BARNEY RETURNS TO LUTHA
“What’s the matter, Vic?”
asked Barney Custer of his sister. “You
look peeved.”
“I am peeved,” replied
the girl, smiling. “I am terribly peeved.
I don’t want to play bridge this afternoon.
I want to go motoring with Lieutenant Butzow.
This is his last day with us.”
“Yes. I know it is, and
I hate to think of it,” replied Barney; “but
why in the world do you have to play bridge if you
don’t want to?”
“I promised Margaret that I’d
go. They’re short one, and she’s
coming after me in her car.”
“Where are you going to play—at
the champion lady bridge player’s on Fourth
Street?” asked Barney, grinning.
His sister answered with a nod and
a smile. “Where you brought down the wrath
of the lady champion upon your head the other night
when you were letting your mind wander across to Lutha
and the Old Forest, instead of paying attention to
the game,” she added.
“Well, cheer up, Vic,”
cried her brother. “Bert’ll probably
set fire to the car, the way he did to their first
one, and then you won’t have to go.”
“Oh, yes, I would; Margaret
would send him after me in that awful-looking, unwashed
Ford runabout of his,” answered the girl.
“And then you would go,” said Barney.
“You bet I would,” laughed
Victoria. “I’d go in a wheelbarrow
with Bert.”
But she didn’t have to; and
after she had driven off with her chum, Barney and
Butzow strolled down through the little city of Beatrice
to the corn mill in which the former was interested.
“I’m mighty sorry that
you have to leave us, Butzow,” said Barney’s
partner. “It’s bad enough to lose
you, but I’m afraid it will mean the loss of
Barney, too. He’s been hunting for some
excuse to get back to Lutha, and with you there and
a war in sight I’m afraid nothing can hold him.”
“I don’t know but that
it may be just as well for my friends here that I
leave,” said Butzow seriously. “I
did not tell you, Barney, all there is in this letter”—he
tapped his breastpocket, where the foreign-looking
envelope reposed with its contents.
Custer looked at him inquiringly.
“Besides saying that war between
Austria and Serbia seems unavoidable and that Lutha
doubtless will be drawn into it, my informant warns
me that Leopold had sent emissaries to America to
search for you, Barney, and myself. What his purpose
may be my friend does not know, but he warns us to
be upon our guard. Von der Tann wants me to return
to Lutha. He has promised to protect me, and
with the country in danger there is nothing else for
me to do. I must go.”
“I wish I could go with you,”
said Barney. “If it wasn’t for this
dinged old mill I would; but Bert wants to go away
this summer, and as I have been away most of the time
for the past two years, it’s up to me to stay.”
As the three men talked the afternoon
wore on. Heavy clouds gathered in the sky; a
storm was brewing. Outside, a man, skulking behind
a box car on the siding, watched the entrance through
which the three had gone. He watched the workmen,
and as quitting time came and he saw them leaving
for their homes he moved more restlessly, transferring
the package which he held from one hand to another
many times, yet always gingerly.
At last all had left. The man
started from behind the box car, only to jump back
as the watchman appeared around the end of one of the
buildings. He watched the guardian of the property
make his rounds; he saw him enter his office, and
then he crept forward toward the building, holding
his queer package in his right hand.
In the office the watchman came upon
the three friends. At sight of him they looked
at one another in surprise.
“Why, what time is it?”
exclaimed Custer, and as he looked at his watch he
rose with a laugh. “Late to dinner again,”
he cried. “Come on, we’ll go out
this other way.” And with a cheery good
night to the watchman Barney and his friends hastened
from the building.
Upon the opposite side the stranger
approached the doorway to the mill. The rain
was falling in blinding sheets. Ominously the
thunder roared. Vivid flashes of lightning shot
the heavens. The watchman, coming suddenly from
the doorway, his hat brim pulled low over his eyes,
passed within a couple of paces of the stranger without
seeing him.
Five minutes later there was a blinding
glare accompanied by a deafening roar. It was
as though nature had marshaled all her forces in one
mighty, devastating effort. At the same instant
the walls of the great mill burst asunder, a nebulous
mass of burning gas shot heavenward, and then the
flames settled down to complete the destruction of
the ruin.
It was the following morning that
Victoria and Barney Custer, with Lieutenant Butzow
and Custer’s partner, stood contemplating the
smoldering wreckage.
“And to think,” said Barney,
“that yesterday this muss was the largest corn
mill west of anywhere. I guess we can both take
vacations now, Bert.”
