THE MYSTERIOUS FRAU KLEIST
The clever intrigues of Frau Kleist
were unknown to any outside the Court circle at Potsdam.
She was indeed a queer personage,
“only less of a personality than His Majesty,”
as that shiftiest of German statesmen, Prince Buelow,
declared to me one day as we sat together in my room
in the Berlin Schloss.
Frau Kleist was the Court dancing-mistress,
whose fastidious judgment had to be satisfied by any
young debutante or officer before they presumed to
dance before Royalty at the State balls. Before
every ball Frau Kleist held several dance rehearsals
in the Weisser-Saal (White Salon) at the Berlin Schloss,
and she was more exacting than any pompous General
on parade. Perhaps she was seventy. Her real
age I never knew. But, friends that we were,
she often chatted with me and deplored the flat-footedness
of the coming generation of Teutons, and more than
once I have seen her lift her skirts and, displaying
neat silk-stockinged ankles on the polished floor
of the Weisser-Saal, make, for the benefit of the
would-be debutantes, graceful tiptoe turns with a marvellous
grace of movement.
Truly Frau Kleist, with her neat waist
and thin, refined face, was a very striking figure
at the Berlin Court. The intricacies of the minuet
and gavotte, as well as those of the old-world dances
in which she delighted, were taught by the old lady
to Prince Joachim and Princess Victoria Luise, both
of whom always went in deadly fear of her caustic
tongue and overbearing manner.
The Emperor never permitted any dancing
at Court which was not up to a high standard of excellence,
and all who sought to dance were compelled to pass
before the critical eye of the sharp-tongued old lady
in her stiff silken gown.
Once, I remember, certain young people
of the smart set of Berlin sought to introduce irregularities
in the Lancers, but they soon discovered that their
cards were cancelled.
Whence she had come or who had been
responsible for her appointment nobody knew.
One thing was quite certain, that though at an age
when usually rheumatism prevents agility, yet she
was an expert dancer. Another thing was also
certain, that, if a debutante or a young military
elegant were awkward or flat-footed, she would train
them privately in the Terpsichorean art, especially
in the old-world dances which are so popular at Court,
and, accepting a little palm-oil, would then pass
them after squeezing them sufficiently as
fit to receive the Imperial command to the Court balls.
The old woman, sharp-featured and
angular as became her age, with her complexion powdered
and rouged, lived in considerable style in a fine
house close to the Glienicke Bridge at Potsdam, beneath
the Babelsberg, a power to be reckoned with by all
who desired to enter the Court circle.
Regarding her, many strange stories
were afloat. One was that she was an ex-dancer,
the mother of the famous Mademoiselle “Clo-Clo”
Durand, premiere danseuse of the Paris Opera,
and another was that she had been mistress of the
ballet at the Imperial Opera in Petrograd in the days
of the Emperor Alexander. But so great a mystery
were her antecedents that nobody knew anything for
certain, save that, at the age of nearly seventy,
she had access at any hour to the Kaiser’s private
cabinet. I have often seen her whisper to His
Majesty strange secrets which she had picked up here
and there secrets that were often transferred
to certain confidential quarters which control the
great Teuton octopus.
Those at Court who secured the benignant
smiles of Frau Kleist knew that their future path
in life would be full of sunshine, but woe betide
those upon whom she knit her brows in disapproval.
It was all a question of bribery. Frau Kleist
kept her pretty house and her big Mercedes car upon
the secret money payments she received from those who
“for value” begged her favours. With
many young officers the payment to Frau Kleist was
to open the back door to the Emperor’s favour.
We in the Neues Palais (New Palace)
knew it. But surely it did not concern us, for
all of us looked askance at those who strove so strenuously
and eagerly for “commands” to Court functions,
and really we were secretly glad if the parvenus of
both sexes were well bled before they were permitted
by Frau Erna to make their obeisance before Royalty.
