Donovan was, I believe, relieved when
he heard that he could not buy the whole kingdom of
Megalia. The price would have been enormous, but
he would not have hesitated to pay it if, by paying,
he would have got what he wanted. The more he
looked into the business of kingship, the less he
liked it. The idea of Court etiquette worried
him. Donovan disliked dressing for dinner, a
form of activity to which he was unaccustomed.
He got it into his head that the father of the reigning
monarch in a state like Megalia might be called on
to wear uniforms, troublesome things with unusual
buttons and straps, and change them two or three times
a day. He feared that such a combination of exertion
and worry would still further disorder the action of
his heart. He saw no prospect of quiet indolence
among a people which went in for revolutions as a
pastime. Salissa, on the other hand, seemed almost
an ideal spot. There were not likely to be any
regular postal arrangements. There was certainly
no cable. Since there were less than a hundred
inhabitants a liberal pension could be given to each.
Pensioners are notoriously peaceful and unobtrusive
people.
Miss Daisy was a little disappointed
at first; but only at first. Once she hit on
the idea that her kingdom would be the “dinkiest”
in Europe, indeed in the world, she was pleased.
The negotiations were rushed through at a pace which
struck even Gorman as indecent. But everybody
concerned was in a hurry. Konrad Karl was afraid
that the Emperor might hear of the sale through the
Megalian ambassador in London. But that gentleman he
was a Count, I think was under the influence,
probably in the pay of the Emperor, and had been instructed
to ignore King Konrad Karl as much as possible.
He heard nothing about the matter. Madame Ypsilante
was in a hurry for obvious reasons. Miss Daisy
Donovan had looked at the pearl necklace two or three
times, and there was a horrible possibility that she
might regard it as a suitable ornament for a queen.
Miss Daisy was eager to see her island kingdom as
soon as possible. Donovan himself was finding
London less restful than ever. He wanted to get
the Salissa business settled out of hand.
It was settled early in April.
I never heard the exact date of the signing of the
papers, but April the 1st would have been appropriate.
An immense document was drawn up by a solicitor, a
cousin of Gorman’s who lived in a small west
of Ireland town. Gorman said he gave the job
to this particular man because no London lawyer would
have kept the matter secret. My own impression
is that no London solicitor would have undertaken
the job at all. There cannot be any recognized
legal form for the sale of kingdoms. However,
Gorman’s cousin did his work excellently.
The document looked well. He attached eight enormous
seals to it, and he had several of the most important
clauses translated into Latin. It must have been
as good as it looked. Later on nearly every ambassador
in Europe had a look at the “instrument” Gorman
called it an instrument sometimes, sometimes a protocol and
they were all baffled. The American ambassador
in Megalia offered Gorman’s cousin a post in
the U. S. A. diplomatic service, a high testimonial
to his abilities. Miss Daisy and her heirs became
the independent sovereigns of the Island of Salissa.
Donovan promised to pay down the purchase money as
soon as he was satisfied that the island really existed.
The most Gorman could screw out of him in the way
of an advance was L5,000.
The evening after the “instrument”
was signed, Gorman had a visit from Goldsturmer, the
well-known jeweller. The man, a rather unctuous,
but very suave and polite German Jew, was shown into
Gorman’s sitting-room.
“I think,” he said, “that
you are a friend of his Majesty, King Konrad Karl
of Megalia?”
Gorman was on his guard and determined
to give away no information of any kind. The
King’s nervous fear of the Emperor’s displeasure
had impressed Gorman with the necessity of keeping
the sale of Salissa as secret as possible; but he
could hardly avoid admitting that he knew King Konrad
Karl. The affairs of the wine company had occupied
some space in the daily papers, and the names of the
directors had been published. His name and the
King’s had appeared together very frequently.
“And perhaps,” said Goldsturmer,
“you also know Madame Ypsilante?”
“I have seen the lady,” said Gorman.
Goldsturmer was not in the least discouraged by Gorman’s
reticence.
“I cannot,” he said, “expect
you to answer more frankly unless I am equally frank
with you. I am at this time engaged in a business
transaction of some importance with Madame Ypsilante.
The sum of money involved is very large. It is” Goldsturmer’s
tone became reverent “L10,000.”
“Can she pay?” said Gorman,
“not that it’s any affair of mine whether
she can or not.”
“The lady herself cannot pay;
but the King she tells me that his Majesty
has recently sold an estate situated in Megalia to
a wealthy American. Now if that is true ”
“Perhaps in that case the King might pay,”
said Gorman.
“I wonder,” said Goldsturmer, “if
the sale has taken place?”
“Shouldn’t think it likely,” said
Gorman.
