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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Queen's Advocate, by Arthur W.
-Marchmont
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Queen's Advocate
-
-Author: Arthur W. Marchmont
-
-Illustrator: John Cameron
-
-Release Date: April 6, 2022 [eBook #67789]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE QUEEN'S ADVOCATE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-THE QUEEN’S ADVOCATE
-
-
-[Illustration: “OVER AND OVER WE ROLLED IN THE DUSTY ROAD.”
-
- _Page 15_]
-
-
-
-
- The Queen’s
- Advocate
-
- [Illustration]
-
- _By ARTHUR W. MARCHMONT_
-
-
- _Author of “When I Was Czar,” “For Love or Crown,”
- “A Courier of Fortune,” “In The Name of a
- Woman,” “Sarita the Carlist,” etc., etc._
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- _A. L. BURT COMPANY Publishers_
- _NEW YORK_
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1904, BY
- ARTHUR W. MARCHMONT
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. THE RESCUE 9
-
- II. KARASCH 25
-
- III. MORE WITCHCRAFT 39
-
- IV. A CONTEST IN WILL POWER 53
-
- V. UNWELCOME VISITORS 67
-
- VI. A FIGHT FOR THE HORSES 82
-
- VII. ESCAPE 94
-
- VIII. WHAT HAPPENED IN THE NIGHT 107
-
- IX. FROM BAD TO WORSE 121
-
- X. AT POABJA 137
-
- XI. TO SAMAC 150
-
- XII. ON THE HILL AT SAMAC 162
-
- XIII. PREPARING FOR THE CAMPAIGN 176
-
- XIV. ELMA 190
-
- XV. DEVELOPMENTS 204
-
- XVI. THE ARMY’S PLANS 217
-
- XVII. THE QUEEN’S ADVOCATE 232
-
- XVIII. A DECLARATION OF WAR 246
-
- XIX. PRINCE ALBREVICS 263
-
- XX. THE INSULT 278
-
- XXI. THE DUEL 291
-
- XXII. THE SCENT OF PERIL 304
-
- XXIII. A PLAN OF DEFENCE 317
-
- XXIV. THE NIGHT OF TERROR 330
-
- XXV. IN GATRINA’S HOUSE 343
-
- XXVI. CHRIS TO THE RESCUE 356
-
- XXVII. MY DEFENCE 369
-
- XXVIII. “I CANNOT LEAVE MY COUNTRY” 383
-
- XXIX. PETROSCH HAS A PLAN 396
-
- XXX. THE CAMP AGAIN 409
-
-
-
-
-The Queen’s Advocate
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE RESCUE.
-
-
-Crack!
-
-It was a rifle shot, sure enough, somewhere in the hills, and Chris
-raised his huge head with a low growl and thrust his nose against me in
-warning.
-
-I was lying on the flat of my back, my hands clasped under my head,
-thinking lazily, as I watched the glorious sunset amid the Gravenje
-hills--where the play of sunset colour is at times almost as fine as in
-Colorado--and speculated when the storm which was brewing would break.
-
-I had just been chuckling at the idea of what the men in Wall Street
-or the dandies of Fifth Avenue would have thought of Chase F. Bergwyn,
-millionaire, mine-owner, and financier, could they have seen me then
-vagabondising in the Bosnian hills. My dress was a kind of nondescript
-native costume, half peasant’s, half miner’s, very dirty and worn with
-my rough prospecting work; and I carried a ten days’ growth of scrubby
-beard on my sun-tanned face. The report of the rifle stopped the
-chuckle on my lips.
-
-One of my men must have been after some hill game, I guessed, and
-in the eagerness of the chase had disobeyed my strict orders against
-shooting. I was anxious not to draw any unnecessary attention to my
-doings. I was after another pile, in fact. When in Vienna, just before,
-I had been offered what appeared to be a good thing in the shape of a
-concession to work a rich mining district in these Bosnian hills, and,
-as I still had a touch of the vagabond in me, I was roughing it in
-order that I might look into the thing for myself.
-
-I knew that part of Eastern Europe pretty well. I had lived there as
-a lad with a relative stationed in Prague, and as I had the knack of
-picking up the Balkan languages, he had found me of such use that he
-had taken me with him on many an expedition among the hills in Bosnia,
-Servia, and Herzgovina.
-
-I had delighted in the hills, and had carried my love for them across
-the Atlantic when things changed and I went to the States in search
-of fortune. After a time of pretty hard rough-and-tumble hurly-burly
-buffetting I had “struck it rich,” and turned up in New York wealthy
-enough to play a strong hand in the big gambles of Wall Street.
-
-Then the wandering fever laid hold of me again, and, remembering my
-days in the Balkans, I was seized with the idea of utilising the old
-experiences for business purposes. There was money to be made, I
-believed; and I opened up communications with folks in Belgrade and
-Sofia, and was in Vienna, on my way to the Servian capital, when this
-Bosnian mining affair turned up.
-
-The pile was there right enough, just waiting for someone to come
-along and harvest it. But whether the difficulties of harvesting
-it could be overcome, I should have to settle elsewhere; and until
-they were settled I didn’t wish to draw the inquisitive eyes of any
-blockheads of Austrian officials upon me.
-
-There were other dangers, too. Lalwor, a hill village, was not far off,
-and the reports about the villagers were not pleasing. They were not
-likely to jump one’s claim, or do anything of that sort, but were said
-to be quite ready to knock me on the head if they had an inkling that I
-was a rich foreigner. That at least was the opinion of the man who had
-acted as my guide; and probably he knew.
-
-So that, altogether, that shot annoyed me; and I sat up, thinking no
-more about either New York or the sunset, but just how to find out who
-had fired it, and bent upon punishing him for disobedience. Not so
-easy this last as it would have been, had I disliked all the four men
-composing my party less and trusted them more.
-
-Crack!
-
-Another shot. This time nearer.
-
-Chris showed greater uneasiness than before, and getting up ran forward
-sniffing the air. Almost immediately afterwards I heard a faint
-throbbing sound on the earth, uncommonly like a horse’s gallop. But who
-could be galloping our way? No one who was at all likely to be welcome;
-that was certain. I scented trouble, and calling the dog back crouched
-with him behind a bush-covered hillock and gazed, not without some
-anxiety, up and down the steep, rough mountain road.
-
-The camp--which consisted of a cottage or hut for my use, a shed for
-the horses, and a tent for the men--lay two or three hundred yards
-along a gully, which branched off at right angles from this road. I was
-lying at the mouth of the gully, and from my position commanded a view
-from the top to the bottom of the hill, about a mile in length.
-
-Crack! crack!
-
-Two more shots in quick succession; the throbbing sound of the hoofs
-came nearer and nearer; and a horse and rider showed at the top of the
-hill. I caught my breath in surprise as I saw the rider was a woman,
-who was urging her horse, a wiry little white animal, to its utmost
-efforts as it dashed at break-neck speed down the steep, winding,
-boulder-strewn, dangerous road.
-
-Next, two horsemen came into sight and, with a loud shout, one of them
-reined up, and taking deliberate aim fired at the fugitive woman. My
-eye was on her as the shot rang out, and I saw the little white beast
-start, and swerve as if hit. The next instant the blood began to run
-freely over the flank, and the horse’s gait told me it was badly
-wounded.
-
-The men behind saw it, too; and the brute who had fired the shot
-shouted to his companion, and then continued the pursuit.
-
-The chase was all but over. The white horse struggled on gamely, but
-as it neared the gully where I lay the pace slackened ominously.
-Its rider looked back at her pursuers, and then across the ravine;
-and then, to my further amazement, I saw that she was no more than
-a girl in years--and a very pretty one, too; her face flushed with
-the excitement of the mad gallop, her eyes wide with alarm, and her
-features set with the courage of desperate resolve.
-
-Her pursuers realised her plight; and being now sure of capturing her,
-slung their guns and rode down the ugly path very cautiously.
-
-I made ready to take my share in the business. I had my revolver in my
-hip pocket, and drew it out, but did not show myself. My intention was
-to let her pass and then get between her and the men. But her horse
-was done. The bullet had evidently found the artery, for the blood
-was spurting out fast; and just before she reached the spot where I
-crouched the poor beast lurched badly and half sank on its quarters.
-The rider had only time to jump cleverly and quickly from the saddle
-when the end came, and the gallant little horse rolled over.
-
-She must have given up all for lost then; but she showed no sign of
-faltering courage. One swift, desperate glance round she gave, as if in
-search of some chance of escape, and I saw her face was pale and set,
-but full of determination. Then, drawing a dainty little stiletto from
-her dress, she stood at bay behind the body of the dying horse with a
-calmness all eloquent of pluck and nerve.
-
-Meanwhile, with Chris at my heel, and keeping as much as possible under
-cover, I crept forward until I was opposite to her. The men dismounted
-when they were still some fifty yards or so above her, and they were
-rushing forward to close upon her when I showed myself, with Chris
-growling ominously at my side.
-
-The surprise caused by my unexpected appearance gave me a moment’s
-advantage.
-
-“Have no fear. The dog will guard you,” I called to her as I
-passed. “Guard, Chris, guard, good dog,” I told him; and instantly
-understanding me, he ran to her side.
-
-“Thank God,” I heard her murmur as I sprang toward the men, with my
-revolver levelled at them.
-
-“You may give it up,” I cried; but that was not their view. One of them
-swung his gun round on the instant, and was in the act of levelling it
-at me when I fired, aiming low, and shot him in the leg, bringing him
-to the ground.
-
-His companion hesitated at this, then clubbed his gun and appeared to
-be about to attack me, when he suddenly changed his mind and made a
-dart for the horses. I dashed after him, and as he vaulted into the
-saddle I fired at his horse and wounded it. Uttering a cry of rage, he
-leapt with extraordinary agility to the unwounded horse, and might then
-have got off had not the reins of both animals become entangled. Before
-he could disengage them I had closed up to him.
-
-I called to him to surrender, but he had plenty of fight in him, and,
-taking me no doubt for the peasant I looked, he first struck at me
-furiously with his gun, and then tried to ride me down.
-
-I checked that effort with a bullet in his horse’s head, however, and
-threatened to put one into the man himself if he did not submit. But
-still he would not.
-
-Leaping free of the falling horse he surprised me by running back
-down the hill helter-skelter towards the girl, who stood watching us
-with breathless interest. I thought he meant to attack her, and, wild
-with sudden anger, I rushed after him. He had apparently remembered,
-however, that his comrade’s gun was loaded and his object was to secure
-it.
-
-But Chris stopped this. The weapon lay near the girl and Chris sprang
-forward and snarled so savagely looking so formidable and dangerous,
-that the man hesitated, and before his hesitation was over I caught
-up and closed with him. Over and over we rolled in the dusty road in
-a fierce, hand-to-hand tussle, writhing, kicking, and sprawling as we
-gripped each other in that desperate wrestle. But I had the advantage
-of method. I was Cumberland bred, and in my boyhood had learnt some
-tricks and falls which had stood me in good stead before now in many a
-“scrap” in my rough-and-tumble mining days in Colorado and Montana.
-
-I got my grip of him presently, and bit by bit moved my hands up till
-my fingers were playing on his windpipe, and he was seeing stars as I
-dashed his thick head again and again on the hard road, until all the
-fight and all his senses too were knocked out of him.
-
-Then I rose, and taking the reins from the girl’s horse, I tied him up
-securely with them.
-
-All this time I had not spoken to her, except that first sentence; but
-I had caught her great grey eyes fixed upon me questioningly as she
-followed every action. Before going to her I had a look at the man
-I had shot, and found his leg was broken between the knee and the
-ankle. I had some rough knowledge of surgery--one picks up such things
-knocking about the world as I had--so I probed about with my knife and
-found the bullet, which was in the muscular calf, cleansed the wound as
-best I could, and set the bone. Then I placed him in as comfortable a
-position as I could, and told him not to move until I could do more.
-
-This done, I rose and went to the girl. She was now leaning against a
-boulder by the wayside, deathly pale, and to my infinite concern I saw
-that her dress was all blood-stained. One of the coward’s bullets must
-have hit her, I thought.
-
-“Are you hit?” I asked. I spoke in Serb, as I was more familiar with
-that than any other of the Balkan languages.
-
-“No. It is the blood from this poor beast.”
-
-“Thank God for that. You’re very pale, but you won’t have any more
-trouble from the men. I’ll see to that.”
-
-Instead of replying she appeared in some way to resent my tone of
-reassurance, and looked at me steadily with this curious expression
-of resentment mingled with gratitude and some fear. But she had made
-friends with Chris, and the great fellow was pushing his head against
-her as she stroked him.
-
-“You were very brave,” I said after a pause, during which I could not
-keep my eyes off her. She was indeed a beautiful girl, with a figure of
-queenly grace, and I daresay some of the intense admiration I felt may
-have shown in my glance. I had never seen so lovely a face.
-
-“If that man is much hurt you had better see to him,” she said, with a
-distinct note of command in her voice.
-
-“His leg’s broken. I’m going to improvise a splint, and then get help.”
-
-“Help?” Quick suspicion prompted the question. “Do you live about here?”
-
-I shut down a smile. She took me for a peasant; and well she might,
-I thought, as I glanced down at my clothes, dust-stained, torn, and
-dishevelled.
-
-“There is a cottage close here and a tent,” I answered, evading her
-question and her glance. There was clearly a mystery about her to
-be solved. It was as evident as that she herself was well-born, and
-accustomed to give orders for which she expected prompt obedience. But
-leaving all explanations over for the time, I set about making the
-splint.
-
-Returning to the men’s horses I took off the bridle and saddle of the
-dead one, cut away the saddle flaps, and carried them and the reins to
-the injured man. The flaps made good splints, and I bound them tightly
-with the reins round his leg. He had borne all my crude surgery work
-with such stoicism that I guessed he was a Turk, and spoke to him in
-the little Turkish I knew, telling him I would get help and have him
-removed directly. He grunted something about being all right, and soon
-was smoking as placidly as though nothing had happened, and a broken
-leg was one of the usual events of daily life.
-
-I returned then to the girl, who was sitting on the ground with her
-hands clasped over her face. I guessed she was as desperately puzzled
-as I was what to do next.
-
-She sprang up quickly as I approached, and again stared at me with much
-the same expression of anxiety and doubt.
-
-“You seem very clever and resourceful,” she said. “Can yet get me a
-horse?”
-
-“What for? To lose yourself in the darkness among the hills?”
-
-“I can pay you--later, I mean. I have no money on me. Tell me how to
-send it to you, and I will give you any price you name. And I will add
-to it a generous reward for what you have done already.”
-
-“Do you think you are strong enough to travel yet? You are still very
-white, and trembling like a leaf. You are scarcely used to this sort of
-thing, you see.”
-
-“I can judge that for myself,” she answered, almost haughtily, making a
-great effort to rally her shaken nerves.
-
-“I don’t think you are. You don’t realise yet how much this thing has
-shaken you.”
-
-“I am not accustomed to be contradicted in this way.”
-
-“You are very near contradicting yourself by fainting,” I answered. I
-could see it plainly. “How long have you been without food?”
-
-“I do not wish you to question me. Can you get me a horse, or must I
-try to walk? I must have a horse.”
-
-“There’s another reason. If you know anything of these hills you’ll
-know what a storm means among them; and there’s one brewing now.
-Listen.” As I spoke we heard the rumbling of distant thunder among the
-hills.
-
-“I cannot stay here, in any case,” she shot back quickly. Then, after
-a pause, “Who are you? Your name, I mean?” This in her sharp imperious
-manner.
-
-“My name is Bergwyn.” I slurred the pronunciation intentionally. I had
-strong reasons for not wishing anyone to know I had been on the hills
-on my mission.
-
-But the effect of the name upon her was remarkable; and her agitation
-was too great to be concealed even by the effort she made. She appeared
-completely unnerved; and while her eyes opened wide in unmistakable
-fear, she shrank from me as though I were a pestilence incarnate.
-
-“Bourgwan--the--the brigand? I have heard of you.” The words were just
-a whisper, uttered with a catch of the breath all eloquent of terror.
-
-“No, I’m not----” I began with a smile intended to reassure her; but
-before I could finish the sentence her own unfortunate guess had
-completed her undoing, and with a little gasping sob down she went in a
-heap to the ground unconscious, to my utter consternation.
-
-Disconcerting as her collapse was, it nevertheless had the result of
-deciding me what to do. Another clap of thunder came at the moment;
-and, without waiting to think any longer, I picked her up and set off
-as quickly as I could along the ravine to the camp.
-
-She had not recovered consciousness when I reached the cottage; and
-as there was but one room in it, I laid her on the bed, bundled my few
-things together, tossed them out of sight, and leaving the dog with
-her, I went over to the tent.
-
-I found my four men asleep there, and waking them with an impartial
-kick or two, sent them down to bring up the prisoner and his wounded
-companion.
-
-Then I began to realise what a really awkward matter it was likely to
-be to have a girl, and such a girl, quartered upon us. I was not by any
-means sure of my own men, even. They had been chosen by the guide; but
-even he had deemed them so worthless and unreliable that he had gone
-off that morning in search of others. Without him my position was very
-grave. He was already a couple of hours overdue; and with this storm
-coming up it was long odds that he would not arrive until the next
-morning at the earliest.
-
-Still the thing had to be faced. I must take my chance in the tent with
-the men that night, and trust to my own authority and vigilance and
-wits.
-
-I went back to the cottage, and was alarmed to find the girl still
-unconscious; so I got some brandy, and supporting her head managed to
-get a few drops between her lips. This soon had an effect, and after a
-repetition of the remedy she opened her eyes with a deep, long-drawn
-sigh, and gave a great start as she found me bending over her and
-herself on the bed in the hut.
-
-“It’s all right,” I said, soothingly. “You fainted, probably from
-exhaustion and the fright you had, and I brought you here. It was the
-only thing I could do. You are perfectly safe, and the best thing you
-can do is to be quiet until you can eat something. As soon as you’re
-well enough I’ll find you a horse and send you wherever you want to go.”
-
-She listened very quietly, and smiled. A rare thing, that smile of hers.
-
-“I want you to feel you can trust me. I am not that brigand, Bourgwan,
-or any other brigand, as it happens; although my name is sufficiently
-like his to cause you to make the mistake you did about it. It’s all
-very rough here; but it’s the best we can do for you. Now, do you think
-you can feel safe enough to eat and drink something without believing
-we mean to poison you?”
-
-“Don’t.” It was only a whisper, but it was good hearing.
-
-“I’ve had to give you a little brandy. Here’s some more, if you’ll like
-it; and I can get you some preserved milk and biscuits presently. Shall
-I leave you alone here?”
-
-The light had gone as the storm gathered; and just as I spoke the storm
-burst right overhead with a flare of lightning that filled the small
-room with lurid light, followed by a deafening clap of thunder which
-seemed almost to shake the earth until the hut trembled.
-
-But she showed no fear of the storm; so that I gathered she was used to
-the violence with which they raged in that district. She sat staring
-out of the one narrow window wistfully and disconsolately.
-
-“I cannot go?” she said, making it almost a question.
-
-I threw the door wider open, and pointed to the rain that was coming
-down in sheets--just like a tropical downpour.
-
-“Quite impossible--you can see.”
-
-She rose and looked out, shuddered, and then went back to the bed with
-a sigh of disappointment. Some moments passed then. The storm raged
-furiously: the lightning flaring and flashing with intense brilliance,
-filling the sordid little dingy room almost continuously with its vivid
-blue light; the thunder pealing and crashing and roaring as though the
-very heavens would split; and the rain sweeping and swirling down like
-a flood.
-
-And within there was silence between us: she sitting dead still on the
-low pallet, the dog haunched by her side; and I standing, very ill at
-ease, near the door, not knowing what to say or do next, and feeling
-very much of an awkward fool. I wanted to know that she trusted me, and
-would have given anything for a word from her to show she did; while at
-the same time I felt I would have bitten my tongue out rather than have
-asked for such a word.
-
-Yet out it came, nevertheless.
-
-“You feel better and--and safe?” I asked.
-
-The lightning showed me that she moved slightly, turned her head and
-glanced toward me just for an instant, but said nothing.
-
-“I’ll get you something to eat,” I murmured fatuously, and went out and
-pelted through the rain to the tent.
-
-I had got some biscuits and a tin of milk, when a thought occurred to
-me. The men had not returned, and their guns piled in a corner of
-the tent caught my eye as I was leaving. I made a bundle of them and
-carried them away. I could trust my men just as well if they had no
-firearms.
-
-When I got back to the hut she was sitting on the side of the bed and
-had quite shaken off the faintness.
-
-“You need not have gone through the rain--but I suppose you are used to
-it?” she said.
-
-“A man in my position has to get used to anything. Here are the
-biscuits and the milk. I’ve some tinned meat in the cupboard here. Can
-you eat?”
-
-“What are those?” she cried, pointing to the guns.
-
-“The men’s guns. Best to keep them in the dry, you see.” I spoke as
-indifferently as I could; but she was very quick, and by the light of
-the storm I saw her eyes upon my face, with a sharp, piercing look.
-
-“That’s not your reason. I hear it in your voice. Is there anything
-more to fear?”
-
-“No.” It was a lie, of course, but I uttered it stoutly, feeling the
-need of it. “If you’ll eat some of this and get some strength back,
-I’ll explain the position presently.”
-
-“What’s that?” she asked, starting and listening.
-
-In an interval of the storm I heard the voices of the men raised in
-high tones.
-
-“Nothing, only the men with the prisoner,” I replied calmly; but I
-didn’t understand the reason for the high voices, and didn’t like it.
-“I’ll just go and see them.”
-
-“Don’t go, please.” Half command, in the same imperious tone I was
-getting to know well; but unmistakably also half entreaty. It was the
-note I had been waiting for so eagerly, and I felt myself go hot with
-pleasure. She did trust me.
-
-“As you wish,” I answered. “But I had better go.”
-
-There was a pause, and then she said, in a quiet level tone:
-
-“You must do as you think best, of course.”
-
-“Chris here will answer for your safety. Try and eat something,” I
-said; and with that I ran back again to the tent.
-
-In a moment I saw something was wrong. My four men were clustered near
-the fellow whose leg I had broken, quarrelling angrily, with many
-gestures; while the man I had made prisoner was not in the tent at all.
-
-“Where’s the other man?” I asked.
-
-They all turned at the sound of my voice, and one of them, with whom I
-had before had some bother, took the question to himself. He shrugged
-his broad shoulders, first scowled, and then laughed insolently.
-
-“He’s escaped,” he said, his tone a mixture of doggedness and defiance.
-
-The trouble I had been looking for had come, just when it was most
-unwelcome.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-KARASCH.
-
-
-I had had to deal with worse trouble than this before, however, and to
-tackle far more dangerous men than the fellow who, having sounded the
-first note of rebellion, stood eyeing me with lowering brows, while his
-fingers played round the haft of the knife he carried.
-
-These Eastern Europeans can be dangerous enough in a crowd, or in the
-dark, or in any circumstances which offer a chance of treachery. But
-they don’t fight well alone or in the open. That’s where they differ
-from the desperadoes of the West and the mining camps; and I knew it.
-
-The tent was a very large one, affording plenty of room for a
-scrimmage, and as I walked straight up to the man, keeping my eyes
-fixed on his, the rest drew back a little. That’s another peculiarity
-of the people of the hills. They will back up a companion so long as
-the man in command is out of the way, and then back down quite as
-promptly when the music has to be faced.
-
-“See here, Karasch,” I said to the ringleader; “I don’t want any more
-trouble with you--or with anyone else; but I’m not taking any insolence
-from you. Mind that, now. What do you mean by saying the prisoner
-escaped?”
-
-Before he answered he glanced round at his companions.
-
-“He ran away,” he muttered.
-
-“I tied him up so that he couldn’t run. Who set him free? Whoever did
-that will answer to me.”
-
-“Karasch did it,” answered one of the others. Then I guessed the reason
-of the high words I had heard, and that the speaker, whose name was
-Gartski, had been against the thing in opposition to the rest.
-
-“Why did you do it, Karasch?”
-
-“Because I chose to; I’m no wench minder,” he replied with an insolent
-laugh.
-
-I did not hesitate a second, but while the laugh was still on his lips
-I struck him full in the face as hard as I could hit him, and down he
-went like a ninepin. He scrambled up, cursing and swearing and spitting
-out the blood from his mouth, and made ready to rush at me with his
-long knife, when I covered him with my revolver.
-
-“Put that knife down, Karasch,” I cried, sternly. “Don’t try any monkey
-tricks with me. And you others, choose right now which side you’re on.
-I’ve been looking for this trouble for a couple of days past, and I’m
-quite ready for it.”
-
-Gartski came to my side, and one of the others, Petrov, drew to
-Karasch; the fourth, Andreas, remaining undecided.
-
-“You’re faithful to me, Gartski?” I asked. My guide had told me before
-that he was, so I felt certain of him.
-
-“My life is yours,” he answered simply.
-
-“Good; then we’ll soon settle this. Wait, Karasch. There isn’t room
-for two leaders in this camp, and we’ll settle this between us--you and
-I alone--once for all.”
-
-I took Gartski’s knife and handed him my revolver.
-
-“If anyone tries to interfere in the quarrel, shoot him, Gartski,”
-I said, and knife in hand I turned to the others. “Now, Karasch, if
-you’re man enough, we’ll fight on equal terms.”
-
-“Good,” said the other two. It was a proposition fair enough to please
-them all, particularly as his supporters believed Karasch could account
-for me pretty easily in such a fight.
-
-He was quite ready for the tussle, and we began at once. The tent was
-so gloomy--we had only the dim light from a couple of lanterns--that it
-was with some difficulty I could keep track of his eyes as he crouched
-down and moved stealthily around, watching his opportunity to catch
-me at a disadvantage for his spring, his long ugly knife reflecting a
-gleam now from one and now from the other of the lanterns as he moved.
-
-The storm was still raging furiously, and now and again a lurid glare
-of the lightning would light up the tent for an instant so vividly that
-the place seemed almost dark by contrast the next moment.
-
-The men drew to one side watching us, and the wounded prisoner, stoic
-as he had shown himself in his pain, propped himself up on one arm and
-followed the fight with close interest.
-
-My antagonist’s fighting was in the approved cat-like method. Crouching
-low, he would move, with lithe, stealthy tread, for a step or two,
-then pause, then spring suddenly in a feinted attack, then as quickly
-recover himself, and begin all over again.
-
-Fortunately I was no novice at the game; but I had learnt the thing in
-another school. A Mexican had taught me--an adept with the knife, with
-half a score of lives to the credit of his skill. I stood all the time
-quite still; every nerve at tension, every muscle ready for the spring
-when the moment came, but wasting no strength in useless feints. The
-less you do before the moment comes, the more you can do when it does
-come.
-
-Never for an instant did my eyes stray from his; noting every change of
-expression; watching every movement, step, and gesture; almost every
-breath he drew; and using every second to find the weak spot in his
-attack.
-
-I soon saw his purpose. He was striving to make me give ground and
-drive me back to where I should have no elbow room for free movement.
-But I did not yield an inch, not even when he sprang so near me in one
-of his feints as to make me think he meant business at last.
-
-Instead of giving ground I began to take it. Twice he made as if to
-rush at me and each time as he leapt back I stepped a pace forward. As
-the tent was too small to admit of his circling me, he saw that he was
-losing ground; and I noticed a shadow of uneasiness come creeping to
-his eyes.
-
-Then I saw my plan, and the real shrewdness of the Mexican’s tactics.
-My opponent’s method had a serious flaw. During the moment that he was
-recovering himself after his feints he was incapable of attack, and if
-I could close with him at one of those moments I should have him at an
-immense disadvantage.
-
-With this thought I drew him on. When his next feinting spring came
-I fell back a pace, and I could tell by the renewed light in his
-eyes that he felt reassured and confident. He had made me give way,
-apparently, and felt he could easily drive me back until he would have
-me at his mercy.
-
-The next time I repeated the manœuvre, and then a grim grin of triumph
-lighted his face. He crouched again and moved about me, stalking me to
-drive me into an awkward corner of the place, his eyes gleaming the
-while with fierce confidence and murderous intent.
-
-Inspired by this over-confidence, he sprang at me again, this time
-too far, calculating that I should again give way. But I did not,
-and as he jumped back hurriedly to retrieve the mistake I closed on
-him, caught his right wrist with my left hand, and pressed him back,
-chest to chest, holding my right hand away from his left which groped
-frantically and desperately to clutch it.
-
-In that kind of tussle he was no match for me. I had all a trained
-wrestler’s tricks with my legs, and tripped him in a moment so that he
-went down with his left arm under him. I heard the bone snap as we fell
-and I tore the knife from his grip.
-
-His life was mine by all the laws of combat in that wild district, and
-for a moment I held my weapon poised ready to strike home to his heart.
-
-To do him justice he neither quailed, nor uttered a sound. If he had
-shown a sign of weakness I think I should have finished the thing as I
-was fairly entitled to, and have killed him. But he was a brave fellow,
-so I spared him and got up and turned to the rest.
-
-“Do either of you dispute my leadership?” I said to the others. But
-they had had their lesson, and had apparently learnt it thoroughly.
-
-“It was Karasch’s doing, and his only,” said Petrov, who had formerly
-taken sides against me.
-
-“Get up, Karasch,” I said, in a short sharp tone. He got up, and I saw
-his left arm was dangling uselessly at his side. “Now tell me why you
-set that prisoner free?”
-
-“You can fight. Your muscles are like iron. I’ll serve a man who can
-fight as you can,” he growled.
-
-“That’s a bargain,” said I. “Here;” and I held out my hand. He looked
-at me in surprise.
-
-“By the living God,” he muttered, as he put his hand slowly into mine.
-
-“Here’s your knife,” I said next, returning it to him.
-
-He drew back, his surprise greater even than before.
-
-“You trust it to me?” He took it in the same slow hesitating manner;
-and then with a quick change of manner he set his heel on it and with a
-fierce and savage tug at the haft, he broke the bright blade in two.
-
-“It’s been raised against you; and I’m your man now and for always,”
-and down he went on one knee, and seizing my hand kissed it, and then
-laid it on his head.
-
-Demonstrative folk these rough wild hill men of Eastern Europe, and I
-knew the significance of this act of personal homage.
-
-So did the others who had watched this quaint result of the fight with
-the same breathless interest as they had followed the fight itself.
-
-“If you serve me well you’ll find I can pay better than I can fight,
-Karasch,” I said, as he rose.
-
-“I’m not serving for pay now,” he replied simply. “I serve you. My life
-is yours. Gartski, go and saddle a couple of the horses.”
-
-“What for?” I asked.
-
-“I’ll go and find the prisoner. He can’t have ridden far in this storm;
-and I know his road.”
-
-“But your arm is broken.”
-
-“We can tie it up while he gets the horses.”
-
-“Tell me why you set him free, Karasch,” I said, as Gartski and Andreas
-went out. “And while you talk I’ll see to your arm.” I examined it, and
-found the fracture in the upper arm; and having set it as best I could
-I dressed it and bound it up while he spoke.
-
-“On account of the woman,” he said. “I know the man, and he told
-me about her. She’s a witch and a thief and worse, and comes from
-Belgrade. She murdered a child, and was being sent to Maglai, in the
-hills, to be imprisoned; and this morning cast a spell over the men
-who were taking her and escaped. They were to have a big sum of money
-if they got her safe to Maglai, and the man promised me a share of
-it if I’d let him go back and bring his friends here to retake her. I
-have no mercy for a witch. God curse them all;” and he crossed himself
-earnestly and spat on the ground.
-
-“She is no witch, Karasch, but just a girl in a plight.”
-
-“A witch can look just as she pleases. You don’t know them,
-Burgwan”--this was how they pronounced my name. “She was an old woman
-when she left Belgrade. My friend told me that; and she’s been growing
-younger every hour. She’s known to be a hundred years old at least.
-She’s cast her spell over you.”
-
-This was true enough; although not in the sense he meant. He was so
-obviously in earnest that I saw it was useless to attempt to argue him
-out of his superstition.
-
-“Well, witch or no witch, spell or no spell, I am going to see her into
-safety,” I answered firmly.
-
-“You’ll live to rue it, Burgwan. If I help you, it’s because I serve
-you; not to serve her, God’s curse on her;” and he crossed himself
-again and spat again, as he always did when he spoke of her. “If you
-want to be safe from her spells and the devil, her master, you’d better
-twist her neck at midnight and lop off her hands. It’s the only way to
-break the spell when once cast.”
-
-“Ah, well, I’ll try and find another way. And I’ll take all the risks.
-Was that what you were all wrangling about when I came in the hut just
-now?”
-
-“Yes. She’s done harm enough, already. That man’s broken leg, three
-good horses killed, and now my arm;” and he cursed her again bitterly.
-“It’ll be you next,” he added.
-
-“It’ll not be my arm that she breaks,” was my thought.
-
-“What he says is true,” interposed the man whom I had shot. “She’s a
-witch and a devil. Else how did she know when to escape and how to ride
-here to you?”
-
-“Answer that, Burgwan,” said Karasch, confidently. “How could she know,
-if she weren’t a witch?”
-
-Gartski came in then to say the horses were ready, and his entrance
-made any reply unnecessary, for Karasch rose at once, went out and
-mounted.
-
-“I’ll bring him back,” he said, “I know I can find him unless that
-devil blinds the track.”
-
-“Why should she do that, as it’s for her own advantage?” I asked; but
-he and Andreas were already moving off, and his answer was lost in the
-night air.
-
-The storm had passed and the rain ceased, and as I watched the two men
-ride off, the moon came out from behind the clouds, so that I could
-follow the horses for some distance down the ravine. As soon as they
-had passed out of sight I turned to the hut.
-
-I did not enter, but stood near the little window and leant against the
-wall thinking. The tale I had heard concerning the girl had made me
-very thoughtful. Those who know anything of the ignorant superstition
-of the peasantry of the Balkans will best appreciate the danger to her
-of that grim reputation. I had heard scores of stories of men and women
-who had been done to death with merciless barbarity for witchcraft.
-The mere charge itself was enough to turn from them any chance of fair
-trial and justice: and I knew there was not one of the men with me who
-would not have thought he was doing a Christian act to strangle her.
-To kill her was to aim a blow at the devil: the accepted duty of every
-God-fearing man and woman.
-
-But it was not so much her danger that set me thinking then as the
-reason which must lie behind the accusation. Who could have been
-devilish enough to set such a brand upon her; and why? Did she know her
-reputation? There must have been some black work somewhere to account
-for the plight to which such a girl had thus been reduced.
-
-High-born and gently nurtured she certainly was; accustomed to command
-and to be obeyed, as she had given abundant proofs; endowed with beauty
-and grace far beyond the average of her sex; and with innocence and
-purity stamped on every feature and manifesting itself in every act!
-Great enough to have powerful enemies, probably, I guessed; and in that
-I looked to find the key to the problem.
-
-I was in the midst of these somewhat rambling thoughts when the
-casement was pushed open gently.
-
-“Is it you, Burgwan?”
-
-“Yes, it is.”
-
-“What are you doing there?” I was beginning to listen now for the
-little note of command in her voice.
-
-“I am on watch.”
-
-“I have turned you from your cottage.” This was half apologetic:
-followed directly by the other tone. “You will be well paid.”
-
-“Thank you.” It was no use protesting. It seemed to please her to feel
-that she could repay me for any trouble; and it did no harm to humour
-her.
-
-“The storm is over. Can we not start?”
-
-“Where would you go?”
-
-She hesitated. “I wish to get to the railway.”
-
-“To go where?”
-
-“Do not question me.”
-
-“I beg your pardon. I am not questioning you in the sense you imply.
-There are two lines of railway about the same distance away. One leads
-to Serajevo, the other to Belgrade.”
-
-“How far away?”
-
-“The former perhaps twenty miles; the other I don’t know.”
-
-She caught her breath at this. “Where am I, then?”
-
-“In the middle of the Gravenje hills.”
-
-“God have mercy on me.” It was only a whisper; but so eloquent of
-despair.
-
-“You need not despair. It is as easy to travel forty miles as thirty;
-and twenty are not much worse than ten. I will see you through.” But
-this touched her dignity again.
-
-“You shall be well paid,” she repeated. I let it pass, and there came a
-pause.
-
-“Can we not start?”
-
-“You have not told me for which railway; but it doesn’t matter, as we
-cannot start to-night.”
-
-“Why not?” The imperative mood again.
-
-“My guide is not here.”
-
-“Your guide?” Suspicion and incredulity now. “Do you mean to say you
-don’t know your own country? Do you expect me to believe that? It is a
-mere excuse.”
-
-“Have you found me deceive you yet in anything?”
-
-“There may have been no cause yet.”
-
-“Will it not be more just to wait until you do find cause then?”
-
-Another pause followed.
-
-“I don’t wish to anger you,” she said, with a touch of nervousness; and
-as if to correct the impression, she added: “Perhaps you do not think I
-can keep my promise to pay you.”
-
-“You may disbelieve me, but I don’t disbelieve you. I have told you no
-more than the truth.”
-
-“But why do you need a guide?” she asked after a moment’s thought.
-
-“Because I don’t know the way, and don’t care to trust to the men here
-now.”
-
-“But if it is your own country, why don’t you know it?”
-
-“It is not my own country.” This surprised her, and again she was
-silent for a time.
-
-“Who are you?” was the next question. “And where do you belong?”
-
-“I am Burgwan.”
-
-“That is the name of the brigand.”
-
-[Illustration: “IN A SECOND SHE WAS IN THE GRIP OF HALF A DOZEN MEN.”
-
- _Page 136_ ]
-
-
-“I know that; but I am not a brigand. And now I think you had better
-try and rest. If we are to reach the railway to-morrow, it will be a
-long day’s ride, and you must get some sleep. You can sleep in perfect
-safety, the dog will stay with you.”
-
-“You are a strange man, Burgwan. What are you?”
-
-“Does it matter so long as I can bring you out of this plight? Do what
-I ask, please. Rest and get sleep and strength.”
-
-“Do you presume to give me your orders?”
-
-“Yes, when they are for your good. Have you eaten anything?”
-
-“It is for me to give orders, not to obey them.”
-
-“Have you eaten what I brought you?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“So far well, then. Good-night;” and I moved a pace or two away.
-
-“Where are you going?”
-
-“I shall be out here all night within call. And you have Chris.” She
-looked at me in the moonlight and our eyes met.
-
-“Why do I trust you, Burgwan?” I started with pleasure.
-
-“It doesn’t matter so long as you do. Good-night.”
-
-“It is a shame for you to have to stay there all night; but I shall
-feel safe if you do.”
-
-“It’s all right.” I was smitten suddenly with nervousness and answered
-brusquely.
-
-“I shall sleep, Burgwan. Good-night.”
-
-Her tone had a touch of gentle confidence, and I thought she smiled.
-But I did not look straight at her and made no reply.
-
-In one way she was a witch, truly enough; she had cast over me a
-spell which made me feel to her as I had never felt toward any other
-woman; and I leaned back against the wall with my arms folded thinking,
-thinking, aye, and dreaming, for all that I was full awake and my every
-sense alert and vigilant on my watch.
-
-Presently, how soon or how long afterwards I know not, I heard the
-casement opened softly and she peeped out and round at me.
-
-“You are still there, Burgwan?”
-
-“I said I would be, and I generally keep my word.”
-
-“You are not going to stand all night?”
-
-“No; there’s a stone here that will serve for a seat if I tire.”
-
-She drew in her head for a moment, and I heard her move something in
-the cottage.
-
-“There is a chair here and a rug. Take them;” and she put them out
-through the window.
-
-“You are kindly thoughtful,” I said. But here again I seemed to cross
-the curious dividing line in her thoughts, for she drew her head up,
-and looked at me half indignantly.
-
-“Good-night.” She spoke very stiffly, and closed the casement with
-sharp abruptness.
-
-But I forgave the action for the kindness of the thought, and resumed
-my watch and my dreaming.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-MORE WITCHCRAFT.
-
-
-The night hours sped away with only one incident to disturb us. I heard
-a strange noise which I could not locate nor understand, and as I stood
-listening intently Chris, within the hut, barked loudly.
-
-I heard the girl speak to him, and was half minded to ask her to let
-him out that he might help my watch; but I heard nothing more, and so
-let the thing pass.
-
-Day had broken before Karasch returned. He was alone, and had only
-failure and mishap to report. Trouble had dogged him from the start.
-He had not seen a trace of the man he had gone out to find. His
-companion’s horse had put his foot in a hole and broken his leg, and
-nearly killed Andreas, who was lying some fifteen miles away in the
-hills; while Karasch himself had twice been thrown, the second time
-with disastrous results to his broken arm.
-
-He left no doubt as to where he laid the blame.
-
-“We are bewitched, Burgwan,” he said, his brow frowning and his glance
-threatening. “In five years I have never once been thrown; and now
-twice within as many hours. The spell was upon us, and we were not
-meant to find the man.”
-
-“Does anyone cast spells for their own hurt, Karasch? It was necessary
-for her safety that the man should be caught and prevented from
-bringing his comrades here.”
-
-“You are not of this country, or you would know better. These devils
-work their own ends in their own ways. I lifted my hand against you
-because of her, and have brought the spell upon me. God defend us;” and
-he crossed himself earnestly.
-
-“But why should she help to bring her pursuers here?” I repeated; and
-might as well have reasoned with the wind.
-
-“You do not know. He will never reach his friends; or, if he does, the
-way hither will be hidden from them.”
-
-“Don’t be a blind fool, Karasch,” I exclaimed, losing my temper.
-
-He looked at me and shook his head slowly with a suggestion of
-commiseration.
-
-“It is not I who am the fool or blind, Burgwan,” he answered, almost
-sadly. “Listen. The first time I was thrown, I saw before me a
-stretch of beautiful turf and pricked my horse to a gallop across it
-when he plunged right into a pit; and I wonder I was not killed. The
-next time, just before dawn, I was feeling my way carefully when she
-herself appeared suddenly in front of me, all white fire, and flashing
-a gleaming sword before my eyes. I checked my horse, in fear, and he
-reared and fell back almost on top of me. Is not that enough to prove
-the spell?”
-
-It proved to me that he had either been asleep on his horse or was
-suffering from disordered nerves as the result of fatigue and the pain
-from his arm; but when I told him so, he grew more morose and pitying
-in his manner.
-
-“I know why you talk as you do,” he said. “You have looked into her
-eyes. The spell is on you, too--on all here; and we shall die--unless
-she does.” The last three words were uttered after a long pause,
-during which he had glanced ominously and fearsomely toward the hut.
-Superstition held him in its thrall.
-
-I judged it best to check the thought under the words at once.
-
-“The man who lays a finger on her to her hurt will have to reckon with
-me, Karasch,” I said, sternly, and turned away.
-
-He made no reply, but rode on to the shed some distance to the rear of
-the tent, where we stalled the horses.
-
-I began to scent a fresh danger for the “witch,” and was fast growing
-as anxious as she herself could be to get away. If Karasch believed
-that he would be saving me from the spell by killing her, I knew he was
-quite capable of doing it in the face of any commands I might lay upon
-him and the others.
-
-It was easy to guess at his crude reasoning. I had looked into her
-eyes, and was thus under her spell while she lived. My orders for
-her safety would thus be regarded as the result of the accursed
-enchantment; and they would only have to kill her to free me from the
-spell and make me to see that they had done the right thing. They would
-feel that I should then be as eager to reward them for her murder as I
-was now to forbid them touching her.
-
-Added to this was the actual and pressing danger arising from the fact
-that the man who had pursued her had escaped to carry the tidings of
-her whereabouts to his companions and bring them down upon us, perhaps
-in force.
