Baron Barrat was suspicious by education his
experience of life and his own conduct had tended
to render him so; and accordingly when, three hours
after he had seen Gordon apparently commit the French
officer to jail, he found them leaving a cafe in the
most friendly and amicable spirit, he wasted no time
in investigation, but hurried at once to warn the
King.
“What we feared would happen,
has happened,” he said. “The Frenchman
has told Gordon that Zara and Kalonay sold the secret
of the expedition, and Gordon will be coming here
to warn you of it. Now, what are you going to
do? We must act quickly.”
“I shall refuse to believe the
Frenchman, of course,” said the King. “I
shall ask Zara in his presence to answer his charges,
and she will tell him he lies. That is all there
will be of it. What does it matter what he says?
We sail at midnight. We can keep him quiet until
then.”
“If he is troublesome I can
call for help from this room, and the servants of
the hotel and the guards will rush in and find us
struggling together. We will charge him with
an attempt at assassination, and this time he surely
will go to jail. By to-morrow morning we shall
be many miles at sea.”
“But he can cable to Messina,
by way of Gibraltar, and head us off,” objected
Barrat.
“What can he cable?” demanded
the King. “Nothing the people of the Republic
do not already know. It is our friends here that
must not find us out. That is the main thing.
Thank Heaven!” he exclaimed, “Kalonay
and Paul are out of the way, and those crazy boys from
Paris. We will settle it here among ourselves
in five minutes.”
“And the American?” asked
Zara. “He knows, he will come with him.
Suppose he believes, suppose he believes that Kalonay
and I have sold you out, but suspects that you know
it?”
“The American can go to the
devil,” said the King. “Confound
him and his insolence. I’ll have him in
the prison too, if he interferes. Or Erhaupt
can pick a quarrel with him here and fight it out behind
the sand-hills before the others get back from their
picnic. He has done as much for me before.”
Zara stood up. She was trembling
slightly, and she glanced fearfully from Erhaupt to
the King.
“You will not do that,” she said.
“And why not, madame?” demanded Louis.
“Because it will be murder,”
Zara whispered. “He will murder him as
he did that boy in the Park at Pesth.”
“What does the woman mean?”
growled the German. “Is she mad?
Send her to her room, Louis.”
“You know what I mean,”
Zara answered, her voice rising, in her excitement.
“You fired before they gave the word.
I know you did. Oh, Louis,” she cried,
“you never warned me it might come to this.
I am afraid. I am afraid to meet that man ”
She gave a sudden cry. “And
Kalonay!” She held out her hands appealingly.
“Indeed,” she cried, “do not let
Kalonay question me.”
“Silence!” commanded the
King. “You are acting like a fool.”
He advanced toward her, and clasped her wrist firmly
in his hand. “No nerves, now,” he
said. “I’ll not have it. You
shall meet Kalonay, and you shall swear that he is
in the plot against me. If you fail us now,
we are ruined. As it is, we are sure to lose
the bribe from the Republic, but we may still get
Miss Carson’s money if you play your part.
It is your word and the word of the Frenchman against
Kalonay’s. And we have the paper signed
by you for Kalonay as evidence. Have you got
it with you?”
Zara bowed her head. “It
is always with me,” she answered.
“Good,” said the King.
“It will be a difficult chance, but if you
stand to your story, and we pretend to believe you,
the others may believe you, too.”
“But I cannot,” Zara cried.
“I know I cannot. I tell you if you put
me face to face with Kalonay, I shall fail you.
I shall break down. They will see that I am
lying. Send me away. Send me away before
they come. Tell them I saw the Frenchman, and
suspected I had been found out, and that I have gone
away. Tell them you don’t know where I
am.”
“I believe she’s right,”
Erhaupt said. “She will do us more harm
than good. Let her go to her room and wait there.”
“She will remain where she is,”
said the King, sternly. “And she will
keep her courage and her wits about her, or ”
He was interrupted by an exclamation
from Barrat. “Whatever you mean to do,
you must do it at once,” he said, grimly.
He was standing at the window which overlooked the
beach. “Here they come now,” he
continued. “The American has taken no chances,
he is bringing an audience with him.”
The King and Erhaupt ran to the window,
and peered over Barrat’s shoulder.
Advancing toward them along the beach,
some on foot, and some on horseback, were all the
members of the expedition, those who had been of the
riding-party and those who had remained in Tangier.
Gordon and the Frenchman Renauld were far in the
lead, walking by themselves and speaking earnestly
together; Father Paul was walking with Mrs. Carson
and her daughter, and Kalonay was riding with two of
the volunteers, the Count de Rouen and Prince Henri
of Poitiers.
When the King and Erhaupt turned from
the window the Countess Zara had disappeared.
“It is better so,” said Erhaupt; “she
was so badly frightened she would have told the truth.”
The King stood leaning on the back
of a large arm-chair. “Well, the moment
has come, it is our last chance,” he said.