The palace world at every European
Court is a narrow little world of its own, unknown
and unsuspected by the man in the street. There
one sees the worst side of human nature without any
leaven of the best or even nobler side. The salary-grabber,
the military adventurer, the pinchbeck diplomat, the
commercial parvenu, and the scientist, together with
their heavy-jowled, jewel-bedecked women-folk, elbow
each other in order to secure the notice of the All-Highest
One, who, in that green-upholstered private room wherein
I worked with him, often smiled at the unseemly bustle
while he calmly discriminated among men and women according
to their merits.
It is in that calm discretion that
the Emperor excels, possessing almost uncanny foresight,
combined with a most unscrupulous conscience.
“I know! Frau Kleist has
told me!” were the words His Majesty used on
many occasions when I had ventured perhaps to express
doubt regarding some scandalous story or serious allegation.
Therefore I was confident, even though a large section
of the entourage doubted it, that the seventy-year-old
dancing-mistress, whose past was a complete mystery,
was an important secret agent of the Emperor’s.
And what more likely? The Kaiser,
as ruler of that complex empire, would naturally seek
to know the truth concerning those who sought his favour
before they were permitted to click their heels or
wag their fans and bow the knee in his Imperial presence.
And he had, no doubt, with that innate cunning, appointed
his creature to the position of Court dancing-mistress.
The most elegant, corsetted Prussian
officer, even though he could dance divinely, was
good-looking and perfectly-groomed, would never be
permitted to enter the Court circle unless a substantial
number of marks were placed within the old woman’s
palm. It was her perquisite, and many in that
ill-paid entourage envied her her means of increasing
her income.
In no Court in Europe are the purse-strings
held so tightly as in that of Potsdam. The Emperor
and Empress, though immensely wealthy, practise the
economy of London suburbia. But at every Court
bribery is rife in order to obtain Royal warrants
and dozens of other small favours of that kind, just
as open payment is necessary to-day to obtain titles
of nobility. The colour of gold has a fascination
which few can resist. If it were not so there
would be no war in progress to-day.
On October 17th, 1908, I had returned
with the Emperor and his suite from Hamburg, where
His Majesty had been present at the launching of one
of Herr Ballin’s monster American liners, and
at three o’clock, after the Kaiser had eaten
a hurried luncheon, I was seated at the side table
in his private room in the Berlin Schloss, taking down
certain confidential instructions which he wished
to be sent at once by one of the Imperial couriers
to the commandant of Posen.
Suddenly Von Kahlberg, my colleague,
entered with a message that had been taken by the
telegraphist attached to the Palace, and handed it
to His Majesty.
Having read it, the Kaiser at once
grew excited, and, turning to me, said:
“The Crown-Prince sends word
from Potsdam that the American, Orville Wright, is
flying on the Bornstedter Feld. We must go at
once. Order the cars. And, Von Kahlberg,
inform Her Majesty at once. She will accompany
us, no doubt.”
Quickly I placed before His Majesty
one of his photographs knowing that it
would be wanted for presentation to the daring American and
he took up his pen and scrawled his signature across
it. Afterwards I placed it in the small, green-painted
dispatch-box of steel which I always carried when
in attendance upon His Imperial Majesty.
Within a quarter of an hour three
of the powerful cars were on their way to Potsdam,
the Emperor with Herr Anton Reitschel a
high German official at Constantinople and
Professor Vambery, who happened to be at the Palace
at the time, in the first car; the Kaiserin with her
daughter, Victoria Luise, and the latter’s ober-gouvernante
(governess), with one of the Court ladies, in the next;
while in the third I rode with Major von Scholl, one
of the equerries.
Cheers rose from the crowds as we
passed through the Berlin streets, and the Emperor,
full of suppressed excitement at the thought of seeing
an aeroplane flight, constantly saluted as we flew
along.
On arrival at the Bornstedter Feld
it was already growing dusk, and a great disappointment
awaited us. The Crown-Prince rode up to inform
us gravely that the flying was over for the day.
At this the Kaiser grew angry, for he had been out
once before upon a wild-goose chase, only to find
that Orville Wright had gone home, declaring the wind
to be too strong.
At his father’s anger, however,
“Willie” burst out laughing, declaring
that he was only joking, and that all was in readiness.
