THE MIDDLE AGES
The little party moved away without
attracting notice. In a time of such prodigious
movement the going or coming of a few individuals was
a matter of no concern. The hood that Julie Lannes
had drawn over her hair and face, and her plain brown
dress might have been those of a nun. She too
passed before unseeing eyes.
Lieutenant Legaré was a neutral person,
arousing no interest in John who walked by the side
of the gigantic Picard, the stalwart Suzanne being
in one of the carts beside Julie. The faint throbbing
of the guns, now a distinct part of nature, came to
them from a line many miles away, but John took no
notice of it. He had returned to the world among
pleasant people, and this was one of the finest mornings
in early autumn that he had ever seen.
The country was much more heavily
forested than usual. At points, the woods turned
into what John would almost have called a real forest.
Then they could not see very far ahead or to either
side, but the road was good and the carts moved forward,
though not at a pace too great for the walkers.
Picard carried a rifle over his shoulders,
and John had secured an automatic. All the soldiers
were well armed. John felt a singular lightness
of heart, and, despite the forbidding glare of Suzanne,
who was in the last cart, he spoke to Julie.
“It’s too fine a morning
for battle,” he said in English. “Let’s
pretend that we’re a company of troubadours,
minnesingers, jongleurs, acrobats and what not, going
from one great castle to another.”
“I suppose Antoine there is the chief acrobat?”
“He might do a flip-flap, but if he did the
earth would shake.”
“Then you are the chief troubadour.
Where is your harp or viol, Sir Knight of the Tuneful
Road?”
“I’m merely imagining
character, not action. I haven’t a harp
or a viol, and if I had them I couldn’t play
on either.”
“Do you think it right to talk
In English to the strange young American, Mademoiselle?
Would Madame your mother approve?” said Suzanne
in a fierce whisper.
“It is sometimes necessary in
war, Suzanne, to talk where one would not do so in
peace,” replied Julie gravely, and then she said
to John again in English:
“We cannot carry out the pretense,
Mr. Scott. The tuneful or merry folk of the Middle
Ages did not travel with arms. They had no enemies,
and they were welcome everywhere. Nor did they
travel as we do to the accompaniment of war.
The sound of the guns grows louder.”
“So it does,” said John,
bending an ear—he had forgotten that a battle
was raging somewhere, “but we’re behind
the French lines and it cannot touch us.”
“It was a wonderful victory.
Our soldiers are the bravest in the world are they
not, Mr. Scott?”
John smiled. They were still
talking English. He liked to hear her piquant
pronunciation of it, and he surmised too that the bravest
of hearts beat in the bosom of this young girl whom
war had suddenly made a woman. How could the
sister of such a man as Lannes be otherwise than brave?
The sober brown dress, and the hood equally sober,
failed to hide her youthful beauty. The strands
of hair escaping from the hood showed pure gold in
the sunshine, and in the same sunshine the blue of
her eyes seemed deeper than ever.
John was often impressed by the weakness
of generalities, and one of them was the fact that
so many of the French were so fair, and so many of
the English so dark. He did not remember the origin
of the Lannes family, but he was sure that through
her mother’s line, at least, she must be largely
of Norman blood.
“What are you thinking of so
gravely, Mr. Scott?” she asked, still in English,
to the deep dissatisfaction of Suzanne, who never relaxed
her grim glare.
“I don’t know. Perhaps
it was the contrast of our peaceful journey to what
is going on twelve or fifteen miles away.”
“It is beautiful here!” she said.
Truly it was. The road, smooth
and white, ran along the slopes of hills, crested
with open forest, yet fresh and green. Below them
were fields of chequered brown and green. Four
or five clear brooks flowed down the slopes, and the
sheen of a little river showed in the distance.
Three small villages were in sight, and, clean white
smoke rising from their chimneys, blended harmoniously
into the blue of the skies. It reminded John
of pictures by the great French landscape painters.
It was all so beautiful and peaceful, nor was the
impression marred by the distant mutter of the guns
which he had forgotten again.
