THE CORONATION DAY
Toward dusk of the day upon which
the mad king of Lutha had been found, a dust-covered
horseman reined in before the great gate of the castle
of Prince Ludwig von der Tann. The unsettled political
conditions which overhung the little kingdom of Lutha
were evident in the return to medievalism which the
raised portcullis and the armed guard upon the barbican
of the ancient feudal fortress revealed. Not
for a hundred years before had these things been done
other than as a part of the ceremonials of a fete day,
or in honor of visiting royalty.
At the challenge from the gate Barney
replied that he bore a message for the prince.
Slowly the portcullis sank into position across the
moat and an officer advanced to meet the rider.
“The prince has ridden to Lustadt
with a large retinue,” he said, “to attend
the coronation of Peter of Blentz tomorrow.”
“Prince Ludwig von der Tann
has gone to attend the coronation of Peter!”
cried Barney in amazement. “Has the Princess
Emma returned from her captivity in the castle of
Blentz?”
“She is with her father now,
having returned nearly three weeks ago,” replied
the officer, “and Peter has disclaimed responsibility
for the outrage, promising that those responsible shall
be punished. He has convinced Prince Ludwig that
Leopold is dead, and for the sake of Lutha—to
save her from civil strife—my prince has
patched a truce with Peter; though unless I mistake
the character of the latter and the temper of the
former it will be short-lived.
“To demonstrate to the people,”
continued the officer, “that Prince Ludwig and
Peter are good friends, the great Von der Tann will
attend the coronation, but that he takes little stock
in the sincerity of the Prince of Blentz would be
apparent could the latter have a peep beneath the
cloaks and look into the loyal hearts of the men of
Tann who rode down to Lustadt today.”
Barney did not wait to hear more.
He was glad that in the gathering dusk the officer
had not seen his face plainly enough to mistake him
for the king. With a parting, “Then I must
ride to Lustadt with my message for the prince,”
he wheeled his tired mount and trotted down the steep
trail from Tann toward the highway which leads to the
capital.
All night Barney rode. Three
times he wandered from the way and was forced to stop
at farmhouses to inquire the proper direction; but
darkness hid his features from the sleepy eyes of those
who answered his summons, and daylight found him still
forging ahead in the direction of the capital of Lutha.
The American was sunk in unhappy meditation
as his weary little mount plodded slowly along the
dusty road. For hours the man had not been able
to urge the beast out of a walk. The loss of time
consequent upon his having followed wrong roads during
the night and the exhaustion of the pony which retarded
his speed to what seemed little better than a snail’s
pace seemed to assure the failure of his mission,
for at best he could not reach Lustadt before noon.
There was no possibility of bringing
Leopold to his capital in time for the coronation,
and but a bare possibility that Prince Ludwig would
accept the word of an entire stranger that Leopold
lived, for the acknowledgment of such a condition
by the old prince could result in nothing less than
an immediate resort to arms by the two factions.
It was certain that Peter would be infinitely more
anxious to proceed with his coronation should it be
rumored that Leopold lived, and equally certain that
Prince Ludwig would interpose every obstacle, even
to armed resistance, to prevent the consummation of
the ceremony.
Yet there seemed to Barney no other
alternative than to place before the king’s
one powerful friend the information that he had.
It would then rest with Ludwig to do what he thought
advisable.
An hour from Lustadt the road wound
through a dense forest, whose pleasant shade was a
grateful relief to both horse and rider from the hot
sun beneath which they had been journeying the greater
part of the morning. Barney was still lost in
thought, his eyes bent forward, when at a sudden turning
of the road he came face to face with a troop of horse
that were entering the main highway at this point
from an unfrequented byroad.
At sight of them the American instinctively
wheeled his mount in an effort to escape, but at a
command from an officer a half dozen troopers spurred
after him, their fresh horses soon overtaking his
jaded pony.
For a moment Barney contemplated resistance,
for these were troopers of the Royal Horse, the body
which was now Peter’s most effective personal
tool; but even as his hand slipped to the butt of one
of the revolvers at his hip, the young man saw the
foolish futility of such a course, and with a shrug
and a smile he drew rein and turned to face the advancing
soldiers.
