hide his
emotion. Then he turned once to Maenck.
“Escort the prisoner to the
north tower,” he commanded, “and this
insolent girl to the chambers next to ours. Tomorrow
we shall talk with her again.”
Outside the room Barney turned for
a last look at the princess as he was being led in
one direction and she in another. A smile of
encouragement was on his lips and cold hopelessness
in his heart. She answered the smile and her
lips formed a silent “good-bye.” They
formed something else, too three words which
he was sure he could not have mistaken, and then they
parted, he for the death chamber and she for what
fate she could but guess.
As his guard halted before a door
at the far end of a long corridor Barney Custer sensed
a sudden familiarity in his surroundings. He
was conscious of that sensation which is common to
all of us of having lived through a scene
at some former time, to each minutest detail.
As the door opened and he was pushed
into the room he realized that there was excellent
foundation for the impression he immediately
recognized the apartment as the same in which he had
once before been imprisoned. At that time he
had been mistaken for the mad king who had escaped
from the clutches of Peter of Blentz. The same
king was now visiting as a guest the fortress in which
he had spent ten bitter years as a prisoner.
“Say your prayers, my friend,”
admonished Maenck, as he was about to leave him alone,
“for at dawn you die and this time
the firing squad will make a better job of it.”
Barney did not answer him, and the
captain departed, locking the door after him and leaving
two men on guard in the corridor. Alone, Barney
looked about the room. It was in no wise changed
since his former visit to it. He recalled the
incidents of the hour of his imprisonment here, thought
of old Joseph who had aided his escape, looked at
the paneled fireplace, whose secret, it was evident,
not even the master of Blentz was familiar with and
grinned.
“‘For at dawn you die!’”
he repeated to himself, still smiling broadly.
Then he crossed quickly to the fireplace, running his
fingers along the edge of one of the large tiled panels
that hid the entrance to the well-like shaft that
rose from the cellars beneath to the towers above
and which opened through similar concealed exits upon
each floor. If the floor above should be untenanted
he might be able to reach it as he and Joseph had
done two years ago when they opened the secret panel
in the fireplace and climbed a hidden ladder to the
room overhead; and then by vacant corridors reached
the far end of the castle above the suite in which
the princess had been confined and near which Barney
had every reason to believe she was now imprisoned.
Carefully Barney’s fingers traversed
the edges of the panel. No hidden latch rewarded
his search. Again and again he examined the perfectly
fitted joints until he was convinced either that there
was no latch there or that it was hid beyond possibility
of discovery. With each succeeding minute the
American’s heart and hopes sank lower and lower.
Two years had elapsed since he had seen the secret
portal swing to the touch of Joseph’s fingers.
One may forget much in two years; but that he was
at work upon the right panel Barney was positive.
However, it would do no harm to examine its mate which
resembled it in minutest detail.
Almost indifferently Barney turned
his attention to the other panel. He ran his
fingers over it, his eyes following them. What
was that? A finger-print? Upon the left
side half way up a tiny smudge was visible. Barney
examined it more carefully. A round, white figure
of the conventional design that was burned into the
tile bore the telltale smudge.
Otherwise it differed apparently in
no way from the numerous other round, white figures
that were repeated many times in the scheme of decoration.
Barney placed his thumb exactly over the mark that
another thumb had left there and pushed. The figure
sank into the panel beneath the pressure. Barney
pushed harder, breathless with suspense. The
panel swung in at his effort. The American could
have whooped with delight.
A moment more and he stood upon the
opposite side of the secret door in utter darkness,
for he had quickly closed it after him. To strike
a match was but the matter of a moment. The wavering
light revealed the top of the ladder that led downward
and the foot of another leading aloft. He struck
still more matches in search of the rope. It
was not there, but his quest revealed the fact that
the well at this point was much larger than he had
imagined it broadened into a small chamber.
The light of many matches finally
led him to the discovery of a passageway directly
behind the fireplace. It was narrow, and after
spanning the chimney descended by a few rough steps
to a slightly lower level. It led toward the
opposite end of the castle. Could it be possible
that it connected directly with the apartments in the
farther tower in the tower where the king
was and the Princess Emma? Barney could scarce
hope for any such good luck, but at least it was worth
investigating it must lead somewhere.
