The anniversary of the death of Prince
Hubert dawned bright and sunny. The Place showed
a thin covering of snow, which clung, wet and sticky,
to the trees; but by nine o’clock most of it
had disappeared, and Prince Ferdinand William Otto
was informed that the excursion would take place.
Two motors took the party, by back
streets, to the landing-stage. In the first were
Annunciata, Hedwig, and the Countess, and at the last
moment Otto had salvaged Miss Braithwaite from the
second car, and begged a place for her with him.
A police agent sat beside the chauffeur. Also
another car, just ahead, contained other agents, by
Mettlich’s order before his departure a
plain black motor, without the royal arms.
In the second machine followed a part
of the suite, Hedwig’s lady in waiting, two
gentlemen of the Court, in parade dress, and Father
Gregory, come from his monastery at Etzel to visit
his old friend, the King.
At the landing-stage a small crowd
had gathered on seeing the red carpet laid and the
gilt ropes put up, which indicated a royal visit.
A small girl, with a hastily secured bouquet in her
hot hands, stood nervously waiting. In deference
to the anniversary, the flowers were tied with a black
ribbon!
Annunciata grumbled when she saw the
crowd, and the occupants of the first car looked them
over carefully. It remained for Hedwig to spy
the black ribbon. In the confusion, she slipped
over to the little girl, who went quite white with
excitement. “They are lovely,” Hedwig
whispered, “but please take off the black ribbon.”
The child eyed her anxiously. “It will
come to pieces, Highness.”
“Take the ribbon from your hair. It will
be beautiful.”
Which was done! But, as was not
unnatural, the child forgot her speech, and merely
thrust the bouquet, tied with a large pink bow, into
the hands of Prince Ferdinand William Otto.
“Here,” she said.
It was, perhaps, the briefest, and therefore the most
agreeable presentation speech the Crown Prince had
ever heard.
Red carpet and gold ropes and white
gloves these last on the waiting officers made
the scene rather gay. The spring sun shone on
the gleaming river, on the white launch with its red
velvet cushions, on the deck chairs, its striped awnings
and glittering brass, on the Crown Prince, in uniform,
on the bouquet and the ribbon. But somewhere,
back of the quay, a band struck up a funeral march,
and a beggar, sitting in the sun, put his hand to
his ear.
“Of course,” he said,
to no one in particular. “It is the day.
I had forgotten.”
The quay receded, red carpet and all.
Only the blare of the band followed them, and with
the persistence of sound over water, followed them
for some time. The Crown Prince put down the bouquet,
and proceeded to stand near the steersman.
“When I am grown up,”
he observed to that embarrassed sailor, “I hope
I shall be able to steer a boat.”
The steersman looked about cautiously.
The royal guests were settling themselves in chairs;
with rugs over their knees. “It is very
easy, Your Royal Highness,” he said. “See,
a turn like this, and what happens? And the other
way the same.”
Followed a five minutes during which
the white launch went on a strange and devious course,
and the Crown Prince grew quite hot and at least two
inches taller. It was, of course, the Archduchess
who discovered what was happening. She was very
disagreeable about it.
The Archduchess was very disagreeable
about everything that day. She was afraid to
stay in the Palace, and afraid to leave it. And
just when she had begun to feel calm, and the sun
and fresh air were getting in their work, that wretched
funeral band had brought back everything she was trying
to forget.
The Countess was very gay. She
said brilliant, rather heartless things that set the
group to laughing, and in the intervals she eyed Hedwig
with narrowed eyes and hate in her heart. Hedwig
herself was very quiet. The bouquet had contained
lilies-of-the-valley, for one thing.
Miss Braithwaite knitted, and watched
that the Crown Prince kept his white gloves clean.
Just before they left the Palace the
Archduchesss had had a moment of weakening, but the
Countess had laughed away her fears.
“I really think I shall not
go, after all,” Annunciata had said nervously.
“There are reasons.”
The Countess had smiled mockingly.
“Reasons!” she said. “I know
that many things are being said. But I also know
that General Mettlich is an alarmist;” purred
the Countess. “And that the King is old
and ill, and sees through gray glasses.”
So the Archduchess had submitted to
having a plumed and inappropriate hat set high on
her head, regardless of the fashion, and had pinned
on two watches and gone.
It was Hedwig who showed the most
depression on the trip, after all. Early that
morning she had attended mass in the royal chapel.
All the household had been there, and the King had
been wheeled in, and had sat in his box, high in the
wall, the door of which opened from his private suite.
Looking up, Hedwig had seen his gray
old face set and rigid. The Court had worn black,
and the chapel was draped in crepe. She had fallen
on her knees and had tried dutifully to pray for the
dead Hubert. But her whole soul was crying out
for help for herself.
