A KING’S RANSOM
For another mile the two brigands
conducted their captor along the mountainside, then
they turned into a narrow ravine near the summit of
the hills—a deep, rocky, wooded ravine into
whose black shadows it seemed the sun might never
penetrate.
A winding path led crookedly among
the pines that grew thickly in this sheltered hollow,
until presently, after half an hour of rough going,
they came upon a small natural clearing, rock-bound
and impregnable.
As they filed from the wood Barney
saw a score of villainous fellows clustered about
a camp fire where they seemed engaged in cooking their
noonday meal. Bits of meat were roasting upon
iron skewers, and a great iron pot boiled vigorously
at one side of the blaze.
At the sound of their approach the
men sprang to their feet in alarm, and as many weapons
as there were men leaped to view; but when they saw
Barney’s companions they returned their pistols
to their holsters, and at sight of Barney they pressed
forward to inspect the prisoner.
“Who have we here?” shouted
a big blond giant, who affected extremely gaudy colors
in his selection of wearing apparel, and whose pistols
and knife had their grips heavily ornamented with
pearl and silver.
“A stranger in Lutha he calls
himself,” replied one of Barney’s captors.
“But from the sword I take it he is one of old
Peter’s wolfhounds.”
“Well, he’s found the
wolves at any rate,” replied the giant, with
a wide grin at his witticism. “And if Yellow
Franz is the particular wolf you’re after, my
friend, why here I am,” he concluded, addressing
the American with a leer.
“I’m after no one,”
replied Barney. “I tell you I’m a
stranger, and I lost my way in your infernal mountains.
All I wish is to be set upon the right road to Tann,
and if you will do that for me you shall be well paid
for your trouble.”
The giant, Yellow Franz, had come
quite close to Barney and was inspecting him with
an expression of considerable interest. Presently
he drew a soiled and much-folded paper from his breast.
Upon one side was a printed notice, and at the corners
bits were torn away as though the paper had once been
tacked upon wood, and then torn down without removing
the tacks.
At sight of it Barney’s heart
sank. The look of the thing was all too familiar.
Before the yellow one had commenced to read aloud from
it Barney had repeated to himself the words he knew
were coming.
“‘Gray eyes,’”
read the brigand, “’brown hair, and a full,
reddish-brown beard.’ Herman and Friedrich,
my dear children, you have stumbled upon the richest
haul in all Lutha. Down upon your marrow-bones,
you swine, and rub your low-born noses in the dirt
before your king.”
The others looked their surprise.
“The king?” one cried.
“Behold!” cried Yellow Franz. “Leopold
of Lutha!”
He waved a ham-like hand toward Barney.
Among the rough men was a young smooth-faced
boy, and now with wide eyes he pressed forward to
get a nearer view of the wonderful person of a king.
“Take a good look at him, Rudolph,”
cried Yellow Franz. “It is the first and
will probably be the last time you will ever see a
king. Kings seldom visit the court of their fellow
monarch, Yellow Franz of the Black Mountains.
“Come, my children, remove his
majesty’s sword, lest he fall and stick himself
upon it, and then prepare the royal chamber, seeing
to it that it be made so comfortable that Leopold
will remain with us a long time. Rudolph, fetch
food and water for his majesty, and see to it that
the silver plates and the golden goblets are well scoured
and polished up.”
They conducted Barney to a miserable
lean-to shack at one side of the clearing, and for
a while the motley crew loitered about bandying coarse
jests at the expense of the “king.”
The boy, Rudolph, brought food and water, he alone
of them all evincing the slightest respect or awe
for the royalty of their unwilling guest.
After a time the men tired of the
sport of king-baiting, for Barney showed neither rancor
nor outraged majesty at their keenest thrusts, instead,
often joining in the laugh with them at his own expense.
They thought it odd that the king should hold his dignity
in so low esteem, but that he was king they never
doubted, attributing his denials to a disposition
to deceive them, and rob them of the “king’s
ransom” they had already commenced to consider
as their own.