“Send for the Crown Prince, Baron. I
shall be discovered in the act of taking a tender
farewell of my son.”
Barrat made an eager gesture of dissent.
“I would not do that,”
he cried. “If we are to make charges against
the jackal do not have the boy present; the boy must
not hear them. You know how Kalonay worships
the child, and it would enrage him more to be exposed
before the Prince than before all the rest of the world.
He will be hard enough to handle without that.
Don’t try him too far.”
“You are absurd, Barrat,”
exclaimed the King. “The boy won’t
understand what is said.”
“No, but the Jackal will,”
Barrat returned. “You don’t understand
him, Louis, he is like a woman; he has sentiment and
feelings, and when we all turn on him he will act
like a madman. Keep the boy out of his sight,
I tell you. It’s the only thing he cares
for in the world. He has been a better father
to him than you ever have been.”
“That was quite natural; that
was because it was his duty,” said the King,
calmly. “A Kalonay has always been the
protector and tutor of the heir-apparent. If
this one chooses to give his heart with his service,
that is not my concern. Why, confound them, they
all think more of the child than they do of me.
That is why I need him by me now.”
Barrat shook his head. “I
tell you it will make trouble,” he persisted.
“Kalonay will not stand it. He and the
child are more like comrades than a tutor and his
pupil. Why, Kalonay would rather sit with the
boy in the Champs-Elysees and point out the people
as they go by than drive at the side of the prettiest
woman in Paris. He always treats him as though
he saw the invisible crown upon his head; he will
throw over any of us to stay in the nursery and play
tin soldiers with him. And when he was ill ”
Barrat nodded his head significantly. “You
remember.”
“That will do,” said the
King. “We have no time to consider the
finer feelings of the jackal; he is to be sacrificed,
and that is all there is of it. The presence
of the child may make him more unmanageable, but it
will certainly make it easier for me. So go,
bring the boy here as I bid you.”
Barrat left the room and returned
immediately, followed by the Crown Prince and his
nurse. The Prince was a dark, handsome little
fellow of four years. His mother had died when
he was born, and he had never played with children
of his own age, and his face was absurdly wise and
wistful; but it lighted with a sweet and grateful smile
when anyone showed him kindness or sought to arouse
his interest. To the Crown Prince Kalonay was
an awful and wonderful being. He was the one
person who could make him laugh out of pure happiness
and for no reason, as a child should laugh.
And people who had seen them together asked which
of the princes was the older of the two. When
the child entered the room, clinging to Barrat’s
finger, he carried in his other hand a wooden spade
and bucket, still damp with sand, and he was dressed
in a shabby blue sailor suit which left his little
legs bare, and exposed the scratches and bruises of
many falls. A few moments later, when the conspirators
entered the King’s salon, preceded by Erhaupt,
they found the boy standing by his father’s
knee. The King had his hand upon the child’s
head, and had been interrupted apparently in a discourse
on the dignity of kingship, for the royal crown of
Messina had been brought out and stood beside him
on the table, and his other hand rested on it reverently.
It was an effective tableau, and the visitors observed
it with varying emotions, but with silence.
The King rose, taking his son’s
hand in his, and bowed, looking inquiringly from Barrat
to the Prince Kalonay.
“To what do I owe the pleasure
of this visit?” he asked. “Was it
discreet of you to come together in this way?
But you are most welcome. Place chairs for
the ladies, Barrat.”
Kalonay glanced at the others, and
they nodded to him as though to make him their spokesman.
He pointed at Gordon with his cap.
“We are here on the invitation
of this gentleman, your Majesty,” he said.
“He took it upon himself to send after those
of us who had gone into the country, and came in person
for the others who remained in town. He tells
us he has news of the greatest importance to communicate,
which he cannot disclose except to you, and in the
presence of all of those who are to take part in the
expedition. We decided to accompany him here,
as he asked us, and to leave it to your Majesty to
say whether or not you wished us to remain.”
Kalonay smiled in apology at the King, and the King
answered him with a smile.
“The procedure is perhaps unconventional,”
the King said, “but in America they move quickly.
No doubt our young companion has acted as he thought
was for the best. If he has taken a liberty,
the nature of his news will probably excuse him.
Perhaps, Mr. Gordon,” he added, turning to
the American, “you had better first tell me what
this discovery is, and I will decide whether it is
best to discuss it in open council.”
Gordon did not appear to be the least
disturbed by the criticism Kalonay and the King had
passed upon his conduct. He only smiled pleasantly
when the King had finished speaking, and showed no
inclination to accept a private audience.
“What I have to say, your Majesty,”
he began, “is this. I have learned that
all the secrets of your expedition have been sold to
the Republic of Messina. One of those now present
in this room is charged with having sold them.
Shall I go on,” he asked, “or do you still
think it advisable for anyone to leave the room?”
