“The king’s will is
law”
The Blentz princess frowned down upon
the king and impostor impartially from her great gilt
frame. It must have been close to midnight that
the painting moved just a fraction of an
inch. Then it remained motionless for a time.
Again it moved. This time it revealed a narrow
crack at its edge. In the crack an eye shone.
One of the sleepers moved. He
opened his eyes. Stealthily he raised himself
on his elbow and gazed at the other across the apartment.
He listened intently. The regular breathing of
the sleeper proclaimed the soundness of his slumber.
Gingerly the man placed one foot upon the floor.
The eye glued to the crack at the edge of the great,
gilt frame of the Blentz princess remained fastened
upon him. He let his other foot slip to the floor
beside the first. Carefully he raised himself
until he stood erect upon the floor. Then, on
tiptoe he started across the room.
The eye in the dark followed him.
The man reached the side of the sleeper. Bending
over he listened intently to the other’s breathing.
Satisfied that slumber was profound he stepped quickly
to a wardrobe in which a soldier had hung the clothing
of both the king and the American. He took down
the uniform of the former, casting from time to time
apprehensive glances toward the sleeper. The latter
did not stir, and the other passed to the little dressing-room
adjoining.
A few minutes later he reentered the
apartment fully clothed and wearing the accouterments
of Leopold of Lutha. In his hand was a drawn
sword. Silently and swiftly he crossed to the
side of the sleeping man. The eye at the crack
beside the gilded frame pressed closer to the aperture.
The sword was raised above the body of the slumberer its
point hovered above his heart. The face of the
man who wielded it was hard with firm resolve.
His muscles tensed to drive home the
blade, but something held his hand. His face
paled. His shoulders contracted with a little
shudder, and he turned toward the door of the apartment,
almost running across the floor in his anxiety to
escape. The eye in the dark maintained its unblinking
vigilance.
With his hand upon the knob a sudden
thought stayed the fugitive’s flight. He
glanced quickly back at the sleeper he had
not moved. Then the man who wore the uniform
of the king of Lutha recrossed the apartment to the
bed, reached beneath one of the pillows and withdrew
two neatly folded official-looking documents.
These he placed in the breastpocket of his uniform.
A moment later he was walking down the spiral stairway
to the main floor of the castle.
In the guardroom the troopers of the
Royal Horse who were not on guard were stretched in
slumber. Only a corporal remained awake.
As the man entered the guardroom the corporal glanced
up, and as his eyes fell upon the newcomer, he sprang
to his feet, saluting.
“Turn out the guard!”
he cried. “Turn out the guard for his
majesty, the king!”
The sleeping soldiers, but half awake,
scrambled to their feet, their muscles reacting to
the command that their brains but half perceived.
They snatched their guns from the racks and formed
a line behind the corporal. The king raised his
fingers to the vizor of his helmet in acknowledgment
of their salute.
“Saddle up quietly, corporal,”
he said. “We shall ride to Lustadt tonight.”
The non-commissioned officer saluted.
“And an extra horse for Herr Custer?”
he said.
The king shook his head. “The
man died of his wound about an hour ago,” he
said. “While you are saddling up I shall
arrange with some of the Blentz servants for his burial now
hurry!”
The corporal marched his troopers
from the guardroom toward the stables. The man
in the king’s clothes touched a bell which was
obviously a servant call. He waited impatiently
a reply to his summons, tapping his finger-tips against
the sword-scabbard that was belted to his side.
At last a sleepy-eyed man responded a man
who had grown gray in the service of Peter of Blentz.
At sight of the king he opened his eyes in astonishment,
pulled his foretop, and bowed uneasily.
“Come closer,” whispered
the king. The man did so, and the king spoke
in his ear earnestly, but in scarce audible tones.
The eyes of the listener narrowed to mere slits of
avarice and cunning, cruelly cold and calculating.
The speaker searched through the pockets of the king’s
clothes that covered him. At last he withdrew
a roll of bills. The amount must have been a
large one, but he did not stop to count it. He
held the money under the eyes of the servant.
The fellow’s claw-like fingers reached for the
tempting wealth. He nodded his head affirmatively.
“You may trust me, sire,” he whispered.
The king slipped the money into the
other’s palm. “And as much more,”
he said, “when I receive proof that my wishes
have been fulfilled.”
“Thank you, sire,” said the servant.
The king looked steadily into the
other’s face before he spoke again.
“And if you fail me,”
he said, “may God have mercy on your soul.”
Then he wheeled and left the guardroom, walking out
into the courtyard where the soldiers were busy saddling
their mounts.
A few minutes later the party clattered
over the drawbridge and down the road toward Blentz
and Lustadt. From a window of the apartments
of Peter of Blentz a man watched them depart.
When they passed across a strip of moonlit road, and
he had counted them, he smiled with relief.
A moment later he entered a panel
beside the huge fireplace in the west wall and disappeared.
There he struck a match, found a candle and lighted
it. Walking a few steps he came to a figure sleeping
upon a pile of clothing. He stooped and shook
the sleeper by the shoulder.