-
-The situation was growing tighter with every fresh turn, and I made up
-my mind to rush matters and get away at once. I would not wait for the
-return of my guide, but take the risk of finding my way alone.
-
-I had just made this decision when Gartski came running round the tent
-with a white, scared face. He stopped some yards short of the hut, as
-if loath to come too near the abode of the accursed one, and crossed
-himself.
-
-“The horses have been killed, Burgwan. Will you come to the shed to
-Karasch?”
-
-The news, if true, was ill enough to make me change colour, and I went
-back with him.
-
-“We are all under a curse. It is witch’s work,” he said in a curiously
-awed tone; and he wrung his hands and crossed himself again. I was
-beginning to regard that gesture of devotion with a pretty considerable
-dislike by that time.
-
-The news was true enough. The three horses lay dead on the shed floor,
-each in a pool of blood; and on the quarter of each of them a small
-ring of blood was to be seen some two inches across. Peering into the
-shed stood the horse from which Karasch had just dismounted, his neck
-outstretched and his ears cocked in fear.
-
-Karasch and Petrov were inside, preternaturally grave and awe-struck.
-Both looked as frightened as Gartski when he had come running with the
-news to me; and Karasch pointed ominously in turn at the marks on each
-of the dead animals.
-
-“The witch’s mark. It’s always there,” he said.
-
-It was unquestionably very strange, and I looked solemn enough no
-doubt to lead them to believe I was beginning to share their own
-superstitious fears. It was about the worst thing that could have
-occurred at such a juncture; and for the moment I could think of
-nothing but the possible consequences of so disastrous an occurrence.
-
-With an effort I roused myself and examined the “witch’s” mark on each
-of the beasts. A circle had been cut with the point of a sharp knife,
-the mark being just skin deep.
-
-“How did they die, do you think, Karasch?”
-
-He pointed again to the marks and smiled grimly, as though the cause
-were too plain to need words.
-
-“And all this blood?” I asked.
-
-He shrugged his great shoulders.
-
-I looked at Gartski and the third man closely, for any sign that they
-had had a hand in it; but their superstitious fear was too genuine to
-be doubted.
-
-“Turn the horses over,” I ordered; but they shrank away and obstinately
-refused to put a finger near them.
-
-“Who is smeared with the blood of a witch-killed beast dies before the
-moon is old,” said Karasch. “They must burn where they lie.”
-
-“You’re a set of fools,” I cried angrily. But neither anger nor request
-was heeded.
-
-I took the iron bar from the door, and levering it under the smallest
-of the horses turned the carcase over sufficiently to find what I
-sought--the cause of death. There was a wound just under the heart. The
-horse had been stabbed with a sword or long knife. Whoever had done the
-work knew where and how to strike so as to kill instantly.
-
-I went outside then and searched the ground all round the door
-carefully.
-
-“Come back to the tent all of you,” I said. I led the way, scrutinising
-every inch of the ground and following a somewhat unaccountable trail I
-had discovered. It led direct to the tent.
-
-“Let me see to your arm, Karasch,” I said first, intending to let
-them have some minutes to recover from the first effects of their
-stupefaction.
-
-“No, Burgwan. You have cursed blood on you. You cannot touch me. I
-should die, too.”
-
-“Very well, then, we’ll settle this thing first. You saddled Karasch’s
-horse last night, Gartski. Did you fasten the shed afterwards?”
-
-“No; we never fasten it. Bars won’t keep out devils.”
-
-“This is the work of no devil. Those horses have been killed by someone
-who plunged a knife into their hearts and then cut that ring on the
-haunch. I saw the wound myself on the beast I examined. They were all
-right when you left them?”
-
-“Yes, quite right.”
-
-“Did either of you go near the shed again until Karasch returned, or
-did you sleep?” I asked next, remembering the strange noise I had
-heard in the night.
-
-“We had had a long day, and both slept soundly.”
-
-“We’re getting very close to it now,” I answered. I turned to our
-prisoner with the broken leg. “How is your leg this morning, my man?”
-
-“Very painful, but better,” he replied after a pause.
-
-“Did you sleep, or did you hear anything in the night?”
-
-“I slept all through the night. I was asleep when you came in just now.”
-
-“Then it ought not to be so painful. I’ll have a look at it.”
-
-“No, no,” he cried, putting up his hands to ward me off. “Don’t touch
-me. You have touched the accursed blood.”
-
-“Do you believe in it, too?” and I looked keenly at him.
-
-He crossed himself earnestly and spat on the floor.
-
-“Stay, stay. You’re a Turk! why do you cross yourself with the cross
-of the Christians? I won’t touch you against your will, but I must see
-how your leg is doing. Lift him up, Gartski,” and I pointed to a bench.
-They hesitated. “Do as I say; and smartly, too. You know me,” I cried
-sternly.
-
-The man objected and protested with many oaths, and cursed me volubly.
-But I insisted; and the others did not dare to disobey me. Karasch
-himself plucked the man’s rug off, and the other two lifted him.
-
-The mystery was instantly plain to me. The man was smeared from head
-to foot with mud and blood, the traces of which he had tried to remove;
-and lying where his body had covered them were a knife and a small
-lantern; while a glance at his injured leg showed me that the splints
-had been all but torn off in the exertions of his night’s work.
-
-He was a faithful servant to his masters, whoever they might be; and he
-had conceived the design of killing the only horses we had, in order
-to prevent the escape of the girl before his comrades could return to
-recapture her.
-
-Waiting until the two men in the tent were fast asleep he had dragged
-himself, painfully and laboriously, through the mud to the shed, had
-shut himself in, and, by the light of the lantern he carried, had
-deliberately stabbed one horse after the other, putting on each the
-witch’s mark. He knew the superstition about it, of course, and trusted
-to that to save him from the risk of discovery. I had seen the slimy
-trail he had left in the mud, however, and had thus detected him.
-
-With what dogged effort he had acted and the stoical endurance he had
-shown were evidenced by the condition of his wounded leg. The splints
-had been torn off, and he must have suffered excruciating agony in the
-grating of the fractured bones.
-
-I taxed him with the deed, but he denied it, of course, and swore by
-every oath he could think of, Christian and Mahomedan alike, that he
-was innocent and had slept soundly the whole night through.
-
-I drew Karasch aside. “You can see for yourself what happened,” I said,
-significantly and triumphantly. But his superstition was proof even
-against such evidence.
-
-“You do not understand, Burgwan; I do,” he replied, in the same dismal
-fanatical tone.
-
-“The thing can be seen as plainly as a mountain in the moonlight,” I
-exclaimed, impatiently. “He wants to prevent our getting away until his
-companions get here.”
-
-But Karasch only shook his head.
-
-“You can see that he did it, can’t you, man?”
-
-“I can see she used his body to do it. They often do that. He did it in
-a dream. His hand; her mind. I’ll question him.”
-
-“And put a ready-made lie into his thoughts,” I exclaimed, angrily.
-
-“It is witch’s work, more than his,” he repeated, stubbornly and
-doggedly. I felt I should lose my temper if I stayed longer, and
-tossing up my hands in despair at his folly, I gave up talking sense to
-him.
-
-I washed off the traces of the blood from my hands, and having got
-materials for a breakfast, went away to the hut to try and think what
-next to do in view of this fresh disaster.
-
-I don’t think I had ever been more completely cornered than I was
-by the position which faced me then. I was thirty miles or so from
-anywhere; I did not know the road for even a league from the camp; and
-I hadn’t an animal left worth calling a horse. If I attempted to leave
-with the girl, we should probably be lost, or break down by the way.
-Yet if I stayed where I was, we should have her pursuers back to fetch
-her; while, even if they did not come, there was an almost hourly risk
-that my own men would break out against her in order to deliver me from
-her enchantment.
-
-Whichever way I turned I could see nothing but imminent peril for
-her--peril of death indeed; and cudgel my wits as I would, I could see
-no turning in the long, straight lane of danger.
-
-I remember stopping midway between the tent and the hut, and setting
-down the things I carried, and glancing round at the circle of frowning
-hills with a confused and dismaying sense of feebleness. The breeze
-of the morning, fresh and invigorating as it was, seemed to grow hot,
-stifling, oppressive, until it was positively difficult to breathe
-freely. The hills had become suddenly as the walls of a prison,
-shutting me in, a helpless, crippled prisoner. Light, freedom, hope,
-life were all on the other side of them, but the path was barred
-and the way of escape blocked. My nerves were shaken and the mental
-perspective warped, for the moment, in the exaggeration of sudden alarm
-for the girl.
-
-The sight of her brought me to my senses again. She appeared at the
-door of the hut and looking about her saw me and smiled. I must
-keep the knowledge of danger from her, of course, so I went down
-and pretended to busy myself with my packages while I pulled myself
-together.
-
-I picked them up and went on to the hut whistling a strain of the “Star
-Spangled Banner,” and trying to appear as if I hadn’t a thought in the
-world above breakfast.
-
-“Good-morning, Burgwan,” she said, with a sort of chary patronage and
-encouragement.
-
-“Good-morning. I have brought your breakfast. Very homely diet, but the
-best we can offer you here.”
-
-“Never mind. What time do we start?” She had a rare knack of finding
-awkward questions.
-
-“The guide is not come yet,” I answered, conscious that my pause would
-rouse her suspicions.
-
-“But I cannot wait long.”
-
-“That’s true enough.” I spoke the thought aloud, unwittingly.
-
-“What does that mean?” Very sharply asked, this.
-
-“I can’t answer any questions yet. I have to think.”
-
-The reply appeared to offend her, and her eyes flashed as she drew
-herself up with a gesture of authority and constraint. She was turning
-back into the hut when she caught sight of some stains on my clothes.
-
-“That is--blood?” She paused before the word.
-
-“Yes, it’s blood. I didn’t know it was there.”
-
-She shrank from me for a space against the lintel.
-
-“It’s horse’s blood. We’ve had some trouble in the stables, and I’m
-afraid I don’t cut a very pretty figure just now.” I tried to make
-light of it in this way; but it was a feeble effort.
-
-“Tell me--at once. The truth, please.” There was eagerness now in her
-tone, as well as the usual imperative note.
-
-I hesitated. “I suppose you’d better know it,” I said then. “There has
-been foul play in the night, and our horses have been killed. I got
-this on me when I was tracing the thing to its source. That’s all--but
-it’s bad enough.”
-
-“How many?”
-
-“All but one--and he’s dead lame, I’m afraid.”
-
-“Is this true? or is it an excuse to keep me here?”
-
-I winced. The injustice bit deep. I looked at her with a protest in my
-eyes.
-
-“If you’ll put that question plainly, perhaps you’ll see it in its
-proper light, and understand how it may sound to me. No, I don’t mean
-that. It doesn’t matter. I have told you the truth; that’s all.”
-
-“But it does mean delay?”
-
-“I’m very sorry; but thirty or forty miles make a long march for a lame
-horse. I could manage on foot, of course, but----” I left the sentence
-unfinished.
-
-She started, and bit her lip as she realised my meaning. To avoid
-seeing her distress, and to fill the pause, I dropped one of the tins I
-was carrying and stooped to pick it up.
-
-“I have to beg your pardon, Burgwan, for doubting you.”
-
-“That’s no account, I assure you. I couldn’t have helped it myself if
-the position had been reversed. The truth does sometimes look strangely
-like falsehood.”
-
-“But you don’t seem to understand that I must get away. I must.”
-
-“I do realise it,” I answered, very earnestly, “and mean to find a way,
-somehow. I’m not easy to beat, most times.”
-
-“When can we start, then?” I noticed the “we,” and I think it had
-something to do with putting me off my guard.
-
-“I shall have to think a bit,” I said.
-
-“It must be soon, Burgwan. What time is it now?”
-
-Without thinking, I pulled out my watch from an inner pocket--a big
-gold chronometer on a gold chain--and the moment I caught her quick
-eyes on it I saw the mistake, and regretted it.
-
-“Just six o’clock,” I answered, as indifferently as I could.
-
-“That’s a very valuable watch you carry in these lonely hills;” and her
-look spoke her thought much more eloquently than her words.
-
-“It’s a very good timekeeper,” I answered at random.
-
-Her intent gaze held me all the while, and I saw gathering in her eyes
-something of the suspicion with which she had first heard my name the
-previous night.
-
-“How did you get it?”
-
-“Are you not over quick with your suspicions?”
-
-“Am I to fear you--or trust you?”
-
-“If you trust me it will have to be without asking any questions--at
-present. You have no reason to fear me; and never will have.”
-
-“You must tell me where you got so valuable a thing--you, a peasant of
-the hills?”
-
-“I am not a peasant of the hills.”
-
-“Where did you get it?”
-
-“If I told you, you would scarcely believe me.”
-
-“Where?” she insisted.
-
-“I bought it; that’s all.”
-
-She drew a deep breath and bit her lip.
-
-“I have thought of you as a brave man capable of real nobleness. I have
-believed you to be true and honest. If you fail me I have no hope. And
-if you mean me harm, for the sake of the living God tell me so.” She
-spoke with intense but carefully restrained passion until the last few
-words.
-
-“Don’t take it like that,” I replied, firmly and calmly, although moved
-to the core by her appeal. “I will tell you something. I am not what
-I may have seemed to you. I am no peasant and no brigand, as you seem
-to fear. Who and what I am, and why here, I cannot tell you yet; but,
-believe this, I will serve you and save you from this trouble. If you
-wish it, I will take any oath you like on that. But my word is my word,
-and you may trust it.”
-
-She listened intently, marking every word, and when I finished she bent
-forward and gazed searchingly right into my eyes. Then she drew a deep,
-long breath, as of relief, and smiled.
-
-“Thank God, I feel I can trust you. I will not question you again,
-Burgwan.”
-
-“Then the best thing you can do is to show it by getting some
-breakfast.”
-
-The change to the commonplace and practical from that moment of
-feverish passion was a welcome relief to us both.
-
-“Yes; you are right. I will,” she answered, forcing a smile; and
-picking up the things I had laid on the chair, she carried them into
-the hut.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-A CONTEST IN WILL POWER.
-
-
-After that incident there was something of a change in the curious
-relations between us. She was just as imperious at times; but less
-patronising. She seemed to expect my services less as a return for
-payment to be made, or by right of caste and station, than in virtue of
-her womanhood and helplessness. Either she now believed entirely in my
-good faith, or she was anxious to make me think she did.
-
-I explained to her how I generally contrived to prepare my food, showed
-her how to manage the spirit stove, pointed out where the few things
-needful were kept, and offered to make the meal ready for her.
-
-“I am not helpless, and can do it myself, thank you,” she said, half
-resentfully.
-
-“I didn’t know,” I answered, and soon after left her to it. I went back
-to the tent to wash my face and hands and endeavour to get the blood
-stains from my clothes. I began to be disquietingly conscious of my
-exceedingly ungroomed condition.
-
-The men were eating their breakfasts and talking together with lowered
-brow and gloomy faces.
-
-“What are we to do, Burgwan?” asked Karasch, coming over to me
-presently.
-
-“There will be no work to-day. I shall remain in camp.”
-
-“Who is to fetch Andreas?” This was the man who had ridden with him on
-the previous night and lay out on the hills.
-
-“I can’t spare the horse, now we have only one. One of you must take
-food to him on foot, and try to hire or buy some horses in place of the
-dead ones.”
-
-“It will not do,” he said, lowering his voice. “I cannot walk so far;
-and you can’t trust the others.”
-
-“I can trust Gartski.”
-
-“Not after this morning’s business with the witch-killed beasts.”
-
-“Don’t talk such nonsense, Karasch. I proved to you that that
-treacherous devil over there stabbed them to prevent us getting away.”
-
-“He has explained that. He had a vision and remembers it now. She
-stood over him with a flaming sword, just as she appeared to me, and
-compelled him to do it.”
-
-“How a man of your shrewdness can believe such rot passes my
-understanding, Karasch. You might be a great baby if I didn’t know you
-were a brave and clever man.” But flattery was of no more use than
-reproaches.
-
-“You don’t understand these things, Burgwan. We do. You see with her
-eyes; we use our own.” The dogged manner and tone alike showed that he
-spoke with dead conviction.
-
-“Then the best thing will be for the lot of you to clear out,” I
-exclaimed testily.
-
-“You can’t be left alone in her power. I shall stay with you to the
-end. You gave me my life when I had lost it fairly, and I’ll save yours
-in return.”
-
-“What do you mean?” I asked sharply, as a glint of his intention shot
-into my thoughts. Instead of meeting my eyes as usual, he looked down
-and shuffled uneasily.
-
-“The spell must be broken and then you’ll see the truth and--and no
-harm may come to you after all.”
-
-“What do you mean? Speak out, Karasch, and meet my eyes openly like a
-man, as you usually do.”
-
-But this he would not or could not do.
-
-“There is only one way,” he said doggedly. “And it must come to that in
-the end. We have talked it over. Your life must be saved.”
-
-“I should have thought you all knew by this time that I can take pretty
-good care of that for myself.”
-
-“There is only one way,” he repeated in the same dogged tone.
-
-“And what is that way? Out with it, man, in plain terms.”
-
-“She must die, Burgwan, or you will.”
-
-I thought a moment, and then saw a different line and promptly adopted
-it.
-
-“You are too late, Karasch,” I said, as gravely and solemnly as I could
-speak.
-
-“No, there is always time within the same moon.”
-
-“No; she has rendered me proof against any knife or bullet for three
-days on condition that I defend her. And I’ve sworn that I will die
-before anyone shall harm her.”
-
-It was a beautiful bluff. He started back and looked at me in manifest
-horror and crossed himself as he muttered a prayer.
-
-“Don’t do that, you hurt me, Karasch,” I said, pretending to shudder.
-
-“Great God of all. And you a Christian, Burgwan.”
-
-His agitation was almost piteous. He turned deathly pale and beads of
-perspiration stood on his forehead, as he stared at me horror-struck.
-“And I have sworn to save you.” It was just a whisper of dismay and
-helplessness, and it showed the struggle which was raging between his
-superstition and his fealty to me.
-
-“I’ll release you from your oath to me, if you wish; and you and the
-rest can leave as soon as you like.”
-
-“No, by God, no; not if I’m damned forever,” he cried. “I’ll stand
-by you, Burgwan, mad blind fool though you’ve been. Curse the witch
-and all her infernal arts;” and he was at it again with his vehement
-crossing and spitting and prayers.
-
-His devotion moved me deeply. I knew how much the effort must cost him.
-He believed that he was jeopardising not his life only, that he was
-always ready to risk, but his very soul as well. Rough, coarse, crude,
-ignorant, half civilised boor that he was, he had shown a fidelity to
-me such as I had never witnessed before. He should have a reward; and
-it should be rich enough to surprise him if ever we got out of this
-mess; but I could say nothing of it to him then. He would have laughed
-to scorn the promise of money in such a case. I accepted his sacrifice
-therefore without another word.
-
-“What shall we do about Andreas?” I asked. “Gartski and Petrov had
-better go out to him.”
-
-“No. If they go, it will be only to find help and bring others back
-here to do what you say must not be done. Andreas must take his chance.”
-
-“You must go somewhere then, and find us horses.”
-
-“If I take my eyes off those two they’ll run away. I must stay to watch
-them.”
-
-“But we must have horses and at once,” I urged.
-
-“Tell her to send some here. She can if she chooses.” His belief in her
-supernatural powers was complete; but that time it served to turn the
-tables with a vengeance. I had no answer.
-
-“It must be as you say. I’ll ask her;” and with that I left the
-tent, wishing that the miraculous supply of horses were as easy of
-accomplishment as Karasch believed.
-
-There was one that I could have, however, and I deemed it best to make
-sure that neither Gartski nor Petrov should have the chance of stealing
-it. So I led it over to the cottage to tether it close at hand,
-carrying the saddle with me.
-
-Hearing me, the girl came out.
-
-“You have horses, then?” she asked, in a tone of satisfaction.
-
-“I have this one, that’s all;” and I fastened it up to a tree close by
-the hut.
-
-“You are looking very serious, Burgwan. Has anything more happened?”
-
-“A little misunderstanding with the men. Nothing more serious than I’ve
-had before. Have you breakfasted?”
-
-“Yes. I have yours here;” and she brought out to me coffee and a
-steaming dish of food which she had prepared for me with her own dainty
-hands. She might have been a witch, indeed, for the cleverness with
-which she had concocted a savoury meal from the rough fare at her
-disposal.
-
-I was very hungry, and while I ate it with thankfulness and relish she
-fed Chris.
-
-“The dog takes to you, readily,” I said.
-
-“Yes. Good Chris,” and he wagged his tail and looked up at her. “He is
-another mystery, Burgwan--like that watch;” and she smiled.
-
-“Yes; and in his way quite as reliable.”
-
-“It is not a breed often found--in the hills.”
-
-She was fishing, but I would not see the bait, and answered with a
-monosyllable.
-
-“He is very fond of you,” she said.
-
-“He knows me and trusts me, I think.”
-
-“Is that a reproach?”
-
-“It is not for me to reproach you. You don’t know me yet.”
-
-“There are many things I don’t know yet. For one, how I got here to
-this hut?”
-
-I smiled. “I carried you,” I answered.
-
-“You dared?” A quick impulsive rebuke in the question.
-
-“I didn’t dare to leave you lying out there in the road when that storm
-was coming up.”
-
-“You had no right,” she cried, and went back into the hut.
-
-Chris looked up as she went and ran to the door after her; but returned
-and finished his breakfast, and then went in to her.
-
-I had finished mine then, and sat thinking over the position of things
-when she came out.
-
-“I was wrong to be angry, Burgwan. Of course, there was nothing else
-for you to do.”
-
-“I couldn’t think of anything, at any rate.”
-
-“I ought not to have been so childish as to faint,” she said, with a
-smile and a shrug. Then she picked my cup and platter. “Where can I get
-water to wash these?”
-
-“You needn’t bother about that. It’s not fit work for you.”
-
-“But I wish to,” she cried, with a little stamp of the foot.
-
-“There is a spring close here, then,” I replied; and taking a pannikin
-I fetched the water and sat down again and went on with my thinking.
-
-“Can we start now, Burgwan?” she asked. “I wish to reach the railway
-that will carry me to Belgrade.”
-
-“That means thirty miles through a country where I don’t know a yard of
-the road;” and I shook my head.
-
-“You always raise difficulties.”
-
-“No; I don’t raise them, I see them. That’s all. I wish I didn’t. It
-may come to it at the last--but we had better wait for the guide. He
-ought to be here soon now.”
-
-“Don’t the men know the road?”
-
-“We had better wait for the guide.”
-
-“Are not you the leader here?”
-
-“In a way, yes; but not in such a matter. I am thinking all I know to
-find the best thing to do.”
-
-“But suppose the others should come first before this guide, what then?”
-
-“What others?”
-
-“The rest of the men who were taking me to Maglai.”
-
-“Oh, you were going to Maglai. How many were there?”
-
-“Six. Four beside the two you captured.”
-
-“How far from here were you when you escaped?” I noticed that she no
-longer resented my questions as on the previous night.
-
-“I don’t know. It was about noon, and they called a halt; and having
-fed and drunk they lay down and slept, leaving one to watch. But he
-fell asleep, too, with the heat, and I stole off. I rode fast for some
-hours, and then was going slowly, thinking I was safe from pursuit,
-when suddenly the two appeared in the distance and chased me. I let my
-horse go where it would, and it carried me here.”
-
-“You had been riding about seven hours or so, then. That means fourteen
-at least, without the delay of the storm; and then he’d have to chance
-finding them.”
-
-“Whom do you mean by ‘he’?”
-
-I had been calculating roughly how long it would take the man Karasch
-had set free to reach his friends and return with them, and unwittingly
-had spoken the thought aloud. I pretended not to hear her question.
-
-“You don’t know whether all the men rode after you on the same road, or
-spread out in different directions?” I asked.
-
-She made no reply, and when I glanced up I met her eyes bent earnestly
-upon me.
-
-“You are concealing something from me. You heard my question, I know,
-for I saw you start.”
-
-With the curious feeling that I was at a disadvantage sitting down
-below her, I stood up.
-
-“You had better leave the run of this thing to me. I won’t ask any more
-questions than I am compelled; and if they bother you, you can turn a
-deaf ear to them, as I do when I don’t want to hear yours.”
-
-Signs of rebellion flashed from her eyes, and she made ready to give
-battle. She held her head high and squared her shapely shoulders.
-
-“I won’t be dictated to like that, and I won’t remain here on any such
-terms.”
-
-“I am not dictating; I’m talking common sense.”
-
-“I won’t submit to it; I will not.” And she stamped her foot. “I will
-have an answer to my question. I won’t have things hidden from me. Why
-won’t you answer it?”
-
-“Didn’t I tell you I had my deaf ear to it?”
-
-“How dare you try to pass it off with a flippant jest like that? Who
-are you to presume to insult me?”
-
-“Do you really think I wish to insult you?” I asked, very quietly.
-
-“What you wish to do I neither know nor care. But it is an insult, as
-even the commonest instinct of courtesy would tell you.”
-
-“We rough men of the hills haven’t much to do with courtesy.”
-
-“You are not of the hills, you know that. You told me you were no
-peasant. Do you suppose I can’t see that for myself?” I made no reply,
-and after a pause she added, “I know why it is you will not answer me.
-You think I must be a coward because I am a woman.”
-
-“Is that another of the commonest instincts of courtesy--the average
-man’s courtesy, I mean?” I said this with the deliberate intention of
-irritating her to keep her away from the matter. But she saw my purpose
-instantly.
-
-“Will you answer that question of mine?”
-
-“Let me finish first with mine, and then you ask what you will.”
-
-She paused to think, and then nodded as if in answer to her thoughts.
-
-“I am not a coward to be frightened by bad news, and I have already
-guessed the answer to it.”
-
-“Then there can be no need for me to tell it you,” I said.
-
-She waited again, and then looking at me fixedly said, with an air of
-deliberate decision: “If you do not tell me, I will not remain here
-another minute.”
-
-This was a challenge to a trial of wills; and I took it up at once.
-
-“You are not a prisoner,” I said, and stepped aside ostentatiously as
-if to leave the way free for her.
-
-“Can I have that horse there?”
-
-“I’ll saddle him for you. I can lead him down to the ravine to where
-your horse lies, and get your side-saddle.”
-
-“Which road do I take to get to the railway?”
-
-“I don’t know, but I can give you a map and a compass.”
-
-“Get them, please.” She had plenty of will, that was certain; but
-I couldn’t afford to let her bluff me. I went into the cottage and
-rummaged about till I found the compass and the map, and then added a
-touch of realism. I took a spare revolver and loaded it, and held it
-out to her with some extra ammunition.
-
-“You had better take these as well.” She took them and then drove in
-the spur in her turn, by saying in her haughtiest manner:
-
-“You shall be paid for them, Burgwan.”
-
-“You can give the value of them to a charity in Belgrade,” I answered.
-We were both angry now. “Are you ready?”
-
-She was pinning her hat, and when I saw that her fingers trembled, I
-had hard work to persist. But I held on.
-
-“Yes,” she said, after a moment.
-
-We went out and I untethered the horse, and with Chris in close
-attendance, we walked without speaking to the mouth of the ravine,
-close to where her horse still lay.
-
-“Will you hold him, while I get the side-saddle?” Our eyes met for a
-moment, and I saw that at last she was convinced I was in earnest.
-
-I turned away, feeling bad, and unbuckled the girths from the dead
-animal, and then saddled the one she was to ride. I took plenty of
-time over the work, too, hoping she would see the madness of what she
-proposed to do and give in. But she shewed no sign of doing anything of
-the sort; and at last the work was done.
-
-“All is ready,” I said, giving a last look at the bridle. “Can you
-mount by yourself, or shall I help you?”
-
-She made no answer, but stood with her head half averted, looking away
-down the steep mountain road. She was biting her lips strenuously, and
-the fingers which held up her skirt were tightly, almost fiercely,
-clenched. Eloquent little proofs of the struggle that was raging
-between pride and prudence. But I held my tongue and just waited.
-
-Then she turned to me. She was very pale, but her eyes were flashing.
-
-“I thought you were a man,” she cried, between her set lips. I met her
-look steadily without a word. And we stood so for the space of some
-seconds; her face the embodiment of hot passionate contemptuousness;
-mine as impassive as a stone. “And what a coward you are!”
-
-I stood as though my ears were indeed deaf.
-
-She still hesitated; and the woman who hesitates can be saved as well
-as lost.
-
-Then came the last effort of her pride.
-
-“Lead the horse to that stone. I will not soil myself by letting you
-help me.”
-
-I led him where she pointed; and she mounted with the ease of a
-practised horsewoman. She even gathered up the reins and settled
-herself in the saddle; and then waited to look almost yearningly for
-some sign from me. I gave none, but held the bridle as if I had been
-her groom.
-
-Chris stood looking from one to the other of us as if in deep
-perplexity.
-
-“Will you take the dog?” I asked.
-
-Then came the end.
-
-“Do you mean me to go?” It was all I had been waiting for.
-
-“No, not now,” I answered at once; “since you see the folly of it.”
-
-“How dare you? I WILL go now;” and she gripped the reins tightly and
-touched the horse with her heel. But he hadn’t much fire in him, and
-obeyed my hand on the bridle instead of her heel. I held him with my
-left hand and stretched out the other toward her.
-
-“Come; you had better dismount. This folly has gone far enough;” and I
-put as much command and authority as possible into my tone.
-
-I shall never forget the look she gave me, nor my surprise when a
-second later she put her hand into mine and slipped off the saddle. The
-rush of relief was too great for her to simulate further anger.
-
-“How hard you can be. I though you meant it,” she murmured.
-
-“You shouldn’t try us both in this way,” I said. “I had to show you
-that my will is stronger than yours; and you made the lesson hard.”
-
-“Would you have let me go?” she asked.
-
-“No, certainly not.”
-
-“Oh, I wish I had held out,” she exclaimed, vehemently.
-
-I smiled.
-
-“We call it bluff in the States; and I am an older hand at it than you.
-That’s all.”
-
-“The States?” she asked quickly. “What States?”
-
-“United States. I am an American, you see, naturalised, that is; I’m
-English by birth.”
-
-“American? English? But I thought....”
-
-Face, eyes, everything eloquent of questioning surprise.
-
-“Yes, I know. You thought all sorts of things except the right one. But
-anyway, I’m not quite the coward you thought just now.”
-
-“Don’t.”
-
-“No, I won’t again. Come, let us get back to the cottage. We haven’t
-lost after all by this--we have the side-saddle.”
-
-“I don’t know what to think or say,” she cried, in dismay.
-
-“I can understand your purpose. But let us get back, please;” and with
-that we went, I leading the horse as before and she walking by my
-side, Chris keeping close to her as though in some way he understood
-everything.
-
-Again it was a silent walk at first; but this time the motives for
-silence were very different.
-
-[Illustration: “I REALLY BELIEVE THE BARONESS THINKS YOU ARE A PEASANT
-IN DISGUISE.” _Page 238_ ]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-UNWELCOME VISITORS.
-
-
-That contest of wills, followed by my avowal that I was an American,
-marked another very distinct advance toward a better understanding
-between us. My companion’s interest was stimulated and her curiosity
-piqued; and our relationship was at once placed upon a footing of
-personal equality. She made that plain--intentionally, I think--her
-momentary chagrin at defeat in the trial of strength between us
-overshadowed completely by her sense of relief and reassurance.
-
-Chris was a great help to us just then. He seemed to have settled
-it in his thoughts there had been trouble which was now put right,
-and he stalked along by her side, thrusting his great nose into her
-hand, nestling his head against her, and giving many signs of his
-satisfaction. She caressed him gently, and presently, with a half
-glance at me, she said, as if to him:
-
-“And are you American, too, Chris? And is your name really Chris?”
-
-“He’s American born, not like his master, and his name is really
-Chris,” I replied.
-
-“And have you a strong temper, too, Chris?”
-
-“Like master like dog. He can show his teeth at need,” I said with a
-smile. “But he can be a staunch friend--to those who trust him.”
-
-“Does he show them to women?” she asked, turning to flash her eyes upon
-me.
-
-“Is that quite fair?”
-
-“You can show yours,” she said, shrugging her shoulders.
-
-“I’ve seen him hold a man up with a growl when I knew he didn’t mean to
-bite. Just as a lesson, you know.”
-
-“I would trust my hand between HIS teeth,” she answered, as she thrust
-her fingers into his great mouth. The rascal mouthed them, and fawned
-upon her and looked up in her face.
-
-“Ah, he’s kissing it--to congratulate you on having made peace,” I
-said drily; and she drew her hand away so heartily that for a moment I
-feared I had offended her. But I had not.
-
-“Does HE understand what you call ‘bluff’?” was her next question,
-after a pause.
-
-“He’s very much like me in many ways.”
-
-“I can believe that. He is so silent about himself.”
-
-“Like us both in that, perhaps, isn’t he?”
-
-“Is that a reproach or a question?” she retorted, and added, seriously,
-“I cannot tell you about myself; but you shall know some day.”
-
-“I am not asking. We’ll leave it unsaid on both sides, shall we--at any
-rate for the present--and just take each other on trust?”
-
-“As you will. I have learnt my lesson and shall not question you.”
-The reply was given with a mixture of irony, rebellion, and assumed
-submissiveness in manner and tone.
-
-“I am glad to find you so ready a pupil. Chris there could tell you
-that where there’s a toughish job to handle he finds it best to let me
-go my own way.” We had reached the cottage, and she was entering the
-door as I said this. She turned quickly, and threw up her head.
-
-“You expect a dog’s obedience, then?”
-
-“From Chris, yes,” and I smiled.
-
-“From me, I mean. You know I mean that.”
-
-“From you I ask nothing except to do what your judgment prompts,
-tempered perhaps by your trust in--in Chris.”
-
-“In Chris’s master, you mean. Why don’t you say it?”
-
-“Old Chris would do nothing I didn’t approve; so it’s about the same
-thing,” I answered, and led the horse away, tethered him, and having
-loosened the girths gave him a feed, and fetched him some water from
-the spring. When I returned with it she was standing by the house.
-
-“Can I help you?”
-
-“Not in this, thank you.”
-
-“In what, then? I have nothing to do.”
-
-“I’m afraid I can’t find you anything.”
-
-“Don’t you do any work in the camp, then?”
-
-“Not to-day. You see it’s a kind of holiday.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“The work here is finished. I’m getting ready to leave. As soon as
-Georgev--that’s the guide, you know--gets back, I shall be off.”
-
-“I suppose I am not to ask what the work was?” She asked this with
-a smile and a shrug, contriving to convey the impression that while
-she was impatiently curious the question had behind it no vestige of
-distrust.
-
-“I did not intend to tell you, but if you wish it I will. This is a
-prospecting expedition. I’ve been looking to see if any mines could be
-opened here. Of course, it’s a sort of secret, you know.”
-
-“Oh, you’re hoping to make money here?” and the glance she gave at my
-clothes told me her thought. “You are an engineer?”
-
-“No, I am a prospector. I have done it before in the States.”
-
-“I hope you will be successful. But I am sure you will. You are the
-kind of man that does succeed; so masterful, I mean.” We both smiled
-at the word. “Yes,” she added, as if in answer to my thought; “I am
-judging by what has just occurred, for one thing.”
-
-“I am afraid I seem a bit of a brute.”
-
-“I don’t think so. I--I was very angry when I said what I did. I--I
-didn’t mean it; and I’m--I’m sorry.”
-
-“I’m not. I know you don’t think it now; but you meant it then; and it
-was just what anyone else would have meant and said. It helped us to
-understand things better. That’s all. I was very much afraid you meant
-to ride off alone, and then ... well, I don’t know about then.”
-
-“I wish I had known your thoughts,” she said, with a sort of half
-mischievous regret.
-
-“You mean you would have outplayed me?”
-
-She nodded and smiled, “Yes.”
-
-“Well, please don’t try it again. It might be very dangerous play.”
-
-“I won’t, I promise you,” she said readily, understanding from my
-serious tone that I was very much in earnest. “When you use that tone I
-have no rebellion left in me. I am like Chris, I suppose, in that.”
-
-Chris himself interrupted us then by growling, and looking round I saw
-Karasch coming from the tent.
-
-“Chris hates Karasch,” I told her. “The man struck him once savagely,
-and I had all my work to keep the dog from his throat. He never
-forgets. You can see now that every hair on his neck is bristling with
-anger; and Karasch won’t come near him.”
-
-“He is a fierce looking man,” she said.
-
-“But he will serve me now, faithfully, and Chris must make friends with
-him. Will you go into the hut a moment? Come, Chris,” and as she went
-away I led the dog to Karasch and made him understand that he was to
-regard the man as a friend. It was not easy, for Karasch himself was
-afraid; but I stood by while he patted the dog’s head, and I made Chris
-lick his hand. Then I sent him back to the hut.
-
-“Now, Karasch, what is it?” I asked.
-
-“The devil is it, Burgwan. I slept and Petrov has gone.”
-
-It was ugly news, and made me grave.
-
-“So you couldn’t even keep watch, for all your big words,” I said
-angrily.
-
-“It has never chanced so before,” he replied sullenly; and his glance
-across toward the cottage told me the thought behind the words.
-
-“If you were to cut your finger I suppose you’d set it down to the same
-cause just now. You have served me an ill turn. You can send Gartski to
-find him, the sooner the better.”
-
-“You are mad, Burgwan.”
-
-“Mad to have trusted to your keeping awake, perhaps. Not in this. If
-one has got away, where’s the use of keeping the other? When we had
-both safe, it was well; but two can do no more harm than one away; and
-we needn’t be bothered by keeping watch over a traitor. I’ll speak to
-him.”
-
-“Come here, Gartski.” He rose sheepishly and crossed to me. “How long
-has Petrov been gone, and where has he gone?”
-
-“I was asleep, and know nothing,” he lied glibly.
-
-“Yesterday, when the trouble was here, you took my side; now you are
-against me, and want to go.”
-
-“I am not against you,” he began, with much gesticulation.
-
-“Don’t lie. I have means of knowing everything in your thoughts.”
-
-He shrank back a pace and trembled, and crossed himself.
-
-“You know what I mean, I see,” I said. It was no good to have a
-reputation for witchcraft and not make use of it. “If you lie to me
-now,” I went on, looking into his eyes with as fierce an expression as
-I could assume, “you will not outlive the present moon. Tell the truth,
-and no harm will come to you.” Glancing at my hand I saw I had broken
-the skin in tending the horse, and I smeared a little circle of blood
-on the tent post close by. “If that dries before you speak, it will be
-too late, Gartski,” I said, solemnly.
-
-It seemed to be a very reliable card to play, this superstition of
-theirs. He looked at the little circle in horror, his face went ashen
-white and he trembled violently.
-
-“We meant nothing against you, Burgwan; only against the witch,” he
-mumbled.
-
-“It is drying fast, Gartski. Beware.”
-
-“Petrov has gone to get help to deal with her.”
-
-“To murder her, you mean?”
-
-“It is no murder. To kill her for your sake, I swear.”
-
-“Where has he gone?”
-
-“To the priest at Lalwor--the hill village.”
-
-“How far is that, and in which direction?”
-
-“Four leagues up the hills to the south.”
-
-“How long has he been gone?”
-
-“Less than an hour.”
-
-“Come;” and I put my hand on his shoulders, and led him out of the
-tent. “I have no use for spies and traitors here. You can go after him.
-Get away, or I’ll set the dog on you;” and with that I shoved him from
-me--with a parting kick to which the rage I felt gave additional force.
-He limped a few paces and then turned and looked back at me. “Go,”
-I thundered, making a step toward him, and then he ran in a limping
-fashion comical enough to have drawn a smile had the position been less
-grave.
-
-I had frightened enough of the truth out of him to show me that no
-ill results could follow for a few hours. It would take Petrov some
-three hours to reach the hill village; some time would be needed to get
-together a posse, and I felt that I might safely wait an hour or two
-longer in the hope that Georgev would arrive.
-
-But it was clear now that we might have to start before he arrived, so
-I questioned Karasch as to his knowledge of the country which we should
-have to cross. Somewhat to my dismay he declared he knew nothing of it.
-
-I returned to the hut then and found the “witch” studying the map.
-
-“I was going to ask you for that,” I said.
-
-“Can we start?”
-
-“Not yet; I am still waiting for the guide and the horses he may have
-with him; but I want to make out our way.”
-
-Instead of giving it to me she clasped her hands over it as it lay on
-her lap.
-
-“I want to ask you a favour.” Things were changing indeed.
-
-“Well?”
-
-“Won’t you tell me what all this means? You have had more words with
-your men. I know it is about me. Won’t you tell me?”
-
-“They are a set of fools; and they are all gone now, except the big
-fellow, Karasch, whose arm is hurt--broken, in fact.”
-
-“Of course, it is on my account, and, of course, also it means danger
-of some kind. I am not afraid to know it with--with Chris and--and you
-to protect me.”
-
-“I have quarrelled with the men--have just kicked one of them out of
-the camp, in fact. That’s all.”
-
-She sighed and lifted her hands.
-
-“Can’t you see that this uncertainty is worse to bear than any
-knowledge could be, however bad?” She was strangely gentle now.
-
-“You needn’t exaggerate things because you don’t know them.”
-
-“Here is the map. You try me very much. Tell me, please,” she urged as
-I took the map. I fingered it thoughtfully.
-
-“You must not frighten yourself.”
-
-“I am not frightened--except that I think there must be some terrifying
-news you keep back, fearing to frighten me. You put a great strain on
-my nerves.”
-
-“I had not thought of that, and there is no need for it. I will tell
-you enough to show you that. I have had trouble with the men; and
-it is about you. They are only under me because I hired them to do
-certain work. Well, that prisoner whom I shot in the leg yesterday got
-at them with a tale that you were a prisoner of such importance that
-a considerable sum of money was to be paid for your safe delivery at
-Maglai; and they had a fancy to help in earning it. We quarrelled about
-it, and they’ve left the camp.”
-
-“Who do they say I am?”
-
-“They do not know, and could not tell me; of course; and I myself do
-not even know how to address you. You must have seen this--whether
-madame or mademoiselle even?”
-
-“You put your question adroitly, Burgwan. Are you Burgwan, really? But
-you can’t be, of course. You are American.”
-
-“It is the name I have here; and I did not know how pleasant a sound it
-had until I heard you speak it. I would rather you called me by that
-name than any other. And you?”
-
-She had her hands in her lap and kept her eyes bent down as she slowly
-clasped and unclasped her white fingers. Then she lifted her face and
-looked at me with a slow, hesitating smile.
-
-“You might call me--Barinschja.”
-
-“That is Russian for an unmarried woman, isn’t it?”
-
-“Did you think I was married?” The smile in her grey eyes was
-unmistakably brighter.
-
-“I did not think you were Russian.”
-
-“I am not. I am a Serb.”
-
-“Then what we have to do is to get you to Belgrade as soon as possible,
-Barinschja,” and I turned to the map.
-
-“No. I cannot be Barinschja to you. I will be mademoiselle.”
-
-“I thank you.” I understand enough Russian to appreciate the
-difference. Barinschja is from inferior to superior; mademoiselle from
-equal to equal. “Then it shall be mademoiselle. Now for the map.”
-
-“No, not yet. You have forgotten something. You have spoken of the man
-you wounded yesterday, but not of the one you fought and bound. It is
-he who has gone free, isn’t it, to fetch his comrades?”
-
-“Yes, but I did not mean to tell you. How did you guess?”
-
-“From what you said before you--before we fetched that side-saddle.”
-She smiled as she changed the phrase. “When you would not answer the
-question, which I tried to force you to answer.”