He paused and glanced from the King
to the double row of conspirators, who were standing
together in a close semicircle facing the King and
himself. The instant he ceased speaking there
rose from their ranks an outburst of consternation,
of anger, and of indignant denial. The King’s
spirits rose within him at the sound, although he frowned
and made a gesture as though to command silence.
“Mr. Gordon, this is a serious
charge you make,” he said, smiling grimly.
“One that may cost you a great deal it
might cost you your life perhaps.” He
paused significantly, and there was a second outburst,
this time from the younger men, which came so suddenly
that it was as though Louis had played upon certain
chords on a keyboard, and the sounds he wanted had
answered to his touch.
“Pardon me, that is not the
question,” said Gordon. “That I make
charges or run risks in making charges is not important.
That your expedition has failed before it has even
started is, however, of great importance, at least
so it sees to me.”
There was a movement in the circle,
and Father Paul pushed his way forward from his place
beside Miss Carson’s chair. He was so greatly
moved that when he spoke his voice was harsh and broken.
“What is your authority for saying we have
failed?” he demanded.
Gordon bowed gravely and turned and
pointed to the Frenchman. “This gentleman,”
he said, “is General Renauld, Commander-in-Chief
of the army of Messina. He is my authority.
He knows all that you mean to do. If he knows
it, it is likely, is it not, that his army and the
President of the Republic know it also, and that when
we attempt to land they will be waiting for us.”
The King silenced the second outburst
that followed this by rising and holding up his hand.
“Silence! I believe I
can explain,” he said. He was smiling,
and his bearing was easy and so full of assurance
that the exclamations and whispers died away on the
instant. “I am afraid I see what has happened,”
the King said. “But there need be no cause
for alarm. This gentleman is, as Mr. Gordon
says, the Commander-in-Chief of the Messinian army,
and it is true he suspected that an armed force would
invade the island. It is not strange that he
should have suspected it, and it needed no traitor
to enlighten him. The visit of Father Paul and
the Prince Kalonay in the yacht, and their speeches
inciting the people to rebellion, would have warned
the government that an expedition might soon follow.
The return of our yacht to this place has no doubt
been made known in Messina through the public press,
and General Renauld followed the yacht here to learn
what he could of our plans of our intended
movements. He came here to spy on us, and as
a spy I ordered Mr. Gordon to arrest him this morning
on any charge he pleased, and to place him out of
our way until after to-night, when we should have
sailed. I chose Mr. Gordon to undertake this
service because he happened to speak the language
of the country, and it was necessary to deal directly
with the local authorities without the intervention
of an outsider. What has happened is only too
evident. The spy, who when he came here only
suspected, now, as Mr. Gordon says, knows the truth,
and he could have learned it only from one person,
to whom he has no doubt paid a pretty price for the
information.” The King took a step forward
and pointed with his hand at the American. “I
gave that man into your keeping, sir,” he cried,
“but I had you watched. Instead of placing
him in jail you took him to a cafe and remained there
with him for three hours, and from that cafe you came
directly here to this room. If he knows the truth,
he learned it in that cafe, and he learned it from
you!” There was a ring of such earnestness
and sincerity in the King’s speech, and he delivered
it with such indignation and bitter contempt that
a shout of relief, of approbation and conviction,
went up from his hearers, and fell as quickly on the
words as the applause of an audience drowns out the
last note of a great burst of song. Barrat,
in the excess of his relief, turned his back sharply
on the King, glancing sideways at Erhaupt and shaking
his head in speechless admiration.
“He is wonderful, simply wonderful,”
Erhaupt muttered; “he would have made a great
actor or a great diplomat.”
“He is wasted as a King,” whispered Barrat.
There was a menacing movement on the
part of the younger men toward Gordon and General
Renauld, which the King noted, but which he made no
effort to check. Neither Gordon nor General Renauld
gave any sign that they observed it. The American
was busily engaged in searching his pockets, and from
one of these he produced two pieces of paper, which
he held up above his head, so that those in the room
might see them.
“One moment, please,”
he began, and then waited until the tumult in the
room had ceased. “Again, I must point out
to you,” he said, in brisk, business-like tones,
“that we are digressing. The important
thing is not who did, or did not, sell out the expedition,
but that it is in danger of failing altogether.
What his Majesty says is in part correct. I
did not take this gentleman to jail; I did take him
to a cafe, and there he told me much more concerning
the expedition than I had learned from those directly
interested. His information, he told me, had
been sold to the Republic by one who visited the island
and who claimed to act for one other. I appreciated
the importance of what he said, and I also guessed
that my word and his unsupported might be doubted,
as you have just doubted it. So I took the liberty
of verifying what General Renauld told me by cabling
to the President of Messina.”
There was a shout of consternation
at these words, but Gordon’s manner was so confident
and the audacity of his admission so surprised his
hearers that they were silent again immediately, and
waited, with breathless interest, while Gordon unfolded
one of the pieces of paper.