Goldsturmer paused. For quite
a minute he sat looking at Gorman. Then he said:
“In a matter of this kind I
am prepared to pay for information which would be
of use to me. I shall speak frankly. It would
be worth my while to give one per cent. of the sum
involved to any one who could tell me whether the
sale which Madame mentioned to me has really been
effected.”
“Ah,” said Gorman, “one
per cent. on, did you say, L10,000?”
“It would amount to L100.”
“I wish I could earn it,”
said Gorman, “but unfortunately I know nothing
at all about the matter.”
Political life, so Gorman has often
told me, is the very best education obtainable in
one respect. The politician learns to lie fluently
and without discomfort. Even politicians are not,
of course, always believed, but they know how to lie
in a way which makes it very difficult for any one
to give expression to unbelief. Goldsturmer may
actually have believed Gorman. He certainly pretended
to. He did not even offer a two per cent. bonus.
“I must ask you to pardon me,”
he said, “for occupying your time with my inquiries.
I thank you for the way in which you have received
me. Good-bye.”
He bowed his way to the door.
Then he turned to Gorman again.
“You will understand, I am sure,
that mine was a purely business inquiry. I am
not interested in any of the scandal which unfortunately
is connected with the name of his Majesty, or with
that of the charming lady of whom I spoke. Still
less am I concerned with the state affairs of Megalia.
I have no connection with Megalia.”
Gorman sat thinking for a while after
Goldsturmer left him. The jeweller’s visit
and his questions were natural enough. Such inquiries
are made every day. There was nothing surprising
in the offer of one per cent. on the money which was
to change hands in return for information. Gorman
was a politician. It was not the first time he
had been offered a commission. He hoped it would
not be the last. What puzzled him was Goldsturmer’s
final remark. Why should the man have said he
had no interest in the state affairs of Megalia unless
indeed he was interested, was on the track of a suspected
secret?
Once more Gorman lamented the fact
that women were mixed up in a business affair.
“Damn Madame Ypsilante,” he said.
Then, finding some relief for his feelings in expressing
them aloud:
“Damn that woman’s tongue.”
Gorman was puzzled and therefore anxious.
His commission on the sale of Salissa his
rake-off, as Donovan called it was large,
a sum which Gorman did not want to lose. He was
most anxious that the transaction should be successfully
completed and the money actually paid. The King’s
evident nervousness about the Emperor impressed him
unpleasantly. Gorman was not a student of foreign
politics. He did not know precisely what the
Emperor’s position was. Megalia was nominally
an independent state. Its King could, he supposed,
cede a portion of territory to a foreign power without
consulting any other monarch. Yet the Emperor
evidently had to be considered, might put a stop to
the whole business. Konrad Karl had no doubts
about that, and he ought to know.
I am sure that I should be doing Gorman
an injustice if I were to represent him as anxious
only about the commission. He had a queer liking
for the unfortunate Konrad Karl. He wanted as
everybody who knew her did to gratify Miss
Daisy Donovan. And he took a sporting interest
in the sale of Salissa. There was a novelty about
the purchase of the position of reigning monarch which
appealed to Gorman, and there were all sorts of possibilities
about the situation and its future developments.
A week later, just as he was beginning
to forget Goldsturmer’s visit, Gorman had fresh
cause for anxiety. I remember the day very well.
I was lunching at my club, a club of which Gorman
is also a member. As I entered the room I saw
him sitting at a table near the window. I intended
to join him, for Gorman is always good company.
When I reached his table I saw that he already had
a companion Steinwitz, the director of
the Cyrenian Sea Steam Navigation Company. I turned
away at once, for Steinwitz is a man whom I particularly
dislike. Gorman caught sight of me and called:
“Come and sit here. There’s
plenty of room. The waiter can lay another place.”
“Thanks,” I said, “but
I’ve just caught sight of a man at the far end
of the room whom I particularly want to talk to.”
“Talk to him later on,”
said Gorman, “Come and sit here now.”
There was something in Gorman’s
tone which made me think he really wanted me to sit
at his table, that he had a motive in pressing me as
he did. But I was not going to lunch in the company
of Steinwitz. I have nothing definite against
the man; but I do not like him. I shook my head
and found a seat at the far end of the room.
Afterwards months afterwards Gorman
told me that he wanted me very badly that day, me
or some one else. He wanted a third person at
his table. Steinwitz was asking inconvenient
questions, talking about matters Gorman did not want
to discuss. The presence of a third person might
have saved Gorman some awkwardness.
Steinwitz was insistent and determined.
He laid hold on Gorman before lunch and clung to him
until they sat down together.
“You remember asking me,”
said Steinwitz “let me see, it must
have been a couple of months ago you remember
asking me for information about Megalia.”
