MAENCK BLUNDERS
After a hurried breakfast Peter of
Blentz and Captain Ernst Maenck left the castle of
Blentz. Prince Peter rode north toward the frontier,
Austria, and safety, Captain Maenck rode south toward
Lustadt. Neither knew that general orders had
been issued to soldiery and gendarmerie of Lutha to
capture them dead or alive. So Prince Peter rode
carelessly; but Captain Maenck, because of the nature
of his business and the proximity of enemies about
Lustadt, proceeded with circumspection.
Prince Peter was arrested at Tafelberg,
and, though he stormed and raged and threatened, he
was immediately packed off under heavy guard back
toward Lustadt.
Captain Ernst Maenck was more fortunate.
He reached the capital of Lutha in safety, though
he had to hide on several occasions from detachments
of troops moving toward the north. Once within
the city he rode rapidly to the house of a friend.
Here he learned that which set him into a fine state
of excitement and profanity. The king and the
Princess Emma von der Tann were to be
wed that very afternoon! It lacked but half an
hour to four o’clock.
Maenck grabbed his cap and dashed
from the house before his astonished friend could
ask a single question. He hurried straight toward
the cathedral. The king had just arrived, and
entered when Maenck came up, breathless. The
guard at the doorway did not recognize him. If
they had they would have arrested him. Instead
they contented themselves with refusing him admission,
and when he insisted they threatened him with arrest.
To be arrested now would be to ruin
his fine plan, so he turned and walked away.
At the first cross street he turned up the side of
the cathedral. The grounds were walled up on
this side, and he sought in vain for entrance.
At the rear he discovered a limousine standing in
the alley where its chauffeur had left it after depositing
his passengers at the front door of the cathedral.
The top of the limousine was but a foot or two below
the top of the wall.
Maenck clambered to the hood of the
machine, and from there to the top. A moment
later he dropped to the earth inside the cathedral
grounds. Before him were many windows. Most
of them were too high for him to reach, and the others
that he tried at first were securely fastened.
Passing around the end of the building, he at last
discovered one that was open it led into
the east transept.
Maenck crawled through. He was
within the building that held the man he sought.
He found himself in a small room evidently
a dressing-room. There were two doors leading
from it. He approached one and listened.
He heard the tones of subdued conversation beyond.
Very cautiously he opened the door
a crack. He could not believe the good fortune
that was revealed before him. On a couch lay the
Princess Emma von der Tann. Beside
her her father. At the door was Lieutenant Butzow.
The bishop and a doctor were talking at the head of
the couch. Pacing up and down the room, resplendent
in the marriage robes of a king of Lutha, was the
man he sought.
Maenck drew his revolver. He
broke the barrel, and saw that there was a good cartridge
in each chamber of the cylinder. He closed it
quietly. Then he threw open the door, stepped
into the room, took deliberate aim, and fired.
The old man with the ax moved cautiously
along the corridor upon the second floor of the Castle
of Blentz until he came to a certain door. Gently
he turned the knob and pushed the door inward.
Holding the ax behind his back, he entered. In
his pocket was a great roll of money, and there was
to be an equal amount waiting him at Lustadt when
his mission had been fulfilled.
Once within the room, he looked quickly
about him. Upon a great bed lay the figure of
a man asleep. His face was turned toward the
opposite wall away from the side of the bed nearer
the menacing figure of the old servant. On tiptoe
the man with the ax approached. The neck of his
victim lay uncovered before him. He swung the
ax behind him. A single blow, as mighty as his
ancient muscles could deliver, would suffice.
Barney Custer opened his eyes.
Directly opposite him upon the wall was a dark-toned
photogravure of a hunting scene. It tilted slightly
forward upon its wire support. As Barney’s
opened it chanced that they were directed straight
upon the shiny glass of the picture. The light
from the window struck the glass in such a way as to
transform it into a mirror. The American’s
eyes were glued with horror upon the reflection that
he saw there an old man swinging a huge
ax down upon his head.
