A prince of lovers : A romance

By Sir William Magnay

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Title: A prince of lovers
        A romance

Author: Sir William Magnay

Illustrator: Cyrus Cuneo

Release date: March 27, 2024 [eBook #73269]

Language: English

Original publication: United States: Little, Brown and Company, 1905

Credits: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)


*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A PRINCE OF LOVERS ***





A PRINCE OF LOVERS


[Illustration: “It is indeed farewell, dear Princess? I am to go?”

                                                    FRONTISPIECE.]




  A Prince of Lovers

  A Romance

  By
  SIR WILLIAM MAGNAY BART

  Author of “THE RED CHANCELLOR,” “THE MAN-TRAP,”
  “THE HEIRESS OF THE SEASON,” Etc., Etc.

  _ILLUSTRATIONS BY CYRUS CUNEO_

  Boston
  Little, Brown and Company
  1905




  _Copyright, 1905_,
  BY LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY.

  _All rights reserved_

  Published March, 1905

  Plates by The Husted Linotype Co., Cleveland, U. S. A.
  Presswork by The University Press, Cambridge, U. S. A.




CONTENTS


   CHAP.                                       PAGE

       I THE DUKE AND HIS MASTER                  1

      II AT THE FORTUNE-TELLER’S                  7

     III A SOLDIER OF FORTUNE                    22

      IV IN THE ROYAL CHAPEL                     29

       V RUPERTA AND LUDOVIC                     35

      VI THE ORGAN’S PRISONER                    44

     VII OMPERTZ DRIVES A BARGAIN                54

    VIII A SCORE AGAINST ROLLMAR                 67

      IX A FALSE POSITION                        77

       X BY THE MIRROR LAKE                      85

      XI UDO SEES                                97

     XII IN THE MERCURY PAVILION                113

    XIII OMPERTZ FINISHES HIS NIGHT’S WORK      124

     XIV A STRONG MEASURE                       133

      XV OMPERTZ IS PUZZLED                     141

     XVI A DESPERATE EXPEDIENT                  150

    XVII THE FLIGHT                             159

   XVIII STRANGE QUARTERS                       168

     XIX COUNT IRROMAR IN A NEW LIGHT           181

      XX A STRANGE ALLY                         194

     XXI THE COUNT AND HIS PRISONERS            205

    XXII AN UNEXPECTED DEVELOPMENT              215

   XXIII ROLLMAR’S POLICY                       228

    XXIV THE COUNT AND RUPERTA                  240

     XXV THE FOX IN THE WOLF’S DEN              250

    XXVI IRROMAR’S TRICK                        264

   XXVII AN UNWISE MERCY                        274

  XXVIII AT THE USURPER’S COURT                 282

    XXIX FERDINAND’S SECOND VISITOR             290

     XXX ROLLMAR’S WAY                          299

     XXXI THE COUSINS MEET                      313




A Prince of Lovers




CHAPTER I

THE DUKE AND HIS MASTER


For the greater part of two centuries after the close of the Thirty
Years War there existed in Germany some two hundred independent states.
It is with two of these, lying in the midst of what was once the
Hercynian forest, which tract even then, although in slow process of
clearing, retained much of its primitive, desolate wildness, that the
events of the following story are concerned.

And it may be well to premise, seeing that nowadays in story-telling
the realms of imagination have often a two-fold meaning, literal as
well as metaphorical, that, though the embroidery of this tale may be
fanciful, the ground upon which it is worked is of the substance called
fact. For the once secret chronicles of these two hundred kingdoms,
principalities, palatinates, bishoprics, duchies, landgravates and
what not form very pretty reading to the student of humanity; and
the dull atmosphere of much pettiness and fatuous pomp is lighted up
in welcome fashion by occasional stars of romance. And, after all,
apart from the favourable soil they find in that traditional land of
the romantic, these flowers which continually spring up amid the dull
herbage are easily accounted for. For what is romance but the opposite
of the humdrum? And is not human nature the same all the world over,
flourishing even when found in the stifling confinement of a formal
and etiquette-bound court? And does not young and healthy humanity
rebel against the humdrum, and fight tooth and nail against its own
repression?

Thus it came about that the somewhat dramatic romance of the following
pages was played upon a fitting stage, with a change of scenes, the
royal palace, and the castle in the wood, homes respectively of the
heroine and the villain of the piece. The actors have been dead and
forgotten for more than a century, although they live in their types
to-day, the style of their playing alone being changed. The weak
sovereign, the ambitious, astute, unscrupulous minister, the brave,
chivalrous hero, the heroine for whom pride and love and policy are
desperately fighting--at least we all know her--the cold, imperious
beauty with the burning heart. And the unprincipled man-of-the-world,
self-indulgent and scheming to his own gratification, at least he is
not extinct, nor is the weakly ambitious plotter who would grasp the
fruit but fears to climb the tree, and the evil councillor who for the
benefit of his own desperate fortunes eggs him up.

With quieter methods they are in our midst to-day. They are walking
through their parts with just as much determination of spirit as was
theirs who fought and strutted and fretted and postured in the days
before life was so carefully toned down--in the days of this story.
And that the story is in the main true the annals above mentioned can
vouch, even if the events may not in the reality have welded themselves
together just as here set down with a mind for the reader’s patience as
well as his hoped-for entertainment.

       *       *       *       *       *

In his private cabinet Duke Theodor of Waldavia was going through his
daily consultation with his Chancellor, Baron Rollmar; a prescribed
custom as irksome to both as it was unnecessary to either.

“Your excellency has reckoned without your host,” said the Duke.

“I do not propose, Highness,” replied the Chancellor, grimly confident,
“that my host shall have the making up of the reckoning at all.”

“He may not submit to dictation,” suggested his highness.

“Then he will be a greater fool than I take him for, seeing that this
project is as much for his benefit as ours.”

“Some men,” the Duke hazarded out of his somewhat limited experience,
“would not take kindly to a forced marriage.”

“Your Highness uses a harsh word,” Rollmar observed indifferently.

“Perhaps. I was thinking of my daughter.”

The Chancellor just checked a shrug. “Dukes’ daughters and beggars
cannot be choosers. But we have yet to learn that Princess Ruperta has
occasion to bewail her particular lot.”

“She is in an abominably false position. Prince Ludwig’s silence and
indifference would be galling enough to any woman’s pride. And Ruperta
has, perhaps, more than her share.”

The old minister gave a slight bow of assent. Crowned monarchs are
not to be contradicted gratuitously, even when they indulge in
self-disparagement.

“The position is becoming intolerable,” his highness continued.

“Any hour may end it,” said Rollmar, quietly. Then he added, “Surely
you approve of the alliance, sire?”

“Naturally.” Duke Theodor emphasised the word with a nod which was
intended to express the dignity which in his conferences with his
Chancellor was always provokingly elusive. “Of course it would be of
untold advantage to both crowns. It is a most natural desire. The
uniting of the two kingdoms would more than double their power and
influence.”

“It should increase them tenfold,” said Rollmar, as repeating a
cut-and-dried argument for his policy. “And not only their power but
their wealth; the development, more especially, of the natural wealth
of the one by union with the labour of the other.”

“Yes, yes,” snapped the Duke, impatiently, almost petulantly. “That is
our view. Our immediate concern, however, is that of Ruperta and Prince
Ludwig.”

Rollmar smiled, and his smile seemed hardly to endorse the word concern.

“Except to themselves, is it very material?” he asked significantly.

The Duke tried to look resolute. “I have my daughter’s happiness to
think of, Baron,” he protested.

“Doubtless. So have I,” he returned imperturbably. “And am taking the
measures to secure it.”

“Yes, yes, I know,” the Duke admitted pettishly. “But this state of
affairs will not do so. We shall be a laughing-stock.”

“Let him laugh who wins.”

“Ludwig’s conduct in ignoring the matter is an insult.”

“We will not think so, much less say so.”

“But others will.”

“Others are not going to marry him.”

“Are we?”

“Certainly; without fail; most assuredly.”

The Duke rose and paced the room.

“But how long is this state of things going to last, Baron? You must
remember that Ruperta is not one to take kindly to the part of a
puppet. She is a girl of spirit, and this wretched fellow Ludwig,
by his cavalier treatment, is rousing it in a way that threatens
difficulties to our project. Can nothing be done? Where is the fellow?”

“Nobody knows. If anybody did it would be I.”

“I feel inclined,” said Theodor, working himself into a weak man’s
passion, “to throw over the whole affair. It would be the most
dignified course.”

“And the most foolish.”

The Duke turned sharply at the blunt rejoinder. “Certainly not more
foolish than we are showing ourselves at present.”

Rollmar gave a great audible sigh as he often did when his master was
particularly tiresome.

“Pardon me, sire. A thousand times worse, although I do not seem able
to convince you of the fact. I may be so unfortunate as to differ in
ideas from your Highness, but my notion of foolishness would be to
abandon a magnificent chance of imperial aggrandisement for the sake
of taking umbrage at a boy’s want of manners. Ludwig is a fool; he may
not know it, but we do, and when he sets his eyes for the first time on
Princess Ruperta he will know it too. The mischief is that they have
taken it into their heads to dislike each other before they have ever
met. But I anticipate little difficulty on that account.”

“Perhaps not,” replied the Duke, who rejoiced in his rare opportunities
of twitting his masterful minister with failure. “But you must first
find your runaway bridegroom.”

“I intend to find him,” Rollmar returned quietly.

“When found you may perhaps discover a wife as well,” suggested
Theodor, making the most of his temporary advantage.

The Chancellor smiled grimly, and there was an ugly gleam in his dark,
fierce eyes. “It would be a pity--more particularly for her,” he
rejoined. “But as his bride would certainly not be of his own rank the
position would present little difficulty.”

The Duke understood his words the more clearly as read by the pitiless
light in his eyes. The talk was taking a turn which he always made
a point of avoiding. If he was virtually governed by his astute old
servant and left him practically a free hand he would at least take no
responsibility for or cognisance of his ruthlessly unscrupulous methods.

“At least we may take care that my daughter forms no undesirable
attachment,” he said somewhat feebly to give a turn to the subject.

“You may leave me to deal with such a contingency,” Rollmar said,
drawing back his lips in a significant smile.

“Ludwig’s unheard-of conduct is enough to make a girl of spirit rebel.”

“She may rebel,” Rollmar retorted, beginning to grow impatient. “We are
prepared for rebellion. I think your Highness’ hint can be referred to
no actual cause?”

“No,” said the Duke, weakly. “I know of no attachment. I only fear it.”

“You need not fear it, sire,” replied Rollmar, with infinite meaning in
his smile. “The favoured lover’s life would be a very short one.”




CHAPTER II

AT THE FORTUNE-TELLER’S


The moonlit gables of the city threw a zig-zag pattern on the
cobble-paved streets, and brought alternately into view and obscurity
the few passers-by, among whom were two women, who, hurrying along,
seemed, by keeping as near as possible to the base of the triangular
shadows, to shun observation. Recognition, indeed, would not have
been easy, for the ample hoods of their grey cloaks were drawn well
over their faces; only their figures and lightness of step told that
they were young. As to their looks there was, for the reason already
given, no room for more than speculation. Close as they kept together
but few words passed between them, and those scarcely above a whisper.
Of the people whom they met a good many turned to look after them in
curiosity, but owing no doubt to their air of purposeful hurry, no man
seemed to think it worth while to follow them. Up to a certain point,
that is.

Arrived at the fork where one street ran into two the women paused as
if uncertain which to take. It was necessary to look up and read the
names, and as they did so a man crossing the street caught a momentary
glimpse of one of the up-turned faces silhouetted against an oil lamp,
which, from its place some yards away, was brought into level with the
girl’s head. He stopped, almost with a start, then crossing quickly to
the shadow of an entry, waited till the girls resumed their way, upon
which he came out and followed them.

They went, however, but a couple of hundred yards farther. Before a
house in a small secluded _Platz_ they stopped and stood hesitating.
On the door was a plate where by the light of a bluish lamp which hung
in the portico could be read the one word, “Parabosco.” The courage of
the two girls, if checked, soon returned; they went boldly to the door,
which at their approach opened silently and admitted them. The man
who had followed them now paced up and down the _Platz_ in thoughtful
indecision.

He was a good-looking young fellow, alert and soldier-like; yet in
the strong moonlight the face seemed much more than that of a mere
city lounger; its beauty was intellectual, its distinction manifestly
came from a sense of power, power in action united with gentleness of
manner. That was the man’s attraction, his easily imagined fascination,
that sense of quiet, unobtrusive strength; the charm lay not in his
mere features but in the spirit behind them.

Presently, as though his resolve was taken, he went up to the blue-lit
door. An unseen hand opened it as before and, without a word, he
passed in. Meanwhile the two girls had entered a room hung with dark
velvet on which were worked strange cabalistic devices. The air was
subtily perfumed and a light shining through a globe of blue crystal
just illuminated the room enough to enhance its character of mystery.
Perhaps the most striking feature of this was the dead silence, a
stillness that seemed to strike the visitors dumb with its almost
appalling intensity.

“I wish we had not come.” Fear forced out the whisper from one of the
girls.

“We cannot help it now,” returned her companion, whose voice, scarcely
above her breath, seemed only just to repress a tremor.

“I had no idea it was a place like this,” the other said, looking round
with almost a shudder. “If they--he--the man should find out----”

“He will, easily, if you chatter.”

“Well,” persisted the irrepressible one, “this is not what I bargained
for. I thought it would be a piece of fun, but I don’t--oh!”

Her talk was cut short by a woman in oriental dress who had suddenly
appeared and, holding the curtains aside, was motioning the visitors to
pass through. With a momentary hesitation they followed her gesture,
and as they crossed a small ante-room a door in front of them swung
open and they found themselves in the presence of the fortune-teller
to whom their curiosity had attracted them. The sanctum of this
modern soothsayer was furnished with the usual stock-in-trade of his
profession, objects calculated to inspire awe--or something worse--in
the vulgar, and to throw a glamour of the supernatural over what,
stripped of the mystic surroundings, might have been a common-place
personality. The flamboyant chart of the heavens, the divining
crystal, a skull, the glowing brazier, all were there, and at a table
by a great parchment volume sat the fortune-teller. A sharp-eyed
man with clean-shaven, cunning face in which a certain suggestion
of intellectuality was spoilt by the expression resulting from the
habitual practice of roguery.

The light was so arranged that it fell on the visitors, leaving the
fortune-teller in comparative obscurity, like a great spider in the
corner of his web.

“Ladies,” he said in his professional phrase, with a well practised
trick of voice, unnatural and therefore calculated to add to the air of
the supernatural, “you have come, I presume, to consult the stars and
the oracles of the unseen world whose humble interpreter I am. It is
well; the time is propitious, the hour is golden.”

Doubtless the emphasis he laid upon the last word was intended as a
hint, for with that he pushed toward his clients a silver shell in
which lay several coins. Each of the girls added a piece of gold, at
which the eyes gleaming out of the semi-darkness seemed to give a
flash of satisfaction. With that the soothsayer made a show of the
tricks of his trade. He described figures with his wand; cast chemicals
into the brazier, causing ghastly flames to leap and spirt; he took,
perfunctorily indeed, an observation of the heavens and affected an
invocative rapture. All this, however, did not last long, possibly
because the performer may have received an intimation that another
visitor was waiting to consult him. But the farce was gone through with
a gravity which did credit to the restraint behind that very mundane
face.

“Now will one of you ladies advance and place the lines of your hand
under observation?” he said in a tone of commanding request.

Still keeping her hood well over her face, one of the girls went
forward to the table and extended her hand, a long aristocratic hand
of exquisite shape, a hand that even to a man less shrewd than the
fortune-teller must have revealed the station of its owner. Whether
indeed he had suspected or not the character of his visitors, the
man glanced up from the hand with a sharp look of inquiry at the
half-concealed face. The scrutiny was but momentary, next instant he
was bending with a magnifying glass over the outstretched palm. The
time-honoured jargon of the fortune-teller was repeated; then the
cards told the same tale with alluring variations, the stars gave a
confirmatory horoscope.

“Jupiter in conjunction with Venus points to a great, we might almost
venture to say a royal marriage,” the seer pronounced with professional
glibness.

“No, no, not that!” the girl exclaimed with a vehemence which startled
the professor. “At least, I mean it is not certain, is it? It can be
prevented, it can be fought against?”

The smile on the man’s face did not hide the look of intense curiosity
with which he regarded her.

“Fight against the stars?” he protested with a deprecating laugh. “You
are a bold young lady to imagine that.”

“Against the stars? No,” she returned impetuously. “But against the
powers here below that would coerce fate.”

“The fate I have predicted,” rejoined the fortune-teller dryly, “is
scarcely one which a woman would fight against.”

“That may be,” the girl retorted, “but perhaps, Herr Professor, if your
skill in divination were as great as is pretended you would hardly be
surprised at my distaste for the fate you have predicted.”

The sharp eyes with their keen iridescence were fastened on her now in
triumphant premeditation.

“My skill scarcely deserves your sneer, madame,” he replied with a
repressing of his thoughts. “It may be greater than you imagine or than
I claim. Dare you challenge me to put it to the proof? Will you--it is
no light test--will you look into the magic mirror?”

“Why should I?” the girl asked half contemptuously.

“Merely that your scepticism may see how far it is warranted. The
mirror may confirm my verbal forecast,” he gave a shrug, “or not. Only
I warn you that what you shall see there may not be agreeable.”

The other girl who had so far sat intently silent rose and caught her
companion’s arm. “No,” she urged in a frightened whisper, “do not look,
I beg you. It may be terrible.”

“Worse than the royal marriage?” the other exclaimed with a scornful
laugh. “I cannot stop half-way now. I have heard my fate, I must see
its confirmation.”

“As you will,” said the fortune-teller quietly. “Only do not blame me
should the result be displeasing.”

“Show me, Herr Professor.”

He rose. “For that,” he said, “you must be here alone. Your friend may
wait in the ante-chamber.”

“You hear, Minna?”

“No, no; it is not right. I will not leave you. Surely you have heard
enough.”

“No; I mean to see what this mirror has to show. What,” laughing, “did
we come for but to know the future?”

The dark eyes out of the shadow were watching the two girls furtively,
but their owner spoke no word of persuasion. Doubtless his knowledge
of human nature told him that curiosity would prevail unaided. And so
it was. The companion was forced reluctantly to leave them, and when
the two were alone the fortune-teller quietly slipped round and, under
pretence of seeing that the door was securely shut, slipped home its
bolt.

“Remove your hood,” he said facing the girl.

“It is unnecessary,” she replied. “I came to see, not to be seen.”

“Precisely,” the professor returned with a sarcastic grin. “And you
thought to trifle with our sublime art. You judge so meanly of it as to
fancy that we whose knowledge passes human comprehension are ignorant
of the very identity of those who consult us. You pay us a poor
compliment, Princess.”

For a few moments there was silence as she stood, half-fascinated,
watching his glittering eyes. The light was on his face now bringing
out its Jewish cast, the lines of greed and cunning. If the face
disquieted her, she did not show it, she was too proud, too completely
mistress of herself for that. Simply, with a slight inclination of the
head she accepted his protest, giving no sign of discomfiture at the
word which proclaimed her identity, merely saying, as though she were
speaking to a servant--

“Will you let me see what the mirror has to show?”

He was thinking, designing actively as he watched her. “Surely,
Princess,” he said, with an affectation of humility, “the resources
of my art are at your gracious disposal. Will you be seated till the
moment of revelation arrives?”

He turned and busied himself with certain preparations. Presently
with a gesture of warning he drew aside a dark curtain and disclosed
a deep-set mirror, the surface showing nothing but a dead black
reflection. Immediately it was disclosed, a vapour spread over and
blurred the glass.

The Princess had risen and taken a step towards the mirror. Parabosco
turned sharply as the vapour rose; there was evil intent in his face.

“Princess,” he said significantly, “you are not as ordinary inquirers
are. The destinies of royal personages float in a higher plane, are
woven in a grander frame than those of ordinary mortals. The rewards of
divination must be proportionate.”

The man’s meaning was as obvious as his looks were evil. After a
moment’s hesitation she took out her purse and laid another gold piece
upon the table. The man’s eyes remained fixed in their greed.

“That is no price,” he said bluntly, “for the revelation of a royal
destiny.”

“The rewards of divination, as you call them,” the Princess replied
with quiet scorn, “seem to be governed not so much by proportion as by
extortion. Here, I will give you no more.”

As she spoke she laid a second gold coin beside the other. Parabosco
took them up and turned to the mirror, still obscured by the rising
vapour. Without looking back, he beckoned her to his side and enjoining
silence by a gesture, pointed to the recess. Gradually the vapour
became less dense till at length it was so attenuated that the black
reflection could once more be seen. The professor recited a rigmarole
in the style of an incantation--once more the vapour swept across the
glass and as it rolled away a picture became faintly visible. Standing
erect, Parabosco signed to his companion to look closely into the
mirror. As she bent forward to see through the tantalising mist, the
dim picture grew clearer till she could make out its subject.

The interior of a church, a priest at the altar, before him a bride and
bridegroom, the man in a splendid uniform. But the whole indistinct,
and remaining only a few seconds before it was obscured by a fresh
cloud of vapour.

“You saw?” Parabosco asked.

“Very little. The faces were hidden.”

“Was that less than you--bargained for, Princess?” he returned
sarcastically. “The lady was yourself.”

“How do I know that?”

“The mirror shows the fate of none but the gazer.”

“Is that all?”

“By no means. It was hardly worth while to be shown that, except that
it has confirmed what I have already predicted. Look,” he exclaimed,
pointing with a swift gesture to the mirror, “the vapour is agitated!
There is fate behind it; the great crisis, the real story, doubtless,
of your life. Dare you read it?”

“Indeed I dare,” she answered half-mockingly, as though she had begun
to see through the charlatan’s trick. “Do not delay; I have no time to
waste.”

Her words were unfortunate, suggesting to him that for the time she was
in his power. “You must give me a larger fee, Princess,” he demanded
sharply. “Look! Quickly, before the charm dissolves.”

“I will give you nothing more,” she replied firmly.

“Then I will close the mirror, and the chance will be gone forever.
See! Even now it may be too late,” he cried in a pretended excitement.
“It is to see your fate for good or ill. Give me your purse. Quick!
Your jewels, it is worth all that and more!”

She had drawn back and stood facing him steadily. “I will give you
nothing more, I tell you,” she said resolutely. “Your conjuring tricks
have been already overpaid.”

“Tricks?” he screamed. “You dare to blaspheme our sublime art and
mysteries. You know not the risk you run, how near the brink of deadly
horror you stand. You shall see your destiny. The fates are not to be
invoked lightly. You came here to know the future, you shall know it
and shall pay for the knowledge.”

The design of intimidation and extortion was manifest now in all its
vulgar brutality, but the quack had in his victim, although a woman,
yet a woman of character and spirit.

“Not one kreutzer more,” she maintained. “I have had enough of this
nonsense and your rudeness. Show me the way out of this place.”

“Not till you have satisfied my just demands,” he returned with an ugly
look of menace. “The revelation has been invoked for you and you shall
pay for it whether you look or not.”

She took a step towards the door. He sprang forward and intercepted her.

“Not so, Princess. You go not till you give what I demand.”

Mortified as she was at having put herself in the man’s power and at
risking the discovery of her identity which was sure to excite his
greed, she yet never lost her presence of mind.

“You will let me go at once, fellow,” she said haughtily, “or it will
be the worse for you.”

But he judged shrewdly that it might be the worse for him in any event.
“You will pay me to the utmost of your power or it will be the worse
for you,” he retorted. “I am sorry to have to speak to you bluntly,
Princess, but necessity cannot dance attendance on fine speeches or
miss golden opportunities, eh?”

For a moment she deliberated on the simplest way out of a false
position, false enough and to most women terrifying, although her high
spirit ignored its danger. Distasteful as it was to make terms with the
ruffian, it yet seemed the most sensible way out. A scandal would to
her proud spirit be hateful, and then there was Chancellor Rollmar to
think of.

“I am content to pay for my folly in coming to this den of jugglery,”
she said composedly. “I will give you two gold ducats beyond what you
have already extorted.”

“I must have more than that,” he demanded threateningly. “What? Five
ducats all told? It is absurd. Princesses do not come to me every day.”

As he spoke he made a grab at her purse and thrust it into the folds of
his gown. “Now, your jewels, my Princess; they are trifles to you but
much to me. Come! Don’t force my need to extremity. Pay your ransom,
and then you shall go.”

Her hood was thrown back now, disclosing the proud beauty of her face
in its defiant indignation. The lips were set in unutterable contempt
and loathing. It was the first great indignity she had ever suffered,
but if the situation brought its inevitable fear, that was repressed
behind the steady, scornful eyes. Parabosco could not meet the look,
could not raise his greedy eyes beyond the diamond at her breast.

“You shall pay for this, you ruffian,” she said between her teeth.

“I care not,” he flung back, “so that you pay first. Hand over your
jewels, or must I take them?”

In her determination she glanced round as though for a weapon of
defence, but none was available. Interpreting her look, the man sprang
forward and clutched her wrist, at the same time endeavoring to force
the rings from her fingers. It was the fellow’s brutal touch that now
for the first time beat down her courage and extorted a cry for help.

“Minna!” she called desperately. “Minna! Come! Quickly!”

“It is useless to call,” the fellow protested as he struggled to open
her clenched hand. “Your friend cannot hear you. You had best be quiet.
So!”

Failing to force back her fingers he had seized her brooch and torn it
from her bodice.

“Minna! Help!” she cried, putting her strength against her assailant’s
in a fierce effort to regain the jewel.

The handle of the door was tried and rattled.

“Your friend cannot come to you,” the professor laughed. “Better be
reasonable, and----”

With a great thud and snap the door was sent flying open and a man
appeared in the opening; the young man who had followed the Princess
to the house, and who now took in the scene with a frown under which
Professor Parabosco manifestly quailed.

“What does this mean, ruffian?” he demanded. But the fortune-teller was
silent. The young man turned to the Princess with a bow.

“May I ask you, madame?”

Save for the flush on her face, she seemed to have regained her
habitual composure. “This man, this charlatan whom I foolishly came to
consult, has robbed me,” she answered.

“Robbed you?” As he turned to the quacksalver his face, which had
softened, resumed its stern expression. Behind him were now two anxious
spectators of the scene, the princess’s companion, Minna, and the
woman, his wife, perhaps, who acted as usher to the fortune-teller.

“Not robbed,” the fellow cried in defiant reply to the look. “The lady
has availed herself of the most transcendent mysteries of our art, and
refuses adequate recompense.”

He had dropped into the jargon of his calling, and his tone fell from
bluster to complaint.

“You take a somewhat unmannerly way of enforcing your demands,” the
other observed sarcastically. “I will take a leaf out of your book.
Restore at once to this lady what you have taken from her.”

The professor gave a grin of cunning defiance.

“If I tell you who this lady is,” he returned, with a malignant look at
the princess, who had meanwhile drawn over her face the hood and cloak
which the struggle had thrown off, “you may think, my good sir, that I
am not unreasonably paid.”

The veiled threat was significant, but before any possible effect could
be apparent the young officer quietly took the wind out of the other’s
sails.

“I am as well aware of this lady’s identity as you can be, Master
Quacksalver,” he said. “Now, as her highness cannot wish to stay here
longer, you will at once restore what you have taken.”

Parabosco hesitated. The diamond ornament was worth many a week’s
income to him, and his game in that city was up. Quietly, but with
intensely significant action, the young man drew his sword. The jewel
was not to be kept; Parabosco sullenly tossed it on the table.

The other man took it up in surprise. “That?” he exclaimed. “You
filched that, you scoundrel, to pay for your hocus-pocus! Princess,
your brooch.” He placed it in her hand with a bow almost of homage.

“I thank you, sir,” she said simply, so coolly that under the
circumstances the words sounded almost ungracious.

“That is not all, perhaps?”

“He took my purse.”

He held out his hand. “The purse!”

“It was my fee.”

“The purse!”

It fell with a sharp ring on the table and was presented to its owner
as the brooch had been.

“I am indeed grateful, sir,” she said, this time with more animation,
as though sensible of seeming ungracious. “This man had been already
well paid for his trickery. I had given him five gold ducats.”

“Under compulsion, Princess, I fear?”

“Perhaps. But I am satisfied.”

“Then he must return at least four.”

“No, let him keep them; I must pay for my foolish escapade.”

“As you will, Princess. But----”

“Will you add to your service by escorting me out of this place?”

“I am honoured, Princess.” He stepped aside, and she moved towards the
door. “May I say a word to this fellow, Highness?” he begged.

“Is it necessary?”

“Only to warn him that if he sees daylight in this place to-morrow, it
will be through the bars of the town prison.”

The professor evidently thought it very probable; anyhow he did not
dispute the contingency, and in a few moments his three visitors were
outside in the street.

“Oh, Princess, what a horrible adventure,” cried the impressionable
Minna.

“What an amazing piece of folly,” her mistress corrected with a little
shudder of self-reproach. “One can scarcely blame the wretched man
for trying to take advantage of it.” She turned to the young man.
“Let me thank you again, sir, for having rescued us from an awkward
predicament. It was a foolish whim that led us into it, but we had
heard a wonderful account of the fortune-teller, and one gets tired of
being always sensible.”

The explanation seemed wrung from her. The constraint of her tone from
which a touch of haughtiness was not absent, showed that the speaker
was not used to apologize or account for her actions. But here the
intolerable humiliation of a false position made it imperative.

“A very natural curiosity, Princess,” he replied with a smile. “And the
accident of the fellow’s rudeness was hardly to have been foreseen.
It is very hard,” he continued with what seemed perhaps a strange
temerity, “that those in exalted positions should be debarred from
most of the fun and adventures of life.” Seeming to recollect himself,
he added with a deferential bow, “I am truly favoured at having been
permitted to free your Highness from an embarrassing situation.”

She had moved away, but now, as by an afterthought, turned back. “I may
ask who has rendered me this service?”

“I am honoured, Princess. My name is Lieutenant Ludovic von Bertheim.”

“You live in this city?”

“No; I am at present a wanderer. My home is in Beroldstein.”

“Ah, in Beroldstein.” The name seemed to awaken thoughts which were
hardly pleasant, but she dismissed them with a little inward careless
laugh. “Well, good-night, Herr Lieutenant, and many thanks. I hope
there is no need to ask you not to speak of this affair.”

Her manner was a curious mixture of coldness and a sense of duty which
told her that she owed her defender some graciousness.

“There is no need, Princess,” he answered gravely. “You may trust my
honour.”

For the first time there was manifest interest in the look which read
his face. “I am sure of it. Again, good-night,” she said.

But he took a step after her. “Your Highness will not refuse my escort
to the Palace. It is late and----”

She cut him short. “You are good, but an escort is unnecessary. It is
not far, we are two, and we know our way.”

With innate good sense he divined an obvious objection to his proposal.
“I may at least follow at a distance till I see that your Highness is
safe,” he urged.

“As you please,” she replied coldly. “Come, Minna,” and the two hurried
off.

Von Bertheim followed at a distance near enough for protection, too
distant for remark or scandal. Nothing more than a few curious glances
was encountered, and presently the Lieutenant saw them arrive in safety
at one of the private doors of the palace. At the distance, some fifty
paces, which he had punctiliously kept, he stopped and watched, hoping
perhaps for a parting sign from the Princess; but she went in quickly
without turning her head in his direction. Her companion, however,
looked back and the watcher thought she made a sign to him. As she
lingered he hurried forward.

“Good-night,” she said with a demureness which was obviously not quite
natural. “The Princess thanks you again. And, oh,” she added with a
burst of more characteristic eagerness, “you will not breathe a word of
this folly, will you, Herr Lieutenant! It would be terrible for us all.
The Princess trusts to your honour.”

Although it was more likely that the exhortation was rather prompted by
her own fears than a message from her mistress, von Bertheim replied
gravely, “I am sorry that the Princess should deem it necessary to
mention it not twice but once even.”

“Oh,” she protested hastily, “it is my fault. Her Highness has every
confidence in your chivalry. It was lucky,” she laughed with an
admiring glance. “Good-night.”

The door closed upon her and he turned away. “Lucky?” he repeated.
“Yes. How will the luck turn out? Ah, yes, it was a fortunate chance
even if the luck stop there.”




CHAPTER III

A SOLDIER OF FORTUNE


Ludovic Von Bertheim walked back now through the nearly deserted
streets towards the heart of the city. Small wonder was it that his
manner was preoccupied, his face set in characteristic thought. The
last hour had brought him an adventure such as might befall the lot of
few men, even in days when manners were freer, life less circumscribed,
and adventures more plentiful. Judged from his expression, the train of
his thought led to very complex considerations, there was doubt, there
was pleasure, anger, exultation, doubt again, ever recurring, the whole
capped and bound by determination. Once he stopped and, turning, stood
looking at the moon-bathed towers of the palace. Only for a moment or
two till an impatient gesture swung him round and sent him again on his
way.

He had not gone far, however, when he was roused from his abstraction
by a hubbub in the street. Recalling his mind to his surroundings, he
saw under the half-extinguished lights of an inn adjoining a play-house
an excited group round what seemed to be two quarreling men. To avoid
the vulgar obstruction, he crossed the street and walked quickly on. He
had not gone more than a hundred paces when there came up behind him
the sound of running footsteps. A man, bare-headed, and with a naked
sword in his hand was flying as though for his life. The fellow wore
military dress, and instead of, as his pace and condition suggested,
panting with fear, he laughed as he ran. His whole appearance was so
extraordinary that Ludovic, standing by to let him pass, could not help
saying, “What is the matter, friend?”

The man checked his speed and gave a searching look at his questioner.

“Come!” he cried, catching Ludovic’s sleeve and trying to drag him on.
“Get me out of this for the love of Heaven. Come, or I am a dead man!”

There was no fear in the fellow’s face, indeed he seemed to take his
situation as a joke, but his appeal was somehow so irresistible that
Ludovic found himself hurrying on by his side.

They had not gone far, however, when sounds of pursuit were heard.

“They are after us still, the dogs,” the man panted. “This comes of
making myself cheap with _canaille_ and crossing swords with a cowardly
bully.”

“You have run a man through?” Ludovic asked.

“Something like it. No; he ran himself on to my point, clumsy brute.
But I doubt not it is a hanging matter. Don’t empty your lungs any
lower on my account, friend. It is not worth it. I am obliged for your
company but we will part here. Perhaps we may meet again in the next
world, it is not likely in this.”

In spite of his devil-may-care speech there was a refinement about the
man which rather interested Ludovic in him. The signs of pursuit were
now uncomfortably near. “No, no,” he urged quickly. “You must not be
taken like this, man. You know the Jena Platz?”

“Well.”

“Take this key, it will open the door of number eleven. I will throw
these people off the scent and join you presently. Quick! Down there!
It will take you straight.”

With a gasp of thanks the man darted off down the street so narrow that
its high houses screened all moonlight from its roadway. Ludovic ran
on along the wider thoroughfare at a pace which allowed the pursuers
to draw well in sight of him. As he came into view they gave tongue
like hounds; he sped on at a leisurely swing; they, with the zest of
following an imagined blood-trail, came on now with a rush, caught
him and prepared to pull him down. But as he turned and faced them
they saw that he was the very contrast of their man. They howled for
disappointment.

“Where is he? You have seen him running, the big fellow? He has killed
a man. Which way did he take?”

“I saw him, yes; and ran after him. But his legs were better than mine
and I lost sight of him in this street. You will catch him if you do
not waste time. He cannot be far away.”

One or two grumbled and looked suspicious, but the more ardent
man-hunters ran on and the spirit of the chase was contagious. It was
clear as the flooding moonlight that Ludovic was not the man nor one of
his feather. He was left alone.

Without loss of time he turned his steps towards his lodging in the
Jena Platz. His new acquaintance had not only found an asylum but had
made himself quite at home therein; his comfortable attitude suggested
nothing of a fugitive taking sanctuary. However, he received his host
and preserver with a hearty expression of gratitude.

“You drew the dogs off cleverly; it was a good deed,” he remarked
with the glib coolness of a man whose wits and muscles have kept him
going in an adventurous world; “a good deed, and one that will be
recompensed elsewhere better than I can ever hope to repay it. You have
a snug billet here; ah, well, it is my own fault if it is better than
I have been accustomed to of late. Your face is unfamiliar, sir,” he
scrutinised him coolly. “No matter for that. It is the face I would
have wagered on for a handsome action. You are new to this precious
city of peacocks and kites with the big vulture hovering over all?”

“You mean the Chancellor? Yes. I have been here but a week. I come from
Drax-Beroldstein.”

“Ah! That’s a fine bold land, with hot-headed men and pretty women.
Yes; I have loved and fought there--as in a good many lands besides.
But in truth I began to find the climate of your Beroldstein a trifle
too warm for my complexion. I never could keep out of the blaze, you
understand; it takes a sober fool to walk always on the shady side,
and though I may have folly enough and to spare, sobriety is a vice I
cannot confess to.”

“Then you are just as well outside of Beroldstein,” Ludovic laughed.
“Will you fill a glass now? You may stand in need of refreshment after
your late exertion.”

He pointed to a side table on which decanters stood. His visitor showed
no backwardness in pouring out a glass of spirits and tossing it off.

“Ah, yes,” he observed with a meditative smack of the lips; “it was
a ticklish affair. Always a woman; that is my experience, and I have
tossed about the world enough to speak of its tides and currents,
squalls and tempests with authority. Look now. At the play to-night--an
infernally silly piece--a girl laughed at me. Could I help that? Or
laughing back? The play was dull and the girl was pretty. What would
you have? I am no priest to look like a saint and think like a devil.
Well, our interchange of courtesies seemed to give offence to a smart
fellow with a hawk’s eye and a rabbit’s heart, who wanted to monopolise
the lady’s glances. Was it my fault again if she preferred to look
at my shock head than at his wonderful moustachios turned up to his
eyes? The less my deserts the greater my gratitude. And this brave
fellow, like many another, mistook gratitude for love. Anyhow he grew
consumedly jealous, and when the play was over and I was ready to
escort the lady through the crowd he tried to jostle me away. Jostle
me!” He laughed, merrily scornful. “Me, who have fought in half the
countries of Europe; whose sword and a stout heart and arm behind it
(pardon a passing boast) are my stock-in-trade. Naturally I did not
give way, never yet quailed before a pair of fierce moustachios--pah!
Albrecht von Ompertz frightened of a tuft of hair!--and never shall.
He had to carry it boldly before the lady, and when two men are bold
and not agreed, why, it means cold steel. He waited for me by the
tavern, mad with rage and jealousy or--well, poor fellow, they will
never trouble him again in this world. And so I have brought my neck
uncomfortably near the hempen cravat. It was only when my point stuck
in that I remembered the new decree against brawling. Well, what’s done
is done; one cannot blow the fire with burst bellows or get a dance
out of a fellow with a skewered lung.” He drained off another glass of
spirits; his situation seemed to affect him as little as though it were
but the loss of a few pieces at play.

“Von Ompertz, then your name is?” Ludovic said.

“Add Captain,” the other replied with a mock bow and a flourish.
“Devotedly at your service; I would say everlastingly did not that seem
a big word from a man who has but a few more breathing hours before
him. But for those you can command me, and what is more to the point,
my sword.” He took it up from the couch on which he had thrown it and
glanced down the blade. “Don Moustachio’s hot blood has bubbled away,
it seems. Ah, this good little fellow and I have been through some
tight squeezes, I tell you; some warm encounters, official and private,
for personal considerations and for imperial motives. I have held
commissions in pretty well half the states of Europe.”

“A free-lance, Captain?”

“Just so.” He threw his arms out and then pushed back the shock of hair
that fell across one side of his face like a half-drawn curtain.

“I love two things in a lesser degree, but they are comparative trifles
as my old General Freiherr von Aremberg observed after Schweidnitz
when he heard that a church full of people had been fired and its
contents roasted. Yes, I have a keen nose for a quarrel, international
or individual, and it is worth something to be free to follow one’s
sympathies, although that usually means enlisting on the weaker side.
Well, if it is all over now, I’ve lived my life and with plenty of
pepper to spice it.”

All through Captain von Ompertz’ voluble talk his host had been quietly
observing him with amused interest. “You must get away, Captain,” he
said. “A man of your resource and experience is surely not going to
hang about and be taken.”

“Not if I can help it,” the other replied cheerfully. “But get away is
easier to say than to do in this country where Rollmar, the old spider,
has his feelers out on every side. It is nothing but a big net, sir. We
can move about, but we cannot fly, and when he wants to be down on us
the spider moves quickest.”

“And you, devotee of freedom, stay here,” laughed Ludovic.

Ompertz gave a shrug. “The place is lively and is a good point from
which to scan the horizon for a war cloud. And now--_donnerwetter!_
what the devil did that fool with the moustachios want to draw on me
for?”

It was arranged that Captain von Ompertz should stay there in hiding
till a chance occurred of getting away in safety. His host left him
comfortably stretched on a couch with a cloak wrapped round him. But
when in the early morning Ludovic entered the room, his guest had
flown, leaving a few scrawled lines of apology.

“I am none the less grateful because I cannot be a burden to you.
The chance of escape over the net is as fair to-day as it will be
to-morrow, and I hate suspense. If I get clear away you shall hear
from me (though I know not your name); if not you will assuredly hear
of me. A thousand thanks from your grateful servant, A. v. O.”




CHAPTER IV

IN THE ROYAL CHAPEL


It was in obedience to a very natural prompting that in his walks about
the city Ludovic’s feet should be inevitably turned in the direction
of the palace. Perhaps he hoped--of course he did--that chance might
give him a glimpse of that provoking beauty, Princess Ruperta. The
fascination was intensified by the strange situation in which he had
met her. For it showed an underlying stratum of a far different and
warmer nature beneath the hard, frozen surface that the world saw
and noted, and, try as it would, could make no impression upon. So!
Princess Cold-heart was human after all. He laughed as he spoke the
words in his solitary ramble. Human? yes. But what chance had the
humanity, the girl’s real feelings, to expand and flourish enmeshed in
the rigid formality and etiquette, in the killing monotony of a German
Court? And under the eye, benign and relentless, of that inscrutable,
busy state-machine, the Chancellor Rollmar, what play-room could
there be for a girl’s spirits and enjoyment of life? Small wonder, he
thought, if she broke bounds, careless because ignorant of danger. A
girl of high-spirited temperament is not to be completely repressed
even by an astute and autocratic Minister. Does not rebellion thrive on
oppression?

Ludovic had come to Waldenthor well provided with credentials. Only a
night or two after his arrival he had attended a Court ball; and it was
from his sight of the Princess on that occasion that he had been able
to recognise her on the evening of her adventure. He was free of the
Palace grounds, but after the affair at the fortune-teller’s, he, from
motives of delicacy, refrained from walking in them. He would not seem
to take advantage of his service by forcing himself upon the notice
of the Princess. To hover on the outskirts, though, was a greater
temptation than he, perhaps, could resist. And at last the hovering
grew so tantalising that he told himself there could be no harm in
taking a short road to the city by the broad walk which ran through the
royal park. His way took him within a few paces of the King’s chapel.
The tones of the organ in a subdued grandeur trembled out through the
effigied windows. The witchery of the music, united with the glamour of
the place, hallowed by romance ever since the days of chivalry, had an
arresting effect. Ludovic stopped, took off his hat and leaning against
a great elm, gave himself up to the entrancement of the moment.

Like a subtle spell the music stole out into the woodland till the
quivering of the leaves seemed hushed by the charm; the place became
fairyland, but the haunt of fairies of flesh and blood with souls for
life and love, for dreams and hopes sweetening to fulfilment. If heaven
was suggested there, it was heaven on earth.

There was a pause in the playing, but the spell which seemed to hold
the listener was not broken. He remained motionless in his abstraction.
Then the music floated out again in a lovely Andante of Scarlatti’s.
The dreamy look turned to animation, he must drink to the full of that
divine melody; he went forward on tip-toe to a little door which stood
ajar, pushed it gently open and stood raptly breathing in the glorious
strain which, rising and falling, flooded the chapel as with an angel’s
song.

As the last notes trembled away along the groined roof Ludovic stole
forward. The organ burst forth again. From where he stood a screen
hid the player; by advancing a little farther he could see past it.
Quietly he moved on, still the keyboard was hidden by a low curtain.
But he saw something else which rewarded and at the same time rebuked
his temerity, a girl working the handle of the bellows. It was Countess
Minna, the Princess’s companion. Half sitting on a stool, she with a
pretty suggestion of boredom was giving, as occasion called for, a
casual and now and then an impatient pull at the handle which projected
like a bowsprit before her. One hand grasped this, with the other she
held up a book, but the necessity of not keeping her eyes too long off
the leaden indicator must have made reading a somewhat tantalising
pleasure. She would give a slow mechanical pull or two at the lever,
then presently glancing up and seeing the wind nearly gone she would
take both hands and giving a sufficient number of vicious tugs to bring
the lead to its lowest point, she would return to her book. It was
at one of these more energetic pumpings that the intruder’s presence
caught her eye. She started and her face lengthened into an expression
of humorous, half scandalized astonishment. This distraction lasted so
long that the lead crept up unnoticed and the wind gave out bringing
the melody to an abrupt and wheezy halt.

“Minna!” The Princess’s voice only confirmed the certainty Ludovic had
felt as to the player.

“Pardon!” Minna energetically seized the handle and gave several
vigorous pulls. “My book was so exciting that I forgot.”

The melody rose again, the absorbing book lay on the floor, and for
a while the bellows received a pretty girl’s full, almost feverish,
attention.

Presently she looked again at Ludovic and made a comic expression
of disgust. He stood irresolute, telling himself that he ought to
go, yet yielding to the temptation to linger. The girl’s facial
suggestion was now supplemented, after a vehement sending down of
the indicator, by a pantomime of weariness. There must have been an
object in these signals, yet Ludovic did not take the hint. So Minna,
abandoning vagueness, plainly beckoned to him, making signs that he
should take her place at the bellows. The invitation could scarcely be
disregarded. He came forward and took his position by the lever, while
the girl slipped away and settling herself on a more comfortable bench,
avidiously resumed her exciting story.

For about half an hour the music continued, Ludovic gravely keeping to
his work at the bellows, and Minna, save for an occasional sly upward
glance, seeming absorbed in her book. There were breaks in the playing
between the ending of one piece and the beginning of another. In one
interval of silence, as Ludovic stood waiting for the organ to swell
out again, he looked up and saw the Princess standing before him. His
involuntary glance at her face told him nothing. He bowed low.

“Pardon, Princess,” he said soberly, “the Countess was tired and I
ventured to take her place.”

Minna had sprung up and came forward with a look of mingled
apprehension and sly enjoyment of the situation.

“It is true, Highness,” she corroborated. “My arms began to ache and my
book was so exciting that I asked Herr von Bertheim to blow till I had
rested and the duel was over. One cannot blow the organ properly when
one is in a state of terrific suspense.”

The Princess’s face gave no indication of how she took the situation.

“It is perhaps more a man’s work,” she said coldly. “I am obliged to
Herr von Bertheim. I did not know he was in the chapel.”

Still no sign whether his presence gave her offence or not.

“I was passing down the Broad Walk when the music stopped me and drew
me in,” he explained. “I had no idea, until I saw the Countess, that
the player was your Highness.”

“It is perhaps an unusual thing,” she returned with a touch of
bitterness, “to find a person in my position cultivating an art. I do
not know whether it is one of the things we are bidden to leave to
the less exalted, and not meddle with. Your ignorance can scarcely be
blamed, sir.”

“I cannot blame it, Princess, unless my presence has given you offence.”

“That ought never to be,” she returned quickly, “seeing how welcome it
once has been.”

“I could never presume on that chance service,” he said simply.

“No.” She spoke abstractedly, mechanically. Minna had fidgetted away
behind the screen to the door, perhaps on the watch. “That makes it all
the more acceptable,” the Princess added in the same distant tone, a
tone which impelled him to reply.

“I take the hint, Highness.”

He half turned away, when the murmur of her voice recalled him.

“You need not take more than is meant to be given,” she said, and there
was a sweetness in her tone he had never heard before. She gave a
quick glance to where Minna stood, and then added, “If I seem far less
grateful than an”--she gave a little shrug--“an ordinary woman would
be you must not impute the churlishness to me but to my position. It
is one of the attributes of royalty to be above the common feelings
of the outside world.” The words seemed forced from her, the vent of
a grievance, long resented, ever dwelt on. The situation was but an
opportunity not the cause of its expression.

“I never could dream of imputing anything but graciousness to your
Highness,” Ludovic protested eagerly. “I have no right here, I know:
but being free of the Court I ventured to cross the park on my way
home. Then the music caught my ear and I came in, thinking to listen
without being seen.”

She was looking away, now her glance fell on him. “You come to Court?”
she asked in a tone that was scarcely indifferent and yet tantalisingly
vague.

“I had the honour to be present at the Hof-Ball last week.”

“Ah, I wondered----”

He understood that she was thinking of his recognition of her at the
fortune-teller’s. His next words seemed surprisingly bold.

“Your Highness often plays here? Is it too much to ask to be allowed to
officiate as organ-blower again?”

A little hardening of the Princess’s face told him that his temerity
was resented. She gave him no answer. “Minna!” she called, “Come, dear;
it is late.”

But before Minna could reach them he had spoken again.

“Pardon, Highness,” he said with great restraint yet urgently. “You
have not forbidden me.”

But she spoke no word to him again. “Come, dear,” she said, linking
her arm in Minna’s, and so they went across the chancel to the royal
entrance leading by a covered way to the palace. He stood looking after
them hoping for what he knew was beyond hope. Minna opened the door and
the Princess passed out of sight without a backward look. Minna glanced
round with an inscrutable laugh.




CHAPTER V

RUPERTA AND LUDOVIC


She had not forbidden him. Even when reminded of it the suggestion
had not provoked a word of refusal. And yet she had gone without a
sign of leave-taking, but with all the air of being offended. What
was he to think? Turn it over as his mind would, it always came back
to the one conclusion that he would go to the chapel again. “We are
not allowed the feelings of ordinary people,” the Princess had said.
Did not that account for the way she had recollected herself, or at
least her station, and left him without another word? But she had
talked with him for some time before that bold speech of his--lucky or
unlucky, he would not own it either--she had assuredly shown no offence
at finding him there in the chapel, at his presumption in assisting
at her playing. Was that because he had done her a service at the
fortune-teller’s? It was not a palatable suggestion, still less was
it pleasant to think that his forwardness might be construed into a
presuming upon that service. At any rate he would put it to the touch.

For the next days he haunted the park near the chapel but without
hearing the music he listened for, or seeing the Princess except once
when he caught just a glimpse of her driving in at the royal gates.
But one afternoon, when he had begun to think that the organ was never
to speak to him again, his ear caught its notes, softly penetrating,
stealing out into the woodland. For a moment he hesitated. No; he had
resolved to venture boldly; diffidence would avail nothing; after all,
he knew his every feeling to be chivalrous; he would not hang back.

The door was opened. Ah, it might have been closed against him. He went
in quietly; Countess Minna was at the bellows; she laughed, and her
laugh told him that she, at least, had expected him. He returned her
silent greeting and without hesitation went up and took the lever which
she very readily relinquished. The music continued for a long hour,
ever sharpening his hunger for a sight of the player, for the thrill
of her voice again. Minna, as before, sat comfortably reading, with a
certain demure enjoyment on her face, but whether caused by the book
or the situation was not to be told. As each piece ended von Bertheim
looked for that radiant presence to stand before him, and at each fresh
swelling forth of the organ he felt a disappointment which, with his
love of music, might have been incredible.

At length with the dying vibrations of a voluntary’s last notes there
mingled the striking of a clock. Countess Minna jumped up hastily and
ran forward.

“Princess! It is time to go. There is five striking.”

A wave of disappointment passed over him. Should he lose his reward
like that? Was it a trick? As he wondered, the Princess came from
behind the keyboard screen and saw him. Their eyes met; he bowed.

“Thank you,” she said simply. “It was kind of you to relieve Gräfin
Minna.”

He had come near; she, preparing to turn away, held out her hand. He
pressed it to his lips. That was all, except for the word “Good-bye,”
which he scarcely heard, and the “thank you,” from Countess Minna which
he heard not at all. Before he could realise their departure he was
alone.

When he returned to his lodgings he found an official invitation to
a state concert to be held two days later. It meant the chance,
certainly of seeing, perhaps speaking to the Princess. That afternoon’s
luck had rewarded his days of disappointment. She had given him her
hand in token that in her eyes he was free from offence. “She has a
heart after all,” he said as he sat down to write an acceptance.

The concert was as rigidly classical as though the severity of the
Court’s forms and etiquette had infected the music, as, indeed, it had
drawn out the programme. Only in one piece was indulgence given to
mere beauty of melody, and in that he recognised a favourite of the
Princess’s doubtless, since she had played it both times he had been
in the chapel. Carried away by the sensuousness of the melody he sat
with eyes almost involuntarily fixed on the Princess. She was unlikely
to notice his gaze, but the inevitable Minna looked round towards the
side row where he sat, and he suddenly became aware of her scrutiny. He
wondered whether she would tell Princess Ruperta of his whereabouts,
but by no sign could he be certain of that. “Why should she care? What
a fool I am!” he told himself.

When the music was over the guests followed the royal party into the
great drawing-room, where they circulated and chatted in groups. With
his white face bent forward and hands clasped behind his back the
Chancellor strolled observantly through the rooms exchanging a remark
here and there, but ever on the watch, it seemed.

Ludovic von Bertheim stood looking after that fascinating, inscrutable
personality when he heard a well-remembered voice at his side.

“When you have finished studying our Chancellor, Herr von Bertheim, may
I ask you to give me a cup of coffee?”

They strolled off together to the Saal where refreshments were served.

“It is delightful to meet you here again,” Ludovic said; “after----”

“Where there are no organ-bellows to blow?” Minna suggested roguishly.
“Oh! Hush!” She made a gesture of caution and raised her cup to her
lips. Rollmar was passing them.

“I did not know he was so near,” she observed, in a low tone. “He has
ears for whispers and eyes that see all round him. I warn you, Herr von
Bertheim.”

“I will be careful,” he laughed.

“Yes. Not only for your own sake, but----” she checked herself with
a shrug. “You see that young officer with red hair and eyes to
match, like a ferret? You will never guess who he is. Our wonderful
Chancellor’s son. Yes, you may well open your eyes. Captain von
Rollmar; he is as sharp as his face, and----shall I tell you?--a great
admirer of our Princess.”

She took a roguish delight in watching the effect of her whisper,
laughing and sipping her coffee.

“The admiration is hardly returned, I should think,” he could not help
saying.

“You should hope so, eh?” she corrected. “What do you think? The
Princess is a girl of taste. I have--not exactly a message for you, but
I know the lady we speak of is anxious to hear about your country. You
know, perhaps she is to marry your future King?”

“I have heard the rumour.”

“Poor girl! It is a shame.”

“Why a shame?”

“Because she hates him.”

“Has she ever seen him?”

“No. Is that a necessary preliminary in royal betrothals?”

“Perhaps not. But surely to hate.”

“Hates the idea, then.”

“Ah, that is conceivable.”

“The comfort, or the absurdity, of it is that he seems to be, if
possible, as indifferent to her as she to him.”

“That can be only accounted for by his never having seen her.”

“Whose fault is that? He has never even asked for her portrait. He is
away, no one knows where, on a hunting expedition. To ignore, no doubt,
the disagreeable fate in store for him, and to try to forget while he
can that there is such an annoying thing on earth as woman in general
and our Princess in particular.”

Their talk had taken them through the picture gallery and out upon the
terrace, for on that warm autumn night the long windows stood open.
They had gone but a few steps when a well-known voice said:

“Minna, I have been looking for you. I was stifled in these hot rooms.”

As Ludovic bowed to the Princess a casual onlooker would have said it
was a first and formal introduction; and perhaps with the Chancellor’s
many eyes everywhere, that was as well. A court official came
sauntering along, evidently getting a little relief from the boredom of
his duties. Countess Minna threw him a laughing remark to that effect.
He stopped and they stood chatting within two or three paces of the
Princess and von Bertheim.

“I hear, Highness,” Ludovic said presently, “that you are interested in
the country I come from.”

“I cannot help being interested,” she replied. Then as the equivocal
meaning of the words struck her, she added hastily, “It is not my fault
if it is so.”

“I have heard a rumour, Princess,” he said quietly.

“Ah, yes; a rumour. It is only a rumour as yet.” It was impossible to
gather from her tone what meaning lay behind her words. “Tell me of
your country,” she went on. She was looking away over the black screen
of trees at the star-lit sky, and the words seemed forced mechanically
through the dreamy preoccupation that held her.

“It is a pleasant one?”

“A fair land enough,” he answered, “with great vine-covered plains
and rounded hills with lovely broad valleys and nestling towns. Yes,
it is a land too pleasant and favoured to lie longer in obscurity. Our
King----”

“Never mind your king,” she broke in almost haughtily; “he does not
interest me. Tell me of your country. Has it rocks and dashing rivers,
and great forests, like ours?”

“A few only. Scenery like yours is not general.”

“Scenery!” she repeated, with an inflection of something like scorn.
“You speak of that as though it were of no account. It is everything.
It is nature. It makes all the difference between romance and a
dull, sordid reality. Your king”--there was scorn now in her voice
unmistakably--“is, I suppose, intent upon making his country of
commercial importance. The grapes from your vines are to be transferred
to the taverns and shops of London and Paris, and as the drunkards
of the world increase so will your country’s prosperity. Prosperity?
That means money. I hate that. Why cannot this king of yours leave his
people happy as they are? Does money mean content? I would rather be a
mother to the poor than to the rich, rather reign over my country as
Heaven made it, with its crags and torrents and forests, than over a
land of wine-vats and offices where legends and traditions are ousted
by account-books and bills, and the people in their insolence of wealth
acknowledge in their hearts but one king--money. Here, at least, we are
free, or nearly all of us,” she added, a little bitterly.

“But, Princess,” he began to argue, “if the two countries were joined,
would not the best characteristics of both be united?”

“Never,” she returned impatiently; “it is impossible. Romance and
business can never agree.” She gave a little shiver. “We catch the wind
here,” she said, returning to her cold, indifferent tone. “Minna, it is
cold. We will walk to the end of the terrace.”