Shortly after Barney arrived at the
rendezvous he saw a messenger dispatched by Yellow
Franz, and from the repeated gestures toward himself
that had accompanied the giant’s instructions
to his emissary, Barney was positive that the man’s
errand had to do with him.
After the men had left his prison,
leaving the boy standing awkwardly in wide-eyed contemplation
of his august charge, the American ventured to open
a conversation with his youthful keeper.
“Aren’t you rather young
to be starting in the bandit business, Rudolph?”
asked Barney, who had taken a fancy to the youth.
“I do not want to be a bandit,
your majesty,” whispered the lad; “but
my father owes Yellow Franz a great sum of money, and
as he could not pay the debt Yellow Franz stole me
from my home and says that he will keep me until my
father pays him, and that if he does not pay he will
make a bandit of me, and that then some day I shall
be caught and hanged until I am dead.”
“Can’t you escape?”
asked the young man. “It would seem to
me that there would be many opportunities for you
to get away undetected.”
“There are, but I dare not.
Yellow Franz says that if I run away he will be sure
to come across me some day again and that then he will
kill me.”
Barney laughed.
“He is just talking, my boy,”
he said. “He thinks that by frightening
you he will be able to keep you from running away.”
“Your majesty does not know
him,” whispered the youth, shuddering.
“He is the wickedest man in all the world.
Nothing would please him more than killing me, and
he would have done it long since but for two things.
One is that I have made myself useful about his camp,
doing chores and the like, and the other is that were
he to kill me he knows that my father would never
pay him.”
“How much does your father owe him?”
“Five hundred marks, your majesty,”
replied Rudolph. “Two hundred of this amount
is the original debt, and the balance Yellow Franz
has added since he captured me, so that it is really
ransom money. But my father is a poor man, so
that it will take a long time before he can accumulate
so large a sum.
“You would really like to go home again, Rudolph?”
“Oh, very much, your majesty,
if I only dared.” Barney was silent for
some time, thinking. Possibly he could effect
his own escape with the connivance of Rudolph, and
at the same time free the boy. The paltry ransom
he could pay out of his own pocket and send to Yellow
Franz later, so that the youth need not fear the brigand’s
revenge. It was worth thinking about, at any rate.
“How long do you imagine they
will keep me, Rudolph?” he asked after a time.
“Yellow Franz has already sent
Herman to Lustadt with a message for Prince Peter,
telling him that you are being held for ransom, and
demanding the payment of a huge sum for your release.
Day after tomorrow or the next day he should return
with Prince Peter’s reply.
“If it is favorable, arrangements
will be made to turn you over to Prince Peter’s
agents, who will have to come to some distant meeting
place with the money. A week, perhaps, it will
take, maybe longer.”
It was the second day before Herman
returned from Lustadt. He rode in just at dark,
his pony lathered from hard going.
Barney and the boy saw him coming,
and the youth ran forward with the others to learn
the news that he had brought; but Yellow Franz and
his messenger withdrew to a hut which the brigand chief
reserved for his own use, nor would he permit any
beside the messenger to accompany him to hear the
report.
For half an hour Barney sat alone
waiting for word from Yellow Franz that arrangements
had been consummated for his release, and then out
of the darkness came Rudolph, wide-eyed and trembling.
“Oh, my king?” he whispered.
“What shall we do? Peter has refused
to ransom you alive, but he has offered a great sum
for unquestioned proof of your death. Already
he has caused a proclamation to be issued stating
that you have been killed by bandits after escaping
from Blentz, and ordering a period of national mourning.
In three weeks he is to be crowned king of Lutha.”
“When do they intend terminating
my existence?” queried Barney.
There was a smile upon his lips, for
even now he could scarce believe that in the twentieth
century there could be any such medieval plotting
against a king’s life, and yet, on second thought,
had he not ample proof of the lengths to which Peter
of Blentz was willing to go to obtain the crown of
Lutha!
“I do not know, your majesty,”
replied Rudolph, “when they will do it; but
soon, doubtless, since the sooner it is done the sooner
they can collect their pay.”