“Who would have thought that
a single bolt of lightning could have resulted in
such havoc?” mused Victoria.
“Who would?” agreed Lieutenant
Butzow, and then, with a sudden narrowing of his eyes
and a quick glance at Barney, “if it was
lightning.”
The American looked at the Luthanian.
“You think—” he started.
“I don’t dare think,”
replied Butzow, “because of the fear of what
this may mean to you and Miss Victoria if it was not
lightning that destroyed the mill. I shouldn’t
have spoken of it but that it may urge you to greater
caution, which I cannot but think is most necessary
since the warning I received from Lutha.”
“Why should Leopold seek to
harm me now?” asked Barney. “It has
been almost two years since you and I placed him upon
his throne, only to be rewarded with threats and hatred.
In that time neither of us has returned to Lutha nor
in any way conspired against the king. I cannot
fathom his motives.”
“There is the Princess Emma
von der Tann,” Butzow reminded him. “She
still repulses him. He may think that, with you
removed definitely and permanently, all will then
be plain sailing for him in that direction. Evidently
he does not know the princess.”
An hour later they were all bidding
Butzow good-bye at the station. Victoria Custer
was genuinely grieved to see him go, for she liked
this soldierly young officer of the Royal Horse Guards
immensely.
“You must come back to America soon,”
she urged.
He looked down at her from the steps
of the moving train. There was something in his
expression that she had never seen there before.
“I want to come back soon,”
he answered, “to—to Beatrice,”
and he flushed and smiled at his own stumbling tongue.
For about a week Barney Custer moped
disconsolately, principally about the ruins of the
corn mill. He was in everyone’s way and
accomplished nothing.
“I was never intended for a
captain of industry,” he confided to his partner
for the hundredth time. “I wish some excuse
would pop up to which I might hang a reason for beating
it to Europe. There’s something doing there.
Nearly everybody has declared war upon everybody else,
and here I am stagnating in peace. I’d even
welcome a tornado.”
His excuse was to come sooner than
he imagined. That night, after the other members
of his family had retired, Barney sat smoking within
a screened porch off the living-room. His thoughts
were upon a trim little figure in riding togs, as
he had first seen it nearly two years before, clinging
desperately to a runaway horse upon the narrow mountain
road above Tafelberg.
He lived that thrilling experience
through again as he had many times before. He
even smiled as he recalled the series of events that
had resulted from his resemblance to the mad king of
Lutha.
They had come to a culmination at
the time when the king, whom Barney had placed upon
a throne at the risk of his own life, discovered that
his savior loved the girl to whom the king had been
betrothed since childhood and that the girl returned
the American’s love even after she knew that
he had but played the part of a king.
Barney’s cigar, forgotten, had
long since died out. Not even its former fitful
glow proclaimed his presence upon the porch, whose
black shadows completely enveloped him. Before
him stretched a wide acreage of lawn, tree dotted
at the side of the house. Bushes hid the stone
wall that marked the boundary of the Custer grounds
and extended here and there out upon the sward among
the trees. The night was moonless but clear.
A faint light pervaded the scene.
Barney sat staring straight ahead,
but his gaze did not stop upon the familiar objects
of the foreground. Instead it spanned two continents
and an ocean to rest upon the little spot of woodland
and rugged mountain and lowland that is Lutha.
It was with an effort that the man suddenly focused
his attention upon that which lay directly before
him. A shadow among the trees had moved!
Barney Custer sat perfectly still,
but now he was suddenly alert and watchful. Again
the shadow moved where no shadow should be moving.
It crossed from the shade of one tree to another.
Barney came cautiously to his feet. Silently
he entered the house, running quickly to a side door
that opened upon the grounds. As he drew it back
its hinges gave forth no sound. Barney looked
toward the spot where he had seen the shadow.
Again he saw it scuttle hurriedly beneath another
tree nearer the house. This time there was no
doubt. It was a man!
Directly before the door where Barney
stood was a pergola, ivy-covered. Behind this
he slid, and, running its length, came out among the
trees behind the night prowler. Now he saw him
distinctly. The fellow was bearded, and in his
right hand he carried a package. Instantly Barney
recalled Butzow’s comment upon the destruction
of the mill—“if it was lightning!”
Cold sweat broke from every pore of
his body. His mother and father were there in
the house, and Vic—all sleeping peacefully.
He ran quickly toward the menacing figure, and as
he did so he saw the other halt behind a great tree
and strike a match. In the glow of the flame
he saw it touch close to the package that the fellow
held, and then he was upon him.
There was a brief and terrific struggle.