The moments were precious, yet to von Bertheim it seemed difficult to
make the most of them. The change in his companion’s tone showed him
that she considered at an end the subject on which she had spoken so
warmly. In her fascinating complexity, in the manifest struggle between
constraint and inclination, between the yearning for freedom and the
sense of coercion, in short between the Princess and the woman, there
was something bewilderingly captivating and yet deterrent.

“You cannot think,” she resumed, breaking the silence, “what it is
for those who are born to high places to be condemned to see most of
the pleasures of life from a distance. They are all round us, but out
of reach. We are like poor ragged children gazing into the toy-shop
windows. Yes; we are supposed to have everything, and we have--almost
nothing.” She spoke with a suppression of the feeling which prompted
the words. Ludovic could guess why she was inclined to unburden herself
to him.

“You think I must look upon our first meeting as a strange one,” he
said. “But I have seen too much of the world, have speculated too much
over the problems of our mysterious existence to wonder at that. Ah,
Princess--forgive me if your confidence makes me too bold--I wish it
might fall to my lot to free you from the grip of the world’s custom,
as it was my unspeakable privilege to stand between you and that
thieving ruffian.”

The end of the terrace walk had been reached, and as with the last
words they turned, it brought them face to face. Had he offended her?
He could not tell. The cold, proud look in her face made it seem almost
incredible that it could have been she who had spoken with such feeling
and unburdening of the heart a moment before. Just for a few instants
she made no reply; perhaps the mere expression of his wish scarcely
called for one. The silence left him in exquisite suspense. So intent
was he on her next words that he did not realise she lingered, almost
stopped. Countess Minna and her companion had turned at the same time
and were walking now in front. At last the reply came.

“You are bold,”--the voice was exquisitely low--“but in you I cannot
blame boldness. It is,” here by an effort she lightened her tone, “it
is perhaps as well we can both realise that beyond boldness it is
madness, boldness to me, and madness to aught beside.”

“Not madness,” he protested, “to dream of fighting for happiness,
for----”

“Yes,” she interrupted quickly, almost peremptorily; “madness to
imagine and cruelty to suggest it. Ah!” she gave a shudder, “why are
right things so easily forgotten, wrong ones never? It is late; I must
go in. The dear Chancellor,” she laughed, “will be scandalised--or
worse. You are leaving Waldenthor?”

“I never said so, Princess.”

“But you are going?”

“Not unless your highness orders me.”

“Or somebody more powerful than I. Yes; you had better go. The romance,
the episode is over; would you wait for the anti-climax?”

“Is it over, Princess?” His voice vibrated with tenderness now, since
he might be bold.

“We have arrived at the best ending,” she answered. “Do not wait for an
unpleasant one.”

“Give me a better reason for banishment.”

“Than yourself? Is not the only other reason obvious?”

He bowed his head. That reason was all powerful. “I understand,
Princess,” he replied. “Then I go. Is this the last time we shall meet?”

There was sadness in the proud eyes, he could be sure of that. But with
characteristic self-control she forced it away. “Who can tell?” she
laughed. “We may meet again before very long--in your country. There,
Minna is signing to me. I know what that means. Good-bye, my friend,
good-bye, and thank you.”

She was moving off, but he took a quick step after her. “Princess,”
he pleaded, “give me one day’s respite. Let me hear the music in the
chapel again.”

But she would not stop or turn to give him an answer. He thought he
caught the murmur of one word “Madness!” as she hurried away.




CHAPTER VI

THE ORGAN’S PRISONER


The birds in the woodland surrounding the royal chapel sang lustily, as
though exulting in the fact that the tones of their great opponent, the
organ, were for once so soft and weak as to yield them an easy victory
in the game of out-singing one another. The lowness of tone in the
dragging melody seemed to be the interpretation of a heavy heart; it
spoke the language of sadness and of parting.

Ludovic had taken his place early beside the organ, but had waited long
for the player; long, indeed, past her usual hour. Waited till he was
forced to ask himself whether the last night had not been the end of
that informal, delicious acquaintance. Was he never to see the Princess
again, at least as he had known her? Never again watch fascinated for
those sweet glimpses of the sun breaking through the cold mist? There
was so much he had to tell her, that he felt he dared say now, if only
the chance were not gone. He waited, hoping and despairing, till the
afternoon seemed turning to evening; he watched the door through which
she would come till he hated it for mocking him with its immovability.
At last, when he was sure that the parting was over, unrealized, he
looked up to see the door open and the Princess and Countess Minna
coming towards him.

Eagerly he went forward; ah! she was so cold. There was no trace of
the feeling she had given glimpses of the night before. The hand that
touched his lips was as chill as a statue’s. She had repented, yet
why, then, had she come? There was, at least, no sign of disapproval
in that stately greeting. She went straight to the keyboard, he to his
post, Countess Minna, unusually serious, to her accustomed corner. So
the music began to float gently through the place; it was, or at least
seemed, less interesting to him than usual; he had so much to say, and
the soft introit interposed between him and his desire. Still, he could
but wait; it was not for him to pluck open the blossom of his hopes
before his glorious sun should ripen them. He was content to be near
her, thankful that she had come, overjoyed yet sad to think what her
presence meant. When the playing was over what would her words be? Not
so frigid as her greeting surely; yet the very coldness gave to her
slightest unbending a value far surpassing the warmth of an impulsive
nature.

The sinking sun struck horizontally through the richly tinted windows,
and the shadows of the trees, just stirred by the almost windless
atmosphere, danced slowly and languidly on the wall, the pillars and
richly carved stalls, as though keeping time and character with the
music. The sands of his last day were running low, the dreamy music,
though he loved it, made him impatient. Then an idea came to him.
Why should he not ask Countess Minna to release him and take his
place, so that he might go round and be at least within sight of the
Princess? He hesitated. Would she not be offended if he broke the tacit
understanding between them? Certainly her reception of him had given no
encouragement to impatience or forwardness. It was his duty to respect
her slightest hint, to let the initiative always come from her, above
all, never to make her task (if he dared believe it were one) more
difficult. Yet every argument failed against his intense desire. He
looked round at the demure reader coiled up snugly in her corner; she
glanced up as his movement caught her eye, and laughed as he signed to
her. Then she shook her head; she was sharp enough, and guessed what
he wanted, but--perhaps she, too, thought it madness. Anyhow it was
with a deprecating expression that she rose and came to him.

“Will you not relieve me for five minutes?” he asked.

She kept her hands behind her. “Why?” she asked. “You are surely not
tired.”

“No; not tired, but----”

“The Princess hates any one to look over her.”

“May I not see her from a distance?”

“You are a fool, with apologies for the liberty of telling you so, Herr
Lieutenant.”

“I dare say I am. But why?”

“To long for fruit that is out of your reach.”

“Perhaps. Still I shall not say it is sour.”

“Heaven forbid! No, you will not do that. Look! Quick! The wind is out.
Pump for your life! So! Shall I tell you further why you are a fool?”

“If you please.”

“Because you do not seem to have the sense to know what would happen if
your organ-blowing were to come under the notice of our Chancellor.”

“I can guess.”

“The grapes would be sour, at least they would set your teeth on edge,
though your sense of taste would soon be over.”

“I dare say.”

“And yet it is worth the risk, eh? It is well that you are brave. This
is the last time we meet here.”

“As the Princess wills.”

“She has willed it. I told her she was a--not wise to come to-day. You
don’t think of me and the risk I run. I am not anxious to meet you in
the next world yet. There! as you are brave, and this is truly the last
time, give me the handle. But you will worry the Princess.”

With a word of thanks he had turned towards the front of the organ,
when her voice called him back sharply. “Take care! We are watched.
Bend down quickly.”

She sprang forward and pushed him away, taking his place at the handle.
“Keep under the curtain,” she directed, pumping away vigorously. “Out
of sight. A man is looking through the window. I just saw his head from
where I stood. It was Udo Rollmar. If he sees you--ah, he must not see
you. Hist! there he is again.”

Peeping through a slight parting in the curtains that screened the
organ-blower’s seat, Ludovic could see a foxy face looking in through
one of the leaded panes. He remembered what Countess Minna had told him
of the Chancellor’s son, that he was in love with the Princess.

“I am not afraid of that fellow,” he said. “Why should I hide from him?”

Minna threw up her hand in distress. “Oh, you idiot! You will ruin us
all. Can you not think of the Princess? Now will you hide? Quickly! He
is surely coming in. Oh, we are ruined! We are lost!”

The face had disappeared from the window. The situation was critical.
At any moment Captain Rollmar might show himself over the screen. Minna
was beside herself with terror, while the music still floated out under
the fingers of the unconscious player.

“Oh, this is awful!” she gasped in despair, looking helplessly round
the trap in which they seemed caught. “Ah!” She pointed to the narrow
door which gave admittance to the interior of the organ. “In there, for
Heaven’s sake!” she besought him. But he hesitated and hung back.

“It is unnecessary,” he objected quietly.

Even in her distress she could not help marvelling at his coolness.

“You are mad, or, at least, horribly selfish,” she exclaimed
indignantly. “If you are tired of your life because you cannot have
what you want, I promise you I am not. Man, to save the Princess’s
honour and my life, will you not go in there till the danger is past?”

She spoke with rapid vehemence, trembling with fear and excitement.

“I will obey you,” he said with a half laugh, and entered the narrow
opening. She shut and fastened the door, and then sprang back to the
bellows handle. Just in time; for she had scarcely given one vigorous
pull when the curtain parted, and the expected face appeared. She
affected to give a start and a little scream.

“Ah, Captain, how you frightened me. I thought it was the devil, who
they say once came after a priest in this very chapel.”

His suspicious eyes were searching the place as he replied with a
cunning smile, “It is neither the devil nor a priest this time, little
Minna, although if the old gentleman has taste he would be more
attracted by the organ-blower than by the clergy.”

She made him a mocking curtsey, and, by design or accident, let the
wind run off, bringing the music to a stop.

“Highness!” she cried, “here is Captain von Rollmar.”

If it was in apprehension that the Princess joined them she did not
show it.

“May I blow for you, Princess?” Captain Udo asked with a bow.

“Thank you, I have finished playing,” she returned coldly. “The light
is fading. Come, Minna.”

The vulpine eyes were feasting on her, so contemptuously majestic
in comparison with his cunning insignificance. “Do not hurry away,”
he suggested with all a vain, clever man’s self-confidence. “It is
pleasant here.”

“Yes; but we have stayed long enough. It grows chilly. Let us go,
Minna.”

Minna had placed herself a little behind the Captain, so that, unseen
by him, she could give her mistress a warning glance.

“We might stroll out into the park,” she suggested, “if your Highness
is agreeable. It is a delicious evening, and Captain von Rollmar would
be our escort.”

The proposal suited the Captain exactly, and as for the Princess she
comprehended the intention behind it and agreed. So the three went out
together, leaving Ludovic a prisoner in the organ.

They walked up and down the great avenue till it was time to go in,
Captain Udo in such a state of content that the amiability working out
in his expression almost eclipsed its foxiness. He was too happy to
think of suspicion. It was dusk when they turned up a path leading to
one of the private entrances of the palace. But there was hardly any
scandal to fear in the company of the Chancellor’s son; at least the
wily old terror would have to keep his blame at home.

“Oh, Highness,” Minna cried suddenly, “I have left my book back in the
chapel. How stupid I am! May I run back for it? You shall not wait for
me a minute.”

“Does the book matter?” the Princess asked.

“Oh, Highness,” she replied with a humorous look of entreaty, “it is so
interesting, and I have promised myself such a delicious hour with it
to-night. May I run?”

“You are a spoilt child, Minnchen,” her mistress laughed.

Captain Udo made a half-hearted offer to fetch the book, but Minna
decided that he might not find it at once; she knew exactly where it
was. He should stay with the Princess for the one short minute the
errand would take. Accordingly he, nothing loath, remained and Minna
sped off to the chapel. Only to find the door locked.

The book must indeed be interesting to make her look so troubled at its
loss, Captain Udo thought as she rejoined them empty-handed. But she
would send a servant for it, she said.

“You might have thought of that before, and saved yourself the trouble,
silly child,” the Princess remarked.

       *       *       *       *       *

And Ludovic von Bertheim remained imprisoned in the organ. His was a
curious nature, for the situation amused him, and yet in itself it was
by no means pleasant. The space was confined, the atmosphere close
and dusty. But for a few feeble rays of light which stole in between
the pipes he was in darkness. And yet he laughed. He heard the heavy
footsteps of the sacristan, then the clang of the locked door, and
still he laughed. The situation had its charm; not a very obvious one.
That he was a prisoner was certain enough; he had tried the little
door; it was securely fastened on the outside; no doubt he could kick
it open, but that would be a last resort. Perhaps he did not want to
burst it open. The tortuous pathways in the organ, known only to the
tuner, were not inviting; he resolved to leave them untried, and await
his release where he was, meanwhile making himself as comfortable as
he could. So he stayed, for hours it seemed, for he could not see
his watch. Dusk deepened into night; the moonlight streaming faintly
through the coloured windows could not penetrate that thicket of pipes
and levers; the darkness was as complete and oppressive as the silence.

Perhaps it was from having grown accustomed to the intense silence that
his ear at length detected a light footfall; he listened alertly, it
came near; yes, his ear had not played him false, the step was just by
him, only separated by a thin partition. The latch was turned and the
door opened. So used had his eyes become to the darkness that even the
subdued moonlight for a moment dazzled him, but without a question he
made haste to leave his uncomfortable prison.

“A pretty penance you have made me pay, Countess,” he laughed, then
stopped short with a great thrill. It was not the Countess Minna, whom
he had looked for, but the Princess.

For a moment he could not speak; only stare at her as she stood before
him, the dim light and shadow heightening her beauty by affording of it
no more than a suggestion.

“You, Princess?”

The low tone vibrated with recognition as though struck from the depth
of his heart. It was eloquent of an acknowledgment that could not be
spoken.

“Minna came long ago to release you, but found the chapel locked up.”

Her calm tone was in strong contrast to his fervent ejaculation:--

“Thank Heaven for that!”

A ray of moonlight, guided by a moving branch, stole along the organ
screen and for a moment lighted up her face.

“And you have come, my Princess.” He spoke in a rapturous whisper,
for the intoxication of her beauty, the splendid graciousness of her
presence bereft him of voice. How could he address her as he would have
spoken to Countess Minna?

There was a suggestion of sad playfulness in her tone as she replied.
“Was it not fitting that I should return the service you rendered me,
and free you? But, indeed, I came to say good-bye!”

Her face was now in the dim shadow again and somehow he felt glad of
it. There are joys so great that they suddenly turn to torture.

“Must it be?” he said pleadingly.

“You know it must be,” she answered in the same repressed tone.

“You are going,” he said, “to marry Prince Ludwig against your will.”

“Whether that be or not it can make no difference to us,” she replied
still coldly. Ah, if he might only hear her speak again with the warmth
of last night.

“I cannot leave you, my Princess, even at your bidding.”

“You are unkind to disobey.”

“If you wish me to go, if you will be happier in the knowledge that you
will never set eyes on me again----”

“It is not a question of happiness.”

“Of duty?”

She threw back her head and forced a laugh. “It is a matter, as I said
last night, of madness or sanity.”

“Then let me be mad.”

“No, no.”

“Let me stay, if only to breathe the same air, to see you, far off, yet
to see you, to wake every morning with a hope----”

“No, no!” Ah, her heart was sending warmth into her voice at last.

“You cannot be so cruel, my Princess.” He was pleading now with
desperate earnestness. “Let me stay near you.”

“It is you that are cruel. You must go.”

“Ah, think how you say that. You are my queen, my goddess; I must obey
you. I am to go? Tell me! Tell me!”

She wavered. She was a woman, circumscribed, starved of love and
joy. They were within her reach now, could she keep back her hand
from taking them? Madness, she kept telling herself. Yes, but what a
delicious madness. The strain was at breaking point, then suddenly it
was relieved. Her innate resolution and pride came to her rescue. With
an intense effort she put forth all her strength blindly in a last
effort, and such was her power of repression that the struggle, the
desperate crisis were but faintly indicated.

“Yes; you are to go.”

For very chivalry he could urge her no farther. A shadow passed across
the chapel. “Princess!” Minna’s voice was heard in a low call of
warning.

The Princess turned apprehensively. “I must go. Good-bye,” she said.

She gave him her hand. He seized it in both of his and raised it with
a swift passionate action to his lips. “It is indeed farewell, dear
Princess? I am to go?”

She did not speak; he raised his head and looked in her face for an
answer, still keeping her hand in his. Impulsively, before he could
realize the action, she had bent forward and touched his cheek with her
lips. “Stay,” she said, “my love.”

“Princess, are you mad? You will be missed,” Minna cried, suddenly
appearing. “Run for your life! I will let Herr von Bertheim out.”

The hastening push she gave him seemed to wake him from a delicious
dream. Next moment he was outside the chapel and alone.




CHAPTER VII

OMPERTZ DRIVES A BARGAIN


“No news of Prince Ludwig?” the Duke enquired.

The Chancellor shook his head. “None. He seems to have cut himself off
from news. It is tiresome.”

“After all,” said his highness, “there is no great hurry.”

“There is hurry,” Rollmar contradicted. There were occasions when he
did not concern himself to be too deferential to his master, and this
was one of them. “It is quite time that the Prince at least showed
himself. The effect on the Princess of this indifference may be
disastrous.”

“I hardly think that,” the Duke objected with a weak man’s decision; a
stupid man’s confidence in his own judgment. “_Omne ignotum----_”

“The application of the aphorism is wide,” rejoined Rollmar bluntly,
“but it does not embrace royalties.”

“Oh?” questioned the Duke, feeling that it had very often included
himself.

“No,” the schoolmaster maintained with an expression of something like
contempt for his royal pupil. “Decidedly not where political expediency
is in the air. If it were a simple lieutenant of cavalry, now, instead
of the heir to a throne, the _pro magnifico_ might apply. A young
soldier has possibilities to every woman, a prince only to those of the
middle classes.”

“You don’t know Ruperta.”

“I know women,” the Councillor retorted dryly. “Royalty has no charms
for them until they are over thirty-five.”

“Oh, you think so?” the Duke said doubtfully, having no more definite
argument ready. “I thought a good deal more of it before I was that age
than I do now.”

“Is it possible?” The Duke looked for the sneer he knew was there, but
it was only to be felt, not seen, so he had no excuse for offence.
“Your Highness was not--a woman.”

That was the worst of Rollmar; his cleverness was useful,
indispensable, his stinging tongue abominable. Duke Theodor often
wished his minister less able, that he might afford to do without, or
at any rate, with less of him. To have it conveyed to you daily, even
under the cloak of homage, that your crown covers a pair of ass’s ears
is galling; it needs a full and constant supply of self-opinion for its
constant rejection. Happily in Duke Theodor’s case the flow showed no
signs of failing.

“You think,” he suggested, drawing back from the thin ice at its
ominous crack, “you think my daughter will take offence at the cavalier
way in which Prince Ludwig seems inclined to treat the business?”

Rollmar protruded his under jaw. “I don’t know whether the Princess
will take offence, but the question is whether she may not take a fancy
to someone else, someone visible and tangible, which Prince Ludwig at
present is not.”

“I should hope,” said the Duke pompously, “my daughter would not do
that.”

“I should hope so, too,” Rollmar added dryly.

“It is impossible,” his highness declared, nettled at the doubt in the
other’s tone.

“It is not only possible, but highly probable,” the Chancellor declared
boldly.

“What makes you say that, Baron?”

“My knowledge of human nature, your Highness.”

There was no denying that knowledge which had often done the state good
service. So the Duke did not think it wise to protest further.

“You have suspicions?” he enquired.

“Happily, none--as yet.”

“What do you propose? To find this young man and bring him to his
senses?”

“Precisely; your Highness’s forethought has anticipated my intention.”
The astute old man made a point of always crediting the royal brains
with any little balance that might be due to them.

“It would be well to have the affair settled,” the Duke murmured,
hoping he might not be called upon to suggest a plan for the reclaiming
of the Prince.

“It must be settled,” the Minister returned stooping over his papers.

The note of determination was enough to show that the furtherance
of the object might well be left to the wily old brain for its best
accomplishment. The Duke dismissed the subject with a yawn of relief.
The discussion of family arrangements with Rollmar had usually the
result of making him feel uncomfortable. The armour-plate of mere
dignity is a trifle thin for the shots of intellect.

“To change the subject, I hope your Highness is resolved to second my
efforts in the direction of order by strictly enforcing the brawling
edict,” the Chancellor observed, in a tone less of enquiry than
injunction.

“Why, certainly, certainly,” his highness responded.

“A man was killed in the streets a few nights since,” Rollmar
continued; “outside the Hof-Theater. This sort of thing is abominable
and cannot be permitted. Brawling leads to riot and riot to revolution.”

“Heaven forbid,” ejaculated the Duke.

“It must be put down with a strong hand.”

“Assuredly, Baron. I leave that to you.”

“Clemency is entirely out of place, your Highness.”

“None shall be shewn. Is the offender in this case under arrest?”

“Unfortunately not, Sire. But he is well known, and is sure to be
taken. I have made a point of insisting that he shall not escape.”

“Good. Yes, we must put down disorder even at the cost of a little
disagreeable severity, eh, Baron?”

“Better tighten the strap than lose the helmet,” Rollmar observed with
grim sententiousness, and took his leave.

In his cabinet he heard that the peccant Captain von Ompertz had been
caught and clapped into jail. “That is well,” he commented in a tone
that promised scant mercy for the rollicking _sabreur_.

Doubtless it was because his chief thoughts just then were concentrated
on the alliance he had determined to bring about, that when a scrawled
note from the newly caged one was apologetically laid before him in
which the prisoner insisted that if an interview were granted him
he could lay before the Chancellor a certain fact that had come to
his knowledge which might have an important bearing on the projected
marriage, he, after tossing the message aside contemptuously,
astonished his subordinate by ordering Captain von Ompertz to be
brought to him. Presently the jovial swashbuckler was ushered in and,
at a sign from the Minister, left alone with him.

“Well, Captain, so you are caught at last. What have you to say?”

Rollmar had lifted his head from the writing before him and, leaning
back, regarded the prisoner with a careless but none the less searching
look. A greater contrast between two men could hardly have been
found. The standing figure, big, brawny, workmanlike, with the round,
weather-tanned face crowned by a mass of thick fair hair, the shabby
half-military dress with the empty scabbard eloquent of duress, the
air jaunty with its suggestion of an unquenchable spirit; then the
other personality, mind, as it were, confronting matter, small, wizened
almost, the dress neat but scrupulously simple, the face seamed with
a lifetime of deep thought and restless ambition, placid now as he
surveyed the rough man at his ease, save for the suggestion of energy
and power in the fierce, inscrutable eyes fixed on his visitor. To do
von Ompertz justice it must be said that he never for a moment seemed
to quail under the glance in which could be read life or death with the
chances all inclining towards the latter.

“Yes, Excellency; I have been caught, unfortunately,” the soldier
replied bluffly. “My own fault. I was fool enough to come back like a
fox to my hole when I might easily have scampered across the frontier.”

“The law,” observed Rollmar, with his characteristic trick of
sententiousness, “is ever ready to acknowledge its indebtedness to a
criminal’s own want of common-sense.”

A shadow of sternness fell over the prisoner’s face as he said, “Your
pardon, Excellency, I am no criminal.”

“You are a law-breaker,” Rollmar returned coldly. “A brawler, a
manslayer.”

“I drew in self-defence,” von Ompertz protested hotly.

The only reply was a shrug.

“My only offence was that I happened to be a better swordsman than the
man who attacked me.”

The Chancellor took up a pen and beat it carelessly on his hand. “I
do not propose to try the merits of the case,” he said with cutting
indifference to the other’s protest. “That is for the judge. You have
a communication to make to me. I have no time to waste in listening to
anything else.”

For a moment, so stinging was the old man’s tone, Ompertz looked as
though he would meet it by a hot refusal. But the irritation was put
aside as he replied with a laugh, “I thought it as well to justify the
condition I am going to make.”

Rollmar raised his eyebrows. “Condition?”

“Naturally,” the prisoner returned boldly. “I am not going to throw
a chance away. A secret of state importance has come to me in
extraordinary fashion. I want my liberty; not much to ask, since my
only crime was to prevent myself being run through by a moustachioed
booby who was the real brawler.”

“His Highness,” said Rollmar, “has declared to me within the hour that
he will show no mercy towards disturbers of the peace.”

“Then my secret will go to the gallows with me. And to the woeful
disturbance, I fear, of his Highness’s peace.”

The inscrutable old man was probably anxious, certainly curious, but
he did not show it. “I can but lay your case before the Duke,” he said
with a shrug. “It all depends upon the nature of this secret of yours.
It may be nothing; it may be known to us.”

“It is neither, Excellency.”

“It concerns----” the Chancellor reached for the missive as though he
had forgotten the contents, “the royal marriage? Ah! What can you know
of that?” he questioned scornfully.

“Something your Excellency would and his Highness would not care to
know,” Ompertz answered bluntly. “Something affecting the honour of the
royal house.”

The Chancellor gave in his mind a shrewd guess. “Just so,” he observed
indifferently. “Connected with the Princess?”

“Perhaps. I shall not say till I have your Excellency’s assurance of
pardon and liberty.”

“H’m!” Rollmar leaned back and seemed to ponder whether it were worth
while to make such a bargain. The busy, plotting brain soon had an
expedient to meet the case.

“You had better speak out Captain,” he said, with the suggestion of a
threat.

“With pleasure against an order of release under your Excellency’s
hand,” the undaunted Ompertz persisted.

Rollmar laughed. “You are a bold fellow.”

“It is my trade,” the prisoner returned simply. “As a free man I shall
be happy to place my boldness at your Excellency’s disposal.”

The old minister gave a half-amused, half-contemptuous glance at the
pertinacious mercenary. The pawn in his game might well be saved for a
future sacrifice. He drew a piece of paper towards him and wrote a few
lines. “There, Captain, you are a free man. I trust you have something
of value to pay for your passport.” He tossed the paper across the
table and lay back in his chair his glittering eyes burning like
symbolic lamps of craft and power.

“If I satisfy you not as to that, Excellency,” Ompertz said sturdily,
“I will tear up this paper and go back to my cage. I am an honest man,
noble if I cared----”

“Go on, tell me. I have no time for your family history,” Rollmar
interrupted.

“This, then, it is, Excellency. I have said that a foolish impulse
brought me back here into the net which was spread for me. I thought
I might lie _perdu_ in a snug place I know of, but to get there
unrecognised proved not so easy as I imagined. Chut! When once a man
has a price on his head there is a hue and cry ready for him at every
corner. So it was that I found myself in the city unable to go forward
or retreat for fear of detection. But I contrived to climb unseen into
the royal park, and lay hidden there all the afternoon. Then as dusk
came on I heard the baying of hounds, and suddenly bethought me of the
patrol with their dogs that I had been told made the tour of the park
every evening. Here was a pretty predicament; after all my trouble,
to be run down like a rat in a trench; so I came out of my lair and
looked round for a line of escape. I felt fairly certain the patrol
would confine their attentions to the outer belt of the park where the
covert was thickest.”

“So?” The Chancellor took a mental note of the shortcoming.

“I had plenty of time,” Ompertz continued, “to make a bolt to avoid
them, since, from the sound, the dogs were still at a good distance
off. To climb the outer wall was risky, as I might thereby slip as it
were out of the rain into the gutter. The other alternative was to make
for the palace buildings and lurk there till the patrol had passed,
trusting to my native wit and acquired impudence to carry me through if
challenged. At least I was not likely to be recognised in those high
quarters.

“It would not do to run, as I might pass into view, so I walked soberly
across the park, boldly, as though coming from the gate on business
at the Palace. My plan appeared to succeed; I got under cover of the
buildings without exciting any serious notice, and ensconced myself in
the porch of the royal chapel. Scarcely, however, had I taken my stand
there when I heard voices on the other side of the door. In a second I
had slipped away and was behind one of the buttresses. The owners of
the voices came out and went off. Then it occurred to me that while the
patrol was on its rounds I might best be hidden in the chapel. I went
in softly and for better security--I hope the sacrilege may be forgiven
me, but reverence must give place to necessity--I crept under the altar
and lay there snug and safe from observation. As soon as I judged it
was safe to get back to the plantation, I was preparing to creep out,
when I heard a heavy footstep, and then, to my dismay, the locking of
the door. Well, as I found myself a prisoner I resolved to make the
best of the situation. A church is not, I must confess, the place I
would choose to pass a night in; I prefer livelier quarters. But I am
used to the fortune of war, and my billet was dry, if somewhat dusty.
So I crept back under the altar where I found some cloths, and made
myself so comfortable a bed that being dog-tired, Excellency, I went
off to sleep as in any four-poster.

“When I woke and had occupied some moments in realising where the
devil, or rather, in the name of the saints, I was, I peeped out under
the altar-cloth and saw it was night, although the moonlight enabled
me to see round the place pretty clearly. I was just crawling out
to stretch my limbs which were aching somewhat from the penitential
hardness of the holy floor, when I became aware that I was not alone in
the chapel. I am coming now, Excellency, to the kernel of my secret.”
Von Ompertz had by this acquired an easy confidence from the intense
interest with which the fierce eyes were fastened on him.

“Go on,” Rollmar said curtly.

“The shadow,” he resumed, “of a human figure crossed one of the
pillars, then the figure itself came into my view. A lady.”

“Ah!” The exclamation was involuntary, but it told that the disclosure
had been half anticipated.

“The lady,” von Ompertz continued, “was the Princess.”

The minister did not give the sign of surprise for which the other
paused. “Go on,” he commanded again.

“She came towards me, then turned off by the organ. Under the strange
circumstances a little curiosity was perhaps pardonable, seeing that,
lying as I was in the deep shadow, its indulgence was safe. What was
the Princess doing then all alone in the dark? I crawled forward till
I could see round the screen behind which she had disappeared. Then I
witnessed an unexpected sight, Excellency. I am a man of honour, and
not even to save my neck would I have divulged what I saw to any one in
this world but yourself.”

With a slightly cynical curve of the lip, Rollmar nodded him on.
Ompertz came a step nearer and continued in a lower tone.

“The Princess was standing by an open door in the organ. From out the
opening a figure appeared--a man’s.”

“He came from the organ?”

“Even so, Excellency; from the inside of the organ. They stayed there
talking together. Unfortunately the man stood in the darkness. I could
just make out his form, but not clearly enough to be able to identify
his face were I to see him again. But the Princess stood where a streak
of moonlight showed her face and--well, one has only two eyes, and if
one had twenty the Princess would engage them all.”

“Go on with the story,” Rollmar said with quiet austerity.

Ompertz gave a bow of compliance. “They spoke together for some time,
but in so low a tone that I could catch no word. Then I got a great
start. So intent was I with observing the pair--for although I felt
it was unfair, yet I dared not move back to my hiding-place--that I
did not notice another lady who had entered the chapel and came now so
close as almost to tread on me. Luckily she seemed in such a fluster
that she did not see me. I lay still, scarcely daring to breathe.

“‘Princess!’ she cried. ‘Come! it is time. You will be missed!’

“She moved away towards the door. And then, Excellency, I saw the
Princess kiss the man. They separated on that. Her Highness hurried
away, while the other lady took her companion to the door which I heard
unfastened and locked again. That is all, Excellency. I had to stay
there half-starved till morning, and when I got outside my hunger led
to my arrest. After all, it was my duty to----”

Rollmar held up his hand with a silencing gesture. He was thinking
rapidly, acutely, and what he wanted was facts not comments. Those he
could supply shrewdly enough himself.

“So you never saw the man’s face?”

“No, Excellency. His face was never in the light.”

“Should you recognise his voice?”

“Possibly.” Ompertz felt it his cue to make himself indispensable.

For several minutes there was silence in the room. The Chancellor had
motioned Ompertz to a chair, and himself sat plunged in such intense
thought as, indeed, the information called for. Perhaps, had the airy
swashbuckler had an idea of the part he himself was occupying in that
busy cogitation he might not have sat quite so comfortably assured of
his fortunes. However, expediency was on his side, and for the moment
all was well with him.

The silence was oppressive, the atmosphere of the room heavy, the
ticking of the great clock so monotonous that the soldier of fortune,
whose night’s rest had been disturbed of late, could hardly smother a
yawn. But he told himself he had played his trump card at the right
moment and waited but to draw his winnings.

At length the long deliberation came to an end; the expedient had been
determined on, and Rollmar spoke.

“I am glad to know, Captain von Ompertz, that you are fully alive to
the importance and, above all, to the delicate nature of the secret
which chance has revealed to you. It is fortunate, Captain von Ompertz,
that it is to a man of honour that this compromising affair has become
known.” Ompertz bowed, as accepting a deserved compliment.

“I say,” Rollmar continued with an inauspicious light in his
eyes, “it is fortunate for all parties concerned, directly and
indirectly--yourself included.”

The suggestion was unmistakable, the soldier’s second bow was given in
less comfort than the first.

Sitting with his thin, white, cruel hands clasped before him, the
hands that had woven many a web and signed many a doom, the Chancellor
resumed.

“What you saw, my good Captain, was a dangerous sight for any man to
see. But I have confidence, as I say, in your honour, your chivalry,”
(Ompertz bowed again with rising confidence) “and I mean to trust you.”

“The trust with which your Excellency is pleased to honour a poor
soldier shall never be repented,” was the mercenary’s fervent assurance.

The Chancellor pursed his lips as though to intimate he would take care
of that.

“It is,” he proceeded, “obviously imperative that this discovery should
be confined to the----” he unclasped the long fingers and counted
on them--“the five persons who already know of it. I shall, at any
rate for the present, take upon myself to keep even his Highness in
ignorance. You will understand, Captain, that state as well as personal
interests demand that this foolish affair must be crushed at once.
It is in the highest degree unfortunate that the other party in this
affair is unknown, unrecognisable. Still, that is now merely a question
of a few hours. I propose to employ you, Captain, on this secret
service.”

“I am greatly honoured, Excellency.”

“With you,” Rollmar went on, ignoring the other’s flourish of
acknowledgements, “with you inconvenient explanations will be unneeded.
You will understand. For the time being you are in my service. Here,”
he wrote a few words on a slip of paper, “is an order on my Comptroller
for pay against any present necessities. Furbish up your wardrobe, and
report yourself to me every day at noon and six o’clock. I may have
instructions for you. In the meantime keep your eyes and ears open,
live quietly, respectably, and, above all, remember that a hint of your
secret cancels your pardon.”

“Excellency,” Ompertz protested in his grandest manner, “your threat
does me less than justice. The honour of the Princess is safe in my
keeping; safer than if my life were as important to me as your words
imply.”

Rollmar gave an impatient nod of dismissal. “That is all, Captain.
Report yourself at six o’clock.”

Ompertz turned towards the door, then looked back. “The identity of the
inhabitant of the organ, Excellency? Shall I----?”

The Chancellor waved his hand impatiently. “You may leave that to me,”
he interrupted grimly.

When von Ompertz was gone he struck a bell. “Maurelli,” he said to the
attendant. A keen-eyed under-officer came in.

“I have given Captain von Ompertz his liberty for certain reasons,” the
Chancellor explained, in the quick peremptory tone of a man accustomed
to handle all the various levers of the State-machine. “I have a use
for him. Until I give orders to the contrary let an eye be kept on him,
not too closely. I do not wish the Captain to leave the city or get
drunk.”

“I understand, Excellency.”

A motion of the hand and the Chancellor was alone to work out his
strategy.




CHAPTER VIII

A SCORE AGAINST ROLLMAR


Countess Minna von Croy was a young lady of resource, of a ready wit
and, when she was put to it, of considerable courage. But there was one
person in the Court, perhaps the one person in the world, of whom she
was horribly afraid. That was the Chancellor.

For the Duke--by himself, that is minus his wily old Minister--she
did not care a straw. She could laugh at him as a weak, pompous
figurehead, the mere stalking horse of the Chancellor, from whom he
derived what terrors he possessed; a very marionette, which Rollmar’s
skilful fingers made to strut and posture and frown as suited the
purpose of the moment. She was never tired of reflecting, when in the
royal presence, what a wonderful character the late Duchess must have
possessed, since the Princess was so unlike and so vastly superior to
her father. Yes, the Duke she could look on with a certain careless
tolerant contempt. But the Chancellor? Ah, that was another matter.
Countess Minna hated and despised herself for fearing him--for she
was, under the laziness bred of court life, a girl of spirit--but,
fight against it as she might, she could not get over the uncomfortable
feeling of trepidation and nervousness with which the presence of
that astute, inscrutable old schemer always inspired her. He seemed
to carry with him an environment and an atmosphere of disquietude; a
quiet terrorism radiated from him; he was power incarnate, the power
of a mighty will and a resourceful brain, a quick tongue that would
sting like a snake’s, and a trick of speech that always seemed to carry
something behind its actual words. No wonder Minna was afraid of him;
her sprightly sallies, when she nerved herself to stand up to him, fell
blunted against the old man’s cynical condescension. He made her feel
small, and that was why she so hated him and herself for her fear of
him.

Just at this juncture, too, she might well have reason to regard him
with an especial apprehension; consequently it was with a good deal
of trepidation which defied her powers of self-command that she found
herself invited to a private interview with the Chancellor, in what she
was always pleased to call, the leopard’s den.

He received her with stern politeness which did not allay her tremors.
She was not kept in suspense as to the object of the interview; the
Chancellor was notably a man to come to the point, when there was no
object in delaying the arrival.

“I am sorry, Countess, to have to charge you with a breach of
confidence,” he began severely.

The challenge steadied Minna. “A breach of confidence, your
Excellency?” she echoed in well-simulated surprise.

“An exceedingly serious one,” he rejoined, “an abuse of your position
as maid of honour to the Princess.”

“Excellency!” she exclaimed in open-eyed astonishment. He held up his
hand to check her till she should have heard him out.

“Your position as close companion to the Princess is pre-eminently a
responsible one. It has come to my knowledge, Countess, that you have
grossly abused it.”

“Tell me how, Excellency,” Minna said with compressed lips, fearing
lest an unruly inflection should betray her.

“I am about to give you that superfluous information,” he replied with
cutting emphasis, “although it is mere waste of time to do so. The
Princess has lately formed an improper acquaintance; improper, that is,
certainly so far as the nature of the acquaintanceship goes. You have
abetted her in certain clandestine interviews. That is, precisely, what
I mean by your abuse of the trust reposed in you.”

He spoke sharply, insistently, as giving a definite explanation which
could admit of no quibbling. So, somehow or other, the meeting in the
chapel had been discovered. Clearly, Minna thought, denial was useless.
Her half paralysed wits must be set to work to make the best of the
position.

“I am not aware,” she said cautiously, “that the Princess has done
anything wrong or improper.”

“Indeed?” Rollmar’s face expressed contempt for a mental vision that
could not see a thing so obvious. “You think, then, there is nothing
wrong at any time, but especially now, on the eve of her betrothal
to Prince Ludwig of Drax-Beroldstein, in the Princess indulging in a
nocturnal interview with a man in the chapel?”

“The Princess,” Minna demurred, evading a direct answer and summoning
her courage, “hates the idea of marrying Prince Ludwig.”

“That,” returned Rollmar coldly, “is a matter which I cannot discuss
with you. It is entirely beside the question. What I have to say now
merely touches the part you have played in this scandalous affair--and
its consequences to you.”

There was an ugly hint in the last words which lost nothing in their
pointed emphasis. Poor Minna abruptly ceased to wonder how much her
tormentor knew and how he came to know it, in apprehending her own
punishment.

“I have abetted nothing scandalous,” was all she could protest, and
that feebly enough.

Rollmar gave a shrug. “I hold a different opinion, Countess. The affair
would be disreputable enough in a private family; in connection with a
Royal house it involves not only dishonour, but treason to the State.
That is unquestionable. You probably know the penalty of treason?”

The wretched Minna knew it but too well, since many a case of
ministerial vengeance had come under her notice. Such dark events
were not of infrequent occurrence and were bound to be common talk,
since it was policy not to hush them up too closely. Already she felt
herself a dead woman, or at least one for whom liberty was to be but a
recollection. It was manifest to her that, from the Minister’s point of
view, at least, the affair was sufficiently serious to warrant the most
dire measures. To do her justice, her feeling of abject despair was not
confined to herself. What would be the result to her mistress of this
discovery? Still, her own situation was the more perilous; she recalled
a similar case in which all the possessors of a scandalous secret were
removed from the face of the earth--how, could be only shudderingly
conjectured.

She could but protest her innocence of all wrongful, all treasonable
intention. Not a particularly cogent argument to move the stern old
man, whose fierce, merciless eyes seemed to shrivel up her protests.

“Call it folly rather than treason, if you please,” he retorted with
his pitiless logic; “folly, culpable folly, such as yours, is treason
where the State is concerned. An assignation, innocent or otherwise, is
common enough, its consequences would be purely domestic in every case
but one, the highest. It has been your misfortune, Countess, to allow
yourself to be mixed up in that one exception where the consequences
might be imperial and widely disastrous.”

“Yes, but, Excellency,” she urged, pricked on by apprehension of what
she dared not contemplate, “how could I know? How be to blame for a
chance meeting?”

“A chance meeting? Really, Countess, it is best to be straightforward
with me. A chance meeting? With the Princess visiting the chapel after
dark, and a man hidden in the organ?”

“Let me explain, Excellency.”

“Ah! if you please.” He leaned back, slowly rubbing his white hands
together as though feeling carelessly the talons that were ready to
strike.

“The Princess had been playing the organ that afternoon in the chapel
as is her habit,” Minna said, her voice dry with fear. “I was blowing
the bellows for her as I always do, when this----this person came in
and offered to take my place.”

“Ah! Just so. And this person was----?”

“The--the man who afterwards got inside the organ, Excellency,
because----”

“No doubt. I ask you who he was.”

The name was on her lips; then, in the extremity of her distress, an
idea, a desperate expedient flashed to her mind. She checked the answer
and hesitated. Was this unfathomable old fox really ignorant of von
Bertheim’s identity? The forlorn chance gave her courage and sharpened
her wits. She could but try.

“Come!” Rollmar insisted.

“You know his name, Excellency,” she stammered.

“I ask you.”

She looked at him, but the crumpled parchment of his face told her
nothing. Still, in her woeful plight chance was in her favour, since
she had nothing to lose. “I--I cannot tell you,” she replied, “for I do
not know.”

The cruel eyes shot forth a light which had struck despair in many a
stouter heart than this girl’s; yet she was resolute to play her game
through.

“If you are going to trifle with me, Countess, I shall hesitate no
longer in signing the order for your arrest.”

“Excellency!” she cried, trembling with a terror that was not all
simulated. “I cannot tell you that. It is impossible. I will help you
in every way to find out, I will do all I can to atone for my fault,
but I cannot tell you this man’s name.”

“You will not?”

“I cannot. It is easy for you to find out.”

“Quite,” he assented dryly. “Go on with your story.”

“Someone came into the chapel. Fearing I had done wrong to let him
remain, even to blow the organ, I opened the door and made him get in.
The Princess and I went out into the Park for a few minutes and when I
ran back to release him I found the chapel locked up for the night.”

“So you came down and let him out after dark?” Rollmar suggested with
an incredulous smile.

“Yes, Excellency. I could not let him stay there all night.”

“It would have been too bad, certainly. I am waiting to hear, Countess,
why it was necessary for the Princess to accompany you on this errand
of relief.”

“The Princess was distressed at the idea of the poor fellow being boxed
up in the organ.”

“So distressed that she was obliged to kiss him on his release?”

Minna threw up her hands in horror. She was beginning to feel at home
in her part now. “Kiss! Excellency, you have been grossly misinformed.
Someone has been maligning the Princess to you. It is abominable!”

“It is,” he agreed with a grim smile. “So there was no kiss, eh?”

“Most assuredly not My dear Princess kiss a man like that! You don’t
know her, Excellency.”

He gave a shrug and a look which suggested that if he could not
read the Princess he was at least able to decipher her maid of
honour without trouble. “We shall see, my Countess,” he observed
significantly. “And let me tell you at once that you are very foolish
if you think to hoodwink me. Now, take care. Do I understand you to
suggest that the Princess is engaged in no love affair?”

“A love affair? Perhaps. With the love on one side and that not the
Princess’s. And a kiss! It is preposterous. I take upon myself to deny
the kiss.”

“Never mind the kiss.” Rollmar softened his expression into one of
vulpine humour, and continued almost pleasantly, “I fancy you know more
than you choose to tell, Countess. Never mind”--he silenced her protest
with a gesture--“it makes but the difference of an hour or two. Now,
your one chance of escape from the consequences of your--indiscretion
is to make amends by giving me assistance in this affair.”

This proposal had been precisely what Minna had been aiming at for the
furtherance of her delusive expedient, but she was careful not to show
eagerness. Her courage rose with the realisation that at last she had
a chance of measuring her wits successfully against her cunning old
bugbear.

“But the Princess?” she objected with the suggestion of a scruple. “You
ask me to do her an ill turn.”

“On the contrary,” was the natural retort. “I employ you to do her a
good turn, to be loyal to her best interests. You will not help the
affair by refusing, while it is obviously desirable that the secret
should be confined to ourselves. Still,” he gave one of his ominous
shrugs--“you are at liberty to refuse, but I am afraid it is the only
liberty you can count on.”

The threat appeared to decide her. After a moment’s hesitation she
said: “Your Excellency wishes to discover the man who courts the
Princess?” He nodded. “Then if I may be so bold as to suggest a plan
you might make an unexpected visit to the Royal Chapel at about five
o’clock to-day, in the meantime giving no hint of your suspicions to
any one.”

He looked at her keenly, and under those searching eyes it was all she
could do to keep an expression of ingenuousness.

“Very well,” he said curtly, rising to end the interview. “I need
hardly warn you, Countess, not to attempt to deceive me.”

“I could not hope to do so, Excellency, even if I wished,” she replied
humbly. “And you will soon see that I have no wish.”

He held open the door, and she passed out, hiding with one of her
demurest looks the exultant relief at her heart.

That afternoon, close upon the appointed hour, the Chancellor came
quietly into the Royal Chapel--not so quietly, however, but that Minna,
cunningly on the watch, detected the first signal of his arrival.

There was hurried whispering, a scramble and a hiding away, with a
momentary giving out of the wind supply in the organ. The Chancellor
came in quiet, fox-like and confident, ostensibly listening to the
music, but having eyes for every movement round him. He stood by the
screen overlooking the player till the Princess turned and saw him.

“Ah, Baron!” she said, with some show of composure, “how you startled
me.”

“Do not let me interrupt you, Princess,” he protested grimly.

“Oh, I have finished playing,” and she left the keyboard. “I did not
know you cared for music, Baron.”

“I was a player in my youth,” he replied readily, “before the business
of state-craft left me no time for the pleasures of mere sound. Ah,” he
went on blandly, “this old organ has a history; it would be a pity to
have it removed. I came in to examine it.”

“The organ, Baron?” the Princess exclaimed incredulously and, it
seemed to him, with trepidation, making allowance for her power of
self-control.

“This organ,” he repeated. “There is a question of replacing it.”

“You are going to try it, Baron,” the Princess laughed, making way for
him to reach the player’s seat.

“My fingers have long ago lost their cunning,” he returned with a
gesture of protest, and a half-veiled look which suggested that their
cunning had migrated to another part of his anatomy. “But at least I
know something of instruments and will look at this.”

He affected to make a cursory examination of the manuals, the stops
and pedals, counted the pipes, and so worked round to the door giving
access to the interior. A look of intelligence had passed between him
and Minna, and he felt confident that he had trapped his prey. “Now let
me take a look inside,” he said casually.

“You, Excellency? It is impossible,” Minna affected to protest. “It is
frightfully dusty, no one but a mechanic can go inside.”

But he waved her aside with a smile at her objection.

Then the Princess gave a forced laugh.

“Really, Baron, apart from the dust it is hardly dignified for our
Chancellor to creep into the inside of the organ. You really will
consult your dignity by delegating that inspection to the mechanic.”

He turned and eyed her uncompromisingly. “If I have served your father
well, Princess, it is because I have made a rule to look with my own
eyes into everything that concerned his welfare and that of the State.”

“But, surely the organ, Baron----?”

“May include a question of greater importance and delicacy than one
would suppose,” he rejoined significantly. “Therefore, in pursuance of
my rule I am going to look inside.”

There was clearly no more protest to be made in view of that stern
resolve. Minna stood aside with anxiety on her face. The Baron turned
the latch and pulled open the narrow door. The sharp eyes instantly
detected a pair of legs in military boots, the upper part of the
owner’s body being hidden behind the heavy framework.

The Chancellor turned round to the Princess with a triumphant glitter
in his eyes. “What did I tell you, Princess? You see the wisdom of
my rule. And how unwise it would have been to have delegated this
examination. The organ does contain superfluous matter which I am
better fitted than a mechanic to remove. No wonder, Princess, the
instrument is liable to be out of order. I think we must have one built
for you in your private apartments where your playing will be less
open to be interfered with. Now, sir,” he changed to a loud peremptory
tone--“have the goodness to come out at once!”

He stepped back from the door. The man inside, thus summoned, was heard
moving. The Baron put a silver whistle to his lips, and, as it sounded,
Captain von Ompertz, alert and business-like, entered the chapel by the
outer door. As he did so the hider in the organ appeared and sprang
down to the floor. At sight of him the expression on the Baron’s face
changed from malicious anticipation to chagrined astonishment, as on
those of the Princess and Minna pretended anxiety gave way to amused
triumph. For the man who stood before him, whom he was there to arrest
and send off to secret execution, was his own son, Udo Rollmar.




CHAPTER IX

A FALSE POSITION


Chancellor Rollmar had that night much food for cogitation and
scheming. That he had been shrewdly tricked was an idea which an
interview with his son did not dispel. Udo was sulky and inclined to
be defiant. He did not see why he might not be a sufficiently suitable
match for the Princess. The notion was attractive enough to the Baron’s
ambition, but his knowledge of the world and politics told him that it
was practically out of the question, and he said so.

“I do not see it, father,” Udo protested in an aggrieved tone. “You are
to all intents Duke here, since you are universally acknowledged as the
Duke’s master. Where, then, is the inequality?”

But the astute old Minister’s answer was ready. “You forget, my dear
Udo, that royalty and intellect are two vastly different things. They
are, and must ever be, unequal. They are as the owner and the captain
of a ship. The captain is in trusted command, yet not one inch of rope
or stitch of canvas belongs to him.”

“The captain’s son may aspire to the owner’s daughter,” Udo argued.

“Not on an equality,” his father rejoined; “moreover, and by the
articles of the ship of state, such contingencies are interdicted. No,
Udo, it is a magnificent idea and as manifestly impracticable. You will
do well to put it from your mind.”

“Even if the Princess herself be willing?”

The Baron had shrewd doubts of that. “It seems to me that this is more
an affair of the maid than the mistress.”

Udo flushed. His father’s suggestion found unpleasant corroboration
in the fact that it had indeed been Minna who had invited him that
afternoon to the chapel. The Baron took sagacious note of his silence.
He was, perhaps, notwithstanding, a little disappointed at the token
that he had hit the mark so nearly, for although its growth may be
stunted yet ambition is a plant that will spring up and force its way,
refusing to be choked and withered by the sturdier bushes of discretion
and sagacity with which time besets it.

“Have you any reason to think that the Princess is in love with you?”
he asked bluntly.

“Hardly that yet,” Udo was fain to answer, laughing a little awkwardly
under his father’s searching gaze.

“The Princess dislikes the idea of this projected marriage with Prince
Ludwig. She is likely to be rebellious. You must not let her in any
reckless spirit make a fool of you.”

The words carried more sting than the speaker intended. “It is you,”
Udo returned sneeringly, “who have set your heart on this marriage. I
cannot expect you, where affairs of state are involved, to care even
for your son’s happiness.”

“You cannot expect me to foster your foolish hopes,” old Rollmar
retorted.

“I have a rival provided and backed up by my father,” Udo declared
hotly.

The Baron gave a shrug. “You talk nonsense.”

But the young man was not in a state of mind to see the weak point of
his grievance. “It is unfortunate for you,” he continued viciously,
“that this husband you have provided does not come to your bidding. Is
it not time you produced him?”

The Baron smiled indulgently. Perhaps he could make allowances for a
son to whom he had transmitted the whole of his malignity and but a
modicum of his cleverness. “You will allow me to know best,” he said
quietly, “how to conduct the affairs of this duchy. Prince Ludwig will
be here soon enough, and were he not to come at all it would hardly
open the door to your pretensions. Did I think there was a chance of it
I should hardly overlook you in the matter.”

But the young man was still ruffled. “A chance! You seem to take care,
my good father, that I shall not have a chance, with your ill-timed
descent upon our meeting-place----”

“I looked to find any one but you, my dear Udo.”

“And yet you think you know everything.”

The Baron was content to reflect that there was not much that escaped
him, and this trifling ignorance was temporary. “I heard,” he said,
“that the Princess was in the habit of meeting a man in the chapel,
but the identity of the lover was, possibly from motives of delicacy,
withheld from me. It was my business to discover who was hidden in the
organ.”

“May I ask how you came to suspect my hiding-place?”

“I heard of your being shut up in the organ the previous night.”

“What?” Udo was surprised out of his sullen humour. “I shut up in the
organ? Never in my life till to-day.”

The suspicion in his father’s mind that he had been deluded became
a certainty. “So,” he exclaimed, without betraying the slightest
discomfiture, “then if you speak the truth, my dear Udo, we have both
been prettily tricked.”

Udo’s face grew darker. “How tricked?”

The Baron shrugged. “Our Princess has a lover, and you, my boy, are not
he.”

“Who is he?” Udo demanded with vicious eagerness.

“Ah, that is what I must know, shall know in a few hours,” his father
replied grimly. “He will not enjoy your immunity.”

“I hope not,” Udo observed amiably.

“I have a blood-hound on his track. You may trust me to run him to
earth. When a woman stoops to trickery she is more than a match for the
cleverest man; her strength lies in her weakness--and in his.”

Which saying was not exactly a soothing balm for Captain Udo’s smarting
vanity.

So the Chancellor had been outwitted for the nonce; he was, however,
far too diplomatic to let the Princess or Minna see that he was aware
of it, or to show the slightest spleen. On the contrary, he took an
opportunity when they met at a royal dinner-party that evening of
mildly bantering the Princess on her supposed predilection for his son.
“It is scarcely a fair game to play with my poor boy, Highness,” he
said half ruefully, “to lead him on to dream of the unattainable.”

“Was it my fault, Baron?” she returned. “And for that matter, is it not
yourself who insist on placing me above everybody’s reach--save one?”

“Do not blame the steward for keeping guard over his master’s
treasure,” Rollmar rejoined.

“Burying the talent, Baron.”

“Nay, keeping it for the man who can put it to the best use, not
allowing it to be frittered away and wasted.”

“And in the meantime we are beggars since our fortune is locked up and
unnegotiable. Really, Baron, your plan may be sound policy, but it has
its disadvantages. To go no farther, you have deprived me of a willing
organ-blower.”

“I shall be happy to replace him by a less aspiring one,” he returned
with a smile; “whose position will not warrant his exploring the
interior of the organ when the music is interrupted.”

She gave a petulant shrug. “I see poor Minna will have to resume her
work at the bellows. Perhaps it is best. I presume you have told
Captain Rollmar that his services are dispensed with?”

“I have told my son that wind is apt to fan a spark into a dangerous
flame.”

“You hear, Minna?” the Princess said to her friend who was near. “You
are not in future to call young men to your assistance when I play the
organ. The wind blown by a man is nothing but the breath of scandal,
and our dear Baron is going to have a lock put on the door lest the
works should be tampered with by our cavaliers taking sudden refuge
inside.”

Meanwhile Captain von Ompertz had received instructions to keep a
close watch on the chapel and the park, and especially to note all the
less conventional goings and comings of the Princess and her maid.
Notwithstanding this, however, Minna had, before the order had been
given, found an opportunity of warning Ludovic to keep away from the
palace. Had it not been for this it is likely that the Chancellor’s
desired prey might, after all, have fallen into his hands that
afternoon. As it was, Ludovic, though troubled and impatient, kept
safely away. The message, however, was not entirely one of despair, for
Minna had, on her own responsibility, added a few words to the effect
that should the Princess or she think proper to write, the missive
would be placed under the slab of a ruined sun-dial which stood in a
remote nook of the royal park. Nearer to the palace than that point
he was warned not to approach unless especially bidden. That, at any
rate, was something to feed his hopes upon, and he lived in happy
anticipation of what, perhaps, the next of his morning and evening
visits to the old sun-dial might have in store for him.

Von Ompertz did his best to deserve his patron’s confidence, although
this detective work was not exactly what he had been used to, or indeed
congenial to him. Still he was a soldier of fortune, literally and
figuratively, and ready to take any official work that came in his way.
The pay was good, the prospects, at least as he fancied, still better;
and, after all, he was serving the state, and to hire his services
and his fealty to one state or another was his vocation. Yes, he told
himself, he was lucky to have come so well out of a hanging matter, and
must not grumble if the work which had practically earned his release
was not quite such as he would have chosen. So he paraded the park,
keeping a wary eye on the chapel and the private entrances to the
palace, with his beloved sword, now happily restored to him, loose in
its scabbard, and when the first distasteful idea had been dulled he
found himself as eager to earn his pay by catching the Princess’s lover
as though he were but a bravo or secret agent, and not the man of such
honour as he had through a mettlesome career always striven to maintain.

His sentinel work did not, however, long remain unnoted by Countess
Minna’s sharp eyes. He was, of course, easily recognized as the man
whom Baron Rollmar had summoned to his aid in the chapel. Consequently
the reason of his patrol was not far to seek. Whenever Minna took a
stroll across the park she found herself followed by the swaggering
Captain, now gallant in his dress, his better case throwing up a
certain distinction in his appearance which his former rough, unkempt
attire had all but effaced. It was like the restoration of an old
picture; the traits of a certain nobility came out through the film
gathered by years of rough usage and neglect.

But the espionage was intolerable. Minna turned upon her follower and
demanded in high indignation what it meant. The Captain, taken by
surprise, was gallantly deferential and apologetic. He had no idea of
annoying the honoured Countess or of forcing himself upon her notice.
But strange men, presumably bad characters, had been seen loitering
about the royal precincts and it was his duty to keep watch and account
for them.