As he did so the officer rode up,
and at sight of Barney’s face gave an exclamation
of astonishment. The officer was Butzow.
“Well met, your majesty,”
he cried saluting. “We are riding to the
coronation. We shall be just in time.”
“To see Peter of Blentz rob
Leopold of a crown,” said the American in a
disgusted tone.
“To see Leopold of Lutha come
into his own, your majesty. Long live the king!”
cried the officer.
Barney thought the man either poking
fun at him because he was not the king, or, thinking
he was Leopold, taking a mean advantage of his helplessness
to bait him. Yet this last suspicion seemed unfair
to Butzow, who at Blentz had given ample evidence that
he was a gentleman, and of far different caliber from
Maenck and the others who served Peter.
If he could but convince the man that
he was no king and thus gain his liberty long enough
to reach Prince Ludwig’s ear, his mission would
have been served in so far as it lay in his power to
serve it. For some minutes Barney expended his
best eloquence and logic upon the cavalry officer
in an effort to convince him that he was not Leopold.
The king had given the American his
great ring to safeguard for him until it should be
less dangerous for Leopold to wear it, and for fear
that at the last moment someone within the sanatorium
might recognize it and bear word to Peter of the king’s
whereabouts. Barney had worn it turned in upon
the third finger of his left hand, and now he slipped
it surreptitiously into his breeches pocket lest Butzow
should see it and by it be convinced that Barney was
indeed Leopold.
“Never mind who you are,”
cried Butzow, thinking to humor the king’s strange
obsession. “You look enough like Leopold
to be his twin, and you must help us save Lutha from
Peter of Blentz.”
The American showed in his expression
the surprise he felt at these words from an officer
of the prince regent.
“You wonder at my change of heart?” asked
Butzow.
“How can I do otherwise?”
“I cannot blame you,”
said the officer. “Yet I think that when
you know the truth you will see that I have done only
that which I believed to be the duty of a patriotic
officer and a true gentleman.”
They had rejoined the troop by this
time, and the entire company was once more headed
toward Lustadt. Butzow had commanded one of the
troopers to exchange horses with Barney, bringing the
jaded animal into the city slowly, and now freshly
mounted the American was making better time toward
his destination. His spirits rose, and as they
galloped along the highway, he listened with renewed
interest to the story which Lieutenant Butzow narrated
in detail.
It seemed that Butzow had been absent
from Lutha for a number of years as military attache
to the Luthanian legation at a foreign court.
He had known nothing of the true condition at home
until his return, when he saw such scoundrels as Coblich,
Maenck, and Stein high in the favor of the prince
regent. For some time before the events that
had transpired after he had brought Barney and the
Princess Emma to Blentz he had commenced to have his
doubts as to the true patriotism of Peter of Blentz;
and when he had learned through the unguarded words
of Schonau that there was a real foundation for the
rumor that the regent had plotted the assassination
of the king his suspicions had crystallized into knowledge,
and he had sworn to serve his king before all others—were
he sane or mad. From this loyalty he could not
be shaken.
“And what do you intend doing now?” asked
Barney.
“I intend placing you upon the
throne of your ancestors, sire,” replied Butzow;
“nor will Peter of Blentz dare the wrath of the
people by attempting to interpose any obstacle.
When he sees Leopold of Lutha ride into the capital
of his kingdom at the head of even so small a force
as ours he will know that the end of his own power
is at hand, for he is not such a fool that he does
not perfectly realize that he is the most cordially
hated man in all Lutha, and that only those attend
upon him who hope to profit through his success or
who fear his evil nature.”
“If Peter is crowned today,”
asked Barney, “will it prevent Leopold regaining
his throne?”
“It is difficult to say,”
replied Butzow; “but the chances are that the
throne would be lost to him forever. To regain
it he would have to plunge Lutha into a bitter civil
war, for once Peter is proclaimed king he will have
the law upon his side, and with the resources of the
State behind him—the treasury and the army—he
will feel in no mood to relinquish the scepter without
a struggle. I doubt much that you will ever sit
upon your throne, sire, unless you do so within the
very next hour.”
For some time Barney rode in silence.
He saw that only by a master stroke could the crown
be saved for the true king. Was it worth it?