-
-“Mademoiselle is very quick-witted.”
-
-“And Burgwan can be very obstinate,” she retorted; and I smiled in my
-turn.
-
-“The fellow was set free by my men, but I do not think he can get back
-in time to do any harm.”
-
-“And why have your men deserted you?”
-
-“They were not bound to remain with me.”
-
-“Then the desertion had nothing to do with me?”
-
-“Yes, I told you we quarrelled about you. But I wish to see our course;
-will you let me study the map?”
-
-“Yes, if you will assure me that their desertion bodes no danger.”
-
-“Is Burgwan or Mademoiselle in charge of things here?”
-
-“Will Burgwan answer Mademoiselle’s question? Why did those men say
-there was a price on my head?”
-
-“It was all nonsense, of course.”
-
-“But I wish to know. I have a right to know.”
-
-“They said you had done something or other, and that they were to be
-paid handsomely for getting you to Maglai.”
-
-“Do you know what they said?”
-
-“Yes--that you had committed some crime.”
-
-“Some crime!” she cried, in quite indignant astonishment. Then she
-laughed scornfully. “Do you believe it?”
-
-“No. If I did, it would make no difference.”
-
-“A criminal! With a price on my head! What can it mean?” This was more
-to herself than to me, so I plunged into a study of the map, and in a
-few minutes had made out a part of the route we should have to go.
-
-“I am no criminal, Burgwan,” she said, breaking in suddenly on my study
-of the map.
-
-“I didn’t need to be told. This is the way we shall have to go at
-first”; and I drew her attention to the map.
-
-While we were examining it, Chris grew restless, and at length got up
-and stood sniffing the air and the ground and listening.
-
-“What is it, Chris, old dog?”
-
-He came and nosed my hand and then went a few yards off and pointing
-towards the ravine, growled.
-
-“Someone is about,” I said, as I folded up the map and put it in my
-pocket. “Will you go into the hut, Mademoiselle? It may be the guide
-Georgev--or it may not; and may mean trouble of some sort. Take Chris
-with you and shut the door. He’ll answer for anyone who tries to bother
-you. Chris, inside; on guard, good dog.”
-
-He understood and obeyed at once, although his eyes said he would
-rather stay with me.
-
-I strolled half way to the tent and called to Karasch, who came out.
-
-“I think someone is coming up the ravine, Karasch. It may be Georgev,
-or some of the men in search of Mademoiselle yonder. You mean to stand
-by me?”
-
-“On my oath, yes. But if they are in search of her, you’d better give
-her to them, Burgwan.”
-
-“Stop that fool talk, and leave everything to me; and do exactly as I
-tell you from start to finish.”
-
-Then I heard the sound of horses’ hoofs, and I lit a cigar and sat down
-to wait for the riders. There were three of them, and the first glance
-showed me Georgev was not among them. I sat smoking until they rode up,
-then I rose slowly.
-
-“Are you the new men hired by the guide, Georgev?” I asked.
-
-“No,” answered one who appeared to be the leader. “Is there a man named
-Karasch here?”
-
-“What do you want?” I asked.
-
-“An answer to my question. And I mean to have it. This is the place,
-sure enough,” he said, turning to his companions. “The tent and the
-hut;” and he nodded toward each. “You’re Karasch, by your description,”
-he said to Karasch. “Where’s the prisoner?”
-
-“I’m in charge here. Put your questions to me,” I broke in, brusquely.
-
-Resenting my tone, he looked at me more sharply than before, and then
-laughed.
-
-“I know you. You must be the man who rescued our prisoner yesterday and
-shot Drago. You’ll answer for that, I promise you; but I don’t want any
-trouble. Your other men are on our side, you know.”
-
-“The man I shot lies in the tent there with a broken leg. The prisoner
-you seek is in the cottage.”
-
-“That’s better,” he cried, with a sneering laugh. “You know when you’re
-beaten, I see.”
-
-I shrugged my shoulders as if indifferent.
-
-“We’re only two here, and Karasch has a broken arm. So you’re not
-likely to have much trouble.”
-
-“Where are the others?” he asked, suspiciously, as if half fearing an
-ambush. “There were five of you.”
-
-“One, Andreas, lies out on the hills somewhere, hurt riding after your
-comrade in the night. Petrov and Gartski have gone to Lalwor, the hill
-village yonder, seeking help to take the prisoner.”
-
-“You’ll have to come with us.”
-
-“That’s as it may be. But--we’ve no horses. Your fool of a man killed
-ours last night, so that we shouldn’t get away until you returned. But
-he didn’t expect you so soon.”
-
-“Nor did you, I expect. We came upon our comrade on the hills by chance
-this morning, too ill even to put a leg across a horse. It’s all that
-devil’s work. He wishes he’d had no hand in the black business, I can
-tell you. And so will you.”
-
-“You can take her as soon as you like--the sooner the better. She’s
-caused enough trouble here,” I answered, and putting my cigar between
-my lips I sat down again and lolled back as if in lazy indifference.
-
-But my indifference was not even skin deep. My object was to make them
-confident that there was no sort of resistance to be expected, and
-every nerve and sense in me was on the alert. I was making a kind of
-corner in risks just then, and should need all my wits to avoid being
-squeezed.
-
-I was already fully resolved to use the three horses thus fortunately
-brought within my reach, and my first step was to get the present
-riders off their backs. The second would be to keep them off; and the
-third to put Mademoiselle, myself, and Karasch in their places.
-
-Karasch had said that the “witch” could bring horses our way if she
-pleased; and when I looked his way and saw his eyes glance meaningly
-from me to the horses, I was half persuaded that he connected their
-presence with some supernatural agency.
-
-The three men spoke together a moment and then the leader dismounted,
-handed the reins of his horse to one of the others, and came toward me.
-
-“I daresay you mean to act all right and give up the prisoner,” he
-said, bluntly; “but while we stay here I’m going to make sure you can’t
-play any trick upon us by tying your hands behind you. Stand up.”
-
-As he spoke he signed to the other two, who levelled their guns point
-blank at me.
-
-It was a wholly unexpected turn and seemed to spell crisis. Not seeing
-for the moment what to do, I made no effort to rise, and he repeated
-his command.
-
-“Get up,” he cried this time with an oath. “We’ve no time to waste over
-you.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-A FIGHT FOR THE HORSES.
-
-
-I met the man’s bullying look and glanced from him along the barrels of
-the guns which his companions held pointed at me; and then sat up.
-
-“I don’t see the necessity for it,” I said, quietly.
-
-“No, but I see it, and mean to do it. Get up at once, or you may find
-it difficult ever to rise again,” he said, savagely.
-
-I scrambled up leisurely, dropping my hand into the pocket where I had
-my revolver, and my fingers closed on it as I held it ready to shoot
-without drawing it out.
-
-One of the educational advantages of life in a rough mining camp in the
-West is the use of a revolver from the safe concealment of a pocket.
-This man didn’t appear to understand the trick. I didn’t want his blood
-on my hands; but I wasn’t going to let him tie me up as he proposed.
-
-“Turn round,” he ordered.
-
-“Wait a moment,” I said, quite coolly. “If you do this, how am I to
-know you’ll set me free again when you go?”
-
-“Do as I tell you,” he cried savagely with another oath.
-
-“No, by God, no.”
-
-This was from Karasch, very loudly and angrily spoken, and the man
-turned from me to him.
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“What I say. This was my doing from the first. I set your man free to
-go and find you and bring you here; but this shan’t be done.”
-
-The interruption was very timely, and I took advantage by it to edge
-away until I was sheltered from the guns by the leader’s body.
-
-“What Karasch says is right enough. But you need not say any more,
-Karasch. There won’t be any more talk about binding me or anyone else.”
-
-“By the Cross, but there will!” cried the leader fiercely, and was
-turning to give an order to his companions when I gripped him by the
-shoulder and held him.
-
-“Don’t move. You’re just in the line between those two guns and me,
-and I can talk all the more comfortably while you stay there.” Karasch
-laughed, and the man tried in vain to wriggle out of my grip. “I’m
-covering you all the time with my revolver, and if you get away I shall
-shoot. You’ve been a deal nearer death all the while than you thought,”
-and I showed the ugly little muzzle above the edge of my pocket.
-
-The argument carried conviction. He ceased to struggle, and changed
-colour.
-
-“Tell those men of yours to throw their guns on the ground. They might
-go off by accident, and I’m not taking that kind of risk any longer.”
-
-He hesitated, and I showed him a bit more of my pocket argument.
-
-“I’m accustomed to be obeyed pretty quickly. Ask Karasch there,” I
-said, drily. Karasch laughed again and swore.
-
-The leader shouted the command over his shoulder, and after some demur
-it was obeyed.
-
-“Go and pick the guns up, Karasch, and get this man’s from his horse,
-and bring them to the tent,” I said, and waited while he fetched them.
-
-Then I took my hand from the leader’s shoulder and stepped back.
-
-“Now we shall all breathe a little more freely. You see the kind of
-soft fool you’ve got to deal with in me now, and you won’t make any
-more mistakes of this kind. There are two ways of doing what you’ve
-come to do--the rough and the smooth. You’ve tried the rough and have
-run up against a snag. Now we’ll go to the tent and talk over the
-smooth way.”
-
-“Give us our prisoner, and we’ll go.”
-
-“But Karasch and I wish to go with you, and I want to explain to you
-the little difficulty your man has put in the way. Come.”
-
-“I don’t want to go there.”
-
-“If you’d rather go straight to hell, you can,” I exclaimed, fiercely.
-“Choose, and be quick about it.”
-
-“I’ll come,” he said, sullenly.
-
-“You can tell your men there we’re going to talk, and that they may as
-well bait their horses. We may be some time.”
-
-He was getting to be quite an apt pupil. He turned and gave the order,
-and the two men stepped from their saddles and growled to him to make
-haste.
-
-I led him round the tent to the shed where the three dead horses lay.
-
-“Last night your man killed them. You see, there are three of them.”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“Well, there are three dead ones here, killed by your man, and there
-are three live ones out there on which you have just ridden up.”
-
-“You don’t mean--what do you mean?” he asked. He was beginning to
-understand.
-
-“How do you propose to make up that loss to me?”
-
-He laughed uncomfortably. “You’re a cool hand,” he said.
-
-“I’m cool enough just now,” I returned drily; “and none the safer on
-that account, perhaps, to fool with. How are you going to replace those
-three horses?”
-
-“Speak out, and to hell with you,” he growled.
-
-“I propose an exchange, that’s all. You can have these, and I’ll take
-yours and cry quits.”
-
-His face was a study; rage battling with the conviction of helplessness
-as he glared at me.
-
-“You are three to two, I know; but we’re well armed, and you have
-nothing but your knives. I could put a bullet into you at this minute
-just as easily, and much more surely than your men could have shot me a
-while since.”
-
-He started, and I saw his hand go stealing to his sash.
-
-“I shouldn’t draw it if I were you,” I said quietly.
-
-He took the advice and stood thinking in sore perplexity.
-
-Then I made my first mistake.
-
-“I’ll treat you fairly. I shall pay you for the horses, and will send
-you a couple of hundred gulden for each of them, good Austrian money.”
-
-His eyes lighted; and I read it for a sign of avarice.
-
-“Six hundred gulden,” he said slowly and with gusto. “Six hundred
-gulden. It is a large sum of money; but we should be without horses;”
-and he looked at me cunningly.
-
-“I’ll make it a thousand.”
-
-“Easy to promise. As easy a thousand as ten.”
-
-“What I promise I can do.”
-
-“May the Stone of the Sepulchre crush me if I understand,” he exclaimed
-after a pause.
-
-“It may help you to decide if I remind you I can take the horses
-without even promising a single gulden.”
-
-“And about the prisoner?”
-
-“She goes with me.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because she prefers to.”
-
-“So that we lose the payment for her as well as our horses.”
-
-“How much were you to be paid?”
-
-He paused as if in doubt how much to ask.
-
-“Five hundred gulden each. There are six of us.” He watched me closely
-as he named the amount.
-
-“Three thousand gulden! She must be a prisoner of importance. Who is
-she?”
-
-“It’s a long road to Maglai and a difficult.”
-
-“That doesn’t answer my question. Your man told mine she was a witch.”
-He laughed.
-
-“So we were told. Any tale was good enough to listen to at that price.
-We can’t talk so glibly about hundreds and thousands of gulden as you
-can.”
-
-“Then YOU don’t think she is a witch?”
-
-“I believe what I’m paid to believe--if the pay is high enough. And no
-one would pay such a sum for a mere witch.”
-
-“I’ll pay you the three thousand gulden and the six hundred as well, if
-you let me have the horses quietly, and tell Karasch what you told me,
-that the prisoner is no witch.”
-
-He laughed again, and with sudden change to earnest he shot a sharp
-look at me and asked:
-
-“How will you pay? Who are you to have such a sum?”
-
-“No matter who I am. I will send you the money to any place and in any
-way you name.”
-
-“Horses are horses, and I know who is to pay for the prisoner when we
-get to Maglai.”
-
-“And I’ll increase the price four thousand gulden if you give me the
-name of the man who has employed you.”
-
-“I’d like to serve you, if you really had money to throw away like
-that.”
-
-“I’m paying to avoid trouble and to gain information; but I mean to
-have the horses in any case. You can choose.”
-
-He paused to think again.
-
-“You must be very rich. If I thought you’d pay, I’d do it.”
-
-“You can take my word.”
-
-“You don’t look it,” he said doubtingly, and with an accent of regret.
-
-“I’m through with the talk. Choose,” I answered, shortly.
-
-“I’m ready to risk it, but I must speak to the others.”
-
-“That’s right enough. You can do that; but you must bring the horses up
-to the side of the tent first.”
-
-I let him go in front of me round the tent, and he called to his
-companions to lead the horses over to us. Karasch met them half way,
-and he and I tethered them while the three men held a long and animated
-discussion.
-
-I told Karasch what had passed, emphasising what the leader had said
-about the prisoner being no witch.
-
-“But you said she had put a charm over your life, Burgwan.”
-
-“Because I saw you were set on killing her. She is no witch, but a
-prisoner of great importance. They are to have three thousand gulden
-for taking her to Maglai.”
-
-“Three thousand gulden!” he cried, his eyes wide at the thought of such
-a sum. To him it was a fortune.
-
-“Would anyone pay so much for a witch, Karasch?”
-
-He shook his head.
-
-“The man may be lying.”
-
-I called to him, and he came and confirmed what he had said to me so
-stoutly that Karasch was convinced.
-
-“Are you agreed yet?”
-
-“There would be no difficulty if we were sure of you. Can he pay such
-a sum as four thousand florins?” he asked Karasch, nodding his head
-toward me.
-
-“It is a big fortune,” was the answer, with a shrug of the shoulders.
-“But what he promises he always does.”
-
-Not a very convincing banker’s reference that at the best; and the
-leader shook his head.
-
-“That’s the point. It’s only a promise,” he said, slowly, with a shake
-of the head. “Have you got any of it here to give us now?” The question
-was asked casually enough, as if it were no more than the occasion
-warranted; but I saw more than that in it.
-
-“I’ve told you I’d pay you afterwards. That’s the last word.”
-
-“I’ll try what I can do then;” and with that he went back to his
-companions, and the earnest conference was resumed.
-
-“I don’t trust him,” said Karasch.
-
-“Let us get away quietly with the horses, and we’ll trust to ourselves,
-Karasch,” said I.
-
-“Can you pay such a sum as he named?”
-
-“Yes, ten times the amount, Karasch; and ten times that again if
-necessary.”
-
-“Great Lord of the Living!” he exclaimed. “And yet you come here to the
-hills in this way!”
-
-The three men had now apparently ended their conference, and the leader
-came across to me.
-
-“Two of us are agreed,” he said, as he reached me, “but one will not
-without proof. Let me see our comrade whom you shot. He must have a
-voice in it too.”
-
-“He is in the tent here,” I answered. We entered it, and he went and
-knelt by the wounded man.
-
-I did not trust him any more than did Karasch, and, although I noticed
-nothing to rouse my suspicions, I watched the two closely, and kept my
-hand on the revolver in my pocket, and told Karasch to watch the two
-outside.
-
-So far all had gone as well as I could have wished. We had the horses
-under our hands, and the men were divided so that we could deal with
-them in turn should they attempt to put up a fight.
-
-Such a thing seemed far from their thoughts, moreover. From the
-snatches of talk I heard, the leader appeared to be arguing with his
-comrade, urging him to agree, and answering the objections which he
-raised. Words began to run high between them presently, and at length
-the leader cursed the other volubly for a fool and got up.
-
-“I can do nothing with this pig,” he exclaimed angrily to me.
-
-“You must settle your own matters, and be quick about it,” I returned
-sharply.
-
-I was getting very anxious now on account of mademoiselle. She had been
-shut up in the cottage all the time, and knowing nothing of what was
-passing between the men and me it was easy to guess the effect which so
-trying a suspense would have upon her.
-
-“What can I do? He vows that if I yield to you he will denounce me at
-Belgrade--idiot, pig, and fool that he is,” he cried furiously, pacing
-the floor and throwing his hands about. “We are equally divided now,
-two to two.”
-
-“The money I shall pay would be a fortune for the two who help me. The
-others would have no part in earning it, and no right to share it. Two
-thousand gulden, you know.”
-
-He had passed me, and at the words turned and stood looking at me with
-an expression of consummate cunning.
-
-“You are the devil to tempt a man,” he muttered.
-
-“Give me your help in this, and I’ll make your share three thousand,” I
-said, in a low tone.
-
-“Three thousand gulden,” he murmured under his breath. “Three thousand
-gulden for myself.”
-
-“And you shall have the horse we have and come with us as guide to
-where we wish to go. You know the country?”
-
-“Every yard of it. Three thousand gulden!” He murmured it almost
-caressingly, like a man dazed at the prospect of such riches. “I’ll do
-it,” he exclaimed, and threw up his hand. “You’ll swear on the cross to
-pay me?”
-
-He made a couple of steps toward me as he spoke, and I stepped back,
-not wishing him to come too close.
-
-“Now,” he cried, and sent up a great shout.
-
-There was a guttural sound behind me, and the next instant I felt the
-burning sting of steel in my flesh as the wounded man thrust a knife
-into my leg with a force and suddenness that made me stagger; a clutch
-on my coat followed, which upset my balance and drew me back all
-a-sprawl across him.
-
-Only by the narrowest chance did I escape death then--the chance that
-in falling I so hampered the man that he could not deliver the second
-thrust for which he had already lifted his knife. He struck at me, but
-missed his aim. The blade pierced my coat only, and, mercifully, I was
-unhurt. I was out of his reach before he could strike again, and with a
-heavy kick I put his arm out of action and sent the knife flying across
-the tent while I shouted for Karasch.
-
-It was all the work of an instant, and I was barely on my legs before
-the leader rushed at me. My fingers were still closed on my revolver
-and I fired, but in the confusion missed him, and we grappled one
-another in grim earnest.
-
-He was a more powerful man than I, and although I strove with all my
-strength and used every trick of the wrestling ring that I knew, I
-could not shake him off. He knew I was losing blood from the wound in
-my leg; and he clung to me, pinning my arms to my side, and waiting for
-my strength to give out, as assuredly it must.
-
-For some minute or two matters were thus; his arms wrapped round me
-with the force of iron clamps, fixing mine to my sides; his muscular
-body pressed, straining against mine, and our faces so close that I
-could feel his breath on me as it came through his dilated nostrils.
-
-Then chance was my friend once more. As I writhed and staggered in my
-desperate efforts to shake off his terrible grip, and we tossed and
-swayed in that grim, wild struggle, he caught his foot and down we went
-crash to the ground, he undermost. His grip relaxed for the instant,
-and with a frantic effort I thrust myself free from him, and scrambling
-up jumped out of his reach.
-
-In a second I had the drop on him; and when he regained his feet and
-faced me with a heavy club he had picked up, he was looking down the
-barrel that meant death.
-
-If I hadn’t been a chicken-hearted fool I should have shot him down
-on the spot; but instead I offered him his life; and then, as if in
-contempt of my weakness, Fortune deserted me.
-
-“Throw your hands up, or I’ll put a bullet into you,” I cried.
-
-He stood a second as if weighing the chances, and then from outside
-came the noise of trouble. The crash of breaking wood, a cry from the
-girl, the savage growl of Chris, and an angry shout in Karasch’s deep
-voice.
-
-It was almost the last thing I knew of that fight.
-
-Maddened by the sounds I sprang to rush from the tent, when the wounded
-man, resourceful daredevil as he was, made his last effort and flung
-his rug right at my face.
-
-The last thing I saw was the leader springing toward me with his
-uplifted club; I fired at him; and the same moment a blow on the head
-finished the fight, and I went down stunned and senseless.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-ESCAPE.
-
-
-My first conscious sensation after the blow felled me was as singular
-as it was unpleasant. I seemed to be nothing but one huge head on which
-a hundred invisible smiths were hammering with quick, rhythmic blows,
-each of which gave me such excruciating pain that I yearned to cry out
-to the impish torturers to cease, but was tongue-tied and helpless.
-
-After a time the throbbing sensation decreased in violence; but while
-the sharpness of the pain of each throb was less, it lasted longer,
-producing a deadening sickening ache, which was equally intolerable.
-
-Next I felt something touch my hand with a curiously restless movement.
-The thing was sometimes cold and damp, and at others warm and clinging,
-with a touch now and then of roughness. I tried to draw my hand away,
-but found it heavier than the heaviest metal, so that I could not stir
-even a finger. I shrank from the thing and shuddered; it filled me with
-a sense of uncanny terror; and it appeared to be many long hours to me
-before I found that it was Chris, nosing and licking me and rubbing his
-head against my hand.
-
-I can recall to this day the rush of relief which this discovery
-produced. If Chris was by my side, all must be well. Just that one
-vague thought, without any other conscious connection, followed by a
-sensation of calm peaceful comfort.
-
-I think I passed from semi-insensibility then into sleep, for when I
-became conscious again, I was much better. I was no longer all head; I
-could move my hand to touch Chris, who still kept his watch over me;
-and I heard his little whimper of pleasure at my caress, as he took my
-fingers in his great mouth to mumble them, as his manner was when very
-demonstrative of his affection.
-
-But I was content to lie quite still and soon afterwards another and
-very different set of sensations were started.
-
-Someone came to my side, a fairy touch smoothed the pillow under my
-head, a gentle, cool hand was laid on my burning forehead, deft, quick
-fingers light as gossamer removed the bandage on my head and bathed it
-with water of deliciously refreshing coldness.
-
-I heard a pitying sigh from tremulous lips as the someone bent over me;
-I caught whispered words. “It was for me;” and just when I was striving
-to open my eyes, the lips were pressed swiftly and gently to my brow.
-
-It did more to soothe me, that one swift, gentle touch, than all the
-waters of all the coldest rivers in the world could have done; and
-although I felt like a guilty hypocrite, I kept my eyes closed and my
-limbs still in eager hope that another dose of the same elixir might be
-administered.
-
-But at the moment I felt the deft fingers start and tremble; the
-bathing recommenced a little more hurriedly; and Chris growled.
-
-“Hush, Chris, good dog,” whispered Mademoiselle. “It’s only Karasch.
-Dear old dog,” and a hand left my head to pat him, and in patting him,
-the fingers touched mine and then lifted my hand with ever so gentle a
-movement higher on to the bed.
-
-A heavier tread approached.
-
-“Is he better?” It was Karasch’s gruff voice reduced to a whisper.
-
-“I have been bathing his head,” was the reply.
-
-I could have laughed in sheer ecstasy at the sweet remembrance of part
-of that treatment. And she called it “bathing.” But I did better than
-laugh. I moved slightly and sighed. I must not show full consciousness
-too soon after that “bathing.”
-
-“He moved then,” she said, with a start, in a tone of pleasure, and I
-felt her bend hurriedly over me again in the pause that followed.
-
-Karasch broke the silence.
-
-“It is not safe for you to stay any longer,” he said. “I came to tell
-you.”
-
-The words opened the floodgates of my memory to all that had occurred.
-I had forgotten everything; but in a moment I understood.
-
-“I told you I should not leave him, Karasch.”
-
-“He would wish it, I know. Your safety comes first with him.”
-
-“Come where we can speak without fear of disturbing him,” was the
-reply; and then I was left alone with Chris.
-
-[Illustration: “PUT THOSE GUNS DOWN!”
-
- _Page 348_]
-
-I opened my eyes and looked about me, remembering things. I was in
-the tent close to where I had fallen and they had brought the bed from
-the cottage and placed me on it. I looked about for the wounded man who
-had been the cause of my undoing, but he was not there. Everything else
-was as it had been before the trouble; and I wondered what had happened.
-
-“Good Chris, old dog,” I said, putting out my hand to pat him. He
-barked, not very loudly, but the sound jarred my head with such a spasm
-of pain that I hushed him; and as I was doing so, Mademoiselle and
-Karasch came hurrying back.
-
-“You are better, Burgwan?” she asked.
-
-“What does it all mean?” I asked. “I remember I had a crack on the
-head.” I lifted my head, though it took all I knew not to wince at the
-pain it cost me, and put my hand to it.
-
-“We will tell you everything presently. You mustn’t talk yet. You are
-not strong enough.”
-
-“Tell me now. I am all right;” but I was glad to yield to her hand and
-lay my head down again. “Where are those men?”
-
-“All is well. You may be perfectly at ease,” she said, soothingly.
-
-“What time is it?”
-
-“It is afternoon.”
-
-“The same day?”
-
-“Yes, the same day. You have been unconscious from that blow on the
-head. I am so glad you are better. But you must sleep.”
-
-I looked across at Karasch, who was staring at me with trouble in his
-eyes.
-
-“Did we keep the horses?” I asked him; but Mademoiselle replied.
-
-“Yes. All is well. You can rest in perfect safety.”
-
-Karasch started to say something, but she checked him with a glance and
-a gesture.
-
-“Any news of Petrov or Gartski?” I asked him; and again she gave the
-answer for him.
-
-“They will give us no trouble now, none at all,” she said, with gentle
-firmness. “You can rest quite assured.”
-
-Again Karasch wanted to speak and again she stopped him just as before
-with a glance and a quick gesture. I understood then.
-
-“I want to speak to Karasch alone,” I said.
-
-“No, you must not speak to him yet. There will be plenty of time when
-you are better. Go away, Karasch; you disturb Burgwan and excite him.”
-
-He lingered in hesitation and looked at me; and she repeated her words
-dismissing him.
-
-“Yes go, Karasch, and saddle the horses. Three of them; and put
-together enough food for three of us for a couple of days. And come and
-report the moment you are ready.”
-
-“Burgwan! You are mad,” cried Mademoiselle.
-
-“No, I am just beginning to be sane again. Go, Karasch;” and without
-any more he left the tent.
-
-“You must not attempt such folly. I will not go.”
-
-“You’ll find it both lonely and unsafe alone here then.” She smiled at
-that, but tried to frown.
-
-“That is just like you. But you shall not take this risk. You are not
-fit to move from where you are.”
-
-“Fit or unfit, I’m going. I read Karasch’s meaning in his looks when
-you wouldn’t let him put it in words.”
-
-“Don’t attempt this, Burgwan. Please, please don’t,” she cried with
-such sweet solicitude for me and such complete indifference to her own
-danger that I could not but be deeply moved.
-
-“What would happen if Petrov or Gartski got back with a crowd? I’m not
-strong enough just yet to do any more fighting, but I am strong enough
-to run away. And run away I’m going to.”
-
-“It may kill you,” she murmured, despondently.
-
-“Not a bit of it. I am getting stronger every moment. See, I can sit
-up;” and I sat up and tried to smile as if I enjoyed it, although my
-head seemed almost to split in two with the effort. I can’t have been
-very successful, for she winced and flinched as though she herself were
-in suffering.
-
-“You need rest and sleep--you must have it.”
-
-“I can sleep in the saddle. I’m an old hand at that.”
-
-“But the jolting--oh, no, no, you shall not.”
-
-“The jolting won’t hurt me. I can shake my head any old way now.” I
-shook it, and she and the tent and the bed, the earth itself seemed to
-come tumbling all about me in a bewildering rush of throbbing pain.
-
-“You nearly fainted then,” she cried. And I suppose I did, for her
-voice sounded far off and her sorrow-filled face and eyes were looking
-at me through a hazy film of distance. But I pulled myself together.
-
-“I’m a bit weak, of course, but fit enough to ride.”
-
-“Burgwan! You are going to do this madness for me.”
-
-“No, no,” I said, my head clearing again. “I am just running away
-because I’m afraid of what may happen to me if I stay until Petrov and
-the other fools get here.”
-
-“Let me go by myself then.”
-
-“And desert me?” She lifted her hands with a glance of protest.
-
-“You make things so difficult,” she cried; then with a change as a new
-thought occurred to her, she added: “Beside, there is another reason
-for you not to come with me. You are so weak we should not be able to
-ride fast enough. You must see that.”
-
-“You fear I should hamper your escape?”
-
-“Yes,” she answered stoutly, although her eyes were contradicting her
-words and she dropped them before my look. “You are not strong enough.”
-
-I affected to believe the words and not the eyes.
-
-“I give in. You must go alone then.”
-
-“I am not afraid to stay.”
-
-“And face the brutes who would come here? Do you know why they are
-coming?”
-
-“Yes. Karasch has told me all--his own belief about me, and that of the
-others.”
-
-“You are brave, Mademoiselle.”
-
-The words were simple enough in themselves, but I think she read in
-them something of what was in my thoughts. She kept her head bent down
-and her interlocked fingers worked nervously. Then she looked up and
-smiled.
-
-“You know the risk you would run; why would you do it?” I asked.
-
-She threw off the more earnest feeling with a shrug of the shoulders.
-“I don’t know that there would be any risk.”
-
-I took this as her way of avoiding the channel into which we were
-drifting. I smiled.
-
-“You would be so helpless, too, alone here,” I said.
-
-“Alone?” catching at the word.
-
-“Yes alone. I am afraid to stay and am going in any case; if not with
-you, to hamper you, then by a different road.”
-
-Her eyes clouded and she gave a little nervous start. “I am punished;
-but I--I didn’t mean that,” she said very slowly.
-
-“I know. If I had not seen your real motive I might have been content
-to stay. Nothing would have mattered then.”
-
-“Burgwan!” Quick protest and some dismay were in her tone; and the
-colour rushed to her cheeks. “I will go and see if Karasch is ready,”
-she added, and hurried away.
-
-Had I said too much and offended her? I sat looking after her some
-moments, in somewhat anxious doubts and fears, and yet conscious of a
-strange feeling of exhilaration.
-
-Then with a sigh of perplexed discontent I threw back the rug, rolled
-off the bed, and got on my feet. I was abominably weak. My brain swam
-with every movement I made, so that the place whirled about me until
-I must have nearly fainted. My leg was stiff and painful where that
-treacherous brute had run his knife into me. I remember looking at
-the bed with a sort of feverish longing to get back on to it almost
-impossible to resist as I clung to the tent pole to steady myself and
-let my head clear.
-
-“It’s got to be done, Chris, old man,” I said to the old dog, who was
-standing by me; and after a struggle resolution lent me strength, and
-I ventured at length to do without the support of the pole and began
-to limp slowly and painfully up and down. If there had been no one but
-myself to think about I should have given in and just lain down again
-to let happen what might.
-
-But the thought of Mademoiselle’s danger was tonic enough to keep me
-going; and when I heard Karasch and her outside, I managed to crawl to
-the opening of the tent to meet them.
-
-“We are ready, you see, Chris and I,” I said.
-
-Mademoiselle said nothing, but the look in her eyes was full of sweet
-sympathy and deep anxiety.
-
-“I’m afraid I don’t look very fit,” I murmured. I must have cut a
-sorry figure, indeed, I expect; my clothes rough and torn, begrimed
-with dirt and smeared here and there with blood, my head swathed in a
-bandage, and my face pale to whiteness above and blackened below with
-my sprouting beard.
-
-“I wish you could laugh at me. It would do me a power of good.”
-
-“Laugh! Burgwan!” she said, her lips trembling. She put out her hand.
-“Let me help you. Lean on me.”
-
-“As if I wanted any help,” I laughed, and making an effort, I started
-toward the horse I was to mount, only to stagger badly after half a
-dozen steps. In a moment her arm was under mine.
-
-“You see,” she exclaimed, in quick distress.
-
-But I laughed. “Coward, to gloat over my fallen pride. I only tripped
-over something.”
-
-“Lean on me,” was all she said.
-
-“Are you really fit to travel, Burgwan?” asked Karasch.
-
-“Get me on to the horse. I can ride when I can’t walk.”
-
-“I think you should stay here,” he declared.
-
-“Silence, Karasch,” I returned, angrily. My anger was at my own
-confounded weakness, but I vented it on him. “The air will pull me
-together.”
-
-I started again for the horse and this time reached it, and with
-Karasch to help me, clambered into the saddle.
-
-Mademoiselle watched us almost breathlessly. If my face was whiter than
-hers, I must have looked bad indeed.
-
-“Have you got everything, Karasch?”
-
-“Yes. Food, water and arms;” and he pointed to the horse he was to ride
-which was well laden.
-
-“I can’t help you up, Mademoiselle,” I said, with a smile.
-
-I seemed to be the only one of the three who could raise a smile; for
-she looked preternaturally grave and troubled as she mounted, and
-Karasch as though he had never known a smile since he was born. But
-then he was never much of a humorist.
-
-“The map and the compass, you have them?” I asked him.
-
-“I have them,” said Mademoiselle.
-
-“Then we can go. Wait, wait,” I exclaimed. “I have forgotten something.
-I must get off.”
-
-“What is it?” she asked.
-
-“We must have money. It’s in the hut. I must get it.”
-
-“You can’t go in there,” she said, quickly.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“The men are there.”
-
-“The men there?” I repeated dully, not understanding. “What are they
-doing there?”
-
-“When you were found in the tent we dared not move you, so we brought
-the bed across to you and put the wounded men in the cottage.”
-
-“Yes, of course, you haven’t told me yet what occurred. But my money is
-hidden there and we must have it.”
-
-“We’ll fetch it if you tell us where to find it.”
-
-“Karasch?” I answered, doubtingly.
-
-“You can trust him. I am sure of him,” she declared with implied
-confidence. “He is a Serb and would give his life for--for us. I would
-trust him with mine.”
-
-“There is more there than he thinks. I’d rather he didn’t see it all.
-Life is one thing, money’s another.”
-
-“Tell me then. I will get it. He shall go with me to the hut door, but
-shall not see it.”
-
-I told her where to find it and she and Karasch dismounted. I waited on
-my horse and while they were in the cottage I heard the report of a
-gun in the distance.
-
-Chris started up at the sound and barked in warning.
-
-“I don’t like the thing either, old dog.” I didn’t; for unless I was
-too dizzy to guess right, it came from the direction of Lalwor and
-threatened trouble.
-
-They lingered an unnecessary time in the cottage and every moment was
-now dangerous; so I rode up to the door and called them. When they came
-out Mademoiselle was trembling and looked scared and ill.
-
-“I must get them some water, Burgwan,” she said, as she handed me the
-money. “I cannot leave them like that. One of them--the one Chris flew
-at--seems to be dying.”
-
-“We dare not stay;” and I told them of the gunshot I had heard. “There
-will soon be enough here to look after them.”
-
-Karasch settled the matter with a promptness which showed what he
-thought of the news. He threw down the pannikin he carried and shut the
-door of the hut.
-
-“Come,” I said to her; and seeing we were both so earnest, she gave way
-and we started.
-
-We rode slowly and in silence down the ravine until we reached the
-mouth of it, and made such speed as we could down the mountain road.
-
-“There’s a lot I want to ask; but as the easiest pace for me is a
-canter, and as it’s the safest for us all just now, we’ll hurry. We
-can talk afterwards,” I said when we reached the level; and I urged
-my horse on until we were cantering briskly, the old dog loping along
-close to me and looking up constantly as though he was fully conscious
-that something was very much amiss with me calling for the utmost
-vigilance and guardianship on his part.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-WHAT HAPPENED IN THE NIGHT.
-
-
-We did not slacken speed until we had put some miles between us and
-the camp; and although at first I suffered abominable torture from the
-jolting, I had to keep on, and after a time I found that the rush of
-the cool air, acting as a kind of stimulating tonic revived me. My head
-became gradually less painful and my brain cleared.
-
-If we had only been certain of our road I should have had no serious
-misgivings as to the result. We were all well mounted, and although
-the horses were not fresh, yet they were quite fit to carry us the
-distance we had to travel to reach the railway. But I could only guess
-the road, picking the way by the compass; and in that difficult and
-barren district there was a constant risk that we should lose the way,
-especially as we should have to ride through the night.
-
-It was almost evening when we left the camp, and my intention was to
-ride as far and as fast as possible while the daylight lasted and then
-rest until the moon rose. We should then have six or seven hours to
-ride before even the earliest peasants would be astir, and in that time
-I calculated we should be able to reach the frontier town of Samac, the
-terminus of the line.
-
-The overpowering reason for travelling at night was the fear that some
-attempt would be made at pursuit. If Petrov and Gartski succeeded in
-bringing any considerable party back to the camp from Lalwor, they
-would learn from the men there of the reward to be paid for getting
-Mademoiselle to Maglai; and for any such sum as three thousand gulden
-the average Bosnian peasant would leave all he had in the world
-and go scrambling for a share of it. And with greed to back up the
-superstitious abhorrence of witchcraft, there was no telling what would
-be done.
-
-We were a party easily tracked, too. Two wounded men, a woman, and a
-huge hound like Chris would be readily remembered if once seen anywhere
-at any time; and the night was thus the safest for us.
-
-I kept all these thoughts to myself, however, and pushed on as fast as
-practicable, although both Mademoiselle and Karasch urged me more than
-once to halt and rest.
-
-“We must get on while the light lasts,” was my answer. “We shall be
-compelled to rest when the dark falls;” and the only time we slackened
-speed was when the nature of the road compelled us.
-
-“I wish you would rest, Burgwan, if only for an hour,” said
-Mademoiselle as we were walking the horses up a hill.
-
-“Not while the light lasts,” I replied. “The fretting impatience to get
-on would do me more harm than the rest would good. I am in little or no
-pain now. Tell me what happened after I was knocked over.”
-
-“Karasch and Chris saved me. He says the man in the tent with you
-shouted some signal at which the two who were with him broke open the
-hut door. Chris flew at them, pinned one man by the throat, and the
-other who was close behind fell in the confusion.”
-
-“Good Chris,” I exclaimed.
-
-“Yes, indeed, good dog. Well, Karasch was on the watch and as the man
-was getting up and drawing his knife to attack Chris, Karasch rushed up
-and knocked him senseless with a gun.”
-
-“Well played, Karasch. And then?”
-
-“That was all, except that I had great difficulty in making Chris loose
-his hold. His fury was really awful to see. But he obeyed me, and
-Karasch and I together bound the men and made them prisoners; but both
-were badly hurt--especially the one Chris mauled.”
-
-“But the third man?” I asked, perplexed.
-
-“We found him shot in the tent, near you.”
-
-I remembered then my shot at random just as I was struck.
-
-“Is he dead?”
-
-“No, but badly wounded; and we got him and the man you took last night
-to the hut.”
-
-“Well, it serves them all right; and the folk from Lalwor will look
-after them. They meant killing me. But it may make things uglier for
-us, and is all the stronger reason for us to hurry on while the light
-lasts;” and we pressed forward again.
-
-Just when the gloom was deepening fast, my policy of haste was
-justified.
-
-I had halted at a point where the road forked and, in considerable
-doubt which way to ride, was anxiously consulting my map when Chris put
-his nose to the ground and whimpered.
-
-“Steady, Chris, good dog, steady,” I whispered; and he knew he was
-to make no noise. “Someone is about,” I said to Mademoiselle. We sat
-silent and listened, and presently heard the throbbing of hoofs from
-the direction we had been riding.
-
-“Two horses,” said Karasch, whose hearing was very acute.
-
-“It may be nothing. Ride into the shadow of those trees and let Karasch
-and Chris go with you,” I said to Mademoiselle.
-
-“But you....” she began to object.
-
-“Please do as I say and at once,” I interposed; and I put my horse on
-to the grass under another tree.
-
-She did as I asked without further protest and I waited for the
-newcomers. They caught sight of me while still at some distance and
-checked their horses first to a trot, and then to a walk.
-
-“You are well come; I have lost my way,” I said as they reached me.
-
-“Who are you?” asked one; and as the question was put the other man
-laughed, and backed his horse to a safe distance as he said:
-
-“It is Burgwan. We are all right;” and I recognised the voice.
-
-“That is Petrov?”
-
-“Yes. You are wanted at the camp, Burgwan, to explain things there.
-Where is the witch? May the curse of God blight her!”
-
-“If you are the man, Burgwan, you must come back with us,” put in the
-other man, who spoke with an air of authority.
-
-“Must?”
-
-“Yes, must. There are some badly injured men there; and the injured
-make strange charges against you which must be explained.”
-
-“Who are you?”
-
-“I am Captain Hanske, from Lalwor--the head officer of the district
-under the Imperial Government. You left the place with an escaped
-prisoner? She must return with you.”
-
-A most disquieting turn, this Of all developments possible, the least
-to my liking was a conflict with the Austrian authorities.
-
-“I am prepared to meet any charges,” I answered firmly. “An attempt was
-made upon my life there, and all I did was done in self-defence. But I
-cannot return with you.”
-
-“You have no option. You must do as I say and at once.” He spoke in
-curt stern tone of a man accustomed to be obeyed. I knew well enough
-the fear in which the Austrian officials are held by the Bosnians.
-
-“We will see,” I answered, in quite as stiff a tone. “I have first a
-reckoning to settle with Petrov there;” and I wheeled my horse round
-and rode toward him. But he did not wait for me to get near him. He was
-off like the wind; as indeed I had hoped.
-
-“I’ll carry the news back to the rest at the camp,” he called over
-his shoulder, and he galloped back along the road as though the devil
-himself were at his heels. I listened to the dying sounds of his
-horse’s hoofs with intense satisfaction, and went back with a laugh to
-the official.
-
-“Your character as a desperado is well established,” he exclaimed drily
-and angrily.
-
-“Now we can talk on equal terms,” said I, quietly.
-
-“I order you in the name of the Emperor to come with me.”
-
-“And I tell you, man to man, I shall do nothing of the kind. I am no
-desperado, as I shall be easily able to prove when necessary; but I
-have no time for anything of the sort now.”
-
-“Then I shall accompany you.”
-
-“No, that also is impossible.”
-
-“What were you doing in the camp yonder?”
-
-“My own business, merely.”
-
-“Where are you going?”
-
-“Also about my own business.”
-
-“Where are your papers?”
-
-“I have none to show you.”
-
-“Then I shall accompany you.”
-
-“No. That I shall not allow.”
-
-“Do you dare to threaten me?”
-
-“There are three roads here. One back to the camp; one to the left
-there, and one to the right. You are free to choose which you please
-and I will take another.”
-
-“I shall not leave you.” He was getting very angry and dogged.
-
-“If you are armed you may perhaps force yourself upon me.”
-
-“I shall do as I say,” he answered, with just enough hesitation to
-assure me he was not armed. Then it occurred to me that it would be
-safer to get him away from the place and to increase the distance
-between him and the camp. It would be the more difficult for Petrov and
-the rest to find him when they returned.
-
-“Mademoiselle,” I called. She and Karasch came out. “We are to have a
-companion. This gentleman desires to ride with us. This is our road;”
-and choosing that which led away to the right, I rode on with her,
-leaving the official to follow.