“It is, I presume,” Minna said resentfully, “no part of your duty to
follow me?”

Only as a protection and that at a most respectful distance, he assured
her. It was, he ventured to point out, the honoured Countess who had
accosted him, not he the noble Countess.

Minna was a pretty girl, and there was a certain wistful admiration in
the Captain’s eyes as he uttered the somewhat disingenuous explanation.

“When I require your escort, your protection,” she retorted, quite
unsoftened by his hyper-courteous manner, “I will ask for it.”

“When you require it, gracious Countess, it will probably be too late,”
he rejoined. “My orders are----”

“To force your services upon the ladies of the household who walk in
the park,” she exclaimed indignantly. “Perhaps when you understand that
they are uncalled-for and distasteful you will see the desirability
of a not too strict obedience to your precious orders; that is, if a
soldier can understand anything beyond the word of command.”

If the taunt stung him his low bow hid its effect. “The noble Countess
will pardon me, but the humble soldier who has been so unlucky as to
offend her has also some pretensions to nobility. The soldier’s trade
is killing; but I hope my profession has not killed the chivalry in the
last of a noble Austrian race.”

He spoke with a certain dignity and a marked softening of the bluff
manner which a rough life had given him. But Minna was in no mood to
be interested in one whom she looked upon merely as a creature of her
arch-enemy, the Chancellor.

“You can easily prove your pretension,” she returned coldly, “by
ceasing to molest me. I am quite able to take care of myself, and to
be followed about the park is hateful.”

Without waiting for further parley, she turned abruptly and walked off,
leaving him to gaze after her with a discomfited look on his face.

“A plaguey business this of mine,” he muttered. “I must either neglect
my duty or my manners. After all, Albrecht von Ompertz is a gentleman;
it goes against the grain to play the spy. And on a sweet pretty girl,
too, though, by the lightning, something of a spit-fire. Ah, there was
a time when a girl of her sort would not have spoken like that to me.
Pfui! Can I blame her if she took me for--what I am, what I have made
myself? Bah! Let me get on with it. Duty before everything; even at the
risk of offending a proud little pair of bright eyes.”

With something like a sigh he took up the burden of a false position
and strolled off watchfully in the direction Minna had gone.




CHAPTER X

BY THE MIRROR LAKE


The encounter between Countess Minna and von Ompertz had the effect of
making both watcher and watched more circumspect.

The Captain ceased to perambulate the royal precincts so openly, while
Minna’s daylight walks were of the most patently innocent kind. So far
she played her game shrewdly enough; but it was certainly a dangerous,
if not a false move, when she determined on an expedition after dusk to
the old sun-dial. The spirit of rebellion had entered strongly into the
Princess, and was fanned by her companion from motives of pure roguery
as well as for revenge for the fright which the Chancellor had given
her. It was to the Princess Ruperta intolerable that her whole life
and happiness should be dominated by this cunning old minister, and to
be subjected to a system of close espionage was more than her spirit
would endure. If the Duke, her father, was weak enough to submit, she
would not be so tame: she would let Rollmar see that she was no pawn
to be pushed about according to the exigencies of his political game.
She wished as dearly as he that the laggard Prince would make his
appearance; she would give him an uncomfortable time of it, and delight
in upsetting the Chancellor’s plans.

“He is wise to keep away in hiding,” she said resentfully to Minna,
“but, for all that, I should love to hear that he had arrived. The
Baron should have many a _mauvais quart d’heure_, I promise you.”

“It would be rare fun,” Minna assented. “How I should enjoy watching
the old fox’s face while you were mortifying the vanity of this
precious Prince Ludwig. You will surely have a fair field there, dear
Highness, for were he not eaten up by self-conceit he would have been
here long ago.”

“He has never shown the least sign of interest.” The Princess made a
quick gesture of anger. “And I am to marry the pig. I hate him; I hate
him, as you shall see, my dear Baron.”

Meanwhile her precious freedom should not be circumscribed. Her
feelings should not be coerced. If this hateful marriage, after a
stormy wooing, had to take place it was at least hardly to be expected
that she should calmly wait, keeping her fancy free, for this very
cavalier wooer. The Princess was, as has been seen, a woman of great
determination, who could be as cold as ice, nay, colder, for she had
the power of remaining at freezing point under the fiercest sun. Still,
after all--and no one knew this more shrewdly than did the Baron--she
was a woman; her force of passion was none the less strong because it
was deeply set. To such a nature her very bringing up had made for
waywardness, power in a woman implies caprice, and caprice is none the
less absolute because the power is bounded. The road to such a woman’s
heart is not direct. They who take the straight path shall find it but
leads them to a blank wall, or at least to a fast-barred door. The
heart is set, as it were, in the centre of a maze, you may chance upon
it by taking a path which seems to lead away from your objective. There
is a cunning side inlet; a short, unexpected turn, and lo! the goal is
before you.

It was thus with Ludovic von Bertheim. He had caught the Princess’s
interest by surprise at the fortune-teller’s; the glamour of a strange
adventure was over his personality, the glimpses she had caught of his
character, so different from that shown by the young bloods she was
used to see about the Court, had captured her fancy, then her heart,
which, despite her reputation for coldness, was hungering for love. And
love had seemed so far off, so little to be hoped for now that she was
to be hand-fasted to a man whom she had never seen, and who seemed bent
on showing that he must not be expected to play the lover. Small wonder
then if, under the stress of a joyless future and wounded sensibility,
she forgot her pride of station and allowed herself to think tenderly
of a man who had so suddenly and curiously come into her life. Now,
more than ever, did she resent with all the spirit that was in her the
manifest way in which she was being used by Rollmar to further his
schemes of aggrandisement. That he should wish her to form an alliance
of high political importance she could understand; it was, from a
statesman’s point of view, reasonable enough; but that he should take
upon himself to play the spy on her, to interfere with her personal
liberty, was more than she would brook. It was monstrous, and, with a
girl of her high spirit, was simply pressing the key which would give
forth the note of rebellion.

“It is dangerous, though, Minna,” she said.

“Surely, Highness, you are not beginning to fear that old fox.”

“Not I,” she replied scornfully, “I meant for him, for the Lieutenant.”

Minna gave a shrug. “Possibly. We may tell him the risk he runs. I
wager if we appoint a meeting he will not stay away for fear of our
dear Baron; and if he should, why, let him stay away for ever.”

“He will not stay away,” the Princess asserted. “But if we should
lead him into a trap, Minna, it would be terrible. The Chancellor is
relentless.”

“At least we are not fools,” Minna declared. “I have outwitted the old
tiger-cat once; trust me, dear Highness, not only to do it again, but
to deal with that stupid swaggering fellow of his, a great fool who
calls himself noble and proves it--by playing the spy.”

So presently Minna was allowed to write a short message, and after
dark she slipped out to take it across the park to the appointed
post-office. But all her wariness did not hide her from the sharp eyes
that were on the watch. The stupid swaggering fellow she chose to
despise was an old campaigner; one whose life had too often depended on
alertness of eye and ear to be caught napping. Neither was he the fool
she was pleased to call him. He had sense enough to guess shrewdly that
her daylight walks were a blind, and to expect her appearance on a more
purposeful errand in the evening.

If it went against the grain to spy upon a woman, Ompertz gathered
some satisfaction from the thought that the disdainful little maid of
honour evidently despised him, which sentiment she was by no means
given to conceal wherever they chanced to meet. Now, perhaps it was to
be his turn, he thought, as he followed the dark, retreating figure
that hurried along the great avenue of elms. Von Ompertz was an expert
stalker, his trained eye could see in the dark almost as clearly as
a cat’s, he had little difficulty in keeping her within observation
and himself out of it. She gave him a long chase, but he stuck to it
successfully, and was, after much wonderment, rewarded by seeing the
note posted beneath the loose slab of the sun-dial.

In half an hour the missive was in the hands of the Chancellor; its
purport was noted, and it was restored to its place.

Rollmar was highly pleased at the near prospect of putting an end to
what might prove a tiresome impediment to his scheme. He commended
Ompertz, and with him concerted a plan of action for the next night
for which the assignation was given. The soldier was quite willing
to undertake the business single-handed, but at that suggestion the
Chancellor shook his head. It was too risky, the thing was to be
carried out swiftly, surely, noiselessly. Ompertz would be provided
with two assistants; he was to be in command, and the Chancellor’s
future favour depended upon the way in which the business would be
performed.

       *       *       *       *       *

The lovers’ place of meeting was to be by the temple on the lake in
the park. A romantic spot where the trees grew down to the water’s
edge, and arched over till their branches swept the surface. It was a
favourite place for summer picnics and fishing parties. The lake was
of great depth; being formed in a chalk basin the water was singularly
clear, and reflected in almost startling intensity the high wall of
foliage which surrounded it.

It was on the outer fringe of this belt of woodland that Ludovic
kept watch next evening for the coming of the Princess, and as the
two cloaked figures showed themselves against a vista of moonlit sky
he, with a delicious sense of anticipation, hurried forward to meet
them. After the greeting, Minna dropped behind as the others walked on
towards the lake.

“Ah, Princess,” Ludovic said, “how desperately I have longed, and how
gloriously I have been rewarded.”

“I ought not to have come,” she replied. “It is a great risk,
especially for you. Baron Rollmar is suspicious, impertinently
suspicious.”

Behind her quiet tone there was the vibration of restrained
indignation, of a sharp resentment. He joyed to realise that she talked
quite freely to him now; the impulsive act of their last meeting had
swept away the barrier of reserve which had stood between them.

“The worthy Chancellor,” he said, “has plans for your future.”

“In which I am not consulted.”

“Is that the reason you resent them?”

“Could I have a better? So even you have heard of Rollmar’s plans?”

“Even I, Princess. Vaguely. You are to marry Prince Ludwig of
Drax-Beroldstein.”

“According to the Chancellor’s predetermination.”

“And you are not inclined to fall in with his views?”

Her face was set firmly as she answered, “I am not.”

“For no other reason than that you are not a free agent?”

Was it because he was catechising her with too much freedom that she
turned on him and replied sharply? “For several other reasons.”

“Dare I ask for one?”

She gave him a curious glance, surprised, perhaps, at his persistent
questioning. “I will give you one, an all-sufficient reason. I hate
Prince Ludwig.”

“You might not if you knew him.”

“I could not do otherwise. I hate him, I hate him!”

Her vehemence seemed to surprise him. “It is a rash declaration to
make,” he said. “I venture to think, Princess, that if you saw him you
might after all recant.”

She shook her head impatiently. “Never. Nothing could ever make me like
that man; not even were he to turn out the most charming fellow in the
world. Ah, of course, he is your Prince, your future King, you are too
loyal to hear a word said against him, even from a woman whom he has
treated, to say the least, with disrespect.”

“If he has done that, my Princess----”

“If? He has. But I will not stoop to complain. Happily his conduct
suits my purpose, and for the rest my pride can take care of itself.
Your Prince has a right to your loyalty, he is nothing to me but a
disagreeable shadow, a mere name that offends me. Let us talk of him no
more.”

They had now passed through the belt of wood and arrived at the margin
of the lake. It lay before them like a strip of mirror framed in the
dark sides over which the shadows reached. At a short distance along
the margin stood a small building, an imitation of a classical temple,
its cupola on which the moonlight fell, looking like a white ball
suspended in the air, since the lower part of the structure was in
shadow. From this a short platform or landing-stage extended over the
water and terminated in a boat-house. It was towards this temple, their
appointed trysting-place, that the Princess and her companion strolled,
Minna following them at a discreet interval.

“It makes me sad, my Princess,” he said, “to think that you are not
happy, when I am powerless to prevent it. I who would give my life to
spare you an hour’s unhappiness. If our paths lay together; as it is
they seem to cross only to run wide apart.”

She did not reply at once. “Who can tell?” she said, after they had
taken some steps in silence, “what the future may hold for----” she
hesitated--“for me? Happily no one, not even our Chancellor! and so
there is just a little space for hope to squeeze itself in, although
they would try to deny that to one whose birth puts her above the joys
of ordinary humanity.”

The same note of bitterness which she had struck that night when they
talked on the terrace sounded again. It was evidently becoming the
dominant tone in her life’s music.

“Princess,” Ludovic said, “I cannot bear to hear you talk like that.
And yet how can I dare----?”

She interrupted him with a little laugh, putting out her hand and just
touching his arm for an instant. “Come, my friend,” she said lightly,
“you shall have no more of my doleful grievances. We did not meet to
waste our time in grumbling at a fate which, after all, may not be as
bad as it looks. I love to hear of the world outside our dull court
walls, to come in touch with a life which is free and unrestrained by
the hateful officialdom in which my lot is cast. Tell me of yourself.”

They had reached the temple. The Princess sat down on a bench by the
pillared entrance and signed to him to sit beside her.

“Tell me of yourself.”

“I fear,” he said, “that my history is uneventful enough. It is but
that of a young soldier who is now on furlough and travelling for
pleasure. My life’s real history starts at a point whence it is as well
known to you as to me. And you can continue it as well, or better, than
I.”

She comprehended his meaning and looked down. He spoke earnestly, yet
with a chivalrous reticence which she appreciated. For some moments
there was silence between them. The murmur of the woodland, just
rustled by a slight breeze, was pierced by the cry of a night-jar.
It came like a note of ill omen, although to the lovers the tranquil
delight of the situation was too absorbing to allow them to be
altogether conscious of their surroundings.

“I?” She laughed with wistful eyes fixed on the black wall of trees in
front of them. “I can tell nothing. You know I am mistress not even of
my own actions, although a duke’s daughter.”

His voice, as he replied, was very low, coming to her ear only
just above the murmur of the wood. “You are mistress of one thing,
Princess.” He paused, watching her anxiously for a sign of offence or
encouragement. None came. “Of me--of my heart,” he ventured.

“And my own--that is all,” she said softly.

“That is all the world to us.” He took her hand and pressed it to his
lips. He was on his knees before her. “Princess! My love! Ruperta! My
love!” he murmured.

She seemed to check an impulse and turned her head away. “It is
madness!”

“Then let me never be sane,” he whispered in rapture. “Princess, give
me one word, one word in which you shall write my life’s history--that
I am beloved by you.”

The hand he clasped was cold, the face which glorified his gaze was
set as that of a beautiful statue. Only the breath which, coming
quickly, made manifest that the cold face was but the flag of one of
the belligerents within her. “It is not fair.” The words came from her
dreamily from excess of repression.

“Fair?” he echoed passionately. “How can it be unfair to either of us?
When I would die gladly in the sound of that word from your lips, die
before a fleck of scandal could touch you.”

“I believe that,” she replied. “I am sure that you are the very soul of
honour, but----”

“Ah, let there be no ‘but,’ my love, my sweet Princess.”

“You are asking me to speak a word which both of us know well I have no
right to utter.”

“From your head, perhaps; but from your heart?” he pleaded.

She still gently shook her head. “No, no, my dear friend. You must be
content with the signs I have already given you.”

“Princess, ah, dear love, I beseech you.”

“No, no.”

“Give me at least the sign again.”

“The sign?”

“A kiss.”

The hot breath of the word touched her cheek, which seemed to glow and
catch fire from its ardency. “No, no!” she cried desperately. “You are
unkind; I--I was mad; I knew not what I did. You must forget----”

“Never! never!”

Her coldness, her innate imperiousness had vanished. She was no longer
the Princess, but a woman striving with the temptation of a passion,
which was snapping one by one the bands which had so long confined it.
She had for one moment given it working room, and now she was reeling
fainting in its grasp. With an intense, supreme effort she put out her
arms and thrust him from her. He caught her wrists in his hands and
held hers to his lips. So they stayed looking into each other’s eyes;
he had but to spread out his arms to bring their faces together.

“Go!” she panted, “go! I--this is--ah, will you not respect me and let
me go; yes, and end this madness?”

His lips scarcely moved as he answered tensely: “Yes, Princess, I will
go if you bid me.”

“I bid you go.” An effort alone kept the words steady.

He lowered her hands, but still kept them in his own. “I have offended
you?”

“You will if you do not obey me.” She was steadying herself now after
the blind struggle. The rapture was thrust away; a few moments more,
could she but keep command of herself, and she would be again the
Princess as the world knew her.

Ludovic let her hands fall free. “At least, Princess,” he said with an
effort, “you shall not say I do not respect you.”

“It is best,” she replied simply; and he longed to detect a sign of
regret in her voice.

Like the sound that startles us from a dream came Minna’s voice in a
terrified undertone as she rushed into the porch.

“Highness! we are discovered! We are lost! There are men coming. Look!”

A glance showed them figures but a few yards away advancing quickly
from the deep shadows of the trees. In an instant Ludovic had sprung
to the door. It was unlocked. With a deep exclamation of relief, he
slipped through into the circular room to which it gave access. As he
turned to fasten the door behind him he found that the Princess had
followed. “Go back,” he cried in consternation, “or you are ruined.
Trust me----”

The door was closed now, and they were in the room together. Already
could be heard the sound of a man’s voice and Minna’s replying to it.
Ludovic shot the bolt of the door, then ran across to that on the
opposite side which gave upon the lake. It was fastened.

“Princess!” he exclaimed in agony. “I have disgraced you, but----”

She was at his side, her face white with terror. “It is I who am to
blame,” she said in an agitated whisper. “They will kill you. They are
the Chancellor’s men, I know. They will kill you. Ah, they shall kill
me too.”

The streak of moonlight which fell through the window showed more than
terror in her face. It was love. For an instant he held her in his
arms. “Darling,” he whispered, strangely calm, “have no fear.” Their
lips met in a burning kiss, then again she pressed hers to his, as
though clinging to the last touch of joy the world would give her.
There was a loud knocking at the door. He gently put her from him, and
with unaccountable deliberation went towards it. She caught his arm.
“They will kill you without mercy or hesitation,” she said.

He turned. “Would it not be better,” he whispered, “for Prince Ludwig?”

She started back as though the name had been a blow to strike her. “To
save me from him, let them not take you,” she entreated. “Let us not
part with that hated name between us.”

He seemed to change his intention, as he ran to the window and opened
it. “Farewell, my love,” he said, turning towards her.

Her arms were round his neck. “Good-bye, my darling. Oh, my love, my
love! That I could die with you.”

As their lips parted he turned and dropped lightly from the window
to the landing-stage beneath. Rigid with a despair too poignant for
tears, she stood and watched him, never heeding the knocking and
rattling at the door. She saw him creep out along the pier that bridged
the platform and the boat-house, the shelter of which he gained just as
the door of the temple was sent flying open and two men stumbled into
the room.

In a moment they comprehended how their man had escaped.

“The window,” Ompertz commanded hastily. “Pardon this violence,
Highness,” he added with a bow to the Princess, who stood before him
motionless, impassive as a statue, “but we are after a fellow who
haunts this place and may offer to molest your Highness.”

Her face did not change as with dry lips she said quietly, “He is not
here.”

Meanwhile the other man had got out of the window and been joined
from outside by a third. “To the boat-house, idiots!” cried Ompertz,
hastening to the window. Minna came in and sank down trembling
and hysterical by her mistress. The men ran along the gangway and
disappeared into the boat-house. Ompertz, waiting by the window, half
turned and began another apology to the Princess. With a touch of her
wonted imperiousness she cut him short, forbidding him to address her.
One of the men came back along the pier.

“Well?” Ompertz demanded. “Have you caught him?”

“He is not there, Captain,” the fellow answered, at a loss. “The place
is empty.”

Ompertz swore an oath between his teeth. A shot rang out from the
boat-house. The two men leaned forward, peering anxiously across the
shadow-streaked water. They were too intent to hear a gasping sigh as
Princess Ruperta sank down by Minna’s side in a swoon.




CHAPTER XI

UDO SEES


Within the hour Ompertz was standing before his employer.

“Well?” Rollmar demanded sharply, as he read the soldier’s face. “You
have failed?”

“I dare not say we have, Excellency,” he answered, determined to make
the best of the business. “I should not like to swear that our man is
not lying at the bottom of the lake with a bullet through him.”

In Rollmar’s searching eyes there was a gleam of savage satisfaction.
“So? But there is a doubt about it, eh?”

“We lost the fellow in the darkness,” Ompertz explained. “But that he
went into the lake is certain, and almost so that he never came out
again. The water of the Mirror Pool is deadly cold, Excellency: he
would need all his hot blood----”

The Chancellor stopped him by an impatient gesture. “I want facts, not
theories, from a soldier. And the fact is you have bungled.”

“More likely that we have saved your Excellency the trouble of a
private execution,” Ompertz rejoined sturdily. “Pesqui swears he hit
him.”

The Chancellor’s contemptuous exclamation showed that he did not accept
that worthy’s view of the matter. “What of the Princess?” he demanded.

“The Princess thought so too,” the soldier replied imperturbably, “for
she fell into a swoon. It was that which kept me from going to see
whether her lover had been accounted for.”

“And in the meantime he got clear away,” Rollmar said in a sharp tone
of annoyance. “What did the two fools that were with you?”

Ompertz gave a shrug. “They hurried round the bank, one on each side,
and searched thoroughly.”

“When it was too late.”

The Captain seemed, even in that presence, on the verge of losing
his temper. “What could they do, Excellency? They are Italian cats:
they cannot swim in icy water. The Princess’s condition demanded my
attention. I deny that we have failed, or, at least, that we have
bungled.”

“We shall see,” Rollmar said curtly, and dismissed him.

Very early next morning a boat floated out on the lake with two men
in it, the Chancellor and Captain von Ompertz. The glassy water gave
back the two faces which peered over the gunwale, as different as
two physiognomies could well be: one with sharp, cruel, saturnine
features, and a skin like creased parchment; the other full, ruddy,
weather-beaten, its pleasant jovial expression just held in check by
the grim business of the moment. The eyes of both men were keenly
scanning the bottom of the lake, clearly visible through several
fathoms of water; but the object they sought nowhere met their
scrutiny. Over every foot of water which could possibly have been the
theatre of the hoped-for tragedy the boat glided; to and fro, turning
and backing and zig-zagging, with the keen, ruthless face bent over the
bow like a devilish figurehead, its malignant eyes eager for the sight
of a grey face staring up from the white floor beneath them. Rollmar’s
anxiety was proved by the patient care with which every place, likely
and unlikely, was examined; but all without result. At length he broke
sharply what to his companion had been an uncomfortable silence.

“Row back to the boat-house. It is as I thought. You have bungled.”

The accusation could not, judged by the result, be very well denied,
but the free-lance was not the man to let judgment go by default.

“From no lack of zeal, Excellency,” he protested as he set himself to
the sculls.

“Zeal!” There was an infinity of contempt and annoyance in the word.
“Better lack zeal than sense.”

Captain von Ompertz looked redder than the exertion of rowing would
account for. “I do not see, Excellency,” he argued sturdily, “where we
failed in sense.”

He was failing therein now, for wisdom will not argue with a
disappointed, angry man.

“Then I will tell you,” Rollmar returned, as though not unwilling to
have vent for his spleen. “The man you sought was in that building;
there were three of you, and you let him escape. All the wit shown in
the business he may fairly claim. You should have sent one of your men
round and cut off his escape on this side.”

“That I did, Excellency. I sent Forli round,” Ompertz assured him
promptly. “It was hardly my fault that in creeping along the narrow
parapet he slipped and fell into the water, thereby losing time.”

The boat touched the landing-stage. Without troubling to continue the
discussion, Rollmar stepped ashore and walked off quickly, followed by
the discountenanced but still jaunty Captain.

On reaching home Rollmar sent for his son. “Udo,” he said, “you see
much of the Court doings. I must find out who the man is for whom the
Princess has taken this foolish fancy. Have you any idea?”

The young man threw himself on a couch with a moody head-shake.

“I have seen nothing of it, father. She always seems cold and distant
to every one alike.”

“And yet there is a--lover.”

Udo winced. The idea stung him as with the flick of a whip.

“You are sure of that?” he asked, hoping for a doubt.

“Quite. I nearly had the fellow caught last night.”

“And you have no idea who he is?” Udo asked incredulously.

The Baron shook his head. “None. The fact is not flattering to our
system, but this, you see, is an affair which must be handled with
the greatest delicacy and secrecy. Should a breath of scandal reach
Beroldstein, our hopes in that quarter would be annihilated. Now, keep
your eyes open, my dear boy; I must find out who the man is. The affair
must be stopped at once. He shall not escape me again.”

Udo nodded and rose. His foxy eyes and sharp features did not look
as though they needed any especial incentive to watchfulness beyond
nature’s prompting. At the door he turned and asked, with a certain
jealous curiosity, “When you catch the fellow, what are you going to do
with him?”

As the eyes of father and son met significantly, it would have been
difficult to say which shot forth the greater malignity; the only
difference was that in Udo’s it was natural, in the Baron’s it seemed
rather acquired by the practice of a relentless state-craft. “He must
pay the usual penalty of high treason,” he answered.

Udo’s sharp look broadened into a meaning smile. “In such a manner that
neither the offence nor the punishment is likely to reach interested
ears.”

“Assuredly,” said the Chancellor.

       *       *       *       *       *

Not a word had come to Princess Ruperta as a consequence of the night’s
adventure. No word to tell her whether her lover was dead or alive, no
sign of punishment for her escapade, no hint even that it was known.
Her father was pompously kind as usual, proud of her imperious beauty,
for which he took the credit. So the Chancellor, who, of course, knew,
had not thought it proper to tell his royal master; for whatever the
Duke’s faults were, he was no dissembler. But this, the consequence to
herself, scarcely troubled the Princess in the terrible suspense she
endured through the uncertainty of her lover’s fate. When the first
paroxysm of despair was over and she had recovered from her swoon,
her habitual self-command reasserted itself, and she gave way no more
to her feelings. Only Minna, who knew her so well, could guess from a
mere shade’s difference in her manner how deep and bitter they were. On
one point only was she unrestrained, that was in blaming herself and
Minna for inviting Ludovic to what they had had every reason to know
might prove a death-trap. For that he had met his death the Princess
was sure, although every beat of her heart incited her to doubt it.
She read in the silence which was kept towards her that all was over;
the merciless hand had shut and clasped for ever the book wherein
those sweet words were written. Ah, she could not endure the thought
that the voice whose whispered tones had vibrated every chord within
her was silent, that the arm that had protected her and clasped her in
that dear embrace was cold for evermore. Hers had been a starved life,
and now when the wave of love for which she was athirst rippled to her
parched lips, it was driven back by this storm of tragedy. Her whole
nature now turned in fierce rebellion against the annihilator of her
happiness. As the hours went by the torture of an unavailing despair
became intolerable. The passion within her was none the less intense
that it was voiceless; her rage against Rollmar seemed to have spread
itself into every fibre of her body. That she had been rash in leading
her lover into a trap in no wise altered the vileness of the fact
that the trap was set. Had Ludovic really been taken in it? Minna was
persistent and never wavered, at least ostensibly, in her belief that
he had escaped. But her mistress brushed aside every theory that argued
for his safety.

“You might know the Baron by this,” she said, resenting the flattering
insistence of false hopes. “He does not make a mistake ever. His
methods are as sure as they are remorseless. I caught a glimpse of him
from the window just now. It was not the face of a man who had failed.”

“I might retort, dear Highness,” maintained Minna, “that you might know
him well enough to put no trust in that ugly, wrinkled mask. You will
learn nothing from our amiable Baron.”

“But I will,” Ruperta exclaimed impetuously. “I will. He shall tell me
what he has done. I will challenge him this very night. There is no
secret now between us; and if there were, the time for fearing him is
past. Happily, this abominable scheme has given me a hold over him, and
he shall see that he has not a baby to deal with.”

There was a reception that night at the Palace, and Princess Ruperta
kept her word. No one who saw her as she entered the Hall of Audience
could have guessed her sufferings. Except that she was slightly
flushed, she seemed cold and proud and as magnificently beautiful as
ever. When the formal reception was over, the Duke descended from the
daïs and stood chatting with the members of his immediate circle. The
general company began to circulate in the hall and the suite of state
apartments which led from it, and the hum of a subdued conversation
rose.

Princess Ruperta, watching her opportunity, met Rollmar as, putting an
end to what seemed the somewhat inconvenient questioning of one of the
foreign representatives, he turned away in his abrupt manner and left
the royal circle.

A less acute man would have recognized that she had planted herself
in his way with an object, but he gave no sign that he so understood
it, his face showing nothing but a courtier’s smile as he bowed before
her. The Court etiquette kept clear a space round them, so that the
low tones of their talk could not well be overheard, although curious
glances might note the remarkable contrast between the withered old man
and the radiant beauty.

Ruperta came to the point at once, since it was doubtful how long
opportunity might serve her.

“You, or rather your hirelings, took a strange liberty last night,
Baron.”

Her voice was just steady, but he knew the effort it cost her. An old
diplomatist and word-fencer, he never hesitated to cut short his party
when he saw an opening for a _riposte_. He looked up from his bow into
the proud, indignant face.

“One which was forced upon me by the liberty which your Highness has
been so unwise as to permit yourself.”

He spoke with the firmness and confidence of a strong will and the
prestige of successful statesmanship. But she met unflinchingly even
the electric touch of his dominant personality.

“It is abominable,” she said. “I will not submit to your interference.”

Glancing at her sharply with those unfathomable eyes, he just gave a
slight deprecating drop of the head as he replied firmly--

“Not mine, Princess, but the State’s.”

“The State’s!” she echoed hotly. “You take too much upon yourself.
I will not submit to it. You may rule my father, but you shall not
control my actions.”

He was looking at her fixedly now. There was little of the courtier
about the old minister as he retorted pointedly, “It is a pity your
Highness should render control from outside a necessity.”

Her teeth were set in her lip till it was as white as her complexion.
Only the heaving of her bosom betrayed the force of her excitement.
“It is neither necessary nor acceptable,” she returned imperiously.
All this time the question she longed, yet dreaded to ask, was at her
lips, yet unspoken, as though she were fearful to invoke the spectre
of the truth. Yet she felt that to be thus at issue with Rollmar
was purposeless and undignified; it was certainly not for that she
had accosted him. Now she felt she must put the question, let the
consequences be what they might. She took a steadying breath, but there
was just a little flinching drop of the eyes, and then, in a voice
which would have struck a passing observer as quietly cold, almost
indifferent, she said--

“As you have gone to last night’s unwarrantable lengths, may I ask,
Baron, the result of your creatures’ attack?”

“Ah!” The suspicion of a smile softened for an instant the hard, dry
mask that confronted her. Had he suspected her reason for alluding to
a subject she would naturally have avoided? Anyhow, it was patent now.
“The result,” he answered slowly, “I cannot tell you.”

She gave a look of something like disgust at his almost brutal want of
consideration. Did he mean to force her to question him further, and so
incidentally acknowledge the facts of her part in the affair? It was
hateful, yet, she told herself, quite like him. She wished she could
strike him dead as he stood there before her mocking her almost frantic
anxiety with a smile of infinite evasion. Was the man a fiend that
he would not speak more fully? The answer he had given her was truly
Delphic. It might mean nothing, and, what was more probable, it might
mean the worst. Still, as she had stooped to ask, she would press her
question now till she got a tangible answer.

“I wish to know,” she said insistently, “what happened to the person
whom you set your men to attack?”

But for a trace of temper she was quite calm now. The chill of despair
was creeping over her, and the racking suspense gave way before it.
Rollmar looked at her curiously, almost as though wondering whether he
might attribute her calm to a callousness akin to his own.

“Your question, Princess,” he replied with the same Sphinx-like
closeness, “is perhaps one which is better left unanswered.”

“All the same, I must have an answer,” she persisted.

“Then,” he said, with uncompromising decision, “I have to tell your
Highness that you will not be troubled any more by the person to whom I
presume you refer.”

Into his eyes, which were fixed with calm severity on her face,
there flashed a look of surprise. A rapid and unaccountable change
had come over her expression. Was she actress enough to receive a
stab in the heart with an air of joy? For the sudden light in her
eyes was surely nothing else. But for an instant was he at a loss;
then he turned quickly and looked behind him. The crowd was moving
to and fro, talking, laughing, all decorously as under the royal
eye; the Chancellor’s sharp and significant scrutiny caused many a
furtive glance at the pair, and perhaps cried halt to more than one
unguarded remark. His quick, rapacious eyes took in every detail of
the human medley, then suddenly glanced back, keen as a hawk’s, to his
companion’s face. But the look which had startled him had gone. He saw
nothing but a cold self-possession with just a suspicion of triumph in
the half-contemptuous eyes.

“You have answered my question, Baron,” she said simply, and without
the mocking lip he looked for; “and I thank you. It is well to know our
friends--and our enemies.”

“Your Highness,” he returned, “will never have anything but a true
friend in Adrian Rollmar.”

“Whose deeds to secure her happiness will speak for themselves.” The
mockery was there now, as, with a slight bow, she turned and left him.

Your man of action is never left standing at a loss by discomfiture.
With purposeful alacrity, Rollmar turned away on his side and looked
for his son.

“Udo,” he said, when, as in response to a sign, the young man joined
him, “the man is here. The man we seek: Princess Ruperta’s lover.”

“Ah, where is he? Let us----”

The Baron made a restraining gesture. “I do not know him even by sight;
have no idea who he is; but that he is here I am certain. Watch the
Princess. I will have my men ready. To-night must see the end of this
folly.”

It was not long before the Princess, her every sense of observation
quickened by excitement, became aware that the sharp eyes of Udo
Rollmar were following her every movement. The same whisper that told
Minna of Ludovic’s safety warned her of the spy.

“You must contrive to put him on his guard,” she said, “while I draw
Captain Udo away. But, above all, beware of the Baron. I cannot see
him, but feel sure he is watching from his spider’s corner.”

When they had separated, and Minna, on the arm of the vainest and,
consequently, the most stupid Court popinjay she could find, had
strolled off in search of Ludovic, the Princess signed graciously to
Udo and brought that fierce little fox to her side.

“You are quite determined to avoid us to-night, Captain von Rollmar,”
she said, forcing a spirit of banter with the man she now loathed.

Udo’s glance, as it met hers, changed from one of artful resentment to
a certain fiery admiration. With the object he had in view, it was,
he felt, waste of time to talk to her; he would have preferred to
watch and mark down her lover, thereby at one stroke appeasing his own
jealousy and paying her for the trick she had played him. But in the
veins of the fox-like little Captain, while he had much of his father’s
malicious keenness, ran warmer blood, and he was thus liable to a
weakness against which assuredly the Chancellor was proof. The flush
of excitement, of joy at the sight of her lover, had given a radiance
to Princess Ruperta’s beauty and an animation, an exaltation which it
usually lacked. To-night it was perfect, striking, irresistible. It
flashed down upon the cunning little face before her, the sharp, crafty
eyes with their red lashes, the carefully turned-up moustache, and
general dandified treatment of a natural repulsiveness; and in that
flash it took and held captive the treacherous mind opposed to her. For
that mind told him he had never seen such radiant, imperious beauty.
To turn his back upon it when there was an opportunity of luxuriating
in it would be the act of a Stoic or a madman, and he was neither. He
was quite shrewd enough to know there was but a poor chance for him in
the long run, that even now he was but favoured for a purpose; but then
he was vain, and the future flattered him with possibilities, vague,
desperate, yet not unachievable. At least, his father’s schemes and his
own vindictiveness could wait for half an hour.

“If that was your idea, Highness,” he replied, “you might have
attributed my seeming avoidance to the consciousness that my society
might not be welcome.”

She laughed. Reading in his eyes the effect she was working, she took
care to keep him well under the spell. “Since when has Captain Udo von
Rollmar grown diffident?”

“Since his Princess showed him clearly, if unintentionally, that his
company was only welcome as a means to an end.”

Still smarting under the trick, he could not resist the taunt. But she
lightly ignored it.

“A means to an end? Is not that the reason of all good companionship?
What better end than pleasure?”

Though the voice and half confidential manner thrilled him almost to
intoxication, he knew that the words were quibbling and insincere, that
the woman was fighting for her lover with every wit sharpened by the
exigency of the situation. But that merely spurred his determination
to pursue this forlorn hope. At least, sincere or insincere, she was
giving him a lead; who could blame him if he followed it? And, after
all, if nothing better came of it, retaliation lay that way. Even an
august princess should not make him foot this fool’s dance without
paying the piper.

“The pleasure, my Princess,” he replied craftily, “may be one-sided.”

She gave him a quick, offended glance. “How do you mean? One-sided?”

“Do not misunderstand me,” he pursued. “I should have said
disproportionate. The slight pleasure which you are gracious enough to
acknowledge, my Princess, may be a dear joy, a terrible pleasure to me.”

If its origin was in craft, he felt as he looked at her that the
sentiment was true enough. It was, indeed, a dangerous beauty; one
to hurry a man to the pit of despair; and as he drank it in he found
himself vowing it should not be so with him.

They had left the great Hall of Audience and were in one of the smaller
of the state reception rooms. So far her purpose was accomplished, and
one of the spies held safe where he could work no harm.

“You take,” she said, “the matter too seriously.”

“Can any one blame me for that, gracious Princess?” he returned,
feeling his way cautiously since he knew well her power of setting
presumption down.

“Of course I am to blame,” she suggested, hiding with a smile her
distaste for the business she was about.

“Are you not?” he rejoined, growing bolder as his determination to
profit by her complaisance increased. “If I dared to ask you to put
yourself for one moment in my place. To get a smile from the loveliest
woman in Europe, to be permitted to walk by her side, to talk to her
without restraint, in short, to be lifted from this common world into
another and a glorious sphere; then to know that he must fall back to
the cold earth again after those moments of Heaven; Princess, imagine
this and say whether the author of this desolation would deserve blame
or pity.”

He spoke with a feeling and impetuousness which were foreign to him,
and, as she listened in little more than curiosity, she wondered
whether it was feigned or true. If genuine, she could have little pity
for the man, and if false, none. But she realized as the speech grew
warmer that the situation was becoming unpleasant.

“You are determined to make friendship a terribly serious business,”
she said with gentle irresponsiveness. “Now, will you in turn try to
put yourself in my place? Then you will see how barren and lonely a
life must be which is denied pleasant intercourse with its fellows.”

“The fire must burn alone,” he replied. “The more glowing it is the
farther we must keep from it unless we would be consumed.”

She laughed. “Poor fellow! And you are scorched?”

Perhaps her laugh stung him, for, as they sat together, he turned to
her fiercely.

“I am scorched,” he answered with intensity. “It is for you to say
whether it shall be to the death.”

Something in his manner made her check the part she was playing.

“I do not understand you, Captain von Rollmar,” she said, as she rose
with a touch of proud dignity.

He sprang up and stood before her. “I hope that each of us
misunderstands the other,” he said meaningly.

“How?” she demanded, with the imperious light in her eyes.

He had got past restraint now, and was aggressively insistent. “I
mean,” he went on, “that I have suspected you of playing a trick upon
me, of showing me unlooked-for, unhoped-for favour to further a certain
purpose. How else could I account for your gracious condescension?”

There was a touch of mockery in his speech. She welcomed it, at least
it was better than tenderness. But it was, considering their positions,
rude and she resented it.

“You are using a freedom which is the best reproof to my mistake,” she
said coldly. “It is scarcely gallant or respectful to suggest that I
have played a trick upon you.”

“You compel me, Princess, to speak plainly,” he retorted. “If your high
station does not prevent your using your powers to amuse yourself with
me it is hardly fair to screen yourself behind it. I am not the fool
you have sought to make me. I know you have a lover.”

She flushed. “You are insolent, Captain von Rollmar. It is you who
avail yourself of your father’s position to take strange liberties.
Please do not say any more. I am sorry that I took any notice of you.”

She moved sideways to get past him, but he still barred her way. “Do
not add to your discourtesy,” she said with chilling contempt.

He showed no heed of her command, standing before her with lowering
face and ablaze with passion. “You must hear me, Princess,” he insisted
hoarsely. “There are spirits easier to call up than to lay. You spoke
just now of my father, of his position,” he continued rapidly, as
though determined to get out the speech which was at his lips. “That
position is one of the most powerful in Europe; and, incidentally, it
places me, his son, almost on a level with you. No, hear me out,” for
with an exclamation of impatient scorn, she had moved away. “So there
is nothing so very ridiculous and unheard-of in my pretensions.”

“Your pretensions?” she repeated, disdainfully smiling.

“My pretensions,” he maintained doggedly, “to love you, to seek your
hand.”

“Captain von Rollmar, are you mad?” she cried.

“Not at all,” he returned resolutely.

“Putting aside the absurdity of these pretensions of yours,” she said,
content to argue and so gain time, while expecting every moment would
bring Minna to her rescue, “you forget that, by your father’s policy,
my hand is already bestowed.”

“I think, Princess,” he retorted, “that since you forget it, I may be
pardoned for ignoring it.”

The reply was natural and obvious enough, but from the speaker it was
more, it was intolerable.

“At least,” she rejoined haughtily, “if I turn aside from the way Baron
von Rollmar has marked out for me I may at least be permitted to take
which path I choose.”

“You have scarcely chosen wisely,” he said with a curious softening
of his aggressive manner. “The path you are treading leads to danger.
Let me conduct you to a safe one leading to happiness, Princess,” he
continued earnestly, and his face lighted by the glow of his ardour
came as near to beauty as such a face could, “there is only one man on
earth in whose favour my father would renounce his cherished scheme.
Any other who aspires to you simply courts his own destruction. You
have to choose between Prince Ludwig, who treats you as I know you of
all women hate to be treated, with neglect and worse, you must choose
between him and me, who love you to adoration.”

“Must I?”

He searched her eyes for the effect of his pleading, since her tone
gave no clue, but these were equally cold.

“There is no other alternative,” he protested, taking her exclamation
as a simple question and ignoring its possible note of defiance.

“Then,” she retorted, “it is open to me to make one.”

“No, no. It is madness,” he protested. “Is there need, my sweetest
Princess? Why will you misjudge me? Were we married we could defy----”

“I have listened to your absurdities too long,” she exclaimed with a
flash of scorn. “Enough! Never!”

But as she moved away, this time with determination, he seized her
hand. “Princess,” he urged resolutely, “you shall hear me. You shall
return the love you have called forth. You make me desperate, and----”

She, looking past him, gave a little cry. Instantly he dropped the
hand he was by force keeping and turned. A man was in the doorway, a
man with set face and eyes as those of one who stares at the wavering
balance of his fate. There was for the moment a pause of speechless
embarrassment, then Ludovic, with a bow and muttered apology, passed
out of sight.

But as Udo turned back to his companion she saw with fear that his look
had changed from annoyance to triumph.

“Your lover?” he asked in a tone that needed no answer. “At last he is
found. You had better grant my prayer, Princess.”

Fate, he realized, had in that moment put a weapon into his hands. How
well it would serve he had yet to determine, but at least he would use
it. And Ruperta on her part, in that unlooked-for crisis, debated in
desperation what line she would take.

“Your prayer?” she repeated to gain time for her feverish thoughts to
take shape.

“Accept my love,” he insisted.

“And why, pray?” she asked, coldly indifferent once more, “because that
man was a witness to your unmannerly behaviour?”

His face darkened. “That man was your lover.”

“Indeed? Then I must have two,” she said ambiguously.

He was baffled but would not show it “You may only have one by
sunrise,” he rejoined viciously, significantly.

Minna came in.

“Is it love or hate?” he demanded quickly.

“Neither, I hope,” Ruperta returned, with a laugh.




CHAPTER XII

IN THE MERCURY PAVILION


“I have found your man I think,” Udo said to his father.

“Ah? Who is he?”

“That I propose to find out. A stranger.”

The Chancellor looked serious. “Are you sure? How can the Princess have
become acquainted with a stranger?”

Udo gave a shrug. “At least he is known enough to be here. Come; I will
show him to you.”

They strolled observantly through the rooms. “There! The man in the
foreign uniform talking to General Rovigno.”

“So!” The hawk’s glance had marked down the victim. “You are certain,
Udo?”

“Hardly enough, perhaps, to send the fellow to the fate that awaits
him,” Udo answered casually. “But I will make certain. It is a mere
question of watching.”

“Better find out first who he is,” the Chancellor observed. He signed
to a resplendent Court official who immediately came up with a bow.

“I do not recognize that young officer, Herr Oberkammerer.”

“Possibly not, Excellency,” the functionary replied with another bow.
“He is a stranger visiting the country. He comes from Beroldstein. His
name is Lieutenant von Bertheim.”

“From Beroldstein? You are sure?”

“Quite, Excellency. He came furnished with a Court introduction through
the Drax-Beroldstein embassy. Is there any reason for objecting----”

“Oh, no,” Rollmar protested. “A very distinguished looking young man.
Thank you, Herr Oberkammerer.”

He turned away from the ceremonious official and drew Udo aside. “Make
certain,” he said; “and as soon as you have put the matter beyond a
doubt, let me know.”

He thought the identity quite feasible, still a blunder was a thing he
detested. Before striking he must make sure.

And Udo watched lynxlike for the confirmation of his guess; shrewdly
keeping observation on the Princess rather than on her suspected lover.
But for that untoward episode of a few minutes before, he might have
watched till the sharp green eyes grew tired without detecting what he
sought. Von Bertheim had been cunningly warned by Minna and was not
likely to betray the Princess or himself by the slightest sign. But
now discovery was threatened by Ruperta’s distress. A pretty greeting,
she told herself bitterly, she had given the lover who had a few hours
before risked his life for her, whom she might have been supposed to
believe dead, to be surprised in the act of allowing another man to
make love to her. Ludovic’s face had shown his mortification, he had
seen enough for that, too little to comprehend the real nature of the
scene. He would know she was not a woman to permit an admirer to go to
that length unchecked unless she were willing. She was pre-eminently
one who could fence herself round with a cold indifference which no
unacceptable ardour could melt. The unlucky moment had found her
in a hatefully false position, one of which the mere thought was
intolerable. She must at all hazards set it right, and, above all, warn
her lover against the Rollmars and their manifest designs. That she
would run a terrible risk was obvious, but, at least to Ludovic von
Bertheim, the danger was pressing in any event.

“Come,” she said to Minna, “I must speak to him, must warn him.”

“Your highness!” the girl remonstrated. “No, no. It is sheer madness. I
have already warned him. If it must be repeated, let me speak to him.”

But Ruperta was determined. “Come with me. Trust me to take care. I am
no fool.”

The throng was thinning now; some had left, many were at supper. The
Princess could go where she would without the irksomeness of finding a
lane opening for her, or the risk of being jostled.

“I last saw him in the Vandyke room,” Minna said. They strolled arm in
arm through the rooms, the Princess greeting many of the guests as they
passed. Ludovic was still where Minna had left him, still talking or
rather listening to the garrulous old General.

“Take care,” Minna said in a warning undertone, “Udo is watching us.”

Ruperta laughed. They passed through the room without noticing von
Bertheim by more than a return of the bow with which he and his
companion saluted them. “Oh, that noble Udo, that _preux chevalier_,”
was Ruperta’s mocking comment. “Let us turn. Now keep your eyes open
for the red fox. Ah, he is gone.”

“At least he is invisible,” Minna said, on her guard.

As they passed von Bertheim and the General the Princess’s handkerchief
fell. Ludovic saw and sprang forward to restore it. She stopped for an
instant and took it from him. Several people had come into the room
and saw the action; none of them could have noticed in it more than a
common incident of courtesy. They could not dream that the receiving
hand thrilled that which gave with a quick pressure, that the murmured
words were far more than those of thanks. Only one pair of sharp, avid,
ravening eyes, suddenly visible from their ambush, saw what they
desired, yet hated to see, saw proof of what had been conjecture, saw a
near and certain revenge. It was enough. The jealous, vindictive glance
just lingered for a moment on the pleasant sight of death in that face
which raised itself in happy confidence; then the gallant Udo von
Rollmar turned with a smile of satisfaction and hurried to his father.

“It is as well to be certain,” observed the Chancellor with his cynical
smile, as he nodded his acceptance of the information. “You may leave
the affair to me, Udo.”

“Can I be of any use?”

“You? No. My men are ready. It is butcher’s work.”

Ten minutes later a written message, signed R., was mysteriously put
into the Lieutenant’s hand bidding him wait in the little garden
pavilion which stood in the shrubbery a short distance from the place.
It was called the Pavilion of Mercury, from a figure by which it was
surmounted. He had freed himself from the General’s somewhat boring
prolixity and was debating with himself whether he should stay or go,
when the message was brought him by a little page of honour. In delight
that he had waited and so not missed it, he made his way out into the
palace grounds, taking heed that his movements were not too curiously
observed. The words which Ruperta had spoken when he restored her
handkerchief had been enough to allay the doubts with which the scene
he had witnessed with Udo Rollmar had filled his mind. Indeed it was
almost inconceivable that a girl of the Princess’s character could
be captivated by a man like the Chancellor’s son. And now the full
explanation of that equivocal situation would doubtless be given him.

Von Ompertz had received his orders, the most distasteful of his life,
and stood with his two satellites waiting grimly for his man. He had
on the first shock of Rollmar’s order, met it by a refusal. It was
indeed, as the Chancellor had designated it, butcher’s work, and he
was a soldier with the strain of his innate nobility ever ready to
assume, sometimes to his detriment, the function of a conscience. He
loved fighting for its own sake and was ready enough to slay his fellow
man in hot blood; but in cold? To become a midnight assassin? Pfui! It
went against that same make-shift conscience of his. But the astute
old reader of men’s characters and motives had made short work of his
objection, although he judged it prudent to condescend to a certain
amount of persuasive argument. It was a State service, this deed which
looked so black; far more important in its way than the killing of a
score of the Duke’s enemies in battle. The honour of an illustrious
house, of a royal name, was deeply concerned; only to a man like the
Captain, of absolute trustworthiness, of honourable principles above
the run of his class, could the secret vindication of the royal honour
be entrusted. And then there was the obvious ugly alternative should
the quixotic refusal be persisted in. The rope round Captain von
Ompertz’s neck was only loosened, it was still there, but this service
would make him quit of it altogether.

So the free-lance, seeing this was no situation for trifling, was fain
to buy his life by consenting to what he tried to persuade himself was
a bounden if disagreeable duty to the State whose hospitality he had
enjoyed and to its Minister whose pay he was taking, and who, after
all, was a better judge of the act’s justification than he himself
could be.

Accordingly he had taken his station, secure from notice, at a point
among the azalea bushes which commanded the path leading from below the
terrace to the Mercury Pavilion. He saw a man’s figure emerge from the
shadow of the high parapet and advance quickly along the alley which
ran a few yards in front of where they stood. He made a sign to the two
who waited behind him, and all three crouched down expectantly.

Von Bertheim came on steadily, unsuspectingly. They could hear his
footsteps, now passing close to their ambush, presently striking the
stone step of the pavilion and entering. Like feline beasts of prey
they crept toward their quarry; Ompertz with a campaigner’s expert
caution, the two Italians with the fell litheness of tracking leopards.
Noiselessly they gained the alley and now retreat was cut off, the trap
was complete.

“Wait here,” he whispered, motioning back the cutthroats at his side.
“If I need you I will call.”

But one pressed forward at his shoulder. “Better make sure this time,
Captain,” he urged.

However, Ompertz preferred to do the ill work his own way. In his idea
the victim, being, as the uniform had told him, a soldier, should meet
his death at the hands of a soldier, not at those of a professional spy
and assassin which he shrewdly suspected to be the vocation of his two
assistants.

“Stay here,” he repeated authoritatively. “I am no bungler--this is
one’s man’s work.”

He went forward alone and stood in the doorway of the pavilion.
Ludovic, who was sitting on a rustic chair at the farther side of the
little room, started up at the sound of his step and began to cross to
the door. Then he stopped, seeing it was a man’s figure that filled
the entrance. A stream of moonlight came through the window and lay
slantwise across the room, dividing the two men. Into this band of
light a glittering object was suddenly projected. It was the barrel of
a pistol pointing straight at Ludovic’s heart. He gave a quick cry.

“Hold your hand, fellow! I am----”

There was an answering, half smothered exclamation as the pistol was
lowered and Ompertz’s face peered forward, coming into the shaft of
light. “Lieutenant von Bertheim!” he said in a shocked whisper. “You?
And, God forgive me, I was about to----”

“To put me out of Chancellor Rollmar’s way,” his intended victim
supplied with a laugh. “If you have any scruples as to disobeying your
orders I think I can remove them.”

Ompertz held up his hand warningly. “There are two Italian scoundrels
outside to make sure the thing is done,” he said in a rapid whisper.
“You saved my life; I’ll pay that debt if it costs my own.”

“There is no need, my friend,” Ludovic began, but before he had time to
say more, Ompertz had raised his pistol and fired at the wall. “Now,”
he commanded hurriedly, “fall down, quick! down with you and I’ll swear
you are dead.”

He had caught Von Bertheim by the shoulders and urged him to the floor.
For a moment the other seemed inclined to refuse, then changed his mind
and, with a laugh at the situation, lay down as he might have fallen
had the shot taken its originally intended effect. Ompertz bent down
and covered his supposed victim’s face with his cloak just as the two
evil visages of his assistants looked in at the door.

He held up a restraining hand as they came forward. “No bungle this
time,” he announced grimly; “a bullet through the heart leaves no room
for doubt.”

He whipped aside the cloak from Ludovic’s face, which happily lay in
shadow, and then replaced it; pretended to feel the pulse, let the
hand fall with a thud, and turned to the door. “Now to report to his
Excellency,” he said motioning them out before him. “Come! I’ll have
the fellow respected now that he can do no more harm.” So he baulked
their curiosity, sturdily sent them out of the place and, following,
closed the door.

The Princess and Minna with arms linked had strolled out upon the
terrace. The atmosphere of the rooms had seemed charged with excitement
that evening, and the calm glory of the night with its soft, pure air
was infinitely refreshing. Here the Chancellor found them when he came
out in grim expectancy of the report that one more human obstacle had
been removed from his path. It was an untoward encounter; certainly
the Princess, glad as perhaps he might have been to teach her a lesson
and show his fell power, was otherwise the last witness he wanted for
his anticipated interview.

Still he greeted them suavely enough, and then remarked that the air
was chilly and that the Princess would do well to go indoors.

“I do not feel it,” she objected. “It seems to me quite warm and balmy.”

“Nevertheless it is chilly,” he insisted in the domineering tone which
came so easily to him. “Your Highness should be advised. The obligation
not to trifle with royal health extends far beyond a personal
consideration.”

“It seems that royal health is of far more account than royal
happiness,” she could not help retorting.

“Indeed, no,” he returned, ignoring, in his unruffled way, any
significance in the speech. “Your health, gracious Princess, means
happiness to all your father’s subjects and surely to yourself. And
it is your happiness for which with all my ability and experience I
unceasingly strive. Only be convinced of that, dear Highness, and let
me----”

The sound of a shot broke the stillness of the night-shrouded park.
Ruperta turned quickly in the direction whence it had come.

“What was that?” she exclaimed, in a voice which foreboding filled with
dread.

“It is nothing,” Rollmar answered with a shrug, “which need concern
your Highness.”

She was regarding him searchingly, her eyes full of a fearful
suspicion. “A pistol shot under the very palace walls. Surely----” She
stopped as though unable to control her voice. Her lips were trembling
and her face, in the light from the window, was white.

“May I beg you to go in, Highness?” the Baron repeated, extending his
arm to keep open the window.

In that moment the cold, statuesque beauty was transformed in a
fashion that startled even the imperturbable Chancellor. Her face
flushed and her eyes were alight with bitterness and anger.

“I know now,” she said hotly, “why you were anxious for me to go in,
what this chill air of yours meant. It was to get me out of the way of
your dastardly act, your fiendish work. I know. You have killed the man
whom you have been hunting down so atrociously; assassin, vile murderer
that you are. And you dare, hypocritical wretch, to talk of my health.
I will go and see your work, and if it be as I suspect, I swear before
Heaven you shall bitterly rue it!”

Rollmar stepped before her. “Princess, this is madness. You must not
go. You are wrong.”

“Liar!” she flashed out at him passionately, the flood of her anger
keeping back the waters of desolation that were ready to flow over her
soul. “Show me that I am wrong. Take me there. Prove it. Ah, you dare
not! But I will see----”

“Dear Highness----” Minna began to remonstrate apprehensively, but
Ruperta had pushed aside all opposition and was running towards the
steps that led down from the terrace.

As Rollmar followed her, his temper hardly soothed by the unfortunate
chance which had marred the complete success of the business, his sharp
eyes saw the expected three figures drawing out from the shadow of the
wooded alley. He quickened his pace, meanwhile sternly ordering Minna
to stop the Princess. “Come back, Highness!” he cried, “I order you.
Your father shall know of this.”

Minna, impelled more by fear of the horror which might be waiting them
than the Chancellor’s threat, ran quickly and caught her by the arm,
trying to draw her back.

“Dear Highness, I entreat you, do not go farther,” she panted.

But the three were by this time quite visible.

“Look! Those men!” Ruperta cried. “Ah, I will know!”

Rollmar caught her, angrily, it seemed, by the arm. “Your Highness is
exceeding all propriety,” he said.

“As your Excellency is exceeding all justice and all humanity,” she
retorted.

He made a gesture of impatience. “Have your own way, then. But I have
warned your Highness.”

Without staying for further words, Ruperta turned again and ran
distractedly down the alley leading to the pavilion. Recalling himself
from a moment’s critical thought, Rollmar looked round at his agents,
“Well?”

Ompertz bowed. “It is well, Excellency. I have hardly bungled this
time. These men have seen him dead. One shot was enough.”

The Chancellor glanced for corroboration at the Italians who bowed
with a word of confirmation. “Good,” he said. “I will see what further
orders are needful. Captain von Ompertz, you may report yourself at my
bureau at ten o’clock to-morrow morning.”

As the soldier bowed and turned away, Rollmar made a sign to one of the
Italians, and, as he came near, whispered a hurried word to him. The
man nodded, and then the two went off by the way Ompertz had taken,
leaving the Chancellor standing alone in keen thought.