“This is a copy of the cablegram
I sent the President,” he said, “and to
which, with his permission, I signed General Renauld’s
name. It is as follows:
The President. The Palace, Messina. They
will not believe you are fully informed. Cable
at once the exact hour when they will leave Tangier,
at what hour they expect to land, at what place they
expect to land, what sum you have promised to pay
for this information, and the names of those to whom
it is to be paid.
Renauld.
Gordon lowered the paper. “Is
that quite clear?” he asked. “Do
you follow me? I have invited the enemy himself
to inform you of your plans, and to tell you who has
betrayed them. His answer, which was received
a half hour ago, removes all suspicion from any save
those he names. General Renauld and myself cease
to be of the least consequence in the matter; we are
only messengers. It is the President of Messina
who will speak to you now. If you still doubt
that the secret of your expedition is known to the
President you will have to doubt him.”
The King sprang quickly to his feet
and struck the arm of his chair sharply with his open
hand.
“I shall not permit that message
to be read,” he said. “If we have
a traitor here, he is a traitor against me.
And I shall deal with him as I see fit, in private.”
There was a murmur of disappointment
and of disapproval even, and the King again struck
the arm of his chair for silence. Kalonay advanced
toward him, shaking his head and holding out his hands
in protest.
“Your Majesty, I beseech you,”
he began. “This concerns us all,”
he cried. “It is too evident that we have
been betrayed; but it is not fair to any of us that
we should all lie under suspicion, as we must unless
it is told who has been guilty of this infamy.
I beg your Majesty to reconsider. There is
no one in this room who is not in our secret, and
whoever has betrayed us must be with us here and now.
I, who have an interest second only to your own,
ask that that cablegram be read.”
There was a murmur of approbation
from the conspirators, and exclamations of approval
and entreaty. Miss Carson, in her excitement,
had risen to her feet and was standing holding her
mother’s hand. The King glanced uncertainly
at Kalonay, and then turned to Barrat and Erhaupt
as if in doubt.
Gordon’s eyes were fixed for
a moment on Kalonay with a strange and puzzled expression.
Then he gave a short sigh of relief, and turning
quickly searched the faces of those around him.
What he saw seemed to confirm him in his purpose,
for he folded the paper and placed it in his pocket.
“His Majesty is right,” he said.
“I shall not read this.”
Kalonay and Father Paul turned upon
him angrily. “You have no choice in the
matter, sir,” Kalonay cried. “It
has passed entirely out of your hands.”
“I beg your Majesty that the
cablegram be read,” the priest demanded, in
a voice that held less the tone of a request than of
a command.
“I shall not read it,”
persisted Gordon, “because the person chiefly
concerned is not present.”
“That is all the more reason
for reading it,” said Kalonay. “Your
Majesty must reconsider.”
The King whispered to Barrat, and
the others waited in silence that expressed their
interest more clearly than a chorus of questions would
have done.
“It shall be as you ask,”
the King said, at last. “You may read the
message, Mr. Gordon.”
Gordon opened the paper and looked
at it for some seconds of time with a grave and perplexed
expression, and then, with a short breath, as one
who takes a plunge, read it aloud. “This
is it,” he said.
To General Renauld. Cable Office,
Tangier. They leave Tangier Tuesday at
midnight, they land at daybreak Thursday morning on
the south beach below the old breakwater. The
secret of the expedition was sold us for three hundred
thousand francs by the Countess Zara and the Prince
Kalonay.
Gordon stuck the paper in his pocket,
and, crossing to Kalonay, held out his hand, with
a smile. “I don’t believe it, of
course,” he said; “but you would have
it.”
Kalonay neither saw the gesture nor
heard the words. He was turning in bewilderment
from the King to Father Paul, and he laughed uncertainly.
“What nonsense is this?”
he demanded. “Whose sorry trick is this?
The lie is not even ingenious.”
General Renauld had not spoken since
he had entered the room, but now he advanced in front
of Kalonay and faced him with a threatening gesture.
“The President of Messina does
not lie, sir,” he said, sternly. “I
myself saw the Countess Zara write out that paper,
which I and others signed, and in which we agreed
to pay to her and to you the money you asked for betraying
your King.”
Father Paul pressed his hand heavily
on Kalonay’s shoulder. “Do not answer
him,” he commanded. Gordon had moved to
Kalonay’s other side, and the three men had
unconsciously assumed an attitude of defence, and
stood back to back in a little group facing the angry
circle that encompassed them. The priest raised
his arm to command a hearing.
“Where is Madame Zara?” he cried.
“Ah, where indeed?” echoed
the King, sinking back into his chair. “She
has fled. It is all too evident now; she has
betrayed us and she has fled.”
But on his words, as if in answer
to the priest’s summons, the curtains that hid
the door into the King’s private room were pulled
to one side, and Madame Zara appeared between them,
glancing fearfully at the excited crowd before her.
