THE GRATITUDE OF A KING
At the cry silence fell upon the throng.
Every head was turned toward the great doors through
which the head of a procession was just visible.
It was a grim looking procession—the head
of it, at least.
There were four khaki-clad trumpeters
from the Royal Horse Guards, the gay and resplendent
uniforms which they should have donned today conspicuous
for their absence. From their brazen bugles sounded
another loud fanfare, and then they separated, two
upon each side of the aisle, and between them marched
three men.
One was tall, with gray eyes and had
a reddish-brown beard. He was fully clothed
in the coronation robes of Leopold. Upon his either
hand walked the others—Lieutenant Butzow
and a gray-eyed, smooth-faced, square-jawed stranger.
Behind them marched the balance of
the Royal Horse Guards that were not already on duty
within the cathedral. As the eyes of the multitude
fell upon the man in the coronation robes there were
cries of: “The king! Impostor!”
and “Von der Tann’s puppet!”
“Denounce him!” whispered
one of Peter’s henchmen in his master’s
ear.
The Regent moved closer to the aisle,
that he might meet the impostor at the foot of the
chancel steps. The procession was moving steadily
up the aisle.
Among the clan of Von der Tann a young
girl with wide eyes was bending forward that she might
have a better look at the face of the king. As
he came opposite her her eyes filled with horror, and
then she saw the eyes of the smooth-faced stranger
at the king’s side. They were brave, laughing
eyes, and as they looked straight into her own the
truth flashed upon her, and the girl gave a gasp of
dismay as she realized that the king of Lutha and
the king of her heart were not one and the same.
At last the head of the procession
was almost at the foot of the chancel steps.
There were murmurs of: “It is not the king,”
and “Who is this new impostor?”
Leopold’s eyes were searching
the faces of the close-packed nobility about the chancel.
At last they fell upon the face of Peter. The
young man halted not two paces from the Regent.
The man went white as the king’s eyes bored
straight into his miserable soul.
“Peter of Blentz,” cried
the young man, “as God is your judge, tell the
truth today. Who am I?”
The legs of the Prince Regent trembled.
He sank upon his knees, raising his hands in supplication
toward the other. “Have pity on me, your
majesty, have pity!” he cried.
“Who am I, man?” insisted the king.
“You are Leopold Rubinroth,
sire, by the grace of God, king of Lutha,” cried
the frightened man. “Have mercy on an old
man, your majesty.”
“Wait! Am I mad? Was I ever mad?”
“As God is my judge, sire, no!” replied
Peter of Blentz.
Leopold turned to Butzow.
“Remove the traitor from our
presence,” he commanded, and at a word from
the lieutenant a dozen guardsmen seized the trembling
man and hustled him from the cathedral amid hisses
and execrations.
Following the coronation the king
was closeted in his private audience chamber in the
palace with Prince Ludwig.
“I cannot understand what has
happened, even now, your majesty,” the old man
was saying. “That you are the true Leopold
is all that I am positive of, for the discomfiture
of Prince Peter evidenced that fact all too plainly.
But who the impostor was who ruled Lutha in your name
for two days, disappearing as miraculously as he came,
I cannot guess.
“But for another miracle which
preserved you for us in the nick of time he might
now be wearing the crown of Lutha in your stead.
Having Peter of Blentz safely in custody our next immediate
task should be to hunt down the impostor and bring
him to justice also; though”—and
the old prince sighed—“he was indeed
a brave man, and a noble figure of a king as he led
your troops to battle.”
The king had been smiling as Von der
Tann first spoke of the “impostor,” but
at the old man’s praise of the other’s
bravery a slight flush tinged his cheek, and the shadow
of a scowl crossed his brow.
“Wait,” he said, “we
shall not have to look far for your ‘impostor,’”
and summoning an aide he dispatched him for “Lieutenant
Butzow and Mr. Custer.”
A moment later the two entered the
audience chamber. Barney found that Leopold the
king, surrounded by comforts and safety, was a very
different person from Leopold the fugitive. The
weak face now wore an expression of arrogance, though
the king spoke most graciously to the American.
“Here, Von der Tann,”
said Leopold, “is your ‘impostor.’
But for him I should doubtless be dead by now, or
once again a prisoner at Blentz.”
Barney and Butzow found it necessary
to repeat their stories several times before the old
man could fully grasp all that had transpired beneath
his very nose without his being aware of scarce a single
detail of it.
When he was finally convinced that
they were telling the truth, he extended his hand
to the American.
“I knelt to you once, young
man,” he said, “and kissed your hand.
I should be filled with bitterness and rage toward
you. On the contrary, I find that I am proud
to have served in the retinue of such an impostor
as you, for you upheld the prestige of the house of
Rubinroth upon the battlefield, and though you might
have had a crown, you refused it and brought the true
king into his own.”