It is an open question as to which
of the two was the most surprised at the cat-like
swiftness of the movement that carried Barney Custer
out of that bed and landed him in temporary safety
upon the opposite side.
With a snarl the old man ran around
the foot of the bed to corner his prey between the
bed and the wall. He was swinging the ax as though
to hurl it. So close was he that Barney guessed
it would be difficult for him to miss his mark.
The least he could expect would be a frightful wound.
To have attempted to escape would have necessitated
turning his back to his adversary, inviting instant
death. To grapple with a man thus armed appeared
an equally hopeless alternative.
Shoulder-high beside him hung the
photogravure that had already saved his life once.
Why not again? He snatched it from its hangings,
lifted it above his head in both hands, and hurled
it at the head of the old man. The glass shattered
full upon the ancient’s crown, the man’s
head went through the picture, and the frame settled
over his shoulders. At the same instant Barney
Custer leaped across the bed, seized a light chair,
and turned to face his foe upon more even turns.
The old man did not pause to remove
the frame from about his neck. Blood trickled
down his forehead and cheeks from deep gashes that
the broken glass had made. Now he was in a berserker
rage.
As he charged again he uttered a peculiar
whistling noise from between his set teeth. To
the American it sounded like the hissing of a snake,
and as he would have met a snake he met the venomous
attack of the old man.
When the short battle was over the
Blentz servitor lay unconscious upon the floor, while
above him leaned the American, uninjured, ripping
long strips from a sheet torn from the bed, twisting
them into rope-like strands and, with them, binding
the wrists and ankles of his defeated foe. Finally
he stuffed a gag between the toothless gums.
Running to the wardrobe, he discovered
that the king’s uniform was gone. That,
with the witness of the empty bed, told him the whole
story. The American smiled. “More nerve
than I gave him credit for,” he mused, as he
walked back to his bed and reached under the pillow
for the two papers he had forced the king to sign.
They, too, were gone. Slowly Barney Custer realized
his plight, as there filtered through his mind a suggestion
of the possibilities of the trick that had been played
upon him.
Why should Leopold wish these papers?
Of course, he might merely have taken them that he
might destroy them; but something told Barney Custer
that such was not the case. And something, too,
told him whither the king had ridden and what he would
do there when he arrived.
He ran back to the wardrobe.
In it hung the peasant attire that he had stolen
from the line of the careless house frau, and later
wished upon his majesty the king. Barney grinned
as he recalled the royal disgust with which Leopold
had fingered the soiled garments. He scarce blamed
him. Looking further toward the back of the wardrobe,
the American discovered other clothing.
He dragged it all out upon the floor.
There was an old shooting jacket, several pairs of
trousers and breeches, and a hunting coat. In
a drawer at the bottom of the wardrobe he found many
old shoes, puttees, and boots.
From this miscellany he selected riding
breeches, a pair of boots, and the red hunting coat
as the only articles that fitted his rather large
frame. Hastily he dressed, and, taking the ax
the old man had brought to the room as the only weapon
available, he walked boldly into the corridor, down
the spiral stairway and into the guardroom.
Barney Custer was prepared to fight.
He was desperate. He could have slunk from the
Castle of Blentz as he had entered it through
the secret passageway to the ravine; but to attempt
to reach Lustadt on foot was not at all compatible
with the urgent haste that he felt necessary.
He must have a horse, and a horse he would have if
he had to fight his way through a Blentz army.
But there were no armed retainers
left at Blentz. The guardroom was vacant; but
there were arms there and ammunition. Barney
commandeered a sword and a revolver, then he walked
into the courtyard and crossed to the stables.
The way took him by the garden. In it he saw
a coffin-like box resting upon planks above a grave-like
excavation. Barney investigated. The box
was empty. Once again he grinned. “It
is not always wise,” he mused, “to count
your corpses before they’re dead. What
a lot of work the old man might have spared himself
if he’d only caught his cadaver first or
at least tried to.”