Ruperta, followed fearfully by Minna, had reached the pavilion and it
was not until her foot was on the threshold that she stopped, sick and
faint at heart, not daring to look in. But her pause was in silence,
save for her quick breathing; the cry of her heart found no utterance.
Then a desperate longing to know the worst nerved her to look in, and
she saw the room was empty. Scarcely daring to trust her eyes, she
signed to Minna and went in. The thing she dreaded was not there; the
two women stood and looked into each other’s face in wonder. Then there
was the sound of a step at the door. If it were Rollmar----. Ruperta
went quickly to it, and gave a great gasp of joy as she was clasped in
her lover’s arms.

“Ah, my love, my dear love!” she murmured. Then, when their kisses
allowed speech, he told her in a few words what had happened.

“You are mad to stay here,” she said, holding him fast nevertheless.

“How can I go?” he protested. “Ah, if you only were content to marry
Prince----”

She shook her head impatiently. “That is now farther from me than
ever,” she declared. “That shall never be, I swear to you, my love.”

At last she made him go, saying she would let him run no more risks
for her sake, yet doubting how they should cease. And he assured her
that he feared nothing, that with a love like theirs all must be well.
And that made her sad, knowing well how experience was against that
comfortable hope and that love counts as a very minus quantity against
State policy.

Nevertheless, when she went back to the Palace, the Chancellor,
watching for her with grim expectation, was not a little puzzled at
what he saw in her face.




CHAPTER XIII

OMPERTZ FINISHES HIS NIGHT’S WORK


Captain von Ompertz, when the Chancellor had dismissed him, made very
natural haste to get clear of the palace precincts before his deception
should be discovered. He had not, however, gone far when he found he
was being caught up by one of his late associates, the Italian to whom
Rollmar had whispered. Judging it wiser to appear in no particular
haste, he turned and waited for the fellow to join him.

“Ah, you are going home, Capitano, after a pretty night’s work. May I
come with you as far as our ways lie together?”

Now if Ompertz had really carried out his late orders he would have
declined, with no complimentary language, the company of a man whom
he loathed and whose associateship he resented. But to-night he could
scarcely with prudence refuse the fellow’s proposal, so they went on
together.

“I am in haste to get to my lodging,” he said. “So step out, signore. I
hope to-night’s work has been more acceptable to you than it has to me.”

The Italian, edging his lithe body close to his companion’s shoulder,
as with quickly gliding steps he kept pace with the soldier’s stride,
threw out his arms with a deprecating gesture.

“_Basta!_ _Capitano mio_, such little affairs are common enough at our
Court. Our Chancellor ever takes the nearest way to his destination. A
wise man does not wait for a wasp to sting him before he crushes it.
And the Baron has the wisest head in Europe to-day.”

“And the reddest hand, eh?”

“Ah, _amico mio_, a kingdom is not to be maintained in safety without
the judicious spilling of a little blood. Better a few drops of rain
than a storm, a little blood-letting than a fever.”

“That is true enough,” Ompertz assented, not caring to express his
real views on the subject. “And we servants of the State, must regard
ourselves as the great surgeon’s lancets, eh?”

“Exactly,” grinned the Italian. “And we should have as little feeling
and curiosity as the scarifying knife, be as empty of scruples as is
the cupping glass of air.”

“Oh, I shall get used to it, never fear,” the Captain assured him.

They were making their way to one of the side gates of the park which
opened upon an outskirt of the town, and now had reached the outer belt
of woodland, near the spot where Ompertz had once lain concealed. It
was his intention, as soon as they should have passed through the gate,
to separate from his companion, not caring even at that time of the
night to be seen walking through the streets with him.

As they went quickly along under the trees Ompertz stumbled over a
projecting root and nearly fell, but managed to recover himself. But
the stumble made him aware of a peculiar action on the part of the
Italian which put him keenly on his guard. When his foot caught the
root the impetus of the quick pace at which they were walking sent him
headlong some yards before he could right himself. His companion made
a sudden spring after him, only to reach him just as he recovered his
balance. As Ompertz half turned, he fancied he caught a certain ugly
gleam in the other’s uplifted hand, but the Italian quickly lowered his
arm and threw out the other with a pretence of steadying him.

“_Davuero!_ That was nearly a bad fall, Capitano,” he observed with an
awkward laugh, and Ompertz told himself that if the stumble had sent
him a foot less far, and so just out of the other’s reach it would
indeed have been a fall from which he might never have risen. However,
he kept a wary eye on the Italian, grimly alert for his expected
attack, and so they passed out of the gate together.

Here he halted. “Which is your way, Signor Calosi?”

The Italian pointed townwards. “Surely we go to the city together,” he
suggested with feline courtesy.

Ompertz checked his first impulse which was unceremoniously to separate
from the fellow. He nodded, and they walked on together along the
gloomy road skirting the park wall. Very bitter and resentful thoughts
were in his mind as he realized his position and his employer’s
treacherous intention. It was plain enough. He was supposed to have
done his work, and so was to be incontinently put out of the way as
the possessor of a dangerous secret. And within the hour Rollmar had
flattered him, spoken of his honour and trustworthiness, and promised
him his absolute freedom as the price of his night’s work, while all
the time he was marking him down for the assassin’s knife. His blood
boiled at the idea, and he exulted fiercely in the thought of the
trick he had played on the treacherous old Chancellor and of a second
thwarting on which he was grimly resolved. So he kept on with the
Italian, having the object of giving that worthy a chance of repeating
his attempt It was not long in coming. This time it was Calosi who
stumbled, or pretended to do so. The spot was one which Ompertz had
shrewdly suspected he would choose for the attack; darker than the rest
of the obscure way by reason of the overhanging trees. Moreover, it was
the last convenient place for a dark deed before they should approach
the outlying houses of the city.

At Calosi’s stumble, Ompertz, who was on the watch for a trick, gave
a sudden spring forward and turned, at the same time whipping out his
sword already loosened in its scabbard. As he anticipated, he faced
round to meet the Italian’s dagger raised for the stroke he had so
cunningly avoided.

“You cursed, black-muzzled dastard!” he cried with a derisive laugh.
“You shall pay for that coystril’s trick,” and with that made a lunge
at him.

The Italian’s face at first showed an attempt to laugh the thing off,
but its futility was so apparent and the soldier’s blade so pressing,
that he speedily abandoned it and set to work to defend himself as best
he could.

“Ah, my poor Capitano, it is enough,” he exclaimed in terror as,
putting aside a thrust at his heart, he felt the blade pierce his
shoulder. “I will confess!” he screamed, as the irresistible attack
grew hotter. “I will give you--”

“Silence, you pest, you treacherous dog!” Ompertz cried, setting his
teeth. “If you choose to play your murderous tricks on a stronger man
you must be ready for the penalty.” And so, bearing down the Italian’s
desperate defence, he ran him through.

Calosi fell with a gasping cry and had expired ere he touched the
ground. Ompertz drew back his sword and wiped it on the dead man’s
cloak, shaking his head with a troubled countenance as he sheathed it.

“I’d as lief this had not happened,” he muttered, “but it was
necessary, and ’tis done. Well, my head can scarce be in greater
jeopardy now than it was before, and at least this gives me a few
hours’ start.”

Hastily he rolled the body into the ditch that ran under the park
wall, where it lay concealed by the over-growing grass and weeds.
“Well, there is one scoundrel the fewer walking the earth to-night,” he
commented. “If I hang for this I shall leave the world a trifle better
than I found it.” He effaced the blood marks from the path, and hurried
on to the city.

As he gained the narrow streets his devil-may-care humour, which had
been repressed by the events of the night, returned; he hummed a tune
and strode along with his characteristic jauntiness. Once he stopped
and seemed to debate with himself whether he should go on or turn back.
“No; I must do it,” he said. “A good turn from a stranger is worth six
from a friend; and, after all, my life is not of such wonderful value
or surety that I need think twice about risking it.”

So, starting on again with a more purposeful gait, he soon arrived at
the door of Ludovic von Bertheim’s lodging. As he looked up at the
windows for a light, the man he sought came round the corner.

“Well met, Lieutenant,” he said with a military salute. “I came on
my way to--who knows?--the gallows, probably, to give you a word of
warning.”

“Come in,” Ludovic replied, and led the way.

The soldier smacked his lips significantly and followed. “A glass of
that excellent brandy after this night’s work will not come amiss,” he
observed frankly.

In the room von Bertheim pointed to the suggested refreshment and his
guest lost no time in helping himself.

“I have to thank you, Captain, for my life.”

Ompertz gave a deprecating wave of the arm. “Pfui! ’Twas but a natural
_quid pro quo_, my friend,” he protested airily.

“It was more than that,” the other returned gravely.

“Well,” said the soldier, after a second draught, “time is short, and
were it not, I have not come hither to bandy words about that. I have a
sense of common honour and gratitude--that is nothing to boast of--and
am not a midnight bravo, although I admit that an hour ago I must have
looked uncommonly like one.”

“I can understand the matter,” Ludovic assured him with a smile.

“Can you? Then you will understand that you stay here in considerable
danger, my enterprising young friend.”

Ludovic smiled confidently. “I hope that is past.”

“Is it?” the other retorted. “You have a singular confidence, young
man, amounting almost to folly. Take my advice. You have had two
miraculous escapes. Are you mad enough to fancy that his Excellency,
our most noble Chancellor Rollmar, will fail a third time to brush you
out of his way?”

“Possibly not,” von Bertheim replied dryly. “But I do not think he is
likely to try it a third time.”

“Ah, you are not going to give him the chance? That’s right. I am off
now to save my skin. Suppose we go together?”

“With all my heart, Captain,” Ludovic laughed. “But I am not ready to
start just yet.”

“The devil you are not!” Ompertz exclaimed in surprise. “Why, you are
not, I take it, such a coxcomb as to trouble about packing your trunks
when the trunk that stands on your two legs is likely to have a hole
picked in it.”

“Hardly,” the other laughed. “Still, I can assure you, Captain von
Ompertz, that there is no such especial hurry for either of us to take
to our heels. I am quite safe, and will take you under my protection.”

Ompertz stared and then broke into a laugh. “_Alle Wetter!_ But you
have no mean opinion of yourself, my brave Lieutenant. To stand man to
man, or to a round half dozen, is one thing; to pit oneself against the
seven devils united in the scraggy person of our Chancellor is quite
another.”

“You are right enough, my friend; and I admit that I have run a couple
of very foolish risks. But now I do not mean to fight, to oppose myself
to this incarnation of the seven devils.”

“That’s well,” Ompertz hastily replied. “Discretion is virtue, even
in a soldier, when the odds are against him. Boldness is for the big
battalions, as I have learnt often enough. So you are going to retreat
and fall back upon a less dangerous wooing. Good! We may as well go
together, at least part of the way.”

“You mistake me,” von Bertheim said quietly. “I do not intend to leave
Waldenthor, at least just yet.”

“Then I do,” Ompertz exclaimed, catching up his hat and taking a stride
towards the door. “I have warned you, and, as it seems, to no purpose.
I am sorry, but that your brandy is a good viaticum, to have wasted so
much time over the business.”

Ludovic made a restraining gesture. “Stay here with me for the next
twenty-four hours and we will start together. In the meantime I will
guarantee your safety.”

The soldier looked at him curiously. “You speak very confidently, young
sir; and I am loath to disbelieve you. But you will pardon me if I am
inclined to set more store by the practical and cogent evidence of
Chancellor Rollmar’s ill-will than by the pleasanter but less tangible
proofs of Lieutenant von Bertheim’s good-will.”

“And yet,” replied the other, “I could easily convince you.” He stopped
and seemed to debate with himself, taking a turn across the room. His
manner evidently puzzled Ompertz, who stood with his hand on the door,
his departure just restrained by curiosity. But the chance of safety
by staying seemed too doubtful. “I must wish you farewell, and a safe
slipping out of old Rollmar’s clutches,” he said, pulling open the door.

Ludovic turned. “You will not go?”

“While my feet can touch _terra firma_.”

“You will go to your death. Whereas----”

The sound of a horse’s hoofs came up the street, and suddenly ceased
under their window. Then came a knock at the street door. Ompertz let
an oath slip through his teeth. “Too late! I have stayed to my death.
But----” He set himself hard, taking his stand in a corner of the room
with drawn sword. Von Bertheim laughed but made no remark. Both men
kept silence, in which they could hear the door being opened. Next
moment a man’s figure appeared in the doorway, and a good-humoured
face looked with amused wonder at the room’s two occupants and their
strangely contrasted attitudes, one loungingly expectant, the other
desperately militant.

Checking the visitor’s exclamation of surprise, Ludovic went forward
with a cry of welcome.

“Anton! You, my dear fellow, at this time of the night! You bring me
news?”

“Or I should scarcely have risked finding you so very wide awake at
this hour. Yes; I bring you news, and have ridden hard with it.”

He glanced significantly at Ompertz, who, half reassured, had lowered
his point.

Von Bertheim answered the look. “My good friend, Captain von Ompertz,
who has just rendered me an important service at some risk to himself.”

“Then,” the newcomer observed dryly, “as we are all friends and it is
late, Captain von Ompertz may put his sword to bed.”

“If his sword were afraid of late hours,” the free-lance retorted,
as with a laugh he sent the weapon home in its scabbard, “Captain
von Ompertz would not have the honour of standing before you at this
moment. It is hard to tell friends from foes in this city, and I but
waited Lieutenant von Bertheim’s word before disguarding.”

“Now, Anton, your news. You may speak before our friend,” said Ludovic.

“Your uncle has met with an accident, a fall out riding.”

“He is dead? No?”

“When I left he was as far through death’s door as a man can be to have
any chance of drawing back.”

“Then there was a chance, Anton?”

He gave a shrug. “He was alive. I did not tarry to hear the result of
the putting together of six scientific craniums. It was enough that
the patient had a breakage in his; so I came post-haste to tell you.”

“It was what I might have expected of you, Anton. Now I will have a bed
made ready for you and----”

Anton opened his eyes. “A bed? My dear friend, you are not going to
sleep on it?”

“I cannot start till to-morrow.”

“Then I cannot help thinking that you run a grave risk. You have been
away over long already.”

“The risk is mine, not my uncle’s,” Von Bertheim returned. “To-morrow
evening I will start at latest.”

Anton looked serious. “I would not like to answer for the
consequences,” he said warningly.

“Nor I,” chimed in Ompertz. “I have been telling our friend as much for
the last half-hour. If he stays here till to-morrow I would not like to
wager that he survives his uncle with the smash on his skull.”

“What keeps you here?” Anton asked.

“Never mind,” Ludovic replied.

Ompertz laughed.




CHAPTER XIV

A STRONG MEASURE


Duke Theodor wore a troubled face next morning, and its cause stood
before him, insistent, uncompromising, in the person of his terrible
Chancellor. The pains which his Highness was at to remain wrapped in
the cloak of his pompous dignity, in spite of the determined wind of a
strong will which kept now fluttering the thin material, now blowing it
aside and, occasionally, with a fierce gust threatening to tear it into
ribbons, were quite as pitiable as amusing. The measure which Rollmar
was, with his usual dogged persistence, forcing upon his sovereign was
more than strong. It was startling, and indeed, from the Duke’s point
of view, heroic. For it amounted, put plainly--and, after but little
courtly preamble, the stern old minister so put it--to the imprisonment
of his daughter, with a view to keeping her safe till Prince Ludwig
should think proper to come and claim her.

“It is preposterous,” exclaimed the Duke. “I cannot do it.”

“It is essential,” retorted Rollmar. “Your Highness must do it.”

“The girl will come to her senses without that,” said his highness.

“I doubt whether she will come to her senses with it,” returned the
Chancellor. “Only, once under lock and key, her state of mind will not
so much matter.”

“I could not consent to such a severe measure,” the Duke maintained
weakly, “except under the stress of absolute necessity.”

“Which necessity has arisen,” Rollmar insisted calmly.

“You will convince me of that, Excellency.”

“Readily, your Highness. If the facts of these clandestine meetings
with this young officer are not sufficient proof of the necessity.”

“Why not take--ah’m--preventive measures against him, Baron?” said the
Duke, brightening with a plausible argument.

“Your Highness may rest assured that we are doing so,” Rollmar answered
a little testily.

“You are a long time about it,” rejoined the Duke with a suggestion
of malicious satisfaction at the idea of his infallible minister’s
discomfiture. “Surely, Baron, you are not withheld by any scruples on
account of the transgressor being a foreigner and a guest?”

There was a very obvious and cheap sneer in this, since it was
notorious that Chancellor Rollmar was the last man in Europe to be
influenced by such considerations.

But a weak man does not as a rule gain much satisfaction from sneering
at a strong one. It would have taken a more masterly brain and a
sharper tongue than Duke Theodor’s to put Rollmar out of countenance.
He simply replied--

“I am quite confident that in such a case any act of punishment which
it might be expedient to inflict would be covered by the cloak of your
Highness’s gracious approval. But, to return to facts, I regret to say
I am unable to inform you, sir, at this moment with absolute certainty
that my orders have been duly executed.”

The Duke raised his eyebrows, still hugging the idea of his
master-servant’s failure. “How is that, Baron? You have as a rule, I
understand, but to point your finger.”

The Baron greatly resented the way in which he was being cross-examined
about his discomfiture; it was bad enough to realise it, without being
worried into confessing it. He had expected the Duke to fall in with
his views without opposition or even protest, but as he did not seem
inclined to do so, the wily old diplomatist told himself that he must
weight his proposal with the story which would force it through as
imperative.

“Your Highness knows my aversion to a blunder,” he replied
impressively. “It was necessary to make quite certain that the finger
could point to the right man. It was only last night that I became
sure of that. The agent whom I employed to--to put any further scandal
out of the question executed his orders to the satisfaction of certain
witnesses. But it was with as much astonishment as regret that I learnt
this morning that the culprit’s body had mysteriously disappeared.”

“Indeed!” There was enough sensation in the story to interest the
shallow mind of the royal _pococurante_.

“On my way to the palace just now,” Rollmar proceeded, in the cold tone
of one who drives home an unassailable argument, “I was informed that
one of my agents, to whom I had given certain particular instructions,
had been found stabbed to death outside the park wall.”

“Horrible! Atrocious!” cried the Duke, thinking of his own safety.

“This news,” continued the Chancellor, in the same dry voice, “tends
to confirm my suspicion of treachery in the person I employed. Your
Highness will comprehend,” he broke off to interpolate the explanation
as a teacher might elucidate a stiff passage in a pupil’s reading,
“that we cannot command men of unimpeachable integrity to do work of
this sort. We rely on their interest rather than their honesty.”

“Quite so,” said his Highness. “No doubt two knaves are more useful
for certain purposes than one honest man.”

“At least they are more available,” Rollmar said dryly. “Now, this
second episode points to the possibility of our lieutenant being still
alive. I say it is possible, though not probable. Still, considering
the high interests involved, we cannot afford to ignore the chance. If
we have failed, most unexpectedly, to put an end to the affair on one
side we are bound to resort to the other. That, your Highness, is the
reason why I have every confidence in proposing to you a measure which
I feel must be distasteful to your Highness’s affection.”

The Duke shook his head vaguely. “A doubtful remedy and a great risk,
Baron.”

“Pardon me, sire. A very certain remedy and a removal of risk.”

“Surely not of scandal?” the Duke argued. “A pretty thing to be said
that we could only keep our Princess to the match by locking her away
from every other man. And a fine prospect for their married happiness.”

“Such a state of affairs is not uncommon in royal circles,” Rollmar
observed, with a little cynical grin. “Where policy of state is
concerned small considerations must give way to great. Princess
Ruperta will not be the first royal bride who has had to be caged.
She represents the price of a kingdom; surely it is wise to keep our
treasure under lock and key, away from irresponsible pilferers. But I
do not propose, Highness, that our precautions should become known. The
Princess’s health needs change of air. A few weeks’ residence in the
Castle of Krell has been prescribed.”

The Duke winced. “Krell has an ominous sound,” he said smiling feebly.
“It need not be Krell.”

The minister had evidently made up his mind. “Krell has a dark
history,” he agreed casually, “which renders it not the liveliest
abode in the world, for which reason, your Highness, it seems exactly
the place to bring a wayward young lady to her senses. Moreover,
its natural situation renders it an ideal retreat from undesirable
Philanders. May I take it that your Highness will give the necessary
orders for the Princess’s journey to-morrow?”

His Highness seemed, notwithstanding his wise old counsellor’s
persistence, to have a flat refusal on his lips. However, he checked
it, and, rising, took a turn across the room in considerable
discomposure. Rollmar stood watching him from beneath his knit brows
with a smile of mingled confidence and contempt. The Duke came back.
“I cannot consent to this,” he declared with a prodigious effort to be
and, what was more to the point, to seem resolute; “at least not at
this moment. So severe, so drastic a measure must not be taken in a
hurry.”

“It is,” replied the Chancellor with calm sententiousness, “almost
invariably, without loss of time that drastic measures have to be
taken. The need of such argues urgency.”

“That may be,” the Duke returned loftily. “But this is a matter wherein
my daughter’s welfare and happiness are concerned.”

“Wherein the welfare and glory of your duchy are involved.”

“I am not so sure,” said the Duke, abandoning direct argument, “that it
is, after all, so great a matter.”

“But I am,” the minister retorted. “You must pardon me, Highness, if
I insist that this alliance is of the very highest consequences. An
importance not to be weighed for an instant against the young lady’s
few days of discontent or even discomfort.”

He had changed his tone now and spoke with almost peremptory
insistence. The man’s strong will and character came out and seemed to
beat down in a moment the feeble faculties arrayed against them.

“I repeat,” said the Duke, visibly weakening, “there is no such great
hurry.”

“I regret to take an entirely opposite view to your Highness.”

He was firm, and his master knew by experience what his firmness
meant. In spite of a long series of abject failures Duke Theodor still
persisted in trying an occasional mental fall with the Samson who
clasped the pillars of his royal house.

“Prince Ludwig is behaving cavalierly,” said the Duke, fishing about
for an argument, as a man will prolong a hopeless game of chess. “I
have reason to suppose my daughter resents it. He cannot complain, and
we may.”

“It is not our policy to complain or to give the Beroldsteiners cause
for dissatisfaction,” the Chancellor returned shortly, as declining to
do more than suggest that his view was not to be traversed.

The royal temper began to give way under the minister’s somewhat
contemptuous persistence. “It simply amounts to this then, Baron. That
while Prince Ludwig chooses to prolong his rustication, my daughter
is, like Andromeda, to be chained to the rock of Krell to await his
pleasure.”

“That,” said Rollmar, “is one way of describing the position. But the
simile scarcely holds good, since our Minotaur comes not to destroy but
to enrich.”

“And therefore,” said the Duke, following out the idea with a weak
mind’s love of trivialities, “it becomes necessary in our case to slay,
not the Minotaur, but Perseus.”

Rollmar gave an assenting bow. “Since the Minotaur is assuredly the
better match. Andromeda will be chained for her advantage, not against
her destruction.”

“I do not like chains,” the Duke protested.

“They are,” said Rollmar, “the unseen insignia of royalty. I have done
my best for many years to keep them from galling your Highness. But if
you persist in feeling for them, I can do no more. Perhaps it is as
well; I may have done too much already.”

There was in this, as the Duke knew well, a covert threat of
retirement; and, much as he would have liked to take at his word the
determined and exacting old minister, who constituted the most galling
of all his fetters, yet for the safety of his kingdom and, what touched
him nearer, his own personal security, he dared not. Cold-blooded,
cruel, relentless, false when expediency called for deceit, overbearing
and contemptuous to the master whom he led by the nose, Chancellor
Rollmar was yet honest enough of purpose in his patriotism and his
schemes for the aggrandisement of the little kingdom he ruled with so
strong a hand.

So Duke Theodor had in the end to give in--which, to save time and
trouble, he might well have done at the beginning--and consent
that Princess Ruperta should from that very hour be placed under
surveillance, and that the next day she should be conducted to the
fortress-castle of Krell which had been the prison, and occasionally
the grave, of certain persons who from time to time had had the
temerity to oppose or offend the implacable Chancellor. The name of
Krell had become almost a terror, and Rollmar was wise in choosing it
as a retreat eminently adapted to bring the perverse Princess to a
sense of obedience to his will.

The Duke had, with an ill grace, given a forced and grudging consent
to the arrangement, and the Chancellor, having gained his point by
what he considered an exorbitant expenditure of time and patience, was
proceeding to mention other and less personal business of state, when
word was brought that a despatch-rider had just arrived with important
news from Beroldstein.

With an unusual show of eagerness, Rollmar had the despatch brought in.

“Has Prince Ludwig come to light?” the Duke inquired.

“No. But he will,” Rollmar answered. “King Josef is dead.”




CHAPTER XV

OMPERTZ IS PUZZLED


“I wonder----”

“Ah!”

“Whether it would be possible to get this letter given to the Princess.”

“You wonder, Captain?”

Countess Minna was becoming disdainful. She had come suddenly upon
Ompertz in the park, and he had startled her as much by his unexpected
question as by his abrupt appearance. But she had quickly recovered
herself.

“It is scarcely a matter to speculate about. Give your letter to the
first usher or page you see.”

She was thrilled with curiosity; but thought she knew better than to
show it.

Ompertz laughed. Perhaps he saw inquisitiveness peeping through the
mask of dignity. “That would hardly do,” he objected. “I should have
said, given secretly.”

Her curiosity now was intense, nevertheless she contrived to look
indignant.

“Then I should say the question you might speculate about is whether
the Princess would care to receive it,” she returned.

“True enough,” he assented heartily, “if it came from so humble a
person as myself. I am but a messenger.” He paused, as loving to
tantalize her. But she gave no voice to the curiosity that was in her
eyes. “It is from Lieutenant von Bertheim.”

“Ah!” she made a quick movement, then checked herself. “I suppose,” she
said sarcastically, “you have been commissioned to bait a trap for the
Princess, and are, as usual, dutifully obeying orders.”

The thrust called forth a little laugh. “Anyhow, I disobeyed orders
pretty thoroughly last night,” he returned, “or the hand that wrote
this would never have held pen again.”

She was still mystified, but her expression softened.

“Will you explain?” she asked, still coldly.

“With pleasure,” he replied. “Since I must admit that if ever a man’s
position stood in need of explanation mine does at the present moment.
The lieutenant got me, a stranger, out of a tight corner once. It was
not his fault that I got squeezed into it again, and then, unknown to
us both, he gave me a chance of slipping out a second time. Then came
the part I might all my life have regretted playing, but happily that
is spared me. You see, gracious Countess, I did not know who it was I
was set to catch, nor did the Chancellor who set me to catch him. But
for an opportune moonbeam last night, I might now have been mourning
a friend, and Princess Ruperta a lover. But now we are allies; I have
gone over, driven at the point of a rascal’s dastardly stiletto. Pfui!
I am at least a gentleman, and, as such, claim to consort with men of
honour--and here is my credential.”

With a bow, he held out a sealed note. “I am fortunate to have
encountered you, noble Countess.”

She took the note, looking at him curiously. “You lay in wait for me,”
she suggested suspiciously.

“Indeed I did,” he answered frankly. “How else should I have hoped
to get that all-important message to the Princess? And my lying in
ambush had another reason. His Excellency the Chancellor and Captain
von Ompertz have fallen out. I am in his black books--thick volumes,
I guess; there should be a price on my head; but to repair a wrong
against friendship I am content to run the risk.”

Minna seemed to be debating a question with herself. Presently she
said: “I, in turn, have a letter for the Lieutenant.”

He bowed, but, perhaps from innate delicacy, forebore to offer himself
as messenger. “It is of great importance,” she pursued.

“Yes? Ah!” he laughed. “You were doubtless on your way to the old
sun-dial.”

She flushed, and the suspicion returned to her face in full force.

“The sun-dial,” she repeated. “You know--ah! and I, too, know now how
and by whom we have been betrayed.”

He gave an assenting sign. “In pursuance of duty, which is, happily,
mine no longer.”

“Spy!”

“I have been, I blush to confess, for a few hours,” he admitted, with a
sigh and a rueful face; “but that, you may trust me, is over. The dark
cloak never sat comfortably upon me. Many a man of my mind and in my
position would have called himself a patriot, but I will not quarrel
with the more opprobrious term.”

“Once a spy, always a spy,” she said resentfully.

Plainly her words cut him and he winced.

“I deserve that,” he returned, “and yet in my case it is far from
true. I was forced to do a thing I loathed to save my neck, and I
swear to you, Countess, by the honour of a soldier, by the Judge,
before Whom, if I am caught here, I shall very soon stand, that, had I
known the identity of the man I was employed against, had I known the
false tongue, the treacherous heart of my employer, I would have gone
whistling to my death before I would have sullied my poor hacked shield
with the stain of that business.”

There was nothing of the spy about him now. His words rang true as her
instinct told her. Still she would give in her belief grudgingly.

“I will entrust you with the letter if you are likely to have an
opportunity of delivering it,” she said, a little more dubiously than
was needful. She was not going to forgive too easily. “I presume it
will go into your hands, whether I give it to you here or leave it
under the sun-dial.”

“Assuredly,” he agreed cheerfully, ignoring the ungraciousness of her
speech. “Since my friend, the Lieutenant, has commissioned me to seek
for a letter which might lie there.”

“And which he would not trouble to seek himself,” she said with a
little pout.

“The Lieutenant,” he returned, “has heard family news which compels him
to leave for Beroldstein to-night.”

She went pale. “He leaves to-night?”

“That, I wager, is the purport of the letter I have given you. It is
settled, and I accompany him.”

The last words were spoken with a touch of triumph, as finally giving
the lie to Minna’s suspicions, but she seemed too distressed to notice
it. “Oh, how unlucky,” she exclaimed with a troubled look. “But perhaps
after all it does not so much matter. There is no harm in telling you
what must soon be no secret. The Princess also takes her departure
to-morrow. Not of her free will, far otherwise. We are sent by that
hateful Chancellor to the fortress of Krell.”

Ompertz opened his grey eyes. “This will be news for the Lieutenant.”

“Oh, the Lieutenant,” Minna cried ruefully. “I begin to wish we had
never seen him. It is all through him that we are to be banished to
that terrible, dreary, barbarous Castle of Krell. Ugh! We shall die or
go mad with melancholy in a fortnight!”

“The fortress of Krell,” said Ompertz with a grimly reminiscent smile.
“I know it. It would be a dull place enough for a soldier. But for you
and the Princess? No; it is decidedly not a lady’s bower.”

“And now,” she continued petulantly, “when a knight errant is sorely
needed, he must needs ride off home--for family reasons. Ah!” she
suddenly brightened, “why should not his departure render our horrible
exile unnecessary? If only it could be known to the Baron.”

“The Baron,” Ompertz replied dryly, “should be just now in a state
of doubt whether our knight errant has not taken his departure for
another world. But, gracious Countess,” he continued seriously, “were
it not that royal princesses are dangerous game to pursue, since that
ugly mastiff, treason, puts his nose in, and spoils the sport, I would
suggest a more spirited line of action than a retreat.”

“I dare say you would,” she retorted, “and get us all imprisoned for
life, even if we were lucky enough to keep our heads on our shoulders.
A month at Krell will be bad enough.”

But the soldier was busy with his plan of action. “You are not there
yet,” he said; “and, if I might lay a plan, never should be. The sooner
I carry this news to our friend the better. If he is of my mind he will
not let his lady-love suffer imprisonment for his sake. Pfui! It is
worse than cowardly to coerce a woman with fortresses and dungeons. I
am more than ever ashamed to think I ever took service under that old
dastard. Now, you will keep a sharp eye for one or both of us to-day?
We may not come till night-fall, but you shall hear of us before many
hours are past, and our Lieutenant’s family affairs may go to limbo.
Now, am I to have the honour of bearing the letter?”

She could not but hold it out to him. He took it with a bow which had
perhaps a touch of mockery in it, at any rate there was a look of
amused satisfaction in his face. “I thank you, gracious Countess,” he
said, “not only for the letter but for the token that your confidence
in this poor soldier is established.”

“I hope it may be,” she said. Ompertz bowed again and they parted.

The soldier was somewhat surprised on joining von Bertheim and
delivering his message to find that the lieutenant did not fall in as
eagerly as he had anticipated with a certain heroic plan he had formed
on his way to the city. His manifest hesitation was a puzzle to the
honest soldier. “Surely, my friend,” he remonstrated, “you are never,
after all the lady and you have gone through for one another, you are
never going to allow that scheming old wretch to pack her off to a
forsaken billet like the fortress of Krell? I have seen the place;
the sight is enough to make a sexton shudder. To a warm-hearted girl
like Princess Ruperta it would mean the devil’s own torture. And, once
inside those walls, I doubt if you would have so much as a chance of
getting sight of her, much less speech with her again till this pitiful
laggard, Prince Ludwig, chooses to come and fetch her out.”

“I do not propose,” Ludovic replied, “to leave the Princess in Krell
fortress. I am only considering whether I have not a better, or at
least a less risky, plan than yours for getting her out.”

“By my faith,” said Ompertz, “I have no plan for getting her Highness
out of Krell once she is in. That would be beyond my powers of
strategy. But she is not there yet, and if we are men she need never
be. I tell you, my young friend, there is only one man who, without an
army at his back, would get the lady out of Krell; and that is he who
would come with an order for release signed, ‘Rollmar.’”

“You scarcely understand the situation, my good friend,” Von Bertheim
said thoughtfully. “But you will soon. Captain Anton de Gayl has gone
to make preparations for our journey to-night.”

Ompertz was looking at him uneasily. But he forebore to ask the
question which his face and manner suggested. Perhaps the other
comprehended this, for he said, “I am going now to the Chancellor.”

“To the Chancellor?” the soldier echoed in surprise. “Then the horses
your friend is ordering will have a lighter load to-night than he
bargains for.”

Ludovic put a friendly hand on his shoulder. “I think not, captain. I
can take care of myself, even with Chancellor Rollmar.”

Ompertz looked at him in wonder and a little admiration. “Well,” he
muttered as Ludovic went out, “that is either the bravest fellow or the
biggest fool I ever met in all my wanderings. They talk of fool’s luck;
he has had enough of that to prove a regular skinful of folly.”

Ludovic took his way to the Chancellor’s. As he went along the
principal thoroughfare of the city a horseman came clattering down
it, meeting him; a man who, by the singularity of his dress as well
as by a certain official importance in his manner and pace, stood out
from the rest of the traffic. As the rider drew near, Ludovic turned
suddenly into a shop he happened to be passing. It was done evidently
from an impulse, as though to avoid recognition. He made a trifling
purchase almost at hap-hazard, and then pursued his way. He had not
gone far when he met his friend Anton de Gayl, who came up with a face
of concern.

“You saw that fellow?” von Bertheim asked.

“Ursleur? Yes; and what is more, have spoken to him. He brings serious
news.”

“Ah! The King----?”

“Is dead.”

“Yours prepared me for that. Poor uncle! I am sorry, though we never
quite agreed. I wish I had been there.”

“Yes,” Anton replied gravely. “It would have been well, Prince, for
more reasons than one.”

“What do you mean, Anton?” the other demanded quickly, noticing the
significance in his tone.

“Ursleur has brought Rollmar news which must be bad for you. It seems
that your cousin Ferdinand has taken advantage of your absence at this
critical moment to declare that you are dead. He has by this probably
got himself proclaimed King, seeing that he is the next heir after you.”

“You really gather that?”

“I do indeed. Things were in a commotion when Ursleur left, and
decidedly shaping that way. I do beseech your Highness to hurry back as
fast as horses can take you. It is madness to linger here.”

“Yes, it is madness,” the new King replied, taking a few agitated steps
to and fro. “Madness! and yet----” He paused in perplexity.

“Once proclaimed, Ferdinand will be difficult to dislodge,” Anton
pursued. “You know what the mob is, and he has taken care to keep
himself popular.”

“How my dear cousin will thank me for having played into his hands,”
the King exclaimed with a short laugh of mortification. “Still, I have
not been quite the mad fool he must think me; and how could I foresee
my uncle’s accident?”

“At least your Highness will not delay your return An hour now may make
the difference of a kingdom.”

The King was silent for a moment. “I start to-night.”

“To-night?” Anton de Gayl exclaimed in a tone of remonstrance. “And it
is yet hardly noon!”

“Nevertheless, I cannot start earlier.”

“Under pardon, your Highness, it is madness.”

The King smiled. “Perhaps. Yes, yes, it is madness, yet none the less
inevitable.”

His friend laughed. “I think I can understand,” he said a little
bitterly. “For only one thing does a sane man fling away a kingdom.”

Ludovic laid his hand affectionately on the other’s shoulder. “Your
impatience is justified, my dear friend,” he said. “I know my interests
are yours. But there is another thing, besides love, for which a man
may risk his crown, and more, his life; that is honour.”

“Honour? Yes. But surely----”

“This is a complicated affair of mine, my dear Anton; and one which
this business of my uncle’s death and Ferdinand’s usurpation have made
tenfold more difficult. The very act which calls me home post-haste at
the same time makes it impossible to avoid a few hours’ delay.”

De Gayl could say no more; so they returned together, the King seeming
to abandon the intention with which he had set out.




CHAPTER XVI

A DESPERATE EXPEDIENT


The rest of the day was occupied by the new King in taking anxious
thought and counsel. His original purpose of declaring his identity
to the Chancellor was now, he felt, a very doubtful expedient. A very
black cloud was resting over him, and the crafty old Minister was
obviously not the one to look with favour upon men whose positions
were insecure. The alliance had been planned and mooted by him for
purely political reasons. With the shadow of doubt now lying over those
reasons, the expediency of the marriage practically disappeared, at
least for the moment. If only Ludovic had declared himself sooner!
As it was, a day’s delay had been fatal. And here came in the other
complicating circumstance which had all along made him withhold the
disclosure, the animus and prejudice against the unseen Prince Ludwig
which had taken such hold of Ruperta’s mind.

After the outbursts of detestation he had not dared to declare
himself. Loving her as he did, the risk was too great, for she was
still something of an enigma to him; and although one word would have
cleared up the situation and smoothed the course of their love, yet
the revulsion might have been too great, might,--who knows?--have
turned love to hate. At least it would have killed the romance; in
which had lain the very joy, the exquisite zest of their love. Ruperta
might very naturally have looked upon the incognito as a trick of
the Chancellor’s and as such would surely have resented it, and then
besides, was romance nothing to Ludovic himself? Was not his wooing her
as a simple lieutenant of cavalry, his gaining her love as such, going
through perils, facing death for her sake, those hazardous yet sweet
adventures crammed into those few delicious days, ten thousand times
more heart-stirring than the dull, cut-and-dried mockery of a courtship
regulated by etiquette and, its very duration settled by precedent,
proceeding tediously to its inevitable end? When he thought, as he did
a thousand times a day, of that first kiss, so thrilling in its very
unexpectedness, he told himself that that moment had given him a joy
which had he come as Prince he never, never could have known. Then as
to the adventures, the first at the fortune-teller’s, so piquant, the
others so perilous yet so delicious, he was young and could enjoy them
to the full, never troubling himself as to the risks he ran in the
attainment of a joy which he had scarcely dared imagine might ever be
his, the finding of love where he had dreaded to meet with coldness
and distaste. But that love had seemed so delicately poised that he
feared to try the touch which might shatter it. It was strong enough in
opposition and adversity; what might it not turn to when the fraud of
his trial was disclosed?

When the scheme of the marriage had been agreed to by the King and
Ministers and then, as a natural, though hardly political, necessity,
had been mooted to him, he had hated the idea almost as cordially
as ever did his destined bride. Expediency counts for little at
five-and-twenty, at least in a free and healthy character. When the
blood is warm the heart must govern the head, or love will have nothing
to say to either. The very fact that these two young people hated the
idea of one another was in reality an all-sufficient reason to fall
desperately in love with each other if once the air could be cleared
of the mist of expediency and arrangement. Could that ever be? It hung
over their hearts like a foul miasma, choking the very life of love.
Their aversion to the match was pretty equal; their attitude differed
with their sex. Ludwig, with a man’s steady common-sense, realized the
wisdom of the policy and, with bitterness in his heart, bowed to the
inevitable which his rank prescribed. Only he vowed he would put off
that inevitable as long as possible. The little liberty he enjoyed
was dear to him--and he was only twenty-five. Where was the hurry? He
was answered that it lay in certain contingencies, death; lusty youth
laughs at that; an interloper; the Princess Ruperta might make another
match; he fervently hoped she would. That was a reason for, rather than
against, delay, he told himself, though he was too wise to utter his
thoughts. A Minister who, in a royal alliance, should take love into
consideration, would be unworthy of the very strap of his portfolio.

So Ludwig kept his own counsel, blowing neither hot nor cold upon
the project, and quietly made preparations for a solitary hunting
excursion. The King, his uncle, protested, but could not well deny his
heir a month’s respite. After all, it would perhaps be no bad thing
to show Chancellor Rollmar that they on their side were not exactly
jumping at his proposal.

But on the eve of his departure Ludwig heard something which induced
him to make some change in the necessary baggage prepared for the
expedition. He set out on the appointed day towards the great forest
where the sport lay, but it was to pass through that wild district with
little harm to fur or feather. He had heard something of the Princess,
his intended bride, something which excited his imagination and raised
his curiosity into a desire to verify it. So as simple Lieutenant
Ludovic von Bertheim he came to Waldenthor, his whereabouts being known
to no one but his friend Anton de Gayl, and there, in pursuance of his
design, saw the Princess, then by a lucky chance, as has been related,
met her in as romantic a fashion as could be desired. But from that
moment he had gradually created a situation where the physical danger
of remaining was outweighed by the moral risk of withdrawing, and every
day the difficulty intensified; until now, when an unlooked-for crisis
had suddenly arisen, his position had become almost untenable. However,
as an expedient from this, he, with characteristic boldness, determined
on a desperate course of action.

Every shred of the innate chivalry which was his in so large a measure
forbade him to allow the Princess to be carried off for his sake a
prisoner to the Fortress of Krell while he could lift a hand to prevent
it. Rollmar’s drastic measure could have been easily obviated had
Ludwig still been in the position he had occupied hitherto. As heir
to the throne of Drax-Beroldstein, and the object of the Chancellor’s
darling plan, he would have had but to declare himself, share the
secret of his incognito with the Minister, when all would have been
easy, and the romance of the wooing might have continued till Ruperta’s
enlightenment was no longer to be dreaded. But now? What would his
reception be by that astute old opportunist? Already, no doubt, on the
news he had just received, he was substituting Ferdinand for Ludwig
as Princess Ruperta’s bridegroom. Was not the old fox capable even of
making things certain and saving possible trouble by continuing to mark
him down for destruction, perhaps now with still greater zeal? No;
that course, a few hours before so simple, was now ineffective. The
bolder and desperate plan must be resorted to no longer for the sake of
romance, but from sheer necessity.

Accordingly Captain von Ompertz, much to his satisfaction, was taken
into counsel, and a very workable scheme the soldier of fortune had to
submit.

At night-fall Ludovic and he made their way secretly into the park
and across to the wing of the palace which contained the Princess’s
apartments, De Gayl having been left in charge of the travelling
carriage outside the park wall. As they approached the palace,
Ompertz stopped with a warning gesture and pointed to a figure, just
discernible, standing in the shadow of the wall below the Princess’s
windows. “The old fox has set a guard,” he whispered. “I must try
impudence to get rid of him, and, if that fails, cold steel. Ugh! Let’s
hope that won’t be needed; it makes me sick to draw in cold blood. Stay
here, and for her Highness’s sake, do not let him smoke you.”

He had begun to go forward now, striding boldly towards the sentinel
who, as he drew near, challenged him.

“It is all right, friend,” he replied with easy assurance. “You know
Captain von Ompertz. I have come by his Excellency’s orders to relieve
you.”

“To relieve me?” the guard repeated dubiously.

“Certainly,” Ompertz returned boldly, cleverly refraining from
explanations in favour of plausible bluffness. “Chancellor’s orders.
Is not that enough? If you want reasons, why, you’ll find him at home
yonder, and can go and ask him, which is more than I care to do.”

“Oh, I’m content enough,” the other returned, with a gruff laugh. “If
you are ordered to relieve me, so much the better night’s rest. Good
evening.”

“Quiet guard, comrade?”

“Seen nothing till you came along.”

“Right! Good-night.” And the fellow went off.

Ompertz had speculated shrewdly enough upon the chance that his being
no longer in Rollmar’s service would not be generally known. In this he
had proved right, and to the sentry, who knew nothing of the change,
the abrupt relief had seemed, after all, quite natural, especially
as the Chancellor’s orders were notoriously apt to be sudden and
inexplicable. The fellow had hardly known why he had been stationed
there; beyond what was dictated by a certain native caution, he could
not question the order which sent him off duty.

And now Ompertz had a clear stage for the carrying out of his plan.
That he was expected by Minna and her mistress was soon evident. The
window opened, and, after a short parley, Ompertz ran off to the spot
where he had left his companion and returned with him, carrying also a
bundle which contained a rope ladder upon which his energies had that
afternoon been expended.

To carry the Princess off under the very nose of the keen old
Chancellor was daring almost to madness. Yet what else could be done?
The alternative was to see her consigned to the prison-castle of Krell
till she should consent to marry Ferdinand the Usurper, or Ludwig the
Detested, whichever fortune should leave in possession of the kingdom.
Would Ruperta ever forgive him if he abandoned her now? Hardly: though
his absence were to regain his kingdom. And if he failed in that? Then
his state would be hopeless indeed. No. Debate it as he would, he
always came back to the conclusion that, as things had stood between
them, he could not, dared not, leave her. To run away as King Ludwig,
even on so creditable an errand, would be to wake her rudely and for
ever from the dream of Lieutenant von Bertheim.

The plan had yet to be proposed to the Princess. She might well draw
back at the idea of a step so daring, so perilous, so absolutely
mad from her point of view, ignorant as she was of her lover’s real
position. But her letter of that morning had indicated that her temper
was ripe for a desperate attempt at escape from Rollmar’s coercion, and
on that idea he had acted.

A weighted end of twine was thrown in at the window, and by that
the rope ladder was drawn up. When this had been made fast, Ludovic
ascended.

“So you have not gone,” Ruperta said as he kissed her hand.

“Could I go,” he replied, “and leave you, dearest Princess, to bear
the punishment I have brought upon you? Is it true that you are to be
taken to Krell?”

“It is true,” she answered, with a show of proud resentment, “that we
have been ordered to prepare for the journey. But the Baron may find
that it is one thing to order and another to be obeyed.”

“He sends you to Krell because you will not marry Prince Ludwig?”

She laughed scornfully. “Prince Ludwig? No. The Baron’s regard for my
feelings is shown by his now having provided another husband for me.
Prince Ludwig has suddenly dropped out of the question.”

“Ah?”

“Yes,” she continued, in all bitterness. “King Josef is dead suddenly.
The gallant Ludwig is nowhere to be found; he has had the good sense
to efface himself at the thought of marrying me. His cousin Ferdinand
has got himself proclaimed King, and as the throne, not the man, is
Rollmar’s design for me, I am now to think no more of dear Ludwig
but to marry Ferdinand, or else spend the rest of my existence in
the dungeons of Krell, a warning to those who think to thwart our
Chancellor. If I had loved Ludwig as much as I have hated him it would
have been all the same.”

“So you have seen Rollmar?”

“This afternoon. Yes, and defied him. He seemed to consider any
delicacy in announcing the change of bridegrooms quite unnecessary. He
was at least frank in his brutality, and had but one word to answer all
my objections; Krell. But he shall see.”

She spoke with a repressed indignation which seemed bursting for an
outlet. He took her hand and they looked into each other’s eyes with a
mutual understanding.

“Then you will come with me, dearest?” he said.

For a moment she did not answer, but her silence was not of hesitation,
her eyes seemed searching into his very soul.

“I can trust you?”

“To my life’s end, my love.” Her hands were clasped in his now. “But
you shall not come with us, you shall not share my fortunes except by
your own free will and wish. My love is too true to lead you selfishly
away from your greater destiny.”

Her eyes were ever looking into his. “I know you are true,” she said
at last. “Ah! how I wish I could tell--could see the light beyond
this darkness.” She turned away and leaned against the carved mantel,
bowing her head on her crossed arms. So for many seconds they stayed in
silence, Minna from the far end of the room watching anxiously for the
decision which might mean so much to her.

Ruperta raised her head. “Oh, how I loathe this life!” she cried
passionately. “How I hate the cold false hearts that surround me here.
Am I never to know anything but indifference, and cold-blooded scheming
and deceit? Am I fit for nothing but to be pushed about, joyless and
hopeless, on this pitiless old intriguer’s chessboard? I will not
endure it; I will not. It shall end. He has threatened me. He shall see
I am not to be threatened with impunity. If my father is weak, that is
no reason why I should submit. I will go from this hated life. Ludovic,
I will go with you.”

As she turned impulsively towards him, he met her.

“Ruperta,” he said, “you must go for love of me, or you will repent
this act.”

For love of him, of a poor Lieutenant of Cavalry. And she a Princess,
only child of a royal house. Truly the plunge was into darkness.
Repentance? Could she think of that now? Poor girl, with all her pride
and beauty and imperiousness, her fate looked gloomy enough but for the
twin stars that seemed to light her way, freedom and love. She put out
her hand. “Yes,” she replied simply. “I will go for love of you.”

Their lips met, then he said, “Come, then, dearest, we have no time to
lose.”

The hasty preparations for the journey were soon made while the two
men waited below, where soon without mishap Ruperta and Minna joined
them, and when Ompertz had, as far as possible, removed the evidence of
their flight, the four set off warily across the park. They reached the
travelling carriage in safety and with no sign of pursuit. It had been
arranged that de Gayl should ride on in advance and take counsel with
certain friends of Ludovic’s, and, if thought advisable, announce his
approach.

So he gave up the reins to Ompertz and hurried off towards the city
where his horse waited ready saddled. Ompertz whipped up the horses,
and so the momentous flight began.




CHAPTER XVII

THE FLIGHT


The journey which the fugitives had before them was one which
necessarily was full of peril and difficulty and, what to Ludovic’s
interest was worse, delay. For to have taken the direct road from one
capital to the other would have been madness. A very few leagues would
have brought their flight to an ignominious end. They would have to
take an unfrequented route, to travel over by-roads, to avoid towns,
to proceed warily, at least till they should have passed the boundary
of the Chancellor’s net-work of spies. For this purpose chance could
not have provided a better pilot than Ompertz. The wandering mercenary
knew the whole region fairly well, while his campaigning experience
would stand them in good stead. He had a rare eye for catching the
sign of unwelcome observation, and knew every trick for avoiding it;
moreover he was full of resource and took danger and difficulty less as
disagreeable episodes than as matters of course.

All through the long, weary night the journey continued without
break or any occurrence to interrupt the monotony of the dark hours.
The Princess, now that the step was taken, had resumed her natural
composure which was in strong contrast to Minna’s feverish anxiety.
Their talk was disjointed and inclined to languish, since all three
seemed preoccupied, and the future seemed dark as the night through
which they drove. Ludovic’s mind was full of serious thoughts; the
stern crisis which had suddenly confronted him was absorbing enough,
the more troubling that he could not share with his companions the
knowledge of his position. Presently the ladies seemed inclined to
sleep. Ludovic made them as comfortable as was possible, and then left
them, to take his seat beside Ompertz on the box. The campaigner had
plenty to say and was glad of a companion and listener. The stories
of his adventures, his remarks on men and things were racy enough,
but they were perhaps hardly appreciated by the man who, with pale,
resolute face, sat beside him trying to pierce the future, inwardly
chafing at the delay their slow progress forced upon him and keenly
sensible of the momentous responsibility of the act in which they were
engaged.

But at last the long night showed signs of passing; black gave way to
dark grey, ever growing lighter till at length the landscape emerged
from its shroud and stood half revealed in the chill mist of morning.
They were still many miles from the frontier when they stopped at a
small town for refreshment and change of horses. But the spirits of
the little party rose with the day and at the thought that, so far,
their venture was successful. Pursuit was, of course, inevitable, but
the chance was that now they had a good many hours’ start, and every
league they had put between them and Waldenthor would have widened the
radius and so increased the difficulty of tracking them. The Princess
and Minna could find consolation now for their hardships in exulting in
Rollmar’s discomfiture. To have defied and checkmated the old fox was
delightful to think of; they could imagine his incredulity, his rage;
and laughed as they pictured his stormy interview with the Duke.

“Poor father! His dignity will be in sore straits to-day. My only hope
is that by the Baron’s temper he will be goaded into taking my part.
Then all may be well; for, after all, father is Duke, not Rollmar.”

It was a poor expectation, Ludovic thought pitifully, that all could
be well with the elopement of a Princess with a simple Lieutenant; he
longed to reveal to her his true position, but still he dared not,
and so long as she continued to see things in a hopeful light, why
should he? Ruperta was rejoicing in the unaccustomed sense of freedom,
delicious in proportion as it had been so longed for and despaired of;
the revelation could well be put off, three words would suffice when
the inevitable moment came, and now every hour their partnership in
this desperate venture lasted must draw tighter the bond between them.
So, masking his own anxieties, he set himself to keep up her spirits,
and in this Ompertz’s bright, buoyant humour was of great help.

But no time was to be wasted; after a hurried meal they had to start
again; at any moment signs of hue and cry might appear, and then their
difficulties would be increased a hundred-fold. So they sped on; along
broken, jolting roads, sometimes across wild tracks of bare country
where road there was none; up tedious hills and down some so steep as
to threaten to dash the carriage to destruction, over crazy bridges,
through doubtful fords, and sometimes under the depressing canopy of
lonely forest tracks; all through the day, which, as it wore on, seemed
more wearisome than the night, they kept on their way, wondering,
doubting, half repenting, yet ever recurringly hopeful. They were
young, and to youth the unknown is delightful; only to age is it a
bugbear.

Ompertz never let his spirits flag through the long hours, nor was it
his fault if depression came upon the others. He sang merrily, and,
when he had a companion, chatted gaily; he was quick of observation,
and had a fund of curious knowledge to illustrate nearly every object
he pointed out. It was a happy moment when he shouted that they were
crossing the frontier, unchallenged, unnoticed, for they had left the
road and taken a rough and devious way between the frontier villages.
So they slipped across and pursued their journey with a feeling
something like relief now that they were beyond Rollmar’s jurisdiction.
But when would safety be reached? Could they hope ever to be safe,
struggling as they were in the toils of an international policy?
Theirs was the security of the mouse with which the cat is playing.
But Ruperta would not allow herself to admit this. She was reckless,
as strong characters bent on desperate enterprises ever will be. To
hesitate, to look back and calculate the chances, when once the boats
are burnt, is the last thing a resolute mind will do; madness or not,
it must be gone through with; what the future has in store is to be met
boldly when it comes, but not anticipated.

When the journey was roughest, the scene most dismal, and Minna’s
sinking heart forced an exclamation of despair, “It is better than
Krell,” Ruperta said resolutely, and that seemed enough. Behind her was
a prison, or at least the hateful monotony of a coerced, circumscribed
existence, in front were liberty and love, room for soul expansion,
sympathy, humanity, everything for which she hungered. And so even
the drear landscape, the fatigues and terrors of the journey, should
never for an instant damp her spirits or make her regret what she had
undertaken. For freedom of soul and body she had thrown every other
consideration to the winds. If she had fallen from her high estate,
smirched her reputation in the eyes of all Europe, she was content so
that it freed her from a hateful bondage, a loathed marriage and gave
her to the man she loved. And him she trusted with her whole soul, so
that she saw no shame in sharing his desperate flight, in facing the
world and danger and death with him.

Evening drew on, and no untoward sign had come to rouse their fears.
But now the character of their route was changing; they were entering
the wild forest and mountainous country which lay like a great rampart
frowning them back from their destination. The high road, upon which
they dared not venture, ran miles away south-west, cutting boldly
through the forest, and that was rugged and gloomy enough. Ompertz,
who knew the district, was confident that he could find his way
across by little used roads where they would be practically safe from
pursuit. The entry to this gloomy region was enough to send a chill
to the travellers’ hearts, and, as though to enhance its forbidding
characteristics, the wind had begun to rise and moan through the trees
and rocky fissures, and the sky to darken with the signs of a coming
storm. Depressing as the prospect was, no turning back was to be
thought of, the environment had to be ignored and the journey pushed
on. Luckily the fresh horses they had lately taken were strong and used
to the rough work they had before them. So they went sturdily forward,
their driver’s spirits seeming in no wise to be damped by the gloom
that had surrounded them.

For a while they would drive through the forest so thick and dark
as to seem impenetrable, the road strewn with a carpet of moss and
pine needles, so that they glided along without noise, the great
trees in their serried myriads seeming to close in upon them with an
oppressiveness which threatened to shut out air as well as light.
The silence was supreme, appalling, in its dominating intensity; it
seemed to enforce itself upon every living intruder on its domain, even
Ompertz’s singing was hushed. Then the wall of trees would open out,
the air would grow lighter, fresher, and the track would pass out upon
an amphitheatre of towering rocks, grim, frowning, majestic, beyond
which the outlet was a defile roofed by the overhanging cliffs so as
to resemble the mouth of a cavern. The terrors of that natural tunnel
made Minna cover her face with her hands and sob for very despair;
Ruperta sat with pale face and compressed lips, keeping her fears at
least from utterance. Ludovic leaned forward and touched her hand. She
looked up quickly with a little shiver, then, as her eyes met his, he
saw what told him she would be brave to the end. Ah, that end! How far
off it was yet, and every tedious minute seemed, instead of bringing
it nearer, to push it farther still. Soon the long archway was passed,
to be succeeded by the steep ascent of a wooded gorge leading to the
very heart of the mountains. Now the storm was beginning to break over
them in its fury. The gale howled and roared in the chasms and ravines,
sweeping with it the rain in blinding scuds. At one moment it would be
light enough just to make out the way, in the next a pall of blackness
would cover them so that even the great walls of rock on either side
could not be seen. They were forced to halt, and Ompertz, still cheery,
dismounted and held counsel with Ludovic.

“We cannot go on through this, Lieutenant,” he declared ruefully, “at
least not up this track. I know these mountain storms too well, we are
comparatively sheltered here, but at every step we take upwards its
fury will increase. We must turn aside and make at all hazards for the
main road. Yes, it is a risk, but it is either that or staying here all
night.”