The stranger hurled the package toward the house.
Barney caught him by the throat, beating him heavily
in the face; and then, realizing what the package was,
he hurled the fellow from him, and sprang toward the
hissing and sputtering missile where it lay close
to the foundation wall of the house, though in the
instant of his close contact with the man he had recognized
through the disguising beard the features of Captain
Ernst Maenck, the principal tool of Peter of Blentz.
Quick though Barney was to reach the
bomb and extinguish the fuse, Maenck had disappeared
before he returned to search for him; and, though
he roused the gardener and chauffeur and took turns
with them in standing guard the balance of the night,
the would-be assassin did not return.
There was no question in Barney Custer’s
mind as to whom the bomb was intended for. That
Maenck had hurled it toward the house after Barney
had seized him was merely the result of accident and
the man’s desire to get the death-dealing missile
as far from himself as possible before it exploded.
That it would have wrecked the house in the hope of
reaching him, had he not fortunately interfered, was
too evident to the American to be questioned.
And so he decided before the night
was spent to put himself as far from his family as
possible, lest some future attempt upon his life might
endanger theirs. Then, too, righteous anger and
a desire for revenge prompted his decision. He
would run Maenck to earth and have an accounting with
him. It was evident that his life would not be
worth a farthing so long as the fellow was at liberty.
Before dawn he swore the gardener
and chauffeur to silence, and at breakfast announced
his intention of leaving that day for New York to
seek a commission as correspondent with an old classmate,
who owned the New York Evening National. At the
hotel Barney inquired of the proprietor relative to
a bearded stranger, but the man had had no one of
that description registered. Chance, however,
gave him a clue. His roadster was in a repair
shop, and as he stopped in to get it he overheard
a conversation that told him all he wanted to know.
As he stood talking with the foreman a dust-covered
automobile pulled into the garage.
“Hello, Bill,” called
the foreman to the driver. “Where you been
so early?”
“Took a guy to Lincoln,”
replied the other. “He was in an awful
hurry. I bet we broke all the records for that
stretch of road this morning—I never knew
the old boat had it in her.”
“Who was it?” asked Barney.
“I dunno,” replied the
driver. “Talked like a furriner, and looked
the part. Bushy black beard. Said he was
a German army officer, an’ had to beat it back
on account of the war. Seemed to me like he was
mighty anxious to get back there an’ be killed.”
Barney waited to hear no more.
He did not even go home to say good-bye to his family.
Instead he leaped into his gray roadster—a
later model of the one he had lost in Lutha—and
the last that Beatrice, Nebraska, saw of him was a
whirling cloud of dust as he raced north out of town
toward Lincoln.
He was five minutes too late into
the capital city to catch the eastbound limited that
Maenck must have taken; but he caught the next through
train for Chicago, and the second day thereafter found
him in New York. There he had little difficulty
in obtaining the desired credentials from his newspaper
friend, especially since Barney offered to pay all
his own expenses and donate to the paper anything
he found time to write.
Passenger steamers were still sailing,
though irregularly, and after scanning the passenger-lists
of three he found the name he sought. “Captain
Ernst Maenck, Lutha.” So he had not been
mistaken, after all. It was Maenck he had apprehended
on his father’s grounds. Evidently the
man had little fear of being followed, for he had made
no effort to hide his identity in booking passage for
Europe.
The steamer he had caught had sailed
that very morning. Barney was not so sorry, after
all, for he had had time during his trip from Beatrice
to do considerable thinking, and had found it rather
difficult to determine just what to do should he have
overtaken Maenck in the United States. He couldn’t
kill the man in cold blood, justly as he may have
deserved the fate, and the thought of causing his
arrest and dragging his own name into the publicity
of court proceedings was little less distasteful to
him.
Furthermore, the pursuit of Maenck
now gave Barney a legitimate excuse for returning
to Lutha, or at least to the close neighborhood of
the little kingdom, where he might await the outcome
of events and be ready to give his services in the
cause of the house of Von der Tann should they be
required.
By going directly to Italy and entering
Austria from that country Barney managed to arrive
within the boundaries of the dual monarchy with comparatively
few delays. Nor did he encounter any considerable
bodies of troops until he reached the little town of
Burgova, which lies not far from the Serbian frontier.
Beyond this point his credentials would not carry
him. The emperor’s officers were polite,
but firm. No newspaper correspondents could be
permitted nearer the front than Burgova.