Indeed, as he spoke the aviator, in his leather jacket,
came up, and I presented him to His Majesty, while
from everywhere soldiers and police appeared, in order
to keep back the crowd to the road.
Then, while we stood alone in the
centre of the great, sandy plain, Mr. Orville Wright
clambered into his machine and, rising, made many
circuits high above us.
The Emperor stood with Herr Reitschel
and the shaggy old Professor, straining his eyes with
keenest interest. It was the first time His Majesty
had seen an aeroplane in flight. Much had been
promised of old Von Zeppelin’s invention, yet
the German public had, until those demonstrations
by the American aviator, taken but little heed of the
heavier-than-air machine. At that time, indeed,
the Emperor had not taken up Von Zeppelin, and it
was only after seeing Orville Wright’s demonstrations
that he entered with any enthusiasm into aeronautical
problems.
High above us against the clear evening
sky, wherein the stars had already begun to twinkle,
the daring American rose, dipped, and banked, his
machine droning like a huge gad-fly, much to the interest
and astonishment of the Emperor.
“Marvellous!” he exclaimed,
as I stood beside him, with the Empress on his right.
“How is it done?”
The crowds went wild with enthusiasm.
The sight of a man flying in the air, manoeuvring
his machine at will, rising swiftly, and then planing
down with the engine cut off, was one of the most amazing
spectacles the loyal Potsdamers had ever
seen. Even the Emperor, with all his wild dreams
of world-power, could never for a moment have foreseen
what a great factor aeroplanes would be in the war
which he was so carefully plotting.
At last Wright came down in a spiral,
banked slightly, steadied himself, and then came lightly
to earth within a few yards of where we stood, having
been the first to exhibit to the great War-Lord how
completely the air had been conquered.
Then, quiet, rather unassuming man
that he was, he advanced to receive the Imperial congratulations,
and to be handed the signed photograph which, at the
proper moment, I produced like a conjurer from my
dispatch-box. Afterwards, though it had now grown
dark, the Emperor, by the powerful headlamps of the
three cars, thoroughly examined the American’s
aeroplane, the aviator explaining every detail.
From that moment for months afterwards
the Kaiser was constantly talking of aviation.
He commanded photographs of various types of aeroplanes,
together with all literature on the subject, to be
placed before him. Indeed, he sent over to Britain,
in secret, two officers to attend the aeroplane meetings
held at Doncaster and Blackpool, where a large number
of photographs were secretly taken, and duly found
their way to his table.
Indeed, it would greatly surprise
your English friends, my dear Le Queux,
if they had only seen the many secret reports
and secret photographs of all kinds regarding Britain’s
military, naval, and social life, which I have found
upon the Emperor’s table.
During my appointment I had through
my hands many amazing reports concerning the financial
and social position of well-known English politicians
and officials, reports made with one ulterior motive that
of attempted bribery. The Emperor meant war, and
he knew that before he could hope for success he must
thoroughly “Germanize” Great Britain with
what result we all now know.
I have recalled the Emperor’s
first sight of an aeroplane in flight, in company
with Herr Anton Reitschel and Professor Vambery, because
of an incident which occurred that same day.
Just before midnight the Emperor, seated in his room
in the Berlin Schloss, was giving me certain instructions
to be sent to Carlton House Terrace, when the door
opened without any knock of permission, and upon the
threshold there stood that arch-intriguer, Frau Kleist,
in her stiff black silk gown, and wearing a gleaming
diamond brooch, the glitter of which was cold as her
own steely eyes.
“Have I Your Majesty’s
permission to enter?” she asked, in her high-pitched
voice.
“Of course, of course,”
replied the Emperor, turning in his chair. “Come
in and close the door. It has turned quite cold
to-night. Well?” he asked, looking at her
inquiringly.
The Emperor is a man of very few words,
except when he tells a story.
The Court dancing-mistress hesitated
for a second. Their eyes met, and in that glance
I saw complete understanding.