“Did I?” said Gorman.
“And I told you it was a rotten
country no trade, no harbours, no tourist
traffic, no anything. Well rather an
odd thing happened yesterday. A man came into
my office by the way, you know him, I think Donovan,
the American millionaire ”
“Oh, yes, I know him. Owns
a pretty daughter, doesn’t he?”
“She was with him,” said
Steinwitz “a romantic sort of girl,
I should say, by the look of her. Head stuffed
full of silly fancies.”
Steinwitz’ eyes were on Gorman
all the time he was speaking. Gorman says he
felt very uncomfortable, but I am sure he did not show
it.
“I scarcely know the girl,”
said Gorman. “What did old Donovan want
with you?”
“Wanted to charter a steamer,
captain, crew and all, one of our boats. Said
he was going for a cruise off the coast of Megalia
and wanted a biggish ship and officers who know the
Cyrenian Sea thoroughly.”
“Odd fancies the Americans have,”
said Gorman. “However, he can pay for what
he wants. If half what they say about him is true,
he could buy up your whole fleet without missing the
money.”
“He certainly did not boggle over the figure
I named.”
“Oh, you let him have the ship then?”
“Certainly. Trade is dull
in those parts now. As a matter of fact the Ida
was lying up.”
Gorman pretended to yawn by way of
showing how very little interest he took in the matter.
“Hope he’ll enjoy the
trip,” he said. “Doesn’t sound
an attractive country by your account.”
“Well,” said Steinwitz,
“there are some interesting things to see.
There’s the Island of Salissa, for instance.”
Gorman was startled by the mention
of Salissa. He may possibly have shown his surprise.
Steinwitz went on:
“By the way, talking of Salissa,
Goldsturmer told me a curious thing the other day.
You know Goldsturmer, don’t you?”
“The jewel man?”
“Yes. He says your friend
Donovan has bought the island of Salissa from that
picturesque blackguard King Konrad Karl. I wonder
if that can be true. Goldsturmer says he has
it on the best authority.”
“Those ’best authorities’,”
said Gorman, “are invariably liars. I have
known scores of them.”
“I daresay you’re right,”
said Steinwitz; “anyhow, in this case the authority
wasn’t one that I should care to rely on.
It was Madame Ypsilante a very charming
lady, but ”
He shrugged his shoulders.
“I wouldn’t care to bet
my last shilling,” said Gorman, “on the
truth of a statement made by Madame Ypsilante.”
“In this case,” said Steinwitz,
“her story was a ridiculous one, absurd on the
face of it. She said that the American girl wants
to set up as a monarch and that Konrad Karl had sold
her the right to call herself Queen of Salissa.”
“Either Goldsturmer was pulling
your leg,” said Gorman, “or Madame was
pulling his. Was she trying to get anything out
of him?”
“Pearls,” said Steinwitz.
“There is a certain rope of pearls ”
“That accounts for the whole thing,” said
Gorman.
Steinwitz seemed quite satisfied that
it did. But he was not inclined to drop the subject
altogether.
“A sale of that sort,”
he said, “would be impossible. The Emperor
wouldn’t permit it.”
Then Gorman made a mistake. For
the first time he showed a real interest in what Steinwitz
said. There is every excuse for him. He
wanted very much to understand the Emperor’s
position; and Steinwitz had already heard possibly
believed the story of the sale of Salissa.
“What on earth has the Emperor
got to do with it?” said Gorman. “Megalia
is an independent state, isn’t it?”
Steinwitz laughed.
“Very few states,” he said, “are
independent of the Emperor.”
There was something in the way he
spoke, a note of arrogance, a suggestion of truculence,
which nettled Gorman.
“Donovan,” he said, “is
a free citizen of the United States of America.
That’s what he says himself. I don’t
expect he cares a damn about any emperor.”
“Ah well,” said Steinwitz,
“it does not matter, does it? Since he has
not bought the Island of Salissa, no question is likely
to arise. The Emperor will not object to his
wandering round the Cyrenian Sea in the Ida.”
Gorman was singularly dull when he
joined me in the smoking-room after luncheon.
I do not recollect any other occasion on which I found
him disinclined to talk. I opened the most seductive
subjects. I said I was sure Ulster really meant
to take up arms against Home Rule. I said that
the Sinn Feiners were getting stronger and stronger
in Ireland, and that neither Gorman nor any member
of his party would be returned at the next General
Election. Gorman must have wanted to contradict
me; but he did not say a word. It was only when
I got up to go away that he spoke; and then he made
a remark which had no bearing whatever on anything
which I had said.
“Women,” he growled, “are
hell. In business they’re red hell.”