THE KING’S GUESTS
Once within the palace Barney sought
the seclusion of a small room off the audience chamber.
Here he summoned Butzow.
“Lieutenant,” said the
American, “for the sake of a woman, a dead child
and an unhappy king I have become dictator of Lutha
for forty-eight hours; but at noon upon the fifth
this farce must cease. Then we must place the
true Leopold upon the throne, or a new dictator must
replace me.
“In vain I have tried to convince
you that I am not the king, and today in the cathedral
so great was the temptation to take advantage of the
odd train of circumstances that had placed a crown
within my reach that I all but surrendered to it—not
for the crown of gold, Butzow, but for an infinitely
more sacred diadem which belongs to him to whom by
right of birth and lineage, belongs the crown of Lutha.
I do not ask you to understand—it is not
necessary—but this you must know and believe:
that I am not Leopold, and that the true Leopold lies
in hiding in the sanatorium at Tafelberg, from which
you and I, Butzow, must fetch him to Lustadt before
noon on the fifth.”
“But, sire—”
commenced Butzow, when Barney raised his hand.
“Enough of that, Butzow!”
he cried almost irritably. “I am sick of
being ‘sired’ and ’majestied’—my
name is Custer. Call me that when others are
not present. Believe what you will, but ride with
me in secrecy to Tafelberg tonight, and together we
shall bring back Leopold of Lutha. Then we may
call Prince Ludwig into our confidence, and none need
ever know of the substitution.
“I doubt if many had a sufficiently
close view of me today to realize the trick that I
have played upon them, and if they note a difference
they will attribute it to the change in apparel, for
we shall see to it that the king is fittingly garbed
before we exhibit him to his subjects, while hereafter
I shall continue in khaki, which becomes me better
than ermine.”
Butzow shook his head.
“King or dictator,” he
said, “it is all the same, and I must obey whatever
commands you see fit to give, and so I will ride to
Tafelberg tonight, though what we shall find there
I cannot imagine, unless there are two Leopolds of
Lutha. But shall we also find another royal ring
upon the finger of this other king?”
Barney smiled. “You’re
a typical hard-headed Dutchman, Butzow,” he
said.
The lieutenant drew himself up haughtily.
“I am not a Dutchman, your majesty. I
am a Luthanian.”
Barney laughed. “Whatever
else you may be, Butzow, you’re a brick,”
he said, laying his hand upon the other’s arm.
Butzow looked at him narrowly.
“From your speech,” he
said, “and the occasional Americanisms into
which you fall I might believe that you were other
than the king but for the ring.”
“It is my commission from the
king,” replied Barney. “Leopold
placed it upon my finger in token of his royal authority
to act in his behalf. Tonight, then Butzow, you
and I shall ride to Tafelberg. Have three good
horses. We must lead one for the king.”
Butzow saluted and left the apartment.
For an hour or two the American was busy with tailors
whom he had ordered sent to the palace to measure
him for the numerous garments of a royal wardrobe,
for he knew the king to be near enough his own size
that he might easily wear clothes that had been fitted
to Barney; and it was part of his plan to have everything
in readiness for the substitution which was to take
place the morning of the coronation.
Then there were foreign dignitaries,
and the heads of numerous domestic and civic delegations
to be given audience. Old Von der Tann stood
close behind Barney prompting him upon the royal duties
that had fallen so suddenly upon his shoulders, and
none thought it strange that he was unfamiliar with
the craft of kingship, for was it not common knowledge
that he had been kept a close prisoner in Blentz since
boyhood, nor been given any coaching for the duties
Peter of Blentz never intended he should perform?
After it was all over Prince Ludwig’s
grim and leathery face relaxed into a smile of satisfaction.
“None who witnessed the conduct
of your first audience, sire,” he said, “could
for a moment doubt your royal lineage—if
ever a man was born to kingship, your majesty, it
be you.”
Barney smiled, a bit ruefully, however,
for in his mind’s eye he saw a future moment
when the proud old Prince von der Tann would know
the truth of the imposture that had been played upon
him, and the young man foresaw that he would have
a rather unpleasant half-hour.
