THE ESCAPE
For half an hour the Princess von
der Tann succeeded admirably in immersing herself
in the periodical, to the exclusion of her unhappy
thoughts and the depressing influence of the austere
countenance of the Blentz Princess hanging upon the
wall behind her.
But presently she became unaccountably
nervous. At the slightest sound from the palace-life
on the floor below she would start up with a tremor
of excitement. Once she heard footsteps in the
corridor before her door, but they passed on, and she
thought she discerned the click of a latch a short
distance further on along the passageway.
Again she attempted to gather up the
thread of the article she had been reading, but she
was unsuccessful. A stealthy scratching brought
her round quickly, staring in the direction of the
great portrait. The girl would have sworn that
she had heard a noise within her chamber. She
shuddered at the thought that it might have come from
that painted thing upon the wall.
What was the matter with her?
Was she losing all control of herself to be frightened
like a little child by ghostly noises?
She tried to return to her reading,
but for the life of her she could not keep her eyes
off the silent, painted woman who stared and stared
and stared in cold, threatening silence upon this ancient
enemy of her house.
Presently the girl’s eyes went
wide in horror. She could feel the scalp upon
her head contract with fright. Her terror-filled
gaze was frozen upon that awful figure that loomed
so large and sinister above her, for the thing had
moved! She had seen it with her own eyes.
There could be no mistake—no hallucination
of overwrought nerves about it. The Blentz Princess
was moving slowly toward her!
Like one in a trance the girl rose
from her chair, her eyes glued upon the awful apparition
that seemed creeping upon her. Slowly she withdrew
toward the opposite side of the chamber. As the
painting moved more quickly the truth flashed upon
her—it was mounted on a door.
The crack of the door widened and
beyond it the girl saw dimly, eyes fastened upon her.
With difficulty she restrained a shriek. The
portal swung wide and a man in uniform stepped into
the room.
It was Maenck.
Emma von der Tann gazed in unveiled
abhorrence upon the leering face of the governor of
Blentz.
“What means this intrusion?” cried the
girl.
“What would you have here?”
“You,” replied Maenck.
The girl crimsoned.
Maenck regarded her sneeringly.
“You coward!” she cried.
“Leave my apartments at once. Not even
Peter of Blentz would countenance such abhorrent treatment
of a prisoner.”
“You do not know Peter my dear,”
responded Maenck. “But you need not fear.
You shall be my wife. Peter has promised me a
baronetcy for the capture of Leopold, and before I
am done I shall be made a prince, of that you may
rest assured, so you see I am not so bad a match after
all.”
He crossed over toward her and would
have laid a rough hand upon her arm.
The girl sprang away from him, running
to the opposite side of the library table at which
she had been reading. Maenck started to pursue
her, when she seized a heavy, copper bowl that stood
upon the table and hurled it full in his face.
The missile struck him a glancing blow, but the edge
laid open the flesh of one cheek almost to the jaw
bone.
With a cry of pain and rage Captain
Ernst Maenck leaped across the table full upon the
young girl. With vicious, murderous fingers he
seized upon her fair throat, shaking her as a terrier
might shake a rat. Futilely the girl struck at
the hate-contorted features so close to hers.
“Stop!” she cried. “You are
killing me.”
The fingers released their hold.
“No,” muttered the man,
and dragged the princess roughly across the room.
Half a dozen steps he had taken when
there came a sudden crash of breaking glass from the
window across the chamber. Both turned in astonishment
to see the figure of a man leap into the room, carrying
the shattered crystal and the casement with him.
In one hand was a naked sword.
“The king!” cried Emma von der Tann.
“The devil!” muttered
Maenck, as, dropping the girl, he scurried toward
the great painting from behind which he had found ingress
to the chambers of the princess.
Maenck was a coward, and he had seen
murder in the eyes of the man rushing upon him.
With a bound he reached the picture which still stood
swung wide into the room.
Barney was close behind him, but fear
lent wings to the governor of Blentz, so that he was
able to dart into the passage behind the picture and
slam the door behind him a moment before the infuriated
man was upon him.