There was nothing to be done, therefore,
but wait until some propitious event gave him the
opportunity to approach more closely the Serbian boundary
and Lutha. In the meantime he would communicate
with Butzow, who might be able to obtain passes for
him to some village nearer the Luthanian frontier,
when it should be an easy matter to cross through
to Serbia. He was sure the Serbian authorities
would object less strenuously to his presence.
The inn at which he applied for accommodations
was already overrun by officers, but the proprietor,
with scant apologies for a civilian, offered him a
little box of a room in the attic. The place
was scarce more than a closet, and for that Barney
was in a way thankful since the limited space could
accommodate but a single cot, thus insuring him the
privacy that a larger chamber would have precluded.
He was very tired after his long and
comfortless land journey, so after an early dinner
he went immediately to his room and to bed. How
long he slept he did not know, but some time during
the night he was awakened by the sound of voices apparently
close to his ear.
For a moment he thought the speakers
must be in his own room, so distinctly did he overhear
each word of their conversation; but presently he
discovered that they were upon the opposite side of
a thin partition in an adjoining room. But half
awake, and with the sole idea of getting back to sleep
again as quickly as possible, Barney paid only the
slightest attention to the meaning of the words that
fell upon his ears, until, like a bomb, a sentence
broke through his sleepy faculties, banishing Morpheus
upon the instant.
“It will take but little now
to turn Leopold against Von der Tann.”
The speaker evidently was an Austrian. “Already
I have half convinced him that the old man aspires
to the throne. Leopold fears the loyalty of his
army, which is for Von der Tann body and soul.
He knows that Von der Tann is strongly anti-Austrian,
and I have made it plain to him that if he allows
his kingdom to take sides with Serbia he will have
no kingdom when the war is over—it will
be a part of Austria.
“It was with greater difficulty,
however, my dear Peter, that I convinced him that
you, Von Coblich, and Captain Maenck were his most
loyal friends. He fears you yet, but, nevertheless,
he has pardoned you all. Do not forget when you
return to your dear Lutha that you owe your repatriation
to Count Zellerndorf of Austria.”
“You may be assured that we
shall never forget,” replied another voice that
Barney recognized at once as belonging to Prince Peter
of Blentz, the one time regent of Lutha.
“It is not for myself,”
continued Count Zellerndorf, “that I crave your
gratitude, but for my emperor. You may do much
to win his undying gratitude, while for yourselves
you may win to almost any height with the friendship
of Austria behind you. I am sure that should
any accident, which God forfend, deprive Lutha of her
king, none would make a more welcome successor in
the eyes of Austria than our good friend Peter.”
Barney could almost see the smile
of satisfaction upon the thin lips of Peter of Blentz
as this broad hint fell from the lips of the Austrian
diplomat—a hint that seemed to the American
little short of the death sentence of Leopold, King
of Lutha.
“We owed you much before, count,”
said Peter. “But for you we should have
been hanged a year ago—without your aid
we should never have been able to escape from the
fortress of Lustadt or cross the border into Austria-Hungary.
I am sorry that Maenck failed in his mission, for
had he not we would have had concrete evidence to
present to the king that we are indeed his loyal supporters.
It would have dispelled at once such fears and doubts
as he may still entertain of our fealty.”
“Yes, I, too, am sorry,”
agreed Zellerndorf. “I can assure you that
the news we hoped Captain Maenck would bring from America
would have gone a long way toward restoring you to
the confidence and good graces of the king.”
“I did my best,” came
another voice that caused Barney’s eyes to go
wide in astonishment, for it was none other than the
voice of Maenck himself. “Twice I risked
hanging to get him and only came away after I had
been recognized.”
“It is too bad,” sighed
Zellerndorf; “though it may not be without its
advantages after all, for now we still have this second
bugbear to frighten Leopold with. So long, of
course, as the American lives there is always the
chance that he may return and seek to gain the throne.
The fact that his mother was a Rubinroth princess might
make it easy for Von der Tann to place him upon the
throne without much opposition, and if he married
the old man’s daughter it is easy to conceive
that the prince might favor such a move. At any
rate, it should not be difficult to persuade Leopold
of the possibility of such a thing.
“Under the circumstances Leopold
is almost convinced that his only hope of salvation
lies in cementing friendly relations with the most
powerful of Von der Tann’s enemies, of which
you three gentlemen stand preeminently in the foreground,
and of assuring to himself the support of Austria.
And now, gentlemen,” he went on after a pause,
“good night. I have handed Prince Peter
the necessary military passes to carry you safely
through our lines, and tomorrow you may be in Blentz
if you wish.”