-
-She had overheard the conversation and questioned me with some anxiety
-as to what I meant to do. She went so far even as to suggest a return
-to the camp.
-
-“I have my plans. It will all come right. I should have left him at the
-fork of the road there had I not thought it best to get him further
-away.”
-
-“But I could probably satisfy him,” she said.
-
-“I’ll deal with him in my own way, please,” was my reply.
-
-We plunged along at such pace as we could make now that the darkness
-had deepened; but when we could go no faster than a walk, and were, I
-reckoned, some two miles from the cross roads, I called a halt.
-
-“We are going to rest here, captain,” I said to him, as we dismounted.
-
-We three sat by the side of the road and while we made a hasty meal
-I explained my plan to Karasch, who was frankly frightened by the
-presence of the official.
-
-“The moon will be up in a couple of hours, Karasch, and you must keep
-watch. I must sleep or I shall not be fit to ride later. We are going
-to leave that man here. If he dismounts, find the means to turn his
-horse astray; if he does not, you must disable the horse. But don’t
-shoot it except in the last resource; for we don’t know who might hear
-the shot. The man we shall just tie up to a tree.”
-
-“It is dangerous, Burgwan. He is an officer of the Imperial
-Government,” said Karasch.
-
-“If he were the Emperor of Austria himself, I should do it in the
-plight we are in.”
-
-I lay down. The excitement had kept me going; but I was done now;
-utterly exhausted and worn out; and despite the hazard of our position,
-I was soon fast asleep. I was wakened by a loud, angry cry from the
-Austrian. I could scarcely lift my head for the throbbing in it; I
-ached in every joint and muscle; and my leg was woefully stiff and
-painful from that knife thrust; but I scrambled to my feet in alarm and
-confusion at the noise.
-
-I must have slept for some three hours; for the moon was up and shining
-fitfully between the masses of ragged threatening clouds which were
-scudding across the face of the heavens. By the light I saw the man
-struggling with Karasch and shouting with a vigour that woke very
-dangerous echoes in the still night. Mademoiselle was holding Chris,
-who was growling ominously, and she was attempting to still him.
-
-I went over to them and found that Karasch had strapped the man’s legs
-tight together and was holding on to the strap with his one arm while
-the Austrian was fighting and wrestling to get free.
-
-“Down, Chris. You may loose him, Mademoiselle,” I said; and the good
-dog came instantly to heel. “Stand from him, Karasch,” I called next.
-“Now, sir, you must stop those cries; or I shall put the dog on you.”
-
-“This is an outrage, an infernal outrage, and you shall all suffer for
-it,” he cried, furiously.
-
-“It’s done by my orders. The outrage is that you should endeavour to
-force yourself upon us.”
-
-“I am doing my duty. I am a Government----”
-
-“I choose not to believe you; that’s all there is to it; and I take you
-to be a dirty spy set upon me by that other coward, Petrov, who was
-with you. I am going to tie your arms to your sides and leave you here.
-We are both suffering from the injuries inflicted by your accomplices;
-and if you resist, you must settle matters with my dog here--and he
-makes a rough fighter at the best of times.”
-
-“You infernal villain....” he spluttered.
-
-“Chris.” The great dog came close up to him and a fearsome brute he
-looked in the moonlight as he eyed the captain and showed his fangs
-with an angry snarl. “Now, Karasch.”
-
-He ceased to struggle then and let Karasch fasten him up securely; and
-after that we gagged him, and finding a suitable place some distance
-from the road we left him.
-
-“Where’s his horse?”
-
-“I started him over the hills. Mademoiselle helped me. I couldn’t have
-done it without her. She got him from his horse talking with him, and I
-got rid of the horse. It’ll probably go home.”
-
-“It may go to the devil for aught I care. But we must be off without
-losing another moment.”
-
-I felt the necessity now. We had burnt our boats with a vengeance
-in this treatment of the Austrian captain; and if we were caught on
-Austrian territory there might be a big bill to pay before we could
-settle matters. It was not now Mademoiselle’s safety only that depended
-upon our reaching Samac, but our own also, and we pushed on as fast as
-possible.
-
-“Karasch told me how cleverly you got that man separated from his
-horse, Mademoiselle,” I said when we were walking the horses up a steep
-hill.
-
-“He did not hear what I said to him?” she asked, quickly.
-
-“He said nothing to me if he did.”
-
-“He deserves what he has got; but it is a dangerous thing in Bosnia to
-interfere with an Austrian official.”
-
-“What did you say to him?”
-
-“I made the only offer I could. I told him I was the cause of all the
-trouble, was alone responsible, and offered to explain everything.”
-
-“Ah, I see. You mean you offered to go back with him, if he would let
-you go alone. It was like you.”
-
-She started and glanced quickly at me. “I did not say that.”
-
-“No. But I know you, and where you are concerned can make a guess.”
-
-“You would have been free, Burgwan; and I could have cleared matters.”
-
-“He was a fool, or he would have guessed and accepted the offer.”
-
-“What do you mean? Guessed what?”
-
-“That the moment I woke I should have ridden back to the camp.”
-
-“Burgwan!”
-
-“Do you think I should have left you in the lurch? It’s not the way we
-treat women in England, or in America.”
-
-“But you don’t understand. I should have been in no danger. Once under
-Austrian protection I could have explained.”
-
-“Explained what?”
-
-“Who I am. You have never asked me.”
-
-“I do not care. When you wish me to know, you will tell me; and when I
-wish to know, I will ask. I can wait. I know what you are--to me.”
-
-Either she did not catch the last words, for I had dropped my voice, or
-she affected not to hear. She said nothing and when we reached the top
-of the hill we rattled on again quickly.
-
-When we drew rein at the next hill we walked half way to the top in
-silence and then she broke it abruptly:
-
-“I will tell you if you wish, Burgwan.”
-
-“I do not. To me you are Mademoiselle: to you I am Burgwan; and
-Mademoiselle and Burgwan we can best remain, until we are out of this
-bother.”
-
-“How far do you think we are from Samac?”
-
-“We ought not to be more than a dozen miles at most--but that’s not
-much more than a guess.”
-
-“When we reach there, we shall part.”
-
-“You will be glad to be on the safe road to Belgrade.”
-
-“Is that another guess, Burgwan?”
-
-“Yes, it’s another guess, Mademoiselle.”
-
-“Do you think it’s a good one?”
-
-“Yes. You would be an extraordinary woman if it were not. I wish with
-all my heart we were safely there.”
-
-“Then I wish it, too,” she answered, with a gesture. A long pause
-followed until she said, “Yes, I do wish it. I had forgotten how ill
-you are and how sorely you need rest.”
-
-“I suppose it sounded as though I was thinking of myself.”
-
-“Not to me; you never seem to think of yourself--at least during our
-comradeship.”
-
-“I like that word--comradeship. Thank you for it.”
-
-“It has been a strange one, Burgwan. How good you have been. And I took
-you at first for a--a peasant, and even once for a brigand.”
-
-“There are worse folk in the world than peasants--or brigands either
-for that matter.”
-
-“What trouble I have brought to you.”
-
-“We shall have the more to laugh over when we meet again.”
-
-“We shall not meet again, Burgwan,” she said, so seriously and
-deliberately that I thought I could detect a touch of sadness. Perhaps
-I only hoped it, and the hope cheated me. I answered lightly,
-
-“One never knows. The world’s a small place now. You might come to
-America some day.”
-
-“No, no. That is impossible,” she interjected quickly.
-
-“Then I might go to Belgrade.”
-
-“No, no,” she exclaimed again in the same quick tone. “That too must be
-impossible.”
-
-“Impossible is a word we are going to wipe out of the American
-dictionary,” I replied, with a smile. “We shall see; but as we are at
-the top of the hill we’ll hurry on to Samac--the first stage, whether
-for America or Belgrade.”
-
-She turned as if to say something, her face very grave and earnest, but
-after a moment’s hesitation shook up her reins and we cantered on.
-
-But a good deal was to happen before we reached Samac; the first stage,
-as I had so glibly named it. We had some few miles of easy going
-when the path became very difficult and branched suddenly in three
-directions. I picked out that which, judging by the compass, promised
-to lead us straight to Samac. But instead of that, when we had followed
-it for an hour or more we found it cut by a broad, swift-flowing river.
-
-The path led right down to the water’s edge and rose from it on the
-other side; but the river was in flood from the recent heavy rains,
-and the ford was impassable. Karasch and I both tried to cross, on
-horseback first and then on foot, but failed; and then we rode along
-the bank searching for a fordable spot.
-
-But this only led us into worse disaster. We came to a spot where
-another stream, itself as fierce and swift and broad, joined the first.
-We were cut off hopelessly.
-
-We had lost precious hours in this way. It was long past the dawn; and
-to make matters even worse I could find no trace of the streams on the
-map anywhere near Samac.
-
-It was an awkward plight in all truth. To go on was impossible; to stay
-where we were for the waters to subside was useless; and yet to go back
-was only to put ourselves once more on the road where we might look for
-danger from those we knew to be in pursuit of us. The hours we had thus
-wasted had thrown away all the advantage gained by the night’s riding.
-
-Yet there was nothing else for it; and with a bitter sigh and something
-stronger at the bad luck, I gave the word, and we started to return.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-FROM BAD TO WORSE.
-
-
-The crushing disappointment and the anxiety it caused, following on
-the fatigue of the long ride, aggravated the injury to my head so that
-I could scarcely keep in the saddle. I had to cling to the pommel to
-prevent myself from falling.
-
-Mademoiselle was quick to see my condition.
-
-“Let us rest, Burgwan,” she said.
-
-“No, we must push on. They may get ahead of us. I shall be better again
-directly.”
-
-“I am too tired,” she answered; and without waiting to hear my protest,
-she slipped from her horse.
-
-“You must not do that,” I exclaimed, irritably.
-
-“Karasch’s arm is bad too,” she replied. “Isn’t it, Karasch?”
-
-“Yes, it is paining me, Burgwan,” he declared then. “I cannot go any
-further;” and he dismounted and came to help me.
-
-“Then I’ll ride on and find the road and return,” I said.
-
-“No,” exclaimed Karasch, as he seized my horse’s bridle.
-
-“Stand away, Karasch,” I cried, angrily. I was more like a fractious,
-obstinate child just then than a reasoning man. I felt I was too weak
-to go on and was angry with them both because I could not hide it.
-
-“You must get off, Burgwan,” he returned, firmly.
-
-“I’ll break your other arm if you don’t loose my bridle, Karasch.”
-
-“Then I’ll hold it. You won’t break mine, Burgwan,” said Mademoiselle,
-taking it quickly. “Hold my horse, Karasch. I am faint for want of food
-and rest, Burgwan. Won’t you help me?”
-
-“You are only doing this because you think I’m such a weak fool as not
-to be able to keep going,” I declared, angrily. “Please to loose that
-bridle, Mademoiselle.”
-
-“Not until you break my arm, Burgwan.”
-
-I sat still looking with a child’s sullen anger into her clear, calm,
-resolute eyes.
-
-“If you were a man....” I began and then laughed. “I’m a fool and
-that’s all there is to it. I’ll get off--but I won’t forgive you.
-This is mutiny.” I rolled from the saddle and was glad of the help of
-Karasch’s sturdy arm. “You don’t seem very weak, you coward,” I said,
-half in earnest, half in jest.
-
-“That’s not the broken arm, Burgwan,” he replied, as he helped me with
-the gentleness of a girl.
-
-“I’m all right and could ride fifty miles,” I protested angrily as I
-sat down; and then in proof of it, I fell back and fainted from sheer
-weakness.
-
-When I came to myself Mademoiselle was bathing my face and head, deep
-pity and care in her eyes.
-
-“I’m horribly ashamed of myself,” I murmured.
-
-“It’s a good thing you didn’t break my arm, Burgwan, isn’t it?” she
-said, smiling.
-
-“I was angry. I wanted to go on. I’m sorry.”
-
-“It was mutiny, you know. You feel better now?”
-
-“Oh, yes. I can sit up. Was I long?”
-
-“Only a few minutes. Karasch has tethered the horses and is getting
-us something to eat. Do you know, I was never so hungry in my life
-before?” and she laughed brightly.
-
-“We’re in a desperate mess,” said I, gloomily.
-
-“We should have been in a worse if we had gone on.”
-
-“Rub it in. You got your own way, you know.”
-
-“I meant to have it; and I’m not going to put my foot in the stirrup
-again until you have had something to eat and have slept for at least
-two or three hours.”
-
-“You have a very masterful way of your own.”
-
-She nodded and smiled to me. “But the point is whether you are going to
-obey without more--mutiny.”
-
-“You seem to take this for a kind of picnic.”
-
-“Here’s breakfast at any rate,” she cried, as Karasch came up.
-
-“Put it down here, Karasch, and get one of the saddles to prop Burgwan
-up.”
-
-“I can sit up without anything, I assure you.”
-
-“Who did you say was masterful?”
-
-I gave in with a smile and a shrug of the shoulders and let them
-arrange the saddle, and found it very comfortable.
-
-It was poor fare. Some hard biscuits, a tin of preserved meat, and some
-water from the river; but it could not have been enjoyed with more
-relish if it had been the best breakfast that the Waldorf-Astoria chef
-could have sent up.
-
-Mademoiselle’s cheerfulness in the strange and depressing circumstances
-was positively dauntless. She would see nothing but the brightest side
-of things. We were lost on the hills; but then it would be so much
-the more difficult for anyone to find us. The food was rough, but we
-had plenty to last us for all that day and part of the next. The loss
-of time might be dangerous, but we all needed rest and could take it
-without risk where we were. We did not know where to look for the road
-to Samac, but we should be sure to find a way somewhere. And meanwhile
-we were getting stronger and so better able to face the trouble.
-
-Even Karasch’s stern face relaxed under her influence. And as for
-me--well, I rolled over on the soft grass when she told me, and having
-put old Chris on the watch, went off to sleep as contentedly as though
-her view of the position and not mine were the true one.
-
-I slept for some hours. I woke once and looked round to find Karasch
-lying on his back at some distance, snoring in a deep stertorous
-diapason; and Mademoiselle curled up fast asleep peacefully with Chris
-lying at her feet. The hot sun was pouring down on the hills and crags
-around us; and I stretched myself lazily and was soon off again in deep
-refreshing slumber.
-
-When I awoke again I was alone to my great surprise. The horses were
-grazing near me tethered; but even Chris was away somewhere; and I sat
-up wondering in some confusion what it meant.
-
-A glance at my watch showed it was two hours and more past noon and
-that I must have slept for six or seven hours. I felt immensely
-refreshed. The pain in my head was so slight as to be inconsiderable,
-and although my leg was stiff, I could move about freely.
-
-Feeling in my pockets I found a couple of cigars in my case, and
-lighted one to think over things. I was smoking it with a rare relish
-when I saw Mademoiselle coming from the direction of the river with
-Chris in close attendance. How the old rascal had taken to her! I went
-to meet them; and as I approached, the dog came running to fawn upon me
-and then rushed back to fawn upon her; and looked from one to the other
-of us as though our comradeship, as she had termed it, was just the
-loveliest thing in the world to him.
-
-“Chris seems to approve our comradeship, Mademoiselle,” I said,
-marvelling how on earth she managed to look so fresh and sweet after
-her rough-and-tumble experiences during the last forty hours. Her soft,
-glossy hair was as neatly arranged as though she had just come from
-her room, her dress was in such order that so far as I could see not a
-thing was out of place.
-
-“He has been with me to the river on guard. I had no idea it was so
-difficult to wash in a river, and to do one’s hair out of doors and
-without a glass.”
-
-“You have been very successful. You put me to shame sadly,” and I
-glanced down in dismay at myself. “And you are so bright and sunny.”
-
-“There is good news. Our luck has turned. Karasch found a peasant who
-was crossing the hills and is learning from him our route. They are on
-the hill yonder.”
-
-“Thank God for that,” I said, fervently.
-
-“Yes, I suppose it is good news,” she replied in a tone which made me
-glance quickly at her. Then she added, after a pause: “You look much
-better for your rest, Burgwan.”
-
-“I feel a different man.”
-
-“Kindly disposed toward masterful rebels?”
-
-“Yes; and very grateful to one of them.”
-
-“I thought you were actually going to strike Karasch when he held your
-bridle rein this morning.”
-
-“I felt like it, too.”
-
-“I think he is afraid of you, Burgwan. It was you who broke his arm,
-wasn’t it?”
-
-“He broke it in a fall.” She paused and glanced at me.
-
-“He told me all about that fall, and what he meant to do, if you hadn’t
-beaten him. It was for me you risked your life in that fight.”
-
-“Karasch ought to hold his tongue.”
-
-We reached the spot where we had rested, and sat down to wait for
-Karasch.
-
-“I have been thinking this morning,” she said, slowly.
-
-“We all have some thinking to do before we are out of our plight.”
-
-“You call this a plight,” and she smiled. “Why, see what a lovely wild
-country it is. I could live in these hills--live, I mean, in the sense
-of keen, rare enjoyment. Look.” She pointed from one hill to another
-with kindling eye. “The freedom of it. The very air is different from
-all other.”
-
-“I should like some clean clothes,” I put in, flippantly.
-
-“Don’t.” And she gestured and frowned. “I want you to feel what it must
-be to me, and then to think, as I was thinking a while since, what
-would have been my fate--if it had not been for you. And you call this
-a plight! It is like Heaven in comparison!”
-
-“I don’t want you to exaggerate what I did.”
-
-“I am not exaggerating it,” she replied deliberately. “I don’t. I
-could not. You risked your life for me and saved me. Not only when you
-rescued me from the two men, but afterwards with Karasch; and yet again
-afterwards when you were hurt. Could I exaggerate that, Burgwan? Can I
-ever repay it?”
-
-She was so earnest in the desire to make me feel her gratitude and
-looked at me with such sweet graciousness, that I came within an ace of
-telling her how she could repay me. The very words rushed to my lips
-only to be stayed by an effort as I dropped my eyes before her. I could
-not speak of this while she was still dependent upon my help.
-
-“What a long time Karasch is,” I said clumsily after a long pause, not
-knowing indeed what else to say.
-
-I felt her eyes still upon me. She made a slight gesture of
-dissatisfaction and her voice had an accent of resentment.
-
-“You are anxious to get to your clean clothes and all that they stand
-for--in exchange for this.”
-
-“You are not content with this?”
-
-“I could be,” she murmured, with a sigh.
-
-“I don’t understand you.”
-
-“No. I suppose not. You haven’t the key.”
-
-“You can have no reason to be afraid to go back to Belgrade. I know
-that, because at the camp you were so anxious to start. Your sighs then
-were of discontent because you couldn’t start at once.”
-
-“You remember?” She smiled slowly, and then grew serious. “No, it
-is not exactly fear, and yet--I suppose in a way it is fear. It is
-certainly reluctance. Oh, I see what you mean.” She broke off, smiling
-very brightly this time. “That there may be some reason connected with
-the cause of my capture which threatens me: that I have committed some
-offence or----”
-
-“No, no, I don’t think anything of the sort,” I interposed.
-
-“No, I’m not a criminal, not even a political criminal, Burgwan--and
-not even a witch.” The smile became a free and joyous laugh, and I
-joined in and laughed also.
-
-“I’m not so sure about the witchcraft, Mademoiselle.”
-
-“If I were a witch I should know all about you and I--yes, I should
-like to, and yet I would rather not. We can be so frank while you are
-just Burgwan. It is all so strange, this comradeship of ours. I shall
-never forget it. Shall you--even when you get to those clean clothes
-that are so much in your thoughts?”
-
-“I’m not likely to change my thoughts even when I change my clothes.”
-
-“What a time Karasch is,” she laughed, throwing back my own words at
-me. “Keeping you from the tailor and the barber in this way!”
-
-“He is keeping you from Belgrade--a much more serious matter.”
-
-“I don’t mind that--and yet I suppose I ought to. But this is so
-delightful,” she cried, joyously.
-
-“This?”
-
-“This delicious freedom. This utter irresponsibility. This Burgwan and
-Mademoiselle comradeship. This being able to laugh at conventions and
-snap one’s fingers in the face of restrictions--the thousand petty
-‘don’ts’ and ‘mustn’ts’ that edge one in so, till one’s very breath
-has to be drawn with restraint and every look and gesture fitted to
-some occasion and empty etiquette. How I wish I was just no more than a
-peasant girl! Oh, it is life.”
-
-“There are plenty of them who would be glad to change places with you.”
-
-“Yes, I know I am talking nonsense, and I daresay I should grow tired
-of it all in a week or a month, and sicken for the flummery and mummery
-again. Besides, there might be no Burgwan like you and no Chris in
-the picture, to feel safe with and trust. I couldn’t do with only
-Karasch’s, could I?”
-
-“He is a very good fellow, and might make a very good husband.”
-
-“Oh, don’t, please. Now you’ve shattered the dream, and made me wish
-for Belgrade and my friends.”
-
-Did she mean all I was ready to read into that sentence? Was it
-intended as a warning lest another than Karasch should presume? I
-was glad I had held my tongue just before. When I did not reply, she
-stooped and patted the dog and then laughed.
-
-“I wish you were my dog, Chris,” she said. “I shall get one just like
-him and call him Chris.”
-
-“Would you like to change masters, Chris?” He drew himself lazily
-across the grass at my words and thrust his nose into my hand almost as
-if understanding my question and answering it. “I will give him to you
-if you like, Mademoiselle.”
-
-But she shook her head. “No. No, no, no,” she cried.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-She called him back to her side and caressed him before she answered,
-and then spoke very slowly.
-
-“I don’t think I know why. I would rather have him than anything in
-the world, but I couldn’t take him. I--I couldn’t bear to have him, I
-think.”
-
-“You may change your mind when you see him next time.” She bent over
-him again and patted him and let him lick her hand.
-
-“I am afraid I know what you mean, Burgwan--that you think of coming
-some day to Belgrade. I hope you never will.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“It would not do. Oh, no, no, a thousand times no. It is so difficult
-to explain. Here we are Burgwan and Mademoiselle; and there--well, for
-one thing, you would have your clean clothes,” and she broke off with
-a smile partly quizzical and partly of dismay; and then added: “You
-would look for Mademoiselle and would only find....” she finished with
-a shake of the head and a sigh.
-
-“You think I should be disappointed?”
-
-“You must not come, Burgwan. There would be no Mademoiselle in
-Belgrade.”
-
-“Chris may wish to see his successor. He is a masterful dog, you know,”
-I said with a smile.
-
-“This is no jest, Burgwan. I wish you would promise me not to come
-there. Ah, here comes Karasch. Promise me, Burgwan;” and in her
-eagerness she leant across and laid a hand on my arm, the earnestness
-of her manner showing in her eyes.
-
-“I cannot promise,” I answered.
-
-She drew her hand away with a gesture of impatience and said, as she
-rose: “That is not like Burgwan. The very mention of Belgrade has
-changed you.”
-
-“Not changed me. I have always meant to go,” I replied. As I got up
-Karasch reached us, and there was no chance to say more.
-
-He explained that the peasant had been pointing out the way to him and
-was willing to lead us to the proper road.
-
-The horses were saddled at once and when they were ready, I went to
-Mademoiselle, who had been standing apart gazing at the rugged scenery
-with intense enjoyment.
-
-“Are we ready, Burgwan?”
-
-“Yes; we may start now.”
-
-“I am almost sorry, I think,” she said, looking about her wistfully.
-“But it’s all over.”
-
-“Except the comradeship.”
-
-“No, not even excepting that. You will get your clean clothes and I all
-the conventions once more and--all that they mean. I am ready;” and she
-sighed.
-
-I helped her into the saddle.
-
-“And it was only yesterday I would not let you help me to mount. It
-seems a year ago,” she said. “You gave me that lesson in will power;
-but I beat you this morning, Burgwan, and had my revenge.”
-
-“Do you mean about my going to Belgrade?” I challenged.
-
-“Ah, you will promise me then?”
-
-“If I promised I should only break my word.”
-
-“Promise, and I will trust you--for the sake of the comradeship.”
-
-“Then I will not promise.”
-
-“You will force me to tell you things that will compel you to promise.
-And it will be kinder not to force me. Oh, so much kinder.”
-
-“You puzzle me.”
-
-“Will you promise? Burgwan?” she urged, pleadingly.
-
-“I cannot.”
-
-“Oh, that hard will of yours!” and wheeling her horse round she rode
-off after Karasch and the guide, leaving me to follow.
-
-What did she mean? What could she tell that would convince me a future
-meeting must be avoided? What reason could there be on her side? What
-could she think there might be on mine? These and a hundred questions
-arising out of them plagued me during the ride; and none of the answers
-that suggested themselves could satisfy me.
-
-But I was soon to have other matters for thought. The guide put us in
-the right road for Samac, which he told us was about fifteen miles
-distant through a place called Poabja; and as soon as he had left us we
-rattled over the ground at a sharp canter.
-
-For one thing, I was very uneasy about the Austrian officer whom we
-had treated so drastically on the previous night. If he was found and
-liberated, and raised a hue and cry after us there would probably be
-some very awkward consequences; while if he was not liberated soon,
-his very life might be jeopardised. My intention was to send a search
-party after him as soon as we reached a place where that could be done
-without risk to ourselves; and I was confident that my influence in
-Vienna was amply sufficient to cause my explanation of the whole affair
-to be accepted. But I could and would do nothing until I was certain of
-Mademoiselle’s safety.
-
-My anxiety increased when we reached the outside of Poabja; and I kept
-a vigilant lookout for any signs that the news of our arrival could
-have preceded us. This was possible, of course. We had strayed so far
-from the proper road and had stayed so long in the hills that if Petrov
-and the rest from the camp had followed us to where we had encountered
-the Austrian, and had continued on the road to Samac, they would pass
-through Poabja and we might easily run up against some trouble, even
-without the complication arising out of the official’s rough handling
-by us.
-
-I soon noticed signs which I did not like. We began to meet peasants
-and others on the road; and I observed that while some of them did no
-more than stare at us with close scrutiny, others started away and
-turned their backs and made the sign of the cross as we passed.
-
-Karasch noticed this also; and when we met a couple of men who behaved
-in this eccentric fashion, he glanced from the men to Mademoiselle and
-from her to me.
-
-“Ill news has got ahead of us, Burgwan,” he said to me in an undertone.
-“We had better avoid the town. You saw that sign of the cross!”
-
-“Go back and question the men.”
-
-“Why do we halt?” asked Mademoiselle, as Karasch rode back.
-
-“We must make certain of the right road,” I answered.
-
-“But is not this Poabja?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then we know we are right. Samac is not half a dozen miles beyond.”
-
-Karasch came back wearing an anxious look.
-
-“To avoid the town will cost a couple of leagues. But I think we should
-take that route,” he said.
-
-“Why avoid it? We have lost our way once,” said Mademoiselle.
-
-“We fear trouble. News of our coming is known,” I explained.
-
-“Do you mean about the officer who tried to stop us last night?”
-
-“No--that you are suspected of witchcraft.”
-
-She laughed. “I have nothing to fear in Poabja. I will find means to
-charm their anger into friendship;” and she settled the question of
-route by shaking her reins and cantering off toward the straggling
-little place.
-
-The approach lay up a long, winding hill, steep in places, and as we
-rode up it the people came out from the houses to gaze at us. Languid
-curiosity gave way to close interest, and this in turn quickened into
-some excitement. Men and women walked up the hill abreast of us and
-some few ran on ahead.
-
-Near the top of the hill stood an inn outside which some half dozen
-saddle horses were hitched; and when the riders came hurrying out I was
-scarcely surprised to see Petrov among them talking and gesticulating
-freely to his companions.
-
-Men began to call then one to the other; the calls were caught up on
-many sides, at first intermittently but swelling gradually, as the
-crowd increased, into a coherent cry which I recognised with deep
-misgivings.
-
-“The Witch! The Witch! The Witch!”
-
-I regretted that we had taken the risk; but Mademoiselle only smiled
-even when the cries grew louder and more angry and threatening, and
-hands were raised in imprecations and revilings.
-
-“Forward,” I cried. “We must get through them.” But to my dismay
-Mademoiselle hesitated.
-
-Then Petrov and a man with him ran and placed themselves in front of
-her and made a snatch at her bridle rein. Karasch and I pushed forward.
-
-“Stand back there,” I said.
-
-“That she devil can’t pass, Burgwan,” answered Petrov.
-
-I stretched forward and tore his grip from the rein and flung him
-reeling back into the crowd.
-
-A score of hands were raised in menace and the cries of “The Witch!
-Death for the Witch!” went up all around us; while the circle closed in
-ominously. A stone was hurled and narrowly missed me and then some dirt
-was thrown at Mademoiselle.
-
-That was more than I was taking. If we were to get through it would
-have to be by force. So I drew my revolver and called to Karasch to do
-the same.
-
-“I’ll shoot the first man who stops me,” I shouted, and for a moment
-the men fell back before the weapons. “Now is our chance. Gallop for
-all we’re worth and we shall get through.”
-
-But the luck was against us. A stone struck Mademoiselle’s horse and he
-reared and plunged and then fell. In a second she was in the grip of
-half a dozen men and before Karasch and I could dismount and get to her
-assistance we were separated from her by the crowd and seized in our
-turn, the weapons were struck from our hands and we were overpowered.
-
-I was carried into a house close to the inn, my hands and legs
-were bound and I was thrust into a room and left to curse my folly
-for having ventured into the place, to brood over the dangers to
-Mademoiselle, and to breathe impotent vows of vengeance against Petrov
-and everyone concerned in our capture.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-AT POABJA.
-
-
-For an hour and more I was left to gnash my teeth in rage as I tore and
-struggled fruitlessly to loosen the cords that bound me. In that hour I
-endured the torments such as even hell itself could not have surpassed.
-My violent struggles inflamed the hurt to my head until it throbbed as
-if it would split; but all mere physical pain was lost and deadened in
-the surpassing agony of mind.
-
-The thought of that sweet, pure girl in the power of these crazy,
-superstitious fanatics was unendurable; and had the torture continued
-longer it would have driven me mad. Death threatened her every minute
-she was in the hands of frenzied fools such as they were; and a hundred
-possible ways in which they might murder her occurred to me, each
-stimulating the passion of my fear and anguish.
-
-At length the door of my room was opened and Petrov and another man
-entered. The sight of him so maddened me that I strove to rise, bound
-though I was, to wreak my fury upon him.
-
-“No harm is meant to you, Burgwan,” he said.
-
-My answer was a volley of curses and threats so vehement and furious
-that he started back in alarm.
-
-“No harm is meant to you,” he repeated.
-
-“Loose these cords then, to prove it,” I cried.
-
-His companion made as if to approach me when Petrov held him back.
-
-“Not yet,” he said, turning pale with fear.
-
-“It doesn’t matter when you do it. You know me, Petrov, and now mark
-this. If I find that the least harm is done to Mademoiselle, I’ll make
-you pay the price. And the price shall be your life. I’ll hunt you
-down, if it costs me all I have in the world, and when I find you, God
-have mercy on you, I won’t. That I swear.”
-
-“She is a witch,” he said, doggedly.
-
-“You lie, you treacherous snake. And if you value your dirty skin, see
-that no harm comes to her.” It seemed to afford me some kind of relief
-to abuse the beast.
-
-“You told me so yourself,” he declared sullenly.
-
-“Loose these cords and say that again, and I’ll tear your lying tongue
-out by the roots.” I must have been beside myself to talk in this
-strain; but it had its effect on him.
-
-“She has come to no harm,” he said then.
-
-“You may thank your God for that--if it’s true.”
-
-“It is true,” declared the other man. “We came here to set you free.”
-
-“Do it then.”
-
-“Not while he threatens me,” put in Petrov, quickly.
-
-“I know nothing about that. It’s the priest’s orders.”
-
-I pricked up my ears at that and the great crushing weight of my fears
-began to lighten.
-
-“Say that again. And tell me what it means,” I cried.
-
-“She’ll only be taken to Maglai,” said Petrov.
-
-“Say that again,” I repeated to his companion.
-
-“I don’t know what it means. I was told she had confessed to being a
-witch and asked for the priest, that she might repent and be shriven;
-and then we were told to come to unbind you.”
-
-“Why the devil didn’t you say so then, when you came in, and do it at
-once?”
-
-“You’re too violent.”
-
-“If all’s well with her, you can go to hell your own way.” The relief
-from the strain was so intense I felt almost hysterical with sudden
-joy, and I lay back and laughed aloud. The two men stood staring at me
-wonderingly.
-
-“What shall we do?” asked Petrov’s companion.
-
-“If you disobey the priest, my good fellow,” I interposed, “you’ll see
-what he says to you, and I’ll take care that he knows of it.”
-
-Instead of replying, they left the room and fastened the door behind
-them. I didn’t care now what they did. All was well in the matter that
-had troubled me. Mademoiselle was unharmed and they might do with me as
-they pleased. I could trust myself to get out of any trouble when once
-I was in communication with my agents in Vienna.
-
-All was well with her and the world was once more a place to smile in.
-
-Then I began to piece things together and to figure out how such a
-change could have been effected. Mademoiselle herself had found the
-means of doing it all. I recalled her phrase about charming away the
-anger of the people at Poabja, and the way in which she had cantered on
-fearlessly when Karasch and I had counselled the other route to avoid
-passing through the town. She must have had a strong reason for her
-confidence. Brave as she certainly was, she would not have faced such a
-risk voluntarily unless she had had good grounds to know she would pass
-the ordeal successfully.
-
-Who was she? What influence was she, a Serb of Belgrade, likely to have
-in that out-of-the-way Bosnian village? On whom was that influence
-exercised? The man said she had confessed to her witchcraft and asked
-for the priest that she might repent and be shriven. The priest it
-was who had ordered my release, and the priest it must be, therefore,
-through whom she had been able to clear herself.
-
-How? It was an easy inference that he knew her and that she had made
-the pretended confession so as to get face to face with him. But why
-had she told me nothing about him? “I have nothing to fear in Poabja,”
-she had said; but not a word of the priest. And then I thought I could
-see the reason. She did not wish him to tell me who she was.
-
-Had I known of him she knew I should have sought him out first, or have
-sent for him, and the secret would have been out before she could have
-cautioned him to say nothing. Rather than that, she had risked entering
-the place and facing the crowd. Yet she had offered once to tell me
-about herself. At that point the apparent inconsistency beat me; and
-the only guess I could make was that she had anticipated getting to the
-priest without any such trouble as that which had befallen us.
-
-I was more than content to lie there thinking in this way. It pleased
-me to let my fancy run at random about her. I cared nothing who she
-was. To me she was just Mademoiselle; and I wanted to know no more.
-She had come into my life to stay; and nothing that she could be, and
-nothing she could ever do, would alter that all-supreme fact for me.
-
-Two days before I had never seen her. Forty-eight hours! But they had
-been forty-eight hours of comradeship; and forty-eight years could
-not blot out all that those hours had held for me, when I had been
-in succession the peasant Burgwan, the brigand, and then the trusted
-comrade and friend.
-
-What had they held for her? I would have given much to know. Daring,
-imperious, rebellious, yielding, solicitous, and at last utterly
-content to trust as she had been in turn; what feelings lay beneath the
-surface? How was I to read that conversation on the hillside? Why was
-she so resolute that our parting was to spell permanent separation;
-that I must not go to Belgrade, and must never seek to see her again?
-
-I had not given the promise sought, of course. I would not give it.
-What would she say if I told her that my visit to Belgrade, in my
-character as financier was already arranged and that my hand had
-already been felt in that unrestful little centre of Balkan policy.
-Probably she knew nothing and cared little about Balkan politics or
-finance; and I was indulging in half a hundred conjectures of her
-reason for my keeping away from Belgrade when the two men entered my
-room and brought me a note.
-
-“From the priest,” said one of them.
-
-But it was not. It was from her.
-
- “All my troubles are over and you may be quite at rest about me. Give
- your word not to hurt the man Petrov. I ask this. I ask, too, that
- you will consent to remain where you are for two hours longer. Will
- you do this--a last favour? For all you have done for me I cannot
- thank you; I can only remember. Do you think me graceless and a churl
- if I say our comradeship is over and if I go without seeing you? I
- can only say in excuse, I must. To Burgwan from
-
- “Mademoiselle.”
-
-“I am taking Chris. You said I should alter my mind. I have. I will
-treat him as what he has been--one of the comrades.”
-
-I read the letter two or three times. At first with feelings in which
-chilling despair, a sense of ineffable loss, and intensely bitter
-regret overpowered me. It stung me like a blow in the face that she
-could go like this, without even a touch of hands, or a parting glance.
-She was safe, and I was nothing, or less than nothing to her. But at
-the second and third reading very different thoughts were stirred. A
-hope sprang to life in my heart great and wild enough to dazzle and
-bewilder me.
-
-Could it be, not that she cared nothing for me but that she feared for
-herself in the hour of parting? Dared I hope that? Did she fear that
-feelings, which she was all unwilling to shew, would force themselves
-out in despite of her efforts in the moment of parting? Was it from
-that part of herself, from her heart, that she was thus running away,
-and not only from me? I prayed that it might be so.
-
-Then a colder mood followed, cold enough to freeze that hope, at the
-prompting of judgment. She knew nothing of me. To her I was just
-Burgwan; at first peasant, then, on my own admission, an American
-in such sordid surroundings as might well make her deem me a mere
-adventurer. With that belief in her mind, she might well be at a loss
-how to part from me--what to say and do, and whether she ought not to
-make me some reward for what I had done.
-
-The thought bit like a live acid with its intolerable sting; and yet
-my judgment found reason after reason in support of it. I alternated
-between a hot desire to rush out there and then and seek her, and a
-stolid, dogged resolve to let her go and to live down the mad desire to
-see her and explain all.
-
-“You are to give us some answer,” said the man who had brought the
-letter. The two had been watching me in silence during those few
-distraction-filled minutes. “An answer concerning Petrov here.”
-
-“You are safe from me, Petrov,” I replied. “I will let you go, but keep
-out of my way for the future.”
-
-“I meant no harm, Burgwan, on my soul none to you. I did what I did
-for you,” he said, and stooped to cut the cords that bound my feet. “I
-did wrong and am sorry.”
-
-He was an idiot, but he couldn’t help that; and I let him free my hands.
-
-“Get me some paper,” I said, and he hurried away and returned with it.
-My hands were too numbed from the cords and the efforts I had made to
-release myself for me to be able to do more than scratch senseless
-hieroglyphics on the paper. I could scarcely hold the pencil, indeed,
-and he and the other man chafed them until the blood was set in
-circulation.
-
-Even after some minutes of this I could only write in large, uncouth
-letters--a sort of illiterate scrawl which was no more than a
-caricature of my handwriting. But time was pressing. Mademoiselle might
-be gone before my letter could reach her, so I wrote as best I could.
-
-“I agree on condition that you see me. Burgwan.”
-
-I spelt my name as she had been accustomed to pronounce it; and having
-sent Petrov to deliver it, I ordered the other man to get me some food
-and milk.
-
-I had no appetite; but I had eaten nothing for many hours and knew I
-must keep up my strength; so I forced myself to take it. The milk was
-grateful enough, for I was feverish and consumed with thirst. But all
-the time I was waiting impatiently for Petrov’s return with the answer
-to my letter; and as soon as I had finished the meal I paced up and
-down the low, narrow room feeling like a caged beast.
-
-But my resolve was fixed. She should not go without my seeing her; and
-when minute after minute passed and Petrov did not return, I could
-barely keep within the house, and was seized with a fierce longing to
-rush off to the priest’s house and find her.
-
-At length the suspense and restraint passed endurance, and I went to
-the door and shouted for someone. The man who had been with Petrov came
-in response.
-
-“Who is the priest who gave you your orders?”
-
-“Father Michel.”
-
-“Where does he live?”
-
-“By the side of his church at the end of the long street.”
-
-“How far is it? How long should it take to go there and return?”
-
-“The man should have been back before now. I suppose they have kept him
-while an answer was written.”
-
-“Who are you?”
-
-“This is my house. I keep the inn next door.”
-
-“Where is my horse?”
-
-“Your companion has them all. Karasch is his name, isn’t it?”
-
-I had forgotten all about Karasch in my anxiety.
-
-“Where is he and the horses?”
-
-“They have been fed in my stables. There’s a bill to pay,” he added, as
-though that was the most important feature in the whole case. I suppose
-it was to him. I gave him a gold piece and told him to keep the change,
-and so made a friend.
-
-“Can you lead me to the priest’s house?”
-
-“Of course I can, at need. But I was told you were going to remain here
-a couple of hours. It is nothing to me.”
-
-“See if Petrov is coming,” I said next. His words had recalled
-Mademoiselle’s letter; and I was still anxious to do what she had asked.
-
-He went out and after a minute or two, returned.
-
-“He is coming down the hill now,” he announced.
-
-“You can go then.”
-
-“I shall be at hand if you want me,” he answered, and shut the door
-behind him.
-
-Petrov came a minute later and had a letter.
-
-I tore it open with trembling fingers.
-
-“Will you wait for me? Mademoiselle.”
-
-I breathed a sigh of intense relief, and looking up, caught Petrov’s
-eyes bent upon me. As he met my look he lowered his face.
-
-“You can go,” I said, curtly.
-
-“I want to serve you still, Burgwan.”
-
-“I have no need for you. Go.”
-
-“There is money due to me.”
-
-“How much?”
-
-He named a sum and I gave it him, saying that rightfully he had
-forfeited it by his disobedience. He counted it slowly as if to make
-sure it was right.
-
-“I want to serve you still, Burgwan,” he repeated.
-
-“I tell you I have no need for you.”
-
-“About that Austrian Government officer, Burgwan, Captain Hanske?” It
-was said with sly suggestiveness.
-
-“Well?”
-
-“Where is he? He stayed with you and has not been seen again. No one
-but me knows you saw him last.”
-
-I laughed.
-
-“Are you threatening me?”
-
-“No. I want to serve you. Is he dead?”
-
-“You insolent dog. No.”
-
-“What did you do with him? I’ve kept my lips closed.”
-
-“Closed or open it’s all one to me. Say what you like to whom you like.
-But get away from here.”
-
-“I want to serve you, Burgwan. You can pay. Not only about him, but
-about that, too;” and he pointed to the letter.
-
-“What the devil do you mean?”
-
-“I was a long time gone, wasn’t I?”
-
-“Well?” His manner and tone were full of suggestion.
-
-“I can serve you. I can help you to get those three thousand gulden!”
-
-“Three thousand gulden!” I exclaimed, utterly at a loss for his meaning.
-
-“Yes, the three thousand waiting to be paid at Maglai.”
-
-Then I understood and burst into a laugh.
-
-“I think you’re making a pretty considerable ass of yourself, Petrov;
-but I’ll listen to you.”
-
-“You meant to take her to Maglai, you and Karasch. You knew she was no
-witch and meant to earn the reward. Well, I can help you now, if you’ll
-give me my share.”
-
-My first impulse was to kick him out of the room and I started angrily
-to obey it; but then a very different thought stopped me. He knew
-something that I ought to know. He took me for a scoundrel enough
-to betray Mademoiselle in this way and thought he could sell this
-knowledge of his at the price of a share in the reward.
-
-“Why were you so long away?” I asked, seizing on the vital point.
-
-“What share am I to have?”
-
-“Half the reward when I receive it.”
-
-“You swear that?” he asked slowly.
-
-“Tell me what you know,” I cried, sternly.
-
-“Does she say she’ll come here?” he asked, pointing again at the note
-in my hand.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Ah. She’s gone and if we’re to get her into our possession again we
-shall have to be quick.”
-
-“Gone? Where?” I exclaimed, aghast at the check.
-
-He threw up his hands.