The American clawed at the edge of
the massive frame, but all to no avail. Then
he raised his sword and slashed the canvas, hoping
to find a way into the place beyond, but mighty oaken
panels barred his further progress. With a whispered
oath he turned back toward the girl.
“Thank Heaven that I was in time, Emma,”
he cried.
“Oh, Leopold, my king, but at
what a price,” replied the girl. “He
will return now with others and kill you. He is
furious—so furious that he scarce knows
what he does.”
“He seemed to know what he was
doing when he ran for that hole in the wall,”
replied Barney with a grin. “But come, it
won’t pay to let them find us should they return.”
Together they hastened to the window
beyond which the girl could see a rope dangling from
above. The sight of it partially solved the riddle
of the king’s almost uncanny presence upon her
window sill in the very nick of time.
Below, the lights in the watch tower
at the outer gate were plainly visible, and the twinkling
of them reminded Barney of the danger of detection
from that quarter. Quickly he recrossed the apartment
to the wall-switch that operated the recently installed
electric lights, and an instant later the chamber
was in total darkness.
Once more at the girl’s side
Barney drew in one end of the rope and made it fast
about her body below her arms, leaving a sufficient
length terminating in a small loop to permit her to
support herself more comfortably with one foot within
the noose. Then he stepped to the outer sill,
and reaching down assisted her to his side.
Far below them the moonlight played
upon the sluggish waters of the moat. In the
distance twinkled the lights of the village of Blentz.
From the courtyard and the palace came faintly the
sound of voices, and the movement of men. A horse
whinnied from the stables.
Barney turned his eyes upward.
He could see the head and shoulders of Joseph leaning
from the window of the chamber directly above them.
“Hoist away, Joseph!”
whispered the American, and to the girl: “Be
brave. Shut your eyes and trust to Joseph and—and—”
“And my king,” finished the girl for him.
His arm was about her shoulders, supporting
her upon the narrow sill. His cheek so close
to hers that once he felt the soft velvet of it brush
his own. Involuntarily his arm tightened about
the supple body.
“My princess!” he murmured,
and as he turned his face toward hers their lips almost
touched.
Joseph was pulling upon the rope from
above. They could feel it tighten beneath the
girl’s arms. Impulsively Barney Custer drew
the sweet lips closer to his own. There was no
resistance.
“I love you,” he whispered.
The words were smothered as their lips met.
Joseph, above, wondered at the great
weight of the Princess Emma von der Tann.
“I love you, Leopold, forever,”
whispered the girl, and then as Joseph’s Herculean
tugging seemed likely to drag them both from the narrow
sill, Barney lifted the girl upward with one hand while
he clung to the window frame with the other.
The distance to the sill above was short, and a moment
later Joseph had grasped the princess’s hand
and was helping her over the ledge into the room beyond.
At the same instant there came a sudden
commotion from the interior of the room in the window
of which Barney still stood waiting for Joseph to
remove the rope from about the princess and lower it
for him. Barney heard the heavy feet of men,
the clank of arms, and muttered oaths as the searchers
stumbled against the furniture.
Presently one of them found the switch
and instantly the room was flooded with light, which
revealed to the American a dozen Luthanian troopers
headed by the murderous Maenck.
Barney looked anxiously aloft.
Would Joseph never lower that rope! Within the
room the men were searching. He could hear Maenck
directing them. Only a thin portiere screened
him from their view. It was but a matter of seconds
before they would investigate the window through which
Maenck knew the king had found ingress.
Yes! It had come.
“Look to the window,”
commanded Maenck. “He may have gone as
he came.”
Two of the soldiers crossed the room
toward the casement. From above Joseph was lowering
the rope; but it was too late. The men would be
at the window before he could clamber out of their
reach.
“Hoist away!” he whispered
to Joseph. “Quick now, my man, and make
your escape with the Princess von der Tann. It
is the king’s command.”
Already the soldiers were at the window.
At the sound of his voice they tore aside the draperies;
at the same instant the pseudo-king turned and leaped
out into the blackness of the night.
There were exclamations of surprise
and rage from the soldiers—a woman’s
scream. Then from far below came a dull splash
as the body of Bernard Custer struck the surface of
the moat.