Julie and Suzanne, her menacing shadow,
dismounted from the wagon presently and walked with
John and Picard. Lieutenant Legaré was stirred
enough from his customary phlegm to offer some gallant
words, but war, the great leveler, had not quite leveled
all barriers, so far as he was concerned, and, after
her polite reply, he returned to his martial duties.
John had become the friend of the Lannes family through
his association with Philip in dangerous service,
and his position was recognized.
The road ascended and the forest became
deeper. No houses were now in sight. As
the morning advanced it had grown warmer under a brilliant
sun, but it was pleasant here in the shade. Julie
still walked, showing no sign of a wish for the cart
again. John noticed that she was very strong,
or at least very enduring. Suddenly he felt a
great obligation to take care of her for the sake
of Lannes. The sister of his comrade-in-arms
was a precious trust in his hands, and he must not
fail.
The wind shifted and blew toward the
east, no longer bringing the sound of guns. Instead
they heard a bird now and then, chattering or singing
in a tree. The illusion of the Middle Ages returned
to John. They were a peaceful troupe, going upon
a peaceful errand.
“Don’t tell me there isn’t
a castle at Ménouville,” he said. “I
know there is, although I’ve never been there,
and I never heard of the place before. When we
arrive the drawbridge will be down and the portcullis
up. All the men-at-arms will have burnished their
armor brightly and will wait respectfully in parallel
rows to welcome us as we pass between. His Grace,
the Duke of Light Heart, in a suit of red velvet will
be standing on the steps, and Her Graciousness, the
Duchess, in a red brocade dress, with her hair powdered
and very high on her head, will be by his side to
greet our merry troupe. Behind them will be all
the ducal children, and the knights and squires and
pages, and ladies. I think they will all be very
glad to see us, because in these Middle Ages of ours,
life, even in a great ducal castle, is somewhat lonely.
Visitors are too rare, and there is not the variety
of interest that even the poor will have in a later
time.”
“You make believe well, Mr. Scott,” she
said.
“There is inspiration,”
he said, glancing at her. “We are here in
the deeps of an ancient wood, and perhaps the stories
and legends of these old lands move the Americans
more than they do the people who live here. We’re
the children of Europe and when we look back to the
land of our fathers we often see it through a kind
of glorified mist.”
“The wind is shifting again,”
she said. “I hear the cannon once more.”
“So do I, and I hear something
else too! Was that the sound of hoofs?”
John turned in sudden alarm to Legaré,
who heard also and stiffened at once to attention.
They were not alone on the road. The rapid beat
of hoofs came, and around a corner galloped a mass
of Uhlans, helmets and lances glittering. Picard
with a shout of warning fired his rifle into the thick
of them. Legaré snatched out his revolver and
fired also.
But they had no chance. The little
detachment was ridden down in an instant. Legaré
and half of the men died gallantly. The rest were
taken. Picard had been brought to his knees by
a tremendous blow from the butt of a lance, and John,
who had instinctively sprung before Julie, was overpowered.
Suzanne, who endeavored to reach a weapon, fought like
a tigress, but two Uhlans finally subdued her.
It was so swift and sudden that it
scarcely seemed real to John, but there were the dead
bodies lying ghastly in the road, and there stood
Julie, as pale as death, but not trembling. The
leader of the Uhlans pushed his helmet back a little
from his forehead, and looked down at John, who had
been disarmed but who stood erect and defiant.
“It is odd, Mr. Scott,”
said Captain von Boehlen, “how often the fortunes
of this war have caused us to meet.”
“It is, and sometimes fortune
favors one, sometimes the other. You’re
in favor now.”
Von Boehlen looked steadily at his
prisoner. John thought that the strength and
heaviness of the jaw were even more pronounced than
when he had first seen the Prussian in Dresden.
The face was tanned deeply, and face and figure alike
seemed the embodiment of strength. One might
dislike him, but one could not despise him. John
even found it in his heart to respect him, as he returned
the steady gaze of the blue eyes with a look equally
as firm.
“I hope,” said John, “that
you will send back Mademoiselle Lannes and the nurses
with her to her people. I take it that you’re
not making war upon women.”
Von Boehlen gave Julie a quick glance
of curiosity and admiration. But the eyes flashed
for only a moment and then were expressionless.
