LEOPOLD WAITS FOR DAWN
After the American had shoved him
through the secret doorway into the tower room of
the castle of Blentz, Leopold had stood for several
minutes waiting for the next command from his captor.
Presently, hearing no sound other than that of his
own breathing, the king ventured to speak. He
asked the American what he purposed doing with him
next.
There was no reply. For another
minute the king listened intently; then he raised
his hands and removed the bandage from his eyes.
He looked about him. The room was vacant except
for himself. He recognized it as the one in which
he had spent ten years of his life as a prisoner.
He shuddered. What had become of the American?
He approached the door and listened. Beyond the
panels he could hear the two soldiers on guard there
conversing. He called to them.
“What do you want?” shouted
one of the men through the closed door.
“I want Prince Peter!”
yelled the king. “Send him at once!”
The soldiers laughed.
“He wants Prince Peter,”
they mocked. “Wouldn’t you rather
have us send the king to you?” they asked.
“I am the king!” yelled
Leopold. “I am the king! Open the
door, pigs, or it will go hard with you! I shall
have you both shot in the morning if you do not open
the door and fetch Prince Peter.”
“Ah!” exclaimed one of
the soldiers. “Then there will be three
of us shot together.”
Leopold went white. He had not
connected the sentence of the American with himself;
but now, quite vividly, he realized what it might
mean to him if he failed before dawn to convince someone
that he was not the American. Peter would not
be awake at so early an hour, and if he had no better
success with others than he was having with these
soldiers, it was possible that he might be led out
and shot before his identity was discovered.
The thing was preposterous. The king’s
knees became suddenly quite weak. They shook,
and his legs gave beneath his weight so that he had
to lean against the back of a chair to keep from falling.
Once more he turned to the soldiers.
This time he pleaded with them, begging them to carry
word to Prince Peter that a terrible mistake had been
made, and that it was the king and not the American
who was confined in the death chamber. But the
soldiers only laughed at him, and finally threatened
to come in and beat him if he again interrupted their
conversation.
It was a white and shaken prisoner
that the officer of the guard found when he entered
the room at dawn. The man before him, his face
streaked with tears of terror and self-pity, fell upon
his knees before him, beseeching him to carry word
to Peter of Blentz, that he was the king. The
officer drew away with a gesture of disgust.
“I might well believe from your
actions that you are Leopold,” he said; “for,
by Heaven, you do not act as I have always imagined
the American would act in the face of danger.
He has a reputation for bravery that would suffer
could his admirers see him now.”
“But I am not the American,”
pleaded the king. “I tell you that the
American came to my apartments last night, overpowered
me, forced me to change clothing with him, and then
led me back here.”
A sudden inspiration came to the king
with the memory of all that had transpired during
that humiliating encounter with the American.
“I signed a pardon for him!”
he cried. “He forced me to do so.
If you think I am the American, you cannot kill me
now, for there is a pardon signed by the king, and
an order for the American’s immediate release.
Where is it? Do not tell me that Prince Peter
did not receive it.”
“He received it,” replied
the officer, “and I am here to acquaint you
with the fact, but Prince Peter said nothing about
your release. All he told me was that you were
not to be shot this morning,” and the man emphasized
the last two words.
Leopold of Lutha spent two awful days
a prisoner at Blentz, not knowing at what moment Prince
Peter might see fit to carry out the verdict of the
Austrian court martial. He could convince no one
that he was the king. Peter would not even grant
him an audience. Upon the evening of the third
day, word came that the Austrians had been defeated
before Lustadt, and those that were not prisoners were
retreating through Blentz toward the Austrian frontier.
The news filtered to Leopold’s
prison room through the servant who brought him his
scant and rough fare. The king was utterly disheartened
before this word reached him. For the moment he
seemed to see a ray of hope, for, since the impostor
had been victorious, he would be in a position to
force Peter of Blentz to give up the true king.
There was the chance that the American,
flushed with success and power, might elect to hold
the crown he had seized. Who would guess the
transfer that had been effected, or, guessing, would
dare voice his suspicions in the face of the power
and popularity that Leopold knew such a victory as
the impostor had won must have given him in the hearts
and minds of the people of Lutha? Still, there
was a bare possibility that the American would be
as good as his word, and return the crown as he had
promised. Though he hated to admit it, the king
had every reason to believe that the impostor was a
man of honor, whose bare word was as good as another’s
bond.
He was commencing, under this line
of reasoning, to achieve a certain hopeful content
when the door to his prison opened and Peter of Blentz,
black and scowling, entered. At his elbow was
Captain Ernst Maenck.
“Leopold has defeated the Austrians,”
announced the former. “Until you returned
to Lutha he considered the Austrians his best friends.
I do not know how you could have reached or influenced
him. It is to learn how you accomplished it that
I am here. The fact that he signed your pardon
indicates that his attitude toward you changed suddenly almost
within an hour. There is something at the bottom
of it all, and that something I must know.”
“I am Leopold!” cried
the king. “Don’t you recognize me,
Prince Peter? Look at me! Maenck must know
me. It was I who wrote and signed the American’s
pardon at the point of the American’s
revolver. He forced me to exchange clothing with
him, and then he brought me here to this room and
left me.”
The two men looked at the speaker and smiled.