The man was happier without a crown. Barney had
come to believe that no man lived who could be happy
in possession of one. Then there came before
his mind’s eye the delicate, patrician face of
Emma von der Tann.
Would Peter of Blentz be true to his
new promises to the house of Von der Tann? Barney
doubted it. He recalled all that it might mean
of danger and suffering to the girl whose kisses he
still felt upon his lips as though it had been but
now that hers had placed them there. He recalled
the limp little body of the boy, Rudolph, and the
Spartan loyalty with which the little fellow had given
his life in the service of the man he had thought
king. The pitiful figure of the fear-haunted
man upon the iron cot at Tafelberg rose before him
and cried for vengeance.
To this man was the woman he loved
betrothed! He knew that he might never wed the
Princess Emma. Even were she not promised to another,
the iron shackles of convention and age-old customs
must forever separate her from an untitled American.
But if he couldn’t have her he still could serve
her!
“For her sake,” he muttered.
“Did your majesty speak?” asked Butzow.
“Yes, lieutenant. We urge
greater haste, for if we are to be crowned today we
have no time to lose.”
Butzow smiled a relieved smile.
The king had at last regained his senses!
Within the ancient cathedral at Lustadt
a great and gorgeously attired assemblage had congregated.
All the nobles of Lutha were gathered there with their
wives, their children, and their retainers. There
were the newer nobility of the lowlands—many
whose patents dated but since the regency of Peter—and
there were the proud nobility of the highlands—the
old nobility of which Prince Ludwig von der Tann was
the chief.
It was noticeable that though a truce
had been made between Ludwig and Peter, yet the former
chancellor of the kingdom did not stand upon the chancel
with the other dignitaries of the State and court.
Few there were who knew that he had
been invited to occupy a place of honor there, and
had replied that he would take no active part in the
making of any king in Lutha whose veins did not pulse
to the flow of the blood of the house in whose service
he had grown gray.
Close packed were the retainers of
the old prince so that their great number was scarcely
noticeable, though quite so was the fact that they
kept their cloaks on, presenting a somber appearance
in the midst of all the glitter of gold and gleam
of jewels that surrounded them—a grim,
business-like appearance that cast a chill upon Peter
of Blentz as his eyes scanned the multitude of faces
below him.
He would have shown his indignation
at this seeming affront had he dared; but until the
crown was safely upon his head and the royal scepter
in his hand Peter had no mind to do aught that might
jeopardize the attainment of the power he had sought
for the past ten years.
The solemn ceremony was all but completed;
the Bishop of Lustadt had received the great golden
crown from the purple cushion upon which it had been
borne at the head of the procession which accompanied
Peter up the broad center aisle of the cathedral.
He had raised it above the head of the prince regent,
and was repeating the solemn words which precede the
placing of the golden circlet upon the man’s
brow. In another moment Peter of Blentz would
be proclaimed the king of Lutha.
By her father’s side stood Emma
von der Tann. Upon her haughty, high-bred face
there was no sign of the emotions which ran riot within
her fair bosom. In the act that she was witnessing
she saw the eventual ruin of her father’s house.
That Peter would long want for an excuse to break
and humble his ancient enemy she did not believe;
but this was not the only cause for the sorrow that
overwhelmed her.
Her most poignant grief, like that
of her father, was for the dead king, Leopold; but
to the sorrow of the loyal subject was added the grief
of the loving woman, bereft. Close to her heart
she hugged the memory of the brief hours spent with
the man whom she had been taught since childhood to
look upon as her future husband, but for whom the
all-consuming fires of love had only been fanned to
life within her since that moment, now three weeks
gone, that he had crushed her to his breast to cover
her lips with kisses for the short moment ere he sacrificed
his life to save her from a fate worse than death.
Before her stood the Nemesis of her
dead king. The last act of the hideous crime
against the man she had loved was nearing its close.
As the crown, poised over the head of Peter of Blentz,
sank slowly downward the girl felt that she could
scarce restrain her desire to shriek aloud a protest
against the wicked act—the crowning of a
murderer king of her beloved Lutha.