As she stood hesitating on the threshold, she swayed
slightly and clutched the curtains for a moment as
though for support. The priest advanced, and
led her to the centre of the room. She held
a folded paper in her hand, which she gave to him in
silence.
“You have heard what has passed?”
he asked, with a toss of his head toward the heavy
curtains. The woman raised her head and bowed.
The priest unfolded the paper.
“Am I to read this?” he asked. The
woman bowed again.
There was silence in the room while
the priest’s eyes ran quickly over the paper.
He crushed it in his hand.
“It is as General Renauld says,”
he exclaimed. “In this the Republic of
Messina agrees to pay the Countess Zara and the Prince
Kalonay three hundred thousand francs, if the expedition
is withdrawn after it has made a pretence of landing
on the shores of Messina.”
He took a step forward. “Madame
Zara,” he cried, in a tone of warning, “do
you pretend that the Prince Kalonay was your accomplice
in this; that he knew what you meant to do?”
Madame Zara once more bowed her head.
“No! You must speak,” commanded the
priest. “Answer me!”
Zara hesitated, in evident distress,
and glanced appealingly at the King; but the expression
on his face was one of grief and of unrelenting virtue.
“I do,” she said, at last, in a low voice.
“Kalonay did know. He thought the revolution
would not succeed; he thought it would fail, and so and
so and we needed money. They made
me I, O my God, I cannot I cannot!”
she cried, suddenly, sinking on her knees and hiding
her face with her hands.
Kalonay stepped toward her and lifted
her gently to her feet; but when she looked and saw
who it was that held her, she gave a cry and pulled
herself free. She staggered and would have fallen,
had not Gordon caught and held her by the arm.
The King rose from his chair and pointed at the shrinking
figure of the woman.
“Stand aside from her,”
he said, sternly. “Why should we pity her,
what pity has she shown for us for me?
She has robbed me of my inheritance. But let
her go, she is a woman; we cannot punish her.
Her sins rest on her own head. But you you,”
he cried, turning fiercely on Kalonay, his voice rising
to a high and melancholy key, “you whom I have
heaped with honors, whom I have leaned upon as on the
arm of a brother, that you should have sold me for
silver, that you should have turned Judas!”
The crowd of volunteers, bewildered
by the rapid succession of events, and confused and
rendered desperate by the failure of their expedition,
caught up the word, and pressing forward with a rush,
surrounded Kalonay in an angry circle, crying “Judas!”
“Traitor!” and “Coward!”
Kalonay turned from side to side.
On some he smiled bitterly in silence, and at others
he broke out into swift and fierce denunciations;
but the men around him crowded closer and would not
permit him to be heard. He had turned upon them,
again challenging them to listen, when there was an
opening in the circle and the men stepped back, and
Miss Carson pushed her way among them and halted at
Kalonay’s side. She did not look at him,
but at the men about him. She was the only calm
figure in the group, and her calmness at such a crisis,
and her youth, and the fineness and fearlessness of
her beauty, surprised them into a sudden quiet.
There was instantly a cry for order, and the men
stood curious and puzzled, watching to see what she
would do.
“Gentlemen,” she said,
in a clear, grave voice. “Gentlemen,”
she repeated, sharply, as a few murmurs still greeted
her, “if you are gentlemen, let this lady speak.
She has not finished.” She crossed quickly
and took the Countess Zara by the hand. “Go
on, madame,” she urged, gently. “Do
not be afraid. You say they made you do it.
Who made you do it? You have told us a part
of the truth. Now tell us the whole truth.”
For a moment the girl seemed much the older of the
two, and as Zara glanced up at her fearfully, she
smiled to reassure her, and stroked the woman’s
hand with her own. “Who made you do it?”
she repeated. “Not the Prince Kalonay,
surely. You cannot hope to make us believe that.
We trust him absolutely. Who was it, then?”
The King sprang forward with an oath;
his apathy and mock dignity had fallen from him like
a mask. His face was mottled, and his vicious
little eyes flashed with fear and anger. Erhaupt
crowded close behind him, crouching like a dog at
his heels.
“She has lied enough already,”
the King cried. “We will not listen to
her. Take her away.”
“Yes, let her go,” shouted
Erhaupt, with a laugh. “If she had been
a decent woman ”
There was a quick parting in the group
and the sound of a heavy blow as Kalonay flung himself
upon Erhaupt and struck him in the face, so that he
staggered and fell at length upon the floor.
Gordon stood over him, his fingers twitching at his
side.
“Stand up, you bully,”
he said, “and get out of this, before we throw
you out.”
Zara’s face had turned a pitiful
crimson, but her eyes flashed and burned with resolve
and indignation. She stood erect and menacing,
like an angry goddess, and more beautiful in her indignation
than they had ever seen her.