“You bank too strongly, my friend,”
said Peter of Blentz, “upon your resemblance
to the king of Lutha. I will admit that it is
strong, but not so strong as to convince me of the
truth of so improbable a story. How in the world
could the American have brought you through the castle,
from one end to the other, unseen? There was a
guard before the king’s door and another before
this. No, Herr Custer, you will have to concoct
a more plausible tale.
“No,” and Peter of Blentz
scowled savagely, as though to impress upon his listener
the importance of his next utterance, “there
were more than you and the king involved in his sudden
departure from Blentz and in his hasty change of policy
toward Austria. To be quite candid, it seems
to me that it may be necessary to my future welfare vitally
necessary, I may say to know precisely how
all this occurred, and just what influence you have
over Leopold of Lutha. Who was it that acted
as the go-between in the king’s negotiations
with you, or rather, yours with the king? And
what argument did you bring to bear to force Leopold
to the action he took?”
“I have told you all that I
know about the matter,” whined the king.
“The American appeared suddenly in my apartment.
When he brought me here he first blindfolded me.
I have no idea by what route we traveled through the
castle, and unless your guards outside this door were
bribed they can tell you more about how we got in here
than I can provided we entered through that
doorway,” and the king pointed to the door which
had just opened to admit his two visitors.
“Oh, pshaw!” exclaimed
Maenck. “There is but one door to this
room if the king came in here at all, he
came through that door.”
“Enough!” cried Peter
of Blentz. “I shall not be trifled with
longer. I shall give you until tomorrow morning
to make a full explanation of the truth and to form
some plan whereby you may utilize once more whatever
influence you had over Leopold to the end that he
grant to myself and my associates his royal assurance
that our lives and property will be safe in Lutha.”
“But I tell you it is impossible,” wailed
the king.
“I think not,” sneered
Prince Peter, “especially when I tell you that
if you do not accede to my wishes the order of the
Austrian military court that sentenced you to death
at Burgova will be carried out in the morning.”
With his final words the two men turned
and left the room. Behind them, upon the floor,
inarticulate with terror, knelt Leopold of Lutha,
his hands outstretched in supplication.
The long night wore its weary way
to dawn at last. The sleepless man, alternately
tossing upon his bed and pacing the floor, looked
fearfully from time to time at the window through which
the lightening of the sky would proclaim the coming
day and his last hour on earth. His windows faced
the west. At the foot of the hill beneath the
castle nestled the village of Blentz, once more enveloped
in peaceful silence since the Austrians were gone.
An unmistakable lessening of the darkness
in the east had just announced the proximity of day,
when the king heard a clatter of horses’ hoofs
upon the road before the castle. The sound ceased
at the gates and a loud voice broke out upon the stillness
of the dying night demanding entrance “in the
name of the king.”
New hope burst aflame in the breast
of the condemned man. The impostor had not forsaken
him. Leopold ran to the window, leaning far out.
He heard the voices of the sentries in the barbican
as they conversed with the newcomers. Then silence
came, broken only by the rapid footsteps of a soldier
hastening from the gate to the castle. His hobnail
shoes pounding upon the cobbles of the courtyard echoed
among the angles of the lofty walls. When he had
entered the castle the silence became oppressive.
For five minutes there was no sound other than the
pawing of the horses outside the barbican and the
subdued conversation of their riders.
Presently the soldier emerged from
the castle. With him was an officer. The
two went to the barbican. Again there was a parley
between the horsemen and the guard. Leopold could
hear the officer demanding terms. He would lower
the drawbridge and admit them upon conditions.
One of these the king overheard it
concerned an assurance of full pardon for Peter of
Blentz and the garrison; and again Leopold heard the
officer addressing someone as “your majesty.”
Ah, the impostor was there in person.
Ach, Gott! How Leopold of Lutha hated
him, and yet, in the hands of this American lay not
only his throne but his very life as well.
Evidently the negotiations proved
unsuccessful for after a time the party wheeled their
horses from the gate and rode back toward Blentz.
As the sound of the iron-shod hoofs diminished in the
distance, with them diminished the hopes of the king.
When they ceased entirely his hopes
were at an end, to be supplanted by renewed terror
at the turning of the knob of his prison door as it
swung open to admit Maenck and a squad of soldiers.
“Come!” ordered the captain.
“The king has refused to intercede in your
behalf. When he returns with his army he will
find your body at the foot of the west wall in the
courtyard.”
With an ear-piercing shriek that rang
through the grim old castle, Leopold of Lutha flung
his arms above his head and lunged forward upon his
face. Roughly the soldiers seized the unconscious
man and dragged him from the room.
Along the corridor they hauled him
and down the winding stairs within the north tower
to the narrow slit of a door that opened upon the
courtyard. To the foot of the west wall they brought
him, tossing him brutally to the stone flagging.
Here one of the soldiers brought a flagon of water
and dashed it in the face of the king. The cold
douche returned Leopold to a consciousness of the nearness
of his impending fate.
He saw the little squad of soldiers
before him. He saw the cold, gray wall behind,
and, above, the cold, gray sky of early dawn.
The dismal men leaning upon their shadowy guns seemed
unearthly specters in the weird light of the hour
that is neither God’s day nor devil’s
night. With difficulty two of them dragged Leopold
to his feet.
Then the dismal men formed in line
before him at the opposite side of the courtyard.
Maenck stood to the left of them. He was giving
commands. They fell upon the doomed man’s
ears with all the cruelty of physical blows.
Tears coursed down his white cheeks. With incoherent
mumblings he begged for his life. Leopold, King
of Lutha, trembling in the face of death!