Further conversation was interrupted
by the sound of footsteps without, and an instant
later Yellow Franz entered the squalid apartment and
the dim circle of light which flickered feebly from
the smoky lantern that hung suspended from the rafters.
He stopped just within the doorway
and stood eyeing the American with an ugly grin upon
his vicious face. Then his eyes fell upon the
trembling Rudolph.
“Get out of here, you!”
he growled. “I’ve got private business
with this king. And see that you don’t
come nosing round either, or I’ll slit that
soft throat for you.”
Rudolph slipped past the burly ruffian,
barely dodging a brutal blow aimed at him by the giant,
and escaped into the darkness without.
“And now for you, my fine fellow,”
said the brigand, turning toward Barney. “Peter
says you ain’t worth nothing to him—alive,
but that your dead body will fetch us a hundred thousand
marks.”
“Rather cheap for a king, isn’t
it?” was Barney’s only comment.
“That’s what Herman tells
him,” replied Yellow Franz. “But he’s
a close one, Peter is, and so it was that or nothing.”
“When are you going to pull
off this little—er—ah—royal
demise?” asked Barney.
“If you mean when am I going
to kill you,” replied the bandit, “why,
there ain’t no particular rush about it.
I’m a tender-hearted chap, I am. I never
should have been in this business at all, but here
I be, and as there ain’t nobody that can do
a better job of the kind than me, or do it so painlessly,
why I just got to do it myself, and that’s all
there is to it. But, as I says, there ain’t
no great rush. If you want to pray, why, go ahead
and pray. I’ll wait for you.”
“I don’t remember,”
said Barney, “when I have met so generous a
party as you, my friend. Your self-sacrificing
magnanimity quite overpowers me. It reminds me
of another unloved Robin Hood whom I once met.
It was in front of Burket’s coal-yard on Ella
Street, back in dear old Beatrice, at some unchristian
hour of the night.
“After he had relieved me of
a dollar and forty cents he remarked: ‘I
gotta good mind to kick yer slats in fer not havin’
more of de cush on yeh; but I’m feelin’
so good about de last guy I stuck up I’ll let
youse off dis time.’”
“I do not know what you are
talking about,” replied Yellow Franz; “but
if you want to pray you’d better hurry up about
it.”
He drew his pistol from its holster
on the belt at his hips.
Now Barney Custer had no mind to give
up the ghost without a struggle; but just how he was
to overcome the great beast who confronted him with
menacing pistol was, to say the least, not precisely
plain. He wished the man would come a little nearer
where he might have some chance to close with him
before the fellow could fire. To gain time the
American assumed a prayerful attitude, but kept one
eye on the bandit.
Presently Yellow Franz showed indications
of impatience. He fingered the trigger of his
weapon, and then slowly raised it on a line with Barney’s
chest.
“Hadn’t you better come
closer?” asked the young man. “You
might miss at that distance, or just wound me.”
Yellow Franz grinned.
“I don’t miss,”
he said, and then: “You’re certainly
a game one. If it wasn’t for the hundred
thousand marks, I’d be hanged if I’d kill
you.”
“The chances are that you will
be if you do,” said Barney, “so wouldn’t
you rather take one hundred and fifty thousand marks
and let me make my escape?”
Yellow Franz looked at the speaker
a moment through narrowed lids.
“Where would you find any one
willing to pay that amount for a crazy king?”
he asked.
“I have told you that I am not
the king,” said Barney. “I am an
American with a father who would gladly pay that amount
on my safe delivery to any American consul.”
Yellow Franz shook his head and tapped
his brow significantly.
“Even if you was what you are
dreaming, it wouldn’t pay me,” he said.
“I’ll make it two hundred thousand,”
said Barney.
“No—it’s a
waste of time talking about it. It’s worth
more than money to me to know that I’ll always
have this thing on Peter, and that when he’s
king he won’t dare bother me for fear I’ll
publish the details of this little deal. Come,
you must be through praying by this time. I can’t
wait around here all night.” Again Yellow
Franz raised his pistol toward Barney’s heart.
Before the brigand could pull the
trigger, or Barney hurl himself upon his would-be
assassin, there was a flash and a loud report from
the open window of the shack.