“Wake up!” he cried in
a subdued voice. “Wake up, Prince Peter;
I have good news for you.”
The other opened his eyes, stretched,
and at last sat up.
“What is it, Maenck?” he asked querulously.
“Great news, my prince,” replied the other.
“While you have been sleeping
many things have transpired within the walls of your
castle. The king’s troopers have departed;
but that is a small matter compared with the other.
Here, behind the portrait of your great-grandmother,
I have listened and watched all night. I opened
the secret door a fraction of an inch just
enough to permit me to look into the apartment where
the king and the American lay wounded. They had
been talking as I opened the door, but after that
they ceased the king falling asleep at once the
American feigning slumber. For a long time I
watched, but nothing happened until near midnight.
Then the American arose and donned the king’s
clothes.
“He approached Leopold with
drawn sword, but when he would have thrust it through
the heart of the sleeping man his nerve failed him.
Then he stole some papers from the room and left.
Just now he has ridden out toward Lustadt with the
men of the Royal Horse who captured the castle yesterday.”
Before Maenck was half-way through
his narrative, Peter of Blentz was wide awake and
all attention. His eyes glowed with suddenly
aroused interest.
“Somewhere in this, prince,”
concluded Maenck, “there must lie the seed of
fortune for you and me.”
Peter nodded. “Yes,” he mused, “there
must.”
For a time both men were buried in
thought. Suddenly Maenck snapped his fingers.
“I have it!” he cried. He bent toward
Prince Peter’s ear and whispered his plan.
When he was done the Blentz prince grasped his hand.
“Just the thing, Maenck!”
he cried. “Just the thing. Leopold
will never again listen to idle gossip directed against
our loyalty. If I know him and who
should know him better he will heap honors
upon you, my Maenck; and as for me, he will at least
forgive me and take me back into his confidence.
Lose no time now, my friend. We are free now
to go and come, since the king’s soldiers have
been withdrawn.”
In the garden back of the castle an
old man was busy digging a hole. It was a long,
narrow hole, and, when it was completed, nearly four
feet deep. It looked like a grave. When he
had finished the old man hobbled to a shed that leaned
against the south wall. Here were boards, tools,
and a bench. It was the castle workshop.
The old man selected a number of rough pine boards.
These he measured and sawed, fitted and nailed, working
all the balance of the night. By dawn, he had
a long, narrow box, just a trifle smaller than the
hole he had dug in the garden. The box resembled
a crude coffin. When it was quite finished, including
a cover, he dragged it out into the garden and set
it upon two boards that spanned the hole, so that it
rested precisely over the excavation.
All these precautions methodically
made, he returned to the castle. In a little
storeroom he searched for and found an ax. With
his thumb he felt of the edge for an ax
it was marvelously sharp. The old fellow grinned
and shook his head, as one who appreciates in anticipation
the consummation of a good joke. Then he crept
noiselessly through the castle’s corridors and
up the spiral stairway in the north tower. In
one hand was the sharp ax.
The moment Lieutenant Butzow had reached
Lustadt he had gone directly to Prince von der
Tann; but the moment his message had been delivered
to the chancellor he sought out the chancellor’s
daughter, to tell her all that had occurred at Blentz.
“I saw but little of Mr. Custer,”
he said. “He was very quiet. I think
all that he has been through has unnerved him.
He was slightly wounded in the left leg. The
king was wounded in the breast. His majesty conducted
himself in a most valiant and generous manner.
Wounded, he lay upon his stomach in the courtyard of
the castle and defended Mr. Custer, who was, of course,
unarmed. The king shot three of Prince Peter’s
soldiers who were attempting to assassinate Mr. Custer.”
Emma von der Tann smiled.
It was evident that Lieutenant Butzow had not discovered
the deception that had been practiced upon him in
common with all Lutha she being the only
exception. It seemed incredible that this good
friend of the American had not seen in the heroism
of the man who wore the king’s clothes the attributes
and ear-marks of Barney Custer. She glowed with
pride at the narration of his heroism, though she
suffered with him because of his wound.
It was not yet noon when the detachment
of the Royal Horse arrived in Lustadt from Blentz.
At their head rode one whom all upon the streets of
the capital greeted enthusiastically as king.
The party rode directly to the royal palace, and the
king retired immediately to his apartments. A
half hour later an officer of the king’s household
knocked upon the door of the Princess Emma von
der Tann’s boudoir. In accord with
her summons he entered, saluted respectfully, and
handed her a note.
It was written upon the personal stationary
of Leopold of Lutha. The girl read and reread
it. For some time she could not seem to grasp
the enormity of the thing that had overwhelmed her the
daring of the action that the message explained.
The note was short and to the point, and was signed
only with initials.
DEAREST EMMA:
The king died of his wounds just before
midnight. I shall keep the throne. There
is no other way. None knows and none must ever
know the truth. Your father alone may suspect;
but if we are married at once our alliance will cement
him and his faction to us. Send word by the
bearer that you agree with the wisdom of my plan,
and that we may be wed at once this afternoon,
in fact.