“Now, I shall tell them the
truth,” she said, sternly. “That
man,” she cried, pointing her finger at the
King, “that man whom they call a King that
man who would have sacrificed the only friend who serves
him unselfishly is the man who sold your
secret to the enemy. It was he who made me do
it. He sent me to Messina, and while the priest
and the Prince Kalonay were working in the south,
I sold them to the government at the capital.
Barrat knew it, Erhaupt knew it, the King himself
planned it to get money. He has robbed
all of his own people; he had meant to rob this young
girl; and he is so mean and pitiful a creature that
to save himself he now tries to hide behind the skirts
of a woman, and to sacrifice her, the woman
who has given her soul to him. And for this my
God!” she cried, her voice rising in an accent
of agony and bitter contempt “for
this!”
There was a grim and momentous silence
in the room while Zara turned, and without waiting
to learn what effect her words might have, made her
way swiftly through the crowd and passed on out of
the room and on to the terrace beyond.
The King crouched back in his chair
like a common criminal in the dock, glancing fearfully
from under his lowered eyebrows at the faces about
him, and on none did he see the least question of doubt
but that Zara had at last spoken the truth.
“She lies,” the King muttered,
as though answering their unspoken thoughts, “the
woman lies.”
There was no movement from the men
about him. Shame for him, and grief and bitter
disappointment for themselves, showed on the face of
each. From outside a sea-breeze caught up the
sand of the beach and drove it whispering against
the high windows, and the beat of the waves upon the
shores filled out and marked the silence of the room.
The Prince Kalonay stepped from the
circle and stood for a moment before the King, regarding
him with an expression of grief and bitter irony.
The King’s eyes rose insolently, and faltered,
and sank.
“For many years, your Majesty,”
the Prince said, but so solemnly that it was as though
he were a judge upon the bench, or a priest speaking
across an open grave, “the Princes of my house
have served the Kings of yours. In times of
war they fought for the King in battle, they beggared
themselves for him in times of peace; our women sold
their jewels for the King, our men gave him their
lives, and in all of these centuries the story of
their loyalty, of their devotion, has had but one
sequel, and has met with but one reward, ingratitude
and selfishness and treachery. You know how
I have served you, Louis. You know that I gave
up my fortune and my home to go into exile with you,
and I did that gladly. But I did more than that.
I did more than any king or any man has the right
to expect of any other man. I served your idle
purposes so well that you, yourself, called me your
jackal, the only title your Majesty has ever bestowed
that was deserved. There is no low thing nor
no base thing that I have not done for you. To
serve your pleasures, to gain you money, I have sunken
so low that all the royal blood in Europe could not
make me clean. But there is a limit to what
a man may do for his King, and to the loyalty a King
may have the right to demand. And to-day and
here, with me, the story of our devotion to your House
ends, and you go your way and I go mine, and the last
of my race breaks his sword and throws it at your feet,
and is done with you and yours forever.”
Even those in the room who held no
sympathy in their hearts for the sentiment that had
inspired the young man, felt that at that moment and
in their hearing he had renounced what was to him his
religion and his faith, and on the faces of all was
the expression of a deep pity and concern. Their
own adventure, in the light of his grief and bitterness
of spirit, seemed selfish and little, and they stood
motionless, in an awed and sorrowful silence.
The tense strain of the moment was
broken suddenly by the advent on the scene of an actor
who had, in the rush of events, been neglected and
forgotten. The little Crown Prince had stood
clinging to his nurse’s skirts, an uncomprehending
spectator of what was going forward. But he
now advanced slowly, feeling that the silence invited
him to claim his father’s notice. He halted
beside the chair in which Louis sat, his head bent
on his hands, and made an effort to draw himself up
to his father’s knee.
But the King pushed him down, and
hid his face from him. The child turned irresolutely,
with a troubled countenance, and, looking up, saw
that the attention of all was fixed upon him.
At this discovery a sudden flood of shyness overtook
him, and he retreated hastily until his eyes fell
on the Prince Kalonay, standing alone, with his own
eyes turned resolutely away. There was a breathless
hush in the room as the child, with a happy sigh,
ran to his former friend and comrade, and reached
up both his arms. The tableau was a familiar
one to those who knew them, and meant only that the
child asked to be lifted up and swung to the man’s
shoulder; but following as it did on what had just
passed, the gesture and the attitude carried with them
the significance of an appeal. Kalonay, as though
with a great effort, lowered his eyes to the upturned
face of the child below him, but held himself back
and stood stiffly erect. A sharp shake of the
head, as though he argued with himself, was the only
sign he gave of the struggle that was going on within
him.
At this second repulse, the child’s
arms dropped to his side, his lips quivered, and he
stood, a lonely little figure, glancing up at the
circle of men about him, and struggling to press back
the tears that came creeping to his eyes.
Kalonay regarded him steadfastly for
a brief moment, as though he saw him as a stranger,
searching his face with eyes as pitiful as the child’s
own; and then, with a sudden, sharp cry, the Prince
dropped on his knee and caught the child toward him,
crushing him against his heart, and burying his face
on his shoulder. There was a shout of exultation
from the nobles, and an uttered prayer from the priest,
and in a moment the young men had crowded in around
them, struggling to be the first to kiss the child’s
hands, and to ask pardon of the man who held him in
his arms.