“May I speak in confidence with
Your Majesty?” she asked, advancing into the
room, her stiff, wide skirts rustling. Except
the Court ladies she was the only female at Court
whom the sentries stationed at the end of the corridor
allowed to pass to His Majesty’s private cabinet.
But Frau Kleist had access everywhere.
Her eyes were the eyes of the Emperor. Many a
diplomat, financier, military or naval commander has
been raised to position of favourite because he first
secured by payment, of course, according
to his means the good graces of the ex-ballerina.
And, alas! many a good, honest man has been cast out
of the Potsdam circle into oblivion, and even to death,
because of the poisonous declaration of that smiling,
bejewelled old hag.
“Of what do you wish to speak?”
inquired the Emperor, who, truth to tell, was very
busy upon a most important matter concerning the building
of new submarines, and was perhaps a little annoyed
by the intrusion, though he did not betray it, so
clever was he.
“Of the Reitschel affair,” was the old
woman’s low reply.
At her words the Kaiser frowned slightly,
and dismissed me. I bowed myself out, and closed
the door upon the Emperor and his clever female spy.
That she should have at that late
hour come from Potsdam for, looking down
into the courtyard, I saw the lights of her big Mercedes showed
that some underhand work was in progress.
Only a week before I had been discussing
Anton Reitschel and his position with my intimate
friend, old Von Donaustauf, Master of Ceremonies,
who was supposed to control the ex-dancer, but who
in reality was in a subordinate position to her, because
she had the ear of the Emperor at any hour. Petty
jealousies, dastardly plots, and constant intrigues
make up the daily life around the Throne. Half
the orders given in the Emperor’s name are issued
without his knowledge, and many an order transmitted
to the provinces without his authority.
By handling, as I did, hundreds of
those secret reports which reached the Emperor I had
learned much concerning Herr Anton Reitschel, and from
old Von Donaustauf I had also been able to obtain certain
missing links concerning the intrigue.
Reitschel, a burly, round-faced, fair-haired
Prussian of quite superior type, held the position
of Chief Director of the German-Ottoman Bank in Constantinople.
His duty for the past three years had been to conciliate
the Sultan and to lend German money to any industrial
enterprise in which any grain of merit could possibly
be discovered. He had been singled out, taken
from the Dresdner Bank, and sent to Constantinople
by the Kaiser in order to play Germany’s secret
game in Turkey especially that of the Bagdad
Railway and to combat with German gold Great
Britain’s diplomacy with Tewfik Pasha and old
Abdul Hamid, in view of “The Day,” which
the Emperor had long ago determined should soon dawn.
Was he not the War-Lord? And must not a War-Lord
make war?
As old Von Donaustauf had put it,
between the whiffs of one of those exquisite cigarettes,
a consignment of the Sultan’s own which came
from the Yildiz Kiosk to Potsdam weekly:
“Our Emperor intends that, notwithstanding
Britain’s policy in the Near East, Germany shall
soon rule from Berlin to Bagdad. Herr Reitschel
is in reality charged with the work of “Germanizing”
the Ottoman Empire.”
That I already knew by the many secret
reports of his which arrived so constantly from Constantinople,
reports which showed quite plainly that though the
great German Embassy, with its huge eagles of stone
set at each end, might have been built for the purpose
of impressing the Turks, yet the shrewd, farseeing
Herr Anton, as head of that big financial corporation,
held greater sway at that rickety set of offices known
to us as the Sublime Porte than did his Excellency
the Ambassador, with all his beribboned crowd of underlings.
Truly the game which the Emperor was
playing in secret against the other Powers of Europe
was a crooked and desperate one. On the one hand
the Kaiser was making pretence of fair dealing with
Great Britain and France, yet on the other his agent,
Herr Reitschel, was ever busy lending money in all
directions, and bribing Turkish officials in order
to secure their favour in Germany’s interest.