He followed it warily, feeling his
way with hands and feet and occasionally striking
a match. It was evident that the corridor lay
in the thick wall of the castle, midway between the
bottoms of the windows of the second floor and the
tops of those upon the first this would
account for the slightly lower level of the passage
from the floor of the second story.
Barney had traversed some distance
in the darkness along the forgotten corridor when
the sound of voices came to him from beyond the wall
at his right. He stopped, motionless, pressing
his ear against the side wall. As he did so he
became aware of the fact that at this point the wall
was of wood a large panel of hardwood.
Now he could hear even the words of the speaker upon
the opposite side.
“Fetch her here, captain, and
I will talk with her alone.” The voice
was the king’s. “And, captain, you
might remove the guard from before the door temporarily.
I shall not require them, nor do I wish them to overhear
my conversation with the princess.”
Barney could hear the officer acknowledge
the commands of the king, and then he heard a door
close. The man had gone to fetch the princess.
The American struck a match and examined the panel
before him. It reached to the top of the passageway
and was some three feet in width.
At one side were three hinges, and
at the other an ancient spring lock. For an instant
Barney stood in indecision. What should he do?
His entry into the apartments of the king would result
in alarming the entire fortress. Were he sure
the king was alone it might be accomplished.
Should he enter now or wait until the Princess Emma
had been brought to the king?
With the question came the answer a
bold and daring scheme. His fingers sought the
lock. Very gently, he unlatched it and pushed
outward upon the panel. Suddenly the great doorway
gave beneath his touch. It opened a crack letting
a flood of light into his dark cell that almost blinded
him.
For a moment he could see nothing,
and then out of the glaring blur grew the figure of
a man sitting at a table with his back toward
the panel.
It was the king, and he was alone.
Noiselessly Barney Custer entered the apartment,
closing the panel after him. At his back now
was the great oil painting of the Blentz princess that
had hid the secret entrance to the room. He crossed
the thick rugs until he stood behind the king.
Then he clapped one hand over the mouth of the monarch
of Lutha and threw the other arm about his neck.
“Make the slightest outcry and
I shall kill you,” he whispered in the ear of
the terrified man.
Across the room Barney saw a revolver
lying upon a small table. He raised the king
to his feet and, turning his back toward the weapon
dragged him across the apartment until the table was
within easy reach. Then he snatched up the revolver
and swung the king around into a chair facing him,
the muzzle of the gun pressed against his face.
“Silence,” he whispered.
The king, white and trembling, gasped
as his eyes fell upon the face of the American.
“You?” His voice was barely audible.
“Take off your clothes every
stitch of them and if any one asks for
admittance, deny them. Quick, now,” as the
king hesitated. “My life is forfeited unless
I can escape. If I am apprehended I shall see
that you pay for my recapture with your life if
any one enters this room without my sanction they
will enter it to find a dead king upon the floor;
do you understand?”
The king made no reply other than
to commence divesting himself of his clothing.
Barney followed his example, but not before he had
crossed to the door that opened into the main corridor
and shot the bolt upon the inside. When both
men had removed their clothing Barney pointed to the
little pile of soiled peasant garb that he had worn.
“Put those on,” he commanded.
The king hesitated, drawing back in
disgust. Barney paused, half-way into the royal
union suit, and leveled the revolver at Leopold.
The king picked up one of the garments gingerly between
the tips of his thumb and finger.
“Hurry!” admonished the
American, drawing the silk half-hose of the ruler
of Lutha over his foot. “If you don’t
hurry,” he added, “someone may interrupt
us, and you know what the result would be to
you.”
Scowling, Leopold donned the rough
garments. Barney, fully clothed in the uniform
the king had been wearing, stepped across the apartment
to where the king’s sword and helmet lay upon
the side table that had also borne the revolver.
He placed the helmet upon his head and buckled the
sword-belt about his waist, then he faced the king,
behind whom was a cheval glass. In it
Barney saw his image. The king was looking at
the American, his eyes wide and his jaw dropped.
Barney did not wonder at his consternation. He
himself was dumbfounded by the likeness which he bore
to the king. It was positively uncanny.
He approached Leopold.
“Remove your rings,” he
said, holding out his hand. The king did as
he was bid, and Barney slipped the two baubles upon
his fingers. One of them was the royal ring of
the kings of Lutha.