-
-“To Samac. But you haven’t taken that oath about my share.”
-
-“You infernal villain. Do you think I mean to harm her? Out of the
-way;” and dashing him aside, I called for the other man and told him I
-must have my horse at once.
-
-Then I turned back to Petrov.
-
-“How long has she been gone?” I asked.
-
-“I shan’t say. I’ve lied to you, Burgwan.”
-
-“Here;” and I took out some gold pieces. “These are yours if you tell
-the truth.”
-
-“She’s gone on the road to Samac, Burgwan, in a carriage which the
-priest found for her, and has about half an hour’s start. They kept me
-from coming back to you.”
-
-Karasch came up then with his horse and mine, and in a moment I was in
-the saddle dashing in hot haste up the winding street.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-TO SAMAC.
-
-
-Many of the village folk were still lounging in the street and the
-clatter of the horses’ heels brought out more to gape and stare in
-wonderment as we clattered past. We were nearing the end of the place
-when I caught sight of a church with a mean-looking presbytery by the
-side.
-
-I checked my horse, rode to it, and asked for Father Michel. A tall
-white-haired priest came out; kind-faced, with remarkable eyes almost
-black, under black brows. A man to trust certainly.
-
-“You are Father Michel?”
-
-For answer he turned his searching eyes upon me, paused and said: “You
-will be Burgwan?”
-
-“Yes. And you know why I come.”
-
-“On the contrary, I was in the act of coming to you.”
-
-“Is she here?” I did not know how to speak of Mademoiselle; but he
-understood instantly. He patted my horse’s neck and looked up with
-sympathy in his manner and glance.
-
-“You will let me speak with you?”
-
-“Is she here?” I repeated.
-
-“She wished me to see you. We arranged that she should go and that I
-should give you her messages. You will come into my house?”
-
-“No, I cannot wait. She is gone to Samac. I shall ride after her. I
-must see her.”
-
-“You are suffering,” he said, with that soothing comfort-offering air
-which is the priceless possession of many women and some good men. “You
-will let me give you her messages?”
-
-“I cannot wait,” I said again; and yet I lingered.
-
-“Will it ease your own pain to make her suffer?” The question made me
-wince; and I shirked the answer to it.
-
-“She _has_ gone to Samac?”
-
-“Yes, she has driven to Samac. There is plenty of time for you to
-listen to me and then to overtake her before she can leave there.”
-
-“She was to come to me,” I said, with a glance of doubt at this. It
-might be another ruse. He saw the doubt instantly.
-
-“You may believe me. I do not wish to detain you if you prefer to go,
-and should not stoop to a trick.” He stepped back and waved his hand as
-if to signify I was free to go, and added: “It is only for her sake.”
-
-He knew the strength such a plea would have for me.
-
-“I must see her. I will.”
-
-He threw up his hands with a gesture of pain.
-
-I half wheeled my horse round to start and then checked him.
-
-“Why did she go in this way?”
-
-Again he turned those wonderful eyes of his upon me, and answered
-slowly:
-
-“If you do not know I must not tell you. She has gone out of your life
-altogether--altogether. It is her own doing; her own will and wish and
-doing. Let her go.”
-
-“I will not,” I exclaimed almost fiercely.
-
-“Have patience and the strength of a man, Burgwan. You have acted nobly
-to her, offering your life in her defence. She cannot repay you. She
-knows that, and I know it. Add chivalry to your courage, and spare her.”
-
-“She told me to wait for her--in that letter, I mean; and yet before it
-was in my hands, she had gone away.”
-
-“The sweetest pleasure in life as well as the noblest quality in man is
-self-denial, Burgwan; and in your case it is real prudence and wisdom
-as well.”
-
-“But she bade me wait for her,” I repeated.
-
-“Not in Poabja, Burgwan. She bade me get from you your name and the
-means of communicating with you if ever----”
-
-“Then it was a mere trick of words,” I cried with angry unreason. “I
-shall follow her;” and without waiting for him to reply I rode off
-quickly. I think I was afraid to trust myself longer with him; afraid
-lest he should prevail with me; afraid lest the fierce consuming desire
-to look once more upon her face should be chilled by the appeals to my
-better nature which he knew how to make so shrewdly.
-
-Already he had made me conscious of the stubborn selfishness of my
-purpose; and as I galloped along, I sought to stifle the feeling with
-specious palliation and anger. She had no right to treat me in this
-way. I had done nothing and said nothing to deserve it. She had run
-away under the cover of a mere trick and ruse. And so on.
-
-But I could not shake off the impression of the priest’s words, “Will
-it ease your own pain to make her suffer?” The question haunted me. I
-could find no answer to it in my own thoughts, just as I had found none
-in speaking with him. Out of it came the chilling conviction that the
-part I was playing was the part of the coward.
-
-I was forcing myself upon her in face of her remonstrance and pleading.
-“Her own will and wish and doing.” What was I but a coward to try and
-force her. The very air took up the cry of coward; and the rhythm of my
-horse’s hoofs seemed to echo it at every throbbing stride.
-
-But I knitted my brows and set my teeth and held on. I must see her
-again. I would. It was my passion that urged me. I would see her, let
-the world cry shame upon me for my cowardice. And I dug my heels into
-my horse’s flanks in my distraction and rushed along up hill and down
-alike at a mad, reckless speed.
-
-Fast as I rode, however, I could not outpace that thought of cowardice.
-It gained upon me, little by little; now to be flung aside in anger,
-only to return to chill me until I hated the thing I was doing and
-had to put forth every effort of my selfish desire to prevent myself
-checking the horse and turning back to seek some other means to my end.
-
-If it was really to cause her suffering, after what she had gone
-through, how dared I go on? What would she think of me? She had trusted
-to me in all that time of peril with the implicit trust of a child.
-Thank God I had been able to stand between her and her danger, and we
-had come through it together to safety. And now I was so madly selfish
-that I could not be man enough to spare her from this pain.
-
-“I cannot thank you; I can only remember,” she had written. And here
-was I bent upon blotting the memory with this slur of my own crude,
-brutal selfishness. Was this what she would look for in her comrade?
-Was it what she had the right to expect? How would the act look when
-she came afterwards to remember?
-
-Unwittingly I checked my horse. I was a coward now of another kind. I
-was afraid to satisfy my own desire; afraid to mar the memory she would
-have of our comradeship; afraid to meet the look of reproach I knew
-would be in her eyes at the sight of me.
-
-My horse, glad enough to ease his speed, fell into a walking pace, and
-I let the reins drop on his neck as I hung my head in sheer dejection.
-Karasch came to my side in astonishment then.
-
-“Is anything the matter, Burgwan?”
-
-“Nothing that you can help, Karasch.”
-
-“We are going to Samac, are we not?”
-
-“I don’t know--and don’t care. Don’t worry me with your questions.”
-
-“Mademoiselle has been taken there, hasn’t she? Are you not going to
-her help?”
-
-“She has gone there of her own will and wish. She is quite safe; you
-need have no fears for her.”
-
-“How do you know she is safe?”
-
-“The priest told me.”
-
-“The priest!” he exclaimed, with scant respect. “I should like to know
-it for myself and trust my own eyes.”
-
-I started and instinctively gathered up the reins again. What if she
-was not safe after all. Could the whole thing at Poabja be just a trick
-to get her from me?
-
-I laughed suddenly; so suddenly that Karasch started and looked at me
-in surprise and some alarm.
-
-“May I see the devil if I see a reason for laughing.”
-
-But I did. I was laughing at the effect his words had had on me--at
-the tempting pretext they offered for continuing the journey. I could
-pretend that I was in doubt about her safety, and that that was the
-reason for my riding after her. I played with the thought; and then
-laughed again.
-
-“Don’t be a fool, Karasch. She is quite safe, I tell you.”
-
-“Have you ridden out thus far then at a wild gallop in order to see how
-dusty the roads are?”
-
-“I suppose that’s about how it looks,” I laughed.
-
-“That blow on your head has hurt you more than we thought.”
-
-“No, it isn’t my head this time,” I said drily.
-
-“Your leg, you mean? Or did they do anything to you at Poabja?”
-
-“Yes, it all happened at Poabja, Karasch. I must go back there and see
-that priest again;” and I pulled my horse up and turned him. I would
-have given much to have taken Karasch’s view and have ridden on, but
-the thought of Mademoiselle’s eyes stopped me. Even if I persuaded
-myself, I could not tell the lie to her.
-
-Karasch sat facing me stolidly.
-
-“You are ill, Burgwan, or it wouldn’t be like this with you. Go back to
-Poabja and I’ll seek you there.”
-
-“What do you mean? Where are you going?”
-
-“To Samac. I will not desert her.”
-
-The grim irony of this was too much for me and I smiled. Here was I,
-consumed with intense longing to go to her and compelled to hold myself
-back with a curb of iron--and to Karasch my act seemed no more than
-paltry cowardice and desertion. My smile seemed to anger him.
-
-“You have not been so free with your laughter till now,” he said,
-curtly, “and I see no cause for it.”
-
-“If I laugh it is not for joy, Karasch; but you don’t understand. Do as
-you say. Go on to Samac and bring me any news you may find there.”
-
-“You are right. I don’t understand. But you had better ride on with me.
-If you are really ill, we are nearer to Samac than Poabja; and if there
-is news you ought to know, it may mean a grievous waste of time to have
-to ride back to Poabja.”
-
-How aptly the plea fitted with my desires. It was true, too. She might,
-after all, have need of me. There was just the chance that matters had
-been misrepresented. It could do no harm for me to be in Samac. I need
-not see her even if I went there.
-
-Karasch watched me closely as I sat letting these thoughts and others
-of the kind influence me; and he believed that he was persuading me
-and bringing me back to my right mind.
-
-“I shall be very little use without you, Burgwan, if there is really
-more trouble. We ought to make sure. We should be cowards to desert her
-now.”
-
-“I wonder which way the real coward would decide to go, Karasch. For
-the life of me I don’t know;” but I wheeled my horse round again and we
-rode on toward Samac.
-
-After all I was not now going to see her, I said to myself. I would
-just make sure, as Karasch had suggested, that all was well with her,
-and then hide myself until she had left. That was how I shut the door
-and turned the key against those uncomfortable words of the priest
-about chivalry and self-denial. After all it was perfectly consistent
-with chivalry to assure myself of her safety to the last minute, and
-yet keep away; while as for self-denial that would be all the greater
-if I did not see her when close to her at Samac than if I remained five
-miles off at Poabja.
-
-Yet in my heart I knew perfectly well I was going to see her. I was
-going to play the coward and to force myself upon her at the risk of
-causing her pain; aye, even with the prospect of losing her esteem.
-
-I did not ride so fast now, and thus Karasch could talk. He wanted to
-talk about her; what we should do when we reached Samac. But I could
-not stand that, and each time he began I mumbled some incoherent reply
-and struck my heels into my horse to get away from him; and at last he
-gave up the attempt.
-
-I knew that I was going to ride straight up to the railway depot where
-I should find her; but I would not admit this even to myself yet, and
-certainly would not put it into plain words.
-
-Presently he chose another topic.
-
-“Have you thought about that Austrian Government officer, Burgwan?” he
-asked, with some evidence of uneasiness.
-
-“Yes, a good deal.”
-
-“What are you going to do about it? He can’t be left where we tied him
-up.”
-
-“Would you like to go and find him?” I asked, with a grin. It pleased
-me to tease him in the mood I was in.
-
-“No, by the God of the living, not for a fortune.”
-
-“Shall we leave him to die then?” I put the question angrily, as if
-rebuking him for callousness.
-
-“You’d better go yourself,” he growled.
-
-“It would be murder to leave him. There will be a big reward offered
-for his murderers.”
-
-“No one knows about it,” he growled again, uneasily.
-
-“Oh, yes. Petrov does. He spoke of it in Poabja to me.”
-
-“The blight of hell blind him for a cursed pig,” he exclaimed with
-sudden savageness.
-
-“There’s not much chance of that before he can say what he knows,
-Karasch. I mean to leave the country.”
-
-He started so violently that he checked his horse, and when he rode up
-again he looked at me searchingly.
-
-“Are you trying me?” he asked, half fiercely half in doubt.
-
-“No, that’s for the judge to do.”
-
-He chewed this answer for a while in gloomy silence; then he uttered
-one of his quaint oaths into his black beard, and his face cleared.
-
-“There was a time when I should have thought you ready to do even that
-and worse. I don’t now.”
-
-That beat me. “Then if I can’t fool you I may as well say what I mean
-to do,” I said. “Petrov knows the point where we met last night; and
-I shall send back to the priest at Poabja enough money to pay for
-a search party being sent out under Petrov’s guidance to find the
-officer. I marked the spot where we left him and can describe it
-clearly enough.”
-
-“And the men at the camp?”
-
-“I shall send money for them to be cared for.”
-
-“There’ll be a pretty mess of trouble when that officer once gives
-tongue--a hue and cry will be raised for us.”
-
-“It will have to be a loud one to reach us. We shall be far enough away
-by that time.”
-
-He pondered this answer in his deliberate way when puzzled; and then
-lifted his head and looked across at me.
-
-“We?” he asked.
-
-“Didn’t I say I should be out of the country?”
-
-“Yes, you did; but--” he shook his head, doubtingly.
-
-“Did you think I should leave you behind, Karasch?”
-
-“I couldn’t know,” he said; and urging his horse he added: “Shall we
-get on? There’s Samac in sight.”
-
-He rode ahead of me without another word until we were just at the
-entrance to the town, when he stopped and waited for me. His face
-was pale and set. He had been thinking earnestly, and was unusually
-disturbed and nervous.
-
-“You’re a man, Burgwan, right to the heart. I can’t say how glad I am
-you beat me in that fight; and I’d never been beaten before.”
-
-“It’s all right, Karasch; don’t say any more;” and I stretched out my
-hand to him. He took it and held it as he answered almost emotionally:
-
-“You’re a better man than I am every way, by the living God. I’m only a
-dog beside you, but I’ll serve you like a dog, if you’ll let me.” His
-earnestness amounted to passion now.
-
-“Not like a dog, Karasch; not even like our good Chris; but like a man
-and a friend.”
-
-“I’m not fit to be your friend; I’m only a peasant when I’m nothing
-worse; but I’ll be your man, God send the chance to prove it. And now
-you lead and I follow.” He let my hand drop and fell behind and nothing
-would induce him to ride farther at my side.
-
-I was deeply touched by his earnestness. I had had many men offer
-themselves to me before--a man with such wealth as I possessed always
-will have. But this man was moved by no thought of personal advantage.
-It was to Burgwan, the man, he pledged himself, not to the millionaire;
-and I prized the offer for that reason alone.
-
-But this act in falling behind and leaving me to take the lead just at
-that juncture was not without its embarrassment. It made the pretence
-of having followed his lead to Samac the more difficult to keep up; and
-I rode through the town in no little doubt and hesitation what to do.
-
-Inclination drew me straight to the station, and Mademoiselle; while
-that pricking consciousness that was doing a cowardly thing warned me
-away.
-
-But love and doggedness triumphed. I had come too far to retreat; and
-now that I was so near to her I lacked the pluck to keep away from her.
-
-I did what I had felt I should do. I rode straight to the station and,
-giving my horse into Karasch’s charge, I entered it to look for her.
-
-She was there, sitting in the miserable waiting-room, dejected and
-sorrowful, and bending over Chris as he squatted on his haunches beside
-her, with his great head in her lap.
-
-He recognised my step and with a whimper of pleasure, started up and
-rushed to me, fawning upon me with such delight that I had to check him.
-
-But Mademoiselle turned pale as she saw me, her hands clasped quickly
-and tightly together, her lips parted and her brow drew together in a
-frown of dismay or pain.
-
-Then I put the dog aside and went to her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-ON THE HILL AT SAMAC.
-
-
-As I stepped forward two persons who had been sitting apart from her
-rose and came quickly toward me. In my abstraction I had not noticed
-them; but I saw now that one was a priest and the other a matronly
-woman of between thirty and forty years of age.
-
-“What do you want? Who are you? This lady is in my care,” said the
-priest.
-
-“You saw that the dog knew me for a friend,” I answered.
-
-“That may be, but what do you want?” he asked again.
-
-I looked across to Mademoiselle. She hesitated a moment and then spoke
-to the priest.
-
-“It is all right, father. I wish to speak to--him.” There was just a
-suspicion of a pause at the last word as though she had been in doubt
-how to speak of me.
-
-“But Father Michel--” began the priest in protest, when she interposed
-and with a single gesture silenced him.
-
-The incident gave her time to regain self-possession. Outwardly she
-grew calm, dignified, and almost cold, but her eyes were burning and in
-them I read the reproach I had so dreaded during my ride.
-
-“Why have you come?” she asked, when I could not speak; and her voice
-was hard to my ears and accusing. I hung my head.
-
-“I have no answer,” I murmured. “I am sorry; but I can go again.” I had
-hoped, like the fool I was, she would have been glad to see me; and
-chilled and beaten by this reception, I turned on my heel to leave.
-
-Then Chris made a difficulty. He ran after me so that at the door I had
-to turn to send him back.
-
-“Call him,” I said. If she could be hard, so could I; and my face was
-as cold and stern as she could have wished her own to be.
-
-But at my look she winced and bent her head. Her interlocked fingers
-were strained tightly. It was as though she understood the pain she
-caused me and her own tender heart was wrung at the sight. Chris stood
-looking up wistfully into my face.
-
-“Go back, Chris. Good-bye, old dog.” He whimpered in protest; for all
-the world as though he knew we were to part. “Go, Chris, good dog,” I
-said again; and then he went slowly to her and licked the hands which
-were straining in such emotion.
-
-She did not look at me and I turned again and went out.
-
-“Burgwan!”
-
-It was barely more than a whisper, but I heard it clearly as I stepped
-out of the door. I did not heed it, however. I had done wrong in coming
-there at all, and I was sufficiently master of myself now to hold to
-my resolve to leave her. I walked toward the spot where I had left
-Karasch with the horses; but I had not taken a dozen steps before a
-great scurry of feet came after me, and Chris was yelping with glee
-and thrusting his nose into my hand and fondling me.
-
-“You shouldn’t have come, Chris. You’re only making it all the harder,
-old dog. You must go back. You belong to her now;” and turning to send
-him back, I saw her coming toward us.
-
-“I called to you, Burgwan.”
-
-“I thought it best not to hear you, Mademoiselle.”
-
-“I could not let you go like that,” she murmured; and then a pause fell
-between us and we stood for a minute or more, neither knowing what to
-say.
-
-“Karasch is here, too?” she said at length, seeing him with the horses.
-
-“Yes. He was anxious to know you were really safe.”
-
-“And you?” There was a quick gleam of hope in her eyes that I too had
-acted with the same motive.
-
-“That was not my reason. I knew you were safe. I have seen Father
-Michel. I came because I am a coward. But I am going.”
-
-“No.” Sharp, clear, decisive and almost peremptory her tone was. And
-again we were silent in mutual embarrassment. To relieve it somewhat I
-began to move, and we walked away from the little station along a path
-leading up a small grass-covered hill and reached the top of it before
-we spoke again.
-
-“When does your train leave?”
-
-“At eight.”
-
-“There is an hour yet,” I said, glancing at my watch.
-
-“Yes, there is just an hour,” she repeated, monotonously, as if glad
-of something commonplace to say. And again we came to a stop.
-
-“When do you reach Belgrade?” It was a fatuous question; but as I could
-not speak of what filled my heart, I had to speak at haphazard.
-
-“I don’t know. We travel all night, I suppose;” and there was an end of
-that subject.
-
-“Shall we sit down? The view is lovely,” I said next.
-
-“Oh, don’t, for God’s sake, don’t.” It was a cry right from her heart.
-“Can’t you see what you are making me suffer, and you talk to me of
-trains and views?”
-
-“We must talk of something,” I replied, a little doggedly.
-
-“Why do you come here?” she asked, turning upon me fiercely. “If you
-had been the man I deemed you, you would have done as I asked--after
-what I told Father Michel to tell you.”
-
-“I did not give him time to tell me anything. When Petrov brought me
-your second letter bidding me wait for you, he told me that you had
-already left for this place. I came after you at once.”
-
-“But you said you had seen the priest. Did he not come to you? He
-promised.”
-
-“I didn’t wait for him when I learnt you had left. I rode to him to his
-house. He said I should cause you pain if I followed you and appealed
-to my chivalry and said he had messages for me from you, and urged me
-to stay and listen. But I had pain of my own and with an angry laugh I
-rode away after you.”
-
-“That was your view of chivalry?”
-
-“Yes; that was my view of chivalry. I told you I came because I was
-a coward. I am. I see it now. And you may as well know me for what I
-am.” I spoke bitterly, stung by her scornful words, and found a curious
-pleasure in avowing my unworthiness. “I have forced myself upon you,
-you see; forced myself like a brute and a----”
-
-“Oh, don’t,” she interposed, putting up a hand in protest, and turning
-away, walked to a fallen tree and sat down upon it. I followed and
-threw myself on the ground near and waited for her to speak. She sat
-thinking awhile and then said slowly:
-
-“Things must be made plain between us, Burgwan. I planned to leave you
-in Poabja.”
-
-“Father Michel told me as much.”
-
-“It was for the best, so. I knew that when once I was in Poabja he
-would be able to help me.”
-
-“And my help would be no longer needed.”
-
-“I am glad you are angry. It helps me,” she answered, quietly; and so
-silenced me. “You remember I told you I had nothing to fear there; and
-I would have told you why, but that I was afraid I could not see him
-first and so warn him what not to tell you about me. That was why I
-rode on into the town, meaning to find him out by myself. He is from
-Belgrade, and, of course, knows me. I meant him to help me slip away
-while detaining you on some pretext.”
-
-“Others did that for him,” I put in drily.
-
-“You were not hurt, were you?”
-
-“No, but you might have been.”
-
-“I was not. By a happy chance Father Michel met me while I was in the
-hands of the people and had asked them to take me to him. He rescued me
-at once and took me to his house. I told him then about you and he gave
-orders for your release. Then word was brought that you had threatened
-to take Petrov’s life, and I wrote you that letter asking you to remain
-where you were for two hours. This would have given me time to get
-right away; and I was writing you another letter, when Petrov came back
-with yours. We detained him while I left, and I arranged with Father
-Michel to tell you all you wished to know about me.”
-
-“You arranged it all very cleverly, Mademoiselle,” I said angrily, as
-I rose. “I am sorry I upset your plans. I owe you an apology. I offer
-it now.” I bowed with affected ceremoniousness and added like a brutal
-cad, in my anger: “I was a fool, of course, to have looked for further
-consideration.”
-
-Her answer was a look, no more; but as I met her eyes my face flushed
-with the shame she made me feel for my brutality. I felt I could have
-torn my tongue out could the words have been unspoken. I turned and
-covered my flaming cheeks with my hands and walked away down the hill.
-
-“Burgwan! Burgwan!” she called, and when I did not stop came after me
-and laid her hand on my shoulder. I shook it off impatiently, like a
-petulant child, and she placed herself in my path.
-
-“Burgwan! Is it possible that that is how it seemed to you? My God!”
-
-I took my hands from my face and saw that hers was white and strained.
-
-“Let me go,” I cried.
-
-“Not like that. Not with that thought,” she said, her lips trembling.
-
-“Let me go. I am not fit to look at you.”
-
-“Not with that thought of me,” she repeated.
-
-“Let me go,” I cried, for the third time passionately. “Or I will not
-answer for myself.”
-
-“Not with that thought of me,” she repeated again. “I cannot. Do you
-really think so of me?”
-
-“My God, how could I? I love you with my whole heart.” The avowal
-burst from me by an uncontrollable impulse, and I stood shaken by the
-vehemence of my own passion and looked for her to shrink from me.
-
-But instead she smiled softly and with maddening sweetness as she
-murmured my name.
-
-“Ah, Burgwan; now you know.”
-
-I seized her hands to draw her to me. But this she resisted, though she
-left them in mine, and as I looked into her eyes I saw the tears there.
-
-“I have been punished, Burgwan,” she said as she smiled through her
-tears.
-
-“You love me, then?”
-
-She met my look without faltering, smiling on through her tears, and
-made a brave effort to choke back her emotion, until her head drooped
-slowly.
-
-“You must not ask me that, Burgwan. You must know all the truth now.
-Poor Burgwan. Oh, I think my heart is breaking.” The last was little
-more than a sigh, and taking her hands from mine she went back up the
-hill to the tree and sat down again.
-
-Seeing her sorrow, Chris went to her and whined and put his head in her
-lap; the beast loved her well nigh as much as I did, and her trouble
-grieved him as it grieved me, I think. She threw her arms round his
-neck and laid her head to his in response to his dumb offer of sympathy.
-
-In this way some minutes passed, and I knew without words from her
-all the reason of her wish to leave me. That wild thought of mine had
-been right. It was from her own heart she had been flying; and she was
-suffering now the pain I could have spared her but for my insensate
-selfishness.
-
-I knew that there were obstacles which she believed to be insuperable
-between us, and I had driven her to this admission of her love as the
-preface to telling me the reasons why it was impossible.
-
-But in the same moment I vowed they should not come between us. Nothing
-should do that except her own will; and if these difficulties could be
-overcome by any means within my reach, my life should be devoted to
-beating them down.
-
-There was something or someone to fight now; and she was a prize worth
-fighting for, with all the man that was in me; and while the sight of
-her pain moved and distressed me beyond words, I could no longer feel
-sorry I had come after her to Samac.
-
-She loved me; and the knowledge of love may have a setting of pain
-and sorrow and yet be well gained and rightly gained. Our hearts had
-answered one to the other; and despite the pain, it was well that each
-should know the truth.
-
-I put away all the signs of passion and fastened them down with the
-clamps of resolution. I would win her yet, let the case be desperate as
-it would. I could wait for such a victory; and while waiting, fight to
-hold the love I had already won.
-
-Presently, when she had become less agitated, she called me.
-
-I let her see at once that I had chosen my course.
-
-“I don’t mind what you are going to tell me, it will make no
-difference,” I said as I sat by her side.
-
-She smiled but shook her head. “You do not know yet,” she answered. “It
-is hopeless and impossible.”
-
-“You do not know me, or you would not use that word.”
-
-“I remember what you said about that on the hill this morning; but
-this--I am so sorry, Burgwan.” She paused and then said very steadily:
-“I am the promised wife of another man.”
-
-The words hit me hard, each with a sting of its own. I had looked for
-anything but this; and I needed all my resolution not to wince and shew
-the pain they inflicted, but to meet her steady gaze with one equally
-steady. I succeeded and forced a smile as I answered.
-
-“I had not expected that,” I said, quietly. “But in fact I don’t think
-I know what I did expect. In any case there is a great difference
-between a wife and a promised wife, Mademoiselle.”
-
-“I shall be his wife within the present month.”
-
-“That gives us a fortnight or three weeks. The month is only a week
-old.”
-
-“You do not understand.”
-
-“If you tell me that you love another man, I shall----”
-
-“Don’t,” she interposed with a gesture.
-
-“It is not the coward who says this, and now it is you who do not
-understand me. I am not making love to you. I will never do that unless
-I can do it honourably; and that cannot be while you are promised to
-another man. But until you tell me that your heart is given to another,
-I shall not cease to hope and will not cease striving to win you.”
-
-She listened to me and caught at my words. She lifted her head and
-with an air of half-defiant pride she made a great effort to look me
-straight in the eyes and take up my challenge.
-
-“I do love--” But she could get no farther; her head fell, and she
-cried, “You would shame me, Burgwan.” I cried with intense earnestness:
-
-“God forbid that I should do that, Mademoiselle. I wish I could make it
-all easier for you. But this is life to us both and nothing will serve
-but truth and candour.”
-
-She did not answer this for some moments, but sat thinking intently,
-her face averted from me; and presently I said: “People have been in
-this plight before, and have come out of it.”
-
-She took no notice at first and then turned with a sad, sweet smile.
-
-“You must not make this too hard for me. I owe you so much----”
-
-“Say nothing of that, please, or you will silence me altogether,
-Mademoiselle,” I interposed, quickly.
-
-“Do you forget what I told you--there would be no Mademoiselle in
-Belgrade. I am the Princess Gatrina, betrothed to Prince Albrevics,
-next in succession to the Servian throne.”
-
-I tried to take it with a smile as I had before taken the news of her
-betrothal; but I could not. I could not even find a word to reply. I
-just sat staring out in front of me yet seeing nothing. I was like a
-man stricken dumb by a sudden calamity--helpless, numbed and beaten.
-
-I must have turned deathly white, for all the blood in my body seemed
-to have rushed to my heart which beat with great lurching thumps
-against my ribs and shook my whole body. Then my head where I had been
-struck began to throb in response to the wild hammer of the pulse, and
-I grew dizzy and faint. My breath came with difficulty and I had to
-grip the tree with strenuous hands lest I should fall from it.
-
-“It was this I asked Father Michel to tell you,” she said presently.
-
-I heard her, of course; but her voice sounded far away and apart from
-me. Much as though the barrier between us had become substantial and
-she were speaking from far on the other side of it.
-
-At length I managed to get to my feet and to pace up and down, winning
-the fight against my reeling senses and gathering up the fragments of
-my scattered resolution. The first sign of my victory was a feeling of
-blind, bitter anger with myself for having shewn such weakness before
-her.
-
-“You must not judge me by this exhibition,” I said, as a sort of
-apology. “My head pained me for a moment. That’s all; I’m better now
-again.”
-
-But her pitying eyes shewed that she understood.
-
-“I am so sorry.” Just conventional words they were; but the look and
-the tone told me how straight from her gentle heart they came and how
-intensely she was feeling. “You are ill. Sit down again.” She did not
-use any name now, and I noticed the omission. I was no longer Burgwan;
-and already the restraint of our altered relations was making itself
-felt. But she moved as if to make place for me on the fallen tree.
-
-“I am not ill now, thank you; and I think it is time for you to go.” I
-glanced at my watch. “Yes, it is quite time.”
-
-She sat on a moment, her eyes closed, and then sighed deeply and rose.
-Chris got up with her and she bent down and fondled him.
-
-“Good-bye, Chris, dear, faithful friend, good-bye,” she murmured, and
-kissed his head.
-
-“You will not take him?” I asked.
-
-“Not now. No. I--I cannot. I should think of--of this.” Then with a
-smile: “He will be so much happier with you.” She stooped and kissed
-him again.
-
-“It is better so, perhaps.” I said. “But just as you will.”
-
-She was very quiet and calm now, and turning from the dog, she held out
-her hand to me, with a brave smile.
-
-“Good-bye. You have not told me how to address you.”
-
-I took the white trembling fingers, and held them a moment with a
-slight pressure, which was returned.
-
-“It is only Burgwan who bids you good-bye,” I said.
-
-“It is better so. It is only Burgwan whom I can remember.”
-
-She paused a moment, her eyes wistfully on mine, and then impulsively
-held out her hand again.
-
-This time I was carrying it to my lips when I remembered, checked
-myself, and let it fall. She was trembling violently, and her breathing
-was deep and laboured. As I loosed her hand I heard her catch her
-breath; and looking up I saw she was very white, the lips were almost
-bloodless as she bit them in the battle with her agitation.
-
-We stood thus looking into one another’s eyes for some seconds.
-
-Poor little woman, she was finding it very hard; and a fierce yearning
-came upon me to clasp her to my heart and urge her to let love have its
-way and trust herself to the care of my love.
-
-But it was her moment of weakness, and one of us two must be strong. I
-believe she knew by love’s instinct the thought that thus rushed upon
-me, for her hands were half raised and a great flush of colour spread
-over her pale cheeks.
-
-I stepped back and dropped my eyes to the ground. There was a
-half-smothered sob, the brush of her skirts, the light touch of her
-foot-fall on the path; and when I lifted my head she had gone, hurrying
-down the hillside, and Chris was looking after her and then back at me
-whining in doubt.
-
-I watched her go, hoping she would turn her head; but she held on
-steadily and was nearing the bottom when Chris gave a short bark and
-scampered after her at a mad gallop, reaching her just before a bend in
-the path would have hidden her.
-
-I hoped she would take him with her; but she did not. She stopped and
-petted him, letting him fawn upon her in his loving way, and stooped
-and kissed him, and then I saw her point up the hill toward me.
-
-He hesitated to obey her, came a few steps, stopped and ran back to
-her. She petted him again, and again ordered him back. He looked up
-in her face as if in dire doubt; and then came slowly toward me, but
-only to stop and turn again. She repeated the gesture; and this time he
-drooped his tail and came on.
-
-She watched him; and presently looked higher up to me. I waved my hand,
-but she gave no answering signal; and before the dog reached me, she
-had passed round the bend in the path and was gone.
-
-I sat down on the fallen tree where we had been together and leant my
-face in my hands, overcome by a deadening sense of utter desolation and
-dreary loss. This at first shut out all other thoughts.
-
-But not for long. If the barrier between us was so infinitely greater
-than my worst fears had conceived that on first learning it I had been
-whelmed and staggered by the blow, I had gained another knowledge. She
-loved me; and with that priceless vantage on my side I should be a
-coward indeed to be daunted by any obstacles.
-
-She loved me; and when I rose, my resolution was set. I would fight on
-to the end to win her, let who else and what else stand in my path.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-PREPARING FOR THE CAMPAIGN.
-
-
-I don’t know any place where money talks with such effect as in the
-southeast of Europe; and I made it talk for all it was worth during the
-week that I was getting ready to go to Belgrade.
-
-I reckon that when you want to gain an end the chief means are to know
-quite definitely what you want, to grip on it with all your teeth,
-to pay liberally for what you must know to gain it, and to hold your
-tongue and let the other man do the chattering. You may also at need
-have a stalking horse.
-
-I used one now in the campaign to win Gatrina. I was hit very hard
-when she told me the barrier between us was no less than her chance
-of succeeding to the Servian throne; but I wasn’t knocked out. On the
-contrary, the bigness of the barrier soon ceased to frighten and began
-to attract me. I meant to win her; and to go to Belgrade to do it. But
-I shut that purpose away in the strongest safe in my thoughts with a
-time lock which would only open to let it out when the fitting moment
-arrived. What I said was that I was going to Belgrade in regard to a
-big loan which that little kingdom was just then particularly anxious
-to float.
-
-It served me well. Any man who was going to put his money into such
-a venture would naturally want to know things; and, if some of
-the points on which I sought information did not seem to have any
-connection, there were plenty of people ready to give it, and none to
-bother with my motives, so long as I chose to foot the bills.
-
-I was well served by my agents, and inside the week I knew far too
-much to let me dream of trusting a nickel to the Servian exchequer,
-but quite enough to enable me to go to Belgrade and play the part
-of a representative of a group of American capitalists with amiable
-financial intentions.
-
-I knew other things, too. Secrets, many of them, about intrigues that
-were in progress against the Servian rule and government. And a nice
-mess of unhealthy pottage they made. One thing I had been particularly
-urgent to discover--the character of Prince Albrevics. It was anything
-but cleanly. He was one of those men who learn the commandments pretty
-thoroughly by breaking every one of them consistently, and then sigh in
-_blase_ regret that, as there are only ten of them, they have to stoop
-to repetition in order to live comfortably.
-
-My money began to talk that same evening in Samac.
-
-Soon after Gatrina had started on her journey, I surprised the depot
-folk at Samac with a request for a special train. I looked a pretty
-object to travel special, no doubt; and at first they laughed and
-were for hustling me out of the place as a lunatic. But I soon had
-them hustling with a very different purpose. Money did it. And inside
-of five minutes the station master himself, a lean hungry looking
-Austrian, had put himself absolutely at my disposal and was working
-all he knew to figure out the best means of getting me through to
-Vienna.
-
-I said I would start in an hour and a half, and having sent a wire in
-cypher to my agent in Vienna to help matters on at that end, I went to
-Karasch, and with him rode back to Poabja to get the priest’s help in
-straightening things out in the matter of that Austrian officer.
-
-He did not give me a very pleasant reception.
-
-“You have been to Samac?” he asked.
-
-“I have just come from there.”
-
-“Then why do you come to me?” he asked with cold austerity.
-
-“Not to say I’m sorry for having gone there, but to get you to render
-me a service.”
-
-“You have seen--” he paused, and I filled in the words for him.
-
-“The Princess? Yes.”
-
-“Did she send you to me?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“I can do nothing for you,” he answered, as if to close matters.
-
-Then I let the money talk. I counted out the sum which I thought would
-be necessary for paying a search party and also such an amount as I
-guessed he would be glad to have for his church and his poor; and laid
-them on the table in two heaps.
-
-“This is for the church and your poor; and this is for you to disburse
-for me;” and I described very briefly what I wanted done.
-
-“Are you thinking to bribe me?”
-
-“Nothing of the kind. The Princess is involved in this matter of the
-Austrian, and for her sake as well as mine the thing must be arranged.
-She knows what passed at the camp and would, of course, testify if
-necessary. But I can take care of myself when I get to Vienna; and I am
-going there to-night by special train.” I added the last detail as an
-impressionist money argument.
-
-“Who are you?”
-
-“I am an American citizen; and nothing else matters just now. This is
-more for the Princess Gatrina than for me. She had to be saved, and I
-couldn’t do it with kid gloves on.” He thought over this.
-
-“It is either a right or a wrong thing you are asking of me. If right I
-do not desire to be paid for it; if wrong, I am not to be bribed to do
-it;” and he pushed back toward me the money I had offered him for his
-church.
-
-“It’s clean money,” I said, getting up. “You needn’t be afraid. Keep it
-untouched until you are satisfied it is clean and then use it, or not,
-as you please. I should like to have a report of what you do.”
-
-“To whom shall I send it?”
-
-“To me. You heard my name--Burgwan--and can send to that name under
-cover to this address in Vienna;” and I wrote the name of a man so well
-known that he started.
-
-“Baron Burndoff, the great banker.”
-
-“Yes, the banker,” I repeated; “and my friend.”
-
-“I don’t understand it,” he murmured, half to himself.
-
-“There is one other little favour you might render me. I need badly a
-fresh suit of clothes. Could you tell me how to get one?”
-
-“I do not furnish disguises, sir,” he answered, so curtly that I almost
-smiled, as I retorted, suavely:
-
-“I am sorry to have caused you to say discourteous things.”
-
-He drew himself up. “I am not concerned for your feelings. I am acting
-for the Princess Gatrina;” and he bowed stiffly and formally to dismiss
-me. But I noticed that he kept both the sums of money; and I went out
-satisfied that he would do what was necessary and I was well pleased at
-the result.
-
-On the ride back to Samac I made a discovery. I was somewhat at a loss
-what to do with Karasch. Staunch and brave he was undoubtedly; but
-there was very much of the rough diamond about him. I could not quite
-see how he was going to fit himself into the routine of my service.
-
-“What would you like to do, Karasch?” I asked him.
-
-“Follow you and serve you,” he replied simply and promptly.
-
-“I don’t think you quite understand what that implies; and I wish you
-to do so. I live thousands of miles away, in America; and I expect to
-return there soon.”
-
-“When you have done with me, you can turn me away. I am your man.”
-
-“You are too good a fellow for me to turn you away. But the life I live
-is not like that in the camp yonder. I’ve had as much of that just now
-as I want. Life in a city is a very different thing and you might find
-it cramping.”
-
-“Do you wish me to leave you? You have but to speak.”
-
-“You don’t understand me. I owe you a debt which nothing I can do for
-you will ever repay. But I can do something toward it. If you can think
-of any kind of life you’d like to lead, I’ll see that you have the
-chance. If you’d like to be gentleman at ease, I’ll find you the means.”
-
-“A gentleman at ease? What’s that?”
-
-“To have enough money to live upon without working for it.”
-
-He swore good humouredly, and asked with a laugh: “Do you think I want
-to do nothing?”
-
-“Well, if you’d like to work I’ll buy you a house and some land for you
-to cultivate, and you can choose where.”
-
-“I have chosen.”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“To serve you,” he replied, earnestly.
-
-“You must think a heap of me in that case,” I laughed.
-
-“I do,” he said, in just the same grave, decided tone.
-
-“I’m afraid you won’t like the city life, Karasch.”
-
-“If I don’t I can leave it. But I’ve lived in one.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“Belgrade.”
-
-“Are you a Serb then? Georgev said you were Bosnian.”
-
-“I am a Serb; and Georgev is a fool.”
-
-“So you’ve lived in Belgrade, have you?” I said as a thought occurred
-to me. Did he know who Gatrina was? “How did you come to change so
-toward--toward Mademoiselle?”
-
-“She told me something about herself when you got that crack on the
-head.”
-
-“You didn’t tell me?”
-
-“She made me promise not to speak.”
-
-I had been pretty blind, it seemed.
-
-“Do you know who she is?”
-
-“No. Only that she’s a great lady in Belgrade.”
-
-“Did she tell you how she fell into the hands of those men?”
-
-“No; she does not know. She was carried off and believed she was in the
-hands of the brigands, and that they would hold her for a ransom. But I
-could find out.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“I know Belgrade and I know the friends of the men with her.”
-
-“How would you get the information?”
-
-“Quickest to buy it.”
-
-Money was to talk again. “How much?” I asked.
-
-“They were to have three thousand gulden if they got her to Maglai. Not
-getting a kreutzer, they’ll be ready to sell the whole scheme for less
-than half.”
-
-“Would you go to Belgrade?”
-
-“I’ll go anywhere you send me.”
-
-“You shall go there at once and wait for me. I shall be there in about
-a week. I am going first to Vienna; and you must use the interval
-to get this information for me. Lose no time and pay whatever is
-necessary. I’ll give you some money and send you more. But, mind, we
-must have the truth--whatever it costs.”
-
-“They know me too well to deceive me,” he answered. “I shall have it
-all in less than a week; and have the men as well, at your service, if
-you want them.” And so it was settled.
-
-Money had talked when we reached Samac, and the special was ready for
-us. I took Karasch with me as far as Maria-Theresiopel, where I was to
-catch the mail to Vienna, and he to get the train to Belgrade; and on
-the journey I discussed the matter with him fully and gave him such
-directions as were necessary.
-
-“Mind, not a word about me until we meet in Belgrade,” was my last
-parting injunction; and for the rest of the journey I slept almost
-until Vienna was reached.
-
-A very full week was the week that followed; and money was talking
-every minute of it, while I gathered the information I needed and
-pieced it together for the campaign I had before me.
-
-It was just a big bluff I put up about that Servian loan; and played
-it well enough to convince all who came near me that I meant it right
-along. It was easy to prove that I and those who were behind me in the
-States had the dollars and could put them on the table. That was true;
-but the bluff was to make folks believe me soft enough to accept the
-security and vouch for it to others.
-
-My attitude was that of the typical Missouri man. “Show me” was my one
-text. “Prove to me the thing is sound, and I’ll find the money right
-now;” and the very strenuousness of the efforts to persuade me was in
-itself enough to have made even a plunger suspicious.
-
-But I kept a very stiff upper lip; and when I raised difficulties,
-hinted at concessions that should be made, and asked for facts in
-regard to other matters, I was at last referred to Belgrade direct.
-This was what I wanted; and I consented to go there; but not without
-making a show of reluctance.
-
-In the meantime I heard from Father Michel that he had been successful
-in arranging all the difficulties in connection with the affair at the
-camp. The Austrian official had exaggerated matters to me that night in
-declaring there were dying men there. No one had died; and the injured
-men had first been so frightened with the threat of prosecution for
-their part in the abduction that the money I had left for them had been
-accepted with very grateful surprise.
-
-Captain Hanske had very naturally resented his rough handling, and,
-breathing many threats of what his government would do, had forwarded a
-very furious report to Vienna.