With a groan Yellow Franz crumpled
to the dirt floor, and simultaneously Barney was upon
him and had wrested the pistol from his hand; but
the precaution was unnecessary for Yellow Franz would
never again press finger to trigger. He was dead
even before Barney reached his side.
In possession of the weapon, the American
turned toward the window from which had come the rescuing
shot, and as he did so he saw the boy, Rudolph, clambering
over the sill, white-faced and trembling. In
his hand was a smoking carbine, and on his brow great
beads of cold sweat.
“God forgive me!” murmured
the youth. “I have killed a man.”
“You have killed a dangerous
wild beast, Rudolph,” said Barney, “and
both God and your fellow man will thank and reward
you.”
“I am glad that I killed him,
though,” went on the boy, “for he would
have killed you, my king, had I not done so. Gladly
would I go to the gallows to save my king.”
“You are a brave lad, Rudolph,”
said Barney, “and if ever I get out of the pretty
pickle I’m in you’ll be well rewarded for
your loyalty to Leopold of Lutha. After all,”
thought the young man, “being a kind has its
redeeming features, for if the boy had not thought
me his monarch he would never have risked the vengeance
of the bloodthirsty brigands in this attempt to save
me.”
“Hasten, your majesty,”
whispered the boy, tugging at the sleeve of Barney’s
jacket. “There is no time to be lost.
We must be far away from here when the others discover
that Yellow Franz has been killed.”
Barney stooped above the dead man,
and removing his belt and cartridges transferred them
to his own person. Then blowing out the lantern
the two slipped out into the darkness of the night.
About the camp fire of the brigands
the entire pack was congregated. They were talking
together in low voices, ever and anon glancing expectantly
toward the shack to which their chief had gone to
dispatch the king. It is not every day that a
king is murdered, and even these hardened cut-throats
felt the spell of awe at the thought of what they
believed the sharp report they had heard from the shack
portended.
Keeping well to the far side of the
clearing, Rudolph led Barney around the group of men
and safely into the wood below them. From this
point the boy followed the trail which Barney and his
captors had traversed two days previously, until he
came to a diverging ravine that led steeply up through
the mountains upon their right hand.
In the distance behind them they suddenly
heard, faintly, the shouting of men.
“They have discovered Yellow
Franz,” whispered the boy, shuddering.
“Then they’ll be after us directly,”
said Barney.
“Yes, your majesty,” replied
Rudolph, “but in the darkness they will not
see that we have turned up this ravine, and so they
will ride on down the other. I have chosen this
way because their horses cannot follow us here, and
thus we shall be under no great disadvantage.
It may be, however, that we shall have to hide in
the mountains for a while, since there will be no
place of safety for us between here and Lustadt until
after the edge of their anger is dulled.”
And such proved to be the case, for
try as they would they found it impossible to reach
Lustadt without detection by the brigands who patrolled
every highway and byway from their rugged mountains
to the capital of Lutha.
For nearly three weeks Barney and
the boy hid in caves or dense underbrush by day, and
by night sought some avenue which would lead them
past the vigilant sentries that patrolled the ways
to freedom.
Often they were wet by rains, nor
were they ever in the warm sunlight for a sufficient
length of time to become thoroughly dry and comfortable.
Of food they had little, and of the poorest quality.
They dared not light a fire for warmth
or cooking, and their light was so miserable that,
but for the boy’s pitiful terror at the thought
of being recaptured by the bandits, Barney would long
since have made a break for Lustadt, depending upon
their arms and ammunition to carry them safely through
were they discovered by their enemies.
Rudolph had contracted a severe cold
the first night, and now, it having settled upon his
lungs, he had developed a persistent and aggravating
cough that caused Barney not a little apprehension.
When, after nearly three weeks of suffering and privation,
it became clear that the boy’s lungs were affected,
the American decided to take matters into his own
hands and attempt to reach Lustadt and a good doctor;
but before he had an opportunity to put his plan into
execution the entire matter was removed from his jurisdiction.