Leopold sat tapping his foot upon
the carpet. It was all very well if he, the
king, chose to praise the American, but there was no
need for old von der Tann to slop over so. The
king did not like it. As a matter of fact, he
found himself becoming very jealous of the man who
had placed him upon his throne.
“There is only one thing that
I can harbor against you,” continued Prince
Ludwig, “and that is that in a single instance
you deceived me, for an hour before the coronation
you told me that you were a Rubinroth.”
“I told you, prince,”
corrected Barney, “that the royal blood of Rubinroth
flowed in my veins, and so it does. I am the son
of the runaway Princess Victoria of Lutha.”
Both Leopold and Ludwig looked their
surprise, and to the king’s eyes came a sudden
look of fear. With the royal blood in his veins,
what was there to prevent this popular hero from some
day striving for the throne he had once refused?
Leopold knew that the minds of men were wont to change
most unaccountably.
“Butzow,” he said suddenly
to the lieutenant of horse, “how many do you
imagine know positively that he who has ruled Lutha
for the past two days and he who was crowned in the
cathedral this noon are not one and the same?”
“Only a few besides those who
are in this room, your majesty,” replied Butzow.
“Peter and Coblich have known it from the first,
and then there is Kramer, the loyal old shopkeeper
of Tafelberg, who followed Coblich and Maenck all
night and half a day as they dragged the king to the
hiding-place where we found him. Other than these
there may be those who guess the truth, but there are
none who know.”
For a moment the king sat in thought.
Then he rose and commenced packing back and forth
the length of the apartment.
“Why should they ever know?”
he said at last, halting before the three men who
had been standing watching him. “For the
sake of Lutha they should never know that another
than the true king sat upon the throne even for an
hour.”
He was thinking of the comparison
that might be drawn between the heroic figure of the
American and his own colorless part in the events
which had led up to his coronation. In his heart
of hearts he felt that old Von der Tann rather regretted
that the American had not been the king, and he hated
the old man accordingly, and was commencing to hate
the American as well.
Prince Ludwig stood looking at the
carpet after the king had spoken. His judgment
told him that the king’s suggestion was a wise
one; but he was sorry and ashamed that it had come
from Leopold. Butzow’s lips almost showed
the contempt that he felt for the ingratitude of his
king.
Barney Custer was the first to speak.
“I think his majesty is quite
right,” he said, “and tonight I can leave
the palace after dark and cross the border some time
tomorrow evening. The people need never know
the truth.”
Leopold looked relieved.
“We must reward you, Mr. Custer,”
he said. “Name that which it lies within
our power to grant you and it shall be yours.”
Barney thought of the girl he loved;
but he did not mention her name, for he knew that
she was not for him now.
“There is nothing, your majesty,” he said.
“A money reward,” Leopold
started to suggest, and then Barney Custer lost his
temper.
A flush mounted to his face, his chin
went up, and there came to his lips bitter words of
sarcasm. With an effort, however, he held his
tongue, and, turning his back upon the king, his broad
shoulders proclaiming the contempt he felt, he walked
slowly out of the room.
Von der Tann and Butzow and Leopold
of Lutha stood in silence as the American passed out
of sight beyond the portal.
The manner of his going had been an
affront to the king, and the young ruler had gone
red with anger.
“Butzow,” he cried, “bring
the fellow back; he shall be taught a lesson in the
deference that is due kings.”
Butzow hesitated. “He
has risked his life a dozen times for your majesty,”
said the lieutenant.
Leopold flushed.
“Do not humiliate him, sire,”
advised Von der Tann. “He has earned a
greater reward at your hands than that.”
The king resumed his pacing for a
moment, coming to a halt once more before the two.
“We shall take no notice of
his insolence,” he said, “and that shall
be our royal reward for his services. More than
he deserves, we dare say, at that.”
As Barney hastened through the palace
on his way to his new quarters to obtain his arms
and order his horse saddled, he came suddenly upon
a girlish figure gazing sadly from a window upon the
drear November world—her heart as sad as
the day.
At the sound of his footstep she turned,
and as her eyes met the gray ones of the man she stood
poised as though of half a mind to fly. For a
moment neither spoke.
“Can your highness forgive?” he asked.
For answer the girl buried her face
in her hands and dropped upon the cushioned window
seat before her. The American came close and
knelt at her side.
“Don’t,” he begged
as he saw her shoulders rise to the sudden sobbing
that racked her slender frame. “Don’t!”
He thought that she wept from mortification
that she had given her kisses to another than the
king.