At a little distance from them Barney
saw Emma von der Tann surrounded by a group of officials
and palace officers. Since he had come to Lustadt
that day he had had no word with her, and now he crossed
toward her, amused as the throng parted to form an
aisle for him, the men saluting and the women curtsying
low.
He took both of the girl’s hands
in his, and, drawing one through his arm, took advantage
of the prerogatives of kingship to lead her away from
the throng of courtiers.
“I thought that I should never
be done with all the tiresome business which seems
to devolve upon kings,” he said, laughing.
“All the while that I should have been bending
my royal intellect to matters of state, I was wondering
just how a king might find a way to see the woman
he loves without interruptions from the horde that
dogs his footsteps.”
“You seem to have found a way,
Leopold,” she whispered, pressing his arm close
to her. “Kings usually do.”
“It is not because I am a king
that I found a way, Emma,” he replied.
“It is because I am an American.”
She looked up at him with an expression
of pleading in her eyes.
“Why do you persist?”
she cried. “You have come into your own,
and there is no longer aught to fear from Peter or
any other. To me at least, it is most unkind
still to deny your identity.”
“I wonder,” said Barney,
“if your love could withstand the knowledge
that I am not the king.”
“It is the man I love, Leopold,”
the girl replied.
“You think so now,” he
said, “but wait until the test comes, and when
it does, remember that I have always done my best to
undeceive you. I know that you are not for such
as I, my princess, and when I have returned your true
king to you all that I shall ask is that you be happy
with him.”
“I shall always be happy with
my king,” she whispered, and the look that she
gave him made Barney Custer curse the fate that had
failed to make him a king by birth.
An hour later darkness had fallen
upon the little city of Lustadt, and from a small
gateway in the rear of the palace grounds two horsemen
rode out into the ill-paved street and turned their
mounts’ heads toward the north. At the
side of one trotted a led horse.
As they passed beneath the glare of
an arc-light before a cafe at the side of the public
square, a diner sitting at a table upon the walk spied
the tall figure and the bearded face of him who rode
a few feet in advance of his companion. Leaping
to his feet the man waved his napkin above his head.
“Long live the king!”
he cried. “God save Leopold of Lutha!”
And amid the din of cheering that
followed, Barney Custer of Beatrice and Lieutenant
Butzow of the Royal Horse rode out into the night
upon the road to Tafelberg.
When Peter of Blentz had escaped from
the cathedral he had hastily mounted with a handful
of his followers and hurried out of Lustadt along
the road toward his formidable fortress at Blentz.
Half way upon the journey he had met a dusty and travel-stained
horseman hastening toward the capital city that Peter
and his lieutenants had just left.
At sight of the prince regent the
fellow reined in and saluted.
“May I have a word in private
with your highness?” he asked. “I
have news of the greatest importance for your ears
alone.”
Peter drew to one side with the man.
“Well,” he asked, “and what news
have you for Peter of Blentz?”
The man leaned from his horse close to Peter’s
ear.
“The king is in Tafelberg, your highness,”
he said.
“The king is dead,” snapped
Peter. “There is an impostor in the palace
at Lustadt. But the real Leopold of Lutha was
slain by Yellow Franz’s band of brigands weeks
ago.”
“I heard the man at Tafelberg
tell another that he was the king,” insisted
the fellow. “Through the keyhole of his
room I saw him take a great ring from his finger—a
ring with a mighty ruby set in its center—and
give it to the other. Both were bearded men with
gray eyes—either might have passed for
the king by the description upon the placards that
have covered Lutha for the past month. At first
he denied his identity, but when the other had convinced
him that he sought only the king’s welfare he
at last admitted that he was Leopold.”
“Where is he now?” cried Peter.
“He is still in the sanatorium
at Tafelberg. In room twenty-seven. The
other promised to return for him and take him to Lustadt,
but when I left Tafelberg he had not yet done so,
and if you hasten you may reach there before they
take him away, and if there be any reward for my loyalty
to you, prince, my name is Ferrath.”