“Gentlemen,” Kalonay cried,
his voice laughing through his tears, “we shall
still sail for the island of Messina. They shall
not say of us that we visited the sins of the father
on a child. I was weak, my friends, and I was
credulous. I thought I could break the tradition
of centuries. But our instincts are stronger
than our pride, and the House I have always served
I shall serve to the last.” He swung the
Crown Prince high upon his shoulder, and held his other
arm above his head. “You will help me
place this child upon his throne,” he commanded,
and the room rang with cheers. “You will
appeal to his people,” he cried. “Do
you not think they will rise to this standard-bearer,
will they not rally to his call? For he is a
true Prince, my comrades, who comes to them with no
stain of wrong or treachery, without a taint, as untarnished
as the white snow that lies summer and winter in the
hollow of our hills, `and a child shall lead us, and
a child shall set them free.’ To the yacht!”
he shouted. “We will sail at once, and
while they wait for us to be betrayed into their hands
at the north, we shall be landing in the south, and
thousands will be hurrying to our standard.”
His last words were lost in a tumult
of cheers and cries, and the young men poured out
upon the terrace, running toward the shore, and filling
the soft night-air with shouts of “Long live
the Prince Regent!” “Long live our King!”
As the room grew empty Kalonay crossed
it swiftly and advancing to Miss Carson took her hand.
His face was radiant with triumph and content.
He regarded her steadily for a moment, as though he
could not find words to tell his feelings.
“You had faith in me,”
he said, at last. “Can I ever make you
understand how much that means to me? When all
had turned against me you trusted me, you had faith
in me, in the King’s jackal.”
“Silence; you must never say
that again,” the girl commanded, gently.
“You have shown it to be the lie it always was.
We shall call you the Defender of the Faith now;
you are the guardian of a King.” She smiled
at the little boy in his arms, and made a slight courtesy
to them both. “You have outgrown your old
title,” she said; “you have a proud one
now, you will be the Prince Regent.”
Kalonay, with the child in his arms,
and Miss Carson were standing quite alone. General
Renauld had been led away, guarded by a merry band
of youngsters; the King still crouched in his chair,
with Barrat bowed behind him, but pulling, with philosophic
calm, on a cigarette, and Father Paul and Gordon were
in close conversation with Mrs. Carson at the farther
end of the room. The sun had set, and the apartment
was in semi-darkness. Kalonay moved closer to
Miss Carson and looked boldly into her eyes, “There
is a prouder title than that of the Regent,”
he whispered; “will you ever give it me?”
The girl started, breathing quickly,
and turned her head aside, making an effort to free
her hand, but Kalonay held it closer in his own.
“Will you give it me?” he begged.
Then the girl looked up at him smiling,
but with such confidence and love in her eyes that
he read his answer, though she shook her head, as
though to belie the truth her eyes had told him.
“When you have done your work,”
she said, “come to me or send for me, and I
shall come and give you my answer; and whether you
fail or succeed the answer will be the same.”
Kalonay stooped quickly and kissed
her hand, and when he raised his face his eyes were
smiling with such happiness that the little child in
his arms read it there, and smiled too in sympathy,
and pressed his face closer against his comrade’s
shoulder.
Gordon at this moment moved across
the room and bowed, making a deep obeisance to the
child.
“Might I be permitted,”
he asked, “to kiss his Royal Highness?
I should like to boast of the fact, later,”
he explained.
The Crown Prince turned his sad, wise
eyes on him in silence, and gravely extended a little
hand.
“You may kiss his Highness’s
hand,” said Kalonay, smiling.
Gordon laughed and pressed the fingers in his own.
“When you talk like that, Kalonay,”
he said, “you make me feel like Alice in the
court-room with the Kings and Queens around her.
A dozen times this afternoon I’ve felt like
saying, `After all, they are only a pack of cards.’”
Kalonay shook his head and glanced
toward Miss Carson for enlightenment.
“I don’t understand,” he said.
“No, you couldn’t be expected
to,” said Gordon; “You have not been educated
up to that. It is the point of view.”
He stuck out the middle finger of
his hand, and drove it three times deliberately into
the side of the Crown Prince. The child gasped
and stared open-mouthed at the friendly stranger,
and then catching the laugh in Gordon’s eyes,
laughed with him.
“Now,” said Gordon, “I
shall say that I have dug the King of Messina in the
ribs that is even better than having kissed
him. God bless your Royal Highness,” he
said, bowing gravely. “You may find me
disrespectful at times,” he added; “but
then, you must remember, I am going to risk a valuable
life for you. At least it’s an extremely
valuable one to me.”