Maenck, leaning from the window, heard
the scream and the splash, and jumped to the conclusion
that both the king and the princess had attempted
to make their escape in this harebrained way.
Immediately all the resources at his command were
put to the task of searching the moat and the adjacent
woods.
He was sure that one or both of the
prisoners would be stunned by impact with the surface
of the water, and then drowned before they regained
consciousness, but he did not know Bernard Custer,
nor the facility and almost uncanny ease with which
that young man could negotiate a high dive into shallow
water.
Nor did he know that upon the floor
above him one Joseph was hastening along a dark corridor
toward a secret panel in another apartment, and that
with him was the Princess Emma bound for liberty and
safety far from the frowning walls of Blentz.
As Barney’s head emerged above
the surface of the moat he shook it vigorously to
free his eyes from water, and then struck out for the
further bank.
Long before his pursuers had reached
the courtyard and alarmed the watch at the barbican,
the American had crawled out upon dry land and hastened
across the broad clearing to the patch of stunted trees
that grew lower down upon the steep hillside before
the castle.
He shrank from the thought of leaving
Blentz without knowing positively that Joseph had
made good the escape of himself and the princess,
but he finally argued that even if they had been retaken,
he could serve her best by hastening to her father
and fetching the only succor that might prevail against
the strength of Blentz—armed men in sufficient
force to storm the ancient fortress.
He had scarcely entered the wood when
he heard the sound of the searchers at the moat, and
saw the rays of their lanterns flitting hither and
thither as they moved back and forth along the bank.
Then the young man turned his face
from the castle and set forth across the unfamiliar
country in the direction of the Old Forest and the
castle Von der Tann.
The memory of the warm lips that had
so recently been pressed to his urged him on in the
service of the wondrous girl who had come so suddenly
into his life, bringing to him the realization of a
love that he knew must alter, for happiness or for
sorrow, all the balance of his existence, even unto
death.
He dreaded the day of reckoning when,
at last, she must learn that he was no king.
He did not have the temerity to hope that her courage
would be equal to the great sacrifice which the acknowledgment
of her love for one not of noble blood must entail;
but he could not believe that she would cease to love
him when she learned the truth.
So the future looked black and cheerless
to Barney Custer as he trudged along the rocky, moonlit
way. The only bright spot was the realization
that for a while at least he might be serving the one
woman in all the world.
All the balance of the long night
the young man traversed valley and mountain, holding
due south in the direction he supposed the Old Forest
to lie. He passed many a little farm tucked away
in the hollow of a hillside, and quaint hamlets, and
now and then the ruins of an ancient feudal stronghold,
but no great forest of black oaks loomed before him
to apprise him of the nearness of his goal, nor did
he dare to ask the correct route at any of the homes
he passed.
His fatal likeness to the description
of the mad king of Lutha warned him from intercourse
with the men of Lutha until he might know which were
friends and which enemies of the hapless monarch.
Dawn found him still upon his way,
but with the determination fully crystallized to hail
the first man he met and ask the way to Tann.
He still avoided the main traveled roads, but from
time to time he paralleled them close enough that
he might have ample opportunity to hail the first
passerby.
The road was becoming more and more
mountainous and difficult. There were fewer homes
and no hamlets, and now he began to despair entirely
of meeting any who could give him direction unless
he turned and retraced his steps to the nearest farm.
Directly before him the narrow trail
he had been following for the past few miles wound
sharply about the shoulder of a protruding cliff.
He would see what lay beyond the turn—perhaps
he would find the Old Forest there, after all.
But instead he found something very
different, though in its way quite as interesting,
for as he rounded the rugged bluff he came face to
face with two evil-looking fellows astride stocky,
rough-coated ponies.
At sight of him they drew in their
mounts and eyed him suspiciously. Nor was there
great cause for wonderment in that, for the American
presented aught but a respectable appearance.
His khaki motoring suit, soaked from immersion in
the moat, had but partially dried upon him. Mud
from the banks of the stagnant pool caked his legs
to the knees, almost hiding his once tan puttees.