“I know of one Lannes,”
he said, “Philip Lannes, the aviator, a name
that fame has brought to us Germans.”
“I am his sister,” said Julie.
“I can wish, Mademoiselle Lannes,”
said von Boehlen, politely in French, “that
we had captured your brother instead of his sister.”
“But as I said, you will send
them back to their own people? You don’t
make war upon women?” repeated John.
“No, we do not make war upon
women. We are making war upon Frenchmen, and
I do not hesitate to say in the presence of Mademoiselle
Lannes that this war is made upon very brave Frenchmen.
Yet we cannot send the ladies back. The presence
of our cavalry here within the French lines must not
be known to our enemies. Moreover, I obey the
orders of another, and I am compelled to hold them
as prisoners—for a while at least.”
Von Boehlen’s tone was not lacking
in the least in courtesy. It was more than respectful
when he spoke directly to Julie Lannes, and John’s
feeling of repugnance to him underwent a further abatement—he
was a creation of his conditions, and he believed
in his teachings.
“You will at least keep us all
as prisoners together?” said John.
“I know of no reason to the
contrary,” replied von Boehlen briefly.
Then he acted with the decision that characterized
all the German officers whom John had seen. The
women and the prisoners were put in the carts.
Dismounted Uhlans took the place of the drivers and
the little procession with an escort of about fifty
cavalry turned from the road into the woods, von Boehlen
and the rest, about five hundred in number, rode on
down the road.
John was in the last cart with Julie,
Suzanne and Picard, and his soul was full of bitter
chagrin. He had just been taking mental resolutions
to protect, no matter what came, Philip Lannes’
sister, and, within a half hour, both she and he were
prisoners. But when he saw the face of Antoine
Picard he knew that one, at least, in the cart was
suffering as much as he. The gigantic peasant
was the only one whose arms were bound, and perhaps
it was as well. His face expressed the most ferocious
anger and hate, and now and then he pulled hard upon
his bonds. John could see that they were cutting
into the flesh. He remembered also that Picard
was not in uniform. He was in German eyes only
a franc tireur, subject to instant execution,
and he wondered why von Boehlen had delayed.
“Save your strength, Antoine,”
he whispered soothingly. “We’ll need
it later. I’ve been a prisoner before and
I escaped. What’s been done once can be
done again. In such a huge and confused war as
this there’s always a good chance.”
“Ah, you’re right, Monsieur,”
said Antoine, and he ceased to struggle.
Julie had heard the whisper, and she
looked at John confidently. She was the youngest
of all the women in the carts, but she was the coolest.
“They cannot do anything with
us but hold us a few days,” she said.
John was silent, turning away his
somber face. He did not like this carrying away
of the women as captives, and to him the women were
embodied in Julie. They were following a little
path through the woods, the German drivers and German
guards seeming to know well the way. John, calculating
the course by the sun, was sure that they were now
going directly toward the German army and that they
would pass unobserved beyond the French outposts.
The path was leading into a narrow gorge and the banks
and trees would hide them from all observation.
He was confirmed in his opinion by the action of their
guards. The leader rode beside the carts and
said in very good French that any one making the least
outcry would be shot instantly. No exception would
be made in the case of a woman.
John knew that the threat would be
kept. Julie Lannes paled a little, and the faithful
Suzanne by her side was darkly menacing, but they
showed no other emotion.
“Don’t risk anything,”
said John in the lowest of whispers. “It
would be useless.”
Julie nodded. The carts moved
on down the gorge, their wheels and the hoofs of the
horses making but little noise on the soft turf.
The crash of the guns was now distinctly louder and
far ahead they saw wisps of smoke floating above the
trees. John was sure that the German batteries
were there, but he was equally sure that even had he
glasses he could not have seen them. They would
certainly be masked in some adroit fashion.
The roaring also grew on their right
and left. That must be the French cannon, and
soon they would be beyond the French lines. His
bitterness increased. Nothing could be more galling
than to be carried in this manner through one’s
own forces and into the camp of the enemy. And
there was Julie, sitting quiet and pale, apparently
without fear.