Kalonay looked at Gordon for a moment
with serious consideration, and then held out his
hand. “You also had faith in me,”
he said. “I thank you. Are you in
earnest; do you really wish to serve us?”
“I mean to stay by you until
the boy is crowned,” said the American, “unless
we separate on our several paths of glory where
they will lead depends, I imagine, on how we have
lived.”
“Or on how we die,” Kalonay
added. “I am glad to hear you speak so.
If you wish, I shall attach you to the person of the
Crown Prince. You shall be on the staff with
the rank of Colonel.”
Gordon made a low and sweeping bow.
“Rise, Sir Archibald Gordon,”
he said. “I thank you,” he added.
“We shall strive to please.”
Miss Carson shook her head at him, and sighed in protest.
“Will you always take everything as a joke,
Archie?” she said.
“My dear Patty,” he answered,
“the situation is much too serious to take in
any other way.”
They moved to the door, and there
the priest and Mrs. Carson joined them; but on the
threshold Kalonay stopped and looked for the first
time since he had addressed him at the King.
He regarded him for some seconds sternly
in silence, and then pointed, with his free hand,
at the crown of Messina, which still rested on the
table at the King’s elbow. “Colonel
Gordon,” he said, in a tone of assured authority,
“I give the crown of Messina into your keeping.
You will convey it, with all proper regard for its
dignity, safely on board the yacht, and then bring
it at once to me.”
When he had finished speaking the
Prince turned and, without looking at the King, passed
on with the others across the terrace and disappeared
in the direction of the shore, where the launch lay
waiting.
Gordon crossed the room and picked
up the crown from the table, lifting it with both
hands, the King and Barrat watching him in silence
as he did so. He hesitated, and held it for
a moment, regarding it with much the same expression
of awe and amusement that a man shows when he is permitted
to hold a strange baby in his arms. Turning,
he saw the sinister eyes of the King and of Barrat
fastened upon him, and he smiled awkwardly, and in
some embarrassment turned the crown about in his hands,
so that the jewels in its circle gleamed dully in the
dim light of the room. Gordon raised the crown
and balanced it on his finger-tips, regarding it severely
and shaking his head.
“There are very few of these
left in the world now, your Majesty,” he said,
cheerfully, “and the number is getting smaller
every year. We have none at all in my country,
and I should think seeing they are so few that
those who have them would take better care of them,
and try to keep them untarnished, and brushed up,
and clean.” He turned his head and looked
inquiringly at the King, but Louis made no sign that
he heard him.
“I have no desire, you understand
me,” continued Gordon, unabashed, “to
take advantage of a man when he is down, but the temptation
to say `I told you so’ seems almost impossible
to resist. What?” he asked “I
beg your pardon, I thought you spoke.”
But the King continued scornfully silent, and only
a contemptuous snort from Barrat expressed his feelings.
Gordon placed the crown carefully
under his arm, and then removed it quickly, with a
guilty look of dismay at its former owner, and let
it swing from his hand; but this fashion of carrying
it seemed also lacking in respect, so he held it up
again with both hands and glanced at the King in some
perplexity.
“There ought to be a sofa-cushion
to go with this, or something to carry it on,”
he said, in a grieved tone. “You see, I
am new at this sort of thing. Perhaps your Majesty
would kindly give me some expert information.
How do you generally carry it?”
The King’s eyes snapped open and shut again.
“On my head,” he said, grimly.
Gordon laughed in great relief.
“Now, do you know, I like that,”
he cried. “That shows spirit. I am
glad to see you take it so cheerfully. Well,
I must be going, sir,” he added, nodding, and
moving toward the door. “Don’t be
discouraged. As someone says, `It’s always
morning somewhere,’ and in my country there’s
just as good men out of office as there are in it.
Good-night.”
While the sound of Gordon’s
footsteps died away across the marble terrace, the
King and Barrat remained motionless and silent.
The darkness in the room deepened and the silence
seemed to deepen with it; and still they remained
immovable, two shadowy figures in the deserted apartment
where the denunciations of those who had abandoned
them still seemed to hang and echo in the darkness.
What thoughts passed through their minds or for how
long a time they might still have sat in bitter contemplation
can only be guessed, for they were surprised by the
sharp rattle of a lock, the two great doors of the
adjoining room were thrown wide open, and a broad
and brilliant light flooded the apartment. Niccolas,
the King’s majordomo, stood between the doors,
a black silhouette against the glare of many candles.
“His Majesty is served!” he said.
The King lifted his head sharply,
as though he found some lurking mockery in the words,
or some fresh affront; but in the obsequious bow of
his majordomo there was no mockery, and the table beyond
glistened with silver, while a pungent and convincing
odor of rich food was wafted insidiously through the
open doors.
The King rose with a gentle sigh,
and nodded to his companion.
“Come, Barrat,” he said,
taking the baron’s arm in his. “The
rascals have robbed us of our throne, but, thank God,
they have had the grace to leave me my appetite.”