Delay, which could in any way be avoided, was not to be thought of.
And, indeed, if they were to take to the high road now, the sooner they
struck it the better for their chances of proceeding unmolested. But
how were they to make their way out of that rocky maze? Never admitting
the difficulty, Ompertz turned the horses and made for a cross road he
had noticed some distance back. This proved, when he turned into it,
to be rough and almost impossible for a vehicle to traverse. Nothing
daunted, Ompertz stuck to his task, and, his horses being willing
and sure-footed, the carriage made some progress through the roaring
tempest. The track, as Ompertz had expected, led gradually downwards;
he was confident that a couple of leagues should bring them to the
road, and then all they would have to fear would be Rollmar’s pursuit.

But now their first serious mishap was to occur. The mountain road,
which seemed to be getting smoother so that the horses could increase
their pace, dipped unexpectedly in its winding course, just as a great
squall of wind and rain came roaring over the mountain. Aided by the
declivity, the carriage was now rolling down at a dangerous pace.
Blinded for the moment by the squall, Ompertz was unable to check or
even guide the horses. The carriage swerved from side to side, to
crash at last into a projecting corner of rock, the impact splintering
a wheel and so bringing their progress to an end. With a cry of
discomfiture, Ompertz leapt down and satisfied himself that no one was
hurt.

“Unlucky wretch that I am!” he cried in an agony of regret. “I have
ruined everything now.”

Ludovic, taking in the cause of the accident, was far from blaming him.

“No fault of yours, my friend. Who could hope to drive down such a
place in a night like this?”

As the clouds were swept across the sky, alternating darkness
penetrable and impenetrable, the rain would cease fitfully, and then
pour down and, caught by the wind, sweep horizontally through the
gorge. The carriage certainly afforded shelter, but to Ludovic the idea
of having to stay there all night was maddening. It seemed the very
ruin of their enterprise.

“Stay you with the ladies,” said Ompertz, “while I go and reconnoitre.”

The idea of finding an inn or another carriage in that wild spot seemed
hopeless enough; still, anything was better than inaction.

Chafing with impatience as he was, Ludovic tried to dissuade him. “You
can do nothing till the storm passes, except to get a wet skin, my dear
Captain.”

Ompertz’s only argument was to wrap his cloak tightly round him and
start off on his forlorn hope.

The accident seemed to have strengthened rather than damped Ruperta’s
spirit; it was as though nothing could matter now. So they talked
almost cheerfully, as the wind shrieked round them and the rain lashed
the panes.

Minna was resigned now to her fate; she could laugh with the
recklessness of despair; all hope in her was shattered with the wheel.
Happily, the storm seemed inclined to abate something of its fury; the
rain beat less savagely; the intervals of comparative light lasted
longer. It was but a short half-hour from Ompertz’s departure, when his
voice hailing them sent a thrill of expectation to their hearts. In
an instant Ludovic was outside. Ompertz clambered breathless down the
steep wall of rock.

“There is a great Schloss not a quarter of an hour from here,” he
cried. “We are in luck! There will at least be shelter and food,
perhaps a carriage. Come! The weather is abating. I will show you the
place. Man, you cannot leave the ladies, and one a Princess, out here
all night, and such a night, with a fine house but a few minutes away,”
he protested, as he saw Ludovic hesitate.

A short consultation brought them to the conclusion that something must
be risked. In that wild, desolate place they were not likely to be
recognized, while shelter and rest were urgent, since their progress
was stopped. Wrapping the Princess and Minna in their cloaks, the two
men helped them up the craggy side of the ravine where they could
strike across to the Schloss.

To bring the horses up was a more formidable business, but Ompertz,
whose experience had fitted him for coping with most practical
difficulties, accomplished this without mishap, and the party pushed
forward through the storm. The way was difficult enough; amid rocks and
pit-falls, they had in the darkness to proceed with the greatest care.
After nearly an hour’s walking, they entered a valley running through
a vast pine forest which rose and stretched away on either hand, a
weird expanse of impenetrable blackness. At the top of a slight ascent
Ompertz cried, “Look!”

They could see, a short way before them, a light shining out of the
intense darkness, as through a hole in a black curtain, and when they
had gone a few steps further along the now descending road, the passing
away of a dark cloud brought dimly out against the sky the turrets of
the castle.




CHAPTER XVIII

STRANGE QUARTERS


The approach to the castle was by a series of terraces connected by a
narrow zig-zag road. It stood on a small plateau formed in the wooded
hill which rose with almost perpendicular abruptness behind it. Its
aspect was curious enough, but the most astounding thing about it
was its position, its unexpectedness, and the contrast with its wild
surroundings.

As Ludovic and his companions made their way up the winding road their
curiosity grew at every step. And the curiosity was not altogether
without apprehension.

“The last thing I looked to find in these wilds,” Ompertz observed with
a puzzled look at the grey silent building. “It is like a fairy tale.”

Ludovic was a little anxious, having his responsibility in mind, as to
the outcome of the adventure. But such ideas did not seem to trouble
Ompertz.

“Our greatest piece of luck,” he said, “is that the palace is
inhabited. There are plenty of old castles about in these parts, but
they have been handed over long ago to the bats and owls. Now, that
lighted window bodes a more comfortable reception than a screech and a
flutter.”

“No doubt it is a shooting-lodge,” Ludovic suggested.

“It can be nothing else,” Ompertz agreed. “We may look for a good
supper and a night’s rest, if not for a carriage.”

They had now reached the gateway which led to the entrance door. Here
the horses were made fast, and then Ompertz pulled the iron bell-handle
that hung in the porch. Scarcely had his hand left it, when the door
was thrown open, sending a blinding flood of brightness into the black
night, and disclosing a great square hall, hung with trophies and
implements of the chase. Two men in quaint liveries stood at the door.
As it opened they made way for a third with white hair and beard, who
came forward and, with a bow, motioned the travellers to enter. Ludovic
in a few words gave the reason of their seeking shelter. Taking it as a
matter of course, the old man listened gravely, and then ushering them
into a room off the hall, asked them to wait there.

“I will at once inform my master of your arrival,” he said
deferentially, and so left them.

The four looked at one another in astonishment.

“Well, if this is not an extraordinary place to light upon in the
mountains,” Ompertz exclaimed, accepting his good fortune with a laugh.

To Ruperta alone, since her experience was narrowed to one phase of
life, did their reception seem short of wonderful.

“Everything now,” said Ludovic, “depends upon our host; who he is, and
whether he is likely to recognize us. Supposing that he does not, you
and I, Princess, must pass as brother and sister; Countess Minna and
Captain von Ompertz are our friends and travelling companions. Let us
hope our incognito may not be suspected.”

As he spoke, the door was opened by the old steward, who, with a
bow--for those were days of ceremonial--ushered their host into
the room. A man as singular as was his dwelling. He seemed the
very incarnation of power, with his broad chest, massive throat
and strongly marked features. His hair and beard were black, his
complexion swarthy, but his eyes, curiously, were light blue. He was
plainly dressed, but a certain dignity of look and movement gave him an
air of distinction. He bowed, and greeted the travellers with almost an
excess of welcome.

“I should be very sorry to hear of your mishap,” he said, “were it not
for the pleasure it gives me to be your host to-night.”

His voice, Ludovic thought, was the deepest he had ever heard. There
was, too, a peculiar sustained vibration in it, like the deep pedal
notes of an organ.

“We must consider ourselves very fortunate,” Ludovic added, after a
word of thanks, “to have found a shelter so splendid and unexpected in
this place.”

Their host laughed, showing, in contrast to his black beard, a row of
dead white teeth. “I do not wonder at your surprise,” he said. “But I
love a mountain life, its wildness and its sport. At the same time,
sense of comfort and luxury in one’s home enhances by contrast one’s
enjoyment of these surroundings.”

“Naturally,” Ludovic agreed, his opinion of their singular host still
hanging in doubt.

“Many people pretend to love a mountain life,” the other continued,
“but they make themselves woefully uncomfortable, and soon fly back to
towns and civilization. I may, perhaps, claim to have the courage of my
fancy.”

The man’s manner was perfect, far more refined than his appearance
would have suggested, yet to Ludovic’s keen perception there was
something about him which made him doubt the depth, the reality of his
frankness.

“My servants have probably told you my name. No? It is Irromar, Count
Irromar, and this, my principal place of residence, is called the
Schloss Teufelswald.”

Ludovic accepted the information with a bow, and some inward
congratulation that their identity was not likely to be known to this
secluded nobleman. Irromar? The name, though, seemed not unfamiliar.

The Count’s deep voice interrupted his attempt to recall it.

“And now, may I know whom I have the honour of entertaining?”

Ludovic gave the name he had assumed during his incognito, presenting
Ruperta as his sister, changing Minna’s title to simple Fräulein, and
giving Ompertz alone his actual designation. During the introduction
the Count’s eyes rested rather longer on Ruperta’s face than Ludovic
liked, and their expression seemed to have something in it which
exceeded greeting; but then that was natural. She was a queen among
women, and might have come, no doubt, as a revelation to this
mountain-dweller.

“We are in haste to push on with our journey,” Ludovic said. “If we
might beg the loan of a carriage, our horses are still fresh, and----”

The Count made a quick gesture of protest. “It is not to be thought of,
my dear sir. As to the carriage, why, the whole of my stable would be
at your service, were I cruel enough to allow you to leave my roof this
wild night.”

“Nevertheless, I should be glad if you would permit us to continue on
our way,” Ludovic persisted. “We have lost too much time already.”

The Count smiled. “Which you will certainly not recover by starting
before morning. What, Lieutenant,” he added in an easy tone of
masterful remonstrance, “it would be nothing less than an outrage to
drag these ladies out again into the storm and darkness. They are
fatigued enough already, one can see.”

Ruperta spoke a word to second Ludovic’s urging; but their host would
not hear of their departure.

“I am an inexorable host,” he laughed. “If you come to my inn, the
reckoning I charge is that you make wise use of the hospitality it
affords. Now--ah, Gomer,” he said as the old steward entered, “you have
come to tell us that supper is ready. Come, my friends; I shall give
myself the pleasure of joining you. The wild weather has given me a
second appetite.”

With a deferential bow, he offered his arm to Ruperta. She hesitatingly
took it and he led her from the room. The masterful peremptoriness
of his insistence was so coated with the good humour of a frank
hospitality, that it could not without ungraciousness be withstood,
so Ludovic, comforting himself with the reflection that Ruperta and
Minna would have a much-needed rest, was forced to accept the delay and
submit to his host’s decree.

The Count led the way to a fine square dining hall, where a luxurious
supper table had been prepared. The room curiously reflected its owner.
In spite of its air of great refinement, there yet seemed flung over it
a subtle suggestion of brute strength, almost savagery. Upon the solid
oaken floor were strewn rugs made of the skins of bears and wolves. The
walls were hung with vivid tapestries on which were worked flamboyant
pictures of war and sport almost brutal in their realism. Antlers and
swords, armour and sporting weapons were the ornaments of the room; it
was essentially the dwelling-place of a strong adventurous personality.
But there was the touch of scarcely restrained savagery which seemed,
to delicate minds at least, to make the tone of the place repulsive.
And, over all, the note of strength; fierce, dominant strength.

The good fare and sparkling wine after the hardships of the long
journey soon made the travellers take a more cheerful view of the
situation, and put them in a frame of mind to accept with thankfulness
the shelter, and with resignation the delay, which this accident had
provided. Even Ruperta began to take a manifest interest in her unusual
surroundings and could join almost animatedly in conversation with her
host. With a tact, which had in it something of suspicion, the Count
forebore to question closely any of the party as to the purpose and
extent of their journey, accepting a nebulous explanation on Ompertz’s
part, who airily accounted for their presence in those mountain wilds
by their having missed the high road, with amused toleration of an
obvious fiction. Then he adroitly turned the conversation to general
topics, talking of war and campaigning to the captain, of sport to
Ludovic, of lighter social matters to the ladies. Although he was found
keeping his state in that wild spot, the Count soon proved that he was
far from being exclusively a dweller with nature. He was familiar with
many capitals and their society, and was by no means ignorant of what
was going on in the more civilised world beyond his mountain fastness.
He happened to mention Rollmar.

“You know the Chancellor?” Ludovic asked.

“Not personally; well enough by reputation, though, and we have
corresponded, not too amicably, more than once. Yes, we are well known
to one another,” the Count laughed grimly. “It is well for one of us,
perhaps, that I stand some leagues outside his jurisdiction.”

“You would try a fall with him?” Ompertz suggested.

“We should hardly be likely to leave one another in peace. Chancellor
Rollmar loves coercion, not to say tyranny, and I--well, I brook no
interference with my liberty of will.”

There was scarcely need for the statement; the man’s determined nature
was obvious.

“I am just now amused,” he continued, “in watching a little scheme
of the old fox’s where chance is trying a fall with him. I allude
to a matter which must be, at least partially, known to you; the
projected marriage between Princess Ruperta and Prince Ludwig of
Drax-Beroldstein.”

“Ah!” Ludovic bent forward with assumed interest in order to direct
the Count’s notice from Ruperta. “I suppose not even a possible mutual
dislike between the parties will avail against Rollmar’s intention
there.”

The Count laughed. “No. I must give our friend the Chancellor credit
for strength of purpose to brush aside such a harmless fly as that.
But now he is faced by something more like a difficulty. You have not
heard the latest news? No? It is scarcely likely; but I make a point of
being well posted. Yes; within the last few days a change has come over
the situation which may prove an awkward blow to the old schemer. King
Josef has died suddenly from an accident.”

“So Prince Ludwig is King?” Ompertz observed.

With a knowing shake of the head the Count drew back his black fringed
lips in a smile. “Prince Ludwig, as most of the world knows to its
great amusement, has run away and hidden himself to escape the bride
Rollmar has ready for him. Why, is his affair; for report speaks of her
as a beauty. However, perhaps he did not consider the sugar sufficient
to disguise the medicine. Well, the extraordinary part of the affair is
this. Uncle Josef dies. Nephew Ludwig, the Unready, is not to be found,
consequently Nephew Ferdinand, the Alert, springs up, and, seizing the
opportunity, coolly seats himself upon the vacant throne.”

A long, low whistle sounded through the room. Ompertz’s lips were
pursed; he was staring at Ludovic in bewildered suspicion.

Ludovic understood the whistle and the look, but he felt the soldier’s
circumspection was, after the first shock, to be trusted.

“This must rather complicate the Chancellor’s matrimonial plan,” he
remarked coolly to his host.

“Yes, indeed,” the Count laughed. “And I am curious to see how long it
will be before we hear of a transference, by proxy, of the Princess’s
affections.”

“To the reigning cousin?”

“Exactly.”

“What would the world say of the Princess who allows her hand to be
transferred so casually?” It was Ruperta who put the question.

The Count turned to her with a cynical smile.

“Chancellor Rollmar would probably say, Fräulein, that a Princess had
no right to her hand or her heart. They are the property of the State,
to be disposed of to its best advantage. And this State is represented
by Chancellor Rollmar.”

“I was not asking for the Chancellor’s opinion, but the world’s,”
Ruperta said coldly.

“The world, dear lady, is too selfish to trouble itself about such
matters. The world considers that persons in high places have their
duties--sometimes very disagreeable ones--to perform. It is, after all,
some compensation for other advantages. Moral, do not be a Princess,
the world would say with a shrug. No; the only person who is likely to
find serious fault with the business is the Princess herself. Always
supposing that she has inherited sufficient character and preserved
sufficient humanity to feel her position and resent it.”

“You mean if she is a woman and not a doll?”

“Exactly. In this particular complication, the Princess may regard the
change from the rightful heir to the usurper with the indifference
which she doubtless feels for both.”

“She may feel none for a third man,” Ludovic put in.

The Count gave a shrug. “So much the worse for her and the third man,
if Rollmar gets wind of it.”

“Poor Princess!” Ruperta commented bitterly.

“You speak,” said Ludovic to the Count, “as though the transference
of the Princess’s hand was inevitable. Putting aside the question of
submission to Rollmar’s orders, is it certain that Ferdinand will
succeed in keeping the position he has assumed?”

“Possibly not,” Irromar answered carelessly. “Although it is always
easier to hold than to oust. Ferdinand seems to have the favour of the
people, and the mob counts; even Rollmar acknowledges that. Anyhow, I
should advise Ludwig to show himself without delay, if, indeed, he is
not already a corpse or a hermit.”

When supper was over, the Princess and Minna were conducted to their
sleeping apartments. About these the keynote of barbaric luxury, which
characterised the rest of the house, was entirely absent; the furniture
and arrangement of these rooms suggested a woman’s supervision, and
yet save a maidservant, they had seen none in the house. However, the
travellers were too tired to speculate much on the matter, and were
soon asleep.

The two men sat with their host for an hour or more, for his talk
was so surprisingly full of information and a certain charm of
vigorous expression, that Ludovic, in spite of his anxiety, was held
half-fascinated by the man, and time went by unheeded.

“If the curiosity of a stranger may be pardoned,” Ludovic said, as the
Count’s contradictory nature increasingly piqued him, “I should tell
you that mine is still unsatisfied as to the reason a man like yourself
has for living in this strange, wild place. A love of liberty I can
understand, but I should have thought this a freedom more suited to an
animal than to a man of keen intellect.”

A curious look passed over the Count’s face, a kind of grim
justification of himself, it seemed, against Ludovic’s criticism. For,
during that instant, the brute, rather than the man, looked out of the
untrustworthy eyes.

“You are criticising,” he replied, with something of a feline suavity,
“a life, a state of existence which you have presumably never tried.
Because most men who dwell far from cities and civilization are clods
and almost animals, is that any reason why a thinking, intelligent
human being need succumb to such surroundings as these, and become
a brainless, mechanical dullard, an observer of nothing higher than
vegetation and the weather? I flatter myself I give the lie to that
suggestion. I love contrast, and the life I have chosen gives it to me
in all its strength, all its stimulating charm. And for the rest, we
have all, deny it as we may, something of the animal life in us, the
lion, let us say to be complimentary to ourselves, or the eagle. To
that side of our nature the rocks, the woods and the wild solitude of
the mountains are bound to appeal.”

“And the stronger the man,” Ompertz observed, “the stronger the animal
passion for a wild life.”

It was impossible to tell from the Count’s face whether he resented the
pushing of his argument to the personal limit, but Ludovic, watching
him curiously, had an idea that the black beard hid an ugly expression
just then.

Irromar laughed. “I am content, at any rate, to be judged as I am,”
he returned with a sort of careless defiance. “I can keep my wits
sharpened here in the mountains, as well as my claws and teeth.”

“You can, indeed,” Ludovic assented laughingly, careful to smooth over
any irritation his companion’s tactless observation might have caused.
“It is that which, if I may say so, has set me to wondering.”

The Count was quite blandly good-humoured now. “Most of us are agreed,”
he said, “that life is to be enjoyed while we have the power. The great
mistake lies in our trying to enjoy it in the same way, as though
the _summa voluptas_ had been arrived at. The wise man is he who
refuses to follow the palling pleasure which satisfies, and in the end
dissatisfies, the mob, but maps out a course of pleasure for himself.
And, to do that, he must not be afraid of singularity. His method
will excite the wonder, more or less respectful, of all but a few
who will recognize that his folly is founded on wisdom. The pleasures
of life are limited; they may be counted on the fingers; the ways of
pursuing them are practically unlimited. Each generation discovers and
adopts new ones; here and there a man anticipates the wisdom of his
successors, that is all.”

“You seem,” Ludovic observed, veiling with a smile a slight feeling
of contempt at his host’s tone, “you seem to suggest that the most
successful pursuit of pleasure is proof of the highest wisdom.”

“Is it not?” There was an arrogant confidence in the rejoinder.

“I should be sorry to think so.”

The Count’s smile was irritatingly pleasant. “And yet I wager that in
your heart you think so.”

“Indeed?”

“I could give my reasons, but forbear to do so. At least I give you
credit for self-deception. And, if I might offer a piece of advice, as
an older man who has seen much of the world, I would suggest that the
sooner you recognize the wisdom of setting the world’s enjoyment before
you in the best light the less regret will you have to look forward to.
The maze of pleasure has so many paths and windings, each delightful
enough when you turn into it, but getting more and more dreary as you
go on, till it ends in blankness and disgust. A few paths there are
which take some trouble to find and are less inviting than the others,
but their interest, on the contrary, increases as we follow them.”

“I quite agree with you,” Ludovic returned dryly. “It was of such I was
thinking. The paths of real pleasure, to which I hardly supposed you
meant to allude.”

The two men were antagonistic in their natures, and both realized it.
But each kept outwardly unruffled.

“I intended to be quite comprehensive,” Irromar laughed, “and to
include all pleasures, of every kind. The proportionate values vary
with our dispositions. My highest enjoyment may not be, presumably is
not, the same as yours. Captain Ompertz again will possibly differ from
us both.”

“Mine,” responded the soldier with bluff humour, “is a good fair fight,
either single-handed or in company.”

A smile, significant in its suggestion of a readiness to gratify the
other’s desire, crossed the Count’s face. “You have seen much fighting,
Captain?” he inquired casually.

Ompertz had begun a comprehensive answer, when a singular interruption
caught Ludovic’s attention. The room where they sat was hexagon-shaped,
its six walls being hung with tapestry of even more racy design than
that of the dining hall. Suddenly a portion of the hangings was
silently pushed aside; evidently a door had been opened behind it; and
in the dark recess thus formed a woman stood. A woman young, beautiful,
magnificently dressed, her breast and hair sparkling with diamonds,
as was her white hand that held back the portière. Ludovic, sitting
opposite, with his look startled into attention at the unexpected
movement, saw all this in the instant that the apparition remained. He
saw something more than this. A fearful expression on the woman’s face.
Beautiful as in repose it could only be, it appeared at that moment
distorted into what seemed a blending of all the darker passions.
Fear and hate, jealousy, rage, all were there in the parted lips, the
glaring eyes, the heaving bosom, the hand trembling on the curtain,
and then, over and above all, a look of terrified despair. It was as
a glimpse of hell, beauty marred in the sight by utter hatefulness.
Then, scarcely realized, it was gone. The sharp turn of the Count’s
head to see what his guest was looking at was only in time to catch the
movement of the tapestry as it dropped into its place. But, whether he
guessed or not, his air of easy entertainment was gone, or, at least,
continued only by an effort. Ludovic soon rose and bade him good-night,
finding it in his heart to wish that they were still sheltering in the
broken carriage among the rocks, and had never stumbled upon a place
of refuge which, with all its peculiar luxury, was somehow utterly
distasteful to him.

“You will like, perhaps, to make an early start,” his host said in
parting; “and my men shall be ready to go with you to the place where
you left your carriage, although I shall be sorry indeed to part with
guests as welcome as unexpected.”

He said this in a manner quite charming in its graceful cordiality. In
spite of an instinctive dislike, Ludovic could not but be interested in
the man whose character gave evidence of being so strangely positive in
its many sides.

As Ludovic bade Ompertz good-night, the soldier, unseen by their host,
bent on his knee and raised the other’s hand to his lips.

“Shall I ever hope for pardon, majesty?” he murmured.

Ludovic laid his hand kindly on his shoulder. “It is yours in full, my
friend.”




CHAPTER XIX

COUNT IRROMAR IN A NEW LIGHT


Early next morning Ludovic and Ompertz set out to inspect the wrecked
carriage. They were accompanied by an officer of the Count’s household,
having under him two men carrying tools for the repair, if possible, of
the broken wheel. He was a man of forbidding aspect, towards whom both
the travellers felt an instinctive distrust, nor was the appearance of
the two other men any more prepossessing. But there was no time for
Ludovic to concern himself with men’s characters as indexed by their
faces. With a kingdom and his love hanging on the balance of an hour,
the speedy resumption of the journey was all that could be thought of.
The storm had passed away; the morning was fresh and fine; scarcely
a sign remained of the tempest but its tail of abating wind and
scurrying clouds, and, on the ground, the still trickling rain-courses.
Seen in the daylight, the castle and its situation seemed yet more
extraordinary than by night. Its surroundings were rugged and stern to
a degree almost of repulsion; the bluish-black wood, stretching away
behind it, formed a suitably mysterious background; while over all was
the intense note of lonely, frowning power.

As they went along the valley, with the striking silence only
accentuated by the plashing water, the whispered hush of the wind-swept
trees, and the occasional cry of a bird, Ludovic tried to get from the
Count’s man some idea of his master’s mode of life. But the fellow,
without being exactly surly, was not to be drawn, at least on that
subject. His replies were significantly curt, and he would persistently
change the conversation by a remark on the scene through which they
were passing.

It was not long before they neared the place of the previous night’s
accident. Ompertz, with a campaigner’s faculty for locality, pointed it
out to the head man.

“Our carriage lies just over there in the gorge which meets this at an
angle yonder. Our shortest way will be to climb over the bank here, and
cut across the high ground.”

He had already sprung some way up the ascent, when the man called him
back. “Better keep along the track here,” he said. “The saving in
distance is hardly worth the trouble of the climb.”

“But it is nothing,” Ompertz shouted back. “And it takes us directly to
the spot. Time counts for much, and----”

“I tell you you will save nothing in time, Captain,” the other
insisted, somewhat to Ludovic’s surprise, for Ompertz’s way was easy
enough and obviously shorter. “And then there is a steep descent on
the other side. Come! Let us not waste time, but keep on by the easier
path.”

Almost peremptorily he motioned Ludovic forward. “Come you,” he ordered
the two workmen. “I think we know the way best, eh, Lukas?”

“Yes, indeed,” one of the fellows replied, with a rough laugh. “No time
for climbing, if his honour is in a hurry.”

Surprised almost into suspicion as he was, Ludovic was too impatient
to dispute the matter. “Come, Captain,” he called to Ompertz, “we had
better keep down here. We must do as we are bidden, it seems.”

Ompertz sprang down in no very amiable mood, but had tact enough to
keep his muttered comments to himself.

The head man, whom his subordinates addressed as Gronhartz, now,
as they walked on and he had gained his point, became by contrast
surprisingly affable. He began to talk almost volubly of the life
in the mountains, of sport, of the Count’s prowess as a hunter,
and recounted several remarkable feats of strength his master had
performed. The fellow talked fast, with an evident eagerness to allow
no pause in the one-sided conversation. He had certainly said more in
the last few minutes than in all the earlier and longer portion of
their walk, when, having doubled the rocky angle and turned up the
second and steeper gorge, they came in sight of the carriage, standing
as they had left it, lopsided, with one axle on the ground.

Now a startling thing happened.

As they came to within about fifty paces of the carriage, Gronhartz
suddenly broke off his talk and stopped, turning back to speak to his
two men, who were following a few steps behind. With a mere turn of
his head, as the man dropped behind, Ludovic hurried on with Ompertz,
in natural anxiety to ascertain the extent of the damage. Intent on
the broken wheel, Ludovic noticed nothing else till, when within a few
yards of the carriage, an exclamation from Ompertz made him look up
quickly. Then came the startling whisper--

“There is someone inside!”

A swift glance in response showed Ludovic a movement inside the
carriage, but of what he could not make out. Then he turned
instinctively to the three men behind him. A slight jutting out of the
rocky wall half hid them from where he stood. He made a quick step
aside to get them in full view. In the same instant a shot rang out
from the carriage, and a bullet touched his shoulder. But for that
chance spring to one side it must have gone through him. Then there
came a great cry of rage and surprise from Ompertz, simultaneously
with a second shot, and, before Ludovic had quite realized what was
happening, his companion had rushed to the carriage, fired his pistol
through the window, and then, whipping out his sword, commenced a
furious onslaught upon the half visible occupants.

“Treachery! Damnable treachery!” he shouted. “Look to yourself, sire.
Shoot those other dogs down. I can manage these fellows.”

Already, at his warning, the three men who had accompanied them were
rushing forward, the leader with a drawn sword, the others with short
cutlasses. For an instant Ludovic was in doubt whether their rush was
to be against him, or to oppose what might be some mountain desperadoes
who had attacked them from the carriage. But in a moment he was
undeceived. As the three men came upon him, there was no mistaking
their intention. He gave one glance back to where Ompertz was slashing
and thrusting through the carriage window, springing backwards and
forwards with what, but for the action’s deadly seriousness, would
have been antics comical in their intensity. He just had time to see
a hand come through the window on the further side, then the door
opened, and a ruffianly looking fellow stumbled out with drawn sword.
The situation was critical. The reason of the treacherous attack might
be a mystery, at all events it was real enough. The three were now
closing upon Ludovic; the fourth, who had come out of the carriage,
was dodging Ompertz and making to join them. Ludovic saw that another
moment’s hesitation might mean death. At least one man’s life was in
his hand, for he had a pistol. He levelled it at the chief, the man
called Gronhartz, and shot him through the heart. Seeing him fall, the
two with him slackened their pace and wavered. But, encouraged by the
shout of the man from the carriage, who was now rushing with uplifted
sword upon Ludovic, they came on again, and for a moment he was in
extreme peril. But Ompertz, whose alertness had been checked by a fall
on the slippery, uneven ground, was now at hand, coming up just as
Ludovic found himself beset by two assailants in front and one behind.
Could Ompertz get to him in time, before the three weapons should make
their simultaneous thrusts? If not, it seemed that Ludovic must fall.
The blades were now within a few feet of him, as he stood desperately
swinging his own round, and Ompertz was yet some yards away. With a
furious cry like a wild animal’s, the soldier rushed madly to the
rescue. His great shout gained him a second or two as the man, the
most dangerous of the three, who was threatening Ludovic from behind,
half turned, and so had to check his rush. Then, seeing Ompertz was
not quite so near as he had imagined, he went on again, and coming
to close quarters, let drive at Ludovic. By almost miraculous good
fortune, the King’s sword was sweeping round that way; it just caught
and beat aside the deadly thrust. There was no time for a second in
the same direction; the ruffian’s sword was now needed to meet that of
Ompertz. When it came to a fair fight, man to man, he was no match for
the soldier either in courage or skill. Ompertz knew that, with the
odds still against them, no time was to be wasted in pretty fighting.
Rapidly, with a furious onslaught, he drove his man back upon the
shelving wall of the ravine, with the result that the fellow stumbled
backwards, and, before he could recover himself, the unerring sword
passed through him, and he went down with a groan, as Ompertz sprang to
the King’s assistance.

Barely in time. For the slope, which had just been fatal to one of
their enemies, was likewise placing Ludovic in great peril. With two
men attacking him, he was forced to keep his back to the rocky wall,
and, in consequence, could not spring backwards to avoid the furious
double thrusts which were made at him. His two assailants were
fighting desperately, more for their own skins now than for murder.
When they saw their intended victim joined by Ompertz, his face like
that of an enraged lion, his sword red with the blood of the man who
lay a few paces away, where in his death agony he had rolled, such
assassins’ courage as they had completely failed them; the certainty
of their design’s failure seemed to paralyze their arms, and, before
Ludovic had time to command his forbearance, Ompertz had run them both
through, and they were writhing on the ground.

“Speak, you dog!” the soldier cried, holding his point to the throat of
the one who seemed to have the more life in him. “Who set you on this
devil’s work, the Count?”

“The Count, curse him!” the fellow ejaculated with a hideous grimace,
and then lay still with the look stamped on his face.

Ompertz turned away with all a soldier’s indifference mingled with
disgust.

“A narrow escape, sire,” he laughed, grimly respectful. “I thank Heaven
I was here to help your Highness out of the trap.”

“I shall not forget your service if ever fate gives me the power to
reward it,” Ludovic replied, grasping the soldier’s hand. “I wish,
though, you had not been so quick with those last two fellows. When we
got the advantage, their deaths were not necessary.”

“Pardon me, sire,” Ompertz insisted deferentially, “it never pays to
let a snake go when you have him under your heel. Mercy is thrown away
upon such reptiles as those. Worse, it breeds danger, and we have, I
fancy, enough to face as it is.”

“That is true,” Ludovic agreed, with a troubled look. “I seem to have
fallen now into a very vortex of difficulty and danger. Still, I may be
thankful that luck has so far been on my side, and that Heaven has sent
you, my friend, to help me.”

They went to the carriage. Inside, lying back in the seat which Ruperta
had occupied on their long drive, with a ghastly grin on his ashen
face, was a dead man.

“I gave that fellow no chance to take a second aim at your Highness,”
Ompertz observed grimly. “It was a pretty trap, and I hope we may be
well out of it.”

The carriage was now to be no more thought of, so, taking from it such
of their belongings as might be useful, as well as a spare pistol of
the dead man’s, they made their way from the place of bloodshed.

“What I cannot understand,” Ludovic remarked, as they went cautiously
down the gorge, “is the Count’s motive in this attempt.”

“A precious scoundrel!” Ompertz ejaculated. “I only hope I may have a
chance of getting even with him; and we have left the Princess there in
his devilish hands.”

“That is what troubles me more than anything else,” Ludovic replied
seriously. “I cannot understand it. Even as it is, I almost incline to
doubt whether the Count was the real instigator of this outrage. It is
too preposterous.”

“I had no liking for the man last night,” Ompertz observed.

“Nor had I. Still, what possible harm can we have done him that he
should have conceived this vile attempt against us? To murder in cold
blood.”

Their return through the valley was without further incident. As they
drew near the castle, they saw the lounging figure of the Count on one
of the lower terraces. He was alone, save for the company of a great
wolf-hound, with which he was carelessly playing.

“Let him not see us too soon,” Ludovic said, and, keeping on the
inner edge of the path, they approached the flight of terraces from
the side. By this means they came upon their host somewhat suddenly,
at a distance of not more than twenty paces. The dog looked round
sharply with a low growl of suspicion, and his master followed the
look, expectantly, it seemed, although, when he saw his two guests, he
showed no sign of surprise or discomfiture. On the contrary, there was
a pleasant smile on his face as he went forward to greet them.

“So, my friends! You have found your carriage, I hope, not past repair.
And my men are doing for you all that may be necessary, yes?”

The man’s coolness was almost staggering. For a moment Ludovic stared
at him astounded, scarcely believing such hypocrisy possible. Then he
replied--

“Your men, Count Irromar, have certainly tried to do all that was
necessary to prevent our ever journeying again in that carriage or any
other.”

The Count looked mystified. “I do not understand you, Lieutenant.”

“I think you do,” returned Ludovic. “The men whom you were kind enough
to send with us have just, in conjunction with two other ruffians who
lay in wait in our carriage, made a dastardly attempt on our lives.”

The Count had preserved his look of mystified inquiry, till the
last words changed it to one of serious, then smiling incredulity.
“Lieutenant, surely you have prepared a little jest for our breakfast
table.”

“I fancy,” Ompertz, towards whom the Count had glanced in half-amused
inquiry, put in with bluff impatience, “those five sportsmen who
are now lying in the gorge yonder will miss both the jest and the
breakfast.”

As though failing still to obtain a satisfactory explanation, the Count
looked back to Ludovic.

“I am still in the dark. If this is not a jest, will you, sir, kindly
tell me what has happened?”

“I have already told you,” Ludovic returned sternly. “It is for me to
ask you, Count Irromar, whether this abominable attempt was made at
your instigation?”

The Count gave a shrug of impatient contempt. “My instigation?” he
echoed, with a show of restrained indignation. “If I understand aright,
you come to me with an extraordinary tale of having been attacked by
five men, three of them my servants; and you return to the house which
has received you, you must allow, with every token of hospitality, and
accuse me, your host, of being the author of this unheard-of outrage.
Really, my Lieutenant, I hope my ideas of hospitality differ vastly
from yours.”

“They do,” Ludovic retorted dryly. “For I can scarcely believe that
these men acted of their own accord.”

“Such things have happened,” Irromar rejoined suavely, “whether they
have taken place to-day or not. I do my best to keep order in my
household, but can hardly be held morally responsible for the acts of
my servants.”

He was so confident, so incredulous, and withal so politely unruffled,
that Ludovic found himself doubting whether the attempt, after all,
should be laid to his charge. Then the woman’s face, which he had seen
the night before, rose in his mind, and his mistrust returned in fuller
force.

“That the outrage could have been planned without your knowledge,
Count,” he said resolutely, “is inconceivable.”

Irromar smiled indulgently. “I cannot be answerable, either, for the
workings of your imagination,” he replied, with irritating demur. “Do I
understand you, or your friend, to say that the five men you speak of
have been killed?”

Ludovic nodded assent “Luckily. It was our lives or theirs.”

The Count looked grave. “I hope you may be able to justify such an
extreme measure,” he said. “Even in these wilds, we do not hold life so
cheap as you military gentlemen seem to suppose. But I should like to
think that this is all a pleasant little fiction on your part.”

His indifference was growing more and more exasperating. “I am quite
ready to justify what I and my friend have been forced to do in this
business,” Ludovic returned sternly. “The atrocious attack upon us can
never be explained away, and I am at a loss even to guess its motive.
But as it seems quite useless to expect sympathy from you in the
matter, we will ask you to let us resume our journey without further
delay, and to send word to the ladies that we are ready and await them
here.”

There was a deepening of the curious look in the Count’s eyes.

“The ladies?” he repeated, in a tone of bland surprise. “Surely they
have been with you. They left the castle, I understand, about half an
hour since, and followed you down the valley.”

Ludovic’s face darkened as the scheme of treachery grew more apparent.

“It is impossible,” he objected. “In that case we must have met them.
You have been misinformed. May I ask you to let the ladies know that we
are waiting to start.”

The Count seemed to lose patience. “The ladies are no longer under my
roof, I tell you,” he insisted. “If you think they have missed their
way, I will send out a party to seek them. I can do no more.”

Ompertz stood at Ludovic’s shoulder. “He is lying,” he whispered.

“I think, Count,” Ludovic said, “that you are mistaken. The ladies are
still within the castle.”

Suddenly the Count’s face changed, as, somehow, although the actuality
was in a greater degree, Ludovic had had an intuition that it would
change. Its expression of urbane, if cynical, strength became one of
furious rage, which seemed to blaze forth from every feature. Yet,
curiously, for the moment, the outburst was confined to his looks; his
speech did not rise above a concentrated but restrained indignation.

“You think? You give me the lie, Herr Lieutenant? I am wondering what
will be your next insult to the man who has sheltered and fed you. I
tell you the ladies of your party have left my roof. If you choose to
doubt me, you may search the castle, but at your peril.”

“At our peril, then,” Ludovic replied resolutely, “if it must be. I
fear we must seek them within doors since----”

“Since you do not choose to believe my word,” the Count roared,
letting loose his rage now with a vengeance. “You give me the lie!”
he continued furiously. “You come here, wretched whipster, begging
my hospitality, which I give you in full measure, and you repay it
by insult, by worse, according to your own words, by killing my men;
bringing me a story such as no one would credit. You must be mad. By
heaven, if I find that what you have told me be true, I will have
vengeance. The blood of my servants shall not be shed for nothing by
wandering madmen. I will kill you as a dangerous pest, so look to
yourself, yes, both of you, my Lieutenant and Captain!”

Nothing could exceed the acrimonious fury of this tirade. The polished
man-of-the-world, the self-indulgent sportsman, with his suave cynical
philosophy, was transformed into a raging animal, snarling upon his
spring. The dark face seemed now black with temper, the eyes were
blood-shot, the great white teeth significantly shown, all made the
face a picture of vicious rage not to be forgotten.

For a moment Ludovic stood nonplussed, hardly knowing how to take the
situation. That the Count had some evil scheme in his mind was certain,
how it was to be met by two men, with nothing but their courage to back
them, was not quite so plain. One awkward feature of the situation
was the plausibility behind which the Count had taken his stand. The
position he had assumed had in it certainly less of improbability than
the story Ludovic had to tell. Anyhow, in that wild region might was
right. The Count’s intention to pick a quarrel and so get rid of them
was manifest: to argue further or try to convince him would be sheer
waste of time. And yet the crisis was so desperate that something had
to be done.

As Ludovic paused, hesitating as to the course he should take, Ompertz
took a step sturdily forward, and confronted the raging Count with no
sign of flinching or perplexity.

“As to madmen,” he said bluffly, “you will soon find, Count, on which
side the madness lies. At least we are not fools, and I know not what
object you may have in trying to make us such. We are not afraid of you
or your threats, and that we can fight against odds your ravine yonder
bears witness more eloquent than a whole day’s boasting.”

The Count, who during this speech had eyed Ompertz with a deadly
hatred, remarkable for its very unreasonableness, now laughed
scornfully.

“You are a fine fellow,” he cried, “to afford asylum to. A precious
pair of adventurers, I doubt not. I am tired of you; you sicken me with
your mad tales and your brag. You can fight, you say? Good; then fight!”

With the word he put a silver whistle to his lips and blew a shrill
call. Before the summons ceased to sound men began to make their
appearance from all parts of the castle and its approaches. Men
of determined, if ruffianly, aspect, most of them in the dress of
foresters, all bearing on the left arm the badge of the house they
served, and all armed with hunting cutlasses. They came hurrying down
the terraces in a business-like manner, and as, at a sign from the
Count, they formed up in double line on the platform next above that
where he stood, Ludovic told himself that a more truculent array of
ruffians he had never set eyes on or even imagined could exist. It
took not many seconds for them to assemble, and during the operation
the Count watched them with a set, grim smile. Then he turned to his
late guests. The rage had gone from his face now--perhaps it had never
been more than skin deep--it had given place to a vicious suavity
which was, if anything, more repulsive than the coarser token to his
disposition.

“These,” he waved his hand towards them, “are but a small part of the
force with which I protect myself and my property in these wilds. These
are but the number who were within call. No man has ever yet defied me
with impunity, and there seems no reason”--here he smiled with evil
sarcasm--“why you should succeed where others have failed. But, as you
have eaten my bread, I will be somewhat punctilious in observing the
laws of hospitality, without enquiring too curiously how far you have
disregarded them. Walter!” he called to a man who, standing a little
in advance, seemed in command of the posse of retainers. When this
fellow, no exception to the general repulsiveness, had come down the
Count proceeded. “I give you, Lieutenant von Bertheim and Captain von
Ompertz, one hour from now to get clear of my territory. If, after that
hour, you are found on it you shall die the death of dogs. You hear?
Those are my orders. I have no more to say. I listen to no word. Go!”

He turned abruptly, and walked quickly up the ascent. His two guests
were left standing there, with the officer grimly watching them.




CHAPTER XX

A STRANGE ALLY


“We cannot play the lion here; we must play the fox.”

Ludovic had touched Ompertz on the arm, as the soldier stood defiantly
eyeing the captain of the Count’s body-guard, and they had turned away
down the slope.

“We can do nothing against that force as we are, and it is madness to
think of it. All we can attempt is to set our wits against the Count’s.”

“A damnable villain!” Ompertz exclaimed setting his teeth wrathfully.

“Yes; we have walked into a hideous trap. Worse, we have taken that
divine girl into it with us.”

“May I be hanged if I understand it,” Ompertz observed, in a mystified
tone.

“I think I do,” Ludovic returned gloomily.

“You believe the ladies have not left the castle?”

“I am sure of it.” He turned and looked towards the point where the
great square tower was just visible above the ravine, and stamped his
foot in impotent desperation. “And I have been calling Fate my friend,”
he exclaimed bitterly. “Of all the hideous tricks she has ever played
man, surely this is the most crushing. To lose everything at one stroke
by the hand of a brute in human form such as that. To be helpless here,
our very lives not worth an hour’s purchase, and the Princess----ah,
why did we not let those five fellows kill us just now, and end this
misery worse than death?”

“For my part I am just as pleased they did not,” Ompertz said dryly;
“and it is some satisfaction to know that if we have but an hour or
two to live, we have accounted for five of as scurvy a company of
scoundrels as ever it has been my luck to encounter. Now, sire, if, as
our law is short enough to make time of some account, I may speak under
pardon, we have two courses more or less open to us. To run away, or
stay and do our best to rescue the ladies. I need hardly ask which,
even with a kingdom at stake, your Highness chooses.”

The sharp gust of despondency which had swept over Ludovic had soon
passed away. “No need, truly,” he replied. “If we have but one thing
more to do in this world it must be to find the Princess and Countess
Minna and get them out of the clutches of this execrable villain. It is
a desperate venture, and our lives will, almost surely, pay forfeit for
the attempt; but it must be made.”

Ompertz had become thoughtful. “It is a poor chance,” he said at
length; “so desperate that I doubt whether your Highness be justified
in taking it. Hear me out, sire,” for Ludovic had, by an impatient
gesture, imposed silence upon him; “I am far from counselling a policy
of cowardice. This rescue cries out to be accomplished; it is the one
thing under Heaven to-day which can brook no disregard. But the means,
sire? Are you right in almost surely throwing your life away on a
forlorn hope? Will you hear my simple plan? That the Princess Ruperta
is held a prisoner in the castle of this rascally Count has but to be
known abroad, and her rescue is but the question of a regiment’s march
hither, nay of a word from our late acquaintance, Chancellor Rollmar.
Her kidnapper is ignorant of her identity; he little knows what he is
doing.”

“I doubt whether, did he know it, the matter would not be made worse,”
Ludovic said. “I seem now to have heard of this Count Irromar as one
who has spent his life in defying all law, national and moral, and
has long been at issue with the government to which he should owe
allegiance. An outlaw, a very brigand, or I am much mistaken; and his
conduct corroborates my suspicion. That we, of all people, should have
put our necks under his heel.”

“It is like enough,” Ompertz replied composedly. “But that the rightful
and, I trust, soon reigning King of one State, and the Princess of
another, should remain in such a situation is monstrous, inconceivable.
Now, sire, my plan is this: Let me stay here alone, using what poor
strength and wit I have to find out and free the Princess, while your
Highness hurries post-haste back to Rollmar. There can be nothing
to fear from him now, this peril will be paramount over every other
consideration.”

Ludovic took a short turn, thinking over the project “No,” he said at
length. “I cannot do it. Your suggestion is praiseworthy enough, my
good friend, but I cannot leave Princess Ruperta.”

“Not even when your departure would mean her speedy release,” the
soldier urged; “your staying here, your own death and her condemnation
to the lengthened horror, to which from that villain she is certain to
be exposed?”

“I cannot go,” Ludovic cried in desperation. “How can I leave her like
this without even an attempt at rescue?”

“If the Princess,” Ompertz said resolutely, “can hear one word from the
world outside those walls, she shall know the truth; if not, you may as
well be bringing help as staying here to no purpose.”

But still the idea of leaving was so repugnant to Ludovic that he would
not agree. He proposed to send Ompertz on the errand, but the soldier
sturdily refused to leave the King in the midst of that deadly peril.
For it was certain enough that the Count’s was no idle threat. It
needed no more than the argument of that morning’s attack to put his
intention beyond a doubt. At length, after a discussion which lasted
till the sands of their hour’s grace had run out, it was determined
that they should, at any risk, make a thorough examination of the
castle and its approaches, and try what chance there might be of
holding communication with the Princess. To leave that unattempted was
impossible, and should their scrutiny promise no success, Ludovic would
lose no further time in hurrying off to the nearest place where help
could be obtained.

With this settled plan, they set themselves to return to the castle,
avoiding any spies or guards who might be on the watch for them.
Ompertz, however, was shrewdly of opinion that the Count would regard
the idea of their return, at least alone, as too improbable for the
need of taking any great precautions, although he might, no doubt,
anticipate the bringing of an armed force against him later, when time
allowed.

Still, with their lives already forfeit, they had to proceed warily.
They were at issue with a man, shrewd, determined and probably as
cunning as he was cruel. They decided to make their way to the wooded
height above the castle whence they could reconnoitre it from the
rear. The climb was tedious enough to their impatient spirits, since
it was necessary for safety to approach it by an indirect way. But at
length they reached a point of observation several hundred feet above
the castle which lay immediately beneath. On the way they had met no
signs of any human beings, and had begun to hope that the place might,
after all, not be so jealously guarded as they feared. The castle below
them stood grey and massive, silent, with no indication of the active,
organised life the watchers knew well it contained. They could see now
it was a building of considerable size; much greater, in fact, than the
front suggested. It ran back at various points into the rock which had,
either by nature or by art, been excavated in a manner that it and the
building seemed dove-tailed into each other, the stone projections,
natural and constructed, alternating in a strange architectural fashion.

“A rare prison-house our friend the Count has built for his chance
guests,” Ompertz observed grimly, as, with a soldier’s eye, he took
in the stronghold. “’Tis well placed, too, strategically, since it
commands this raking height, which is rather its strength than, as
one might at the first glance suppose, its weak point. Even artillery
would be wasted here, unless the devil himself guided the flight of the
shot, and he would be more likely to fight on the side of his disciple
within.”

Cautiously now, they began the descent of the mountain side, taking
good care that the sharpest observation from the castle should not
detect them. Every few minutes they would pause and reconnoitre
shrewdly. The whole place was still as death. The wind had quite died
away, the tall pines stood motionless, the thick carpet they shed
deadened all footfalls, no living thing crossed their path; it seemed
as though the evil genius of the place had infected the very air and
frightened away all free life. At length Ludovic and his companion got
down to the castle’s turrets, unmolested so far. Proceeding now with
the greatest circumspection, since every foot they descended increased
their peril, they lowered themselves little by little, till they found
themselves in face of a wall of smooth rock, pierced about the centre
by a small doorway which was approached by a short flight of rough
steps. This wall evidently formed the outer side of one of the wedges
or dove-tails which ran in alternate fashion in and out of the rock.
Whatever light the narrow building got would be from windows on the
inner side, since outwardly there were none.

Whispering to Ludovic to watch his keenest, Ompertz crept forward,
then up the steps and examined the little door. Evidently nothing was
gained by that, for he turned away presently with a shake of the head.
Ludovic stole down and joined him, and they explored further. The
various ramifications at the back of the castle seemed to be joined
by tunnels cut through the rock. These tunnels were not straight, but
zig-zag, evidently so contrived for a purpose, and, from the fact that
the explorers could never see more than a few feet in front of them,
the examination was attended with the greatest risk.

“This is hopeless,” Ludovic said despairingly, at length, when they
had crept for some time through the turnings of the rocky fastness.
“It seems sheer folly in a place like this to expect that we can light
upon Ruperta’s prison. There may be chambers running far into the rock
itself of which we from the outside can know nothing.”

“It is a fairly impregnable dwelling-place,” Ompertz assented dryly.
“With accommodation such as this establishment affords, the man would
be a fool if he cannot keep his prisons snug away from observation. It
seems to me that the sooner your Highness sets off for more effective
help than we can hope to give, the less time will be lost in the
Princess’s rescue.”

To continue in their present position was too perilous. With discovery
threatening them every moment, to attempt a leisurely examination of
the building was madness. They had noted a winding path with rough
steps which seemed to lead up into the woods above.

“Let us go up here and make one more survey,” Ludovic said, “and then I
will lose no more time in seeking help.”

The ascent was fortunately screened from observation by a rocky wall on
each side. They lost no time in climbing it, and soon found themselves
once more among the trees high above the castle. From where they now
stood many of the windows were visible, although they themselves,
keeping back in the obscurity of the wood, were tolerably safe from
observation. They crept along well within the fringe of the trees
till they could look down upon a court-yard formed in a triangular
opening in the rock, and having for its base a wall of the castle. In
this several men were moving about, the first signs of the busy life
of the place which their reconnaissance had shown them. But this sight
advanced them nowise towards the object they sought. That the place was
well manned was obvious; in the teeth of such a garrison to hope to get
at the prisoners was out of the question. Even Ompertz was without hope.

“There might be a chance at night for finding out something as to their
situation,” he said dubiously. “But I would not give a kreutzer for it.
This is a hard nut, and we shall break our teeth before we crack it.”

“You are right, my friend,” replied Ludovic; “and I repent now that we
have wasted these hours in this vain spying. Hateful as it is to me
to turn my back on this brigand’s den while Ruperta is there, I will
lose no more time in bringing those who shall force it. Though, Heaven
knows, I seem poor and powerless enough now.”

“I will see your Highness on your way,” Ompertz said, “and then return
to my post here.”

They turned and had ascended but a few paces through the wood when by a
common impulse they stopped. A figure stood before them, its presence
made known so suddenly that they could not have told whence it had
sprung--the figure of a woman. With the first glance of surprise,
Ludovic saw that it was she of whom he had caught that painful glimpse
in the doorway the night before. But her face was now no more contorted
by passion; save for an expression of troubled purpose it was calm
enough for its dark, striking beauty to be fully seen. She was dressed
in a close-fitting gown of greenish brown cloth the colour of which
made her not easily distinguishable among the trees when her face was
not seen. With the slight repellent frown on her face, she seemed
indeed to be the unpropitious spirit of that wild forest.

For a few moments she and the two men stood confronted in the silence
of surprise and doubt. Then she spoke.

“You are seeking someone?”

“Yes,” Ludovic answered, eyeing her suspiciously. For the natural
thought in both men’s minds was that she was there as a spy.

“The ladies who came hither with you last night?” she pursued in the
cold, even voice of intense repression. A moment’s reflection told
Ludovic that there was nothing to be gained by concealment or evasion.

“Yes,” he said. “We have been unaccountably separated from them.”

She gave a low, harsh laugh. “Unaccountably! You do not know your late
host, then. It would have been indeed strange if you had been allowed
to leave this place together.”

The bitterness with which she spoke was so intense that it seemed to
wring the words from her. But it prompted Ludovic to take confidence.

“Then,” said he, “my worst fears are true. The ladies have been
kidnapped and are imprisoned in the castle.”

With a scornful smile she bowed her head in assent.

“And you think, in your simplicity, to get them out. You, who would be
killed like a couple of troublesome wasps if you were seen prowling
about here.”

“Better that prospect, madam, than be the cowards to run away.”

She gave a little start of interest at his speech, looking at him
steadfastly with a half-sigh of regret. “True; I do not blame you; no
woman could. Only I warn you that any hopes you may have of rescue are
worse than vain. You would know that if you knew Count Irromar.”

“I am sorry to hear it,” Ludovic replied simply.

“Yes. What are two men, however brave, however careless of their lives,
against Irromar’s gang of assassins, against his secret chambers, his
locks and bars?”

“I have in me the bold hope,” Ludovic said shrewdly, “that you, madam,
are willing to help us, since we seek nothing wrong.”

She laughed curiously. “You find me a likely traitor?”

Ludovic made a protesting gesture. “I thought not so. Treachery is no
name for help in this cause.”

“And yet,” she rejoined, speaking through her clenched teeth, “it is,
above all others, the right word for my help. But if I am a traitor,
it is that I have been driven to it. And a traitor’s doom would be,
perhaps, the most grateful form of the death I have now hourly to
expect.” She was speaking more to herself than to them. “Yes; I will
help you,” she continued, suddenly rousing herself. “It was for that I
sought you here.” She laughed; it was always the same bitter, repellent
laugh, a laugh that transformed her beauty into ugliness, drawing, as
it were, a film of evil over the comely flesh. “I watched for you,” she
continued, “from my little window in the tower yonder. I was pretty
certain you would come. You are not the first fools, or the last, to
dash out your brains against those rocky walls. I saw you. I have a
quick eye--to-day.” There was a curious significance in the last word.
“I will help you. At least, I will let you into the castle and show you
where Karl Irromar keeps his fair prisoners. Do not blame me if you
find your deaths in place of your ladies.”

Ompertz, who had all this time stood silent, although keenly observant,
now struck in.

“Under pardon, gracious lady, if I may be permitted a word, I would
say that your offer is as handsome as it is unexpected. But before we
are free to bless our good genius, we should have some surety that the
Count has not chosen an alluring bait to attract us into his stone
trap.”

The lady flushed. “You may take or reject my offer,” she returned
haughtily. “Your doubts are perhaps natural enough, still I cannot
undertake to remove them.” She half turned away. Ludovic, with a
monitory gesture to his companion, took a step after her.

“If we doubt,” he protested gently, “it is, as you say, but natural,
for we have some experience, unhappily, of the Count’s methods and
cunning. My comrade is fearful but for me; for himself he has as little
fear in trusting you as I for myself. I accept your offer gratefully.”

It was the vivid recollection of her face the night before that decided
him. It might be a trap, he told himself, but the chances, as he saw
them, were against it.

The lady met his look with eyes that had in them a softer expression
than he had seen there before; a memory, perhaps it was, of what her
character had once been.

“I can scarcely blame you,” she, replied, as the more sympathetic
expression passed away in a hard laugh, “for mistrusting me. After all,
it matters very little, since the venture on which you seem determined
is such desperate folly. But I will say this for your comfort that,
could I trust myself to tell you what I have suffered at the hands of
Karl Irromar, you would wish you might be as sure of my ability as
of my willingness to help you. The man can be a very fiend when he
chooses; I think some of his familiar devils must have raised the storm
which drove you here.”

She spoke with an intense, despairing bitterness that carried
conviction with it. Her story, in all but its details, was plain
enough. It was written on her face in those evil lines which surely a
splendid misery, rather than nature, had branded there.

“You will help us, then?” Ludovic said.

“Yes,” she answered. “But not now. It must be to-night. Be here, at the
top of this path, half an hour after night-fall, that is, if reflection
allows you to keep your foolhardy intention.”

“It can only strengthen it,” he replied.

She gave a smile of curiosity. “I think I understand,” she murmured.

“You have surprised me into forgetting how grateful I should be,”
Ludovic said, with gallant earnestness, taking the hand she held
towards him and raising it to his lips.

But she gave a sudden little shudder. “No, no!” she cried, snatching
back her hand. Then she turned away and went quickly down the steep
path.




CHAPTER XXI

THE COUNT AND HIS PRISONERS


When Countess Minna awoke that morning, she had found herself among
surroundings which, as she examined them, gave her considerable
uneasiness. In her fatigue and the excitement of the night before she
had but cursorily noticed the room, merely finding that it was next
to the Princess’s, and communicated with it. When she rose in the
morning she saw that this door, which had overnight been left open,
was shut. When she tried it she found it locked; when she called to
her mistress no answer was returned. She ran to the other, the outer
door of her room; that was locked also. A vague alarm seized her. She
looked round and shuddered in an excess of fear at the unprepossessing
character of the apartment. At night it had looked fairly comfortable;
the grey light of morning now brought out its dismal, almost funereal,
sombreness. The great bed resembled a catafalque; its hangings, like
the rest in the room, were black, scarcely relieved by a purple line of
device. The few pictures were portraits, all of singularly forbidding
aspect, and the whole tone of the apartment bore out the note of gloom.
She went to the window and threw back the curtains; as she did so
almost starting back in dismay. The outlook was upon a sheer wall of
hewn rock, as gloomy and depressing as was the room. The place had the
aspect of a prison, and it seemed very much as though it were really
one as far as she was concerned.