A glance at the old man at her side
showed her the stern, commanding features of her sire
molded in an expression of haughty dignity; only the
slight movement of the muscles of the strong jaw revealed
the tensity of the hidden emotions of the stern old
warrior. He was meeting disappointment and defeat
as a Von der Tann should—brave to the end.
The crown had all but touched the
head of Peter of Blentz when a sudden commotion at
the back of the cathedral caused the bishop to look
up in ill-concealed annoyance. At the sight that
met his eyes his hands halted in mid-air.
The great audience turned as one toward
the doors at the end of the long central aisle.
There, through the wide-swung portals, they saw mounted
men forcing their way into the cathedral. The
great horses shouldered aside the foot-soldiers that
attempted to bar their way, and twenty troopers of
the Royal Horse thundered to the very foot of the
chancel steps.
At their head rode Lieutenant Butzow
and a tall young man in soiled and tattered khaki,
whose gray eyes and full reddish-brown beard brought
an exclamation from Captain Maenck who commanded the
guard about Peter of Blentz.
“Mein Gott—the king!”
cried Maenck, and at the words Peter went white.
In open-mouthed astonishment the spectators
saw the hurrying troopers and heard Butzow’s
“The king! The king! Make way for
Leopold, King of Lutha!”
And a girl saw, and as she saw her
heart leaped to her mouth. Her small hand gripped
the sleeve of her father’s coat. “The
king, father,” she cried. “It is
the king.”
Old Von der Tann, the light of a new
hope firing his eyes, threw aside his cloak and leaped
to the chancel steps beside Butzow and the others
who were mounting them. Behind him a hundred cloaks
dropped from the shoulders of his fighting men, exposing
not silks and satins and fine velvet, but the coarse
tan of khaki, and grim cartridge belts well filled,
and stern revolvers slung to well-worn service belts.
As Butzow and Barney stepped upon
the chancel Peter of Blentz leaped forward. “What
mad treason is this?” he fairly screamed.
“The days of treason are now
past, prince,” replied Butzow meaningly.
“Here is not treason, but Leopold of Lutha come
to claim his crown which he inherited from his father.”
“It is a plot,” cried
Peter, “to place an impostor upon the throne!
This man is not the king.”
For a moment there was silence.
The people had not taken sides as yet. They
awaited a leader. Old Von der Tann scrutinized
the American closely.
“How may we know that you are
Leopold?” he asked. “For ten years
we have not seen our king.”
“The governor of Blentz has
already acknowledged his identity,” cried Butzow.
“Maenck was the first to proclaim the presence
of the putative king.”
At that someone near the chancel cried:
“Long live Leopold, king of Lutha!” and
at the words the whole assemblage raised their voices
in a tumultuous: “Long live the king!”
Peter of Blentz turned toward Maenck.
“The guard!” he cried. “Arrest
those traitors, and restore order in the cathedral.
Let the coronation proceed.”
Maenck took a step toward Barney and
Butzow, when old Prince von der Tann interposed his
giant frame with grim resolve.
“Hold!” He spoke in a
low, stern voice that brought the cowardly Maenck
to a sudden halt.
The men of Tann had pressed eagerly
forward until they stood, with bared swords, a solid
rank of fighting men in grim semicircle behind their
chief. There were cries from different parts of
the cathedral of: “Crown Leopold, our true
king! Down with Peter! Down with the assassin!”
“Enough of this,” cried Peter. “Clear
the cathedral!”
He drew his own sword, and with half
a hundred loyal retainers at his back pressed forward
to clear the chancel. There was a brief fight,
from which Barney, much to his disgust, was barred
by the mighty figure of the old prince and the stalwart
sword-arm of Butzow. He did get one crack at
Maenck, and had the satisfaction of seeing blood spurt
from a flesh wound across the fellow’s cheek.
“That for the Princess Emma,”
he called to the governor of Blentz, and then men
crowded between them and he did not see the captain
again during the battle.
When Peter saw that more than half
of the palace guard were shouting for Leopold, and
fighting side by side with the men of Tann, he realized
the futility of further armed resistance at this time.
Slowly he withdrew, and at last the fighting ceased
and some semblance of order was restored within the
cathedral.
Fearfully, the bishop emerged from
hiding, his robes disheveled and his miter askew.