Passing on by his own grave, he came
to the stables. A groom was currying a strong,
clean-limbed hunter haltered in the doorway. The
man looked up as Barney approached him. A puzzled
expression entered the fellow’s eyes. He
was a young man a stupid-looking lout.
It was evident that he half recognized the face of
the newcomer as one he had seen before. Barney
nodded to him.
“Never mind finishing,”
he said. “I am in a hurry. You may
saddle him at once.” The voice was authoritative it
brooked no demur. The groom touched his forehead,
dropped the currycomb and brush, and turned back into
the stable to fetch saddle and bridle.
Five minutes later Barney was riding
toward the gate. The portcullis was raised the
drawbridge spanned the moat no guard was
there to bar his way. The sunlight flooded the
green valley, stretching lazily below him in the soft
warmth of a mellow autumn morning. Behind him
he had left the brooding shadows of the grim old fortress the
cold, cruel, depressing stronghold of intrigue, treason,
and sudden death.
He threw back his shoulders and filled
his lungs with the sweet, pure air of freedom.
He was a new man. The wound in his breast was
forgotten. Lightly he touched his spurs to the
hunter’s sides. Tossing his head and curveting,
the animal broke into a long, easy trot. Where
the road dipped into the ravine and down through the
village to the valley the rider drew his restless mount
into a walk; but, once in the valley, he let him out.
Barney took the short road to Lustadt. It would
cut ten miles off the distance that the main wagonroad
covered, and it was a good road for a horseman.
It should bring him to Lustadt by one o’clock
or a little after. The road wound through the
hills to the east of the main highway, and was scarcely
more than a trail where it crossed the Ru River
upon a narrow bridge that spanned the deep mountain
gorge that walls the Ru for ten miles through
the hills.
When Barney reached the river his
hopes sank. The bridge was gone dynamited
by the Austrians in their retreat. The nearest
bridge was at the crossing of the main highway over
ten miles to the southwest. There, too, the river
might be forded even if the Austrians had destroyed
that bridge also; but here or elsewhere in the hills
there could be no fording the banks of the
Ru were perpendicular cliffs.
The misfortune would add nearly twenty
miles to his journey he could not now hope
to reach Lustadt before late in the afternoon.
Turning his horse back along the trail he had come,
he retraced his way until he reached a narrow bridle
path that led toward the southwest. The trail
was rough and indistinct, yet he pushed forward, even
more rapidly than safety might have suggested.
The noble beast beneath him was all loyalty and ambition.
“Take it easy, old boy,”
whispered Barney into the slim, pointed ears that
moved ceaselessly backward and forward, “you’ll
get your chance when we strike the highway, never
fear.”
And he did.
So unexpected had been Maenck’s
entrance into the room in the east transept, so sudden
his attack, that it was all over before a hand could
be raised to stay him. At the report of his revolver
the king sank to the floor. At almost the same
instant Lieutenant Butzow whipped a revolver from
beneath his tunic and fired at the assassin.
Maenck staggered forward and stumbled across the body
of the king. Butzow was upon him instantly, wresting
the revolver from his fingers. Prince Ludwig
ran to the king’s side and, kneeling there,
raised Leopold’s head in his arms. The bishop
and the doctor bent over the limp form. The Princess
Emma stood a little apart. She had leaped from
the couch where she had been lying. Her eyes were
wide in horror. Her palms pressed to her cheeks.
It was upon this scene that a hatless,
dust-covered man in a red hunting coat burst through
the door that had admitted Maenck. The man had
seen and recognized the conspirator as he climbed to
the top of the limousine and dropped within the cathedral
grounds, and he had followed close upon his heels.
No one seemed to note his entrance.
All ears were turned toward the doctor, who was speaking.
“The king is dead,” he said.