-
-His superior was dining with me the day after the report was received,
-and had done himself very well indeed when he referred to the matter.
-
-“You know a priest named Father Michel in Poabja, an out-of-the-way
-hole in Bosnia, don’t you, Mr. Bergwyn?” he said with a very suggestive
-smile.
-
-I affected to think. “Poabja? Poabja? Whereabouts is it?”
-
-“A few miles from Samac--the point on the frontier where the line ends;
-and where one might at a pinch get a special train; if for instance
-one was in a hurry to leave the district.”
-
-He intended me to know by that, of course, that my movements had been
-traced.
-
-“I think I had a friend who once went there,” I replied.
-
-“This may be about him;” and he pulled out the report and gave it
-me and took another cigar and a fresh drink, as I glanced through
-the paper. It was a duly garbled official misdescription of what had
-occurred that night and represented the captain as having fought
-valiantly against great odds until he had been overpowered.
-
-“He seems to be a valiant fellow, this agent of yours,” I said. “And
-this--how is he called? Burgwan, is it?--must be a desperate character?”
-
-He laughed. “Singular name, isn’t it? Very much like yours.”
-
-“Now you mention it, so it is. But, of course, it isn’t my name;” and I
-smiled in my turn.
-
-“Of course not. A strange story, though. Do you think your--friend
-would know anything about it?”
-
-“I shouldn’t be in the least surprised. I’ll find out. By the way, your
-man seems to have been roughly handled. Don’t you think he ought to be
-promoted in some way?”
-
-“Promotion is slow, you see. Do you think you could do anything for
-him?” he asked, as if the idea had just occurred to him; and smiled
-again slyly.
-
-“I don’t see how it affects me. Wait, I have an idea. I can tell you
-how you can do it, and make a pile for yourself at the same time. This
-camp on the hills he speaks of must be the spot where my friend went
-prospecting about some mine deposits. He told me there was a fortune
-waiting there for the man who developed the thing; but he knows the
-difficulty which a foreigner would have in working it, and has given it
-up. Why not get hold of the concessions yourself; they can be had for a
-song; and put this man in charge to carry on the work?”
-
-“It would take money.”
-
-“Oh, there would be no difficulty about that if the thing had official
-influence behind it--such for instance as yours. The thing’s right. The
-ore’s there, I know that.”
-
-“_You_ know it?” he put in quickly.
-
-“I’d trust my friend’s judgment as freely as my own.”
-
-“You say a fortune? How much?”
-
-“Oh, anything from half a million gulden upwards.” I spoke airily,
-as though a few hundred thousand gulden were a matter of comparative
-insignificance.
-
-He smoked for a while in silence, his brows knitted thoughtfully:
-
-“Would your friend go into it?” he asked.
-
-“It’s the sort of thing I should take up myself right now if I had your
-influence with me,” I replied.
-
-“You Americans are a wonderful people, Mr. Bergwyn. We’ll speak of this
-to-morrow. I’ll think it over.”
-
-“It’s worth doing, not only thinking over;” and as I returned him
-his report I added: “And this man really deserves some sort of
-compensation.”
-
-He shrugged his shoulders and laughed. “He shall have an official
-letter praising his zeal; and we shall hear no more of that part of it.”
-
-We did talk it over the next day and we fixed up a working arrangement.
-Then he spoke to me about the Servian loan.
-
-“You’re not going into it, are you?”
-
-“They promise some valuable concessions.”
-
-He paused and said deliberately: “If you’ll take my advice, it
-is--don’t.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“It’s too risky.”
-
-“You’ve another reason. What is it?”
-
-He shook his head. “You don’t understand Balkan politics.”
-
-“You mean your government are against the loan?”
-
-“Servia might buy arms, or build railways with the money--neither
-course to our interests, you know.”
-
-“A bit rough on Servia, isn’t it?”
-
-“We have to think of ourselves, you see. Besides, it isn’t safe for a
-little country like that to develop too quickly. There’s Russia, too.
-Two big powers, both closely concerned. Take my advice--don’t.”
-
-“I’m going to Belgrade,” I answered.
-
-“By all means go. You’ll see things then for yourself.”
-
-“What would happen if she got the loan?”
-
-“She won’t get it, Mr. Bergwyn. The government is tottering now--and
-perhaps the throne. Anything can happen in Belgrade at any time--except
-the floating of a loan.”
-
-“I shall go to Belgrade. We’re ready to carry risks, you know, when a
-thing’s right.”
-
-“Oh, yes, by all means go, as I said. They’ll make much of you; but
-remember when you’re there what I’ve said, in confidence, and--don’t.”
-
-I could judge by the insistence upon this advice that he thought I was
-still undecided; and as that was just the impression I wished to leave,
-I said no more.
-
-Two days later I left for Belgrade, where, as my friend the minister
-had told me, I found them quite ready to make much of me, as a sort of
-possible financial saviour of the country. I soon saw the influence
-which I could wield even in regard to the real purpose which took me to
-the capital.
-
-But even within a few hours of my arrival, and while I was disposed to
-shake hands with myself for the adroit course which I was managing to
-steer, I met with an ugly check--most unwelcome and disconcerting.
-
-A large house had been placed at my disposal, and I had breakfasted on
-the morning after my arrival and was planning my movements for the day,
-when my man, Buller, brought me a card.
-
-“The Baroness von Tulken.”
-
-I remembered the name. It had been given me as that of a woman of much
-influence at the court who was said to be taking an important part
-in political affairs. But I could think of no reason why she should
-flounce down on me almost at the moment of my arrival. I hesitated
-therefore whether to see her. But I decided I would. If time is not too
-pressing, it is generally best to see people at once and get at the
-kernel of their business in a couple of minutes, instead of letting
-them worry you with correspondence.
-
-There was the chance, too, that under the circumstances she might have
-some information to give or sell; and I was speculating who she might
-be and what she wanted, as I went to her.
-
-But I knew her the moment my eyes fell on her, before I saw her face;
-and I started and caught my breath in surprise and some dismay. I
-could have wished her anywhere in the world except in Belgrade at that
-particular juncture.
-
-She was looking out of the window as I entered, and when she turned
-gave me one quick glance.
-
-“Ah, then it _is_ you, Chase,” she cried, as she came toward me both
-hands extended and uttered my Christian name, with a smile on her
-handsome face, as though the meeting were just the loveliest thing that
-ever happened for us both.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-ELMA.
-
-
-A large, long room on the first floor of a house in Prague; the
-furniture, once rich, now sadly worn; the lights dim except over one
-table where cards were scattered on the green cloth as they had been
-left by the players; close to it, partly in shadow, a second table with
-drink and glasses; near it an overturned chair; away in the gloom a
-cowering figure on a settee with old hands pressed strenuously on the
-hidden face; and in the centre a queenly woman, beautiful as a picture,
-white-faced, distraught and trembling, but struggling to appear defiant
-as she faced a boy of nineteen who was regarding her with looks in
-which hot love, horrified repugnance and disgust struggled with the
-bewildering pain of the knowledge of her unworthiness. She had been
-caught red-handed in the flagrant use of the tricks of a common card
-cheat; and the rest had gone, with flouts and scoffs and jeers, leaving
-the two, the boy, face to face with the sudden consciousness of her
-shame, and suffering as only a boy in his calf love can suffer: the
-woman, scared and confused, but wrathful and relying defiantly upon the
-power of her beauty.
-
-I was the boy; and Elma Dreschkel, now the Baroness von Tulken, was
-the woman. We had not met since that night; but the picture flashed
-back upon my memory, resistlessly and instantaneously, as I felt once
-more upon me those dark, dangerous, and strangely compelling eyes of
-hers.
-
-“You are surprised, of course; but you will not refuse me your hand,”
-she said, as I hesitated to take hers.
-
-I took her hand. “Yes, I am surprised,” I answered.
-
-“You are not changed much. Older, broader, more manly, of course, and
-much handsomer, too.”
-
-“The change in my looks may not be very great.” It was a fatuous thing
-to say, for it gave her a chance which her ready wit seized at once.
-
-“I have not changed even in looks,” she said, with a sigh and droop of
-the eyes and a little graceful gesture of the hands. She did herself
-less than justice, however. The seven years had ripened her beauty of
-form and face; the girl had become a woman; and the woman more than
-fulfilled the promise of the girl. She was faultlessly dressed, too,
-with exquisite taste; and had achieved that combination of apparent
-simplicity and suggestion of costly extravagance after which so many
-American women strive not always with success.
-
-She knew I was looking very closely at her and she paused long enough
-to give me ample opportunity. Then she glanced up and smiled: hers was
-one of the most dangerous smiles ever given to a woman.
-
-“Well?” she asked, as if challenging me. Was she anxious to establish
-our relations upon something of the old footing?
-
-“To what do I owe the favour of this visit?” I asked in a formal and
-precise tone.
-
-But she only laughed. “Is it a favour, really, do you think? Do you say
-that only as a preface to dismissing me?”
-
-“It is, at any rate, as I said, a surprise.”
-
-“Why? Why should it be a surprise that I wished to see you again, and
-that hearing a great financier, Chase F. Bergwyn, was coming here, I
-rushed here the first moment I could to make sure that it was you?”
-
-“The surprise may be to find you in Belgrade.”
-
-“Oh, yes, that of course--but not that I should wish to see you.” She
-had always been clever in turning my words back upon me.
-
-“I am afraid you misunderstand me,” I said after a pause. “I meant to
-ask you if there was anything I could do for you?”
-
-“Would you do it, Chase?” she cried with quick daring, flashing her
-eyes upon me. “I wonder if you would. I should like to think so.”
-
-“Will you regard the question as put quite formally? This visit is
-quite unexpected, and as I am a somewhat busy man just now, my time is
-very much occupied.”
-
-“I am still standing,” she answered, unexpectedly.
-
-I placed a chair for her and she sat down, gracefully--she did all
-things gracefully--and smiled. “How long can you spare me?” She put the
-question lightly, with mockery in every accent.
-
-“I have engagements right through the day. Baroness....”
-
-She interposed with a quick gesture, rose suddenly and looked at
-me as if I had insulted her by this use of her title, and her lips
-opened as if to give her protest utterance; but she merely sighed and
-shrugged her shoulders, and sat down again. A very effective piece of
-acting--but no more than acting.
-
-In reply I glanced at the card which I still held in my hand.
-
-“Yes, I married for money and position. What would you have had me do?”
-She made the quick question a reproach, speaking in a low, tense tone
-as of carefully restrained feeling, with a dash of personal defiance,
-paused and then added slowly: “I was deserted by--everyone. Was I to
-starve and sink and go on sinking and starving. The Baron was three
-times my age. Wealthy, and believed in me and trusted me. When even
-those who might have had faith in me”--she paused again as she repeated
-the phrase--“even those who might have had faith, turned their backs
-upon me, and deserted me, he offered me the shelter of his rank and
-riches and name. And even if I had no heart to give him in response,
-was I to blame for giving him my hand? Does it lie with you to reproach
-me?--you, of all men; you?”
-
-So intense was her tone, so magnetic her influence, and so realistic
-her acting that she actually roused in me for the moment the feeling
-that in that old time it was I who had wronged her and played the part
-of coward now suggested, and not she who had cheated and cozened me in
-my boyish infatuation until for years my faith in all women had been
-destroyed. Yet I knew that she was that most dangerous of all created
-beings--a beautiful woman with brains and without a heart.
-
-“I am not reproaching you,” I answered. “On the contrary, I
-congratulate you. I think you acted very prudently.”
-
-“My God,” she cried in an accent of intense suffering; and first
-glancing at me with eyes full of sadness and suffering, she bent her
-head upon her hand. She was master of many emotions; but the acting
-which had fooled the boy in love was powerless to deceive me now.
-
-A pause of some embarrassment followed. What I wished to learn was her
-motive in coming to me. She had a strong one, of course. I could gamble
-on that.
-
-“Need we pretend?” I asked, at length.
-
-She shivered as though the words hurt her, and then looking up
-suddenly, answered with a sort of fierce _abandon_.
-
-“No. No; although God knows it is no pretence that I am agitated at
-seeing you again.”
-
-“If you are thus disturbed let me suggest that we postpone the
-conversation until you are more self-possessed.”
-
-She drew in her breath sharply with a little shudder, and stretched out
-a hand as if in entreaty, then clasped it to her face and appeared to
-make a great effort to regain self-restraint.
-
-“Bear with me a moment. This is so strange a meeting. I....” she
-stopped, and bit her lip and smiled and sighed.
-
-I watched her quite unmoved by this display. “Yes, it is very strange,”
-I said.
-
-Next, as if having regained self-possession and desirous of getting
-away from an embarrassing situation, she said, unexpectedly, and
-almost crudely: “Won’t you sit down, Cha-- Mr. Bergwyn?” She made the
-correction palpable, then added: “I should apologise for my excitement
-having betrayed me into calling you by--by the name once so familiar. I
-am still liable to impulses.”
-
-I accepted the position thus suggested, sat down and answered in a tone
-of conventional compliment: “So beautiful a woman as you, Baroness,
-need never think of apologising for anything.”
-
-“At all events I will try not to offend again,” she said lightly. “I
-suppose that really I ought not to have come to you in this way, but
-have waited until we met. You are so great a man now.”
-
-“You had some reason for coming, of course. Shall we discuss that?”
-
-“Oh, yes, I had a reason; but I find it so hard to explain it now.”
-Her manner now was that of a sort of engaging nervousness. “I declare
-I could almost wish you were a stranger, Mr. Bergwyn. It would be less
-difficult.”
-
-This was my chance and I took it. “You may really regard me as a
-stranger, Baroness;” I said, gravely, with emphasis; but she smiled
-winningly, intentionally disregarding my meaning, and replied with
-great sweetness:
-
-“You were always considerate.” She paused and continued then with a
-glance:
-
-“I had my reasons for coming to you, of course. I suppose I may be
-frank. In the first place I wished to be sure that you were the Mr.
-Bergwyn who knew me before I came to Belgrade.”
-
-Her eyes said more than her words then and I gave the assurance they
-sought.
-
-“If I understand you, pray be quite at rest. Since we parted you have
-lived your life and I have lived mine--and our memories do not go
-behind that new life.” I meant that if she did not wish me to give her
-away, I did not want that old boyish intrigue of mine raked up. She was
-relieved by the assurance, and could not hide the feeling.
-
-“I was sure of that, of course,” she answered with a scarcely
-perceptible sigh of relief. “It does not affect your purpose here.”
-
-“How could it?”
-
-“Of course your agents have been making inquiries about everything
-here, and I suppose you know something of my position and influence. I
-am a rich woman, Mr. Bergwyn, and stand high in the confidence of many
-people in Belgrade.”
-
-“I had heard of the Baroness von Tulken as one enjoying considerable
-influence at Court.”
-
-“Yes, I have influence; and even if I had found you a stranger I
-intended to place it entirely at your service. Need I say how much more
-I should wish to do so, seeing you are who you are.”
-
-“I thought we were not to remember that.”
-
-“How precise you men of business are!” she laughed. “Well, do you
-accept my offer?”
-
-“I should be charmed, of course, and if the need arises I shall
-instantly remember your promise.”
-
-“Is that a refusal?” she asked swiftly.
-
-“A conditional acceptance rather, is it not?”
-
-“I did not come for conditions. I came for frank acceptance or
-rejection of my offer.”
-
-“I arrived but last night,” I reminded her, blandly.
-
-“You are playing with words. What is your object in Belgrade?”
-
-“I think everyone in the capital who knows of my presence knows why I
-have come.”
-
-“But I mean your secret object. You have not come here to lend this
-money. Englishmen--I beg pardon, even Americans do not act like madmen
-in such matters. You know there is no stability in the kingdom, no
-security that even your interest would be paid. Why then do you come?
-What part are you proposing to play in all the intrigues at present
-rife here? Whose side do you take and why?”
-
-“The negotiations for the loan....” I began when she cut me short with
-a laugh and waved the words aside.
-
-“What is it you want to buy with your money?”
-
-“Really....”
-
-“I will put it another way,” She interposed again. “Which party are
-you with? The army are intriguing against the present dynasty; are you
-with them? The Crown is intriguing to secure the next succession for
-the Queen’s brother; are you with them? Another party is intriguing to
-secure the Princess Gatrina in her rights; are you with them?--with
-us, I should say. If you are, then indeed your millions may be safe.”
-
-“I fear I do not understand you. The Queen is responsible for the
-betrothal of the Princess to the Prince Albrevics; how then....”
-
-The interposing laugh was now scornful.
-
-“You have indeed much to learn. You will hold what I may say in
-confidence?”
-
-“Yes; but without pledging myself to make no use privately of any
-information; and I think you should not speak,” I answered after a
-pause of doubt whether I could rightly let her speak freely. But she
-had no hesitation.
-
-“I will take your word and any risks. I wish you, if you take any
-side, to take ours. The Queen’s object in promoting the marriage of
-the Princess--as good a girl as ever lived--with such a vile reprobate
-as this Albrevics is--what do you think? Nay, you would not see it,
-not understanding the cross currents of our matters here. She knows,
-as all the country knows--except Gatrina herself, perhaps--that of all
-the impossible successors to the throne he is the most impossible.
-She does it that Gatrina’s claims may thus be destroyed finally and
-Gatrina herself in this clever way removed from the path of the Queen’s
-brother.”
-
-“Very smart, very subtle, and very feminine,” I said, with a smile as
-though the plan appealed to my appreciation of a really clever move.
-“And what is your plan?”
-
-“First, what is your motive in Belgrade? Would you help in so shameful
-a scheme against the Princess?”
-
-I affected to consider and then answered with more truth than she knew.
-
-“No, I think I can safely say I should not.”
-
-“I was sure of it,” she cried, triumphantly. “And you would not help
-the army in their plans?”
-
-“I do not know them.”
-
-“They can be put in one word--assassination.”
-
-“God forbid that I should deal with such a thing. But you must be mad
-to think it.”
-
-She paused and then said slowly with significant emphasis:
-
-“When I know not, and how I know not, but matters will come to that
-if the army once have the courage to act. The Queen has some strong
-friends, but some terrible enemies; and there is but one way to avert
-catastrophe.”
-
-“How is that?”
-
-“By securing the succession to the Princess Gatrina by the only means
-which can render it secure.” She fixed her eyes upon me with an intent,
-searching look.
-
-“That is your scheme, you mean. How would you do it?” I had no scruple
-in questioning her now. I saw that some plan against Gatrina was in the
-making, and was ready to go to lengths now to know it.
-
-“By securing her marriage with a man who would be accepted by the
-country as a king.”
-
-“And there is such a man?”
-
-“Yes; the Duke Barinski, of Fagodina.”
-
-“I have never heard of him. What claim to the throne can he make?”
-
-She smiled significantly. “He has many. He is connected by descent
-with the Karageorgevics, while the Princess represents the Obrenovics.
-Together their claim would be incontestable, as it would reconcile and
-unite the rival interests. And what is most--he has the support of
-Russia. Now you understand.”
-
-“And _your_ motive?”
-
-“The Duke is the head of the family of which I am a humble member.”
-
-“A very beautiful member certainly, and a very useful one, also
-certainly; but I should not use the term humble, Baroness. You seem to
-have a strong cause, particularly with Russian influence behind. You
-think it will succeed?”
-
-“It cannot fail,” she said in a tone of dead conviction.
-
-“And the Princess Gatrina? What are her views?”
-
-She shrugged her shoulders. “In a marriage of State what does it matter
-to the bride who the groom may be? She at present trusts the Queen, and
-so accepts even such a man as Albrevics.”
-
-“It is all very interesting, but there is one question which a business
-man would put--a man looking of course to his own interests only. If
-those who are with me in this joined in this scheme, would the Russian
-influence go so far as to guarantee the loan?”
-
-“Do you think I can pledge the Russian Government?”
-
-“Scarcely that, perhaps, but in such a case you may have some
-influence.”
-
-She laughed very musically. “You are much quicker than you used to be.
-Chase--I beg your pardon, Mr. Bergwyn--you think I am a Russian agent.
-Well, you are right. I am. My husband, the Baron, was one.”
-
-“Was?”
-
-“He is dead. Of course you know that.”
-
-“Your pardon; I did not. And you told your people, of course, that you
-were coming to see me?”
-
-Again she understood me; and again she laughed. “Yes. I told them
-it was possible I might have some influence with you--some personal
-influence, of course.” She paused and added, slowly: “But I see now
-that I was wrong.”
-
-“At any rate I think we may now say we understand each other and this
-matter,” I said as I rose.
-
-“You will join us? There is no other way to make your interests safe.
-Russian influence is paramount.”
-
-“Forgive me if I hold my decision over. What you have said has greatly
-impressed me.” It had, but not quite in the way she may have thought.
-
-“I shall see something of you while you are here?”
-
-“How long I remain is, of course, uncertain,” I answered; and the
-evasion displeased her.
-
-“That may mean no. But I must see you. I insist, I do, indeed,
-positively insist;” and she laid her hand on my arm and smiled
-winningly.
-
-“But I may go over to the Austrian side, whatever that may be. They
-may also have eloquent advocates.”
-
-“You may find the Queen’s chief advocate the most difficult to resist.
-I think I ought to warn you.”
-
-“Who is that?”
-
-“The Princess Gatrina--a very beautiful girl and very persuasive.”
-
-Fortunately the start I gave passed unnoticed as her eyes were off me
-at the moment.
-
-“It seems to be a contest of beautiful women, Baroness,” I said with a
-bow.
-
-“It is perhaps fortunate for you, therefore, that you are now only a
-business man--with a short memory,” she retorted with a glance which I
-affected not to see.
-
-Then an unexpected incident followed. I accompanied her to the door and
-as we crossed the hall, Chris was lying there. He got up and she looked
-at him and paused.
-
-“That is an enormous dog, Mr. Bergwyn. I do not like big dogs.”
-
-“Chris will not hurt you. He is gentle as he is big--unless on
-necessary occasions.”
-
-“You call him Chris?” she exclaimed, in a tone of surprise. “That is
-something of a coincidence; I hope it is not an omen,” and she gave me
-a keen glance.
-
-“Why a coincidence?”
-
-“I was thinking of the Queen’s advocate--Gatrina. She has had some
-adventure in which a dog named Chris took a part. I hope it is not an
-omen that you will side with her. I am very superstitious, you know.
-We Serbs are.”
-
-But she was not a Serb and was far too sensible to be superstitious.
-Besides, there was an expression on her face as she drove away that I
-would have given a good deal to have understood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-DEVELOPMENTS.
-
-
-I should have reckoned it bad luck to run up against Elma once more
-under any circumstances; but it was much worse to find her installed
-here in Belgrade, a woman of rank, wealth and influence, in close
-touch with the court and with Gatrina, and taking a part in the game
-of political intrigue likely to render her a serious opponent to my
-purpose.
-
-There was no use blinking at ugly facts, or attempting to hide from
-myself that if she came to learn the real purpose of my presence in
-Belgrade, she could do me incalculable mischief; and I did not begin to
-persuade myself that if the occasion arose she would hesitate to do it.
-
-It was in this wise. In those silly, calf days of my boyish infatuation
-I had written the usual wild, high-falutin nonsense to her--and plenty
-of it. Pouring out my soul to her, I had thought it then: making an
-egregious young ass of myself, I deemed it now; but soulful or asinine,
-there were the letters on record against me. Nor could I doubt that if
-Elma found me attempting to use my influence with Gatrina against the
-plans of the Russian party those letters would be used for all they
-were worth to checkmate that influence.
-
-Elma had indeed been clever enough to appeal to me to bury the past
-and to hint that she was afraid of my revealing what I knew about her.
-But she had meant it more as a bluffing appeal to my sense of honour.
-She knew she had little enough to fear from any revelations. They might
-damage her Court influence; but the Russian authorities who employed
-her would not care a red cent. They would have no inconvenient scruples
-so long as she was useful to them. Very probably they knew all about
-her already, and had perhaps used the knowledge to give a twist to the
-screw which kept her zealous in their service.
-
-I flinched and flushed at the thought of those letters being read by
-Gatrina. That must be stopped somehow, and I must get them back into
-my possession. But how? I could not see any means at present. Elma was
-just an abominably clever woman. She had shewn that by rising to her
-present position out of the ashes of that old scandal in Prague; and
-I was only too painfully conscious that in any play of wits in such a
-matter she would almost certainly outwit me.
-
-Yet disconcerting as was this personal side of the matter, it was not
-by any means the most disturbing result of that talk with her.
-
-She had made me realise that the obstacles in my way were vastly
-greater than I had reckoned. The whole axis of the position seemed to
-have shifted, indeed. I had come to Belgrade with the somewhat vague
-notion that by means of my wealth and the knowledge I had gained of the
-character of Prince Albrevics, I should be able to stop the proposed
-marriage. But that somewhat arrogant assurance was beaten out of me at
-a stroke. Money was useless here.
-
-I saw that Gatrina’s marriage was the centre round which two at least
-of these ugly schemes of high political intrigue actually revolved. It
-was one of the most critical issues of that most critical time; and in
-regard to it her happiness and welfare were just the last things to
-which anyone concerned gave five cent’s worth of consideration.
-
-The Court scheme meant her sacrifice to such a man as this Albrevics in
-order that she might be out of the way of the Queen’s project to secure
-the succession for her brother. The Russian plan was scarcely less
-treacherous. They were wishing to use her as a counter in order to get
-their own puppet on the Throne. No more and no less.
-
-Then there was the third plot--that of the army; and so far as it
-concerned Gatrina it threatened to be worse than either of the others.
-If it came to a head and Elma’s grim forecast of assassination were
-realised, it would be directed against the Obrenovics family as a
-whole. Gatrina, as a member of that family, would be in actual personal
-danger; for it was difficult to think that one so directly in the line
-of succession as she was would be allowed to slip through the meshes of
-a net flung wide and drawn in by strong, angry, merciless hands.
-
-I had looked for anything rather than this. But Elma had outlined the
-picture; and my own concern for Gatrina soon painted in the details in
-lurid and alarmist colours.
-
-I was still groping for the guiding thread in all this tangled skein
-of trouble when the first of my appointed visitors was announced, and
-I had to assume my role of hard-headed business man in regard to the
-proposed loan.
-
-He was a man high up in the Government, and I listened gravely to
-his proposals, putting a number of objections much as I had done in
-Vienna; and then said that I had heard so much of the instability of
-the Government and of plots and conspiracies, that I must take time to
-satisfy myself what they all meant.
-
-“You need have no apprehension, Mr. Bergwyn,” he declared blandly. “The
-Throne and the Government have never been more secure; and now that the
-vexed question of the succession is about to be so happily settled,
-there is not the slightest ground for alarm.”
-
-“To be settled how?”
-
-“By the marriage of the Princess Gatrina to Prince Albrevics. All
-faction will end with that.”
-
-“And Russia?”
-
-He waved his hands deprecatingly. “Russia will accept the situation.
-She always does, when once it is established.”
-
-“But the Queen’s popularity?”
-
-“Was never greater. Her strength is paramount.”
-
-“And her intentions as to her brother’s succession?”
-
-“The merest _canard_--absolutely without foundation.”
-
-“You think Prince Albrevics would be accepted by the country?”
-
-“Personally I regret he is not a--not more discreet. But he will reform
-when his responsibilities grow.”
-
-“How many hold that view?”
-
-“He is not popular, it is true; but we Serbs are a peace-loving people
-and, when a thing is settled and makes for peace, we accept it and work
-for it.”
-
-“And the army?”
-
-“There has been discontent, I know, and certain appointments have been
-made by the Crown which have provoked criticism. But the leaders are
-loyal and sound. There will be no trouble.”
-
-“I would wish to convince myself at first hand. Whom should I see? I
-want the name of a man who knows; and not necessarily a Government man.”
-
-“You can take it from me.”
-
-“That does not mean you would rather I saw no one?”
-
-He flinched at the blunt question very slightly and then smiled.
-“Certainly not. I am not so foolish. You have come to convince yourself
-and we wish to help you do this. There is, of course, some disaffection
-in certain regiments; but on no considerable scale. No man knows the
-feeling of the army as a whole better than Colonel Petrosch. And you
-can speak to him freely. He is the better man for you to see, perhaps,
-because he is not by any means a friend of the Court.”
-
-I remembered the name as one which had been given me by my Austrian
-friends in Vienna; and having thus obtained what I wanted, I got rid
-of my visitor as soon as possible.
-
-As soon as he had gone I looked up the note I had made about this
-Colonel Petrosch and was surprised to find him described as a man
-with a strong grievance against the Government, having considerable
-influence in the army, and believed to be using that influence against
-the Throne.
-
-This looked as though he were the very man I sought, and I resolved to
-go to him at once. But I was to have a stroke of good fortune in that
-matter. I was ready to start when my servant, Buller, came in.
-
-“There is a rough-looking fellow asking for you, sir, and says you sent
-for him. But I thought I’d better tell you first. I told him you were
-busy and that he had better write.”
-
-“What name?”
-
-“I couldn’t catch his name, sir. I can’t understand the language; but
-it sounded something like Crash.”
-
-I laughed. “Karasch, Buller. Bring him up at once; and be very civil to
-him. He wishes to be your fellow-servant.”
-
-Buller’s features were at that moment a study. Well-trained servant
-though he was, and correct and phlegmatic as an Englishman could be, it
-was now beyond his power to conceal the dismay and disgust he felt at
-the prospect.
-
-“Yes, sir,” he stammered at length and turned to go.
-
-“He saved my life, Buller, at the risk of his own; and I think a heap
-of him, even if he does lack a little polish.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” he said now in his most correct manner, and went out to
-return in a moment. “This way, Mr. Crash,” I heard him say as he opened
-the door, and not a trace of feeling was on his stolid face as he
-ushered him in.
-
-Karasch was vastly impressed at finding me in such surroundings and
-his fine dark eyes rolled about him with a gaze of wonderment and
-settled first upon Chris, who got up at his entrance, and then upon
-me. I think he was not a little nervous for all his attempt to appear
-self-possessed.
-
-“I have done my lord’s bidding,” he said at length.
-
-“Is your arm better, Karasch?”
-
-He started as though the question recalled the old tussle between us.
-“It is getting well, my lord.” He felt apparently that I ought to be
-addressed by some title.
-
-“Good; then sit down and tell me what you’ve done; and by the way,
-don’t call me my lord.”
-
-A glance round the room and a waive of the hand shewed me his thought.
-“As you please, Excellency; I am only your servant.”
-
-“Very well, we’ll leave it at that. Now tell me your news.”
-
-“I have seen the friends of the men who took away the lady, and I know
-who they were serving. I have also seen her and know who she is.”
-
-“Who hired them?”
-
-“The Duke Barinski of Jagodina, Excellency. She is the Princess
-Gatrina--but the men did not know her.”
-
-“Duke Barinski! Are you sure?” I exclaimed. This was news indeed. “Are
-you sure, Karasch?”
-
-“I have seen the man with whom he made the bargain. He is at your
-service now, Excellency; I have paid him. If you wish to see him, I
-will bring him here.”
-
-“All I need is to be quite certain. He would not deceive you?”
-
-“He knows better, Excellency,” answered Karasch, with a dry,
-significant smile. “I hold his life here;” and he held out his hand
-with fingers and thumb pressed together.
-
-“Tell me all.”
-
-“There is but little to tell, Excellency.” He appeared to derive some
-sort of satisfaction from using this title frequently. “I knew where
-to go for the information, as I told you; and as soon as I had done
-as your Excellency bade me and seen a doctor about my arm, I sought
-the men out; they are old companions of mine and, as I had money they
-welcomed me. For three days we drank together and I had the story from
-three or four of them, both when they were drunk and when sober; and
-it was always the same. The Princess was at the great house of the
-Baroness von Tulken one evening, and when she wished to leave, she was
-put into a carriage not her own with two of the men dressed in her
-livery. They drove her by a certain route and at an agreed spot the six
-men who were to take her to Maglai stopped the carriage and with a show
-of force seemed to compel the coachman to drive away into the country,
-two of the men entering the carriage to keep the Princess quiet. They
-told her they were brigands; and after some miles they compelled her
-to alight and ride with them. They were to take her to Maglai and to
-receive one thousand gulden, not three as they told your Excellency.”
-
-“But the witchcraft business, Karasch?”
-
-“The Duke Barinski told them she was a witch, Excellency, who had been
-detected and was being sent off privately in this way, because she had
-too many friends of influence to be tried openly in Belgrade. Had they
-known who she was really, they would have been afraid.”
-
-“Then he risked her very life. They might have killed her.”
-
-“No, Excellency; because not a kreutzer was to be paid to them at
-Maglai if the slightest harm was done to her. It was clever.”
-
-“It was devilish,” I said, hotly. “Where in Maglai were they to take
-her and who was to pay the money?”
-
-He produced a slip of paper with a name and address upon it. “You can
-make inquiries if you wish, Excellency,” he said. “You will find what I
-have said is the truth. It is the Duke Barinski’s plotting.”
-
-“You don’t mean he went so far as to see these men himself?”
-
-“He did not declare himself, Excellency; but he was recognised.”
-
-I sat thinking a moment over the news.
-
-“Have you any guess as to his motive?”
-
-“No; I could have none; nor could my friends,” he answered, shaking his
-head.
-
-“Would your men bear this story out even to his face?”
-
-“Why not? They are now in your service--that is, if you wish me still
-to pay them.”
-
-Money was not to be so entirely useless after all, it seemed. “Yes, pay
-them, Karasch. Have you any money left?”
-
-“I have brought it;” and he produced the greater part of what I had
-given him.
-
-“You had better keep it.”
-
-“It will be safer with you. You can give it me as I need it,
-Excellency;” and he laid it on the table.
-
-“Take what you want;” and he took a very moderate sum which he declared
-would be enough. I told him then that for the present he had better not
-live in my house but was to come night and morning for instructions,
-and to let me know how to communicate with him instantly in the event
-of my needing him in any pressing emergency.
-
-His news gave me plenty of matter to chew, and I sat turning it over
-and over in my mind. I saw Elma’s pro-Russian hand in it plainly; and
-although Karasch and his companions could make no guess at the motive
-for the abduction, I could make one.
-
-Had they succeeded in the scheme of getting Gatrina to Maglai they
-would have kept her there until she had consented to marry Duke
-Barinski. Then their plan to secure the succession would have come into
-the field of practical politics; the Queen would have been quietly
-checkmated; Russian influence would have openly backed up the united
-claim of the Duke and Gatrina; and the crooked path would suddenly have
-been made smooth.
-
-Gatrina’s escape from her guards had alone prevented this and her safe
-return to Belgrade had no doubt completely disconcerted the schemers.
-
-But they were not of the kind to put aside the plan because of this
-check and we might look for some other move from them equally daring,
-cunning and far-reaching.
-
-They had acted cleverly indeed, and had blinded their tracks
-successfully. The Duke had kept carefully in the background and Elma
-had so far retained the confidence of Gatrina as actually to learn from
-her some details of her escape.
-
-I did not forget her reference to the “adventure in which a dog called
-Chris” had played a part; and I might gamble on it that, if they
-discovered the part I had taken, I should soon find myself the object
-of some of their attentions. And they were antagonists whom anyone
-would be prudent to take very seriously.
-
-Complications were developing at a merry rate; but Karasch’s news had
-suggested a way by which one of Gatrina’s suitors at any rate might be
-driven from the field.
-
-This was to face the Duke himself, tell him what I knew, confront him
-with the men he had employed, and see what the effect on him would
-be of a threat to reveal the whole plot to the Court. The Queen’s
-readiness in dealing drastically with her enemies would frighten him
-surely enough; and I knew the Russian tactics too well not to feel
-assured that, if once he were discovered and disgraced, they would drop
-him instantly in favour of some shrewder tool.
-
-Then came another development. A chamberlain from the Court brought me
-an invitation to a reception for the following night at the Palace;
-and was at some pains to make it clear that it was to be held out of
-compliment to myself and “those other illustrious Magnates of America”
-who were associated with me.
-
-Money was talking loudly enough in that, at any rate; and I sent him
-away with an assurance of my appreciation of the honour, expressed
-in such flowery terms as occurred to me at the moment. Even as I was
-speaking to him my thoughts slipped back to what Elma had said about
-the “Queen’s advocate.”
-
-I should meet Gatrina again. In a moment a hundred qualms of doubt were
-started as to how she would receive me, rendering me uneasy, restless,
-and almost nervous.
-
-What would she say? How would she look? Would the brute she was going
-to marry be present? Would she reproach me for thus again forcing
-myself on her? Would she see through the flimsy hypocrisy of my
-pretended financial mission? Would she give me away to the Court?
-Should I get a chance of telling her of the danger in which she stood?
-And then, somehow, that scene on the hill at Samac a week before, came
-into my thoughts and I sat smoking, mooning and dreaming.
-
-Gatrina seemed so desperately far removed from me now and the opposing
-forces were gathering such strength that my confidence of success gave
-ominous signs of wavering. The prospect of winning her looked like no
-more than a forlorn hope; and although I was as determined as ever to
-fight on until I was actually beaten, I felt a cold chill of doubt
-settling down upon me.
-
-Buller entered, breaking my reverie just at that moment, to bring me a
-card. I took it impatiently.
-
-“Captain Nikolitch, from Colonel Petrosch.”
-
-I uttered an involuntary exclamation of delight. My visitor was a man
-who had been my close and intimate friend in that past time in the
-Balkans; and coming as he did from Colonel Petrosch, he was just the
-man of all others able to help me. No one could have been more welcome
-at such a juncture.
-
-“Show him right here, Buller,” I said, gleefully, standing up to
-welcome him cordially.
-
-The pendulum had swung right over suddenly and the luck was once again
-on my side.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE ARMY’S PLANS.
-
-
-Nikolitch was as glad to meet me as I to welcome him, and our mutual
-greeting was very warm and cordial.
-
-“I could scarcely believe it was really you, Bergwyn,” he said, when we
-were through with the hand-shaking and had lighted our cigars. “That
-was why I wrote on my card that I came from Colonel Petrosch. I can
-scarcely believe it now, I think;” and he smiled. He was a year or
-so older than I; a fair, handsome, frank-faced fellow with a winning
-manner and a delightful smile.
-
-“It’s a bit like a fairy tale, perhaps. How did you hear of me?”
-
-“What a question, my dear fellow, when you’re the centre of financial
-attraction just now in half a dozen circles. And do you mean to tell me
-you’re a millionaire? Why, in those jolly old days you were as poor as
-I was and, worse luck, still am.”
-
-“They were jolly old days, weren’t they? I am just delighted to see
-you again. Yes, I’m a millionaire; and if you’d done as I wanted you
-to then, gone out with me to the States, you would be one too. I had a
-toughish time of it for a year or two; and it was all luck at the end.
-Nothing else. I got hold of a mine which had broken the hearts of the
-men who had been working it with me. When they gave up in despair I got
-it for next to nothing and held on; and inside a month came on the gold
-by pure accident just where we hadn’t looked for it. My perseverance
-had paid me and I stepped out of the mine that day as rich as a man
-need wish to be. That’s all.”
-
-“You were always a dogged beggar,” he said.
-
-“I don’t like being beaten.”
-
-“The same thing another way round,” he laughed. “And so you’ve come
-back to the old hunting ground to take a hand here as a big financier.
-You’ll have to be careful, Bergwyn. This is no gold mine.”
-
-“Tell me about yourself.”
-
-“Oh, there’s nothing to tell; nothing much. I entered the army here,
-and having some influence, got my captaincy sooner than I deserved it.
-I like it well enough; but I wish I’d gone with you. I’d rather be a
-millionaire.”
-
-“Why does Colonel Petrosch send you to me?”
-
-“I’m a favourite of his a bit, and of others. They’ve let me know
-things, you see; trust me, I suppose; and all that. When I heard your
-name mentioned I pricked up my ears, and told Petrosch I fancied I knew
-you. He wants you and your money bags on the side of the army in all
-this mess of messes; and picked me out as a sort of informal ambassador
-to negotiate with you. Though why the devil you want to meddle with
-things here beats me.”
-
-“I had the Colonel’s name given me this morning as a man who could
-tell me the hang of things in regard to the intentions of the army. I
-suppose he could.”
-
-Nikolitch laughed. “If he can’t no one can, Bergwyn. But who sent you
-to him?”
-
-I told him the name of the Minister.
-
-“By the blue sky, that’s a curiosity. Why, old Petrosch is in the very
-thick of the army plans and dead against the Court, King, Queen, and
-all the rest of them. He’ll grin when I tell him.”
-
-“The Minister assured me that the army was loyal to the throne, and
-that the Colonel could convince me of that. He admitted there was
-some disaffection in certain regiments, but that the feeling was
-insignificant.”
-
-“Oh, he’s an ass; and nothing else. That’s the usual rot talked in the
-Court circles; and of course the officers don’t undeceive them and shew
-their hand.”
-
-“And what’s the truth?”
-
-“Why that--of course we’re talking as old friends, Bergwyn, and you
-won’t repeat what I say?”
-
-“I give you my word on that. I’m going to talk to you presently about
-myself on the same understanding.”
-
-“Well, the fact is then that we’re on the eve of a revolution; and
-there’s only one real power in the country. The army. They can’t stand
-the Queen’s methods--and they don’t mean to.”
-
-“Show me.”
-
-“I can’t understand either the King or the Queen. She’s one of the most
-wonderful women that ever drew breath; and in some respects the ablest
-and shrewdest. In others, she acts like a perfect fool. She comes from
-the people, of course; and that’s against her; but she could have made
-her position absolutely secure if she’d shewn a gulden’s worth of tact
-in the right direction. But she never does. She could have had the
-army leaders at her feet; but she has alienated every one of them, by
-sticking all sorts of impossible men, relations or favourites, at the
-top of things; and degrading every man of capacity who won’t kow-tow to
-her in everything. As a result, bar her favourites she hasn’t a friend
-left in the army. It’s the same in everything else; and the limit has
-been reached.”
-
-“And the King?”
-
-“He says ditto to every word she utters. She can’t forget she came from
-the gutter, or near it; and, having power, is never at rest unless she
-is shewing it. She wants us all to be too afraid of her to dare to
-remember her origin. That, at least, is what many of us think. Anyhow,
-she has made the present position impossible and the officers are going
-to change it. It’s the only way to save the country.”
-
-“How will they change it?”
-
-He shrugged his shoulders. “By a revolution, Bergwyn; a peaceful one,
-if possible; but a revolution, certainly.”
-
-“If possible? What does that mean?”
-
-“The abdication of the King and Queen--if they’ll go.”
-
-“And if they won’t go?”
-
-“They’ll have to,” he replied, with another shrug. “To tell you the
-truth, there’s a section of the officers who urge violent means.”
-
-“Assassination?” I recalled Elma’s prophecy.
-
-“Yes, it comes to that,” he said, gloomily. “I’m dead against violent
-methods; but what they contend is that it is better half a score of
-lives should be lost than as many thousands by a civil war. Our hope--I
-mean the hope of the moderate men in the army--is that the King will
-see the uselessness of resisting the army and go.”
-
-“You are convinced that the army will stand together?”
-
-“Oh, yes. Petrosch gave me the proofs to bring to you;” and he took out
-some papers and plunged into a description of the feeling in almost all
-the regiments in the army.
-
-“It looks convincing enough on paper,” I said.
-
-“My dear Bergwyn, it’s the result of months of work and agitation, and
-you may rely on it. And we have the country with us. Look here;” and
-out came more papers, proving that the feeling of people of all classes
-was on the side of the army.
-
-“There is only one real power in Servia to-day, Bergwyn. The army.”
-
-“And why does Colonel Petrosch send you to me with all this?”