“Worse than Krell,” she gasped, as she turned away and began to dress
herself. When this was done, she tried the doors again, shaking and
knocking at them, but without getting any response. Her fears now
increased every moment; she thought of all the tales she had heard of
wild robber nobles and their death-traps; were they not nicely caught
there? The very circumstance of their flight had made their rescue or
any knowledge of their imprisonment an impossibility. Had they not,
she asked herself miserably, by their own folly destroyed every clue
to their whereabouts, and so unwittingly contrived their disappearance
from the face of the earth? Yes, she persuaded herself, they had fallen
into hands which would take care that they were never seen or heard of
more.

Just as she was working herself into a perfect frenzy of fear and
despair, the door suddenly opened, and a maid of somewhat repellent
aspect brought in breakfast. This she set down without speaking a
word or, indeed, showing any particular consciousness of the other’s
presence, and was leaving the room, when Minna sprang after her and
asked her anxiously why the door between the rooms had been locked. To
this the girl merely shook her head and answered, “I do not know.”

“But I wish to see the other lady at once,” Minna protested. “Will you
either unlock that door or show me the way to her room?”

Again the maid shook her head. “I may not. I know nothing,” was her
unconvincing reply.

“Then,” exclaimed Minna, pushing forward to the door, “I will go myself
and find the way. I will not stay--ah!”

She started back with a little cry. At the door stood a man; none other
than the Count.

He came in with a smile, which did not tend to restore Minna’s
confidence. The maid went out, and the door was shut again.

“I hope you rested well, Fräulein?”

The set smile gave the lie to the words. Obviously he did not expect to
hear of a pleasant night’s rest.

“I slept well, Count. I was dead tired,” she answered, keeping back her
trepidation.

“Ah, to be sure. You had a long, fatiguing journey of how many hours--I
forget?”

The question was put with just enough insinuation to put the girl on
her guard.

“I could not tell you; I lost count of them,” she replied, forcing a
laugh.

“Ah, yes; no doubt, and you missed your way, of course. You would
hardly take notice of time.”

There was something behind the man’s casual questions. A purpose
lurked there. He let it peep out, possibly because he hardly thought
concealment worth while. But Minna’s wits, as we have seen, were apt
to become sharpened and steadied by a critical situation. They awaited
now with apprehensive curiosity the declaration, surely coming, of
the Count’s purpose. His eyes were fixed on her in a way which made
her feel uncomfortable. It was like the gaze of a snake. She had
never thought that light blue eyes could give forth such a sinister
expression.

“The Lieutenant and his friend have gone off to look after the broken
carriage,” Irromar said.

“Ah!” Minna brightened at the idea of getting away.

“A hopeless errand, I fear.”

His tone made her look up into his face with a start. It seemed to have
far more of fate in it than was concerned with a wrecked carriage.

But she tried not to betray the sinking at her heart.

“You can doubtless put us in the way of procuring another carriage,”
she suggested.

“Perhaps. I am not sure.”

There was no mistaking the half threat in his tone. She looked at him
now in scarcely disguised apprehension.

“You are not sure?” she repeated.

His ferine teeth gleamed out in an inscrutable smile. “Hardly. I have
certain doubts as to how far my help should be given. Doubts, pardon
me, as to the correctness of the story the Lieutenant told me last
night. Yes. Now you, Fräulein, may perhaps find it expedient to declare
the truth.”

It was an ugly invitation, more especially in the way it was given.
So this was the purpose of the interview, Minna thought; but to what
ultimate end? What right had this man, in exchange for a night’s food
and shelter, to be inquisitorial?

“I can tell you,” she replied, “nothing more than you have already
heard.”

“Nothing nearer the truth?”

“No, indeed.”

“I think you can, Fräulein.”

“You are wrong, Count.”

“No. Nor in thinking that you will.”

Nothing could exceed the masterful tenacity of his manner. It was as
though he knew everything, and was merely trying to convict his guest
of deceit.

“I can tell you nothing nearer the truth,” Minna persisted. With so
great an issue at stake, she could think of nothing but what she
conceived to be her duty.

The Count’s eyes never left her, but she bore their searching bravely.

“You can tell me,” he said, very deliberately, “that the Lieutenant and
Fräulein von Bertheim, if that be her name, are not brother and sister.”

“I cannot,” she returned evasively.

“You may not?”

“May not?” she laughed, not very successfully. “There is no compulsion,
that I know of.”

“There is,” he retorted significantly, “to speak the truth.”

In spite of her fears, his insistence began to irritate her. “If you
know better than I, Count, my testimony can scarcely be necessary.”

“Perhaps not,” he returned brusquely; “still I mean to have it.”

He had risen, and now stood over her. The sense of the man’s immense
power seemed to dominate her, but she thought of Ruperta, and
determined the secret should not be drawn from her.

“You will not tell me the truth,” he continued, “without forcing me to
extort it.”

“Extort it?” Desperation gave her courage, and her scornful smile was
unforced.

He nodded. “You will do well to listen to reason, Fräulein. I am asking
no great matter; simply inviting you to tell me the truth, which I
already suspect to practical certainty.”

“If you are uncivil enough to doubt a lady’s word----” she began
weakly. He interrupted her by a contemptuous laugh.

“I have no time to waste in bandying words further,” he exclaimed
impatiently. “I hoped you would not force me to use my power, but if
you will be so foolishly obstinate----”

He moved to the window and flung back the curtain. The wall of rock
rose sheer and grey within a few feet, blocking out all view of the
sky, and mocking the sight with a poor wedge of daylight which served
but to illuminate its black monotony.

“That is all the outside world you will see till you have told me the
truth,” Irromar said quietly.

Repressing the shudder which the prospect induced, she turned quickly
to him. “Then we are prisoners?”

He smiled uncompromisingly. “Scarcely that, as yet. But you may be.”

“You will keep us here at your peril, Count,” she flared out, her
indignation getting the better of her fear.

“It may be,” he returned, as smiling at a child’s threat. “I will take
the risk.”

“It may be greater than----” she stopped. In the stress of resentment
her tongue was outstripping her judgment.

“Yes?” he asked, with his irritating, probing smile.

“Then this is why I have been locked in my room,” she went on, covering
the slip with an excess of indignation. “And is Fräulein von Bertheim a
prisoner too under this hospitable roof?”

“It depends upon you,” he answered.

A defiant reply was at her lips, but she thought better and checked
it. Boldness and obstinacy were here manifestly out of place; wit
alone could avail. After all, since the Count clearly suspected the
relationship between Ludovic and Ruperta, where was the point in
keeping up a deception which was already hardly one? So long as the
great secret of their real identities remained unguessed, the other did
not seem to matter much. Since Minna had hoodwinked Rollmar she had
acquired confidence in her native wit. What she wanted now was to get
back to Ruperta; this solitary confinement and state of alarm were more
than she felt she could bear.

“And if I tell you the truth of what you want to know?” she asked, with
a fine show of reluctance.

“Then you will be free.”

She made a shrewd grimace. “A vast difference between one word and
another.”

“A great difference to you,” he agreed.

“What can it matter to you?”

“I am a man who likes to have his own way at any cost.”

“Cost to your neighbour, your guest.” She could not forego the obvious
retort.

“To my guest, even,” he returned, with a shrug, “when I suspect my
hospitality has been abused.”

She laughed. “It is, then, a heinous sin in these regions to assume a
relationship?”

“I do not allow deception under my roof, if I can detect it,” he
replied bluffly. “Now, your companions; tell me. They are no more
brother and sister than are you and I?”

“No.”

“They are lovers?”

“You can see that as well as I.”

He tapped his foot impatiently. “Tell me.”

“Then--yes.”

“Of course; it is clear. They are eloping?”

“Under circumstances of infinite respectability, Count,” she said
archly.

He laughed. “Ah, yes; of course. Far be it from me to suggest the
contrary. Thank you, Fräulein. That is all I wanted to know, unless
there is anything more you wish to add.”

“Only a request that, now I have satisfied your curiosity, I may be at
liberty to join my friend and prepare for our departure.”

“Certainly, when your carriage is ready.” With a cunning smile, he
moved to the door and went out quickly, closing it behind him. When she
tried to follow him she found she was again a prisoner.

The Count had bolted the door behind him, and now went straight to the
room that had been allotted to the Princess. A very different apartment
it was from poor Minna’s; for, whereas that was repulsively dismal and
terrifying, Ruperta’s lodging was luxuriously furnished and pleasant
in the highest degree. The windows looked out upon the valley and the
stretch of pine-clad mountains beyond; there was no hint of a possible
prison in those cheerful rooms, the appointments of which went, in
their delicate refinement, far beyond anything which that part of the
castle they had seen the night before would have led one to expect.
The apartment was as magnificent as anything Ruperta had known in her
father’s palace; but for her anxiety to be on the way again she could
have delighted in the pleasant rest and change of scene. As yet no
shadow of a suspicion of her host’s intentions had come to her. She
was awaiting with some impatience Minna’s appearance to join her half
finished breakfast, when she was told that the Count asked permission
to pay his respects to her. He came in, another man from him who had
just left Minna. He was now the very perfection of grave courtesy; the
attentive host, the open-hearted sportsman.

“I had expected the Lieutenant and his friend back before this,” he
observed, after their greeting. “It is long since they went off to
inspect the broken carriage.”

“You do not think harm can have come to them?” Ruperta suggested,
noticing his serious expression.

“That,” he replied, “is scarcely possible, since I sent several of my
men with them.”

She was reassured by his words. “That is well. No doubt they will soon
be ready to start.”

“You are in great haste to leave us, Fräulein?”

“Not that, Count. But we have a long journey before us.”

“Ah, yes. It is sad that the pleasure of one must be the pain of
another.”

The words were gravely spoken; tinged, perhaps, with a rather deeper
feeling than a mere phrase of compliment. Ruperta laughed pleasantly.
Her new life and its adventures were breaking down her old reserve.

“Hardly pain, I should hope, Count. Although parting is seldom a matter
of indifference; it involves either relief or regret.”

“And here? Relief, you cannot deny it, on one side; regret, I cordially
own it, on the other.”

“Relief cannot be our feeling at leaving one who has been our friend in
distress,” she objected. “Who has known how to turn a vexatious delay
into a pleasant visit.”

“If,” he said, bending forward insinuatingly and speaking in a more
earnest tone, “I have succeeded in doing that, I am splendidly
rewarded. You, Fräulein, in your distress and anxiety, cannot realize
the brightness with which this accident, unlucky and yet lucky, has
illuminated my rude, lonely existence.”

She seemed to think he had expressed himself warmly enough, for she
replied almost coldly, “It is surely your own choice, this rude, lonely
life as you call it. Although I dare say an occasional guest makes an
agreeable change.”

The blue eyes were fixed on her in a curious admiration. With glorious
beauty such as hers, coldness could only be provocative to a man of the
Count’s temperament.

“May I see Fräulein Minna?” she asked. “It is surely time we made ready
for leaving.”

“Scarcely, I hope,” he returned, and something in his manner seemed to
suggest to her that he might design, she knew not why, to delay their
departure.

“Please, Count,” she continued, more insistently, “let me find the
Fräulein, or send her to me.”

A man came running out of the wood towards the castle.

“Ah, here comes one of my men,” the Count said. “He evidently brings
news. I will see what it is.”

He hastened from the room, leaving Ruperta in a vaguely uneasy state of
mind. Very soon he returned, and she saw in his face, as somehow she
had anticipated, that he had unpleasant news to give her.

“I am placed in an awkward position,” he said, in reply to her look of
inquiry. “My man, who accompanied the Lieutenant and his friend, tells
me a story so strange that I hesitate to make it known to you.”

“Please tell me at once--everything,” Ruperta said with compressed lips.

He affected to hesitate for a moment, then said, “It appears that the
Lieutenant and Captain von Ompertz have, for some unaccountable reason,
taken their departure without you.”

She stared at him for a few moments as though not realizing the news.

“Gone without us?” she said, with quiet incredulity.

He made a grave sign of confirmation. “I fear it is but too true,” he
maintained sympathetically. “They have gone, under circumstances which
leave, I fear, no doubt as to their intention.”

The notion was so preposterous that it scarcely moved her.

“I cannot believe it,” she said calmly. But the darker idea of a
sinister intent prompting the falsehood began to take shape in her mind.

“Will you hear what my man has to say?” Irromar asked.

“No,” she answered, with a cold repression that seemed almost
indifference. “At least, not now. I will wait, since there seems yet no
chance of our departure.”

He bowed. “I shall be but too honoured and happy to keep you as my
guest,” he said, unchecked by her significantly averted face. “Will
you pardon my boldness, Fräulein, if I must tell you that, should we
unhappily find that your friends have deserted you, you have found
another, a devoted friend, in Karl Irromar?”

She returned no answer, gave no sign even that she heard him, and he
judged it wise to leave her.




CHAPTER XXII

AN UNEXPECTED DEVELOPMENT


Night, falling over the dark forest, effectually hid Ludovic and
Ompertz, who were making their stealthy way towards the trysting-place.
All through the dragging hours of that weary afternoon they had lain
hidden among the rocks, having before them the curtain of a great clump
of brushwood. Once they saw a couple of armed men stroll by: they wore
the Count’s heraldic badge on their arms, and, by their manner, were
evidently a patrol keeping a quiet look-out. Possibly, however, with
the idea that their chief’s late guests were hardly likely to have run
the risk of lingering so near the castle, the guard made no serious
search for them, contenting themselves with a casual sharp watch. That
was the only incident to break the monotony of those anxious hours; it
served to give the lurkers assurance that their presence was hardly
expected.

Never was the falling dusk so welcome as on that evening. When it was
safely dark, the two stole out, eager to be about their desperate
attempt. For to entertain the idea that they two, even with the
lady’s help, could rescue the prisoners from a man so powerful,
so resourceful, so wary as the Count, and get them away from his
prison-like stronghold, was, could they have considered it soberly,
nothing short of madness. But, in truth, their situation was as
desperate as was their venture; they could not view it dispassionately
if they would. Action was imperative; delay intolerable; the danger
and distress of the prisoners was bound to increase every moment they
remained in that robber’s den.

The two men had but half a mile to go from their hiding-place to
the rendezvous, but the nature of the ground they traversed, and
the need of extreme caution left little remaining of the half-hour
after night-fall which was their appointed time. Save for a few dim
streaks of moonlight which filtered through the trees, the wood was
perplexingly dark as they crept through it. Stealing along like
marauding panthers, they arrived at length, without incident or alarm,
at the meeting-place. No one was there. Standing close to a great tree,
they waited for their guide’s appearance. Scarcely a sound broke the
stillness, as they stood there, keenly watchful; the slightest movement
or rustle seemed intensified in that black atmosphere of silence; the
two men drew their very breaths cautiously, as they strained their
eyes into the darkness for the first glimpse of an abnormal movement.
But none came to end their motionless impatience. Minutes passed
without any indication that the tryst was to be kept. At last, when the
appointed time was well past, Ludovic whispered to his companion, “Let
us go forward. She may be here waiting for us, as we are for her.”

Ompertz nodded and they crept out warily into the path. All was still;
ahead of them they could see a dull haze of light rising, evidently
from the lighted windows of the castle below. Suddenly Ompertz put
out his hand and touched Ludovic, then pointed forwards to an object
which his trained eye had detected dimly outlined against the faint
light. Surely it was the figure of a woman standing beside the path.
So the lady had been waiting for them all the while. Vexed at their
short-sighted caution, which had lost so much time, Ludovic went
quickly forward. She stood quietly, so motionless that they wondered
she did not turn at their approach. She had taken her position rather
unwisely, Ompertz thought, at a spot where a thin shaft of moonlight
pierced the trees, bringing her figure into a somewhat dangerous
prominence. As Ludovic came within a few paces of her, he saw it was
she whom they looked for: his hand was raised in the act of salutation,
when suddenly, as though shot, he stopped with a great start and a half
cry.

“Ompertz! Great Heaven! Look!” he cried hoarsely under his breath.

In an instant Ompertz by a quick stride was at his shoulder. The two
men peered forward, with apprehensive intentness, at the girl’s figure.
Then, as by a common impulse, they turned and looked at each other
aghast. Next moment, Ompertz, to whom familiarity with horrors had
given a quicker recovery of nerve and power of action, sprang forward
to the motionless figure. Only to recoil with a deep exclamation of
wrath and abhorrence. As he turned and his eyes met Ludovic’s, the King
saw in them the answer to his gasped question.

“She is dead?”

Ompertz nodded and came close to him, seizing his arm.

“Dead? Yes. Foully murdered for this business. The man is a devil
incarnate.”

Without another word, for the horror was too appalling for speech, they
went a step forward and saw what the deed had been.

The body of the girl was cunningly lashed to the trunk of a young
tree which had been cut down to about the height of her head, and so
formed a support to keep her in an erect posture. The attitude was
natural, and, from a few paces off, the deception was perfect. But now
the grey face, strangely handsome even in its ghastliness, set off in
horrible contrast by the rich dress and jewels which, sparkling in the
moonlight, mocked the lustreless eyes, was so awful that more than the
first glance at it was unendurable. As Ludovic averted his head in an
agony of impotent rage and sorrow, Ompertz caught his arm and said in
his ear.

“His vengeance will not stop here, sire.”

Ludovic roused himself from the horror that seemed to deprive him of
all thought, save one, and understood his meaning.

“We cannot go,” he said desperately, “after that.” He pointed with a
shudder to the Tragedy. “Now less than ever, since we know----”

He stopped, for Ompertz had made a warning gesture, and now turned his
head, listening intently. There was a stealthy rustle in the trees;
while they listened in doubt, it increased and seemed to come from
all sides. Then suddenly came a low cry of command, followed, without
pause, by a noise as of men rushing swiftly and stealthily upon them.

“Look out, sire,” Ompertz cried. “It is a trap! We are surrounded.”

As he spoke, dark forms appeared, running upon them through the trees.
With a soldier’s readiness to meet and make the best of a surprise,
Ompertz had whipped out his pistols, and fired two quick shots at the
foremost of the advancing figures.

“Follow me, sire,” he exclaimed. “We must cut our way through, or we
are dead men. It is our only chance. Keep your fire for the moment. I
fancy I have accounted for two. This is our best way.”

As he spoke, he sprang forward into the wood, over the bodies of the
two men whom his shots had brought down. Ludovic followed, sword
and pistol in hand. There were angry cries behind them, but, for
the moment, they got a slight start, having broken through the ring
of their assailants at the point where Ompertz’s shots had made an
opening. Keeping arm to arm, the two ran on as fast as the thick
wood allowed them, dodging the trees which stood in the way of their
progress, stumbling, falling, bruising themselves against the trunks,
which seemed to advance against them in the darkness, yet always, as
the shouts told them, keeping ahead of their pursuers. It was a grim
hunt, with death a certainty if they were taken.

“Mad fool that I was to let you stay, sire,” Ompertz groaned,
desperately making his way through the hindering trees, with every
thought concentrated on securing his companion’s safety, none troubling
as to his own.

“I care nothing for my life now,” Ludovic returned, with set teeth;
“only to get Ruperta from the clutches of that murdering devil. At
least, he will buy my death at a price beyond his fancy.”

As they kept on, hope came to Ompertz that they might, after all, in
that great thick woodland, succeed in evading their pursuers. The
voices behind them were no longer heard. They stopped and listened,
uncertain whether to conclude that the attack had been completely
baffled, or the human beasts of prey were but preparing for a second
spring upon them. They soon, however, became unpleasantly aware that
their good luck was but imaginary. Suddenly there came from all around
them, as it seemed, a quick succession of low, signalling cries.

“We are surrounded again,” Ludovic said. “Fools that we were to think
we had got clear.”

“They have not taken us yet, sire,” Ompertz replied, as, with grim
determination on his face, he finished the reloading of his discharged
pistols. “We will account for a few, I hope, of these villains before
the end comes, if it be so near. Happily, though they outnumber us
ten to one or more, yet their master does not seem to trust them with
fire-arms. Now, sire, let us make a rush for it. Once out of the
wood----Hah! what is that? By St. Hubert, they have lights for the
better hunting of us down.”

It was true enough. From various points in the circle round them, came,
first a dull glow; then, as the brightness increased, an occasional
flash was seen, as in the narrowing ring of their pursuers, the
torches were thrust to and fro.

“At least their lights serve to show us where they are and where they
are not,” Ompertz observed, with a laugh. “Yonder seems a likely place
to break through. Come, sire.”

Without a moment’s further hesitation they made a dash at a spot where
the interval between the lights seemed greatest. Their assailants had
evidently not thought them so near; as the two burst upon them out of
the darkness, which was intensified beyond the radius of light given by
the glaring torches, the Count’s men gave a cry of surprise, and sprang
at them. But before a blow could be struck, two pistol shots rang out,
the lights the men held made the aim easy to their own undoing; next
instant there were two bodies on the ground and two torches crackling
half-extinguished on the wood’s spiky carpet. Then came a shout, a
hunting cry, only more charged with rage and thirst for blood, followed
by a rush, as the whole band converged and made for the track of
the two who were now running for their lives. The pursuers had the
advantage, since they could see their way; the glare of the lights came
ever nearer, the savage cries of the man-hunters sounded closer, the
fugitives could hear the desperate panting of the men, straining every
nerve to come up with them, and make a speedy end to the night’s work.

“God, sire, that you should die like this!” Ompertz cried with a great
sob, as the two, ever shoulder to shoulder, ran their losing race with
despair. Truly the end seemed close now, as close as the exultant,
panting ruffians at their heels. “That I cannot give the hounds my life
for yours!” The words were wrung from him in that great agony of regret.

“It is well, my faithful friend,” Ludovic replied, as he put forth his
hand and gave the other’s arm a friendly grasp. “You have played your
part nobly. I am only sorry that I have led so brave a spirit to a
trap like this.”

For all seemed over now. Save for the satisfaction of the act, it was
hardly worth while to turn and send another brace of those hireling
murderers to their death. But the last stand had to come, that it was
but a few seconds away each of the two felt in his heart. They would
not fall flying, but with faces set to their foes. They could run
only till the foremost cutlass came within striking distance. It was
but a very few feet away now. Ludovic had the word on his lips, when
there came an exclamation from Ompertz; a gasp, it sounded, of grim
satisfaction. The scene had suddenly changed, so unexpectedly, that it
seemed like magic. The thick wood had abruptly come to an end, they
were in open ground, in comparative light, since the sky showed clear
above them.

“Thank Heaven we shall die in the open,” Ompertz ejaculated, as they
ran down the sloping approach from the wood. “It is some comfort to
get another look at Heaven, whether our journey lie that way or the
opposite.”

The Count’s men, like beasts of prey, were now tearing after them,
their eagerness being probably stimulated by a shrewd idea of the way
in which their chief would be likely to recognize their failure.

On the open ground it was soon apparent that there was no chance of
distancing the pursuit.

“We must turn and face them,” Ludovic said to his companion, as,
turning his head, he caught sight of the flash of a blade almost within
reach of his head.

“No, no, sire; for Heaven’s sake keep on a little longer,” the soldier
gasped. “We may escape them yet. If only we can get to the rocks
yonder. Ah!”

The foremost of their pursuers, an ill-visaged, swarthy giant, was now
within striking distance of Ludovic. Ompertz, running for his life,
was yet keeping an eye on the fellow over his shoulder, watching for
the moment when the blade would be raised for the stroke. As he spoke
the last words, he caught the glint of the steel over Ludovic’s head.
He turned and checked his pace just enough to get a certain aim, then
fired, and, with a roar, the great fellow pitched heels over head. The
next man was perhaps ten paces farther behind; the fugitives had a
renewed start. The rocks, for which they were making, were now quite
near.

“Courage, sire! Keep on at your fastest,” Ompertz cried in his
desperate hope. “We may make a stand against them yet. With our pistols
we may hold these rocks----ah, no! by the ever-lasting thunder, they
have trapped us after all!”

His quick eye had seen that, from an opening in the dark hill-side, a
body of horsemen had suddenly appeared, filing out on the open ground
across which the two had nearly made their way. As they emerged from
the path, they deployed with military smartness, and so formed an
almost invincible barrier between the fugitives and the rocks for which
they were making.

“We are nicely caught between two fires, now,” Ompertz exclaimed with a
groan.

“Never mind; let us fight while we can,” Ludovic returned.

They had slackened their pace, seeing the hopelessness of getting clear
away to the rocks. The Count’s men from behind were now upon them.

“We must try to fight our way back to the wood,” Ompertz cried
desperately. “We have no chance here against horsemen.”

There was little chance enough for them any way; it was merely a
question of how many lives they could exact in payment for their own.

Seeing them halt and turn, the men gave a cry of exultant
blood-thirstiness, and rushed to close in upon them. “Shoot, sire,”
said Ompertz, “and let us have one the fewer to deal with.”

Ludovic’s pistol rang out, and a man fell. Ompertz pointed his empty
pistol, and, seeing their comrade go down, the assailants checked
their onslaught. But the Count was coming up behind them; his furious
tones sounded above the rest, and the stimulus of that dominant
spirit put an end to hesitation. If death was a risk in front, it was
a certainty behind them, and the Count had a peculiarly unpleasant
lethal prescription for cowards and blunderers. So the men were fain to
attack, in spite of the ugly little barrel which swept round upon them
as they spread out to surround the doomed pair.

But now the precious fire could no longer be husbanded. Ompertz, hemmed
in, shot down with his second pistol the most aggressive of their
adversaries. The man’s fall caused but a momentary backward sway of the
on-coming force, which was now ready to attack at all points, and make
short and final work of their victims. As the great body dropped with a
half-choked cry and a thud, his companions, with savage cries of rage,
brandished their weapons and made a simultaneous rush to close in.

Back to back the two doomed men stood, grimly determined to make as
many lives as possible pay for their own, since all else but death was
out of the question. Ludovic was now utterly possessed by the spirit of
blind, despairing recklessness. The sense of the terrible irony of his
fate had passed from his mind. All hope was gone; one after the other
his kingdom and his love had been snatched from him, and now Fate’s
shears were already meeting on the thread of his life. So free of the
world and all it held dear for him did he feel, that he could laugh
and enjoy the desperate excitement of that last struggle, where, since
he could not win, he could delight in reducing his opponent’s gain.
In those terrible moments, when the murdering swords and villainous
faces with eyes drunk with the lust for slaughter pressed round him,
he fought with a coolness and effect which forced from him a laugh at
his own success. He could not have imagined their holding out like
that. He heard, above the guttural hubbub, the Count’s voice roaring,
as much, it seemed, in impatient annoyance as encouragement. Then from
Ompertz behind him came a loud exclamation of triumph, a shout as gaily
jubilant as a man might give on a successful stroke at tennis, but it
meant that another of the Count’s ruffians had been accounted for, and
the debt which their lives were to pay was growing.

But almost immediately afterwards the soldier gave a different cry.

“Ah! I am done for!”

Instantly Ludovic turned to see his comrade practically disarmed, his
uplifted hand grasped but the hilt of his shattered sword.

“My beauty! Gone at last, and on these swine,” he cried ruefully.

There was but one sword now to defend two men. Ompertz, with a
despairing oath, hurled the sword-hilt full in the face of the man
who was about to thrust at him. The fellow’s intention was naturally
checked by the blow which took him fairly on the mouth, and, profiting
by the moment’s respite, Ompertz made a vigorous spring out of the
immediate reach of his assailants, but instead of trying to escape
rushed desperately towards the Count.

“Count!” he cried, throwing out his arms, “kill me, as you please, but
save him. He is Prince Ludwig of Drax-Beroldstein.”

He stopped, for, with an exclamation of angry surprise, the Count had
turned from him and ran forward, peering through the semi-darkness
at a sight which had suddenly attracted him. For a moment Ompertz
supposed that it was Ludovic who was the object of his attention, and
he, too, ran back to where he had left him, fearing that he must by
now have fallen. To his surprise he found Ludovic standing alone; his
assailants had drawn away from him, and were facing, in, as it seemed,
some consternation, the mounted troops which had now advanced from the
shadow of the rocks into the open. The sudden cessation in the attack
was incomprehensible to both men. But, taking in the situation as he
found it, Ompertz lost no time in snatching a cutlass from one of the
dead men, and then sprang to the King’s side.

“Are you hurt, sire?”

Before Ludovic could answer, the horsemen were upon them.

“We shall have less chance now than ever,” Ompertz muttered, preparing,
all the same, to return the expected assault.

But a strange thing happened. The on-coming horsemen halted within a
few paces, showing no intention of immediate attack. Then the Count’s
strong voice was heard challenging them, and at the words a ray of hope
broke in upon Ompertz’s mind.

“What is the matter? What devil’s game are you playing here by night?”
a sharp voice called out.

“By the God of wonders, they are strangers,” Ompertz ejaculated, in
sanguine astonishment.

The Count flung back a fierce reply to the inquiry.

“What business is that of yours? Resume your way, and leave what does
not concern you.”

“Are you Count Irromar?” the same sharp voice demanded.

“I am Count Irromar,” came the reply; “and answerable to no man for
what happens in my own domain.”

“I am not equally sure of that,” the other returned, in a nettled tone.

“I will brook no interference from you or any other man,” the Count
shouted, resentfully. “Will you please to pass on your way? You are off
your road here.”

Any further rejoinder from the leader of the troop was prevented by a
cry of discovery from one of his own men who was nearest to Ludovic and
Ompertz.

“Captain! Captain! We are in luck at last. Here are the very men we are
seeking!”

“What!” The leader put his horse forward, and came up eagerly to where
the two men stood. As he reined up, they both recognised him; Udo
Rollmar.

“So I have caught you at last, my dashing Lieutenant,” Udo exclaimed,
viciously exultant. “Before I hang you on the nearest tree, you will
tell me----”

“What has become of the Princess,” Ludovic said. “I will tell you at
once. She is a prisoner in that castle.”

“Ah, you vile traitor--you----”

Ludovic went up close to his horse’s head. “I will tell you something
more,” he began. Udo’s horse made a slight plunge forward, and Ludovic
put his hand on the bridle. Udo raised his sword.

“Back! you dog,” he cried savagely. “Keep your distance, or----”

The other made a gesture of warning. “I am King Ludwig of
Drax-Beroldstein,” he said quietly.

Udo’s hand fell, and he stared at Ludovic for some moments, as scarcely
realizing the announcement. At length he said:

“The King of Drax-Beroldstein’s name is Ferdinand.”

“Not the rightful king’s. I tell you I am he. I came to your Court,
incognito, for an obvious reason, to add some romance to your father’s
matrimonial projects. You comprehend? Now, an unfortunate series of
accidents has hampered my plans. All that can be explained later. The
Princess must be our first consideration. That ruffian yonder, Count
Irromar, is, I tell you, keeping her prisoner there.”

Udo’s face hardly exhibited the satisfaction and respect which might
have been expected from the disclosure of Ludovic’s identity. A scowl
of forced suspicion rested there; manifestly he was not relishing the
part fate had cast him for in that romance. His father’s sentiments
in the business differed, as has been seen, considerably from his
own. The feeling uppermost in his mind just then was probably intense
regret that he had arrived on the scene in time to interfere in the
Count’s amiable intentions towards his rival. But there he was, and
the situation was to be accepted as he found it. He could hardly take
upon himself to complete the Count’s work. The Chancellor would surely
find out any such treachery, and was not the man to spare, in such
a case, even his own son. For, in spite of the incredulity which he
thought proper to assume, something told Captain Udo that this was the
veritable Prince Ludovic. The adventure, now that he was given the clue
to it, was plausible enough, and it was obvious from his demeanor that
the man who stood before him was something more than a lying lieutenant.

“This is all very fine and mysterious,” he said ungraciously, still
affecting a doubt he scarcely felt, “and I do not understand it.”

“It is of no consequence,” Ludovic returned with dignity. “You will, at
least, not disbelieve me when I tell you that the Princess Ruperta is
in that castle, held prisoner, and, for aught I know, in dire peril. As
to who or what I am, that can be determined later. But no time must be
lost in rescuing her Highness from that villain’s clutches.”

There was hardly room even to pretend to doubt that statement, and Udo
resumed action, nothing loath, perhaps, to play the rescuer and get
Ruperta out of the danger into which her lover had brought her. He
wheeled his horse and cantered back to the spot whence the Count had
addressed him, only to find that during his colloquy with Ludovic, the
Count and most of his party had disappeared.




CHAPTER XXIII

ROLLAMAR’S POLICY


This manœuvre of the Count’s gave little surprise to Ludovic, although
he felt angry with himself for not having foreseen it, and, indeed,
in letting Irromar slip away, the chance of speedily rescuing the
Princess had been lost. Udo Rollmar showed his double discomfiture
pretty plainly. However, he did not let his moodiness interfere with
his activity. He sent several of his men in pursuit of the Count’s
party, but with little success. The wooded and rocky approach to the
back of the castle hampered the movement of men unfamiliar with the
winding paths and concealed passages; consequently the result of the
pursuit was the capture of but one man. This fellow laughed defiantly
when Udo ordered him to gain admittance for them into the castle as the
alternative to his being strung up on the nearest tree.

“A pleasant draught that,” he laughed sturdily, “set against the dose
our Count would have ready for me.”

“Nonsense, man,” Udo said impatiently; “you will have our protection,
and as for the Count----”

The fellow interrupted him with a still more derisive laugh. “The
Count? You think, with your score of men, to come to a reckoning with
him? Why, Captain, you might as soon try to catch in your hand a bird
flying past you. Ten times your force would never get inside that
castle, were the Count minded to keep you out: and if you did get in
you would never get out again.”

“We shall see,” Udo returned, scornfully confident.

“You do not know my master,” said the man.

“I know him,” Udo retorted, “for a pestilent, defiant law-breaker. A
villain who, for this piece of work, will at last meet the hangman who
has long been expecting him.”

The prisoner’s only reply was an incredulous laugh.

“Do you mean to show us how to gain entrance to the castle?” Udo
demanded impatiently.

“Not I,” the fellow answered. “And you may thank me for refusing to do
you that ill service.”

Udo raised his hand, as though about to order him to be strung up;
then, with a change of intention, he had him bound and attached to one
of his troopers.

“It is as well to keep the fellow alive for a while,” he said to
Ludovic; “we may find a use for him.”

“In my opinion the ugly scoundrel is certainly right, Captain,” Ompertz
observed. “This is no place to account for with a handful of men. It
could defy you at that rate till doomsday.”

By his ill-humoured face, Udo did not seem to accept the opinion very
graciously. But he was fain to consult with Ludovic upon the position
in which they found themselves. His manner towards the King was
dubiously deferential, suggesting that he would have liked to discredit
him were he only certain of his ground.

“You may accept the fellow’s word,” Ludovic said, ignoring Udo’s
manner in his paramount anxiety for Ruperta. “It would, I am sure, be
absolutely useless to attempt to force our way into the place. And
here, from behind, is its least vulnerable point. I fear all we can do
is to go round to the front and threaten or, at least, parley with the
Count.”

Udo’s aggrieved expression seemed, as doubtless it was intended, to
make the most of the undeniable fact that it was by the extravagant act
of Ludovic himself--king or no king--that the Princess had fallen into
this trap. However, he accepted his advice, and the party made their
way round into the narrow valley and so up to the front of the castle.

Here, with sound of bugle and peremptory hammering at the great door,
the master was summoned and entrance demanded. But not a sign of
impression was or seemed likely to be made. After a while, however, a
grating in the door was uncovered, and a man-servant, after blandly
inquiring the reason of the summons, intimated that if the leaders of
the party would come forward alone, having drawn off their men down
into the valley, the Count, his master, might be graciously pleased
to speak with them from a window. As this seemed the best chance they
might expect, Udo ordered down his men, and remained on the highest
terrace with Ludovic and Ompertz. For many minutes they stood there
cooling their impatience. Presently, however, a light appeared at a
window above their heads; it was opened, and at it the Count appeared
with a face of bland, protesting surprise.

“May I ask the reason of this somewhat rude summons?” he inquired.
“What do you gentlemen want?”

“We want,” Udo answered, “the ladies whom you are keeping prisoners.”

The Count raised his eyebrows in still further surprise. “Really,
gentlemen,” he replied, “I am at a loss to understand you. You are
making, knowingly or in ignorance, an extraordinary mistake. I know
nothing of any ladies in my house.”

His affectation of ignorance, while it rather nonplussed Captain
Rollmar, exasperated Ludovic, to whom it was disagreeably familiar.

“A truce to this nonsense and pretence, Count,” he cried. “We are not
here to discuss whether these ladies are in your keeping or not, but to
demand their instant release.”

The light held by the Count’s face showed an ugly wave that for an
instant ruffled its blandness. “You demand, sir?” he returned, with a
slight indication of sternness behind his suavity. “You are as bold to
ask me for what I have not got, as unreasonable to disturb my peace at
this time of night.”

His cool lying was a shield which no words could pierce.

“Then,” said Udo hotly, “you refuse to give up these ladies?”

“Were any ladies under the protection of my poor roof,” Irromar
replied, with maddening calmness, “I should certainly refuse to deliver
them over to what I am almost forced to regard as a band of drunken
marauders.”

“You will rue this insolence before many hours are past,” Udo cried
angrily. “So far from being a drunken marauder, I am Captain Udo von
Rollmar, of his Highness Duke Theodor of Waldavia’s Bodyguard of
Cavalry. My father is Chancellor, Baron von Rollmar, and----”

“And your friends?” The words came snapped out with pointed, malicious
intent, “and your friends, who have, in return for my hospitality,
murdered my poor servants in cold blood, and attempted my own life--who
may they be?”

“I am one,” Ludovic retorted, “who possesses the power to have you
hanged, and I will not rest till I have done so.”

The Count laughed. “And you expect me to open my gates to you?”

“Certainly, to let out the two ladies.”

The Count made a gesture and a grimace of protest.

“This trick shall not serve you, Count, for long,” Ludovic said,
checking his almost ungovernable anger in his anxiety for the Princess.
“Let me tell you, the ladies you keep prisoners are of high rank, and
you will detain them another hour at your peril.”

The Count smiled as resentfully indulgent. “Were the facts as you
state them, I should be tempted to ask how ladies of high rank come to
be travelling in this wild country in company with a pair of common
swashbucklers, if the expression may be allowed me.”

This touched Ompertz, who had hitherto stood by chafing in silence.
“You will pay for that, my sweet Count, on my own as well as this
gentleman’s account, if ever I come within striking distance of you.”

“It is late,” Irromar observed, with his terrible coolness, “and chilly
for listening to insane threats and bluster. I have already indulged
you too long. I can only repeat that I have no knowledge of the ladies
whom you say you seek. Now, Captain, I bid you good-night, and if
I might venture to add a word of advice, it would be that you will
do well to dissociate yourself forthwith from your two disreputable
companions. You are a young man, and--what is strange in your father’s
son--you seem easily gullible. Good-night.”

The window was closed with a bang, and the light disappeared. The three
men turned and descended to one of the lower terraces, where they held
a short consultation. Each was convinced that an attempt with that
handful of men to force a way into the stronghold was not to be thought
of, and Ludovic, gladly as he would have headed such a forlorn hope,
was obliged to bow to its impracticability. The plan quickly decided on
was that he and Udo Rollmar should ride back post-haste to Waldenthor,
inform the Chancellor of what had happened, and return with a force
sufficient to overcome and compel Count Irromar to surrender. Meanwhile
the men already there would remain on the watch under the command of
Ompertz.

No sooner was this plan settled, than the two, taking the freshest
of the horses, started off on their long ride. Tedious as it was,
especially to Ludovic’s impatience, the journey was by a much shorter
route than that by which he had come. When once, after a couple of
leagues’ rough riding, they gained the high road the way was smooth
and direct enough. There was no comparison between their galloping
progress and that of the heavy jolting coach in which the ill-fated
elopement had been made. The day was yet young when the two drew bridle
before the Chancellerie at Waldenthor, and Udo, ushering his companion
into a salon, went to announce to his father the strange result of his
quest.

Ludovic had taken, insensible of fatigue, but a few turns of the
apartment in his restless impatience, when the Chancellor came in.

Rollmar’s greeting manner was a study, a curious blending of
half-doubting deference and slightly contemptuous protest. But his keen
scrutiny of the young man, a revising, as it were, under transformed
circumstances, of a previous observation and opinion, seemed to satisfy
him. His first words, as he bowed, lower than to an equal, yet not so
profoundly as to an assured sovereign, were characteristic.

“And I, Adrian Rollmar, never even suspected it.”

There was a slightly self-reproachful smile on his thin lips as he
motioned Ludovic to a seat and stood before him, keenly revolving this
unexpected phase of the situation.

“You have heard, Baron, about the Princess?” Ludovic asked rapidly.

Rollmar bowed assent. “A pretty pass your Highness has brought your
romance to.”

He seemed not to care to ask or require any personal confirmation of
the news of Ludovic’s identity; he was shrewd and skilful enough to
see that the man before him was undoubtedly royal, although, owing,
perhaps, to his keenness having been diverted to another scent, what
seemed now so obvious had previously escaped his notice. His remark had
a touch of humour which softened its reproach.

“No one,” Ludovic replied, “naturally can regret this unlooked-for
turn more terribly than I. The matter now is to rescue the Princess,
and without a moment’s unnecessary delay.”

To his impatience, Rollmar’s deliberation was provoking. “Ah!
Unfortunately, as we hear, sire, you are not in a position to effect
the rescue yourself.”

For the moment Ludovic did not take his meaning. “By myself? Assuredly
not. You must know this Count Irromar and his stronghold, Baron. It
will require a considerable force to bring him to capitulate.”

Rollmar nodded agreement. “Which your Highness cannot provide.”

“From Beroldstein? No.” Ludovic replied, a little awkwardly. “I fear I
have trouble there to face.”

“Ah!” The Chancellor’s ejaculation was expressive, inscrutably so, in
the suggestion of busy thought lying behind it “You would have done
better, sire, to have looked after your crown, and left your love
affair in my hands.”

“Better, perhaps, for my crown,” the Prince returned, with as much of
a smile as his anxiety would permit. “But, with all deference to your
skill, Baron, not so well in the other matter.”

“At least,” the Chancellor rejoined, “the present situation would have
been avoided.”

“One can hardly hope to fight against chance,” Ludovic said, somewhat
impatiently; “of that I have been the sport lately. My uncle’s fatal
accident, my cousin’s usurpation, and our stumbling into Count
Irromar’s den, were hardly to be anticipated. But if fate has led me
into these hard knocks, it has in other respects marvellously stood my
friend, even--” he smiled--“against you, Baron.”

Rollmar returned the smile a little dubiously. “Under pardon, sire,
your luck can scarcely be said to justify your madness. Romance is,
no doubt, a pretty plaything, but too gimcrack for the stern game of
state-craft. I am an old man, sire, and you a very young one; let me
tell you in confidence from my experience that the greater part of my
forty years’ work has been correcting the mistakes and combating the
absurdities of those whom I have served. Happily--for I am tired of
it--it does not fall to me to help you to regain what you have lost.”

Ludovic rose impatiently. “But it is just for that, Baron, I have
ridden here post-haste through the night.”

“To help you----?” The old minister looked uncompromisingly aghast.

“Yes,” Ludovic exclaimed impetuously, “to rescue the Princess. While we
are talking here----”

Rollmar’s expression had changed into a grim smile. “The romantic still
uppermost,” he said, his contemptuous amusement getting the better of
his deference. “I thought you referred to the recovery of your kingdom.”

“What is that to me while Ruperta is perhaps in deadly peril, or worse?”

“Ah, true.” The old man’s coolness and deliberation were exasperating.
“That is my business, and you may trust me to set about it without
delay.”

“I might be excused for doubting your promptness, Baron.”

“_Festina lente._ But I am not insensible of the criticalness of the
Princess’s position. An armed detachment is already under orders, and I
myself start for the Schloss Teufelswald within the hour.”

“You, Baron?” Ludovic started in surprise.

“Even I,” Rollmar answered quietly. “This precious Count Irromar, whom
you have stumbled upon, is well known to me, at least by reputation,
and is no ordinary man. He unites in himself, as your Highness may have
discovered, the cunning of the serpent with the ferocity of the wolf.
Our troops may oppose the latter quality; it is to meet the former that
I propose to myself a disagreeable journey.”

“Then,” said Ludovic, “we travel together.”

“So far,” Rollmar replied, a little stiffly, “as the road to
Beroldstein is the way to Schloss Teufelswald.”

Ludovic paused in his quick stride towards the door, and stared at him.
“Naturally, Baron, I go with you to the Schloss Teufelswald.”

Rollmar pursed his lips, as he remained standing by the fireplace.
“I would advise you, sire, to let the settlement of your position at
Beroldstein be your first care.”

“You would, Baron?”

“Unless, that is, you are inclined, as is hardly likely, to a man of
your spirit, to let things be as they are.”

Ludovic flushed hotly. “I give up my crown to Ferdinand, or to any
other man? Surely, Baron, either I misunderstand you, or you are
joking.”

“Far from joking, sire. I was only thinking,” he added dryly, “of the
trouble such a course would save.”

“None of my seeking,” Ludovic returned. “Either I am the rightful King
of Drax-Beroldstein, or I am not.”

“_Les absents_,” said the Baron calmly, “_ont toujours tort_.”

This was more than Ludovic could endure. “Enough!” he exclaimed
impatiently. “I will not discuss the point with you. Now, let us start
for Teufelswald without further delay.”

Rollmar eyed him curiously. “I am ready. But for your Majesty it would
be best to go first to Beroldstein.”

Ludovic walked up to him. “What do you mean, Baron?” he demanded.

The Chancellor gave a shrug. “Simply that you may with confidence leave
the rescue of the Princess in our hands.”

“Indeed!” Ludovic retorted. “And what, think you, would her opinion be
of the man who, having brought her into this strait, rode away and left
her deliverance to others?”

Rollmar smiled, masking, obviously, his underlying intent. “Women are
unreasonable. It need matter little to our Princess, once she is
free, by whose agency her liberty is gained. More. Perhaps, all things
considered, it would be as well that you should not appear as her
deliverer.”

“Why not, pray?” Ludovic demanded warmly, as an inkling of the other’s
drift dawned upon him.

Rollmar met him with steady eyes. “If the romance is to come to an end,
the sooner it is over the better.”

The meaning was plain now. “True,” Ludovic returned, with the restraint
of a settled determination. “But the romance will end only with our
deaths.”

Rollmar seemed to accept the words as a challenge. His still
deferential manner was in curious contrast to the dictatorial purport
of his speech. But then his daily interviews with his master had made
the blending of the two quite natural.

“Speaking in the name of my master, Duke Theodor,” he said, “the
question of the alliance between Princess Ruperta and yourself is a
closed one. It was naturally and necessarily contingent on certain
events and circumstances. With the romance of your love affair I
have no concern, except to express a passing regret that it should
have indirectly upset a promising intention. But your Majesty will
understand that, from his Highness Duke Theodor’s point of view, the
proposed alliance of our Princess was not with Ludwig Hassenburg, but
with Ludwig, King, or at least Heir Apparent of Drax-Beroldstein.”


So the meaning was at last clear with a vengeance. The fierce old eyes
left no doubt as to will behind the intent. In Ludovic the impetuosity
of youth was tempered by a certain natural shrewdness and inculcated
tact. He had been brought up to govern, and an important part of his
teaching had been, as it should be of all rulers, to know how to meet a
dangerous opposition by a graceful show of yielding.

After all, the Chancellor’s line of policy, now so bluntly indicated,
was only what might have been expected of him. He had never pretended
that the projected match was more than a matter of state expediency: as
for love in it, he had clearly shown that such a point never troubled
him. The wolf and the serpent, he had said. Yes; there was no use,
especially in Ludovic’s present helpless position, in opposing force,
which he had not, or even spirit, which he had, to cunning. So he bowed
before the expression of the old statesman’s plain-spoken intent.

“I can well understand that, Baron,” he replied, masking the resentment
in his heart. “Were I so simple as to expect you to forego your policy
for a mere matter of romance I should confess to a poor knowledge of
the world and an incompetence to govern my little share of it. But
if you think for a moment that I have given up my crown, you make a
strange mistake. You cannot think that. Could I be capable of so weak
an act of renunciation, were I so ready to bow before circumstances,
I should indeed be unworthy of so noble, so high-spirited a girl
as Princess Ruperta. No, I mean to assert my rights without delay,
and have little fear, that, when once I have raised my standard in
Beroldstein, my cousin Ferdinand will be able to stand against me.”

Rollmar’s face was not an easy one to read, but if at that moment it
gave any clue to his thoughts, it indicated that he was of a different
opinion. But he did not say so. His purpose was to marry the Princess
to the King of Drax-Beroldstein, when once it was quite settled which
of the cousins wore the crown firmly on his head. That issue they might
fight out between themselves, and welcome. As to the result he was
cynically indifferent.

“Very well, sire,” he said calmly, “your spirit is admirable and
deserves success. As a sensible man you will hardly blame my master
if he, before giving his daughter’s hand, waits for the interesting
result. Now, it is time I was on my way.”

With a reverence, he motioned his guest towards the door.

“You will at least let me bear you company, Baron?” Ludovic asked. “Our
ways lie together, and I shall not rest until I know the Princess is
safe.”

“I shall be honoured,” Rollmar answered. “If your Majesty will take
some refreshment, while I speak a parting word with the Duke.”

Rollmar was all suavity when he rejoined Ludovic; and, at the head of
some four-score men, they set out at a smart pace for Teufelswald.




CHAPTER XXIV

THE COUNT AND RUPERTA


A man of Count Irromar’s abnormal cunning and insight had little
difficulty in guessing something very near the truth about his
captives. They were ladies of rank, Ludovic had told him, and he
could quite believe it. Indeed the information jumped with a shrewd
suspicion already in his head, which, however, naturally stopped far
short of the real truth. Tracing in his mind the probabilities of the
affair, he constructed an elopement, a pursuing party, a sudden uniting
of opposite interests, resulting in the parley he had held from the
window. It all fitted in with absolute exactness; the circumstantial
plausibility was so great that he decided he could accept and act upon
supposition as certainty. With this intent he next evening presented
himself once more before Ruperta. A certain urgent business which
claimed him had prevented an earlier interview.

“It is as well that I have kept you safe under my roof, gracious
Fräulein,” he began, with almost apologetic deference. “You have
thereby escaped, if not danger, at least a disagreeable encounter.”

Ruperta’s mood had grown, during these long hours, to one of proud
resentment. Fear, for herself at least, she did not know. The great
effect the situation had upon her was to fill her with an almost
maddening, because futile, indignation. In her treatment at the Count’s
hands she saw nothing but a shameful outrage; the actual danger in
which she stood scarcely occurred to her. Her fearlessness left her
self-reliant, and a self-reliant woman is to herself indeed a tower
of strength. As for her captor and host, she told herself that she
saw through his deceit, and as for his brute strength, why--she was a
woman. It was scarcely conceivable, at any rate in her experience, that
this man could resort to any brutality in order to coerce her.

She replied to him, with disdainful resentment, “What may that be,
Count?”

Her tone suggested that she was prepared to disbelieve whatever he
might be going to tell her; but he ignored his unpromising reception.

“Now the strange desertion of Lieutenant von Bertheim and Captain von
Ompertz may be accounted for.”

“Yes?” Her eyes were fixed on him as though to detect and shrivel up
the coming falsehood. But Karl Irromar was no ordinary man, no ordinary
wrong-doer, even, and the effect was otherwise.

“Captain Rollmar--have I the name aright?--Captain Rollmar has been
here.”

At the name her face had brightened expectantly for an instant, then
clouded again. She would give him no lead; he must tell his story
without suggestion from her, and she could judge of its truth or
falsehood.

“Indeed?” Only intense repression of her anxiety could have enabled her
to pronounce the word so coldly.

“Yes. He came with no friendly intent, that was certain, and I judged
it advisable to keep you under my protection and to refuse him entrance
to my house.”

“The Lieutenant and Captain Ompertz?” She could not resist the question
which forced itself to her lips.

“They had evidently fallen in with Captain Rollmar and his party,” he
replied darkly. “The result of their meeting, you, gracious lady, may
best imagine.”

In truth she did not know what to imagine, what to believe. A chill
of despairing loneliness seemed to sweep over her soul. Only for a
moment, and then she called up her courage again.

“I am thankful,” he said, insistently, “that I deemed it wise to keep
you here under my protection.”

His assumption of patronage seemed to provoke her. “Indeed, Count,” she
returned, “your intention may have been kind, but it is not so certain
that I stood in need of protection--from more than that night’s storm.”

“I think,” he replied, insinuatingly, “that you would not have cared to
meet this Captain Rollmar.”

“You might,” she rejoined, with spirit, “have given me the chance,
instead of keeping me ignorant of his presence.”

The Count laughed. “The captain has not gone far yet. Shall I send for
him?”

The steely blue eyes were on her, lighted with masterful amusement. How
she loathed the indignity she could not resent.

“If you are serious you may send for him,” she answered quietly.

For a moment he stood looking at her in silence, in a pause of
calculation.

“I shall not send for this Captain Rollmar,” he said at length,
speaking with marked deliberation, “for two reasons.”

For an instant her eyes were raised to his face; that was all the
invitation he received to state them.

“One,” he proceeded, “is that I would not for the world subject you to
the chance or shadow of annoyance. And I have every reason to believe
that would be the outcome of my delivering you up to this rough fellow
who is pursuing you, and who may have already wreaked his vengeance on
your--your escort.”

She made a slight movement, perhaps the checking of a shiver: that was
the only break in her impassivity.

“The other,” his tone had fallen to an unlooked-for softness now, and
his manner was almost a caress: “the other is--forgive me, gracious
lady--that I could not bear to give you up to another man’s keeping.”
The speech brought no sign of acknowledgment from her. He drew a step
closer. “You may understand, Fräulein, and pardon?” he added earnestly.

Now she looked him full in the face and there seemed nothing in her
eyes but scorn. “I can at least understand,” she replied.

“And not forgive?”

“Forgive!” she echoed, with imperious yet half-amused disdain, “that
is scarcely a word to be used between us, Count. You pay but a bad
compliment to your hospitality if, after so short an acquaintance, you
find that necessary.”

“I trust it may not be,” he rejoined. “But, surely, where you are
concerned, Fräulein, the matter of mere time can hardly influence the
warmth of the feelings, and therefore of the expressions, of those who
have the privilege of your society.”

His meaning, though plain enough, was guardedly couched, more so than
could manifestly have been usual in one whose manner was wont to be
bluff and direct; but, in truth the outward coldness of her personality
repulsed him, in spite of the mad desire to break through that icy
rampart.

“I am your guest, Count,” she returned, with a quiet, confident
dignity. “As such I may claim at least respect from you.”

The impatience of one who had known little thwarting got the better of
his tact. “My one desire in the world,” he declared, with a touch of
passion, “is that you shall be much more to me than my guest.”

She drew back proudly from his importunity. “And my desire is,” she
retorted, “to cease to be the guest of one who abuses the position of a
host.”

They were at issue now; the fencing must become a fight in earnest.

“If you were aware of my power,” Irromar said, “you would know that I
do not abuse, or even use it, except to lay it at your feet.”

The eyes were fixed on her, holding her there like moral fangs. To
her they seemed more fierce, more fearful even than Rollmar’s, not so
much in the will they showed, as in the possibilities of evil they
suggested. But, strange as this salient malevolence was to her, her
innate courage met the crisis, and she told herself her spirit should
not be conquered.

“It does not appear so,” she replied. “Your word and actions do not
agree. Else why am I kept here a prisoner?”

He made a gesture of protest. “You are mistaken,” he assured her
plausibly. “I have but taken upon myself to keep you here out of the
way of the danger which I see, though you may not, is threatening you.
That this necessity brings a joy to me is a fact which I dare to hope
may not be indifferent to you.”

“Under the circumstances,” she replied steadily, “it can scarcely be of
great moment to me.”

“It may be,” he flamed out, “it may be--of the greatest moment.”

It was a covert threat, but she ignored it. “May I ask,” she said, with
a calmness in contrast to his outburst, “as I appear to be in your
power”--the words were hateful to her, but not to be shirked--“what
your purpose is with regard to my detention here?”

“I had hoped,” he answered, with a soreness which he could not
altogether disguise, “that the question, or at least its tone, might
have been unnecessary.” Then his passion began to rise. “Let me tell
you, madam, without further cloaked speeches, that you seek to repulse,
to defy--for my reception at your hands points to nothing else--a man
whose will is law to himself and to those who cross his path. No one
yet, from the late King Josef downwards, has ever successfully defied
or resisted my will. That its harsh expression is seldom heard, or
even felt, arises from the fact that I am a man of good heart and
gentle birth. That, though I live a strenuous life, I hate brutality
and love refinement. Will you not take the trouble to look beneath the
surface and see--chut! I loathe vanity, but you wilfully shut your eyes
to every object but an unworthy one, and compel me to show you myself,
a man unlike, certainly, any other man you ever met, you ever could
know, a man of a power second to no other one man’s in Europe, a man
who is noble in deed, he claims, as in name, and, above all a man who
asks nothing better, could better be, than to lay his power, his heart,
his very life at your feet, asking you to return, even in a small
measure, the devoted all-conquering love with which you have inspired
him.”

With every phrase the passion of his pleading had risen, till it
touched the very height of insistent fervour. As the climax was reached
he put out his arms, but she avoided him with a quick, decisive
movement. “No, no!” she exclaimed, in mingled dislike and indignation.

“Be sensible,” he entreated. “Why will you not hear me?”

If the brute in his nature was, from an ominous light in his eyes, on
the point of asserting itself, the temper in Ruperta’s was now fairly
roused.

“Hear you!” she echoed, her indignation flashing out, “I have
heard--from you--of your nobility of character, and you now seem bent
upon giving me an illustration of it.”

“If you make me beside myself with love and your coldness,” he urged.