He reckoned that they rode at least
three miles in the gorge. Then they came into
a shallow stream about twenty feet wide that would
have been called a creek at home. Its banks were
fairly high, lined on one side by a hedge and on the
other by willows. Instead of following the path
any further the Germans turned into the bed of the
stream and drove down it two or three miles.
The roar of the artillery from both armies was now
very great, and the earth shook. Once John caught
the shadow of a huge shell passing high over their
heads.
All the prisoners knew that they were
well beyond hope of rescue for the present. The
French line was far behind them and they were within
the German zone. It was better to be resigned,
until they saw cause for hope.
When they came to a low point in the
eastern bank of the stream the carts turned out, reached
a narrow road between lines of poplars and continued
their journey eastward. In the fields on either
side John saw detachments of German infantry, skirmishers
probably, as they had not yet reached the line of
cannon.
“Officer,” said John to
the German leader, “couldn’t you unbind
the arms of my friend in the cart here? Ropes
around one’s wrists for a long time are painful,
and since we’re within your lines he has no chance
of escape now.”
The officer looked at Picard and shrugged his shoulders.
“Giants are strong,” he said.
“But a little bullet can lay low the greatest
of them.”
“That is so.”
He leaned from his horse, inserted
the point of his sword between Picard’s wrists
and deftly cut the rope without breaking the skin.
Picard clenched and unclenched his hands and drew several
mighty breaths of relief. But he was a peasant
of fine manners and he did not forget them. Turning
to the officer, he said:
“I did not think I’d ever
thank a German for anything, but I owe you gratitude.
It’s unnatural and painful to remain trussed
up like a fowl going to market.”
The officer gave Picard a glance of
pity and rode to the head of the column, which turned
off at a sharp angle toward the north. The great
roar and crash now came from the south and John inferred
that they would soon pass beyond the zone of fire.
But for a long time the thunder of the battle was
undiminished.
“Do you know this country at all?” John
asked Picard.
The giant shook his head.
“I was never here before, sir,”
he said, “and I never thought I should come
into any part of France in this fashion. Ah, Mademoiselle
Julie, how can I ever tell the tale of this to your
mother?”
“No harm will come to me, Antoine,”
said Julie. “I shall be back in Paris before
long. Suzanne and you are with me—and
Mr. Scott.”
Suzanne again frowned darkly, but
John gave Julie a grateful glance. Wisdom, however,
told him to say nothing. The officer in command
came back to the cart and said, pointing ahead:
“Behold your destination!
The large house on the hill. It is the headquarters
of a person of importance, and you will find quarters
there also. I trust that the ladies will hold
no ill will against me. I’ve done only
what my orders have compelled me to do.”
“We do not, sir,” said Julie.
The officer bowed low and rode back
to the head of the column. He was a gallant man
and John liked him. But his attention was directed
now to the house, an old French château standing among
oaks. The German flag flew over it and sentinels
rode back and forth on the lawn. John remembered
the officer’s words that a “person of importance”
was making his headquarters there. It must be
one of the five German army commanders, at least.
He looked long at the château.
It was much such a place as that in which Carstairs,
Wharton and he had once found refuge, and from the
roof of which Wharton had worked the wireless with
so much effect. But houses of this type were
numerous throughout Western Europe.
It was only two stories in height,
large, with long low windows, and the lawn was more
like a park in size. It as now the scene of abundant
life, although, as John knew instinctively, not the
life of those to whom it belonged. A number of
young officers sat on the grass reading, and at the
edge of the grounds stood a group of horses with their
riders lying on the ground near them. Not far
away were a score of high powered automobiles, several
of which were armored. John also saw beyond them
a battery of eight field guns, idle now and with their
gunners asleep beside them. He had no doubt that
other troops in thousands were not far away and that,
in truth, they were in the very thick of the German
army.
The château and its grounds were enclosed
by a high iron fence and the little procession of
carts stopped at the great central gate. A group
of officers who had been sitting on the grass, reading
a newspaper, came forward to meet them and John, to
his amazement and delight, recognized the young prince,
von Arnheim. It was impossible for him to regard
von Arnheim as other than a friend, and springing
impulsively from the cart he said:
“I had to leave you for a while.
It had become irksome to be a prisoner, but you see
I’ve come back.”
Von Arnheim stared, then recognition came.