Yet a further game was being played one
that, in addition to the Imperial Chancellor, I alone
knew namely, that while the Kaiser was
making pretence of being the best friend of the Sultan
Abdul Hamid, visiting Constantinople and Palestine,
building fountains, endowing institutes, and bestowing
his Imperial grace in so many ways, yet he was also
secretly supporting the Young Turk party so as to effect
the Sultan’s downfall as part of his sly, Machiavellian
policy a plot which, as you know, ultimately
succeeded, for poor old Abdul the Damned and his harem
were eventually packed off, bag and baggage, to Salonika,
notwithstanding His Majesty’s wild entreaty to
Berlin for protection.
I happened to be with the Emperor
on the Imperial yacht at Tromsoe when he received
by telegram the personal appeal addressed to him from
his miserable dupe, and I well recollect how grimly
he smiled as he remarked to me that it needed no response.
Well, at the period of which I am
making the present disclosure, Herr Anton had been
paying a number of flying visits to Berlin, and had
had many private audiences of both Kaiser and Sultan,
and had on several occasions been invited informally
to the Imperial luncheon table, a mark of esteem bestowed
by the Kaiser upon those who may at the moment be
serving his interests particularly well.
Suddenly all of us were surprised
by the announcement that the Kaiser’s favoured
civilian in Turkey had married Mademoiselle Julie de
Lagarenne, daughter of Paul de Lagarenne, son of the
great French sugar refiner, and secretary of the French
Embassy at Rome. We heard also that, having married
in Italy, he was bringing his wife to Berlin.
Indeed, a week after that news was spread I met them
both in Kranzler’s in Unter den Linden, and
there he introduced me to a pretty, dark-haired, vivacious
young Frenchwoman, who spoke German well, and who told
me that her husband had already given in her name
for presentation at the next Court.
That was about a month prior to Orville
Wright’s flight and the midnight visit of Frau
Kleist to the Emperor.
Truth to tell, the old woman’s
mention of Herr Reitschel’s name caused me considerable
misgivings, because three weeks before I had gathered
certain strange facts from a secret report of a spy
who in Constantinople had been set to watch Herr Reitschel’s
doings. That spy was Frau Kleist’s son.
The Kaiser trusts nobody. Even
his favourites and most intimate cronies are spied
upon, and reports upon those familiar blue papers are
furnished regularly. In view of what I had read
in that report from Karl Kleist, I stood amazed when,
at the grand Court a week later, I had witnessed Herr
Reitschel’s French wife bow before the Emperor
and Empress and noticed how graciously the Kaiser
had smiled upon her. Truly the Emperor is sphinx-like
and imperturbable. Outside the privacy of his
own room, that chamber of cunning plots and fierce
revenge, he never allows his sardonic countenance
to betray his inner thoughts, and will grasp the hand
of his most hated enemy with the hearty warmth of
friendship, a Satanic volte-face in which danger
and evil lurk always, a trait inherited to its full
degree by the Crown-Prince.
The days that followed Frau Kleist’s
midnight visit were indeed busy, eventful days.
Certain diplomatic negotiations with Washington had
been unsuccessful; Von Holleben, the Ambassador, had
been recalled, and given an extremely bad half-hour
by both Kaiser and Chancellor. In addition, some
wily American journalist had fathomed the amazing duplicity
of Prince Henry’s visit to the States and Germany’s
Press Bureau in America, while the Yellow Press of
New York had published a ghastly array of facts and
figures concerning the latter, together with facsimile
documents, all of which had sent His Majesty half-crazy
with anger.
Nearly three months passed.
Herr Reitschel often came from Constantinople,
and frequently brought his handsome young wife with
him, for he was persona grata at Court.
To me this was indeed strange in view of the reports
of the ex-opera dancer’s son who,
by the way, lived in Constantinople in the unsuspicious
guise of a carpet-dealer, and unknown to the bank director.
The latter had, assisted by his wife’s
fortune, inherited from her grandmother, purchased
the Schloss Langenberg, the splendid ancestral castle
and estates of the Princes of Langenberg, situate on
a rock between Ilmenau and Zella, in the beautiful
Thuringian Forest, and acknowledged to be one of the
most famous shooting estates in the Empire. It
was not, therefore, surprising that the Emperor, to
mark his favour, should express a desire to shoot
capercailzie there a desire which, of course,
delighted Herr Reitschel, who had only a few days
before been decorated with the Order of the Black Eagle.