It happened like this: After
a particularly fatiguing and uncomfortable night spent
in attempting to elude the sentinels who blocked their
way from the mountains, daylight found them near a
little spring, and here they decided to rest for an
hour before resuming their way.
The little pool lay not far from a
clump of heavy bushes which would offer them excellent
shelter, as it was Barney’s intention to go
into hiding as soon as they had quenched their thirst
at the spring.
Rudolph was coughing pitifully, his
slender frame wracked by the convulsion of each new
attack. Barney had placed an arm about the boy
to support him, for the paroxysms always left him very
weak.
The young man’s heart went out
to the poor boy, and pangs of regret filled his mind
as he realized that the child’s pathetic condition
was the direct result of his self-sacrificing attempt
to save his king. Barney felt much like a murderer
and a thief, and dreaded the time when the boy should
be brought to a realization of his mistake.
He had come to feel a warm affection
for the loyal little lad, who had suffered so uncomplainingly
and whose every thought had been for the safety and
comfort of his king.
Today, thought Barney, I’ll
take this child through to Lustadt even if every ragged
brigand in Lutha lies between us and the capital;
but even as he spoke a sudden crashing of underbrush
behind caused him to wheel about, and there, not twenty
paces from them, stood two of Yellow Franz’s
cutthroats.
At sight of Barney and the lad they
gave voice to a shout of triumph, and raising their
carbines fired point-blank at the two fugitives.
But Barney had been equally as quick
with his own weapon, and at the moment that they fired
he grasped Rudolph and dragged him backward to a great
boulder behind which their bodies might be protected
from the fire of their enemies.
Both the bullets of the bandits’
first volley had been directed at Barney, for it was
upon his head that the great price rested. They
had missed him by a narrow margin, due, perhaps, to
the fact that the mounts of the brigands had been
prancing in alarm at the unexpected sight of the two
strangers at the very moment that their riders attempted
to take aim and fire.
But now they had ridden back into
the brush and dismounted, and after hiding their ponies
they came creeping out upon their bellies upon opposite
sides of Barney’s shelter.
The American saw that it would be
an easy thing for them to pick him off if he remained
where he was, and so with a word to Rudolph he sprang
up and the boy with him. Each delivered a quick
shot at the bandit nearest him, and then together
they broke for the bushes in which the brigand’s
mounts were hidden.
Two shots answered theirs. Rudolph,
who was ahead of Barney, stumbled and threw up his
hands. He would have fallen had not the American
thrown a strong arm about him.
“I’m shot, your majesty,”
murmured the boy, his head dropping against Barney’s
breast.
With the lad grasped close to him,
the young man turned at the edge of the brush to meet
the charge of the two ruffians. The wounding of
the youth had delayed them just enough to preclude
their making this temporary refuge in safety.
As Barney turned both the men fired
simultaneously, and both missed. The American
raised his revolver, and with the flash of it the
foremost brigand came to a sudden stop. An expression
of bewilderment crossed his features. He extended
his arms straight before him, the revolver slipped
from his grasp, and then like a dying top he pivoted
once drunkenly and collapsed upon the turf.
At the instant of his fall his companion
and the American fired point-blank at one another.
Barney felt a burning sensation in
his shoulder, but it was forgotten for the moment
in the relief that came to him as he saw the second
rascal sprawl headlong upon his face. Then he
turned his attention to the limp little figure that
hung across his left arm.
Gently Barney laid the boy upon the
sward, and fetching water from the pool bathed his
face and forced a few drops between the white lips.
The cooling draft revived the wounded child, but brought
on a paroxysm of coughing. When this had subsided
Rudolph raised his eyes to those of the man bending
above him.
“Thank God, your majesty is
unharmed,” he whispered. “Now I can
die in peace.”
The white lids drooped lower, and
with a tired sigh the boy lay quiet. Tears came
to the young man’s eyes as he let the limp body
gently to the ground.
“Brave little heart,”
he murmured, “you gave up your life in the service
of your king as truly as though you had not been all
mistaken in the object of your veneration, and if it
lies within the power of Barney Custer you shall not
have died in vain.”