The American now blindfolded the king
and led him toward the panel which had given him ingress
to the room. Through it the two men passed, Barney
closing the panel after them. Then he conducted
the king back along the dark passageway to the room
which the American had but recently quitted.
At the back of the panel which led into his former
prison Barney halted and listened. No sound came
from beyond the partition. Gently Barney opened
the secret door a trifle just enough to
permit him a quick survey of the interior of the apartment.
It was empty. A smile crossed his face as he thought
of the difficulty Leopold might encounter the following
morning in convincing his jailers that he was not
the American.
Then he recalled his reflection in
the cheval glass and frowned. Could
Leopold convince them? He doubted it and
what then? The American was sentenced to be shot
at dawn. They would shoot the king instead.
Then there would be none to whom to return the kingship.
What would he do with it? The temptation was great.
Again a throne lay within his grasp a throne
and the woman he loved. None might ever know
unless he chose to tell his resemblance
to Leopold was too perfect. It defied detection.
With an exclamation of impatience
he wheeled about and dragged the frightened monarch
back to the room from which he had stolen him.
As he entered he heard a knock at the door.
“Do not disturb me now,”
he called. “Come again in half an hour.”
“But it is Her Highness, Princess
Emma, sire,” came a voice from beyond the door.
“You summoned her.”
“She may return to her apartments,” replied
Barney.
All the time he kept his revolver
leveled at the king, from his eyes he had removed
the blind after they had entered the apartment.
He crossed to the table where the king had been sitting
when he surprised him, motioning the ragged ruler
to follow and be seated.
“Take that pen,” he said,
“and write a full pardon for Mr. Bernard Custer,
and an order requiring that he be furnished with money
and set at liberty at dawn.”
The king did as he was bid.
For a moment the American stood looking at him before
he spoke again.
“You do not deserve what I am
going to do for you,” he said. “And
Lutha deserves a better king than the one my act will
give her; but I am neither a thief nor a murderer,
and so I must forbear leaving you to your just deserts
and return your throne to you. I shall do so
after I have insured my own safety and done what I
can for Lutha what you are too little a
man and king to do yourself.
“So soon as they liberate you
in the morning, make the best of your way to Brosnov,
on the Serbian frontier. Await me there.
When I can, I shall come. Again we may exchange
clothing and you can return to Lustadt. I shall
cross over into Siberia out of your reach, for I know
you too well to believe that any sense of honor or
gratitude would prevent you signing my death-warrant
at the first opportunity. Now, come!”
Once again Barney led the blindfolded
king through the dark corridor to the room in the
opposite tower to the prison of the American.
At the open panel he shoved him into the apartment.
Then he drew the door quietly to, leaving the king
upon the inside, and retraced his steps to the royal
apartments. Crossing to the center table, he
touched an electric button. A moment later an
officer knocked at the door, which, in the meantime,
Barney had unbolted.
“Enter!” said the American.
He stood with his back toward the door until he heard
it close behind the officer. When he turned he
was apparently examining his revolver. If the
officer suspected his identity, it was just as well
to be prepared. Slowly he raised his eyes to
the newcomer, who stood stiffly at salute. The
officer looked him full in the face.
“I answered your majesty’s summons,”
said the man.
“Oh, yes!” returned the
American. “You may fetch the Princess
Emma.”
The officer saluted once more and
backed out of the apartment. Barney walked to
the table and sat down. A tin box of cigarettes
lay beside the lamp. Barney lighted one of them.
The king had good taste in the selection of tobacco,
he thought. Well, a man must need have some redeeming
characteristics.
Outside, in the corridor, he heard
voices, and again the knock at the door. He bade
them enter. As the door opened Emma von
der Tann, her head thrown back and a flush of
anger on her face, entered the room. Behind her
was the officer who had been despatched to bring her.
Barney nodded to the latter.
“You may go,” he said.
He drew a chair from the table and asked the princess
to be seated. She ignored his request.
“What do you wish of me?”
she asked. She was looking straight into his
eyes. The officer had withdrawn and closed the
door after him. They were alone, with nothing
to fear; yet she did not recognize him.
“You are the king,” she
continued in cold, level tones, “but if you
are also a gentleman, you will at once order me returned
to my father at Lustadt, and with me the man to whom
you owe so much. I do not expect it of you, but
I wish to give you the chance.