One afternoon in mid-autumn the Emperor,
accompanied by the Crown-Prince and myself, together
with the suite, arrived by the Imperial train at the
little station of Ilmenau, where, of course, Reitschel
and his pretty wife, with the land-rats, head and
under foresters, and all sorts of civil officials
in black coats and white ties bowed low as the All-Highest
stepped from his saloon. The Kaiser was most gracious
to his host and hostess, while the schloss, we
found, was almost equal in beauty and extent to that
of Prince Max Egon zu Fuerstenberg at Donau-Eschingen,
which place we always visited once, if not twice, each
year.
The Emperor had complained of a slight
cold, and in consequence, just before we left Berlin,
I had been instructed to summon by telegraph a certain
Dr. Vollerthun from Augsburg, who was a perfect stranger
to us all, but who had, I supposed, been recommended
to the Emperor by somebody who, for some consideration,
wished to advance him in his profession.
While the Emperor and his host were
out shooting, the Crown-Prince and several of the
suite being of the party, I remained alone in a big,
circular, old-world room in one of the towers of the
Castle, where the long, narrow windows overlooked
the forest, dealing with a flood of important State
papers which a courier had brought from Berlin two
hours before. Papers followed us daily wherever
we might be, even when yachting at Cowes or in the
Norwegian fjords.
About midday Dr. Vollerthun was ushered
in to me a short, stout, guttural-speaking
man of about sixty, rather bald, and wearing big,
round, gold-rimmed spectacles. I quickly handed
him over to the major-domo. He was a stranger,
and no doubt one who sought the Emperor’s favour,
therefore as such I took but little interest in him.
About three o’clock that same
afternoon, however, a light tap came at the door,
and on looking round, I saw my hostess standing upon
the threshold.
She was quietly but elegantly dressed,
presenting the true type of the smart Parisienne,
but in an instant I realized that she was very pale
and agitated. Indeed her voice trembled when she
asked permission to enter.
Since her marriage I had many times
chatted with her, for she often came to the Palace
when her husband visited Berlin, as he did so frequently.
I had danced with her; I had taken her in to dinner
at various houses where we met, always finding her
a bright and very intellectual companion.
She quietly closed the door, and,
crossing the room with uneven steps, advanced to the
table from which I had risen.
“Count von Heltzendorff!”
she exclaimed in a low, strained voice. “I I
have come to seek your aid because well,
because I’m distracted, and I know that you
are my husband’s friend,” she exclaimed
in French.
“And yours also, Madame,”
I said earnestly, bowing and pulling forward a chair
for her.
“My husband is out with the
Emperor!” she gasped in a curious, unnerved
tone. “And I fear; oh, I fear that we are
in great peril deadly peril every hour every
moment!”
“Really, Madame, I hardly follow
you,” I said, standing before the dark-haired,
handsome French girl for she was little
more than a girl who had inherited the
whole fortune of the biggest sugar refinery in Europe,
the great factory out at St. Denis which supplied nearly
one-sixth of the refined sugar of the world.
“My husband, whom I love devotedly,
has done his best in the interests of his Emperor.
You, Count, know for you are in a position
to know the real aims of the Kaiser in
Turkey. These last six months I have watched,
and have learned the truth! I know how, when the
Emperor went to Constantinople five months ago in
pretence of friendship towards the Sultan, with Professor
Vambery as interpreter, he practically compelled Abdul
Hamid to give him, in return for certain financial
advances, those wonderful jewels which the Empress
Catherine, wife of Peter the Great, gave in secret
to the Grand Vizier to secure the escape of the Russian
Army across the Pruth. I know how the Emperor
seized those wonderful emeralds, and, carrying them
back to Potsdam, has given them to the Empress.
I know, too, how he laughed with my husband at the
cleverness by which he is fooling the too trustful
Turks. I ”
“Pardon, Madame,” I said,
interrupting her, and speaking in French, “but
is it really wise to speak thus of the Emperor’s
secrets? Your husband is, I fear, guilty of great
indiscretion in mentioning such matters.”