-
-“Two reasons. Either that you may be induced to join our side at once;
-or, failing that, that you may be persuaded of the uselessness of
-financing the Government or any other faction opposed to us.”
-
-“And your own opinion, Nikolitch?”
-
-“My dear fellow, I’m only a fly on the wheel; but I think you must be
-in a great hurry to chuck your money away, if you think of taking any
-side at all. The army will win in the end: we must, for nothing can
-stop us; and there will be a new Government, and with a new King--Peter
-Karageorgevics, I expect--but until things are settled what’s to be
-your security for any loan?”
-
-“You put it plainly,” said I, with a smile at his bluntness.
-
-“That’s what I came for, Bergwyn. I speak partly as old Petrosch’s
-mouthpiece, but chiefly as an old chum. Mind you, when the new
-Government is in the stirrups matters may be different; there’s a great
-deal got to happen before that, however. But I suppose you don’t really
-come to fool your money away?”
-
-“Is that a mouthpiece question or your own?”
-
-“Petrosch might like to know,” he laughed, stroking his moustache;
-“but of course I shan’t tell him a word you don’t wish me to repeat.
-He doesn’t think you came here with any thought of such business; but
-he does want to kill the chance of your doing any with others than the
-army.”
-
-“If the army really holds the key to the position I might wish to have
-their influence for a certain purpose.”
-
-“He’s a cute devil, and that’s the truth. That’s just how he summed up
-your visit. But of course he doesn’t know what the purpose is.”
-
-“Could the influence be got?”
-
-“My dear Bergwyn, anything could be got in this little kingdom of
-ours--at a price. I fancy his notion is that you are after a title of
-some sort, or some concessions, and are ready to buy them by floating
-this loan. That’s the idea in the Court too, I know. I chuckled when I
-heard it--but then I know you and they don’t.”
-
-“No. I don’t want either a title or concessions; but I can see now the
-gist of certain hints thrown out this morning. What I do want is to get
-to the bottom of certain things here in the first place. You’ve spoken
-freely enough about the army, are you at liberty to talk about other
-matters?”
-
-“Of course I am. Fire away, ask what you like.”
-
-“What are the Court intentions about the succession?”
-
-“The Queen means to secure it for her brother--and it’s that which has
-put the final touch to the army discontent. They simply won’t have him;
-and yet it’s a fact that the formal pronouncement in his favour is
-actually drawn up. Some of our people have seen the document. Of course
-it’s a secret; but we’ve got friends even in the Palace itself.”
-
-“But the claims of the Prince Albrevics and his marriage with Princess
-Gatrina?”
-
-“Why, of course, mere rot. The Princess stands in the direct line of
-succession, but she’s a woman and barred from the throne. Albrevics is
-an impossible; everyone knows that--and a very unsavoury impossibility
-too. But the Princess has or had something of a following and they
-would be glad to see her on the throne if a husband could be found
-who’d be received as King. They know this at Court, and so the plan is
-hatched to marry her to Albrevics and get her out of the road. It’s
-an infernal business, for she’s just as good as gold. But she’s in the
-way of the Court schemes and consequently is to be sacrificed. That’s a
-specimen of the royal methods.”
-
-“Isn’t there another scheme about here--to marry her to the Duke
-Barinski?”
-
-“So you’ve heard that, eh? That’s the Russian plan. He’s a tool of
-Russia and would make a pretty puppet for them if they could succeed.
-But they won’t. The army won’t have it; and what the army decides will
-be done.”
-
-“You astound me,” I exclaimed in surprise at the freedom with which
-he spoke. “Does everybody know everybody else’s schemes in this
-extraordinary country?”
-
-“Pretty well. I suppose it looks odd to a stranger; but our chief talk
-here is conspiracy of one kind or another. Why, even the plans of
-the army have been carried to the Court; and they are so blind that
-they won’t believe them. It isn’t etiquette there even to think that
-anything hostile to the Court can happen.”
-
-“Are there any other plots?” I asked with a smile.
-
-“Heaps; but you’ve got hold of the three that count for anything; and
-only that of the army will come to a head. Next, please;” and he threw
-himself back in his chair and laughed at my look of surprise. After a
-moment he added: “There’s only one person in all the mess I pity--the
-Princess Gatrina. She may find things very ugly; although there’s not a
-soul who knows about her who would do her an injury. You’ve heard the
-tattle about her?”
-
-“What is that?”
-
-“She was kidnapped the other night; at least, so we believe. At any
-rate she disappeared and no one knew where she’d gone. There was a
-story that she had been carried off by brigands; but that’s all rot,
-of course. Nobody knows exactly what happened except herself, perhaps;
-although I doubt if she does.”
-
-“I know,” I said, quietly.
-
-“What?” His astonishment was complete. “The devil you do.”
-
-“I’m going to tell you. Nikolitch: as my friend, you know, not the
-Colonel’s mouthpiece.”
-
-“I’m friend first, Bergwyn, mouthpiece only afterwards--and a long way
-afterwards, too.”
-
-“Well, then, I’m here because of the Princess;” and I told him as
-briefly as I could of the adventure in the hills and Karasch’s
-discovery of the part played by Duke Barinski. I said nothing, however,
-of my feelings for Gatrina, leaving him to believe merely that I was
-anxious for her safety.
-
-“You’re a lucky devil, Bergwyn,” was his first comment. “I wish I could
-have had such a chance to serve her. But what an infernal scheme! What
-are you going to do?”
-
-“I want the army influence to protect her in case of trouble. Now you
-understand. How can I get it?”
-
-“Tell Petrosch what you’ve told me in the first place, and in the
-second, pledge yourself to negotiate a loan for the new Government as
-soon as it’s well established.”
-
-I thought a moment. “No, to the first part,” I said. “That’s for
-ourselves alone at present. To the second, yes, as soon as you like.”
-
-“He’s very quick. He’ll guess.”
-
-“Guess what?”
-
-He smiled significantly. “You want this Albrevics marriage off, I
-suppose.”
-
-“Any woman should be prevented from marrying such a brute.”
-
-“Of course,” he replied, drily, and paused. “You might put it on that
-ground; but he wouldn’t believe it was all. We don’t deal much in
-platonic affection in Servia.”
-
-“I don’t care what he believes.”
-
-“I don’t know him if he wouldn’t be glad to believe a lot. The princess
-is very much in the way. I told you no one wishes her any harm.”
-
-“What do you mean by that grave look?” I asked, for his face was very
-serious.
-
-“It’s a very ugly matter. I told you what the moderate men among us
-feel; but there’s the other section to be reckoned with. If their views
-prevail, it will be a clean sweep.”
-
-“A clean sweep?”
-
-“Yes; everyone connected with the Obrenovics family will be in
-danger--even the Princess herself.”
-
-“Do you mean....” I began, excitedly.
-
-“Yes, I mean all the worst that may be in your thoughts, Bergwyn. And
-neither you nor Petrosch himself, nor anyone, might be able to save her
-in the mad mood that would prevail in such a crisis. It will be a very
-ugly time.”
-
-“Do you think the other section will prevail?”
-
-“Anything is possible in the present temper, Bergwyn.”
-
-“Good God!” I exclaimed, intensely moved and alarmed by the thoughts
-which this admission suggested.
-
-For a few moments we were silent.
-
-“I think I ought to tell you why I thought you had come here,” said
-Nikolitch, breaking the pause. “Do you know there’s an old--old
-associate of yours here? Her name now is the Baroness von Tulken.”
-
-“She came to me this morning.”
-
-“She gave me to understand you were coming here on her account.”
-
-I laughed. “It doesn’t amount to anything what she says.”
-
-“No; but she talks, Bergwyn, and--well, it’s none of my affairs,” he
-broke off, and looked at me as if inviting me to speak.
-
-“Let her talk,” I answered, not accepting the invitation.
-
-“Then it isn’t anything to do with her?”
-
-“No, nothing. I’ve told you the only reason why I’m here.”
-
-“I’m afraid you’ve got a devilish hard task, old fellow. But if I can
-help in any way, use me. I must go. I’ve duty on. What shall I tell
-Petrosch?” and he rose.
-
-“That I want the influence, and that to get it I’ll do that business of
-the loan for the new Government--but not if there’s to be any violence
-in establishing it. Prepare him in that way and arrange for me to see
-him to-morrow.”
-
-“Take my tip and tell him your motive, Bergwyn.”
-
-“I’ll think it over,” I said; and after arranging to see as much as
-possible of one another during my stay in the capital we parted.
-
-After he had gone I did think it over and saw one thing clearly enough.
-I must secure the help and influence of the army at any cost; as that
-promised the most effective means of protecting Gatrina.
-
-On the whole the talk with Nikolitch had the result of restoring
-my confidence and raising my hopes again. There were plenty of
-difficulties to be overcome, of course; but if the army was resolved to
-change the dynasty and was strong enough to force that resolve upon the
-country, Gatrina’s chances in regard to the succession were as good as
-dead; her marriage with either Prince Albrevics or Duke Barinski would
-be objectless, and then--well, she would be free to choose for herself.
-
-That was all I could ask for and I awaited the interview with Colonel
-Petrosch with keen anticipation.
-
-On the following morning Nikolitch came to report that the Colonel had
-been suddenly called away, however, and that he would come to see me
-the next day.
-
-“Anything fresh occurred?” I asked.
-
-“Something is always occurring just now, Bergwyn. But I fancy the
-Colonel has really gone to avoid the reception at the Palace to-night.
-He doesn’t wish to be present himself for one thing; and for another,
-I fancy he wishes you to go there without having committed yourself
-to us. You’re to be tackled, of course--the show is got up for that
-purpose, I suppose--and crediting you with the blunt methods of certain
-Americans, he thinks you might feel impelled to tell the truth. We
-don’t work in that crude way here, you know.”
-
-I smiled. “Did you say anything about the Princess?”
-
-“Very little. I dropped a hint that you were anxious about her safety.
-He made just the answer I should have expected.”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“That he wished to Heaven she could be induced to leave the country.”
-
-“And so do I; but I doubt it. You’ll be at the Palace to-night, I
-suppose.”
-
-“I. My dear fellow, no. There’ll be no place for small fry like me
-there. But I can tell you who will be there;” and he rattled away with
-a lot of Court gossip until I pulled him up.
-
-“There’s one thing I have to do to-day, Nikolitch: perhaps you can help
-me. I want to satisfy myself from outside sources that the army can do
-all you think. Whom should I see?”
-
-“You must take it from us that we are united, Bergwyn: for no one knows
-it. That the army, if united, must be all powerful, you can learn from
-any one anywhere. No one doubts it. Here, see these people;” and he
-wrote down a number of names of influential people in various positions.
-
-I spent the rest of the day prosecuting my inquiries; and everywhere
-I went, I heard the same verdict. That grave troubles were close at
-hand, and that everything must turn upon the attitude of the army. Of
-that no one entertained a shadow of a doubt.
-
-Nothing in all that strange time amazed me more than the openness with
-which the plans of the opposing parties were canvassed on all sides.
-
-Everyone appeared to be agreed that a revolution of some kind was
-actually impending. The attitude of the two Great Powers concerned was
-matter of free talk. Russia had been favoured under Milan; Austrian
-influence had now the upper hand under Alexander and his Queen. Austria
-was hopeful to maintain the King; Russia resolved to countercheck him
-and regain her former influence. The army was speaking for the nation
-at large and equally opposed to both the Powers.
-
-These aims and the possible methods of attaining them respectively
-seemed to be known to all; but nowhere, save in her immediate circle,
-was a good word, nay, scarcely a civil word, used toward the Queen. The
-note everywhere was one of inveterate hostility, almost of execration.
-And this was the most sinister omen of all, not only as affecting her,
-but as touching Gatrina also, of whom I heard many harsh things said.
-
-It was thus in a mood of troubled uneasiness that I set out to attend
-the reception at the Palace, while my private doubts as to how Gatrina
-would meet me in my altered character added a special poignancy to my
-anxiety and disquietude.
-
-I made the most strenuous efforts to hold myself well in hand and
-maintain complete self-restraint; but when at length my eager eyes
-found her, my heart began hammering against my ribs with quite painful
-excitement, in which dread and delight were almost equally mingled.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE QUEEN’S ADVOCATE.
-
-
-The reception was outwardly a very brilliant affair indeed, with
-multitudes of flashing lights, clever colour effects, lavish
-decoration, and a prodigal wealth of flowers, as the setting for the
-showy uniforms of handsome men and the magnificent dresses and jewels
-of pretty women.
-
-One’s first impression was an irresistible tribute to the perfect
-æsthetic triumph which had been achieved. But that impression was
-only momentary. Knowing as I did the cloud of peril which encircled
-the whole court, the scene soon appeared to me to be rather a ghastly
-mockery of Fate than a bit of beautiful realism; and I caught myself
-wondering how men could caper and jest and women smile and frivol in
-pretended unconsciousness of everything but the pleasure of the hour.
-
-I recalled the chamberlain’s words of the day before--that the whole
-thing was arranged in my honour. _My_ honour indeed! To kow-tow to the
-man with the dollars! To bow the knee to mammon! To fool and weedle me
-and dazzle me with a beautiful farce gorgeously mounted, until I would
-loose the strings of my own and my friend’s money bags, and pour out
-the golden stream to enable this kind of burlesque to be continued.
-
-Then I caught sight of Gatrina and fell into a condition of troubled
-anxiety and delicious anticipation from which someone recalled me in
-order to present me to their Majesties--the young King and that most
-remarkable of women, Queen Draga.
-
-I am not likely to forget that moment. The King who, in obedience to
-one of those impulses of his overpowering self-will had had courage to
-choose his wife from among the people and was by nature, I believe, a
-capable, clever and strong man, was overshadowed by his magnificent
-Queen. Beautiful she was not; the face was too strong, too powerful,
-too imperious; and although she was grace personified, in every
-movement and gesture of her perfectly-framed figure, it was by the
-wonderful magnetism of her personality that she dominated all who once
-yielded to the magic influence she exercised.
-
-The few words of greeting which she spoke to me, welcoming me to
-Belgrade, and expressing the hope that I liked the capital, were
-uttered with a charm that made the merest commonplace phrase beautiful,
-and endowed it with the point of significant meaning of rare eloquence.
-At least so it all appeared to me while my own words sounded awkward,
-clumsy and crude in contrast.
-
-I was replying to a question in this way when Gatrina approached the
-Queen, and I saw her look at me and start in intense surprise; flushing
-first and then turning white as the gauze dress she wore, her eyes
-unable to leave my face.
-
-A few seconds passed while I went on with my reply, rambling almost at
-random in my confusion as I fought my way back to self-possession.
-
-The Queen noticed something in my manner, and I saw the expression of
-her wonderful eyes change for a fleeting instant until she dropped them
-and appeared not to observe my confusion.
-
-What I said I know not; but she smiled graciously and saying that we
-should have another opportunity of discussing the matter, turned to
-Gatrina.
-
-“I must present you to one of my favourites, Mr. Bergwyn, the Princess
-Gatrina. She is most kindly disposed to all Americans, and will tell
-you all about Belgrade.”
-
-The next moment I was bowing to Gatrina and the King and Queen, and
-their circle moved away leaving us together. I mumbled some commonplace
-about being charmed to have such a guide. This was for the benefit
-of those within earshot about us; and before she could reply an
-interruption came.
-
-Elma swept up, superbly dressed and full of confidence, and held out
-her hand to me.
-
-“How do you do, Mr. Bergwyn? I am glad to see an old friend here. How
-pale you look, Gatrina. Are you ill?”
-
-“No, thank you. The room is hot.”
-
-“That is so often the cause, isn’t it?” she replied, with flagrant and
-almost insolent disbelief in the excuse. “You must be careful, dear.
-You are not strong since your terrible experience recently. Do you know
-of the princess’s adventure and escape, Mr. Bergwyn?”
-
-“I have but just been presented to her, Baroness.”
-
-“Oh, I thought you had met before,” she exclaimed. “Of course, I don’t
-know why--but then one never does know why one makes such mistakes,
-does one? Let us go and sit down. You are such an object of attention,
-Mr. Bergwyn, that you’ll be positively mobbed if we stand here. It
-isn’t every day we see an American millionaire in Belgrade where we’re
-all as poor as mice in churches.”
-
-She led the way to some seats, and not knowing what else to do, we
-followed. She played with admirable confidence. What she knew or
-guessed about that time in the Bosnian hills, I could not tell, any
-more than I could see her motive. But she seemed to understand that
-she had us at a disadvantage and made the most of it adroitly. She was
-resolved to pose before Gatrina as an old friend of mine, and I did not
-see how to stop her, although every word had its barb for me.
-
-“You would be surprised, Mr. Bergwyn, and I think you ought to be
-flattered, at the number of people who wish to know you,” she said
-as soon as we were seated. “The moment I said you were an old friend
-of mine, I was pestered, literally pestered, by people wanting to be
-introduced.”
-
-“I am here on business only, Baroness.”
-
-“Here, to-night you mean. Oh, yes, of course, I know that. But you used
-to have a keen liking for pleasure you know;” and she smiled as though
-she knew a hundred secrets about me all elaborately dissipated and
-disgraceful.
-
-“I did not mean to-night,” I corrected. “I meant my visit to Belgrade.”
-
-“Of course, how very stupid of me. Why, it might have sounded as if I
-meant that in speaking to Gatrina you would be thinking of business.”
-She laughed with a sort of malicious gaiety. “How very stupid I am. But
-then, we do call you the Queen’s Advocate, don’t we, Gatrina?”
-
-“Mr. Bergwyn may misunderstand you, Baroness.”
-
-“Oh, no, not the least fear of that. We understand one another
-perfectly, do we not, Mr. Bergwyn?”
-
-“In what way do you mean, Baroness?” I asked, pointedly.
-
-She took up the challenge readily and laughed, quite joyously. “Why as
-old friends, old and intimate friends ought to understand one another,
-of course. What else should I mean?” Deny that old friendship to
-Gatrina, if you dare, was in the look she gave me.
-
-“The seven years which have passed since we last met, Baroness, have
-been the stern years of my life,” I answered, for Gatrina’s benefit.
-“And in them I have forgotten the follies of my childhood in the real
-life of the world.”
-
-“What a sage you must have become!” she laughed; but the laugh was more
-palpably forced than before. “Do you know,” she added, “I am just dying
-to tell you of this adventure of Gatrina’s among the brigands. May I,
-Gatrina?”
-
-“No. It would not interest Mr. Bergwyn, nor amuse me.”
-
-“That was the adventure in which the dog, Chris, played a part; as I
-told you yesterday, Mr. Bergwyn. Isn’t it an extraordinary coincidence,
-Gatrina, that Mr. Bergwyn should have an immense dog, positively an
-immense creature of the same name, Chris? I declare I’ve been thinking
-about it ever since I left your house;” and she turned to me with a
-glance. Her audacity increased with every fresh thrust she made.
-
-“There are many big dogs in the world, Baroness, and not nearly enough
-names to go round. Thousands of them must bear the same; and a dog is
-not like us, you see, and cannot change its name.”
-
-“Yours is such a splendid creature, too,” she said, ignoring this.
-“Huge, almost black, smooth-coated; just the kind of dog you would
-love, Gatrina.”
-
-“You make me curious. I must have an opportunity of seeing it, Mr.
-Bergwyn,” said Gatrina, steadily, looking at me for the first time
-since I had spoken to her. She was quite calm and self-collected now,
-and Elma’s interposition had served one good purpose. It had given us
-both time to get over the surprise and confusion of the meeting.
-
-“It will give me great pleasure, Princess,” I answered gravely. I
-understood, of course, that she did not intend Elma to know the truth
-about the hill business.
-
-“You are feeling better again now, dear?” said Elma, solicitously. “I
-am so glad. I wonder what upset you. However, you have got over it,
-and that’s the great thing. I suppose it _must_ have been the heat
-unless”--with a pause and a mischievous shrug of the shoulders--“unless
-it was the shock of meeting Mr. Bergwyn so unexpectedly.”
-
-“I am obliged to you for the implied compliment, Baroness. Do you
-think the Princess expected an American citizen to wear a cowboy’s
-dress or a red man’s war paint?” I laughed, and Gatrina joined me.
-
-“I assure you, Mr. Bergwyn, the Baroness can make the most wonderful
-mistakes,” she said. “I did not understand for the moment what she
-meant about your dog; but I believe I see it now. I do, indeed.” She
-was a better actress than Elma after all, and her merry laugh now was a
-most natural one.
-
-“I must plead my complete mystification, I fear.”
-
-“Of course, you can both misunderstand,” said Elma, spitefully.
-
-“I really must tell you now, Mr. Bergwyn,” declared Gatrina; “although
-I said just now it would not interest you. Elma has made it interesting
-and quite amusing, although the adventure she speaks of was very far
-from being amusing. You know there are still some brigands left in the
-Bosnian and Herzogovinian hills.”
-
-“Brigands?” I exclaimed in a tone of astonishment.
-
-“I am afraid we must admit it. Well, some of them conceived the idea
-that if they carried me off they would get a good ransom; and they
-did it. But they did not get the ransom, for I escaped. After a most
-exciting ride I was saved by a peasant with a big dog, called Chris;
-and because you have a dog of the same name, I really believe the
-baroness thinks you must be a peasant in disguise of an American
-millionaire. Isn’t it ingenious and clever of her?”
-
-“I did not say anything of the kind,” snapped Elma, viciously.
-
-“Of course, we have tried to let as little as possible get known of the
-matter, Mr. Bergwyn, but this delicious theory of the baroness’s has
-made such a joke of it, that really I think I must tell everybody now.
-Would you mind if I were to say plainly that you are not an American
-gentleman but a Bosnian peasant, and that I know that to be true
-because you have a big dog called Chris? It’s such a convincing reason,
-you see.”
-
-“Anything that would associate me with you, Princess, would be a
-pleasure,” I returned, with a bow and a smile, as if I were paying her
-a mere conventional compliment.
-
-“You are trying to make me appear very ridiculous, Gatrina,” exclaimed
-Elma, angrily.
-
-“I declare I shall tell the Queen and get her to let us have a tableau
-in which I should be the maiden in distress, and you the peasant
-rescuer, Mr. Bergwyn. You could get a very picturesque dress, you know;
-and I am sure you could play the part. But to make it complete we ought
-to have the baroness in, because it’s her idea; and yet I don’t see
-what part to give her,” and Gatrina laughed.
-
-“I think I can offer a suggestion,” said I, deliberately. “We could
-reverse the thing; and instead of the Baroness being the one to
-discover the truth, let her have planned your abduction.”
-
-Elma started, her eyes flashed with sudden anger at me, and she changed
-colour.
-
-“What is the matter, Baroness? You are not well,” said Gatrina with a
-startled glance at me, followed by a searching look at Elma’s white
-confusion.
-
-“It is my turn to feel the heat,” she replied, trying to force a laugh.
-“Really, Mr. Bergwyn, I shall begin to be afraid you have some effect
-on the atmosphere. First it upset Gatrina, and now me.”
-
-“You did not like my suggestion, I see. I will withdraw it,” I
-answered, quietly. “Pray pardon me.” Gatrina sat thinking hard; and I
-guessed I had started the line of thought. “It is a curious thing,” I
-went on, as if merely to cover the pause; “but I have had more than
-one experience of the kind. I mean where I have been in conversation
-with people and suddenly, without any palpable cause, they have been
-overcome--by the atmosphere.”
-
-“You must be a dangerous man,” laughed Elma, who was quickly recovering
-herself.
-
-“Not dangerous, I trust, to--my friends”; and I bowed and smiled, and
-gave her a look which she understood.
-
-We were interrupted then by someone who came from the Queen.
-
-“Her Majesty desires me to remind your Highness that the dancing is
-about to commence,” he said to Gatrina, and added to Elma, “Her Majesty
-desires to speak with you at once, Baroness.”
-
-Elma rose. “I suppose I am interfering with your business and so am
-ordered away,” she said with a sneer.
-
-“Will you give me a dance, Princess?” I asked. The moment we were alone
-the feeling of restraint was revived.
-
-“It is by the Queen’s desire,” she answered, with a shrug as she put
-the tips of her fingers on my arm and I led her away. It was a waltz
-and we danced it in silence. At the close I did not know what she would
-wish to do, and as I hesitated, she said suddenly:
-
-“I suppose we must keep up the pretence. We are to go through into the
-further conservatory.” The place was empty save for a couple of chairs
-making a sort of cosy corner; and as I guessed the arrangement was of
-the Queen’s making, I blessed her for her unwitting thoughtfulness.
-
-Gatrina was very pale, and as she sat down she exclaimed impulsively:
-
-“It is almost maddening. You might have spared me this.”
-
-“What is maddening?”
-
-“Please not to pretend you don’t understand. That can only make matters
-worse than they are.”
-
-“I understand that I wish very urgently to speak to you; but if you
-would prefer another time, I will go;” and I got up.
-
-“And so force me to give some false explanation to the Queen of what I
-cannot explain truly. Thank you.”
-
-I sat down again. “Can’t we clear the air a bit?” I asked.
-
-“Having done this miserable thing you pretend not to know what it is. I
-suppose you can see that all this is arranged. That I was to dance with
-you, make myself agreeable to you, bring you here where we could be
-undisturbed, and then talk you into carrying out this miserable loan.
-You can see that surely, as clearly as you can see how successful you
-have been in humiliating me. You must be very glad and proud of your
-success.”
-
-“Thank you.”
-
-“Then if you didn’t plan it, why didn’t you let me know why you were
-coming to Belgrade? Why not tell me who you were really? Why not give
-me time and means to avoid you? Oh, it is intolerable! You knew I was
-to play jackal for the Queen with the American money-man. Elma herself
-told you I was what she calls the Queen’s advocate. Ugh!”
-
-“I don’t like to hear you speak of the Baroness von Tulken by her
-Christian name, as if she were your friend.”
-
-“Is it one of the conditions of your financial business that you
-control the friendships of the Court of Belgrade?”
-
-She was unreasonably angry, and, of course, abominably unjust.
-
-“I don’t see why you do me that injustice? I could not possibly know
-that the Queen would intentionally throw us together, and as for
-humiliation----”
-
-“You knew it yesterday. The Baroness--Elma, told you so.” I smiled at
-the aggressive way in which she paused and threw up her head as she
-made the correction in the name; and the smile irritated her to still
-further anger. “I dislike evasion and pretence, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-I winced a bit under the lash of her words, and paused; and just at
-that moment my memory played me a prank. That scene at the camp when we
-had our first sharp will contest leapt suddenly into my thoughts, and
-when her face had worn pretty much the same resolute angry expression.
-Then I leaned back in my chair and replied very deliberately:
-
-“That’s just where you’re wrong, I think. If you knew anything about
-me you’d know I like evasion and pretence and falsehood. The man who
-can do a dirty unmanly trick in the dirtiest and most selfish way is
-just my type; and if he can do it to a woman--in the way I’ve done it
-to you, for instance--he’s my hero. Of course, he must be a big sort of
-brute; cunning, despicable, and mean; a clever beast at getting women
-into a false position so that he can enjoy a laugh to himself by making
-them suffer--and the more they suffer the more he hugs himself. You
-know the kind of man; you must, because from what you’ve said about
-me----”
-
-“I don’t wish to hear any more about your ideals, thank you.”
-
-“I was only filling in the details to your rough outline. But what I
-want you to understand is, your outline is right and that you have just
-such a brute to deal with in me.”
-
-She did not answer for quite a time and sat tearing to pieces nervously
-a leaf she had plucked from a plant near.
-
-“I did not say anything of the kind.”
-
-“You see it’s this way,” I said, not heeding her words. “I came to
-Belgrade to humiliate you, to insult you, to trample----”
-
-“Don’t, Mr. Bergwyn,” she cried, quickly.
-
-I threw up my hands as one who is aggrieved. “You won’t let me tell you
-the truth, you see. I think it’s a little hard on me, anyway. A man
-doesn’t get many chances of complete self-revelation; and I was just
-enjoying----”
-
-She was looking straight out in front of her and turned her head with
-one swift glance that stopped my banter. I broke off and said very
-earnestly:
-
-“If I did not come for that purpose then I came to serve you.”
-
-“You should not have come at all. You cannot serve me.”
-
-“On the contrary I have already done so. I know what you do not--the
-reason behind your--behind the supposed brigand business.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“You heard what part I suggested for the Baroness von Tulken in the
-tableau. She would know how to play the part to the life.”
-
-She sat up suddenly and faced me, her features flushed and her eyes
-eager.
-
-“How do you think you know this?”
-
-“I don’t think. I know. The scheme was laid here in Belgrade, and the
-men who carried it out were hired and paid by the Duke Barinski. I can
-produce the men who will identify him.”
-
-“It can’t be. How did you learn it?”
-
-“Money; and the aid of a staunch friend of yours.”
-
-“A friend of mine?”
-
-“Karasch.”
-
-“Karasch? Karasch.” She repeated the name in a tone of reminiscence,
-very gentle and low, and putting her hand to her eyes sat back as if in
-dismay or pleasure at the associations connected with it. But a moment
-afterwards the emotion, whether pleasure or pain, passed, and her face,
-as she took her hand from it and sat up again, was colder and sterner
-than I had ever seen it.
-
-“And you connect the Baroness with this?”
-
-“I do, and can prove it.” Her eyes hardened and her lip curled.
-
-“I congratulate you upon your manliness, Mr. Bergwyn. I know the real
-reason for your presence in Belgrade; the Baroness told me that: your
-old and intimate friend whom you are now maligning in this chivalrous
-way.”
-
-And then I knew that Elma had, indeed, been talking about that old
-time; and I understood many things; amongst them the mess of mischief
-she had brewed for me.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-A DECLARATION OF WAR.
-
-
-The position was so full of ludicrous absurdity owing to the monstrous
-distortion of my motives, and yet so embarrassing in my inability to
-explain things without going into the whole matter of my past relations
-with Elma, that I did not know whether to laugh at the absurdity or
-be angry at the injustice. I was angry and yet I wanted to laugh; but
-that did not help me to find a reply to Gatrina’s scornfully delivered
-indictment.
-
-My silence and apparent confusion made the matter worse. Every second
-that I hesitated seemed to increase her indignation; and I could not
-help perceiving that my influence was running down so fast that it
-would soon be many degrees below zero.
-
-My first attempt to remedy the matter was unfortunate.
-
-“We have got suddenly on to very delicate ground, Princess, but I
-can only say that I did not know the Baroness was in Belgrade when I
-resolved to come here.”
-
-“That means that you give the lie to a woman behind her back, Mr.
-Bergwyn; and that woman my friend and also an old friend of yours.”
-Cold, contemptuous and cutting in every syllable, her words hurt me to
-the quick.
-
-“Pardon me, you must not twist my words. I am telling you no more than
-the truth and no less. If the Baroness told you----”
-
-“_If?_” she broke in, indignantly. “Then it is _my_ word you question.”
-
-“No; that again has never entered my thoughts. The shortest plan will
-be for me to go in search of the Baroness and bring her here that this
-may be explained.”
-
-“There is no need, thank you. It is not sufficiently important.”
-
-“Will you tell me what she said?”
-
-“No, Mr. Bergwyn, I am not a talebearer,” she answered with a quick
-shrug of the shoulders.
-
-“You allow other people to carry tales to you. But that perhaps is your
-interpretation of consistency. Do you believe what I told you?”
-
-“Shall we change the subject, Mr. Bergwyn? I hope your impressions of
-Belgrade, so far as the scenery is concerned, have been pleasant.” Her
-assumption of courtesy was excellent.
-
-“Do you believe what I told you that I came here without knowing of the
-presence of the Baroness von Tulken?”
-
-“The views from the higher grounds are considered to be among the
-finest in Europe. Have you seen them?”
-
-I rose from my seat. “I will fetch the Baroness,” I said, bluntly.
-
-She paused, got up, and looking straight at me, said icily:
-
-“Can you not find some other opportunity to tell her what to say?”
-
-I caught my breath with the pain of this and bit my lip as I gripped
-the back of my chair tightly. I think she must have seen something of
-what I suffered in that moment. Then I bowed.
-
-“I have no answer to that, Princess. I shall leave Belgrade to-night
-for good. Of that you may now rest assured. Shall I take you back to
-the ballroom?”
-
-But instead of placing her hand on the arm I offered, she sat down
-again and turned her face away from me. I stood a few moments in some
-hesitation and then said: “I bid you farewell, Princess;” and walked
-away.
-
-“Mr. Bergwyn,” she called, when I had taken some half dozen paces. I
-stopped and turned. “I wish to speak to you.” She spoke without looking
-at me. I retraced my steps and stood by my former seat. Some moments of
-tense silence followed.
-
-I broke the silence. “This has become very embarrassing to me,
-Princess; but I have decided upon my course. There are some things I
-have to tell you, but with your permission I will write them and send
-them by Karasch whom you can question as to the truth of that part of
-them which he knows. I recognise now the mistake I made in coming to
-the capital, and I will remedy it at once. I can easily find a pretext
-for my sudden departure.”
-
-“No. You must not go. Please, sit down. Don’t you understand that we
-are probably being watched, although not overheard.”
-
-I resumed my seat then; and again we were silent.
-
-“You are angry at what I said?” she asked at length.
-
-“No. It was much too terrible to cause mere anger.”
-
-“I did not wish to give you pain.” Her face was still averted from me,
-and when I did not reply, she turned and looked swiftly at me. “I was
-angry but I--I did not mean it, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-“I am very glad to hear that. Shall we leave it there?”
-
-“You wish to humble me and force me to say that I am ashamed of the
-words?”
-
-“God forbid I should have such a thought. But you appear so incapable
-of doing me anything but injustice.”
-
-“I am not; but the position is so impossible.”
-
-“Only if you make it so.”
-
-“I want to believe in you, but--” she threw up her hands and sighed.
-
-“If you would do so, it would make all the difference.”
-
-“I am in such sore trouble that you cannot understand.”
-
-“On the contrary, I think I know more of the trouble than you yourself.
-I know the motive of the Queen in regard to your marriage with Prince
-Albrevics.”
-
-She started with sudden agitation. “You, a stranger to Servia, have
-heard that. Tell me.”
-
-“The Prince is impossible as a ruler for the country; not a hundred men
-in the country would bear with him on the throne; and in that case your
-own claim would be sacrificed. She would have you make the marriage for
-that reason--that her own plans in regard to her brother’s succession
-may be helped.”
-
-“Yes, that is what they have told me. It has come like a terrible and
-sudden blow. How did you hear it?”
-
-“Not from one source only, but several. It is the common knowledge of
-those who understand these things.”
-
-“I cannot believe it; I cannot. She is goodness itself to me, and has
-always been my friend. To me more than a sister; and I love her and
-trust her as one. I cannot believe it!” Her distress and pain as she
-spoke were intense. “They tell me that even now she and the King are
-prepared with the proclamation in favour of her brother, and only wait
-for my marriage to issue it. But it cannot be true.”
-
-“I only tell you what I am assured is true.”
-
-“What am I to do? Whom can I trust if not the best friend I have ever
-had?” She spoke almost wildly in her agitation.
-
-“If as you think we are being observed, Princess, may I counsel you
-to shew less feeling and excitement? Let me speak while you collect
-yourself. You must face the position calmly, for there is yet another
-danger that threatens you. There is a scheme to marry you to the Duke
-Barinski----”
-
-“You know of that, too!” she interposed. “How do you learn all these
-secrets?”
-
-“Let me put a question to you,” I said, as a thought occurred to me.
-“Who told you of the Queen’s intentions in regard to Prince Albrevics?”
-
-“I cannot tell you that.”
-
-“Then I will tell you. It was the Baroness von Tulken.” There was no
-need for her to say in words that my guess was right. Her start and
-glance did that.
-
-“I am almost afraid of you,” she said.
-
-“I don’t wish that; but I would rather have fear than mistrust. These
-things have been told to me plainly by those who seek to get the money
-I am able to control. It was only a guess that the Baroness had told
-you; and I will give you her motive. She desires to influence you to
-marry the Duke Barinski under the pretence that the marriage would
-reconcile the rival interests of the two contending families, and,
-having Russia behind it, would render the throne secure.”
-
-Her surprise at my knowledge of these things was so great that it
-appeared to dwarf the significance of the news itself.
-
-“It is wonderful,” she exclaimed.
-
-“The wonder is rather that while so many people know of all this, you
-yourself have remained ignorant of it so long. Can you bear that I tell
-you still more?”
-
-“Is there more to tell? I am already filled with amazement.”
-
-“Do you know the intentions of the army leaders? I mean so far as they
-affect you?”
-
-“Affect me, Mr. Bergwyn? They cannot affect me.”
-
-“Your eyes and ears have been dulled by the conditions and restrictions
-of the Court life. What I tell you is now for your hearing alone. The
-army will declare against the family of which you are a member, and
-will change the succession to the Throne. When that moment comes it
-will be fraught with peril to you in common with all the Obrenovics.”
-
-“No, no, the army is loyal. I have heard whispers of some such
-treachery; but there is no ground for them.”
-
-“That I know is the Court view--mine is the true one.” I spoke as
-deliberately and impressively as I could.
-
-“This very question has been discussed at the Palace within the last
-few days, a warning to the same effect was conveyed to the King and
-Queen; but they have made wide and searching inquiries; and we know
-there is no ground whatever to doubt the army’s loyalty. You have been
-misinformed.”
-
-“If there were any reason to doubt it, I should not speak positively,
-Princess; but there is none.”
-
-“Why do you wish to frighten me?”
-
-“I wish only that you shall know the truth.”
-
-“But if all you say were true, do you realise what my position would be
-and what my duty would be?”
-
-“It is because I realise the peril that encircles you that I speak
-so plainly. All the parties concerned--the Court, the army and the
-Russian--are struggling for their own objects; and however that
-struggle may end, you stand to lose all. If the Court wins, you will
-be set aside; if the Russian, you might gain the throne for a while,
-but the country would be convulsed by a revolution; if the army win,
-then as a possible Obrenovic claimant to the Throne, you would be an
-obstacle in their path and can judge what your position might then be.”
-
-She sat thinking intently. “If you are right, then there is no one
-about me whom I can trust,” she said, slowly. “Everything is a sham and
-everyone I have believed in false. Do you wish me to think this?”
-
-“I do not know all those whom you trust; but that you need someone to
-advise you in such a crisis is but too clear.”
-
-“You think I am helpless because I am a girl, I suppose?”
-
-“Don’t let us slur this thing with personal consideration. It is far
-too grave, Princess. Of the Queen’s intentions I can give you no
-proofs; but of the other dangers, I believe I can. Will you let me try?
-Can you bring yourself to be at my house to-morrow at midday?”
-
-She looked at me in blank astonishment at the suggestion.
-
-“You can bring with you anyone who is in your confidence. It is open to
-you as one in the Queen’s confidence to leave a card upon me. That will
-serve as an excuse, if you do not consider the issues too grave to be
-subject to any mere conventions. I do.”
-
-“If it were anyone else who proposed such a thing----”
-
-“But it is not,” I interposed; “so don’t refuse at once. If you do not
-come you can send me word.”
-
-“Of course, I trust you,” she said with the old simple directness, to
-my intense delight. “But there are so many reasons----”
-
-She paused. “I know that,” I replied. “But believe me they are nothing
-compared with those which should weigh with you. I shall hope to get
-you proofs of the army’s intentions.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“You must leave that to my contriving.” At that moment I became aware
-that someone was coming quickly toward us through the conservatory
-between us and the ballroom. “Someone is coming. Take no notice,” I
-whispered rapidly, and then in a loud tone: “I shall carefully consider
-all you have said, Princess, and thank you for your patience with me.”
-
-“This is the rare palm, Prince. Oh, someone is here.” It was Elma’s
-voice, and she added with gentle spite: “Why, it is Gatrina and Mr.
-Bergwyn. I thought you had gone an hour ago. I am so sorry to intrude.
-Come, Prince, let us go back. We are in the way.”
-
-“Not in the least, Baroness,” I answered. I had risen and saw that
-her companion was Prince Albrevics, and further that he was partially
-intoxicated.
-
-“I have been looking for you everywhere, Gatrina,” he said in a surly
-tone, his voice a little thick and unsteady with liquor.
-
-“I have been here by the Queen’s desire,” she replied.
-
-“Then you’ve been long enough, and can come away by mine.”
-
-He had been a handsome man in his day, and his figure still retained
-something of soldierly strength and uprightness. But the features had
-the heavy, sodden look of dissipation.
-
-“We have finished our conference, I think, Mr. Bergwyn?”
-
-“How very fortunate we just timed our coming not to disturb them,
-Prince, wasn’t it?” said Elma, with a sweet, significant smile.
-
-“Yes, I think we have finished, Princess;” and with a bow to me she put
-her arm on his and went away.
-
-Elma laughed loudly enough for all to hear; and when I turned to her
-she met my look with a glance of studied defiance.
-
-“You must be careful of him, Mr. Bergwyn. He is a very jealous man,
-passionately devoted to Gatrina and--one of the only real swordsmen in
-Servia.”
-
-“Will you sit down a moment. I have something to say.”
-
-“Shall I take dear Gatrina’s place? Do you really think I am worthy to
-fill it?” she asked in spiteful banter.
-
-“No, I don’t,” I answered, brutally. I couldn’t help it in my vexation.
-“But I wish to speak to you alone.”
-
-“Just like old times, isn’t it?” She laughed, as she settled herself
-comfortably in the chair and looked smilingly at me, as though we were
-about to have a chat on the terms of the most confidential friendship.
-As I did not speak at once, she affected nervousness and said with a
-pout: “You look dreadfully stern. If you are going to be disagreeable,
-I shall not stay. I want you to be like your old self.”
-
-“I am going to say something that should please you.”
-
-“At last? Oh, that will be delightful,” she exclaimed, rapturously;
-but her eyes were full of doubt, surprise and suspicion. “You have not
-said a single nice thing to me since you came.”
-
-“But before I say it, let me request you not to make any incorrect
-statement as to the reasons for my coming to Belgrade.”
-
-“Incorrect? What have I said that is incorrect?” she cried with
-innocent surprise.
-
-“That I came, not on business, but to see you.”
-
-“I only told Gatrina,” she said, laughing coquettishly, as though she
-had the right to tell the world if she pleased; and then added with
-significant insinuation: “You must have got very intimate with her
-if she told you my secrets. I’m afraid I shall really have to warn
-the Queen that you are a dangerous man for her advocate to be on such
-confidential terms with.”
-
-“I am not discussing that. I am merely asking you not to repeat that
-statement to anyone.”
-
-“But isn’t it true?”
-
-“No. And you know it is not,” I replied bluntly.
-
-“Then I am lost in amazement. You certainly did not come on the
-business of the loan; you are much to shrewd for that. And if you
-didn’t come to see me, whom did you come to see?” A most excellent
-assumption of surprise veiled this thrust.
-
-“I came as an American financier, Baroness, looking after my own
-interests.”
-
-But she laughed and shook her finger at me. “Fie, Mr. Bergwyn, fie.
-I did not look to you, the apostle of stolid truth, for such a
-statement.” Then with a change to reflective seriousness. “If it was
-not for me, then it must have been for Gatrina. That’s why I told her
-what I did and gave her a peep, just a little peep, into the past. But
-I have not shewn her your letters--yet. Not one of them; not even the
-least impressive of them. I could not do that; they are all sacred in
-my eyes. My most precious possessions.”
-
-“What is your object in all this--this burlesque?”