“Ah, it’s Scott, the American!
I speak truth when I say that I’m sorry to see
you here.”
“I’m sorry to come,”
said John, “but I’d rather be your prisoner
than anybody else’s, and I wish to ask your
courtesy and kindness for the young lady, sitting
in the rear of the cart, Mademoiselle Julie Lannes,
the sister of that great French aviator of whom everybody
has heard.”
“I’ll do what I can, but
you’re mistaken in assuming that I’m in
command here. There’s a higher personage—but
pardon me, I must speak to the lieutenant.”
The officer in charge was saluting,
obviously anxious to make his report and have done
with an unpleasant duty. Von Arnheim gave him
rapid directions in German and then asked Julie and
the two Picards to dismount from the cart, while the
others were carried through the gate and down a drive
toward some distant out-buildings.
John saw von Arnheim’s eyes
gleam a little, when he noticed the beauty of young
Julie, but the Prussian was a man of heart and manner.
He lifted his helmet, and bowed with the greatest
courtesy, saying:
“It’s an unhappy chance
for you, but not for us, that has made you our prisoner,
Mademoiselle Lannes. In this château you must
consider yourself a guest, and not a captive.
It would not become us to treat otherwise the sister
of one so famous as your brother.”
John noticed that he paid her no direct
compliment. It was indirect, coming through her
brother, and he liked von Arnheim better than ever,
because the young captive was, in truth, very beautiful.
The brown dress and the sober hood could not hide
it as she stood there, the warm red light from the
setting sun glancing across her rosy face and the
tendrils of golden hair that fell from beneath the
hood. She was beautiful beyond compare, John
repeated to himself, but scarcely more than a child,
and she had come into strange places. The stalwart
Suzanne also took note, and she moved a little nearer,
while her grim look deepened.
“We will give you the best hospitality
the house affords,” continued von Arnheim.
“It’s scarcely equipped for ladies, although
the former owners left—”
He paused and reddened. John
knew his embarrassment was due to the fact that the
house to which he was inviting Julie belonged to one
of her own countrymen. But she did not seem to
notice it. The manner and appearance of von Arnheim
inspired confidence.
“We’ll be put with the
other prisoners, of course,” said John tentatively.
“I don’t know,”
replied von Arnheim. “That rests with my
superior, whom you shall soon see.”
They were walking along the gravel
toward a heavy bronze door, that told little of what
the house contained. Officers and soldiers saluted
the young prince as he passed. John saw discipline
and attention everywhere. The German note was
discipline and obedience, obedience and discipline.
A nation, with wonderful powers of thinking, it was
a nation that ceased to think when the call of the
drill sergeant came. Discipline and obedience
had made it terrible and unparalleled in war, to a
certain point, but beyond that point the nations that
did think in spite of their sergeants, could summon
up reserves of strength and courage which the powers
of the trained militarists could not create. At
least John thought so.
The long windows of the house threw
back the last rays of the setting sun, and it was
twilight when von Arnheim and his four captives entered
the château. A large man, middle-aged, heavy and
bearded, wearing the uniform of a German general rose,
and a staff of several officers rose with him.
It was Auersperg, the medieval prince, and John’s
heart was troubled.
Von Arnheim saluted, bowing deeply.
He stood not only in the presence of his general,
but of royalty also. It was something in the German
blood, even in one so brave and of such high rank
as von Arnheim himself, that compelled humility, and
John, like the fierce democrat he was, did not like
it at all. The belief was too firmly imbedded
in his mind ever to be removed that men like Auersperg
and the mad power for which they stood had set the
torch to Europe.
“Captain von Boehlen took some
prisoners, Your Highness,” said von Arnheim,
“and as he was compelled to continue on his expedition
he has sent them here under the escort of Lieutenant
Puttkamer. The young lady is Mademoiselle Julie
Lannes, the sister of the aviator, of whom we all
know, the woman and the peasant are her servants, and
the young man, whom we have seen before, is an American,
John Scott in the French service.”
He spoke in French, with intention,
John thought, and the heavy-lidded eyes of Auersperg
dwelt an instant on the fresh and beautiful face of
Julie. And that momentary glance was wholly medieval.