“I am his wife, Count, and he
conceals little, if anything, from me.”
I looked the pretty young woman straight
in the face in fear and regret.
Possession of those ancient jewels
which, with reluctance, Abdul Hamid had brought out
from his treasury, was one of the Kaiser’s greatest
secrets, a secret of Potsdam known to no more than
three people, including myself. The Emperor had
specially imposed silence upon me, because he did
not wish the Powers to suspect his true Eastern policy
of bribery and double-dealing, blackmail and plunder.
And yet she, the daughter of a French
diplomat, knew the truth!
Instantly I realized the serious danger
of the secret being betrayed to France.
“Madame,” I said, leaning
against the writing-table as I spoke in deepest earnestness.
“If I may be permitted, I would urge that the
Emperor’s diplomacy neither concerns your husband,
as an official, nor yourself. It is his own private
affair, and should neither be discussed nor betrayed.”
“I know,” she said.
“That is just why I have ventured to come here
to consult you, M’sieur! You have been
my good friend as well as my husband’s, and
here to-day, while the Emperor is our guest beneath
our roof, I feel that I am in greatest peril!”
“Why?” I asked with considerable surprise.
“The Emperor has already learnt
that I know the truth regarding his secret,”
was her slow reply. “By what means His Majesty
has discovered it, I, alas! know not. But I do
know from a confidential quarter that I have incurred
the Emperor’s gravest displeasure and hatred.”
“Who is your informant?”
I inquired sternly, eager to further investigate the
great intrigue.
“A certain person who must be nameless.”
“Have you spoken to anybody
of the Emperor’s secret plans in Turkey, or
of his possession of the Empress Catherine’s
jewels?”
“I have not uttered a word to
a single soul except my husband. I swear it.”
“Your husband was extremely
indiscreet in revealing anything,” I declared
again quite frankly.
“I fully admit that. But
what can I do? How shall I act?” she asked
in a low, tense voice. “Advise me, do.”
For some moments I remained silent.
The situation, with a pretty woman seeking my aid
in such circumstances, was difficult.
“Well, Madame,” I replied
after reflection, “if you are really ready to
promise the strictest secrecy and leave the matter
to me, I will endeavour to find a way out of the difficulty providing
you good German that you are by marriage will
take, before the Emperor himself, an oath of complete
secrecy?”
“I am ready to do anything anything
for my dear husband’s sake,” the handsome
young woman assured me, tears welling in her fine dark
eyes.
“In that case, then, please
leave the matter entirely in my hands,” I said.
And later on she left.
That same night, about ten o’clock,
the Emperor, in the dark-green uniform which he always
wears at dinner after hunting or shooting, entered
the room to which I had just returned to work.
“Send Frau Kleist to me,”
he snapped. “And I will summon you later
when I want you, Heltzendorff.”
Frau Kleist! I had no idea the
woman had arrived at the castle. But I dispatched
one of the servants to search for her, and afterwards
heard her high-pitched voice as she ascended the stairs
to hold secret and, no doubt, evil counsel with His
Majesty.
Below I found the fat, fair-haired
little doctor from Augsburg, who was still an enigma,
but eager to see his Imperial patient, and with him
I smoked a cigarette to while away the time.
I was anxious to return to His Majesty, and, as became
my duty as his adjutant, to explain what I had learnt
from the lips of our French hostess.
Suddenly one of the Imperial flunkeys
bowed at the door, commanding the doctor to the Royal
presence, and he left me, hot and flurried, as all
become who are unused to the Court atmosphere, its
rigid etiquette, and its constant bows.
Had the Emperor called the unknown
doctor into consultation with Frau Kleist?
Inquiries I had made concerning the
doctor from Augsburg showed that he was quite a well-known
specialist on mental diseases, and he had also written
a text-book upon bacteriology and the brain. Why
had the Kaiser summoned him? He required no brain
specialist.