Butzow grasped him none too reverently by the arm
and dragged him before Barney. The crown of Lutha
dangled in the priest’s palsied hands.
“Crown the king!” cried
the lieutenant. “Crown Leopold, king of
Lutha!”
A mad roar of acclaim greeted this
demand, and again from all parts of the cathedral
rose the same wild cry. But in the lull that
followed there were some who demanded proof of the
tattered young man who stood before them and claimed
that he was king.
“Let Prince Ludwig speak!” cried a dozen
voices.
“Yes, Prince Ludwig! Prince Ludwig!”
took up the throng.
Prince Ludwig von der Tann turned
toward the bearded young man. Silence fell upon
the crowded cathedral. Peter of Blentz stood
awaiting the outcome, ready to demand the crown upon
the first indication of wavering belief in the man
he knew was not Leopold.
“How may we know that you are
really Leopold?” again asked Ludwig of Barney.
The American raised his left hand,
upon the third finger of which gleamed the great ruby
of the royal ring of the kings of Lutha. Even
Peter of Blentz started back in surprise as his eyes
fell upon the ring.
Where had the man come upon it?
Prince von der Tann dropped to one
knee before Mr. Bernard Custer of Beatrice, Nebraska,
U.S.A., and lifted that gentleman’s hand to his
lips, and as the people of Lutha saw the act they went
mad with joy.
Slowly Prince Ludwig rose and addressed
the bishop. “Leopold, the rightful heir
to the throne of Lutha, is here. Let the coronation
proceed.”
The quiet of the sepulcher fell upon
the assemblage as the holy man raised the crown above
the head of the king. Barney saw from the corner
of his eye the sea of faces upturned toward him.
He saw the relief and happiness upon the stern countenance
of the old prince.
He hated to dash all their new found
joy by the announcement that he was not the king.
He could not do that, for the moment he did Peter
would step forward and demand that his own coronation
continue. How was he to save the throne for Leopold?
Among the faces beneath him he suddenly
descried that of a beautiful young girl whose eyes,
filled with the tears of a great happiness and a greater
love, were upturned to his. To reveal his true
identity would lose him this girl forever. None
save Peter knew that he was not the king. All
save Peter would hail him gladly as Leopold of Lutha.
How easily he might win a throne and the woman he loved
by a moment of seeming passive compliance.
The temptation was great, and then
he recalled the boy, lying dead for his king in the
desolate mountains, and the pathetic light in the
eyes of the sorrowful man at Tafelberg, and the great
trust and confidence in the heart of the woman who
had shown that she loved him.
Slowly Barney Custer raised his palm
toward the bishop in a gesture of restraint.
“There are those who doubt that
I am king,” he said. “In these circumstances
there should be no coronation in Lutha until all doubts
are allayed and all may unite in accepting without
question the royal right of the true Leopold to the
crown of his father. Let the coronation wait,
then, until another day, and all will be well.”
“It must take place before noon
of the fifth day of November, or not until a year
later,” said Prince Ludwig. “In the
meantime the Prince Regent must continue to rule.
For the sake of Lutha the coronation must take place
today, your majesty.”
“What is the date?” asked Barney.
“The third, sire.”
“Let the coronation wait until the fifth.”
“But your majesty,” interposed
Von der Tann, “all may be lost in two days.”
“It is the king’s command,” said
Barney quietly.
“But Peter of Blentz will rule
for these two days, and in that time with the army
at his command there is no telling what he may accomplish,”
insisted the old man.
“Peter of Blentz shall not rule
Lutha for two days, or two minutes,” replied
Barney. “We shall rule. Lieutenant
Butzow, you may place Prince Peter, Coblich, Maenck,
and Stein under arrest. We charge them with treason
against their king, and conspiring to assassinate
their rightful monarch.”
Butzow smiled as he turned with his
troopers at his back to execute this most welcome
of commissions; but in a moment he was again at Barney’s
side.
“They have fled, your majesty,”
he said. “Shall I ride to Blentz after
them?”
“Let them go,” replied
the American, and then, with his retinue about him
the new king of Lutha passed down the broad aisle of
the cathedral of Lustadt and took his way to the royal
palace between ranks of saluting soldiery backed by
cheering thousands.