John saw it and understood it. A rage against
Auersperg that would never die flamed up in his heart.
He already hated everything for which the man stood.
Auersperg’s glance passed on, and slowly measured
the gigantic figure of Picard. Then he smiled
in a slow and ugly fashion.
“Ah, a peasant in civilian’s
dress, captured fighting our brave armies! Our
orders are very strict upon that point. Von Arnheim,
take this franc tireur behind the château and
have him shot at once.”
He too had spoken in French, and doubtless
with intention also. John felt a thrill of horror,
but Julie Lannes, turning white, sprang before Picard:
“No! No!” she cried
to Auersperg. “You cannot do such a thing!
He is not a soldier! They would not take him
because he is too old! He is my mother’s
servant! It would be barbarous to have him shot!”
Auersperg looked again at Julie, and
smiled, but it was the slow, cold smile of a master.
“You beg very prettily, Mademoiselle,”
he said.
She flushed, but stood firm.
“It would be murder,” she said. “You
cannot do it!”
“You know little of war.
This man is a franc tireur, a civilian in civilian’s
garb, fighting against us. It is our law that
all such who are caught be shot immediately.”
“Your Highness,” said
von Arnheim, “I have reason to think that the
lady’s story is correct. This man’s
daughter is her maid, and he is obviously a servant
of her house.”
Auersperg turned his slow, heavy look
upon the young Prussian, but John noticed that von
Arnheim met it without flinching, although Picard had
really fired upon the Germans. He surmised that
von Arnheim was fully as high-born as Auersperg, and
perhaps more so. John knew that these things
counted for a lot in Germany, however ridiculous they
might seem to a democratic people. Nevertheless
Auersperg spoke with irony:
“Your heart is overworking,
von Arnheim,” he said “Sometimes I fear
that it is too soft for a Prussian. Our Emperor
and our Fatherland demand that we shall turn hearts
of steel to our enemies, and never spare them.
But it may be, my brave Wilhelm, that your sympathy
is less for this hulking peasant and more for the
fair face of the lady whom he serves.”
John saw Julie’s face flush
a deep red, and his hand stole down to his belt, but
no weapon was there. Von Arnheim’s face
reddened also, but he stood at attention before his
superior officer and replied with dignity:
“I admire Mademoiselle Lannes,
although I have known her only ten minutes, but I
think, Your Highness, that my admiration is warranted,
and also that it is not lacking in respect.”
“Good for you, von Arnheim,”
said John, under his breath. But the medieval
mind of Auersperg was not disturbed. The slow,
cruel smile passed across his face again.
“You are brave my Wilhelm,”
he said, “but I am confirmed in my opinion that
some of our princely houses have become tainted.
The harm that was done when Napoleon smashed his way
through Europe has never been undone. The touch
of the democracy was defilement, and it does not pass.
Do you think our ancestors would have wasted so much
time over a miserable French peasant?”
This was a long speech, much too long
for the circumstances, John thought, but von Arnheim
still standing stiffly at attention, merely said:
“Your Highness I ask this man’s
life of you. He is not a franc tireur
in the real sense.”
“Since you make it a personal
matter, my brave young Wilhelm, I yield. Let
him be held a prisoner, but no more requests of the
same kind. This is positively the last time I
shall yield to such a weakness.”
“Thank you, Your Highness,”
said von Arnheim. Julie gave him one flashing
look of gratitude and stepped away from Picard, who
had stood, his arms folded across his chest, refusing
to utter a single word for mercy. “This
indeed,” thought John “is a man.”
Suzanne was near, and now both he and his daughter
turned away relaxing in no wise their looks of grim
resolution. “Here also is a woman as well
as a man,” thought John.
“I hope, Your Highness, that
I may assign Mademoiselle Lannes and her maid to one
of the upper rooms,” said von Arnheim in tones
respectful, but very firm. “Here also is
another man,” thought John.
“You may,” said Auersperg
shortly, “but let the peasant be sent to the
stables, where the other prisoners are kept.”
Two soldiers were called and they
took Picard away. Julie and Suzanne followed
von Arnheim to a stairway, and John was left alone
with medievalism. The man wore no armor, but
when only they two stood in the room his feeling that
he was back in the Middle Ages was overpowering.