“We leave to-morrow at noon,”
the Emperor exclaimed brusquely when, an hour later,
I was summoned to his room. This amazed me, for
our arrangements were to remain three days longer.
I recollected Madame Reitschel’s words.
“I do not feel at all well,”
His Majesty added, “and this Dr. Vollerthun
orders me rest at Potsdam.”
In silence I bowed, and then ventured
to refer to what was uppermost in my mind.
“May I be permitted to speak
to your Majesty upon a certain confidential subject?”
I begged, standing against the table whereat I had
been writing the greater part of that day.
“What subject?” snapped the All-Highest.
“Your Majesty’s negotiations
with the Sultan of Turkey. Frau Reitschel has
learnt of them, but she is eager to come before you
and take oath of entire secrecy.”
The Kaiser’s eyes narrowed and glowed in sudden
anger.
“A woman’s oath!”
he cried. “Bah! Never have I believed
in silence imposed upon any woman’s tongue more
especially that of a born enemy! I appreciate
your loyalty and acumen, Von Heltzendorff, but I have,
fortunately, known this for some little time, and in
strictest secrecy have taken certain measures to combat
it. Remember that these words have never been
uttered to you! Remember that! You are adjutant,
and I am Emperor. Understand! I fully appreciate
and note your loyal report, but it is not woman’s
sphere to enter our diplomacy, except as a secret
agent of our Fatherland. Let us say no more.”
Ten minutes later, being dismissed,
I wandered back through the great, silent, echoing
corridors of the ancient castle to my own room.
A great human drama, greater than any ever placed
upon the stage, was now being enacted. Throwing
his loaded dice, the Emperor, with all his craft,
cunning, and criminal unscrupulousness behind his mask
of Christianity, and aided by his unprincipled son,
the Crown-Prince, was actually plotting the downfall
of the Turkish Empire and the overthrow of Islam in
Europe. Between the All-Highest One and the realization
of those dastardly plans for world-power so carefully
and cleverly thought out in every detail night after
night in the silence of that dull, faded green room
upstairs at Potsdam, stood one frail little Parisienne,
the vivacious, well-meaning Madame Reitschel!
Next day we left the Schloss Langenberg,
but before doing so we heard with regret that our
charming little hostess had been suddenly taken ill
during the night, and the Kaiser, as a mark of favour,
had ordered his doctor, Vollerthun, to remain behind
to attend her. That Herr Reitschel was in great
distress I saw from his face as he stood taking leave
of his Imperial guest on the little platform at Ilmenau.
Back in Berlin, I wondered what was
in progress in that far-off Schloss in Thuringia,
but a week later the truth became vividly apparent
when I read in the Staats-Anzeiger an announcement
which disclosed to me the terrible truth.
I held my breath as my eyes followed the printed lines.
Frau Reitschel, the young wife of
the famous Anton Reitschel of Constantinople, had,
the journal reported, been seized by a sudden and
somewhat mysterious illness on the night prior to the
Emperor’s departure from the Schloss Langenberg,
and though His Majesty had graciously left his own
physician behind to attend her, the unfortunate lady
had developed insanity to such a hopeless degree that
it had been necessary to confine her in the Rosenau
private asylum at Coburg.
In a second I realized how the dancing-mistress
and the mental specialist from Augsburg had been the
tools of the Emperor. That “mysterious
illness,” developing into madness, was surely
not the result of any natural cause, but had been
deliberately planned and executed by means of a hypodermic
syringe, in order that the woman who had learnt the
secret of the Emperor’s double cunning in the
Near East should be for ever immured in a madhouse.
Outside the trio responsible for the
cruel and dastardly act, I alone knew the truth how,
by the Emperor’s drastic action, he had prevented
the secret of his chicanery leaking out to the Powers.
Poor Madame Reitschel! She died
early in 1913, a raving lunatic. Her devoted
husband, having served the Emperor’s purpose,
had been recalled to Berlin, where, bereft of the
Kaiser’s favour, he predeceased her by about
six months, broken-hearted, but in utter ignorance
of that foul plot carried out under his very nose
and in his own castle.