“I shall not go without him.
I am betrothed to you; but until tonight I should
rather have died than wed you. Now I am ready
to compromise. If you will set Mr. Custer at
liberty in Serbia and return me unharmed to my father,
I will fulfill my part of our betrothal.”
Barney Custer looked straight into
the girl’s face for a long moment. A half
smile played upon his lips at the thought of her surprise
when she learned the truth, when suddenly it dawned
upon him that she and he were both much safer if no
one, not even her loyal self, guessed that he was
other than the king. It is not difficult to live
a part, but often it is difficult to act one.
Some little word or look, were she to know that he
was Barney Custer, might betray them; no, it was better
to leave her in ignorance, though his conscience pricked
him for the disloyalty that his act implied.
It seemed a poor return for her courage
and loyalty to him that her statement to the man she
thought king had revealed. He marveled that a
Von der Tann could have spoken those words a
Von der Tann who but the day before had
refused to save her father’s life at the loss
of the family honor. It seemed incredible to
the American that he had won such love from such a
woman. Again came the mighty temptation to keep
the crown and the girl both; but with a straightening
of his broad shoulders he threw it from him.
She was promised to the king, and
while he masqueraded in the king’s clothes,
he at least would act the part that a king should.
He drew a folded paper from his inside pocket and
handed it to the girl.
“Here is the American’s
pardon,” he said, “drawn up and signed
by the king’s own hand.”
She opened it and, glancing through
it hurriedly, looked up at the man before her with
a questioning expression in her eyes.
“You came, then,” she
said, “to a realization of the enormity of your
ingratitude?”
The man shrugged.
“He will never die at my command,” he
said.
“I thank your majesty,”
she said simply. “As a Von der
Tann, I have tried to believe that a Rubinroth could
not be guilty of such baseness. And now, tell
me what your answer is to my proposition.”
“We shall return to Lustadt
tonight,” he replied. “I fear the
purpose of Prince Peter. In fact, it may be difficult even
impossible for us to leave Blentz; but we
can at least make the attempt.”
“Can we not take Mr. Custer
with us?” she asked. “Prince Peter
may disregard your majesty’s commands and, after
you are gone, have him shot. Do not forget that
he kept the crown from Peter of Blentz it
is certain that Prince Peter will never forget it.”
“I give you my word, your highness,
that I know positively that if I leave Blentz tonight
Prince Peter will not have Mr. Custer shot in the
morning, and it will so greatly jeopardize his own
plans if we attempt to release the prisoner that in
all probability we ourselves will be unable to escape.”
She looked at him thoughtfully for a moment.
“You give me your word that he will be safe?”
she asked.
“My royal word,” he replied.
“Very well, let us leave at once.”
Barney touched the bell once more,
and presently an officer of the Blentz faction answered
the summons. As the man closed the door and approached,
saluting, Barney stepped close to him.
“We are leaving for Tann tonight,”
he said, “at once. You will conduct us
from the castle and procure horses for us. All
the time I shall walk at your elbow, and in my hand
I shall carry this,” and he displayed the king’s
revolver. “At the first indication of defection
upon your part I shall kill you. Do you perfectly
understand me?”
“But, your majesty,” exclaimed
the officer, “why is it necessary that you leave
thus surreptitiously? May not the king go and
come in his own kingdom as he desires? Let me
announce your wishes to Prince Peter that he may furnish
you with a proper escort. Doubtless he will wish
to accompany you himself, sire.”
“You will do precisely what
I say without further comment,” snapped Barney.
“Now get a ” He had been about
to say: “Now get a move on you,”
when it occurred to him that this was not precisely
the sort of language that kings were supposed to use
to their inferiors. So he changed it. “Now
get a couple of horses for her highness and myself,
as well as your own, for you will accompany us to Tann.”
The officer looked at the weapon in
the king’s hand. He measured the distance
between himself and the king. He well knew the
reputed cowardice of Leopold. Could he make the
leap and strike up the king’s hand before the
timorous monarch found even the courage of the cornered
rat to fire at him? Then his eyes sought the face
of the king, searching for the signs of nervous terror
that would make his conquest an easy one; but what
he saw in the eyes that bored straight into his brought
his own to the floor at the king’s feet.
What new force animated Leopold of
Lutha? Those were not the eyes of a coward.