“None knows,” he continued,
“what has passed between us. None but
you and I need ever know. I tried to make you
understand that I was not Leopold; but you would not
believe. It is not my fault that I loved you.
It is not my fault that I shall always love you.
Tell me that you forgive me my part in the chain of
strange circumstances that deceived you into an acknowledgment
of a love that you intended for another. Forgive
me, Emma!”
Down the corridor behind them a tall
figure approached on silent, noiseless feet.
At sight of the two at the window seat it halted.
It was the king.
The girl looked up suddenly into the
eyes of the American bending so close above her.
“I can never forgive you,”
she cried, “for not being the king, for I am
betrothed to him—and I love you!”
Before she could prevent him, Barney
Custer had taken her in his arms, and though at first
she made a pretense of attempting to escape, at last
she lay quite still. Her arms found their way
about the man’s neck, and her lips returned
the kisses that his were showering upon her upturned
mouth.
Presently her glance wandered above
the shoulder of the American, and of a sudden her
eyes filled with terror, and, with a little gasp of
consternation, she struggled to free herself.
“Let me go!” she whispered. “Let
me go—the king!”
Barney sprang to his feet and, turning,
faced Leopold. The king had gone quite white.
“Failing to rob me of my crown,”
he cried in a trembling voice, “you now seek
to rob me of my betrothed! Go to your father at
once, and as for you—you shall learn what
it means for you thus to meddle in the affairs of
kings.”
Barney saw the terrible position in
which his love had placed the Princess Emma.
His only thought now was for her. Bowing low before
her he spoke so that the king might hear, yet as though
his words were for her ears alone.
“Your highness knows the truth,
now,” he said, “and that after all I am
not the king. I can only ask that you will forgive
me the deception. Now go to your father as the
king commands.”
Slowly the girl turned away.
Her heart was torn between love for this man, and
her duty toward the other to whom she had been betrothed
in childhood. The hereditary instinct of obedience
to her sovereign was strong within her, and the bonds
of custom and society held her in their relentless
shackles. With a sob she passed up the corridor,
curtsying to the king as she passed him.
When she had gone Leopold turned to
the American. There was an evil look in the little
gray eyes of the monarch.
“You may go your way,”
he said coldly. “We shall give you forty-eight
hours to leave Lutha. Should you ever return your
life shall be the forfeit.”
The American kept back the hot words
that were ready upon the end of his tongue. For
her sake he must bow to fate. With a slight inclination
of his head toward Leopold he wheeled and resumed his
way toward his quarters.
Half an hour later as he was about
to descend to the courtyard where a trooper of the
Royal Horse held his waiting mount, Butzow burst suddenly
into his room.
“For God’s sake,”
cried the lieutenant, “get out of this.
The king has changed his mind, and there is an officer
of the guard on his way here now with a file of soldiers
to place you under arrest. Leopold swears that
he will hang you for treason. Princess Emma has
spurned him, and he is wild with rage.”
The dismal November twilight had given
place to bleak night as two men cantered from the
palace courtyard and turned their horses’ heads
northward toward Lutha’s nearest boundary.
All night they rode, stopping at daylight before a
distant farm to feed and water their mounts and snatch
a mouthful for themselves. Then onward once again
they pressed in their mad flight.
Now that day had come they caught
occasional glimpses of a body of horsemen far behind
them, but the border was near, and their start such
that there was no danger of their being overtaken.
“For the thousandth time, Butzow,”
said one of the men, “will you turn back before
it is too late?”
But the other only shook his head
obstinately, and so they came to the great granite
monument which marks the boundary between Lutha and
her powerful neighbor upon the north.
Barney held out his hand. “Good-bye,
old man,” he said. “If I’ve
learned the ingratitude of kings here in Lutha, I have
found something that more than compensates me—the
friendship of a brave man. Now hurry back and
tell them that I escaped across the border just as
I was about to fall into your hands and they will think
that you have been pursuing me instead of aiding in
my escape across the border.”
But again Butzow shook his head.
“I have fought shoulder to shoulder
with you, my friend,” he said. “I
have called you king, and after that I could never
serve the coward who sits now upon the throne of Lutha.
I have made up my mind during this long ride from
Lustadt, and I have come to the decision that I should
prefer to raise corn in Nebraska with you rather than
serve in the court of an ingrate.”
“Well, you are an obstinate
Dutchman, after all,” replied the American with
a smile, placing his hand affectionately upon the
shoulder of his comrade.
There was a clatter of horses’
hoofs upon the gravel of the road behind them.
The two men put spurs to their mounts,
and Barney Custer galloped across the northern boundary
of Lutha just ahead of a troop of Luthanian cavalry,
as had his father thirty years before; but a royal
princess had accompanied the father—only
a soldier accompanied the son.