So now she sat very quiet, and wondered about things.
Prince Ferdinand William Otto sat
by the rail and watched the green banks flying by.
In one place a group of children were sailing a tiny
boat from the bank. It was only a plank, with
a crazy cotton sail. They shoved it off and watched
while the current seized it and carried it along.
Then they cheered, and called good-bye to it.
The Crown Prince leaned over the rail,
and when the current caught it, he cheered too, and
waved his cap. He was reproved, of course, and
some officious person insisted on tucking the rug
around his royal legs. But when no one was looking,
he broke a flower from the bouquet and flung it overboard.
He pretended that it was a boat, and was going down
to Karnia, filled with soldiers ready to fight.
But the thought of soldiers brought
Nikky to his mind. His face clouded. “It’s
very strange about Nikky,” he said. “He
is away somewhere. I wish he had sent word he
was going.”
Hedwig looked out over the river.
The Archduchess glanced at Miss Braithwaite.
“There is no news?” she asked, in an undertone.
“None,” said Miss Braithwaite.
A sudden suspicion rose in Hedwig’s
mind, and made her turn pale. What if they had
sent him away? Perhaps they feared him enough
for that! If that were true, she would never
know. She knew the ways of the Palace well enough
for that. In a sort of terror she glanced around
the group, so comfortably disposed. Her mother
was looking out, with her cool, impassive gaze.
Miss Braithwaite knitted. The Countess, however,
met her eyes, and there was something strange in them:
triumph and a bit of terror, too, had she but read
them. For the Countess had put in her plea for
a holiday and had been refused.
The launch drew up near the fort,
and the Crown Prince’s salute of a certain number
of guns was fired. The garrison was drawn up in
line, and looked newly shaved and very, very neat.
And the officers came out and stood on the usual red
carpet, and bowed deeply, after which they saluted
the Crown Prince and he saluted them. Then the
Colonel in charge shook hands all round, and the band
played. It was all very ceremonious and took
a lot of tine.
The new fortress faced the highroad
some five miles from the Karnian border. It stood
on a bluff over the river, and was, as the Crown Prince
decided, not so unlike the desk, after all, except
that it had a moat around it.
Hedwig and the Countess went with
the party around the fortifications. The Archduchess
and Miss Braithwaite had sought a fire. Only the
Countess, however, seemed really interested. Hedwig
seemed more intent on the distant line of the border
than on anything else. She stood on a rampart
and stared out at it, looking very sad. Even the
drill when at a word all the great guns
rose and peeped over the edge at the valley below,
and then dropped back again as if they had seen enough even
this failed to rouse her.
“I wish you would listen, Hedwig,”
said the Crown Prince, almost fretfully. “It’s
so interesting. The enemy’s soldiers would
come up the river in boats, and along that road on
foot. And then we would raise the guns and shoot
at them. And the guns would drop back again, before
the enemy had time to aim at them.”
But Hedwig’s interest was so
evidently assumed that he turned to the Countess.
The Countess professed smiling terror, and stood a
little way back from the guns, looking on. But
Prince Ferdinand William Otto at last coaxed her to
the top of the emplacement.
“There’s a fine view up
there,” he urged. “And the guns won’t
hurt you. There’s nothing in them.”
To get up it was necessary to climb
an iron ladder. Hedwig was already there.
About a dozen young officers had helped her up, and
ruined as many pairs of white gloves, although Hedwig
could climb like a cat, and really needed no help
at all.
“You go up,” said the
Crown Prince eagerly. “I’ll hold your
bag, so you can climb.”
He caught her handbag from her, and
instantly something snapped in it. The Countess
was climbing up the ladder. Rather dismayed, Prince
Ferdinand William Otto surveyed the bag. Something
had broken, he feared. And in another moment
he saw what it was. The little watch which was
set in one side of it had slipped away, leaving a round
black hole. His heart beat a trifle faster.
“I’m awfully worried,”
he called up to her, as he climbed. “I’m
afraid I’ve broken your bag. Something
clicked, and the watch is gone. It is not on
the ground.”
It was well for the Countess that
the Colonel was talking to Hedwig. Well for her,
too, that the other officers were standing behind with
their eyes worshipfully on the Princess. The Countess
turned gray-white.
“Don’t worry, Highness,”
she said, with stiff lips, “The watch falls
back sometimes. I must have it repaired.”
But long after the tour of the ramparts
was over, after ammunition-rooms had been visited,
with their long lines of waiting shells, after the
switchboard which controlled the river mines had been
inspected and explained, she was still trembling.
Prince Ferdinand William Otto, looking
at the bag later on, saw the watch in place and drew
a long breath of relief.