No fear was reflected in their steely glitter.
The officer mumbled an apology, saluted, and turned
toward the door. At his elbow walked the impostor;
a cavalry cape that had belonged to the king now covered
his shoulders and hid the weapon that pressed its
hard warning now and again into the short-ribs of the
Blentz officer. Just behind the American came
the Princess Emma von der Tann.
The three passed through the deserted
corridors of the sleeping castle, taking a route at
Barney’s suggestion that led them to the stable
courtyard without necessitating traversing the main
corridors or the great hall or the guardroom, in all
of which there still were Austrian and Blentz soldiers,
whose duties or pleasures had kept them from their
blankets.
At the stables a sleepy groom answered
the summons of the officer, whom Barney had warned
not to divulge the identity of himself or the princess.
He left the princess in the shadows outside the building.
After what seemed an eternity to the American, three
horses were led into the courtyard, saddled, and bridled.
The party mounted and approached the gates. Here,
Barney knew, might be encountered the most serious
obstacle in their path. He rode close to the side
of their unwilling conductor. Leaning forward
in his saddle, he whispered in the man’s ear.
“Failure to pass us through
the gates,” he said, “will be the signal
for your death.”
The man reined in his mount and turned
toward the American.
“I doubt if they will pass even
me without a written order from Prince Peter,”
he said. “If they refuse, you must reveal
your identity. The guard is composed of Luthanians I
doubt if they will dare refuse your majesty.”
Then they rode on up to the gates.
A soldier stepped from the sentry box and challenged
them.
“Lower the drawbridge,”
ordered the officer. “It is Captain Krantzwort
on a mission for the king.”
The soldier approached, raising a
lantern, which he had brought from the sentry box,
and inspected the captain’s face. He seemed
ill at ease. In the light of the lantern, the
American saw that he was scarce more than a boy doubtless
a recruit. He saw the expression of fear and
awe with which he regarded the officer, and it occurred
to him that the effect of the king’s presence
upon him would be absolutely overpowering. Still
the soldier hesitated.
“My orders are very strict,
sir,” he said. “I am to let no one
leave without a written order from Prince Peter.
If the sergeant or the lieutenant were here they would
know what to do; but they are both at the castle only
two other soldiers are at the gates with me.
Wait, and I will send one of them for the lieutenant.”
“No,” interposed the American.
“You will send for no one, my man. Come
closer look at my face.”
The soldier approached, holding his
lantern above his head. As its feeble rays fell
upon the face and uniform of the man on horseback,
the sentry gave a little gasp of astonishment.
“Now, lower the drawbridge,”
said Barney Custer, “it is your king’s
command.”
Quickly the fellow hastened to obey
the order. The chains creaked and the windlass
groaned as the heavy planking sank to place across
the moat.
As Barney passed the soldier he handed
him the pardon Leopold had written for the American.
“Give this to your lieutenant,”
he said, “and tell him to hand it to Prince
Peter before dawn tomorrow. Do not fail.”
A moment later the three were riding
down the winding road toward Blentz. Barney had
no further need of the officer who rode with them.
He would be glad to be rid of him, for he anticipated
that the fellow might find ample opportunity to betray
them as they passed through the Austrian lines, which
they must do to reach Lustadt.
He had told the captain that they
were going to Tann in order that, should the man find
opportunity to institute pursuit, he might be thrown
off the track. The Austrian sentries were no great
distance ahead when Barney ordered a halt.
“Dismount,” he directed
the captain, leaping to the ground himself at the
same time. “Put your hands behind your back.”
The officer did as he was bid, and
Barney bound his wrists securely with a strap and
buckle that he had removed from the cantle of his
saddle as he rode. Then he led him off the road
among some weeds and compelled him to lie down, after
which he bound his ankles together and stuffed a gag
in his mouth, securing it in place with a bit of stick
and the chinstrap from the man’s helmet.
The threat of the revolver kept Captain Krantzwort
silent and obedient throughout the hasty operations.
“Good-bye, captain,” whispered
Barney, “and let me suggest that you devote
the time until your discovery and release in pondering
the value of winning your king’s confidence
in the future. Had you chosen your associates
more carefully in the past, this need not have occurred.”
Barney unsaddled the captain’s
horse and turned him loose, then he remounted and,
with the princess at his side, rode down toward Blentz.