“Ride with us and if you have
told the truth, fellow, there shall be a reward and
if not—then there shall be deserts,”
and Peter of Blentz wheeled his horse and with his
company galloped on toward Tafelberg.
As he rode he talked with his lieutenants
Coblich, Maenck, and Stein, and among them it was
decided that it would be best that Peter stop at Blentz
for the night while the others rode on to Tafelberg.
“Do not bring Leopold to Blentz,”
directed Peter, “for if it be he who lies at
Tafelberg and they find him gone it will be toward
Blentz that they will first look. Take him—”
The Regent leaned from his saddle
so that his mouth was close to the ear of Coblich,
that none of the troopers might hear.
Coblich nodded his head.
“And, Coblich, the fewer that
ride to Tafelberg tonight the surer the success of
the mission. Take Maenck, Stein and one other
with you. I shall keep this man with me, for
it may prove but a plot to lure me to Tafelberg.”
Peter scowled at the now frightened
hospital attendant.
“Tomorrow I shall be riding
through the lowlands, Coblich, and so you may not
find means to communicate with me, but before noon
of the fifth have word at your town house in Lustadt
for me of the success of your venture.”
They had reached the point now where
the road to Tafelberg branches from that to Blentz,
and the four who were to fetch the king wheeled their
horses into the left-hand fork and cantered off upon
their mission.
The direct road between Lustadt and
Tafelberg is but little more than half the distance
of that which Coblich and his companions had to traverse
because of the wide detour they had made by riding
almost to Blentz first, and so it was that when they
cantered into the little mountain town near midnight
Barney Custer and Lieutenant Butzow were but a mile
or two behind them.
Had the latter had even the faintest
of suspicions that the identity of the hiding place
of the king might come to the knowledge of Peter of
Blentz they could have reached Tafelberg ahead of Coblich
and his party, but all unsuspecting they rode slowly
to conserve the energy of their mounts for the return
trip.
In silence the two men approached
the grounds surrounding the sanatorium. In the
soft dirt of the road the hoofs of their mounts made
no sound, and the shadows of the trees that border
the front of the enclosure hid them from the view
of the trooper who held four riderless horses in a
little patch of moonlight that broke through the opening
in the trees at the main gate of the institution.
Barney was the first to see the animals and the man.
“S-s-st,” he hissed, reining in his horse.
Butzow drew alongside the American.
“What can it mean?” asked
Barney. “That fellow is a trooper, but
I cannot make out his uniform.”
“Wait here,” said Butzow,
and slipping from his horse he crept closer to the
man, hugging the dense shadows close to the trees.
Barney reined in nearer the low wall.
From his saddle he could see the grounds beyond through
the branches of a tree. As he looked his attention
was suddenly riveted upon a sight that sent his heart
into his throat.
Three men were dragging a struggling,
half-naked figure down the gravel walk from the sanatorium
toward the gate. One kept a hand clapped across
the mouth of the prisoner, who struck and fought his
assailants with all the frenzy of despair.
Barney leaped from his saddle and
ran headlong after Butzow. The lieutenant had
reached the gate but an instant ahead of him when the
trooper, turning suddenly at some slight sound of the
officer’s foot upon the ground, detected the
man creeping upon him. In an instant the fellow
had whipped out a revolver, and raising it fired point-blank
at Butzow’s chest; but in the same instant a
figure shot out of the shadows beside him, and with
the report of the revolver a heavy fist caught the
trooper on the side of the chin, crumpling him to
the ground as if he were dead.
The blow had been in time to deflect
the muzzle of the firearm, and the bullet whistled
harmlessly past the lieutenant.
“Your majesty!” exclaimed
Butzow excitedly. “Go back. He might
have killed you.”
Barney leaped to the other’s
side and grasping him by the shoulders wheeled him
about so that he faced the gate.
“There, Butzow,” he cried,
“there is your king, and from the looks of it
he never needed a loyal subject more than he does this
moment. Come!” Without waiting to see if
the other followed him, Barney Custer leaped through
the gate full in the faces of the astonished trio
that was dragging Leopold of Lutha from his sanctuary.