Maenck raised himself upon an elbow. He spoke
feebly.
“You fools,” he cried.
“That man was not the king. I saw him
steal the king’s clothes at Blentz and I followed
him here. He is the American the impostor.”
Then his eyes, circling the faces about him to note
the results of his announcements, fell upon the face
of the man in the red hunting coat. Amazement
and wonder were in his face. Slowly he raised
his finger and pointed.
“There is the king,” he said.
Every eye turned in the direction
he indicated. Exclamations of surprise and incredulity
burst from every lip. The old chancellor looked
from the man in the red hunting coat to the still form
of the man upon the floor in the blood-spattered marriage
garments of a king of Lutha. He let the king’s
head gently down upon the carpet, and then he rose
to his feet and faced the man in the red hunting coat.
“Who are you?” he demanded.
Before Barney could speak Lieutenant Butzow spoke.
“He is the king, your highness,”
he said. “I rode with him to Blentz to
free Mr. Custer. Both were wounded in the courtyard
in the fight that took place there. I helped
to dress their wounds. The king was wounded in
the breast Mr. Custer in the left leg.”
Prince von der Tann looked
puzzled. Again he turned his eyes questioningly
toward the newcomer.
“Is this the truth?” he asked.
Barney looked toward the Princess
Emma. In her eyes he could read the relief that
the sight of him alive had brought her. Since
she had recognized the king she had believed that
Barney was dead. The temptation was great he
dreaded losing her, and he feared he would lose her
when her father learned the truth of the deception
that had been practiced upon him. He might lose
even more men had lost their heads for
tampering with the affairs of kings.
“Well?” persisted the chancellor.
“Lieutenant Butzow is partially
correct he honestly believes that he is
entirely so,” replied the American. “He
did ride with me from Lustadt to Blentz to save the
man who lies dead here at your feet. The lieutenant
thought that he was riding with his king, just as
your highness thought that he was riding with his king
during the battle of Lustadt. You were both wrong you
were riding with Mr. Bernard Custer, of Beatrice.
I am he. I have no apologies to make. What
I did I would do again. I did it for Lutha and
for the woman I love. She knows and the king
knew that I intended restoring his identity to him
with no one the wiser for the interchange that had
taken place. The king upset my plans by stealing
back his identity while I slept, with the result that
you see before you upon the floor. He has died
as he had lived futilely.”
As he spoke the Princess Emma had
crossed the room toward him. Now she stood at
his side, her hand in his. Tense silence reigned
in the apartment. The old chancellor stood with
bowed head, buried in thought. All eyes were
upon him except those of the doctor, who had turned
his attention from the dead king to the wounded assassin.
Butzow stood looking at Barney Custer in open relief
and admiration. He had been trying to vindicate
his friend in his own mind ever since he had discovered,
as he believed, that Barney had tricked Leopold after
the latter had saved his life at Blentz and ridden
to Lustadt in the king’s guise. Now that
he knew the whole truth he realized how stupid he
had been not to guess that the man who had led the
victorious Luthanian army before Lustadt could not
have been the cowardly Leopold.
Presently the chancellor broke the silence.
“You say that Leopold of Lutha
lived futilely. You are right; but when you
say that he has died futilely, you are, I believe,
wrong. Living, he gave us a poor weakling.
Dying, he leaves the throne to a brave man, in whose
veins flows the blood of the Rubinroths, hereditary
rulers of Lutha.
“You are the only rightful successor
to the throne of Lutha,” he argued, “other
than Peter of Blentz. Your mother’s marriage
to a foreigner did not bar the succession of her offspring.
Aside from the fact that Peter of Blentz is out of
the question, is the more important fact that your
line is closer to the throne than his. He knew
it, and this knowledge was the real basis of his hatred
of you.”
As the old chancellor ceased speaking
he drew his sword and raised it on high above his
head.
“The king is dead,” he said. “Long
live the king!”