“Love?” she repeated scornfully. Then, regarding her persecutor with
abhorrent eyes, his power of will and action, his unscrupulousness and
cunning of purpose and, consequently, her own helplessness came home to
her. But this acute realization of her desperate position brought with
it in a flash the idea of an expedient. To oppose her courage to this
man’s strength was hopeless, but, in her extremity, she remembered her
trick of temporizing with Udo Rollmar. Wit might succeed where mere
spirit failed. True, her former experiment had not been altogether
successful, it had led to a passage which was unpleasant enough, but it
had at least shown her, what she had sometimes heard, that man is most
gullible when his heart or his passion is touched. This man’s mind was,
as it were, a very citadel of cunning behind the outer fortification
of his brute strength; but Udo Rollmar was astute, too, in an
objectionable degree, and she had, at any rate for the moment, fooled
him. The idea of stooping to duplicity was to a girl of Ruperta’s proud
spirit utterly repugnant; but if ever subterfuge was justifiable it was
so in her case, in this crisis as she stood there helpless, desperate,
at the mercy of a man who clearly knew none where his own selfish will
was concerned.

“You talk of love,” she said, with a little softening of the scorn in
her eyes. “What can you expect me to understand by that?”

“Nothing,” he answered readily, and perhaps, for the moment, sincerely,
“but what is due to your position, to your honour and mine.”

She laughed with a touch of satire that was yet provocatively
fascinating. “One might easily doubt your honourable intentions, Count
Irromar, from the manner of your wooing.”

Perhaps the success, which was more familiar to him than failure, gave
him the cue that he was gaining ground, and shut his eyes to the idea
that this royally masterful girl could yoke her pride with deceit.

“I would I might dare hope,” he said, caressingly confident, “that in
your eyes impetuosity may be my greatest fault.”

“Impetuosity,” she said, “means lack of consideration, of respect.”

“No, upon my soul,” he protested. “Will you not do me justice and think
of my temptation; how short the time given me to speak my heart may be?
It is that which has driven me to the impetuosity which has offended
you.”

“You bring me,” she rejoined, with what seemed a lingering touch of
resentment, “news of my friends’ fate, and, with the same breath, make
love to me. Is that delicate consideration, Count? Where is your noble
breeding?”

“I have erred,” he replied, with an affectation of humility. “It was
my heart that got the better of my head. All I have to pray for now is
that you will let me earn your forgiveness.”

She kept her eyes averted and made no reply, and he judged it best to
leave the delicate question for the moment where it was.

“Tell me,” he continued, with a change of tone, “if the question be not
offensive, this Lieutenant von Bertheim? He was your lover?”

She made a slight inclination of assent.

“Ah! I think I can read the story. Yes; romance is a fine illusion, but
power is finer, and it is real. My dearest hope is that you will soon
share mine.”

Still she was silent, for silence was safest then. He, inwardly
exultant, accepted such favourable sign as that silence gave, and,
where importunity was manifestly distasteful, forebore to follow up so
quick upon his advantage.

“And this Captain Rollmar?” he asked, with a knowing curiosity, “He was
the Lieutenant’s rival, eh?”

“I suppose so.”

“And not a desirable one, that is manifest.”

“Hardly, perhaps.”

“The son of a powerful man.”

“The Chancellor Rollmar; yes.”

“The story is plain. You may correct me if I have it wrongly. The
Rollmar needs but to ask and have. To avoid the indignity of such a
disposal, to say nothing of a, perhaps natural, preference, you take to
flight with a lover of your own choosing. Your friend goes with you, to
play propriety, no doubt.”

Ruperta loathed the half-veiled insolence of his examination, but,
at least, it was gaining time and keeping him from a more dangerous
subject.

“It was only natural,” she said, “that I should have a friend of my own
sex with me.”

“Quite natural,” he smiled. “And the big captain? Ah, of course, he
played coachman. The Lieutenant might have chosen a lighter Jehu from
among his trusty friends. Or perhaps there was a tenderness between him
and Fräulein Minna? It is scarcely surprising that your carriage broke
down. Still, it is not for me, of all men, to complain of that. Nor
shall it be my fault if you regret it long.”

Every moment her hatred of the man and his scoffing manner increased;
but, at least so far, it was harmless.

“And your intention,” he went on, “was to go to Beroldstein? And there
get married? Out of Rollmar’s jurisdiction? Am I right?”

“If it gives you any satisfaction to know it, you are not far wrong.”

“Ah!” He was pleased at the successful display of his many-sided power.
“But there is one thing I do not know, except negatively, and cannot
guess.”

“Indeed?” There was perhaps more sarcasm in the word than he liked.

“Your real name and rank. I only know that you are not what you have
given yourself out to be.”

“And what is your idea, Count?”

“That your rank is higher than it appears.”

“And to that is to be ascribed the unusual respect with which you have
thought proper to treat me?”

His face darkened at the irony of the rebuke which, dangerous as it
was, she could not restrain.

“To me,” he returned, as the cloud passed away, “you are only the most
beautiful of earthly women. As a man, as your devoted lover, I am
content with that; as your host and protector I am entitled to know
more.”

Before the embarrassing question could be farther pressed, there came
a gentle knock at the door. Probably aware that the interruption would
not have been ventured upon without good cause, the Count, with an
impatient frown, strode across the room and opened it. Outside stood
the old major-domo. “What is it, Gomer?”

“A traveller, an old gentleman, is at the door begging hospitality for
the night, my lord. He has lost his way.”

“So!” The Count’s face was full of alert suspicion. “An old man, you
say? Is he alone?”

“Quite alone, my lord.”

Irromar thought for a moment, then said, “Let him come in. I will see
him before I consent to let him stay. We must be careful, Gomer, just
now.”

“True, my lord,” the old man replied. “But there is little to be feared
here.”

So, with a word of excuse to the Princess, Irromar went down into the
hall.




CHAPTER XXV

THE FOX IN THE WOLF’S DEN


In his first glance at the stranger, the Count told himself that
Gomer was right and there was nothing to be on his guard against in
the withered, decrepit-looking old man who, wrapped in a fur-lined
travelling cloak, stood before him with a demeanour of apologetic
entreaty. At the second glance he was not so sure. But at least there
was nothing physically to be feared from the harbouring of such a
guest, and as to cunning, why, he was himself no fool, and loved
nothing better than to pit his wits against other men’s.

The old traveller had missed his road, it appeared, and got lost in
the labyrinth of small mountain valleys which abounded in the district
He had been anxious to push on, but the task was clearly hopeless for
that night, and as he was told he could expect to come upon no decent
inn for many miles, he was forced to make bold to crave a night’s
hospitality, should it in no way inconvenience the noble Count. The
noble Count was for the moment in two minds about entertaining a guest
whom continued scrutiny rendered less and less prepossessing. But
he was a man of action and of daring: if this dubious old fellow’s
presence meant danger he would delight in finding it out and checking
it, at the same time making his guest pay dearly for his temerity; if
he were but the strayed traveller he represented himself to be, why, he
might count upon a chatty supper companion. Accordingly, he graciously
placed himself and his establishment at the stranger’s disposal and
presently they went in to supper. It would be well, Irromar reflected,
to give his fair prisoner a night’s respite, and to renew their
interview next morning. Once he could bring her into subjection to his
dominant will--and of this he was confident--he would have no fear of
attack or of any unpleasant consequences.

He found he had not been mistaken in his forecast of his guest’s
sociable qualities. Indeed during the meal each of its partakers
considerably astonished the other, not merely by the acute knowledge
of the world which he displayed but more particularly by his intimate
acquaintance with affairs, both political and social, such as was for
the most part denied to outsiders.

“Who,” the Count’s busy brain puzzled, “can this man be, who has such
a confident knowledge of the inner circle of politics? Hardly the
enterprising merchant he would have me believe. It is just possible;
since your eminent trader makes it his business to be _au courant_
with every move in the political world that vigilance or money can
give him wind of. And yet----?” The Count doubted and guessed, turned
the conversation into probing channels, only to grow all the more
interested and doubtful. By degrees the conviction increased that
this pretended wealthy merchant was an emissary whose real errand was
concerned with the recovery of his prisoners. He calculated in his
mind the time it would have taken for their friends to have received
information of their whereabouts and for his guest to have arrived
on the scene. It fitted exactly. He then concluded that the old man
sitting by the fire and chatting with such confident ease was there for
a purpose.

What? That would surely appear if he had the patience to wait for it.
Was this an emissary of Rollmar’s? The Captain, the Chancellor’s son,
had said his captives were ladies of rank. Had Rollmar sent----? Was
this Rollmar himself, this old, sharp-eyed man who carried with him
such an atmosphere of innate power? Was it possible?

For a moment the truth flashed across his mind, only to be dismissed
as preposterous. Nevertheless it was an indication of the Count’s
acuteness of perception. And his reckoning up of his guest showed that
he was, as he was wont to declare himself, no fool.

Rollmar?

The suspicion recurred persistently, and its grounds increased in
colour and plausibility. He was awaiting developments now in a mood
of intense and provocative curiosity. If this man had come with a
purpose, surely he must declare it without much more delay. Except
he came to spy and then---- The suave face which masked the busy
brain darkened for an instant at the idea. As yet his thoughts had
not reached the point of considering what action he would take should
this in truth turn out to be the wily Chancellor. It would be time
enough to determine that when this strange situation--too strange for
belief--presented itself. Meanwhile, he watched his guest like a tiger,
smooth and treacherous, with a readiness to spring hidden under an
attitude of sleek repose.

But he had not to wait long.

“You have entertained me, a chance guest, possibly a not too welcome
intruder, in princely fashion, Count!” the old man said, abruptly
breaking off their subject of conversation, which happened to be Prince
Ferdinand’s _coup-d’etat_. “In return for your unlooked-for hospitality
I feel I must make an unworthy return in a confession and a piece of
information which may possibly astonish you.”

He spoke quietly, with an easy unconcern, as though confident of his
resources and of the welcome of his communication. But his preamble
was enough to confirm the Count’s suspicion. No man but one, he told
himself, would have the nerve to be so genuinely at his ease when in
the power of another of his character and reputation. Vanity was a
strong ingredient in his imperious character; many a strong, masterful
man is a baby where his vanity is touched. This one was a ruffian,
yet childishly eager to proclaim himself a paragon of sagacity and
intellect. The temptation to a brilliant and discomfiting move was too
great to be resisted.

“You are going to tell me,” he said quietly, “first that you have
introduced yourself under an incognito, and secondly that your real
name is----” He paused for an instant as the old man shot at him a
sharp glance of curiosity. “Baron von Rollmar, Chancellor of the State
of Waldavia.”

If he had expected his guest to be dumfounded at such startling
evidence of an abnormal faculty of perception, he did not make full
allowance for the old diplomatist’s power of self-restraint. Rollmar
had not practised the art of thinking one thing and looking another
through the course of a long public life to be taken aback even by this
unexpected stroke. Without betraying the slightest sign of surprise
or confusion, Rollmar made a slight bow of acknowledgement. For all
the emotion he showed, his host might have merely set him right on a
question of the day of the week.

“A good guess; you are quite right, Count,” he returned coolly, with
a slight appreciative smile. “I need hardly apologise for my false
pretence, since it appears not to have reached the point of deception.
As to its motive, why, I must confess I was a little doubtful of my
reception here, and it was necessary that I should have the opportunity
of making a certain communication to you privately.”

He spoke with a calm assurance which discounted uncomfortably the
Count’s triumph. Indeed that seemed to have gone for nothing.

“I shall be glad, Baron,” he replied, with a courtesy which covered,
not altogether successfully, his feeling of annoyance, “to learn
to what important circumstance I owe the honour of entertaining so
distinguished a guest.”

“I should have imagined, Count,” Rollmar returned, with quiet sarcasm,
“that your undoubted powers of perception would have saved me also the
statement of this second point. However, I can perhaps understand your
reticence. It is indeed an important matter that has brought me so far
afield. More momentous, perhaps, than even you surmise.”

Again came the sarcastic curl of the mobile lips, provoking a
temptation on the Count’s part to take by the throat and strangle the
contemptuous old man who dared to beard him in his stronghold.

“I can only imagine,” he replied bluffly, “that your presence in my
poor house may be the outcome of another and somewhat extraordinary
visit to me paid yesterday by a Captain Rollmar, presumably a relative
of yours.”

The Chancellor nodded. “My son. The cause of my visit goes beyond that,
as you know well, Count. It is occasioned by the reception you were
pleased to give to Captain von Rollmar’s request.”

The Count gave an ugly laugh. “A strange and unaccountable demand----”

He stopped, as Rollmar held up a protesting hand. “The night
grows late, Count, and I am too old a man to exchange my rest for
unprofitable discussions. Of your courtesy allow me to state plainly my
errand.”

He was cool as ever; nevertheless, behind the calm suavity of his
manner there was a touch of sternness, a suggestion of a latent power,
held back in readiness to be called into action if necessary.

“You have,” he proceeded, “you are ready to deny and absolutely ignore
it--but you have under your roof, detained here against their will, two
ladies. Yes, I said you would repudiate the fact”--for the Count had
made a quick, angry sign of denial--“but that is futile. That these
ladies are for the moment in your power, I am well assured. At any
rate, you will kindly allow me to argue on that supposition.”

“I will not, Baron,” Irromar exclaimed threateningly. “No man shall
charge me with such an outrage.”

“You will do well to hear me out,” Rollmar continued imperturbably. “By
refusing to hear a reasonable argument you may force me to resort to
one more forcible and less pleasant.”

The Count laughed loud and scornfully. “You have come here to threaten
me? I have known the Chancellor von Rollmar’s reputation well, and
always gave him credit for sanity.”

“That is, at least, something,” the old man returned dryly, “I trust
that when we part, your flattering opinion will have been in no
way modified. Justified or not, you might have been sure that the
Chancellor von Rollmar was at least sane enough to recognize the
futility of an empty threat. Sane enough also to have stayed at home,
rather than ride so many leagues to carry a mere threat--which any
bullying sergeant could have done as well--to a man who seems for
many years to have thriven on such empty food. No, Count; it was not
to take up the challenge of your refusal to deliver up these ladies
that I am here, but rather to set right, amicably, I hope, a certain
misapprehension which, doubtless, induced you to refuse Captain
Rollmar’s request.”

The Count, with a set and not encouraging smile on his face, kept
silent, in an affectation of courteous tolerance. He foresaw that
the point for which Rollmar was making must be the identity of his
captives, and he was anxious to learn it.

“When I tell you,” the Chancellor proceeded, “who the ladies are, whom
for the moment we may presume you are detaining, you will, I am sure,
recognize that your action, unless quickly abandoned, is bound to have
very serious consequences.”

“Another threat, Excellency?” Irromar could not help interjecting.

“You shall judge how far,” was Rollmar’s quiet answer. “This act of
kidnapping is one that must carry with it its natural, its logical
punishment. Threats are here superfluous. But the ladies in question
are of high rank. One is Countess Minna von Croy, principal Maid of
Honour to Princess Ruperta of Waldavia, and the other is Princess
Ruperta herself.”

The hit, so quietly delivered, told the more heavily from its total
unexpectedness. In the game of surprises the Count could not but own
himself worsted. But, with the perfect nerve system of a healthy tiger,
he did not take long to recover himself.

“Then it would appear that my house has indeed been honoured,” he
laughed, as nettled by his discomfiture. “I do not doubt your veracity,
Baron,” he continued, less roughly as he regained greater command of
himself, “since your very presence here goes far to prove it.”

As he spoke, he was rapidly reviewing his position, as seen in this new
light. Could he, even yet, hold this prize? It was not in his nature
to give up anything on which his heart was set. Still the keen old
man confronting him was not one to be brow-beaten. All the same, why
should he not try? At the worst he could but capitulate if he found his
position untenable.

“It is a very pretty story,” he continued, with another disagreeable
laugh of incredulity. “Your statement that your Princess is roaming
about the country is one which I am ready to accept from your lips.
But when you take upon yourself to declare that she is detained under
my roof, I must beg to join issue and repudiate the assertion, even
coming, as it does, from so illustrious a source.”

“You deny it, Count?” Rollmar would cut short this unprofitable
fencing. He was not a man to be played with, although the vivid
recollection of Ruperta’s superb beauty made Irromar neglectful of the
fact.

“I must, Excellency, you are wasting your time----”

“I think I am,” he retorted dryly. “Therefore let me conclude my
errand. As I have already suggested, I should wish to conduct this
business between us in an amicable manner. That being so, I will, if
you will permit me, put before you my view, an old statesman’s view, of
the position in which you stand.”

“By all means, Excellency,” the Count assented readily. The possible
consequences of his act, and its chance of success were just what he
was curious to learn.

The Chancellor put the tips of his long white fingers together, and
spoke as coolly as though, instead of facing in his den, perhaps the
most dangerous and unscrupulous breaker of laws, divine and human, in
Europe, he were discussing a clause of a new bill with a secretary in
his own bureau. But it is in critical situations that the real staying
power of a man’s character shows itself.

“Shortly, then,” he began. “You say that these ladies are not detained
here by you. That may or, pardon me, may not be the truth. I shall
not concern myself to argue it. But,” he proceeded, as the suggestion
of sternness in his equable tone grew somewhat in its restrained
intensity, “we, that is the State which I have the honour to represent,
have the warrant of sufficient evidence to convince us that it is a
denial which we cannot accept. Your own antecedents, Count, you must
allow,” here the old intriguer smiled deprecatingly, “are scarcely such
as make for implicit confidence in your bare word.”

Irromar smiled in his turn, but the smile did not reach his eyes, which
were darkly threatening. “You are a bold man, Baron, to tell me that,
here in my own house. You presume upon your years.”

“Scarcely,” Rollmar replied with a shrug. “Except so far as my age
gives me little life to lose. Any boldness I may show comes from nature
and from the knowledge that I have a mightly protector a stone’s throw
away.”

If the Count wondered what that was, his guest did not at that moment
enlighten him.

“Now,” Rollmar continued, with a significant glance at the clock,
“should our friend, Count Irromar, persist, as I do not think he will,
in his repudiation, it will become our unpleasant duty to pursue our
enquiries by force.”

“Force!” Irromar laughed.

“Force,” the Chancellor repeated. “Our Count is a strong man,” he went
on pleasantly, “strong in will and in sinew, he has a strong house,
fortified, doubtless, by art, as it is by nature; he has a garrison at
his command; but my knowledge of men tells me that he is not foolish
enough to put his security to an unwisely severe test, or to imagine
that it enables him to defy the resources of a State, should that State
make up its mind in earnest to pull down his house about his ears.”

Irromar was on his mettle now. “That would depend,” he commented
grimly. “He might begin the tussle with a winning advantage. The
holding, for instance, as hostages of perhaps the two most important
persons in that State.”

Rollmar gave a little triumphant smile. “I note your admission, Count,
that the other is here.”

Irromar had realized the slip when it had passed his lips. He could
only give a shrug of indifference. After all, a bland repudiation
would hardly serve him against this self-controlled, penetrating old
strategist.

“But,” the Chancellor went on, “to resume our argument. His holding
these important persons would simply make it imperative that strong
action should be taken. But, no. You will not make a hostage of me,
Count Irromar. Had such a fate any terrors for me, I should scarcely
have been at pains to put myself in your power. My life is for the
State, and at my master’s disposal; I hold it worthless, when balanced
against the welfare of him and his.”

There was a dignified touch of self-abnegating patriotism in the old
minister’s speech which carried conviction to its hearer, for all that
he affected to smile at the declaration.

“You see, Count,” he went on, “I have, as is my custom, well weighed
the consequences of my act; I doubt whether you have done the same
respecting your own.”

“I am not in the habit,” Irromar replied, with an outburst of scornful,
overbearing pride, “of troubling myself about the consequences of any
act of mine which may commend itself to my fancy. I have hitherto found
myself able to shape such consequences myself.”

“Ah, that is where you are wrong, or at least short-sighted,” Rollmar
returned, with provoking, almost patronising, coolness. “That system
may succeed for a while, but it surely means disaster in the end. You
are within measurable distance--literally measurable distance--of that
now.”

“Indeed?”

“In very truth,” Rollmar maintained steadfastly. “I am an old man,
weak and alone, completely at your mercy.” As he spoke, he rose and
faced Irromar with the dignified power which only years passed in
ruling men can give. “I think I have earned the reputation of knowing
every move, every possibility of the game called state-craft, and I
know the difference between a _brutum fulmen_, an empty threat, and
the absolutely certain result of a well-planned and organized action.
Before I left home, I set in motion the machinery for the alternative
accomplishment of the purpose which brought me here. My reason for
coming to you thus quietly and alone was to avoid making the episode
public, to obviate an unhappy scandal.”

He drew himself up and fastened his fierce, undimmed eyes on the Count,
who stood fumingly playing his waiting game with lessening prospect of
success.

“One word more, Count, and only one, since I tire of stretching my
patience to the length of your equivocation. Standing here before
you, and recognizing your personal power over me, I tell you, even
though they may be the last words my tongue may ever utter, that unless
Princess Ruperta is produced and set free within the hour, this castle
of yours shall, by this time to-morrow be a ruin, and yourself hanged
before its walls.”

For a moment it seemed as though the contingency Rollmar had suggested
might become an accomplished fact, and that provocative old man have
the breath strangled out of him by those muscular hands. But from such
a fate perhaps his host’s complex character saved him. After a few
moments of ugly hesitation, the Count started away and took a turn
across the room. Bold, unprincipled dare-devil that he was, he had yet
a strong idea of the importance of his own welfare. In the midst of his
discomfiture and consequent anger, he felt that he had to deal with no
ordinary man, or even statesman. The threat which stirred up his rage
might be a trick, but the chances were heavily against it. Chancellor
Rollmar was, he knew, a man of action as well as of intrigue. The
position was humiliating, and he cursed the chance that had brought
upon him this fall for his pride, this humbling in his hitherto
unbroken success in defying all who crossed his will. But the prize,
although for the moment within his reach, was not for his grasping;
he realized that, and that nothing now was left to him but to cover
his yielding and minimise his defeat in the best manner his wit could
suggest. And his shrewdness told him that it would be sheer waste of
time and trouble were he to attempt to deceive his keen old adversary
in the manner of accepting his defeat. To retire fighting would hardly
serve to satisfy his own self-complacency. He had better make a clean
surrender. So, when he turned again to his guest it was with a face
almost laughingly genial.

“I scarcely think the impregnability of my house will be put to a test
over this business, Excellency,” he said with, to all appearance,
unruffled frankness. “But to one of your eminent shrewdness and
perspicacity I need hardly explain the motives of my action and my
caution in admitting it.”

As Rollmar’s sign of agreement suggested that he had put a rather
different construction on the words from that which was intended, the
Count was fain to explain them.

“I have done myself the honour to retain the Princess under my roof
from motives of protection.”

“Ah!” Rollmar evidently accepted the statement for what it was worth.

“You will allow,” Irromar continued, with dogged complacency, “that the
circumstances under which her Highness came under my roof were, to say
the least, extraordinary, and might be held to excuse any ignorance or
error on my part.”

“Assuredly, Count,” Rollmar agreed. “The circumstances were no doubt,
peculiar.”

“They suggested caution, if not interference, on my part,” his host
proceeded, “even before I was aware of the identity of my guests.”

“Certainly.”

The dominant feeling which now possessed the Count’s mind was intense
curiosity. “The strange conduct and personality of the ladies’
companions were calculated to fill one with suspicion.”

He paused after his tentative speech, but Rollmar merely bowed his
agreement.

“The circumstances and manner of the party’s arrival here were
mysterious.”

Again he paused enquiringly, only to receive the same provoking, silent
response.

“May I ask,” the Count said blandly, “since a mutual understanding
has been established, and before I have the satisfaction of restoring
the Princess to your guardianship, may I ask who the two men were who
formed her escort?”

All this time, Rollmar had been turning over in his mind a certain idea
which was closely connected with the subject of the other’s curiosity.
And it resulted in his answering--

“Another surprise for you, Count, I fancy. Of Captain von Ompertz you
know as much as I; the other was a man of some interest just now,
namely, Prince Ludwig of Drax-Beroldstein.”

“Prince Ludwig? The man who should be King of Drax-Beroldstein?”

The Count was indeed surprised, and showed it the more unrestrainedly
that there was no reason for its concealment.

“The same. Now the mystery is explained.”

“Indeed it is,” Irromar replied thoughtfully. “Had I only known it
sooner, what trouble and cross-purposes would have been avoided. What
lives spared. Prince Ludwig of Drax-Beroldstein.”

The Chancellor stood watching him in silence, an amused smile playing
at his lips.

Presently the Count spoke again, as he got a better grasp of the
situation. “The Princess runs away, then, with her intended husband;
the one you have provided for her. Ah, doubtless to face the usurper,
Prince Ferdinand.”

Rollmar’s smile deepened with a grim intent. “Ah, that is where the
romance appears, romance not provided for in my scheme. I scarcely
blame you, Count, that you have not yet threaded the maze. It has a
deeper winding yet. What if the Princess should be ignorant of the fact
that her lover is Prince Ludwig?”

“You are surely pleased to joke, Baron?”

“So far as my knowledge goes,” Rollmar maintained, “she does not know
that he is more than Lieutenant von Bertheim.”

“Or perhaps she would not have fallen in love with him?”

“A shrewd deduction, Count. When one wishes a woman to go forward it is
not a bad plan to draw her back. Now, you see the pretty affair into
which chance has thrust you.”

Irromar laughed. “My house has indeed been honoured in receiving
three such illustrious guests. The Princess of Waldavia, the renowned
Chancellor von Rollmar and--I hardly know how to describe my third
guest--a sovereign prince and yet no sovereign.”

His glance at Rollmar was suggestive of a question. The old man drew
back the corners of his mouth in a significant smile.

“No sovereign, certainly, at present,” he responded.

The other was not slow at perceiving the hint.

“Have I, then, done you, after all, a service, Baron? Does that alter
your plans? Or is my question indiscreet?”

Rollmar gave him a curiously indefinable look.

“My plan is an alliance between our Princess and the reigning King of
Drax-Beroldstein,” he said quietly.




CHAPTER XXVI

IRROMAR’S TRICK


As Count Irromar went to fetch the Princess, he was concocting a
scheme, daring as became his nature, but one which at a stroke should
add immensely to his power and change his position from that of an
outlaw, an almost brigand noble, to that of a recognized member of the
aristocracy of the land. He would make a bold bid for the royal favour
and countenance; once they were his, he could trust to his wealth, to
his energy, his acquirements, and above all, his will, to give him
social position and rehabilitation. It was a flattering plan, and the
chance of the moment seemed to have brought to his hand the instrument
by which this seemingly impossible metamorphosis could be effected. He
had learnt from Rollmar, in no wise loath to tell him, that King Ludwig
was waiting not far from his castle presumably to know the result of
the Chancellor’s negotiation. That being so, and with a shrewd idea
of the old intriguer’s acquiescence, the rest was, to a man of his
resources, easy.

When he came into the room--having sent Ruperta urgent word that he
must see her, even at that late hour--she wondered what new trick or
persecution this was to be, but her apprehension was manifest only
in her quick glance of enquiry at his face. Otherwise she looked as
imperiously calm as ever.

“I have news for you,” he began, “two pieces of news, one good and the
other doubtful, since I know not how you may receive it.”

“What are they, Count?” she asked, on the alert for a new mark of
duplicity.

“You shall hear the least pleasant first,” he replied, with a courteous
deference which contrasted with the half-veiled insolence of his late
manner. “Baron von Rollmar is here.”

The announcement was indeed startling, and made her look up quickly
with a flush of surprise.

“Baron von Rollmar here? The Chancellor?”

“None other than your father’s minister. You see, Princess, he has told
me who you are, and so shamed my blindness and temerity. Dare I ask for
pardon?”

She gave an inclination of her head, a limited acceptance of his
apology. “What has Baron von Rollmar come for?” she asked.

“For you, Princess.”

Her look justified his calling the news of doubtful acceptability. And,
as it jumped with his project, he noticed it with satisfaction.

“He is here to conduct you back to Waldenthor.”

It was true enough, yet the full, plain truth was scarcely apparent
to her. Having no knowledge, save by vague guessing, of what had
taken place outside the castle during her captivity, she could not
be expected to comprehend the real urgency which had brought the old
minister so far.

“To take me back to Waldenthor?” she repeated.

Irromar gave a confirmatory nod. “At least, he takes you with him
and his party. I am here to have the honour of conducting you to his
Excellency.”

Ruperta thought of the fortress of Krell, and showed no alacrity at the
prospect of the meeting.

“You had another piece of news,” she said, suddenly remembering it.

“Good news. Lieutenant von Bertheim is here, unhurt and----”

“With the Baron?” she asked incredulously.

He smiled. “No. I may be bold to claim penetration enough to agree with
your Highness as to the improbability of that. No. The Lieutenant is
not, indeed, within the castle, but he is not far away.”

He watched the ray of joy on the girl’s face, and as he watched and
welcomed he hated it.

“I have come,”--he proceeded--“the reason of my disturbing you,
Princess, by bringing the news in person, was that I might venture to
submit a proposal which might earn your pardon.”

Her look invited him to speak further, and as he drank it in, he
inwardly cursed the contrary fate which gave to another man this
coveted interest for which he would have bartered his soul--subject,
indeed, to the Master whom he so zealously served having already a lien
upon it.

“I understand the situation,” he said with a subtle smile. “And that
the Chancellor’s plans are not exactly in accord with your own. He is
inclined to interpose himself between you and your happiness, to think
less of romance, of hearts, than of state policy. It is not for me to
interfere, nor would I do so, since Lieutenant von Bertheim has treated
me in a manner which is at least strange, were it not that I owe your
Highness some reparation for the presumption into which my ignorance
led me. I wish to atone by giving you an opportunity of meeting the
Lieutenant before your departure with the Baron Rollmar.”

Her desire broke down the pride which prompted her not to be beholden
to this man for an interview with her lover. She loathed the idea of
taking him into her counsels, even for the moment. Still she felt that,
once more in Rollmar’s power, the separation would be indefinite, might
be life-long, for, surely, he would not be hoodwinked again. So she
yielded to the temptation, not without hesitating at a suspicion of
treachery. Still, something had to be risked, and she conceived a vague
idea that her lover and she might again escape together. The Count
seemed genuinely repentant; what could be his motive, but that which
appeared on the surface? He would scarcely attempt a deed of violence
while that grim old man was beneath his roof, and the idea of the two
being partners in a plot did not seem probable. Rollmar was too shrewd
to take a stranger, practically a foreigner, into his confidence and
employ him in his schemes. At all events, she must take some risk; she
was in a vortex of uncertainty, shaken by these untoward and startling
adventures. So, with perhaps a lurking doubt in her heart, she accepted
the Count’s suggestion.

He read her uncertainty. “You do not give me credit for an honest
desire to serve you, Princess,” he observed. “It is, perhaps, after
all, my own fault. But the event shall quickly prove my good faith.
Give me but three words calling him to you, and I will engage that the
Lieutenant shall be here within the hour.”

He put writing materials before her. “I fear he will not come without a
written word from you,” he said quietly, as Ruperta hesitated.

The reasonableness of the suggestion was manifest. She took the pen and
wrote a simple message. “Come, before I return with Rollmar. R.”

As she wrote the Chancellor’s name her hesitation vanished. She hated
that pitiless old opponent of her happiness, and the idea of his taking
her back in triumph was more humiliating than her pride cared to
contemplate.

The Count took up the paper as her pen left it. “I will send this
by a trusty fellow, and your friend shall soon be here,” he said
significantly. “I, Princess, am not dead to the romantic side of this
life of ours, as the Chancellor seems to be.”

The meeting between Ruperta and Rollmar was as brief as it was awkward.
The old diplomatist was cynically polite, while Ruperta masked by her
coolness and obvious dislike any expression of the mortification which
was at her heart.

“I am sorry for any inconvenience it may cause you,” Rollmar said, as
Ruperta was about to retire, “but it is necessary that we make an early
start homewards in the morning. The Duke will be terribly anxious until
he is assured of your safety.”

“Then would it not be well to send off a messenger at once?” was her
not unnatural suggestion.

“That has already been done,” he replied authoritatively; “but it is
necessary for affairs of State that my return be not delayed an hour
longer than is absolutely unavoidable.”

Ruperta glanced sharply at the determined, inscrutable face, and told
herself that this early start meant in all probability a longer journey
than that suggested, doubtless one to the Fortress of Krell, and her
whole spirit revolted at this man’s insolent assumption of power over
her liberty. Still, she knew her father’s weakness and his servant’s
strength, and saw no way out of the situation, but one.

The hour had not sped when the Count redeemed his word, and Ludovic
stood before her. Then at last she broke down under the strain which
danger, anxiety, and uncertainty had put upon her; the brave nature
gave way, and she fell sobbing into his arms.

“Darling, darling, I thought, though I dared not confess it, never to
have seen you again.” When she grew calmer she told him all that had
happened. He looked grave, listening with a slight frown when she spoke
of the Count.

“So, I owe this meeting to him,” he said, with a dubious shake of the
head. “It is not natural. I doubt not there is a design beneath it. The
man is as treacherous and pitiless as a leopard: I have had terrible
proof of that. I do not trust him, even with the fear of Rollmar before
him; he has gone too far ever to make his peace with me, even did his
hate and lust for revenge allow him to seek it. Still, the present
moment is ours, dearest. And that is infinitely more than, many times
since we parted, I have dared to hope for.”

He held her in his arms, kissing her as though the delight of that
moment might vanish in the next, and be gone forever. Then presently
he told her in a few words of all that had befallen him since their
separation. And, as he held her there, her heart beating on his, all
her reserve and the lingering trammels of her coldness flung away as
she listened, sometimes with a shudder, the sign of a fear which he
knew was for him, he could find it in his heart to bless his dangers,
with the vindictiveness and treachery, since they had worked for the
stress which had opened this paradise to him.

“Oh, my love, if they had killed you I would have died, too,” she
murmured, with her lips on his. “And I should have gone to my death
contentedly in the thought that Heaven had given me, if only for one
little hour, a lover so loyal, true and brave. Ludovic, my love, my
poor starved heart thanks God for you.”

For an instant the word was at his lips which would have told her
his secret, for, surely, the opportunity was apt. Perhaps it was a
feeling that, in a higher sense, in that atmosphere so fully charged
with tenderness and love, the cold shock of the announcement would be
unfitting; perhaps, too, his sensitive, innate chivalry made him shrink
from taking advantage of that supreme moment. The very certainty that
the stroke must win held him back from making it. Anyhow it passed, and
when rapture allowed him speech it was of a still more urgent matter,
their escape. She told him it was for that she had risked the message.

“The Baron does not say so, but I know I am destined for Krell. And
once there,” she shuddered, “I may say farewell to my hopes and to my
liberty, except on terms which are now forever impossible.”

He understood, and signified it by a kiss.

“There is no reason, I hope,” he said, “why we should not push on
again for Beroldstein. The longest and worst part of the way has been
travelled, and the end of our journey is now not so far off. With a
couple of hours’ start we could laugh at pursuit, and need not fear the
high roads to-night.”

“Then let us go, dearest,” she urged.

He smiled at the eagerness he loved. “Everything is arranged,” he
replied. “Ompertz is waiting with horses, and will ride with us. I
fear, though, we must leave Countess Minna behind this time. But she is
now safe from this fellow.”

A look of disappointment clouded Ruperta’s face. “Rollmar will visit my
sins on poor Minna’s head.”

“Her penance shall be of short duration, I promise you that,” Ludovic
assured her confidently. “She shall join you in a very few days.
Rollmar is too sensible to take a foolish and futile revenge. Indeed,
it is best; more, it is necessary. We have no horse for her.”

“And Minna hates riding, if you had. Well then, we must leave her. It
is easier now,” she added, with a loving look of confidence.

In a very few minutes preparations for the escape and the journey
were made. Ludovic extinguished the light, and, cautiously opening
the door, crept out, leading the way along the narrow passage, and
down the winding stairs, descending to the outer door by which his
guide had admitted him to the castle. No one was to be seen; the door
was unlocked; they passed out, and crossed an angular court-yard to a
massive stone door set in the outer wall. This, as Ludovic’s conductor
had shown him, was left merely bolted on the inside; at a strong pull
it swung slowly open, and they found themselves in a passage cut
through the rock and leading out into the wood.

Ludovic put his arm round Ruperta to help her along the rough path.

“Now for our faithful Ompertz and the horses,” he said encouragingly.
“He is near at hand. Another hour, dearest, will see us miles away from
this hateful place.”

They were now at the end of the cutting. It was with a delicious sense
of freshness and liberty that Ruperta felt the wind through the trees
blowing on her face. Her lover’s strong arm was round her--in a few
minutes the enemies of her happiness were to be given the slip. There
was just light enough to see the path; a stronger blast of wind came
through the wood, deadening the sound of another rush. More quickly
than they could realize it, they were surrounded by half a dozen men
who had suddenly sprung from their ambush. Before Ludovic could put his
hand to a weapon, he was seized by four strong fellows, who held his
arms firmly, and began to drag him back to the castle. Ruperta, with
all her spirit, was powerless to render him any help. She herself had
been captured by two men who, with less violence, but equally insistent
force, kept her from following.

But the dashing of her hopes, the sickening sense of the Count’s
treachery, made her desperate and reckless. She struggled furiously
with her captors, two tall, evil-looking ruffians who had, however,
evidently had orders to treat her with as much respect as their object
permitted. This was to take her back to the castle by another entrance;
but they found it not so easy. Ruperta resisted vigorously, then,
remembering that Ompertz might be near, she began calling for help.
It was but a faint hope, but, to her joy, she heard an answering call
which was followed by the welcome appearance of the great dashing
swashbuckler, who came through the wood with a leap and uplifted
sword, a very fury to the rescue.

Evidently the men thought so, for it was with no very confident air
that one of them released his hold on Ruperta, and, drawing his sword,
stood before her to keep Ompertz off. A dog might as well have tried
the repel the spring of an attacking lion. With a mighty sweep his
sword was sent flying among the trees, and it was only by a smart
backward spring that he cheated the soldier’s blade of its second blow.

At the same moment Ruperta found herself free, her other captor
thinking less of his charge than of his skin, which was, indeed, just
then in jeopardy of damage. She quickly told her rescuer what had
happened. He just checked an oath of angry disappointment.

“I told him what to expect,” he said, savagely rueful. “But we
both hoped I might prove a false prophet. Oh,”--he set his teeth
ominously--“oh, for five minutes alone with this precious Count! He
should never tell another lie while I lived, or he.”

Ruperta entreated him to follow her lover and free him. He felt the
urgency of the move, yet hesitated.

“I dare not leave you, Princess, and if we go together”--he gave a
shrug--“I am only one to defend you against this gang of bandits. It
were better to see you into safety first.”

But she would not hear of abandoning Ludovic while there was a chance
of rescue. She too would go back; she had no fear.

Ompertz saw the true courage in her eyes, and no longer opposed
her wish. The two men had skulked away; they were scarcely worth
consideration now. The soldier gave his hand to Ruperta, and, sword
in the other, led her quickly along the passage to the stone door. It
was closed and fast bolted; the men had clearly taken their prisoner
through, and now had him safely lodged. Ompertz gave a kick at the
unyielding barrier.

“No hope of opening that fellow from outside,” he remarked, with a
baffled shake of the head. “And, Highness, let me tell you the sooner
for your sake we get out of this ugly trap the better. We should not
have a chance if these rascals took it into their heads to drop a few
lumps of rock down on ours.”

Although Ruperta had little fear of that awkward contingency, she
recognized the futility of staying there. Her heart was full of
indignation and a terrible anxiety for her lover. But hers was a nature
which rage and fear simply stirred into action; she would never bow to
the inevitable or confess herself beaten.

“Yes. Come back with me quickly,” she said, with sudden resolution.

Ompertz glanced at her and knew that the move was not prompted by fear,
at least for herself. They hurried back along the passage of rock and
into the wood.

“The horses are close by,” Ompertz said, in a tone of doubtful
suggestion.

“That is well; we may want them,” Ruperta replied, and he saw that she
had in her mind a plan of action.

“The Chancellor brought men--soldiers--with him? How many?”

“About eighty.”

“They are near?”

“Hard by, in the forest beyond the valley.”

“That is well,” she said. “I can trust myself to them. I am their
Princess. It is only their leaders who are so vilely treacherous.”

Ompertz looked a little dubious. “If they were all like me, Princess,
you might trust them to the death.”

“And you think I cannot rely upon them to protect me against the false
hearts and lying tongues of the cowards who threaten us? At least I
will try them.”

There was a rustling in the wood, and Count Irromar stood before them.




CHAPTER XXVII

AN UNWISE MERCY


“You have taken an unfair advantage, Princess, of my willingness to
serve you,” he said, with a dark smile.

“I am again, as I might have expected, the victim of your treachery,”
Ruperta retorted, full of scornful anger.

He made a deprecating gesture. “You must blame me no more now. The
business is out of my hands. The treatment of which you may complain is
not mine. I am no longer a free agent.”

His meaning was as obvious as was its falsehood. Ompertz took a step
forward.

“Free agent or not, Count,” he said bluffly, “I shall make bold to hold
you responsible for the outrage suffered by Lieutenant von Bertheim at
the hands of your men. I was just wishing for an interview with you.”

The Count was eyeing him full of stern malignity. “And having
chanced upon it, what do you want to say, my fine fellow?” he asked
contemptuously.

The ugly look on the soldier’s face deepened. “Only this,” he answered
threateningly. “That unless you give an instant order for our friend’s
release, this fine fellow will take upon himself to run you through,
and that without delay.”

A streak of moonlight falling through the trees showed a smile of
ineffable scorn on the Count’s strong face. It also glinted on the
barrel of a pistol which he suddenly presented full at the soldier’s
breast.

“Silence, you dog!” he commanded. “You need a lesson in the manners
befitting a lady’s presence. If you speak another word it will be your
last.”

Ruperta sprang between them. “Count, if you harm this man your life
shall pay for it. I swear. I have power that may astonish you before
long. Yes; I will have you hanged if you do not instantly release the
Lieutenant.”

“You are quite mistaken, Princess,” he replied seriously. “The
Lieutenant is not my prisoner.”

“You liar,” she cried, beside herself with indignation at the way he
was playing with her. “You will tell me next he is not in your house,
in your keeping.”

“It is true enough,” he replied coolly. “But I have no power to release
him. Perhaps you have, Highness.”

The sneer was worthy of him; he had come to hate this woman whom he
might not love.

“We shall see,” she returned. “You refuse?”

“I fear I must--even at the risk of the penalty which your Highness has
foreshadowed.”

“Very well, then,” she said. “You shall see how I will keep my word.
Come, Captain.”

She turned to Ompertz and prepared to move away.

“Permit me to escort you back to his Excellency,” Irromar said. “He
charged me to look after you, and my responsibility is strict.”

“Your responsibility!” she echoed scornfully. “Surely, Count, you have
forfeited any claim to that I will never enter your abominable den
again.”

“It is most unfortunate,” he replied, with a somewhat mocking show
of apology, “that I should have to bear the brunt and odium of your
Chancellor’s actions. Surely, Princess,” he continued, as though urged
merely by his innate love of setting his actions in a false light,
“you must be aware that it was a risky thing to attempt to continue
your elopement under the Baron’s very eye; an eye which looks not too
favourably on the Lieutenant’s pretensions. I should certainly have
warned you against any such mad attempt, had I not thought that your
good sense made it unnecessary.”

Ruperta turned from him, disdainfully impatient. “I cannot discuss the
matter with you, Count, especially as I have good reasons for believing
no word you say.”

He gave a shrug. “It is most unfortunate, I must repeat, this
persistence in imagining my ill-will. As for your interest in the
Lieutenant’s welfare, I can only refer you to Baron Rollmar, to whom it
is now my duty to conduct you.”

He advanced to her with outstretched hand. She shrank from him. Ompertz
whispered a word to her as he fell back a pace. These movements altered
the relative positions of the three. Ruperta had scarcely caught the
soldier’s whisper, but she was quick-witted enough to divine his
intention. She suffered Irromar to lay his hand on her arm. It gave her
an excuse for struggling--to make a sudden clutch at the hand which
held the pistol. Simultaneously Ompertz gave a swift spring, and, as
Ruperta’s hold hampered the Count from turning to meet his attack,
seized him from behind and got his arm tightly round his neck.

Irromar was a very Hercules, but now he was taken at a disadvantage,
and Ompertz was of strength far above the average. It was a fierce joy
to him to find his muscles round that lying throat, and in a very few
seconds he had the Count half-throttled on the ground. Then the pistol
was wrested away, and their enemy lay at their mercy.

“Now let me put an end to the villain,” Ompertz gasped, as with fingers
gripping the Count’s throat and knee pressing on his chest he held out
his hand for the pistol.

[Illustration: “Ruperta’s hold hampered the Count from turning to meet
his attack.”

                                                            PAGE 276.]

But Ruperta refused. Perhaps the livid, distorted face showed her
too vividly the horror of such a midnight deed, and obscured the sense
of expediency.

“No,” she objected. “We cannot. He must not die here--like this.”

“Then you give Lieutenant von Bertheim’s life for his,” Ompertz urged,
bitterly baulked. “In Heaven’s name, let me put a bullet through his
lying brain, and do a good deed for once.”

But she would not consent. “If he swears on his honour that he will
release the Lieutenant, his life shall be spared,” she said.

Ompertz groaned at the throwing away of this chance. “His honour! You
will repent it if you trust to that,” he said, as he tightened his grip
on the Count’s throat, since he might not shoot him.

But Ruperta saw his intention, and insisted that he should relax his
hold. “You hear, Count?” she said.

“I swear,” he gasped.

“Of course he swears,” growled Ompertz.

For some moments Irromar lay panting; the soldier looking down on him
with a grim hankering that was almost comic. Suddenly, from a position
in which most men would have been helpless, the Count, who seemed one
compact mass of muscle, contrived by a convulsive effort to throw
himself on his side, and a desperate struggle began. The suddenness of
the effort had taken Ompertz by surprise, and so at some disadvantage.
Still, he welcomed the renewed struggle, since it gave him an excuse
for shooting. But once, when he might have fired with deadly effect,
he hesitated through fear of hitting Ruperta who had seized one of the
Count’s arms, and then, when he did fire, the bullet seemed to take
no effect at all. With an exclamation of disappointment, he dropped
the pistol, and set himself to grapple in deadly earnest with his
formidable adversary. But great as was his strength, it was pitted
now against one of the strongest sets of muscles in Europe. Little by
little the Count got the advantage, he was a skilful wrestler and knew
all the tricks of that art, so that not even Ruperta’s weight hanging
on to his arm made the struggle evenly balanced. Before long he was
able to force Ompertz backwards and, by a dexterous twist, to spring
clear of him. It was only just in time, for Ruperta had taken Ompertz’
sword, and was only hesitating to use it from fear of striking the
wrong man as they swayed and turned in their desperate encounter.

Now the Count was free. “Quick! the sword!” Ompertz cried, as he
recovered his balance and sprang to her for the weapon. There was a
loud laugh of mockery, and, almost before Ompertz had turned to rush
after him, the Count had disappeared in the darkness. Sword in hand,
the soldier followed as best he could, only to be brought up very soon
by the manifest hopelessness of the pursuit and the fear of missing the
Princess. To her he returned, baffled and fuming.

“I said you would regret it, Highness,” was his reproachful greeting.

She was pale and trembling slightly from the excitement. “It cannot be
helped,” she replied, with a touch of authority. “I am sorry for your
sake, but I could not have the man, whatever his crimes, done to death
like that.”

“He has the devil in him,” Ompertz exclaimed wrathfully. “Now between
him and the Chancellor, who has the infernal touch too, I fear, you may
say good-bye to the chance of getting the Lieutenant free. And I had
my prayer answered and my fingers round that villain’s throat. It was
wicked to fling away the chance.”

“Yes, I am sorry now,” Ruperta agreed, showing not half the intense
regret she felt. “But I am not going to submit myself tamely as a
victim to these outrages and false dealings. I am going to Beroldstein.”

“You, Princess? To Beroldstein?”

“Alone,” she answered resolutely. “I will appeal to the King of
Drax-Beroldstein, since the Duke of Waldavia, my own father, cannot
help me.”

“But the King of Drax-Beroldstein,” Ompertz objected, “is not Ludovic,
but Ferdinand.”

“So much the better,” she returned. “It makes my task less disagreeable
and scarcely more doubtful.”

He recognized the hideous complications which made her plan so
hopeless, yet he saw no sufficient reason for breaking his pledge of
secrecy. After all, Ludovic’s release was the great thing to try for;
in the interests of that, the less known of his identity the better.

“I may go with you, Princess? The horses----”

“No,” she replied. “I should like your escort, but cannot take you
hence. It will be something for me to know that one trusty heart is
left near Ludovic. But I fear. What can you do for my Ludovic against
those cruel villains, the Count and Rollmar?” She turned away in an
access of heart-chilling despair, then next moment had recovered
herself.

“Come, let us not lose another instant,” she said resolutely. “You must
find me an escort among the soldiers. Surely there are some who will
run this risk for their Princess, for any woman, indeed, who is in such
a dire strait as I.”

He told her of certain good fellows there whose acquaintance he had
made in the guard-room, and who, he was sure, would be ready to risk
their lives in this service for her.

“If all goes well, they shall not be losers for standing by me in my
extremity. At least they are human; Rollmar is a fiend.”

They came to the three horses--bitter suggestion of their
failure--mounted, and made their way towards the spot where the men
were encamped. Ompertz’s thoughts were divided between admiration for
this courageous girl and sadness at the thought of how small was her
chance of success.

But the affair, he told himself, was too difficult for his poor brain;
he could see no light through the darkness; only hope that chance,
after leaving them so terribly in the lurch, might once again stand
their friend and accomplish what seemed beyond the scope of every
imaginable plan.

By a difficult path they arrived presently, after many a hindrance from
wood and rock, within a stone’s throw of where the troops lay encamped.
Leaving Ruperta in a place of safety, or, at least, in concealment,
Ompertz went forward to find his men for the purpose.

Half an hour later he, with many misgivings, had taken leave of the
Princess who, with an escort of three stout fellows, started off
through the forest to strike the nearest point of the main road to
Beroldstein. Ruperta had supplemented Ompertz’s explanation by an
appeal to the men to stand by her in her distress. She knew, she said,
the risk her escort would be running; how those who guarded her flight
would do so at the peril of their lives, and she would accept no
service that, with this knowledge, was not freely given. But Ompertz, a
shrewd judge of, at any rate, certain characters, had made no mistake
in choosing the men. Their records were not, perhaps, of the best
repute, but they were three staunch dare-devils, who would think no
more of giving up their prospects and lives at a word from the Princess
than of passing their mug of beer to a thirsty comrade. They had
instantly and heartily sworn to see her through her long ride, or give
their lives in her service, and she felt she need have no fear of their
failing her. So they set off.

The first part of the journey was slow and difficult enough; however,
one of the men knew the country and was confident that they could not
lose their way. Nevertheless, the darkness of the forest hampered their
progress, but, with the dawn, the track, too, grew lighter as the party
emerged upon a hilly stretch of heath.

“We are now but a mile from the great road,” said the man who knew the
way.

They could push on now at a smart pace; time, Ruperta felt, was
everything, and all through the long hours of darkness her impatience
had been torture. It was not many minutes before the broad coach-road
came in sight beyond a belt of woodland which fringed it. Just before
they reached it, hastening over the grassy road, one of the men, who
was riding a few paces ahead, held up a warning hand.

As they reined up, the ring of horses’ hoofs fell upon their ears. The
man quickly threw himself from the saddle and crept forward to the
corner whence he could get a view of the road. Next instant he came
rushing back, motioning them to turn aside among the trees.

“Horsemen coming fast! Quick! They may be after Her Highness. Quick,
under the trees!”

They had scarcely taken cover, when the other party rode by at a
quick pace. Four men, with a fifth at their head, riding in haste and
looking neither to the right nor left. The figure of the leader was
unmistakable.

“It is Count Irromar,” Ruperta exclaimed under her breath. “In pursuit
of me.”

She was wrong. It was the Count, but he was not in search of her. He
was riding post-haste to Beroldstein on business of his own.




CHAPTER XXVIII

AT THE USURPER’S COURT


It was with considerable surprise that King Ferdinand of
Drax-Beroldstein, as yet scarcely settled comfortably into his snatched
dignity, heard that the notorious law-defier and outlaw, Count Irromar,
was at the palace, asking for a private audience on business of the
utmost importance. Had the King been a strong man, or one who felt
his position unassailable, he would probably have handed the noble
brigand over to his officers of justice, congratulating himself on
getting the most troublesome and dangerous of his subjects so cheaply
in his power. But Ferdinand was neither. He was a weak man who had been
unable to resist the chance, urged upon him by designing favourites, to
seize a crown which for the moment seemed to be left without a wearer,
and, having put it on his head, was now trembling inwardly at his own
temerity. He could afford to despise no man, and his only strength came
not from within, but was forced on him by circumstances from without.
It was almost a weak man’s strength of desperation; no one can be so
strong by fits and starts as your thoroughly feeble character who dare
not show his weakness.

Then there was the haunting mystery of Ludwig’s disappearance. At every
waking moment, Ferdinand told himself that his cousin was surely dead,
but in his dreams, he was alive and seeking retribution. In spite of
the assurances of all his friends and flatterers, Ferdinand found
himself doubting every one, from his ministers to the soldiery. He
dreaded to read in every new-comer’s face the solution of the mystery,
the end of his day. Still, he had cast his die, the boats were burned
behind him--foolishly, he told himself, since he might, by constituting
himself regent, have grasped the power clean-handed--and now, as it
was, there seemed nothing for it but to assume a resolution which he
had not, and to keep by force what treachery had won. It had all seemed
so easy and desirable, this pursuit of power, this scheming for a
throne, in the days of preparation; when suddenly the _coup_ had to be
made, and responsibility to be assumed, it was not so pleasant.

Doubtless it was a shrewd knowledge of the usurper’s character that
gave Irromar confidence to put his head into the lion’s mouth. At the
same time, he was well armed, both for attack and defence, with the
knowledge he held.

On receiving the somewhat astounding message, Ferdinand hesitated.
His first impulse was that of the bully; to order the arrest of this
formidable outlaw. Then his chronic feeling of insecurity prompted
him to hear what the visitor had to communicate. Such a man had not
come boldly there without good reason, and he could easily be arrested
after the interview. Accordingly, he gave orders for a guard to be in
readiness and for the Count to be admitted to an audience.

With an affectation of homage which scarcely concealed his bold
confidence, Irromar entered the royal presence, and, having bowed low,
stood before the Usurper in the easy fearlessness of conscious power.
Ferdinand had a set frown on his sharp, gambler’s face; he might as
well have thought to melt a rock by frowning at it, as thereby to
intimidate the strong, reckless nature confronting him. Perhaps he felt
this, as, with an effort at self-assertion, he bid the Count say what
had brought him thither.

“I have come on a matter which is for your Majesty’s ear alone,” was
the sturdy reply.

Ferdinand affected to hesitate, then motioned his curious circle to a
distance. “Now speak out, Count, and briefly.”

But Irromar dropped his strong vibrating voice almost to a whisper, as
he bent forward to the King. “It is of your Majesty’s cousin, Prince
Ludwig, that I have come here to speak!”

He watched closely the effect of his words, and saw nothing but a
curious, indefinable expression flash across his hearer’s face. But it
was enough. And although Ferdinand’s next remark was made in a tone of
studied indifference, Count Irromar knew that the hit was more than a
touch.

“Well? You know, perhaps, what has become of him? His fate?”

Irromar bowed assent. “He is at this moment in my power: a prisoner in
my castle in the Teufelswald.”

If the news gave Ferdinand an uncomfortable thrill, he did not show
it. The pale face, with its stiff yellow moustache and beard, remained
impassive. Only, in the eyes there was a light of fierce concern.
Perhaps, after all, the knowledge that one phase of his uncertainty was
at an end came as a relief to him.

“Well?” Ferdinand had now to use his cunning; he would let suggestions
come from the other side.

“I thought,” the Count answered readily, “that the information might be
of vital interest to your Majesty.”

“In what way, Count?”

“It is not for me to dictate the use your Majesty should make of it.”
His guard was good; it would have to be drawn out and weakened.

“And yet I dare be sworn,” Ferdinand returned, with his cunning smile,
“that you had a use for it in your mind, or you would hardly have
ventured hither.”

Irromar understood the invitation. “Perhaps, sire, a use which may be
to the advantage of both of us,” he replied coolly.

Ferdinand was leaning sideways in his chair, with his hand playing at
his sparse beard; it was a demeanour of sly reserve. “We should like to
have your views, Count, as to this double advantage,” he said.

“Certainly, sire,” Irromar replied, playing his part with every
outward sign of deference. “You will, perhaps, graciously pardon me
if I express them too bluntly; but the position and opportunity are
critical, and plain speaking fits them best.”

Ferdinand gave a quick, impatient nod of authority, and the Count
proceeded.

“The Prince, is, as I have said, my prisoner, secretly hidden away
where no man, unless I choose, can ever find him. He fell into my hands
by an accident, and the fact is practically a secret which need never
be known, save to those whose interest would be to ignore it. To all
intents, he is dead and buried. It is for your Majesty to say whether
he shall ever come to life again.”

He paused. “Go on,” Ferdinand said curtly.

“As to your Majesty’s interest and wishes in the matter,” Irromar
continued, in the same tone of guarded deference, which yet seemed
to mock as it flattered, “I do not presume to make a suggestion, or
anticipate what may be in your Majesty’s mind. All that I wish to put
forward is my hearty willingness to serve you, sire, in this matter.
And, that you may trust me.”

Ferdinand, revolving keenly the crisis, smiled with a purposeful scorn
which hid the inner working of his mind. “Confidence in Count Irromar
is a somewhat unreasonable demand, methinks,” he observed.

“Without a guarantee, yes?” was the ready rejoinder. “It suggests the
second and minor advantage of the situation; that which affects my poor
self.”

“Ah?” Ferdinand was indifferently curious. Perhaps he felt he could,
if expedient, secure that guarantee without the Count’s active
co-operation.

“The very disrepute of my antecedents,” Irromar went on, with the
confidence arising from a strong position, “is, although it naturally
appears to the contrary, the very guarantee for my liberty. Your
Majesty is justly incredulous; but let me explain away the apparent
absurdity. In a word, I am sick of my present outlawry, legal and
moral. My one great desire is to rehabilitate myself, to take up once
more the position to which I was born, and which, in my hot-headed
madness, I chose to throw away. There is but one hand from which I
can hope to receive back what I have squandered, the good name, the
noble position; but one countenance to which I can look for pardon
and favour. If once that hand is held out, that countenance turned
favourably towards me, am I likely to reject that royal generosity and
return to my dog’s life? Now, sire, have I made my meaning plain?”