More mud streaked his jacket front and stained its
sleeves to the elbows. He was bare-headed, for
his cap had remained in the moat at Blentz, and his
disheveled hair was tousled upon his head, while his
full beard had dried into a weird and tangled fringe
about his face. At his side still hung the sword
that Joseph had buckled there, and it was this that
caused the two men the greatest suspicion of this strange
looking character.
They continued to eye Barney in silence,
every now and then casting apprehensive glances beyond
him, as though expecting others of his kind to appear
in the trail at his back. And that is precisely
what they did fear, for the sword at Barney’s
side had convinced them that he must be an officer
of the army, and they looked to see his command following
in his wake.
The young man saluted them pleasantly,
asking the direction to the Old Forest. They
thought it strange that a soldier of Lutha should
not know his own way about his native land, and so
judged that his question was but a blind to deceive
them.
“Why do you not ask your own
men the way?” parried one of the fellows.
“I have no men, I am alone,”
replied Barney. “I am a stranger in Lutha
and have lost my way.”
He who had spoken before pointed to
the sword at Barney’s side.
“Strangers traveling in Lutha
do not wear swords,” he said. “You
are an officer. Why should you desire to conceal
the fact from two honest farmers? We have done
nothing. Let us go our way.”
Barney looked his astonishment at this reply.
“Most certainly, go your way,
my friends,” he said laughing. “I
would not delay you if I could; but before you go please
be good enough to tell me how to reach the Old Forest
and the ancient castle of the Prince von der Tann.”
For a moment the two men whispered
together, then the spokesman turned to Barney.
“We will lead you upon the right
road. Come,” and the two turned their
horses, one of them starting slowly back up the trail
while the other remained waiting for Barney to pass
him.
The American, suspecting nothing,
voiced his thanks, and set out after him who had gone
before. As he passed the fellow who waited the
latter moved in behind him, so that Barney walked between
the two. Occasionally the rider at his back turned
in his saddle to scan the trail behind, as though
still fearful that Barney had been lying to them and
that he would discover a company of soldiers charging
down upon them.
The trail became more and more difficult
as they advanced, until Barney wondered how the little
horses clung to the steep mountainside, where he himself
had difficulty in walking without using his hand to
keep from falling.
Twice the American attempted to break
through the taciturnity of his guides, but his advances
were met with nothing more than sultry grunts or silence,
and presently a suspicion began to obtrude itself
among his thoughts that possibly these “honest
farmers” were something more sinister than they
represented themselves to be.
A malign and threatening atmosphere
seemed to surround them. Even the cat-like movement
of their silent mounts breathed a sinister secrecy,
and now, for the first time, Barney noticed the short,
ugly looking carbines that were slung in boots at
their saddle-horns. Then, promoted to further
investigation, he dropped back beside the man who
had been riding behind him, and as he did so he saw
beneath the fellow’s cloak the butts of two
villainous-looking pistols.
As Barney dropped back beside him
the man turned his mount across the narrow trail,
and reining him in motioned Barney ahead.
“I have changed my mind,”
said the American, “about going to the Old Forest.”
He had determined that he might as
well have the thing out now as later, and discover
at once how he stood with these two, and whether or
not his suspicions of them were well grounded.
The man ahead had halted at the sound
of Barney’s voice, and swung about in the saddle.
“What’s the trouble?” he asked.
“He don’t want to go to
the Old Forest,” explained his companion, and
for the first time Barney saw one of them grin.
It was not at all a pleasant grin, nor reassuring.
“He don’t, eh?”
growled the other. “Well, he ain’t
goin’, is he? Who ever said he was?”
And then he, too, laughed.
“I’m going back the way
I came,” said Barney, starting around the horse
that blocked his way.
“No, you ain’t,”
said the horseman. “You’re goin’
with us.”
And Barney found himself gazing down
the muzzle of one of the wicked looking pistols.
For a moment he stood in silence,
debating mentally the wisdom of attempting to rush
the fellow, and then, with a shake of his head, he
turned back up the trail between his captors.
“Yes,” he said, “on
second thought I have decided to go with you.
Your logic is most convincing.”