The people may wonder for a few days
at the strange haste, but my answer shall be that
I am going to the front with my troops. The
son and many of the high officials of the Kaiser have
already established the precedent, marrying hurriedly
upon the eve of their departure for the front.
With every assurance of my undying love, believe me,
Yours,
B. C.
The girl walked slowly across the
room to her writing table. The officer stood
in respectful silence awaiting the answer that the
king had told him to bring. The princess sat down
before the carved bit of furniture. Mechanically
she drew a piece of note paper from a drawer.
Many times she dipped her pen in the ink before she
could determine what reply to send. Ages of ingrained
royalistic principles were shocked and shattered by
the enormity of the thing the man she loved had asked
of her, and yet cold reason told her that it was the
only way.
Lutha would be lost should the truth
be known that the king was dead, for there
was no heir of closer blood connection with the royal
house than Prince Peter of Blentz, whose great-grandmother
had been a Rubinroth princess. Slowly, at last,
she wrote as follows:
SIRE:
The king’s will is law.
EMMA
That was all. Placing the note
in an envelope she sealed it and handed it to the
officer, who bowed and left the room.
A half hour later officers of the
Royal Horse were riding through the streets of Lustadt.
Some announced to the people upon the streets the
coming marriage of the king and princess. Others
rode to the houses of the nobility with the king’s
command that they be present at the ceremony in the
old cathedral at four o’clock that afternoon.
Never had there been such bustling
about the royal palace or in the palaces of the nobles
of Lutha. The buzz and hum of excited conversation
filled the whole town. That the choice of the
king met the approval of his subjects was more than
evident. Upon every lip was praise and love of
the Princess Emma von der Tann.
The future of Lutha seemed assured with a king who
could fight joined in marriage to a daughter of the
warrior line of Von der Tann.
The princess was busy up to the last
minute. She had not seen her future husband
since his return from Blentz, for he, too, had been
busy. Twice he had sent word to her, but on both
occasions had regretted that he could not come personally
because of the pressure of state matters and the preparations
for the ceremony that was to take place in the cathedral
in so short a time.
At last the hour arrived. The
cathedral was filled to overflowing. After the
custom of Lutha, the bride had walked alone up the
broad center aisle to the foot of the chancel.
Guardsmen lining the way on either hand stood rigidly
at salute until she stopped at the end of the soft,
rose-strewn carpet and turned to await the coming of
the king.
Presently the doors at the opposite
end of the cathedral opened. There was a fanfare
of trumpets, and up the center aisle toward the waiting
girl walked the royal groom. It seemed ages to
the princess since she had seen her lover. Her
eyes devoured him as he approached her. She noticed
that he limped, and wondered; but for a moment the
fact carried no special suggestion to her brain.
The people had risen as the king entered.
Again, the pieces of the guardsmen had snapped to
present; but silence, intense and utter, reigned over
the vast assembly. The only movement was the measured
stride of the king as he advanced to claim his bride.
At the head of each line of guardsmen,
nearest the chancel and upon either side of the bridal
party, the ranks were formed of commissioned officers.
Butzow was among them. He, too, out of the corner
of his eye watched the advancing figure. Suddenly
he noted the limp, and gave a little involuntary gasp.
He looked at the Princess Emma, and saw her eyes suddenly
widen with consternation.
Slowly at first, and then in a sudden
tidal wave of memory, Butzow’s story of the
fight in the courtyard at Blentz came back to her.
“I saw but little of Mr. Custer,”
he had said. “He was slightly wounded
in the left leg. The king was wounded in the breast.”
But Lieutenant Butzow had not known the true identity
of either.
The real Leopold it was who had been
wounded in the left leg, and the man who was approaching
her up the broad cathedral aisle was limping noticeably and
favoring his left leg. The man to whom she was
to be married was not Barney Custer he was
Leopold of Lutha!
A hundred mad schemes rioted through
her brain. The wedding must not go on!
But how was she to avert it? The king was within
a few paces of her now. There was a smile upon
his lips, and in that smile she saw the final confirmation
of her fears. When Leopold of Lutha smiled his
upper lip curved just a trifle into a shadow of a sneer.
It was a trivial characteristic that Barney Custer
did not share in common with the king.
Half mad with terror, the girl seized
upon the only subterfuge which seemed at all likely
to succeed. It would, at least, give her a slight
reprieve a little time in which to think,
and possibly find an avenue from her predicament.
She staggered forward a step, clapped
her two hands above her heart, and reeled as though
to fall. Butzow, who had been watching her narrowly,
sprang forward and caught her in his arms, where she
lay limp with closed eyes as though in a dead faint.
The king ran forward. The people craned their
necks. A sudden burst of exclamations rose throughout
the cathedral, and then Lieutenant Butzow, shouldering
his way past the chancel, carried the Princess Emma
to a little anteroom off the east transept. Behind
him walked the king, the bishop, and Prince Ludwig.