“You have--quite plain,” Ferdinand answered. Then he paused, his
manner seeming to command silence on the other’s part as well. Once
or twice he glanced sharply at the Count’s face, that strong, keenly
determined face. He was scheming rapidly, vaguely, uncomfortably. The
crisis for which he had been preparing himself was, now that it had
suddenly arisen, rather more than he could confidently meet. And his
discomposure was due less to the urgency of the situation than to the
manner of its announcement, and, above all, to the man who set it so
boldly before him. For during the whole interview he had been oppressed
and irritated by the sense of his inferiority to the Count, an
inferiority none the less galling in that it was of evil; such better
qualities as they may have possessed did not enter into the question.
This man’s personality and character were dominant; their owner looked
down from a higher plane of evil upon the weak tool of political
intriguers, seated uneasily on his stolen throne.

But, apart from purely personal considerations, the manifest
superiority forced this question upon Ferdinand. Would it be wise for
him to put himself in the power of this resolute, cunning spirit? The
Count’s argument was plausible enough, but what deep scheme might not
lurk behind it? Had Irromar shown himself a weaker man, Ferdinand would
probably have employed him to put his awkward cousin out of the way,
and then taken the obvious means of securing his ever-lasting silence.
But, somehow, as he looked at his visitor and mentally gauged him, he
could not see in him an easy victim. Still, for the moment, power was
on the King’s side, only he must, indeed, be careful how he let it
slip away. At any rate, the matter was too difficult for an off-hand
decision; he would take counsel with a more astute mind than his own;
as it was, he and this master-spirit were unevenly matched. And in the
meantime he would gratify and avenge his wounded vanity by showing his
power.

So, with a deepening frown, he at length broke the tense pause.

“You are a bold man, Count, to come here and make this proposition to
us. For what may have prompted you to this temerity, the wild life you
have led may, perhaps, be responsible.”

Both men gave a smile, and the Count’s produced the effect which the
King’s vainly intended.

“Nobody,” Ferdinand continued, “but yourself would have conceived so
bold a step. No one in any but our position would have seemed to invite
it.”

“Your Majesty will hardly blame me for seizing a chance so momentous to
both,” Irromar returned, bluffly.

“At least,” Ferdinand replied, guardedly, “we cannot blame you for
hastening to impart to us news so important. That may weigh with us in
the view we shall take in our judgment of you.”

The Count was quick enough to see the line Ferdinand was taking,
and, with the impetuosity of a strong, impatient nature, he set about
brushing aside the barrier of shuffling behind which the King was
entrenching himself.

“There is scarcely time or room for the question of judgment to come
in, sire,” he said, emphatically. “I am a man of action, accustomed to
go straightway to the point at issue. This matter clearly admits of no
temporizing. Your Majesty’s judgment of me is at the moment of little
consequence. My all-important quality is that I am the jailer of the
one person in the world whose condition must supremely affect your
Majesty’s welfare.”

“That,” replied Ferdinand, with a purposeful show of scorn, “is
a matter upon which we do not invite your opinion. The King of
Drax-Beroldstein must not be dictated to by the outlaw of the
Teufelswald.”

The Count flushed purple. “The King----,” he began hotly, then checked
the words at his lips. Doubtless he saw Ferdinand’s object in provoking
him, and resolved to meet him at his own game. “I should be the last
man to presume to usurp the functions of your Majesty’s advisers,” he
said, with a significant smile, “or interfere, unbidden, with aught
that concerns you. I fear that already, in my zeal, I may have been
guilty of officiousness. Is it, then, your pleasure, sire, that I set
Prince Ludwig free?”

Ferdinand had settled his course, and, that once accomplished, could
keep to it firmly enough. “That,” he answered, with an assumption of
dignity, “is a question for our advisers. It is not to be determined in
a moment, certainly not at the suggestion of Count Irromar. We are not
unmindful of your zeal, Count, and shall take it into consideration in
dealing with you. But for the moment we must, as you will understand,
at least make a show of doing our duty. You have set our laws at
defiance, you have been the very scourge of a wide district of our
kingdom. You”--and here a peculiar sneering smile spread over his
face--“you, who have taken upon yourself so boldly to advise us, will
recognize that we cannot afford to reward your long list of black deeds
with immediate tokens of our favour. It would raise an easy and hideous
suspicion. It would at once brand us as our cousin’s murderer. No!
Policy of State must stand before all things, and that policy demands
your arrest.”

All through the speech Irromar’s face had been growing darker, and at
the last word he made a swift gesture of rage.

“Arrest? Your Majesty is joking!”

It was all he could say, but there was clearly no jest in Ferdinand’s
crafty face as he signed to the group that, in scarcely veiled
curiosity, stood apart. He had given his orders, and the men were
ready. At a word from an alert official, Count Irromar, inwardly
raging, and frowning threats, found himself surrounded and a prisoner.

“Your Majesty,” he cried darkly, “will do well to consider this step
you are taking.”

Ferdinand waved his hand with a gesture of dismissal. “We will see you
again, Count; you understand?” he said significantly, as he rose and
walked away.




CHAPTER XXIX

FERDINAND’S SECOND VISITOR


The man to whom Ferdinand turned in his perplexity was one Eugen
Morvan. It was he who had practically set him on the throne, since he
had been the instigator of the course of intrigue which had rendered
possible the _coup_ by which the crown had been seized. A fat, sensual
looking man of five and forty, one who, to the Church’s certain
advantage, had stopped just short of becoming a priest, and, having
thrown aside his deacon’s cassock, had, by devious paths, found his way
to the Court, there, by luck, assurance, an easy-going philosophy and
assiduous flattery, to attach himself to the person and fortunes of the
Prince who stood next but one to the throne.

That his patron should be so nearly a power, and yet be none, was of
itself enough to make it certain that the intriguing, insinuating
spirit at his elbow would never rest from prompting him to amend
the accident of birth. And when the idea had been accepted and the
scheme launched, Morvan had proved that his lazy, self-indulgent
exterior masked a spirit of daring conception and resource. He
was ambitious, too, from, of course, the most material of worldly
considerations. He had a bad man’s lust for power; power for evil,
for selfish ends, for the gratification of every whim, from revenge
to appetite. To have attempted to attach himself to Ludwig would
have been absolutely futile. Bad men are keenly sensitive to their
affinities and their antipathies. Ludwig would never have looked at
that unctuous, knavish face but to order it from his court. Morvan
knew that well, and hated him accordingly. Besides, to the rightful
heir to the throne he could have been of no possible use. There could
be no call there for the intriguing arts by which he sought to make
himself indispensable. But when once he had Ferdinand committed to the
scheme of usurpation--which, by an unlooked-for piece of luck, Ludwig’s
mysterious absence so strangely favoured--that Prince was in his power;
bound to him body and soul. Ferdinand dared not go back when the
evil genius at his side urged him forward, and the result had indeed
justified the confidence of the daring pilot who had seized the helm of
his fortune.

“He is found.”

Morvan had guessed it already. “I was sure of it, sire. Nothing else
could have brought that ruffian to Court.”

Briefly, not without a sign of agitation, Ferdinand told what he had
heard. It was the way of his shrewd adviser never to make light of
dangers, however insignificant, lest he should lose the credit of
surmounting them. So his face was grave as he listened.

“So the crisis has come at last,” he observed, with an air of
confidence in his ability to meet it. “The time for final action has
arrived. It is well. You have acted wisely, sire, in caging the wild
beast. What is to be the next move?”

Morvan was far too shrewd to force his advice gratuitously upon
his patron, knowing if he held back his counsel it would be surely
demanded. And when he gave it, it was cleverly done with an air of
merely amplifying his master’s suggestions and putting them into
practical shape.

“It is on that,” Ferdinand answered, “that I must have your advice. We
must tread warily now.”

“Your Majesty’s first steps have been cautious to admiration,” Morvan
returned, with what seemed a half sneering laugh in his eye. “Yes. We
have the game in hand, so far. We must be careful not to throw away the
advantage.”

“We can hardly employ this desperado to put him out of the way, and
recognise the service by receiving him at our Court.”

The speech was tentative; Morvan, though he so understood it, tactfully
ignored the tone.

“Your Majesty has rightly seen that course would be preposterous,”
he replied craftily. “Happily, there is no need for it. Yes; it
would indeed be a false step to put yourself in the power of that
unprincipled bravo. You would never be safe for an hour. But we--that
is, your Majesty’s position is strong enough without running such a
monstrous risk. The Ministers are yours, the Court is yours, the army
is yours, and I make bold to assert from positive knowledge, from
trusty reports, that the people are yours. What, then, is left for
Ludwig, supposing, as is scarcely probable, that he has not already
fallen a victim to that wolf’s fangs?”

“But, if not, he is still to be feared.”

Morvan’s look was darkly significant. “It will be our fault if ever he
is in a position to trouble us.”

Ferdinand’s cunning eyes met the other’s responsively. “Then what
better means could we employ than this discredited outlaw; the most
natural and irresponsible instrument----?”

“And the most dangerous,” Morvan put in, pursing his lips and shaking
his head. “Say we give him a free hand, and dangle royal favour before
him. We should attach to the Court a restless, scheming, ambitious
spirit, the utterly unscrupulous holder of a dangerous secret, and,
above all, a man of whom the constant sight would be hateful to your
Majesty. And to attempt to put him out of sight would be full of risk.
No! For butcher’s work, one must live the life of a butcher. Blood is
no sure cement for keeping on a crown. We have no Rollmar here, and so
may well abjure his methods.”

“Our scheme and victory have so far been bloodless,” said Ferdinand
meditatively.

“Long may they remain so,” replied his counsellor, heartily. “No, sire,
I have a better plan than this brigand’s.”

“Ah, yes?”

“If, as we believe, the people are with you it is because you have
gained a popularity which the absent one has forfeited. The greater
fool he. Ludwig has got himself into an awkward corner; we know nothing
of that. Let him extricate himself from the tiger’s den as best he can.
It will be certainly difficult, perhaps impossible, if report speaks
truly of the Teufelswald tiger’s methods. It might, perhaps, even be
politic to send, not too soon, a small expedition to his rescue. It
will look generous, and the mob loves generosity--in others--much as
it disrelishes the quality inside its own skin. Who knows? Supposing
our dear cousin should be rescued alive; he is Quixotic; terms may be
made; at worst the expedition can do your Majesty no harm. But if the
whisper of foul play should spread, as it would like wildfire, I would
not wager on the crown being on your head that day week.”

Ferdinand had brightened as he listened; doubtless he was relieved at
the necessity for blood-guiltiness being set aside. And he felt that
the alternative plan was shrewd, too.

“My dear Eugen, you are wonderful,” he exclaimed, fervently. “Yes;
we will follow your advice. Ludwig is scarcely in a position to be
formidable, and it will be our fault if we let him become so. And in
the meantime, we keep the Count where his knowledge cannot leak out?”

A look came over Morvan’s face which showed that the mild course he
had advised did not altogether spring from his character. “It might
be well,” he said, with a touch of brutal significance, “to shut his
mouth for ever. Anyhow, having caught and caged the ferocious brute, it
would be madness to let him out again. And--yes, his life is many times
forfeit. He may as well pay the penalty. No harm in that. It would be a
popular stroke.”

As the Count’s fate was thus shortly decided, a second and even yet
more extraordinary message than that which had announced him was
brought to the King. No less a person than the Princess Ruperta of
Waldavia had arrived at the Palace and was urgently asking an audience.
After the first sense of astonishment, Ferdinand came shrewdly to
connect this visit with his cousin’s fate, though the relation was
not easy to see. Morvan was of the same opinion, as, at the King’s
invitation, he accompanied him to the room where the interview was to
take place.

To Ruperta the first anxious glance at the two men was unprepossessing
enough. It was, however, no time to be influenced by impressions. The
desperate chance of saving her lover filled her thoughts, as, raising
herself from a suppliant’s obeisance, she stood in her splendid beauty
before Ferdinand. He, looking at her with eyes which could see nothing
else, spoke a few words of gracious welcome, and inquired to what he
owed the honour of her visit and how he could serve her, while Morvan’s
dark, unfathomable gaze was unnoticed, as he stood speculating how this
turn might be or not be to his advantage.

The story was soon told; it was already known to its hearers, but
it was Morvan who was the quicker to comprehend that the teller was
unaware of her lover’s real name and rank. It was astounding, for
a while almost incredible, but it gradually forced itself upon his
conviction. Ferdinand was puzzled, and a trifle less quick at divining
the truth; he once had on his tongue the words which would have opened
her eyes, but his confidant, alertly on the watch, interposed so
significantly that he suddenly understood.

“It is to your Majesty that in my extremity I have turned,” poor
Ruperta pleaded, perhaps with failing hope, as she looked at the
usurper’s face with its utter absence of magnanimity. “There is no help
or hope for me in my own land. If my father would befriend us, Rollmar
would not let him; for the servant, I shame to speak it, though it is
well known, is more powerful than his master. He hates me, and has
marked down for death the man I love; it is the fate of all who cross
his path.”

“He designed your hand, Princess, for our cousin Ludwig, unhappily lost
or dead, did he not?” Ferdinand observed, disguising the object of his
question under an appearance of sympathetic interest.

“It was,” she replied, “his abominable disregard for my happiness that
drove me from my home. It was that also, I imagine, that made Prince
Ludwig a wanderer, since he seems to detest this scheme of Rollmar’s as
much as I.”

“Then, Princess, you have no idea as to what became of poor Ludwig;
whether he be living or dead? You have never seen him?” Ferdinand
asked, in simulated concern.

“I have never seen Prince Ludwig. He has taken care of that,” she
answered, with a trace of bitterness. “He need not have feared,”
she added proudly. “There was no need to efface himself from human
knowledge. But perhaps, if he imagined me so poor a thing as to be a
puppet in Rollmar’s hands, he was right to run any risk to avoid me.”

“He knows not what he has missed,” said Ferdinand, with greedy
admiration. “Happily, perhaps, he will never know it now.”

“He is dead?” she asked, with womanly regret.

“There is little doubt of it.”

“And the man on whose account I have come to plead with you?” she
urged. “The subject and soldier of your Majesty, who has braved Rollmar
and faced more than once the death prepared for him; you will not let
him die?”

The covetous eyes were feasting on her beauty, flushed as it was with
the eagerness of entreaty. He roused himself from his preoccupation of
contemplating her face to answer her words.

“Not if we can help it. But, you know, Princess, that Count Irromar is
no easy man to deal with.”

“That is true. Yet surely the King of Beroldstein is stronger than he?”

“Let us hope so,” he said mechanically, as he followed out Ludovic’s
stratagem and its reason.

“You say Rollmar is already there with a force?” Morvan put in. “And he
could not help you?”

“To rescue the man whose death he constantly seeks? Scarcely. It is
from him that I have fled.”

“From Rollmar?”

“He has designs upon my liberty. Perhaps--who knows?--upon my life,
too, rather than that I should bring his scheme to naught.”

“And so,” Ferdinand said, eagerly, “you have come to me for protection
as well. It will be no less a pleasure than an honour to me to afford
you an asylum, my Princess, though in so doing I provoke the ill-will
of a powerful neighbour and put myself at issue with the most pitiless
spirit in Europe. You have appealed to my chivalry, cousin; you have
claimed my protection and help; I lay them all, and myself, at your
feet.”

He advanced, and with an excess of gallantry, bent low and kissed her
hand. It seemed as though his touch chilled her; perhaps she felt
instinctively that he was false; knew, woman-like, that her cause
appealed to him less than her beauty. But in her desperate eagerness,
she could not stay to weigh that. It was enough for the moment that she
could compel his interest.

“Every hour,” she urged, as his lips touched her hand, “every moment is
precious, since this brave life hangs on it. I know how unreasonable
is my request, but my joy would be great in proportion if your Majesty
would speak the word of rescue.”

“We will take measures at once,” Ferdinand assured her, with a show of
alacrity. But he seemed as though he could not take his eyes from her;
a poor guarantee that he would exert himself in her lover’s interest.
Morvan, watching him, read his mind, and laughed to himself.

It was quickly arranged that Ruperta should be lodged at the house of
one of the principal ladies of the Court, and thither she was escorted
with the respect due to her rank, Ferdinand, as he took his leave of
her, reiterating the assurance of his readiness to serve her, which was
so far from his intention.

When he was left alone with Morvan, the evil eyes of the two schemers
met in mutual understanding. As Ferdinand seemed to hang back from
declaring his thoughts and purposes, his henchman, reading them surely,
led the way.

“A royal Princess, indeed,” he observed, with unctuous enthusiasm. “You
might do worse, sire, than to acquire your cousin’s bride as well as
his crown.”

“I was thinking so,” the reply came with ready eagerness. “That
alliance would do more to settle me firmly on the throne than any other
conceivable plan.”

“It would at once and for ever ensure the support of Rollmar.”

“It would. And with that, our position would be strength itself.”

“Quite unassailable. The old fox wants the crowns united. For the flesh
and blood that happen to wear them he cares nothing. I rejoice, sire,
that chance has thrown in your way an opportunity as glorious as it is
unexpected.”

Not a word would the crafty counsellor speak of the most urgent factor,
his master’s personal feelings. He was sure enough of them.

“And Ludwig?”

As he spoke the word, the King glanced with dark suggestion at his
favourite.

Morvan gave a shrug and an evil laugh. “You must keep your word to the
Princess, sire.”

Ferdinand read the mocking words by the light of the laugh. “While he
lives----” he paused significantly.

“Yes,” said Morvan, following the thought, “Princess Ruperta is a
resolute young woman. I think it might be well to release Count Irromar
with a hint. With Rollmar for a close ally, even that dare-devil ceases
to be a danger.”




CHAPTER XXX

ROLLMAR’S WAY


When, early in the morning, Rollmar prepared to set forth on his
return, he was surprised, and yet more enraged, to find that Princess
Ruperta was not forthcoming. That the Count had left the castle he was
aware, since his host had overnight excused his attendance, and taken
his leave on plea of urgent business. Still, faithless and unscrupulous
as the experienced reader of men had clearly seen the Count to be,
he had still been far from anticipating such a defiant piece of
treachery as this development of the affair seemed to indicate. He
gave Gomer, the old major-domo, a very unpleasant quarter of an hour’s
cross-examination, but failed to shake, either by threats or cunning,
his repeated assurance that his master’s departure had nothing to do
with the Princess’s disappearance. The Count, he reiterated, had ridden
forth alone save for an escort of four men. The Princess had, he was
sure, contrived to leave the castle some time before.

The Chancellor, accustomed to weigh probabilities, decided that the
man was lying. It was far easier for him to believe the Count than the
Princess capable of playing that trick upon him. Moreover, she could
hardly have escaped from the castle without the Count’s connivance.
It was true, Ludovic was a possible factor in the business, but why
should Irromar play into his hands, even to spite Rollmar? Little as
the Count might appreciate being worsted by that astute old brain,
he was less kindly disposed towards the man who not only was his
favoured rival, but who had so singularly defeated his evil plans. No.
Rapidly reviewing in his mind the turn of affairs by the light of his
knowledge of the Count’s stubborn, treacherous character, he satisfied
himself that he had either spirited the Princess away, perhaps to some
hiding-place in the mountains, or what was more likely, they were
concealed in a secret apartment under that very roof. The crisis was
as urgent as it was exasperating. Ruperta’s reputation had an immense,
an especial value to him as an important factor in his plans, and this
prolongation of a discreditable escapade was inexpressibly annoying.
So, waving aside the seneschal’s protests and assurances, he demanded
that the Princess should be forthwith produced. Gomer could only shrug
his shoulders hopelessly.

“I will give you a quarter of an hour,” said the angry old man in
his accustomed tone of command, which his fierce eyes ever rendered
terrifyingly effective. “If by that time the Princess is not brought
into this room I will first search every corner of this robber’s den,
and then burn it down over your heads.”

There was an ugly look of half-restrained defiance in Gomer’s eyes as
he replied protestingly, “I cannot, Excellency, bring the Princess to
you, because she is not within these walls. As to your threat, I can
only say that, in the absence of my master, the Count, I, having the
temporary care and charge of this property, will take upon myself to
resist your intention with the best means in my power.”

Rollmar, eyeing him sharply, gave a scornful laugh. “I understand,”
he said, pointedly. “It is as I thought. You have your instructions.
Your courage is inspired, doubtless, by a fear of the arch-bandit,
your master, not so very far away. Very well, then you take the
consequences, the most important of which to yourself will be that in
a very few hours your carcass will be hanging outside the gate which,
in your blind impudence, you think to keep against me.”

Gomer looked for a moment as though he would spring at the old minister
and draw first blood anyhow. His life had probably been lawless, and
his days passed in a state of defiance and danger. But there was
something about Rollmar, an indefinable power and resolution, showing
itself in the glitter of his eyes, the calmly assured dignify of his
manner, which restrained him, as it had held back many another man. The
light--unquenchable, it seemed--that burnt in that decrepit lamp held
the desperado’s spirit under a mysterious spell. He could only repeat
doggedly--

“Your Excellency may try to carry out your threat, but its certain
failure will cost more than your Excellency dreams of.”

“We shall see,” retorted Rollmar, turning away. “It is time the country
was purged of this plague-spot.”

So, with quiet resolution, he left the castle, none daring to stay him,
for it had been whispered that to oppose this old man, whose reputation
for guile and cunning strength was world-wide, was more than even their
master dared to do.

The Count was a very clever man; but, when he rode off in hot haste
on a project that touched him so nearly, he overlooked the fact that
he was leaving a much cleverer man behind him, and his house and its
secrets practically at his mercy. So full was Irromar’s mind of the
opportunity for a bold stroke which had so strangely arisen that he
neglected to anticipate what might logically happen in his absence.
At the same time, it never occurred to him that Ruperta would put her
liberty to any use which might have a disastrous bearing upon the very
plans he was so eagerly revolving. Knowing her to be free, he imagined
nothing worse than that she might, with Ompertz for her protector,
return to her father, and perhaps plead vainly for her lover’s rescue.
But that Rollmar should suppose, when she did not join him, that she
was still a prisoner in the castle was a contingency which he had in
his haste altogether overlooked.

So, in the grey dawn, Rollmar left the castle fuming and vindictive,
and, as luck would have it, the first person he encountered outside
was Captain Ompertz. The soldier of fortune had been in a somewhat
despairing mood. For several hours, from the moment, that is, when
Ruperta had ridden away leaving him to watch the situation on the spot,
he had untiringly devoted himself to making a thorough examination of
such parts of the castle as he could reach, straining every faculty
to light upon a way of getting into some sort of communication with
Ludwig. But, though reckless of his own safety, he risked his neck
many times in his desperate endeavors to get a clue to the prisoner’s
whereabouts, all his efforts were futile.

The Castle of Teufelswald had been built for a purpose, and was a
worthy product of its designer’s cunning brain. Dovetailed with the
rock into which it was built, it presented at all points, save in
front, an uncompromising fastness of blankness and silence. When
once its postern doors of rock were shut and barred, the back of the
building could defy observation and assault; it was, from the rear, at
least, impregnable. It was in vain that Ompertz set himself to climb
tree after tree in the hope of spying from above some indication of
what to a daring man might be a vulnerable point, not to be detected
from the ground. There was nothing which tempted even his desperation
to try for an entrance; no light, no sound. But one thing he did
see, and that was of moment; the setting forth of the Count and his
attendants. Naturally he supposed it was in pursuit of the Princess;
but he could do nothing there in her behalf, only rejoice in the
thought that she had a long start, and ejaculate a fervent prayer that
she might keep it. And, indeed, had he been minded to try to delay the
Count, it would have been impossible to have intercepted the little
party, who passed quickly through the door and rode off without pause
along the woodland path.

Having convinced himself that there was no chance of getting at
Ludovic’s prison from that part of the castle, Ompertz, disheartened
and weary from the want of rest, of which his enforced vigilance had
deprived him, gave up his fruitless endeavour, and dragged himself
towards the valley where Rollmar’s men lay. The light of a chilly dawn
was beginning to spread over the forest and to force its way in grey
streaks up the wood-lined valleys and gorges, turning the black masses
of pines into an indistinct greenish blue, as the soldier, the very
shadow of himself in his utter exhaustion, lay down on an invitingly
sheltered bank, and, careless of his safety, fell fast asleep. From
this he was roused by a voice, uncomfortably familiar, calling,
“Captain Ompertz!”

Half awakened, yet, for very weariness, unable to open his eyes, he
told himself it was a dream. But the summons was insistently repeated.
“Captain Ompertz!” In a moment the truth flashed his mind into complete
wakefulness and he started half up. Over him stood a man; one of the
most dreaded personalities in Europe.

“Up, Captain! I have work for you,” Rollmar said, with inscrutable face.

Ompertz sprang to his feet, wondering, as he looked inquiringly at the
saturnine old face, what the work could be. Was the pitiless Chancellor
minded to take vengeance on him for his share in the elopement? Then he
told himself that they were man to man, and so fell to wondering that
Rollmar should be there at that hour alone.

“How can I serve you, Excellency?” He was now wide awake, and
anticipation made him ignore his fatigue.

“I have,” said Rollmar, “a difficult affair on hand.”

“Yes, Excellency?”

The other seemed to regard his eagerness with the half-contemptuous
amusement a man will have for zeal to which he himself in a like
position would be insensible.

“You are acquainted with this robber’s lair,” he gave an indicating
jerk of the head, “the castle yonder?”

“I know every foot of it, from outside, Excellency.”

“Is it strong enough to defy assault?”

“From behind it could hold out against almost any force without
artillery.”

“H’m! So the attack must be made in front?”

“Assuredly, Excellency. And even there it should be a tough nut to
crack.”

“Nevertheless, Captain, it must be cracked, and without delay.”

Ompertz, looking at him in some wonder and a certain vague joy, was
struck by the imperious determination in the old man’s face.

“Yes, Excellency. It would be no bad thing.”

Rollmar nodded. This ever-ready soldier of fortune afforded him some
slight interest and amusement, and the acute judge of character could
see the man’s honesty, and a deep-lying nobility under the wandering
mercenary’s rough exterior. “The fellow, this Count Irromar, has played
me a trick, and must pay for it,” he continued. Somehow Ompertz’s open
nature seemed to invite confidence; an ordinary captain would have got
nothing beyond bare orders. “So this castle,” he went on, “must be
pulled or burned down about his head. And at once. Delay is out of the
question, since I have reason to believe the Princess Ruperta is still
a prisoner there.”

Ompertz had it on the tip of his tongue to reassure the Chancellor on
that point, but checked the word in time, with a thrill at the danger
into which he had so nearly been led. For in his mind was a great joy
at the thought that if Ludwig were still alive this action might mean
his release, surely the only chance left. If he knew that the Princess
was no longer in the castle, Rollmar, a man above all not given to
waste of energy or zeal, would doubtless abandon his project of sacking
the place, finding it, moreover, no bad policy to leave the ousted
Prince to his fate and the Count’s mercy. Neither did Ompertz judge
it advisable to tell Rollmar of the Count’s departure, since he might
then doubt whether the Princess were, after all, within the walls he
proposed to raze. So, keeping his own counsel, he placed with alacrity
his best service at the Chancellor’s disposal, and they went on towards
the camp to bring up their array.

An hour later, the force advanced threateningly upon the castle, the
front of which was now, in anticipation of an attack, barricaded
against their approach. The windows were screened by iron shutters,
and before the door a sort of portcullis was let down. Rollmar smiled
grimly when he saw the ready preparations for defence.

“He has expected this for many a day,” he said; “it has come none too
soon.”

Ompertz, to whom, as having the best knowledge of the place, the attack
was entrusted, led the men tactically up the terraces. Having advanced,
less, perhaps, to his surprise than Rollmar’s, without opposition
right up to the building, a bugle was blown, and the place summoned to
surrender. An iron shutter opened and old Gomer appeared.

“This castle,” he said, “will never surrender so long as there is a man
left to garrison it. One word, gentlemen, before you commit yourselves
to this vain business: I declare to you that you are greatly in error
in attacking us. The Princess is not here, she is not within these
walls, nor is there a soul here who knows where she is. Were these my
last words I could not say otherwise. I swear to you before Heaven the
lady is not in our keeping.”

Ompertz, who alone knew he spoke the truth, gave him the lie direct:

“Out, you lying old hound!” he cried. “If your word be true let us in
to prove it.”

“That I cannot do,” the seneschal retorted fiercely. “We have had
enough of such undesirable guests as yourself.”

“So you convict yourself of falsehood,” Ompertz returned. “The Princess
is within, and we will have her out; so the sooner you open your door
the better for you.”

For reply, the shutter was drawn across the window with a significant
bang, and the parley was at an end.

Had Ompertz not been aware that the lord of Teufelswald was absent, he
would have been far less hopeful than he was of taking the stronghold
by assault. As it was, he had a pretty shrewd idea that the garrison
was far from being a strong one either in numbers or spirit. Nearly a
dozen fighting men had been killed or wounded in the two encounters
with Ludwig and himself. Four had ridden forth with the Count; surely
not many could remain, and those were without their chief, who, besides
setting a vivid example of reckless daring, knew how to supplement
the courage of his followers by a lively fear of the consequences of
defeat. But he, worth a score of his humble bravos, was happily away,
and Ompertz had promptly taken care to send a detachment of his men
round to the rock door to intercept his possible return.

A short consultation among the leaders of the attacking party resulted
in the conclusion that there was but one feasible way of gaining
admittance, and that was to batter in the principal door. That looked
a formidable task enough; the massive iron-bound oak was manifestly
intended to provide against assault, and then there was the heavy
net-work of beams forming the portcullis to beat down, even before the
door itself was reached. But, given sufficient strength, anything
is physically possible, and with several score of men at his back,
Ompertz felt he could laugh at the Count’s iron-bound beams, which
could have defied a mere dozen assailants for many a day. The first
idea of the attacking party was to set fire to the oaken barrier, but
the wood was too little exposed to catch alight easily, and, moreover,
the contingency had been provided against by the contrivance of a long
cistern above the archway from which at any moment the portcullis could
be drenched with water.

But, though fire might be of no avail, the united weight and sinews
of a considerable body of men made a force which not even Count
Irromar’s barricades could withstand. A tree-trunk was utilized as a
battering-ram, and the attack began in earnest. It was not without its
difficulties. The soldiers swinging the huge log were exposed to an
oblique fire from certain loop-holes commanding the approach to the
entrance, and several men fell, fewer, however, than would probably
have been accounted for had the defence been conducted with more spirit
than seemed to be the case. Their exposure to this galling fire had
the effect of making the attacking party redouble their efforts; the
portcullis began to crack and show signs of giving way beneath the
tremendous battering of the swinging tree-trunk; the blows, planted
with insistence and precision, increased in effect, and made the
yielding of the strong beams only a question of time.

At length, with a crash, the portcullis was staved in, and, with a
shout, the men broke through and rushed forward eagerly to take the
same measures with the door. The shots from the loop-holes, which had
become more frequent and wildly aimed, upon this almost ceased. The
soldiers, being now close under the walls, were in a less exposed
position, but, apart from that, there were signs that the garrison were
either demoralized, or were preparing some new scheme of defence.

In a very few minutes the improvised battering-ram was brought into
position to play upon the door, and its thundering blows sent back
echoing booms from within. The men, now confident of easily forcing
an entry, were laughing, and applying themselves to their task with a
will in order to make short work of it. Suddenly there was a warning
cry from those behind who were farthest from the walls and, before the
foremost men could realize what was going to happen, a huge piece of
rock fell in their midst. Fortunately it came down just between the
two files of men who were working the battering-ram; it crashed plump
on the wood, sending it from the men’s grasp to the ground, and, at
the same time, giving many of the workers time to spring aside and so
avoid being struck by it. Several, however, who had wound the ropes
round their hands were shot forward by the impact, and more or less
crushed. All who were unhurt gave a savage cry of rage at the act, and,
reckless of a second fall, dashed forward to resume operations upon
the door. Ompertz was not slow in urging them on, being now in a wild
state of anxiety as to Ludwig’s safety. The Count’s men seemed capable
of anything, and the sooner their power for mischief was at an end the
better.

“There is plenty of booty in the robber’s den once we get in, my lads,”
he cried, and they again attacked the great door with a will. Scouts
were posted now to give warning of further operations from the roof,
but no more danger seemed to threaten from that quarter.

And now the door began to quiver and crack under incessant, untiring
blows, till, from one mighty stroke, it flew open. The leaders,
anticipating that the entry would be yet disputed, and that their men
would be received with a deadly volley, ordered them, as the door gave
way, to fall back on one side or the other.

But nothing of the kind happened. Instead of the desperate body of
defenders they had expected to confront they saw the great hall empty.
Then Ompertz rushed in like an avenging fury, and with a cheer the
troops followed.

“Take care! Look out for a surprise! These devils are capable of
anything,” the other captain cried warningly, but, for anything that
could be seen, the devils had lost heart and fled. So easily, in the
absence of its leading spirit, was this famed outlaw’s stronghold taken.

Through the now deserted rooms and passages Ompertz hurried, careless
of the tempting spoil which presented itself on every hand, and by
means of which he might easily have mended his fortunes, his mind
occupied by but one object, the finding of Ludwig. “Prince!” he
shouted, till the silent corridors echoed again, “Prince Ludwig! Where
are you?” But no answer came, and as his search went fruitlessly on,
the honest soldier began to have a sickening fear that he would never
hear that voice again. “Prince!” he cried, in his desperation, “I am
here, Ompertz, to set you free. Where are you?”

Shouting as he went, he reached a part of the building where the dimly
lighted passages radiated into the rock. The place was indeed the den
of a human brute. It struck despair into the soldier’s heart.

“A fine limbo for that smooth-spoken villain to live over,” he groaned
in his desperation. “And I gave him his life that he might finish his
butcher’s work. Poor Prince Ludwig! With all his mettle, and after all
his escapes, to find his death in this beast’s den!”

But he was not going to give up the search until he found the prisoner,
dead or alive. He tried one wedge-like passage after another, shouting
the while like a madman. One of the soldiers, hot for plunder, ran
against him.

“What’s the noise for, Captain?” he said, clapping him on the shoulder.
“You ought to know the bearings of this infernal rookery; now show me
where the money-chest is, and we will keep quiet, and share alike.”

“To the devil with your money-chest,” Ompertz returned impatiently. “I
neither know nor care where that murdering dog kept his plunder. I am
looking for a man.”

“A man?”

“Ay; the finest fellow that ever buckled on sword. Come, help me;
though I fear to find his corpse after all.”

The other laughed. “Search for a dead man? Not I. Nor for a live
woman, either, though the Chancellor is offering a hundred pieces to
the man who finds our Princess. There is the scent of wealth in this
strong-box, and that’s the game for me.”

He went off, and Ompertz ran on, calling Ludwig’s name. “Fool that I
am, to think the dead can hear me,” he exclaimed. He passed many doors,
trying them all, throwing open those that were unfastened, and kicking
at others that were locked, but getting no response. He came to a stone
gallery, hewn out of the rock. “Ludwig, my Prince!” he called hoarsely,
and the shout was echoed dismally out of the dark depths beyond.
Nothing but an echo, as mocking as the voice of the castle’s lord. No.
Ompertz could not believe that some fiendish voice was not mocking him,
as, from the darkness, came an answering cry pronouncing his name. He
listened, holding his breath now, not daring to believe he was not
cheated. Yes, there! The call came again, muffled but unmistakable,
“Ompertz!”

He dashed forward with a fervent cry, then stopped, puzzled. Where had
the answering voice come from? He was brought up by the end of the
gallery, a solid wall of rock. He called again. Again the reply, this
time behind him, but nearer, so close that he could recognize Ludwig’s
voice. But there was no sign of any door; nothing but a rough surface
of rocky wall, and it was from the depth of the rock that the voice
seemed to come.

Crying out to get a guiding answer, Ompertz came opposite to the spot
whence Ludwig’s voice so mysteriously proceeded.

“There is a door in the rock,” the King called out in answer to his
question. “Can you not find it?”

Ompertz searched as well as the obscurity would let him, but could
discover no indication of any opening.

“Wait, your Majesty!” he cried at last. “I will fetch those who will
set you free.”

He hastened back to the inhabited part of the castle, passing on his
way soldiers running hither and thither in their eagerness for booty,
who took as little heed of him as he of them. In an inner vestibule he
came upon a scuffling group. At first he thought it a dispute over some
object of value, then something caught his eye which made him turn and
rush up to the men.

It appeared that the party which he had posted to guard the rearward
approaches to the castle had caught some of the defenders as they took
their flight. It was a couple of these ruffians who were surrounded by
soldiers threatening them with instant death if they did not disclose
where the Count’s treasure was kept. Ompertz, recognizing one of the
captives as having held a somewhat superior position in the household,
pushed his way through, and transferred this fellow from the soldiers’
clutches to his own.

“The very man I want. He must show me the way to get at the greatest
prize of all, the man, King Ludwig, who is imprisoned yonder in the
rock.”

The fellow doggedly denied all knowledge of the prisoner.

“Fetch a rope, and throw it over that beam,” was Ompertz’s practical
argument.

The rope was quickly brought and adjusted, and the noose slipped over
the now grey face.

“Thirty seconds’ silence, my fine fellow, and you swing,” Ompertz
announced, with military decision.

There was no mistaking his meaning.

“What do you want?” growled the ruffian.

“The opening of my friend’s prison.”

“If I show you the trick you will let me go free?”

“So far as I am concerned you may go to the devil, who is doubtless
expecting you.”

“In my own time, Captain?”

“In your own time, or his. Now, hurry; or you will go in mine.”

With the rope still round his bull neck, the man was led off in haste
to the rock gallery, his conductors intending to play the same game
with him on their own account when the Captain should have done with
him.

From a receptacle at the entrance of the gallery the man took a small
winch. This, when they had arrived at the place where Ludwig’s voice
had been heard, he fitted into a cunningly concealed hole in the stone.
With a few turns, a portion of what seemed the solid rock began to
recede; it evidently revolved slowly on a pivot till it left an opening
wide enough for a man to pass through. Within was utter darkness, and
from this veritable living tomb Ludwig staggered out, having the face
of a man who had never thought to see the light of day again.




CHAPTER XXXI

THE COUSINS MEET

His great object having been so luckily obtained, having found and
reassured Countess Minna, Ompertz judged it well to tell Rollmar the
truth about Princess Ruperta, although he did not venture to add that
he had known of her flight all along. The Chancellor fell into a fury
of annoyance at this new turn of events, which promised to render the
hushing-up of her escapade all the more difficult. Ludwig, whose first
enquiries had naturally been for Ruperta, was, while overwhelmed at the
thought of her devotion, rendered desperately anxious as to the result
of the step she had taken.

“It is my own fault,” he exclaimed, miserably, “in keeping my secret.
Ignorant as to who I am, how could she know the double danger she was
running in appealing to the last man she should have sought?”

“Neither does he know her lover’s identity,” Ompertz suggested,
hopefully.

“What does that matter?” Ludwig returned. “Ferdinand is evil-minded and
treacherous, and she is the most beautiful woman in the world. Thank
Heaven, at least, that I am free.”

So, burning with the desire to reach his kingdom, which every hour now
must render his the less, and to put his fortunes upon a desperate
cast, he addressed himself to the wrathful and discomfited Rollmar, in
whose plans he seemed no longer an appreciable factor.

“I am setting out for Beroldstein within the hour, Excellency.”

“For Beroldstein?” The words were snapped out impatiently,
indifferently, save for a sneer.

“To regain my kingdom.”

“Ah?” He shook his head. “It is too late.”

“That is my fault in some measure, fate’s in a greater.”

“It is a pity fate is against you,” Rollmar returned, curtly. “Luck
counts for much in politics, as in everything else. Well, I wish yours
may return, Prince.”

Clearly he did not think it would. He was turning away, busy with more
urgent speculations, when Ludwig’s next words recalled him.

“As the husband chosen by yourself for Princess Ruperta, I may look to
your Excellency for help in asserting my rights?”

Rollmar looked at him sharply. “Help? It is no business of mine or my
master’s to set you on the throne. And I have already told you that
the alliance we sought was with the undisputed heir to the throne of
Drax-Beroldstein.”

“An excellent reason,” Ludwig returned with a confident smile, “why you
should render me all the assistance in your power. I do not ask much.
Only the few troops you have here, ready to hand, in my very territory.
I am going straightway to claim my crown, you know I am neither a
coward nor a fool, and luck has of late not been altogether against me.
Will you, who profess such interest in me, grudge me the escort of this
handful of men with which to enter my kingdom?”

“A forlorn hope, Prince.”

“No,” he replied resolutely. “Let me put it to you as policy. These
men I seek to borrow may make all the difference between success and
failure, although, if I live, I do not mean to fail. Think what the
effect will be if I ride into Beroldstein at the head of a body of your
troops, the sign that I am backed by the power of Waldavia. And with
Princess Ruperta by this time in Ferdinand’s clutches you cannot do
otherwise than assert your interest in the situation. Do you think she
will ever marry Ferdinand? I tell you that, whatever may be my fate,
you may put that idea from your mind. Her courage and her constancy I
can answer for.”

Rollmar had his own views of the female mind, still he was forced to
confess to himself that Ludwig’s argument had a certain practical
point. He felt more than ever furious that he had again let the
Princess slip from his grasp to the thwarting of his plans, but, as
statesman and diplomatist, he knew he must set himself to make the best
of fate’s ill turn, and try by a stroke to win his game against it yet.
Ludwig’s proposal was daring to rashness; and the cunning statesman
hated and despised rashness, but it was just feasible and the situation
was becoming so desperate that an heroic measure seemed called for. His
sharp eyes read Ludwig, as he stood before him, confident and eager, as
though the brain behind them were forecasting the desperate venture to
its result by the token of its leader’s character.

“So!” he said, still dubious, “you think, Prince, that you have only to
appear, for the people and the troops to declare for you?”

“I am sure of it. Only let me show that I am recognized as King by you?”

“H’m! It is a desperate chance, touch and go. I would not wager a ducat
on it. Yet I like your spirit; I sympathize with your determination;
power is no light thing to let another snatch away. No; were I in your
place I would do as you are intending, though I would never have given
my enemies the chance of making it necessary for the sake of a romantic
whim. But then, if all men’s characters were alike where would be the
zest in state-craft?”

The Chancellor was becoming more human under the inspiration of
fighting for power than ever Ludwig had seen in him or thought possible.

So the upshot was that when the troops could be drawn from the sacking
of Irromar’s castle, Rollmar, having thrown down his stake, turned
homewards, and Ludwig rode off towards the capital of his kingdom
with Ompertz at his side, and at the head of some three-score men.
The delay in setting forth had been considerable, and the rough way
made the progress of so large a company comparatively slow, so that it
was night-fall when they arrived within a league of the city, having
just missed encountering on their way a horseman, spurring through the
forest, with evil in his face and murder in his heart--Karl Irromar.

Here a halt was made, while Ompertz was sent forward to give notice
of Ludwig’s approach to several trusted friends and adherents. This
was carried out quietly, and without arousing suspicion, even among
Ferdinand’s spies, whose vigilance was, perhaps, beginning to relax.
So successful was Ompertz’s errand, and so eagerly was the news of
Ludwig’s arrival received by his friends, who had begun to despair of
his coming, that in two hours’ time quite a considerable party had
ridden out to greet their lawful sovereign. A plan was hastily formed,
and it was resolved that the most likely way to gain their object was
by a surprise and sudden _coup de main_.

Accordingly, the order was given, and the party rode forward to the
city with all haste, lest the affair should get wind, and Ferdinand’s
party have time to be on their guard. The advance was accomplished so
successfully, that not until the gates were reached did the citizens
become aware of what was going forward. Then several of Ludwig’s
adherents dashed forward up the streets, crying, “Ludwig! Long live
King Ludwig, who has come to claim his own! Hurrah for Ludwig, our
rightful King! Out, men, and rally round your King, King Ludwig for
ever!”

In a very few minutes the almost deserted streets became thronged with
excited citizens, running hither and thither; and when Ludwig, at
the head of what seemed a formidable body of troops, came clattering
resolutely down the street, they recognized and began to shout for him,
as they followed with excited curiosity in his wake.

So far all was well, but the most difficult and critical part of the
business was yet to be faced. With all speed Ludwig and his followers
made straightway for the palace and the barracks, which stood near
together. By the time they arrived there it was evident that the
bad news had been received; the palace was astir, and men were seen
hurrying to and fro. Ludwig and his troops rode up to the main
entrance, while Ompertz and half a dozen influential men turned aside
to the barracks with a view of gaining over the soldiery by a sudden
appeal. The great alarm bell began its frightful clanging; and as the
soldiers sprang to arms, the party of Ludwig’s adherents presented
themselves.

“Soldiers, your King has returned: King Ludwig,” cried Anton de Gayl.
“He is even now at the palace doors, claiming his throne from the
usurper. You are his soldiers, not Ferdinand’s; he looks to you to
support him in right and truth and justice. Men, will you stand by him?
He has the army of the Duke of Waldavia at his back, but he wants you;
he relies on your loyalty and devotion. Say, are they his?”

From the windows could be seen the great square before the palace
filled with troops and with a surging, shouting crowd, and, in the
darkness, the real proportion of soldiers and citizens could not
be distinguished. The men were taken by surprise, and evidently
undecided. Suddenly a voice in the hall cried, “Long live King Ludwig!”

The effect was electrical, and, with a great cheer, the cry was echoed.
De Gayl drew his sword.

“He is there, your rightful King,” he shouted excitedly; “there, on the
threshold, claiming his throne. It is you, his own soldiers, his own
countrymen, to whom he will look to seat him on it and maintain him
there. Let Waldavians stand aside; this is the work and the privilege
of Beroldsteiners. Come!”

He rushed out, and the men, with a cheer, caught up their arms and
followed him.

In the meantime, Ludwig had advanced to the very door of the palace,
which was hastily closed and barred against him. Then, by his orders,
a blast was sounded, and a very stentor among his followers demanded
admittance for Ludwig, the lawful King. As no reply was forthcoming,
the order was given for the door to be forced. While this was in train,
it was evident that the inmates of the palace were in a state of panic.
And it was no wonder, with the whole square filled by what seemed a
threatening crowd, and a strong body of troops at the very doors.
Frantic messages were sent to the barracks for military aid; but it was
too late, while only a handful of soldiers were within the palace and
available. The main body was already outside and shouting for Ludwig.

The door was burst in with a crash, disclosing the brilliantly lighted
vestibule filled with a desperate crowd of the usurper’s household.
They offered no resistance, since it was clearly futile, as Ludwig,
surrounded by a strong body-guard, entered, and passed triumphantly
through to the state salon which lay beyond.

Here, in the midst of a group composed of his council, and adherents,
whose drawn swords and militant attitudes contrasted oddly with their
anxious, apprehensive faces, stood Ferdinand, haggard and desperate,
yet with a look of defiant hatred in his eyes.

So the cousins met.

For a few moments there was a pause, as it were at the very crisis in
the game of life and death, when the winner’s stroke was made, and the
losing gambler saw his ruin in his adversary’s face. It was a terrible
silence, wherein men held their breath, and dared not anticipate the
breaking of the intolerable strain.

Ludwig spoke first, standing forward now, and confronting his cousin’s
lowering face.

“So you have taken care of my throne for me in my absence, Ferdinand,”
he said, with an almost sweet gravity. “I fear the relinquishing of it
will be distasteful to you, yet the moment has come when I must claim
my own.”

Ferdinand’s sharp eyes searched for a suspicion of irony, but the
sting, though sharp enough, was hidden. Ludwig’s tone and expression
were as gravely simple as his words. Even the acuter Morvan, who stood
by, biting his sensual lip in utter discomfiture, could detect no
sarcasm.

Ferdinand made a brave attempt at a smile, but the result was a grin of
hate and mortification. “So you are alive, after all, Cousin Ludwig,”
he said awkwardly, and with a dry tongue. “We heard, on good authority,
that you were dead.”

“I fear,” Ludwig returned, with stern calmness, “that my cousin was so
content with such acceptable news, that he troubled neither to verify
it, for fear it might prove false, nor to send me help in my danger.
I have, indeed, been near death more than once; but, under Heaven’s
mercy, have escaped. And I am here, as you see, to claim my throne.”

The last words, which were pronounced as a challenge, were received by
Ferdinand and his party with ominous silence. The usurper glanced at
Morvan, who went near and spoke to him in a low tone. Then, in the
midst of the dark mutterings, there was a movement beyond the doorway,
which was filled by Ludwig’s adherents, who there awaited the upshot.
They now drew aside to make a passage for Ompertz and de Gayl, who
entered at the head of a body of the domestic troops which they had led
from the barracks. Ferdinand, seeing the uniforms, and thinking they
had come to his assistance, raised his head in relief, and stood forth
defiantly. But Morvan had noticed the leaders, and shrank back, knowing
the game was lost.

“I say I am here to claim my kingdom and the throne you have usurped,”
Ludwig exclaimed, irritated and impatient at the other’s attitude.

There was a great shout of “Long live King Ludwig!” and Ferdinand drew
back like a beaten hound.

“Does my cousin Ferdinand acknowledge or dispute my claim?” The
question was spoken in a lower tone, but quite clearly.

For some moments no answer came from the baffled man, half crouching
like a wolf at bay. Ludwig went up to him. “You must decide on the
instant,” he said, sternly, “or take the consequences.”

Ferdinand ground his teeth together, as his vicious eyes sought counsel
from Morvan. But the evil counsellor had none ready to meet that
crisis, no time had been allowed to face the situation, he looked from
one cousin to the other, silently compared them, and saw his case was
hopeless; so the only reply he could give was a shrug. The bold game
had been played and lost, and that it was irretrievably lost no one
knew better than he whose brain had conceived it.

Ferdinand was fain to answer. “Have I ever pretended to dispute your
right, or asserted my own claim, save on your disappearance and
reported death? You have to thank me, cousin, for having kept the
throne safe for you; nor do I imagine that you in my place would have
acted otherwise.”

The speech was disingenuous enough, and Ludwig knew it; still he was
content to take no further exception to it beyond replying:

“I think I should have acted with less haste and more decency. But that
may pass. Then you, and the council, acknowledge my claim as rightful?”

There was a pause, as every man whom he addressed hesitated to declare
the defeat of his own ambition. Nevertheless, the reluctant assent
could not, in face of those odds, be withheld, and the word was
sullenly spoken.

Ludwig acknowledged it a little haughtily, as accepting a right rather
than a favour, and, at the word, de Gayl and Ompertz led the soldiers
in another cheer, which, caught up and echoed through the hall and out
into the palace square, sounded the knell of Ferdinand’s ambitious
hopes.

“You will not be surprised,” said Ludwig, addressing his cousin, “that,
until the public mind is clearer, I shall find it necessary to deprive
you and your friends of your liberty. You will merely be confined to
your own apartments, and I trust only a few days’ detention may be
necessary.”

With a bitter scowl, Ferdinand turned away, a prisoner where, an hour
before, he had played king. Thus, straightway, and without bloodshed,
did Ludwig gain his throne.

Ruperta, who was lodged in the precincts of the palace, heard the
tumult, which lasted almost through the night. Presently she was
told that Prince Ludwig had arrived to claim his throne, and that a
terrible struggle was anticipated. This news came as a stunning blow
in her distress, for she realized that while the King had to fight
for his throne he would have no mind or men for her service. Then, in
the morning, she heard that the affair was peaceably concluded, that
Ferdinand had abdicated, and that Ludwig was King. So she made haste to
renew her petition to the new ruler, and with revived hope, since she
had, on reflection, come to distrust Ferdinand, and to doubt any real
intention on his part of helping her.

In the miserable hours of waiting, she had divined that she had made
upon the King an impression which would fall like a bar between her
and her great desire; her instinct told her that he was self-indulgent
and treacherous, and that there was little honour in the eyes which
had looked on her so ardently. But what of this man, of the new King?
she asked herself in her perplexity. That was a speculation which beat
her. Politically, she might be considered his betrothed wife; yet he
had run away to avoid her, and so nearly lost his kingdom. And now she,
of all women, had come to him, of all men, to beg his interest and
help on behalf of a lover. The position was intolerably false, for all
it was honest and simple enough. She felt hot with shame that she had
to make this petition, yet she was desperate, and, even at the best,
the life of the man she so loved was hanging in the balance. Yes, she
would let no false shame deter her; she would meet King Ludwig boldly
and frankly; there was no love between them on either side, and--ah,
but there might be. They had never seen each other. What if, at first
sight, he should fall in love with her, as Ferdinand had done? Without
vanity--poor girl, that was far from her just then--she knew it was
more than possible. Her only hope was that King Ludwig might be, as
she had pictured him, cold, stern, prejudiced; above all, she prayed
that he was chivalrous, then the other qualities would matter little;
at least he could not be worse than Ferdinand. So, with anxiety and
impatience keeping back her repugnance and pride, she sent to the King,
whose first care had been to learn that she was safe, a humble petition
for an audience on a matter of life and death. It is certain that she
had not to wait long for its granting.

How describe the meeting? When Ruperta entered the presence-chamber
with fear of failure in her heart, and Ludwig rose to receive her, with
greater fear in his, his life, his very soul, seemed to hang on the
upshot of that moment of recognition, now so strangely come. At first,
as she advanced, she saw only the kingly figure standing to receive
her. Perhaps she dreaded to look into his face. But when, as she drew
nearer, she did raise her eyes, she could not believe what they told
her. She stopped dead, staring in fearful uncertainty at her lover;
then, in a flash, the whole thing became plain as though she had known
and forgotten and suddenly recollected it. Her pause was a terrible
suspense to Ludwig, and, when at last her lips moved, and she cried his
name, he ran forward with outstretched arms, and next moment she was
clasped to his heart.

“Thank God you are safe,” she murmured, and he knew that in her kiss
his trick was forgiven.

Then he led her, lover-like to the daïs, and with full hearts they
talked, not of the past, since they scarcely dared think of it, but
of the future, and the delight it surely held for them. And as they
talked, a rider, with fury and discomfiture in his face, was savagely
spurring a jaded horse over the cobbles of the street that led to the
palace, then across the great square, noticing nothing, inquiring
nothing, in his hot haste to bring news, bad enough, and the warning
which might save his undoing.

“The King!” he cried, as he pulled up his poor reeking horse at the
palace steps, flung himself out of the saddle, and rushed up to the
door. “I must see the King instantly. I bring news that touches his
Majesty’s safety.”

Those of the attendants who did not guess the truth thought his errand
might well be what he proclaimed it, while any who may have realized
his mistake kept their own counsel to see what might befall. Roughly,
and waving aside any attempt to stay him, the man pressed forward to
the presence-chamber, as the curious groups he passed closed in and
followed him.

“The King! I must have instant word with the King.”

The door was opened at his approach, and he passed through, while
some hurried forward to announce him to the King, who had that moment
retired with Ruperta by an opposite door. On receiving the intimation
Ludwig spoke a word to his betrothed, and turned back alone. Then, in
that hour’s second surprise, the two men met again. Count Irromar’s
hot, flushed face turned pale when he saw who the King was, and
realized he had come too late. But his iron nerve did not desert him.

“Already Ludwig?” he exclaimed, with the insolent desperation of
a ruined gambler. “I congratulate your Majesty, as much on your
promptness as your good luck.”

Then he folded his arms, and stood defiantly silent, waiting for his
own fate to be pronounced. He had lost all, yet did not for an instant
regret his bold game. And, as for escape, a half-glance round had shown
him Ompertz armed and expectant, and a file of soldiers at his elbow.

Ludwig hated his task, and, coming, as it did, so abruptly in the midst
of his happiness, it was trebly repugnant. But the remembrance of that
fiendishly murdered woman steeled him, more than would ever his own
treatment, against an unwise mercy. It would be monstrous, he knew, and
a gross abuse of his prerogative to let this ravening human wolf live
to devour his subjects.

“You know the penalty of your crimes,” he said, with stern dignity,
“and can hope for nothing less. It is death.”

Irromar bowed his head. “I do not complain. Fate has served you well,
Ludwig. I accept the penalty which would have been yours but for the
mischance of an hour. As I have lived my life, so will I die my death.”

Thus he went out to his prison and the scaffold.

“I shall never forgive you for running all those unnecessary risks for
me,” Ruperta said to Ludwig. “I am sure if your subjects had known
all your fool-hardiness, sir, they would have pronounced you unfit
to govern them soberly, and would never have allowed you to depose
Ferdinand.”

“You would not have cared for me, my glorious love,” he replied fondly,
“if I had come in sober, formal state to take possession of you, to
have the bargain paid over on the counter of the banker, Rollmar.”

“Tell me the truth, sir,” she insisted, her love hardly kept out of
sight by her show of peremptoriness, “you came secretly like that to
see whether you approved of the bargain. Had I not pleased you, it
would have been so easy for Lieutenant von Bertheim to have slipped
away again and left no one the wiser.”

“You are wrong, sweetheart. I knew there was no chance of that. For I
had been given a description of you, as good a portrait as words could
ever hope to paint of one that beggars description----”

“Ludovic!”

“And also a hint that you might rebel against being made a pawn in
Rollmar’s political game.”

“That judgment was not far wrong.”

“I heard, too,” he continued, “that you were cold and proud; I could
easily account for that, and I told myself that, as snow can keep warm
a living body hidden beneath it, it did not follow that you had not a
warm woman’s heart, and that if it were there I might find it.”

“You had no little confidence in yourself,” she protested, with a
little pouting smile.

“You see,” he explained, “I expected help in my siege from a traitor in
the garrison.”

“A traitor?”

“A rebel, who would rather fall into Lieutenant von Bertheim’s hands
than into Prince Ludwig’s.”

“Ah! yes.”

“And then chance, the most valuable of allies, came to my help.”

“Luckily. Chance has played us some fine tricks.”

“The best is the last, which has given you to me. Ah, how I dreaded the
moment when you would find me out. It might have turned your love to
hate.”

“A trick that does not offend against love and honour will never make a
woman hate a man she really loves. But I ought to bear you a grudge for
your easy victory, and to punish you for stripping my heart so bare.”

“And for playing into your enemy Rollmar’s hands. Punish me; I will
submit and kiss the rod.”

And with that penance the offence was blotted out.

[Illustration]




TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.





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