At sight of the American the king
gave a muffled cry of relief, and then Barney was
upon those who held him. A stinging uppercut lifted
Coblich clear of the ground to drop him, dazed and
bewildered, at the foot of the monarch he had outraged.
Maenck drew a revolver only to have it struck from
his hand by the sword of Butzow, who had followed
closely upon the American’s heels.
Barney, seizing the king by the arm,
started on a run for the gateway. In his wake
came Butzow with a drawn sword beating back Stein,
who was armed with a cavalry saber, and Maenck who
had now drawn his own sword.
The American saw that the two were
pressing Butzow much too closely for safety and that
Coblich had now recovered from the effects of the
blow and was in pursuit, drawing his saber as he ran.
Barney thrust the king behind him and turned to face
the enemy, at Butzow’s side.
The three men rushed upon the two
who stood between them and their prey. The moonlight
was now full in the faces of Butzow and the American.
For the first time Maenck and the others saw who it
was that had interrupted them.
“The impostor!” cried
the governor of Blentz. “The false king!”
Imbued with temporary courage by the
knowledge that his side had the advantage of superior
numbers he launched himself full upon the American.
To his surprise he met a sword-arm that none might
have expected in an American, for Barney Custer had
been a pupil of the redoubtable Colonel Monstery,
who was, as Barney was wont to say, “one of
the thanwhomest of fencing masters.”
Quickly Maenck fell back to give place
to Stein, but not before the American’s point
had found him twice to leave him streaming blood from
two deep flesh wounds.
Neither of those who fought in the
service of the king saw the trembling, weak-kneed
figure, which had stood behind them, turn and scurry
through the gateway, leaving the men who battled for
him to their fate.
The trooper whom Barney had felled
had regained consciousness and as he came to his feet
rubbing his swollen jaw he saw a disheveled, half-dressed
figure running toward him from the sanatorium grounds.
The fellow was no fool, and knowing the purpose of
the expedition as he did he was quick to jump to the
conclusion that this fleeing personification of abject
terror was Leopold of Lutha; and so it was that as
the king emerged from the gateway in search of freedom
he ran straight into the widespread arms of the trooper.
Maenck and Coblich had seen the king’s
break for liberty, and the latter maneuvered to get
himself between Butzow and the open gate that he might
follow after the fleeing monarch.
At the same instant Maenck, seeing
that Stein was being worsted by the American, rushed
in upon the latter, and thus relieved, the rat-faced
doctor was enabled to swing a heavy cut at Barney which
struck him a glancing blow upon the head, sending him
stunned and bleeding to the sward.
Coblich and the governor of Blentz
hastened toward the gate, pausing for an instant to
overwhelm Butzow. In the fierce scrimmage that
followed the lieutenant was overthrown, though not
before his sword had passed through the heart of the
rat-faced one. Deserting their fallen comrade
the two dashed through the gate, where to their immense
relief they found Leopold safe in the hands of the
trooper.
An instant later the precious trio,
with Leopold upon the horse of the late Dr. Stein,
were galloping swiftly into the darkness of the wood
that lies at the outskirts of Tafelberg.
When Barney regained consciousness
he found himself upon a cot within the sanatorium.
Close beside him lay Butzow, and above them stood
an interne and several nurses. No sooner had the
American regained his scattered wits than he leaped
to the floor. The interne and the nurses tried
to force him back upon the cot, thinking that he was
in the throes of a delirium, and it required his best
efforts to convince them that he was quite rational.
During the melee Butzow regained consciousness;
his wound being as superficial as that of the American,
the two men were soon donning their clothing, and,
half-dressed, rushing toward the outer gate.
The interne had told them that when
he had reached the scene of the conflict in company
with the gardener he had found them and another lying
upon the sward.
Their companion, he said, was quite dead.
“That must have been Stein,”
said Butzow. “And the others had escaped
with the king!”
“The king?” cried the interne.
“Yes, the king, man—Leopold
of Lutha. Did you not know that he who has lain
here for three weeks was the king?” replied Butzow.
The interne accompanied them to the
gate and beyond, but everywhere was silence.
The king was gone.