Here was the baron, and here was he, untitled and unknown.
Auersperg glanced at Julie, disappearing
up the stairway, and then glanced back at John.
Over his heavy face passed the same slow cruel smile
that set all John’s nerves to jumping.
“Why have you, an American,
come so far to fight against us?” he asked.
“I didn’t come for that
purpose. I was here, visiting, and I was caught
in the whirl of the war, an accident, perhaps.
But my sympathies are wholly with France. I fight
in her ranks from choice.”
Auersperg laughed unpleasantly.
“A republic!” he said.
“Millions of the ignorant, led by demagogues!
Bah! The Hohenzollerns will scatter them like
chaff!”
“I can’t positively say
that I saw any Hohenzollern, but I did see their armies
turned back from Paris by those ignorant people, led
by their demagogues. I’m not even sure
of the name of the French general who did it, but
God gave him a better brain for war, though he may
have been born a peasant for all I know, than he did
to your Kaiser, or any king, prince, grand duke or
duke in all the German armies!”
John had been tried beyond endurance
and he knew that he had spoken with impulsive passion,
but he knew also that he had spoken with truth.
The face of Auersperg darkened. The medieval
baron, full of power, without responsibility, believing
implicitly in what he chose to call his order, but
which was merely the chance of birth, was here.
And while the Middle Ages in reality had passed, war
could hide many a dark tale. John was unable
to read the intent in the cruel eyes, but they heard
the footsteps of von Arnheim on the stairs, and the
clenched hand that had been raised fell back by Auersperg’s
side. Nevertheless medievalism did not relax
its gaze.
“What to you is this girl who
seems to have charmed von Arnheim?” he asked.
“Her brother has become my best
friend. She has charmed me as she has charmed
von Arnheim, and as she charms all others whom she
meets. And I am pleased to tell Your Highness
that the spell she casts is not alone her beauty,
but even more her pure soul.”
Auersperg laughed in an ugly fashion.
“Youth! Youth!” he
exclaimed. “I see that the spell is upon
you, even more than it is upon von Arnheim. But
dismiss her from your thoughts. You go a prisoner
into Germany, and it’s not likely that you’ll
ever see her again.”
Young Scott felt a sinking of the
heart, but he was not one to show it.
“Prisoners may escape,”
he said boldly, “and what has been done once
can always be done again.”
“We shall see that it does not
happen a second time in your case. Von Arnheim
will dispose of you for the night, and even if you
should succeed in stealing from the château there
is around it a ring of German sentinels through which
you could not possibly break.”
Some strange kink appeared suddenly
in John’s brain—he was never able
to account for it afterward, though Auersperg’s
manner rasped him terribly.
“I mean to escape,” he
said, “and I wager you two to one that I do.”
Auersperg sat down and laughed, laughed
in a way that made John’s face turn red.
Then he beckoned to von Arnheim.
“Take him away,” he said.
“He is characteristic of his frivolous democracy,
frivolous and perhaps amusing, but it is a time for
serious not trifling things.”
John was glad enough to go with von
Arnheim, who was silent and depressed. Yet the
thought came to him once more that there were princes
and princes. Von Arnheim led the way to a small
bare room under the roof. John saw that there
were soldiers in the upper halls as well as the lower,
and he was sorry that he had made such a boast to Auersperg.
As he now saw it his chance of escape glimmered into
nothing.
“You should not have spoken
so to His Highness,” said von Arnheim. “I
could not help but hear. He is our commander here,
and it is not well to infuriate one who holds all
power over you?”
“I am but human,” replied John.
“And being human, you should
have had complete control over yourself at such a
time.”
“I admit it,” said John,
taking the rebuke in the right spirit.
“You’re to spend the night
here. I’ve been able to secure this much
lenity for you, but it’s for one night only.
Tomorrow you go with the other prisoners in the stables.
Your door will be locked, but even if you should succeed
in forcing it don’t try to escape. The halls
swarm with sentinels, and you would be shot instantly.
I’ll have food sent to you presently.”
He spoke brusquely but kindly.
When he went out John heard a huge key rumbling in
the lock.