-
-“Reduced to plain direct questions are you now? But don’t you think you
-could answer that yourself? I’ll give you one answer. I want you on my
-side and I don’t intend, if I can help it, to let the Queen’s advocate
-win you over for the Queen. No, I don’t; although she has the advantage
-of having been rescued by you. You needn’t try and look as if that were
-not true; because it is, and I know that it is. And if you think a
-moment you will see what a service I am rendering her in letting people
-think you came here for my sake. Think of the scandal it would cause if
-it were known that you, the American man of millions, had rescued her
-and then followed her to Belgrade. It would ruin her--and people are
-very particular about reputations in this Court. The Queen is obliged
-to be on account of her own past.”
-
-“Perhaps you know how the Princess came to be in need of a rescuer?”
-
-She laughed again lightly. I was growing to hate her laughter.
-
-“Of course I do, seeing that Duke Barinski and I planned it all. The
-marriage with him would have taken place in Maglai, if she had not,
-most unfortunately for us, escaped.”
-
-“You are very frank.”
-
-“Why not. You have probably told her already that that brigand story
-was a fable and that we were at the bottom of it all. You shewed me you
-knew it all, this evening; and I don’t think so poorly of you as to
-dream you had not got proofs which satisfied you. I know what money can
-do in Belgrade.”
-
-“Russian money, you mean.”
-
-“Yes. Russian money, or any other,” she returned, parrying my thrust
-with the lightest air of indifference.
-
-“It has not bought the support of the army for this Russian scheme of
-yours.”
-
-“Ah, I heard that Colonel Petrosch’s jackal, Captain Nikolitch, had
-been closeted with you.”
-
-“You take a deep concern in my movements.”
-
-“I feel a deep interest in all that affects you. But you know that.
-Besides, it is my business to learn things. We have many agents, and
-Belgrade is only a small place.”
-
-“Agents?” I said hastily.
-
-“Agents or spies. I will call them spies, if you prefer. The point is
-that we have them--everywhere. I am one if you like. They form one of
-the main institutions of government in the Balkans. And in the Servian
-army they abound in all ranks and all regiments.”
-
-“Whatever I have thought of you I have never pictured you as a Russian
-spy.”
-
-She bit her lip and clenched her hands and her cheek flushed.
-
-“It is very easy for a millionaire to sneer,” she retorted, speaking
-deliberately; then with rising passion, she continued: “What would
-you have had me do? God knows I had little enough choice. I was an
-adventuress, living on my wits; a cheat if you will to keep my mother
-and myself from the gutter. Then I was detected; and wherever I looked,
-the finger of contempt met me. What chance had I? I took the only thing
-that offered--a husband; my looks, as I thought, gave me that; and I
-found him--what? A Russian spy. But it was not my looks he sought but
-my brains, my courage, my recklessness. I could do the work, and do it
-well; and when he died I was in too deeply to withdraw.”
-
-She paused and her bosom laboured with her vehemence.
-
-“No, I won’t pretend--to you. I could have withdrawn, of course, had
-I wished. But I did not, for it gave me not only all that a woman is
-supposed to care for, dress, money, and influence; but also what a
-woman is not supposed to crave--power. I was feared; and it is by fear
-I stand where I do. I could have married again, not once but a dozen
-times; I have been wooed until men cried that I was ice. And to them I
-was. What were men or marriage to me? I had tried marriage; and as for
-my heart, it lay in my breast like a dead thing--for the sake of the
-past.”
-
-She looked searchingly at me as I made no reply.
-
-“I am not acting now. I was when I first came to you yesterday; hoping
-or fearing I know not which or what. I have had to learn to act to play
-any part at will. To fawn, to coquet, to jest, to lure, to lie, to
-appear false when I was true, and true when I was false. A spy must
-learn these things--they are the tricks of the life. But I will not lie
-to you. That I promise you. I have told you all plainly that you may
-know me for what I am.”
-
-I had risen in the hope of stopping her. “I beg you to say no more,” I
-said.
-
-“I have not quite finished. Please sit again. I have to speak of you
-and Gatrina--the Queen’s advocate.”
-
-“I would rather you say nothing.”
-
-“I have a purpose in telling you the truth. You have to take a side
-either with or against me. If you are against me, I will fight you
-fairly--but I will use every weapon I have. I know that you came here
-to follow Gatrina; I know that you saved her; my instinct tells me why
-you followed her--and I tell you bluntly, she can be nothing to you.”
-
-“I neither accept nor deny any conclusions you draw,” I said, with a
-smile.
-
-“I need no confirmation from you. I have questioned Gatrina. I knew how
-it was with her before you came; and when I left your house yesterday,
-your dog gave me the clue to everything. We have agents even in Samac
-and Poabja, Mr. Bergwyn; and when your man Karasch was traced to your
-house--after a week spent in inquiries here in Belgrade--the rest was
-easy. The telegraph runs to Samac; and Poabja is but a short hour’s
-ride from there.”
-
-“Why are you so bitter against the Princess?”
-
-“I am not bitter against her--unless you force me. She must act in
-the Russian interest--that means she must marry Duke Barinski. But I
-have other motives, private and personal, far stronger than those of
-policy, that make me tell you you must not and shall not think of her.”
-
-“And what do you seek from me?”
-
-“You may join with us in effecting that marriage, or you may not, as
-you please. But what you must do is to convince Gatrina beyond question
-that your coming here has no connection whatever with what passed at
-the time you rescued her. I have prepared the way for that.”
-
-“You are very thoughtful, no doubt, but I don’t understand you.”
-
-“I have told her that once we were betrothed and that you have come
-here in search of me. You can confirm that.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“By renewing the old relations--for the time--and making the matter
-public.”
-
-“You want me to act that lie in order to deceive her?”
-
-“To convince her of the necessity of marrying the Duke Barinski.”
-
-I had to clench my teeth to keep my indignation under.
-
-“I will not do it,” I said, clipping the words short.
-
-“Then we are to fight, Mr. Bergwyn,” she said, as she rose. “I shall
-find other means and take further steps. I shall poison her against
-you, if I have to shew her your letters in proof of what I told her.
-Will you give me your arm? I am sorry you make me your enemy and
-hers--it may mean danger for her.”
-
-“We will see,” I replied; and having led her back to the ballroom I got
-away from the Palace as soon as I could, to think over the latest and
-most strange development of the situation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-PRINCE ALBREVICS.
-
-
-When I came to think over that promise to Gatrina, to furnish proofs of
-the army’s intentions, I felt I had sawn off a log which I might find
-too big to haul. And the thought made me considerably uneasy.
-
-I had given the pledge in a moment of excitement; and now that I was
-cool, the difficulty of keeping it looked very formidable indeed.
-
-It troubled me a good deal more than the frank declaration of war from
-Elma--although that promised quite sufficient embarrassments of its
-own. That she would keep her word I had no doubt; and I might gamble on
-it that she would do her worst.
-
-Yet in one respect it cleared my course. There was no longer any sort
-of use in finessing with the Russian party. Elma knew too much for me
-to think of being able to deceive her; while her preposterous condition
-that there should be a sham renewal of our old engagement was too
-repugnant and preposterous to be entertained for an instant.
-
-Neither was there any thought of coquetting with the Court. That
-involved apparent acquiescence in the scheme for Gatrina’s marriage;
-the very thing I was firmly bent upon stopping at any cost.
-
-I was thus confirmed in my decision of the previous day to secure the
-influence of the army, and to trust to that to carry me through. But it
-was just in that respect I had increased my difficulties by the pledge
-to Gatrina. I could only keep it by getting Colonel Petrosch to back up
-my statement to her; and here was the trouble.
-
-I recalled Nikolitch’s advice to speak plainly to the Colonel about
-Gatrina; but it was the one subject of all others which I was
-altogether disinclined to discuss with him.
-
-And the disinclination was strengthened when he and Nikolitch arrived;
-for he looked about the last individual in the world whom I would have
-chosen for a confidence of the kind.
-
-His appearance impressed me mainly with a sense of cold, inflexible,
-unsympathetic strength and capacity. He was a hatchet-headed man in
-the fifties, with a long, narrow, keen, undemonstrative face; one of
-those straight, thin-lipped mouths which seem intended for the close
-guardianship of secrets; and an abnormally long heavy chin which
-suggested resolute purpose, dogged persistence and perhaps cruelty;
-while his piercing, hard, close-set eyes tended to confirm this
-suggestion of cruelty. Altogether he was capable of being an ugly enemy.
-
-He was sparing of words in the interview; and whatever he had guessed
-as to the real motives of my presence in Belgrade he was careful to let
-no hint of it appear; and he went straight to the pith of our meeting.
-
-He expressed great pleasures in seeing me, gave Nikolitch a word of
-praise for his share in having brought the meeting about, said he
-understood I wished to secure the influence of the army in certain
-eventualities, and then asked me point blank whether I meant to help
-the existing Government financially.
-
-I answered guardedly that I was not as yet satisfied of the present
-stability of things, but that when there was a really stable Government
-I should be prepared to guarantee a loan.
-
-“Would you regard as sufficiently stable a new Government having the
-united army at its back?”
-
-“Yes, if founded without violence and commanding the support of the
-country.”
-
-He thought this over a moment. “It is all we can ask,” he said. “Will
-you put that in writing, Mr. Bergwyn?”
-
-I assented, and he immediately placed materials before me and waited in
-silence while I wrote out an undertaking on the lines I had indicated.
-This I read aloud to him, and he marked every word, suggesting one or
-two trifling alterations. I made these and then held the paper ready
-to hand to him. I did this to convince him I was earnest; and then I
-opened up the other matter.
-
-“If I give you this it amounts to a pledge that I take the side of the
-army, Colonel Petrosch. What am I to receive in exchange?”
-
-“I do not think I understand you.”
-
-“You are gaining much by this agreement--the assurance that the
-financial help required by the Government will not be found by me. To
-be candid I want something in return.”
-
-“Whatever the committee of officers can in fairness pledge the new
-Government to do, they will--but you will be able to make your terms
-then.”
-
-“I want the assistance of your party now.”
-
-“In what way?”
-
-“My friend Nikolitch has told you I am especially concerned for the
-safety of the Princess Gatrina.”
-
-“Yes.” Not the ghost of a feeling even of interest did he shew.
-
-“I wish to be assured of her safety.”
-
-“There can be no difficulty in giving such an assurance,” he answered
-after a moment’s thought. “So far as I am personally concerned I would
-do my utmost. But you have some further question to put, I see.”
-
-“She is, I think, coming here to-day. I wish her to be convinced of the
-feeling of the army, and that the officers are unanimously resolved
-upon their course of action.”
-
-There was a pause, and I saw Nikolitch glance at me in astonishment and
-from me to the Colonel.
-
-“This is a very grave request, Mr. Bergwyn,” said Petrosch slowly. “Do
-you realise that you are asking me, one of the leaders of the army, to
-reveal our intentions to one of the Queen’s closest friends?”
-
-“You are gaining much from this--” and I held up the paper--“I am
-gaining nothing.”
-
-“I fear I cannot do it, Mr. Bergwyn,” he said, reluctantly. “I might be
-very gravely compromised, to say nothing of the risk to be run.”
-
-“What risk?”
-
-“That the news would be carried straight to the Queen.”
-
-“It has been carried already,” I said.
-
-“How do you mean?”
-
-“I was at the Palace last night and I heard from one who has ample
-means of knowledge, that the plans of the army had been divulged to the
-Court, and that diligent inquiries had been made in consequence. That
-risk is therefore nothing.”
-
-“Do you mean there are traitors amongst us?”
-
-“I deem it extremely probable,” I said, drily.
-
-“I cannot think where?” he declared after a pause.
-
-“Is it the practice of traitors to advertise themselves?”
-
-“This is very grave news--very grave, indeed.”
-
-“Not perhaps so grave as you think--for the result of the inquiries
-made was to satisfy the Court of the loyalty of the army as a whole.”
-
-“Are you sure?”
-
-“I don’t talk just for talk’s sake, Colonel.”
-
-“But it would be very different if I myself were to see the Princess.
-No, I fear I cannot do that.”
-
-“Very well. Then I’ll tear up this paper and we’ll call the matter off.”
-
-“You are asking too much of me, Mr. Bergwyn. I must have time to
-consult others.”
-
-“I never change my terms, Colonel Petrosch. You decide yes or no, right
-now, or I must seek other means.”
-
-He leant back in dire perplexity.
-
-“You would disclose no plans, merely give proofs that the feeling of
-the army is solid; and what you said would be received under a pledge
-of confidence.”
-
-“What is your object?”
-
-“My sole purpose in coming to Belgrade is to secure her safety,
-Colonel; and you can therefore judge how far I am prepared to go.”
-
-“The Princess is one of our grave embarrassments, Mr. Bergwyn. If
-anything I could say would enable you to influence her to leave
-Belgrade for a time, it would be different.”
-
-“I have little influence, I fear.”
-
-He threw up his hands and shook his head, and was silent.
-
-During the pause Buller brought me a card. It was Gatrina’s. She had
-come after all.
-
-“The Princess is here, Colonel, and with your leave I will go to her.
-I’ll send my man in ten minutes, and you can say just yes or no.”
-
-“You will secure the pledge of secrecy?”
-
-“Otherwise I will not ask you to say a word.”
-
-It looked as if I were going to win, after all, and I felt in a
-confident mood as I hurried to Gatrina, giving Buller his instructions
-on the way.
-
-An elderly woman was with her, at whom I glanced with little interest
-as the name, the Countess Vashti, was mentioned.
-
-Gatrina met me with a stiff ceremonious bow; and her voice was cold and
-hard. But her eyes were full of trouble.
-
-“We come by the Queen’s desire, Mr. Bergwyn, to bid you a formal
-welcome to Belgrade on her and His Majesty’s behalf,” she said,
-formally and distantly.
-
-I expressed my gratification in equally formal terms; and we sat
-talking generalities, about the Capital, the ball of the previous
-night, and so on; just commonplace surface chatter, until Buller
-entered and gave me a slip of paper with the one word “Yes” written
-upon it. I had won; and after a little more make-weight twaddle for the
-benefit of the Countess Vashti, I got to the pith of things.
-
-“There are some points arising out of our conversation at the Palace,
-last night, Princess, which have occurred to me, and I should be glad
-of an opportunity of discussing them with you privately.”
-
-“Her Majesty’s object in desiring me to see you to-day, Mr. Bergwyn,
-was that I should speak with you privately if you desired it.” As she
-said this she glanced at the companion, who bowed acquiescence.
-
-I rose at once and giving the old lady a bundle of papers I led Gatrina
-to another room.
-
-“I told you last night that I would endeavour to give you proofs of
-what I said. As to the aim of the Russian party there is no need for
-proof; the Baroness herself last night admitted to me that she had
-instigated your abduction; that you were to have been taken to Maglai;
-and that when there your marriage with Duke Barinski was to be forced
-upon you.”
-
-“She has said almost as much to me to-day--among other things,” was her
-reply, very coldly spoken. I could guess at the “other things,” but
-there was no time then to enter upon any defence.
-
-“As to the power and feeling of the army I can prove my words. Colonel
-Petrosch is here and he will himself convince you. Will you come to
-him?”
-
-“It seems incredible. How have you prevailed upon him to speak of this
-to me?”
-
-“Does that matter, so long as he does speak?”
-
-“I shall be at liberty to report what he may say?”
-
-“No, certainly not. It is for your ears only. You asked for the proofs
-of what I said. I offer it to you; but it must, of course, be under a
-pledge of secrecy.”
-
-She hesitated in anxious perplexity. “I will see him. I can at any rate
-act upon any knowledge so gained.”
-
-“It is for that object I wish you to be convinced.”
-
-We went then to the room where I had left the Colonel and Nikolitch,
-and both men rose and bowed to Gatrina as we entered, the Colonel
-stiffly, Nikolitch with unmistakable interest.
-
-“Time is pressing and the interview need not take long,” I said. “What
-I wish is that you will convince the Princess Gatrina as you have
-convinced me, Colonel Petrosch, of the intentions of the officers for
-whom you speak so far as they affect her.”
-
-Gatrina sat down and looked at him very closely.
-
-The Colonel on his side was not without embarrassment as to how to
-begin. At length he said: “The Princess will, no doubt, be aware that
-the family of which she is a member has incurred the extreme hostility
-of the army. And what I said to you before, Mr. Bergwyn, I repeat
-now--if the Princess consults her safety and interests she will leave
-the country at once.”
-
-Gatrina’s lip curled. “And if she does not consult either by adopting a
-course which she would consider cowardly and consent to be frightened
-away, what then?”
-
-Antagonism and disbelief inspired the reply: the antagonism founded
-upon the Court view of the army’s attitude; the disbelief proceeding
-from her own private feelings. Nikolitch pulled his moustache and
-glanced at her with a mixture of admiration and concern; while the grim
-old Colonel shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“I should apologise, Princess. I am not your Highness’s adviser, nor
-had I any right to assume such a position.”
-
-“Is this all you have brought me to hear, Mr. Bergwyn?” she asked, with
-scarcely veiled disdain.
-
-“No. I wish you to be convinced on two points--that the army is united
-and must be the deciding force in the present crisis; and that it is
-against your chance of succession to the Throne. Colonel Petrosch can
-speak with authority on both--if he will.”
-
-“On both those points I can speak absolutely,” he replied; and very
-succinctly and clearly he made good his case as to the unanimity of the
-great majority of the regiments. That he succeeded in impressing her
-deeply was plain.
-
-“And as to myself?” she asked.
-
-“I much regret to have to say the army would not consent to serve under
-your Highness, or any member of your family,” he answered, decision in
-every syllable.
-
-The gravity of the words appealed to us all.
-
-Gatrina paused. “Any member of my family, Colonel Petrosch?” she
-repeated. “That would include His Majesty himself.”
-
-“Madam, I have spoken under pressure; but my words stand and are not
-to be recalled,” he declared. “I speak not alone for myself, but for
-the entire committee of officers.”
-
-“Your words are full of dangerous insinuations. What do you mean to
-imply?”
-
-“I can add little to what I have said. The plans of the army have been
-much canvassed in the Court and elsewhere, and much misunderstood. But
-they have been decided upon; although, of course, that decision is
-secret.”
-
-“Why do you tell me this?” she asked quickly.
-
-“At Mr. Bergwyn’s desire.”
-
-“And why?”
-
-“Your pardon; that is a question to be put to him.”
-
-I got up to end the interview; and after a moment Gatrina arose also,
-and with a bow to the two men went out with me. We returned to the room
-where we had been alone.
-
-“I have kept my word. I trust you are convinced,” I said.
-
-“I am bewildered. I don’t know whether to take it seriously and be
-gravely alarmed, or to scoff at the whole thing.”
-
-“I think you must take it very seriously.”
-
-“But it means that the officers are all but in open revolt against the
-Throne, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-“You know the many reports to the same effect, all quite openly
-canvassed.”
-
-“How have you influenced Colonel Petrosch to speak in this way to me?”
-
-“It must be enough that he has so spoken. The question does not touch
-that of your decision as to your own action.”
-
-“Do you counsel me to run away, then?” she cried, indignantly and
-almost contemptuously.
-
-“I am afraid I have no influence with you.”
-
-“No. That is true--now.”
-
-“Why do you emphasise that word in particular--now?”
-
-She disregarded the question, but after thinking earnestly for a few
-seconds, her brows knitted and her face intensely serious, she said:
-“The one serious thing is the statement that the regiments are now
-unanimous. Do you believe that?”
-
-“I have not the shadow of a doubt.”
-
-“Why are you so set upon frightening me?”
-
-“You asked me that last night. I told you I have no such wish; I desire
-only that you shall know the truth.”
-
-“I shall not leave my country, Mr. Bergwyn--even if all this be true.
-Nothing shall make me do that.”
-
-“I feared that would be your decision.”
-
-“You hoped I should be a coward then! Thank you.”
-
-“That is not how I should describe my thoughts; but phrases are not of
-much consequence where things themselves are so grave.”
-
-“If what this Colonel insinuates be true, the Queen herself would be in
-trouble and even in danger; would you have me desert her? Do you mean
-you think that would not be the act of a coward?”
-
-“If your remaining to marry the Prince Albrevics would help her, I
-should say it would be cowardly to leave.”
-
-She flushed with anger. “You do Her Majesty wrong and dishonour, Mr.
-Bergwyn, in saying that. She knows now that, like the rest of us, she
-has been mistaken in regard to the Prince. I have spoken freely with
-her and the marriage will not take place.”
-
-“I am very glad to hear it,” I replied in a carefully restrained tone,
-hiding alike my surprise and unbounded delight at the news. But she had
-not exhausted her anger against me.
-
-“Like so many men you seem to find delight in wronging one of the
-noblest women that ever lived--the staunchest friend that a girl could
-have.” It was an easy inference that the Queen had talked her over, but
-I admired Gatrina all the more for this chivalrous and warm defence.
-
-“If it be possible I should like you to believe that I find no pleasure
-at all in wronging any woman. But I do not take the same view of the
-Queen as you do.”
-
-“You have allowed yourself to be poisoned against her. I know by whom,
-and, perhaps, you are not to blame.” A reference to Elma this and an
-unmistakable sneer.
-
-“I think I understand your reference, and there are several things I
-wish to make plainer to you----”
-
-“I beg you not to trouble, Mr. Bergwyn. I wish to leave now.”
-
-“You will let me explain surely.”
-
-“There is no room for any explanations. I know enough, thank you. Let
-me go to the Countess Vashti.”
-
-“You are very unjust and very hard. Last night after I had seen you I
-had a conversation with the----”
-
-“I am quite aware of that,” she broke in, smiling angrily.
-
-“For God’s sake don’t misunderstand me,” I cried, earnestly. “You must
-let me speak of it. It means----”
-
-Impressed by my vehemence, I think, she was going to listen when
-the door of the room was thrust open with some violence, and Prince
-Albrevics entered, followed by Elma herself. The Prince was furiously
-angry; his face more crimson than usual even, and his manner truculent
-and threatening.
-
-“So it’s true and you _are_ here, Gatrina. What is the meaning of it? I
-have come to fetch you away.”
-
-His hectoring tone and the insolent ignoring of me made me hot.
-
-“The Princess Gatrina is here by Her Majesty’s desire, sir,” I said, as
-calmly as I could.
-
-“I have nothing to say to you--yet,” he answered, first giving me a
-vicious look and then ostentatiously turning his back upon me.
-
-Elma laughed, audibly enough for us all to hear.
-
-“I have no need of your escort, Prince,” said Gatrina. “The Countess
-Vashti is with me.”
-
-“You will come with me,” he retorted, curtly.
-
-“On the contrary, I shall go with the Countess. Will you take me to
-her, Mr. Bergwyn?”
-
-“Certainly.” I went toward the door. I observed that she had not taken
-the slightest notice of Elma.
-
-“I have the right to escort you, Gatrina. We don’t need the
-interference of any foreigners.”
-
-Gatrina was in the act of leaving but at this she stopped and turned to
-him.
-
-“You are in error, Prince. You have no longer the right which you
-imply. Her Majesty will explain to you the reason. Your arm, if you
-please, Mr. Bergwyn.” And taking my arm she swept past him, her head
-high and looking every inch a Princess.
-
-He changed colour at her words, and glared at me with a malignity that
-I expected to find utterance in fierce words. But he held them back and
-just did the cursing internally, I suppose.
-
-“The Princess’s carriage,” I said to Buller as we crossed the hall to
-the room where the Countess was waiting.
-
-Just as she came out and we stood in the hall, an unexpected incident
-occurred.
-
-Chris appeared from somewhere and, recognising Gatrina, rushed to her
-with signs of extravagant delight.
-
-She left my arm and bending over him patted him and made much of him in
-her old way; and the dog whimpered and frolicked about her, fawning on
-and licking her as if he had been a young pup. In the midst of it Elma
-and Prince Albrevics came out and watched them.
-
-“What’s the meaning of that?” growled the Prince, with a scowl.
-
-“One might almost think they were old friends,” answered Elma, in her
-sweetest tone.
-
-Gatrina paid no heed to either remark, although she must have heard
-them both; and when she raised her head I saw in her brightly shining
-eyes an expression I had not seen since I came to Belgrade.
-
-“Down, Chris, down,” I cried, for the dog was loath to let her go.
-
-“He remembers me, Mr. Bergwyn; I should not like him to have
-forgotten,” said Gatrina, very gently, but meaningly. It was her way of
-answering Elma’s sneer.
-
-I accompanied them to the carriage, Chris coming with us, and his great
-wistful eyes followed her all the time until she drove away.
-
-As I returned into the house, the Prince passed me on the threshold. I
-stopped, meaning to have some plain-pointed talk with him.
-
-But he prevented that. “I don’t quarrel with a man in his own house,
-sir, but we shall meet again,” he said, and hurried away without giving
-me a chance to reply.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-THE INSULT.
-
-
-Gatrina’s visit resulted in little more than a fiasco, owing to the
-interruption of Prince Albrevics. I re-entered the house in a quite fit
-mood to quarrel with Elma for having brought him upon the scene as she
-had.
-
-Nikolitch had come out in search of me, however, and was speaking to
-her in the hall, so that I could say nothing.
-
-“You will not be long, Bergwyn?” he asked.
-
-“I am ready now.”
-
-“I will wait while you despatch your business with Colonel Petrosch,
-Mr. Bergwyn,” said Elma, readily. “I am in no hurry.”
-
-“I regret I can give you no time to-day, Baroness,” I said, bluntly
-intending it as her dismissal. But she laughed it away.
-
-“You can come and tell me so when he has gone,” she answered, and
-turned into one of the rooms, contriving to convey a most irritating
-suggestion that she was quite at home and perfectly accustomed to
-humour my whims.
-
-“How did she know Petrosch was here?” asked Nikolitch. “She is a
-wonderful woman. She knows everything. She will understand why he has
-come.”
-
-“Let her,” said I, with a shrug. “It makes no difference;” and with
-that we went back to the Colonel.
-
-The rest of the business was soon despatched. I handed him the
-undertaking I had drawn up and thus stood pledged to support the cause
-of the army on the conditions I had already specified. When the Colonel
-had gone Nikolitch remained, and when we had fixed up an engagement to
-dine together that night, he said:
-
-“I think you have done the right thing, Bergwyn; and there is no doubt
-your action will strengthen the moderates among us. It will make
-against the policy of violence; and may render it impossible. I hope so
-with all my heart,” he said, earnestly.
-
-“What will happen?”
-
-“A forced abdication. As I have told you it has been put to the King
-more than once, and he has refused obstinately. But now, backed by the
-united army, it will be different.”
-
-“If he should still refuse?”
-
-“He’ll have to go. The Queen has made it imperative. For a clever woman
-she has made amazing blunders. Of course you understand the Russian
-partisans won’t love you any more than the Queen will continue to be
-friendly to you now.”
-
-“If she gets to know what has passed.”
-
-He nodded significantly toward the room where Elma had gone. “She’ll
-see to that, probably--unless she has some other move. If you can stop
-her, I should.”
-
-“I have no influence with her and seek none.”
-
-“That’s not the story she persists in telling, my dear fellow,” he said
-with a slow smile.
-
-“It’s the story I tell--and it’s the true one, Nikolitch. What story do
-you mean this of hers?”
-
-“I’ll tell you to-night. I’ve a lot to do now. Of course you know your
-own cards; but if I were you, I should keep in with her. She can be
-dangerous, as I’ve told you more than once. Well, till this evening
-then,” he added lightly, and went away.
-
-What story had Elma been spreading now? I had better know it at once, I
-thought, and went to her to ask.
-
-“The Colonel has gone, then? And the Captain, too. I am glad you have
-him for a friend, Mr. Bergwyn,” she said, in her lightest manner. “You
-would have found Belgrade dull without a man friend. Yet you don’t
-quite understand the captain’s position?”
-
-“Did you stay to enlighten me?”
-
-“Oh dear, no. I have much more important matters to discuss. But I
-wish I had warned you that although he is on excellent terms with the
-officers--as he is with everyone, being a delightful man--yet he is
-not in the inner circle. He is of great use to them; but he knows only
-what they choose to tell him. He has been of great use to them, for
-instance, in getting you over to their cause; but of course he has led
-you to make a great mistake.”
-
-“He has just told me that you have spread some report concerning you
-and myself. What is that?”
-
-“I thought he would. He hinted to me just now in the minute I had with
-him that he had heard something; and naturally I did not undeceive him.
-He seemed greatly mystified; of course I knew why,” she added.
-
-“Perhaps you will enlighten me?”
-
-“Don’t you think it is rather a delicate question?”
-
-“I wish you would speak plainly,” I broke out, brusquely.
-
-“I suppose it was in this way. You see you and I were together for some
-considerable time last night at the Palace; and as people had heard
-rumours of the reason for your presence in Belgrade--rumours connecting
-us, I mean; I suppose they put two and two together--at least they put
-us together, that is to say.”
-
-“Captain Nikolitch puts the origin of the rumour down to you, Baroness.”
-
-“I don’t think I object. American millionaires are very rare in
-Belgrade, and if people chose to think that I was engaged to one, was
-it likely that I should have so little of feminine vanity as to be
-displeased?”
-
-I understood now the reason for Gatrina’s coldness, her marked
-estrangement during her visit, and the undermeaning of some of her
-words. She had heard this infernal story. Elma enjoyed my dismay; and I
-believe understood the cause of it.
-
-“Do you mean that you actually gave countenance to such a thing?”
-
-“Pray don’t look so painfully shocked, Mr. Bergwyn,” she mocked.
-
-“You will place me in the extremely invidious position of having to
-deny the report, Baroness.”
-
-Her laugh at this had all the ring of genuineness. “How will you do
-it, Mr. Bergwyn?” she asked, in renewed mockery of my earnestness.
-“Think. How can you do it? You and I know that it has no sort of
-foundation in fact; but how can we stop the tongue of gossip? Let us be
-sensible and just live it down. Other people’s names have been coupled
-together in the same way in mistake before now; but they have not
-been married in consequence. Nor shall we be, I suppose. But it is a
-delightful situation none the less, and just what I desired.”
-
-“I remembered what you said last night,” I exclaimed, angrily.
-
-“You had better laugh at it all than be angry.”
-
-“I have no laughter to spare for it.”
-
-“Ah, that is because of Gatrina. Naturally, too. But it was she who
-made it necessary, and of course, so far as she is concerned, the
-desired effect has already been produced. In a week or two the thing
-will die a natural death, as such things do; and neither of us will be
-a krone the worse.”
-
-“I think you are the most exasperating woman that ever lived,” I said
-hotly.
-
-“I can quite understand that thought. As I told you last night I have
-to play many parts. This one you and Gatrina together have forced upon
-me.” She spoke lightly and shrugged her shoulders, but after a moment
-was serious. “I told you also, last night, that if you forced me to
-fight, I would do it openly. Gatrina’s trust in you was in our way
-and had to be broken somehow. It was broken when she heard this news.
-The Queen had to use the utmost pressure to induce her to come to you
-to-day. Her Majesty did me the honour to ask me in Gatrina’s presence
-whether there was any truth in the report of my secret engagement to
-you--it is supposed to be no more than secret--and I could not, at
-least I did not, deny it.”
-
-“It is infamous,” I broke in, passionately.
-
-“Infamous if you like, but necessary. You have seen Gatrina for the
-last time, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-“I will go to the Queen herself and deny it.”
-
-“You might, if she would receive you. But Gatrina was supposed to be
-coming as a last step to win you and your money to the side of the
-Court. Can she carry back any news other than that her mission as
-Queen’s Advocate has failed? You are now, indeed, pledged to support
-the cause of Her Majesty’s bitterest enemies--the army. And even angry
-as you are now, you can judge the prospect of your reception. You have
-chosen your side and must take the bitter with the sweet.”
-
-She dwelt on all this with telling deliberateness, and the pitiless
-logic of every measured word told upon me. But the effect was not what
-she had intended. Instead of growing more angry, I began to regain
-coolness. The perception of difficulties has always a steadying result
-with me, and I put aside my anger at once. It was too dangerous a
-luxury at such a juncture.
-
-“You are building your theory upon the assumption that I have thrown in
-my lot with Colonel Petrosch and his friends. Do so by all means if it
-pleases you,” I said.
-
-“I judge by what I have found here: but I shall know for certain
-within a few hours. I do not act in the dark. But if you have not, it
-will make no difference in regard to the Queen’s Advocate.”
-
-“I prefer not to discuss the Princess with you.”
-
-“You will find someone else who will wish to do so. Prince Albrevics
-attributes the failure of his marriage to you and will force a quarrel
-upon you. Rumours of that Bosnian adventure have reached him. I wish to
-warn you.”
-
-“Have you anything more to say?” I asked as I rose. “If you have, it
-will be well to say it at once, as you will have no opportunity in the
-future.”
-
-“I suppose I have made you feel like that, and that you won’t believe I
-am sorry. You have driven me so hard. Yet I--” She paused, looked down,
-and then rising came toward me and said half wistfully, half defiantly:
-“I need not be your enemy, and would much rather be your friend. Why
-won’t you see this? All the influence I have could be yours if you
-would only let it be so.”
-
-“I prefer to trust to myself and take my own course, thank you,” I
-said, coldly.
-
-She sighed wearily. “I suppose we all have our hours of weakness and
-perhaps this is mine. I am not ashamed for you to see it. Let me be
-your friend, Chase. I--I won’t ask for anything else. But I feel such a
-coward now for all that I have had to do against you. I could help you
-in all--all except Gatrina. That can never be possible for you. But you
-are being so shamefully betrayed.”
-
-“I have given you my answer.”
-
-“Yes, I know, and I know how dogged you are. But if you trust
-these officers, this Colonel Petrosch, he will only deceive you.
-I told you before, that their policy is to be summed up in one
-word--assassination; if once they resolve to move. We all know that and
-dread it for the sake of Servia. And if you help them with money, they
-will take it and only lie to you. Everyone lies here. It is the common
-coin of negotiation. Trust me a little, just a little, for the sake of
-old times, and I’ll be true to you. I swear on my soul I will.”
-
-“I do not need your help.”
-
-“I am not acting or lying now. Trust me and I will give up all this
-Russian spying business and never touch it again. I want to feel I am
-working for you, not against you. My God, I will do anything, anything,
-if you will but let me.”
-
-“I have already had too clear a proof of that to wish for any more.
-Your carriage is waiting, Baroness.”
-
-She gazed at me intently; and gradually her features and the expression
-of her eyes hardened.
-
-“As you will--but that decision will cost you dear. The men whom you
-have helped or are going to help with your money are assassins; and
-when they have done their work and when the city runs red with blood,
-and both the Queen and her advocate, Gatrina, lie dead among their
-victims, you will remember this hour and your rejection of my help; and
-eat out your heart in belated, unavailing regret. Do you still persist
-in sending me away?”
-
-“Your carriage is waiting,” I repeated doggedly; and she went without
-another word.
-
-I returned to my library feeling very much disturbed. I was cooking a
-dish that didn’t promise to be easy of digestion. I could see that,
-without the help of Nikolitch’s words and Elma’s dramatic confirmation
-of them. What she had said about assassination had impressed me more
-than I cared to own; and I recalled Nikolitch’s uneasy hope on that
-score. Two people more unlike than he and Elma it would be difficult to
-find; and yet both appeared to hold much the same opinion.
-
-Then there was this reported engagement to Elma and all the string
-of complications arising out of it. There was only too much reason
-to believe that it had served its end, as she had said, in regard to
-Gatrina. It was like a net about my feet, entangling and hampering me;
-and how to cut myself free from it was more than I could see.
-
-I had given my word to Gatrina on the previous night that my coming to
-Belgrade had had nothing to do with Elma; and if I had but known of the
-report that morning I could have denied it to her. I could have gnashed
-my teeth as I recalled her phrase about “other things” she had heard
-from Elma at the Court. I could see now what she had meant; and it was
-just the opening I could have used, had I but known; perhaps given
-me for the very purpose. I had let it pass in ignorance; but I could
-readily understand how she would interpret my silence.
-
-To contradict it all now was infinitely difficult. I couldn’t walk
-about the streets shouting it out to the crowd. The door of the Palace
-was closed to me; and probably that of Gatrina’s house as well.
-
-But her visit by the Queen’s desire, as she had so coldly said, gave me
-the right to return it, and I did so that afternoon. Without result,
-however. The Princess was at the Palace, I was informed.
-
-After a moment’s thought I resolved to go there; but I did no good by
-that. After waiting some time a message was brought me that Her Majesty
-regretted she could not receive me just then. I asked for Gatrina
-next, only to be again refused; and I returned home in a bad temper in
-consequence.
-
-I had not recovered it when the time came for my appointment with
-Nikolitch for dinner; and he saw it.
-
-“You look worried,” he said.
-
-“It’ll pass off,” I replied.
-
-“No bad news from the States, I hope? Not another financial crisis.
-They flourish over there gaily, don’t they?”
-
-“Men make fools of themselves there as elsewhere; and with us it takes
-that form pretty often. By the way, you were going to tell me some news
-about the Baroness von Tulken.”
-
-“They say you’re engaged to be married to her.”
-
-“Who says it?”
-
-“Well, I rather fancy she does.”
-
-“It isn’t true. That’s all there is to it.”
-
-“That’s what the other side say.”
-
-“Who are the other side; and why the devil do people want to gossip and
-chatter about me?”
-
-“My dear fellow, the place is full of gossip about you. I don’t know
-whether you care to hear it.”
-
-“It don’t amount to anything what they say--at least to me.”
-
-“I suppose it doesn’t. But when a man’s as rich as you are, they will
-talk. Have you heard that story about your dog?”
-
-“My dog? What do you mean?”
-
-“That big brute of yours, Chris. They say he saved the Princess
-Gatrina’s life in the Bosnian hills or somewhere; and that you were in
-it too. Of course I laughed at it.”
-
-“Naturally. So should I,” I said; but I was in no laughing mood. “How
-do you suppose such a tale got going?”
-
-“Someone with a grudge against the Princess started it. You know what
-spiteful devils there are hanging about the Court?”
-
-“I suppose there are.”
-
-“Rather. Peck each other’s eyes out if they could. But this was a
-blackguard tale intended to compromise her with you. Of course there
-was a lot of talk about that carrying-off affair. Some wanted to make
-out she bolted from Albrevics. Shouldn’t blame her. He’s a beast.
-Hullo, there he is; and not so drunk as usual at this hour either.
-I should be careful of him, Bergwyn. He was abusing you to-day to a
-friend of mine. He’s seen us, I think, and is coming this way. Hang the
-fellow, what does he want to sit at the next table to us for?”
-
-Not wishing a dispute in so public a place, I was careful not to look
-around as the Prince and a couple of friends took their places at the
-table next to us and began to laugh and jest loudly.
-
-Nikolitch nodded to the Prince’s companions and we went on with our
-dinner, the talk drifting to our old experiences in the years when we
-had first known each other.
-
-The Prince, as we could not fail to see, was drinking heavily, and I
-could tell from Nikolitch’s face that like myself he was beginning to
-expect trouble. Once or twice the man was ill-bred enough to whisper
-to his companions while pointing at me; and then all three would burst
-into laughter.
-
-“Should we have our coffee inside?” said Nikolitch at length--we were
-dining in the open.
-
-“Yes, if you like;” said I, and we both rose. As I did so I touched,
-quite unintentionally, the chair of the Prince. He had his wine-glass
-in his hand, and while pretending to move out of my way, he
-deliberately spilt the wine all over me.
-
-“To the devil with your clumsiness,” he cried, angrily, as he jumped to
-his feet; “making me waste good liquor in that way. Oh, it’s the Yankee
-money-man, is it?” he added, with an oath and a sneer.
-
-“I touched your chair quite accidentally and too slightly to have
-caused you to spill your wine.”
-
-“That’s a lie. You did it on purpose,” he cried, loudly.
-
-“Prince Albrevics!” exclaimed Nikolitch; while the two men with him got
-up looking very serious.
-
-“I can’t allow anyone to say that to me, sir,” I said, keeping quite
-cool. “I must ask you to take that word back right here.”
-
-“Not for any cowardly Yankee that was ever born.”
-
-“Perhaps you will do it when you are sober then,” said I.
-
-“I’m cursed if I’ll let a Yankee pig say I’m drunk;” and he rushed
-forward to strike me. I pushed him back; but this only infuriated him
-and he sprang at me again.
-
-I had taken more than enough from him, however, and as he reached me
-the second time, his hand raised for a blow, I got mine in first and
-knocked him down.
-
-The place was instantly in an uproar.
-
-“Stay and do what’s necessary, Nikolitch. I’m in your hands. I’m going
-to smoke over there,” I said, pointing to a table at a distance. And
-taking out my cigar-case I walked away as the Prince’s friends were
-picking him up.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE DUEL.
-
-
-I must have hit the Prince hard, judging by the effects. His friends
-picked him up and after a minute or so led him away into the hotel.
-Then Nikolitch came across to me, his look very troubled.
-
-“This is an ugly business, Bergwyn. He’s badly marked and half dazed
-with your blow.”
-
-“I am more sorry for it than I can say,” I replied. I regretted it
-intensely indeed.
-
-“It was his fault--his only. We all saw that. He came to the place with
-the intention of quarrelling. He knew we were to dine here. One of his
-companions heard it from a friend of mine. He behaved abominably. We
-all see that: even his friends.”
-
-“Oh, yes, the insult was deliberate. I couldn’t take that. What is to
-happen?”
-
-“I said that we would go to your house: and should be there, if they
-had a message to bring. Shall we go?”
-
-“It means a meeting, of course,” I said, as we left.
-
-“Of course. Have you been out before?”
-
-“No; we don’t settle our quarrels this way in the States; but I’ve been
-in more than one ugly scrap and come through.”
-
-“He’s an old hand at it and is an excellent swordsman. But you will
-have choice of weapons. You beat him, through being so cool. He
-generally gets the choice of weapons, taking care to give the insult
-and so be the challenged party. That was his move just now. He first
-insulted you, thinking you would challenge him; and when you didn’t, he
-meant to strike you so that you’d be obliged. I was glad you prevented
-that.”
-
-“I’d give a good deal to be out of it,” I said, after a pause. My
-companion glanced at me in some surprise.
-
-“I don’t see how you can avoid it.”
-
-“I’m not afraid. I don’t mean that. But coming right on top of what you
-were saying about the Princess, it will set tongues wagging about her.”
-
-“You mean the dog story?” I nodded. “You don’t mean there’s anything in
-that?”
-
-“There’s one woman who knows it all and by this time has the proofs.
-The Baroness von Tulken.”
-
-“To the devil with that woman. She’s in everything,” he exclaimed. “Of
-course that’s where it comes from: and of course she told Albrevics.
-It’s an ugly story for him to hear. You’ll have to be careful. He means
-mischief.”
-
-“I’m not thinking about him.”
-
-“No, but he’s been thinking about you, Bergwyn. What will you do?”
-
-“What the devil can I do, man? If it would help things for her, I’d
-choose pistols and kill him; but it would only make matters worse for
-her. Everyone will set the quarrel down to her; and that’s just what
-I’d have given anything to avoid.”
-
-“Oh, it wouldn’t hurt her. It doesn’t hurt a woman here for two men to
-quarrel about her--choosing, of course, a decent pretext--and for one
-of ’em to be killed. It’s happened often enough.” His indifferent tone
-no less than his words astonished me. “Are you a good shot?” he added
-after a pause.
-
-“I can shoot a bit, and use a sword well enough to keep myself out of
-danger, probably, if it comes to that.”
-
-“It will come to one or the other, Bergwyn. There’s no other way now.
-Have you any foils here?” he asked as we reached my house; and when I
-produced them he proposed that we should try a bout.
-
-We took off our coats and set to work at once. Mine was a very
-indifferent style, very rough and ready, and his particularly polished,
-acquired in the latest Italian school. But mine served me well enough
-for defensive purposes. He was the better swordsman, with a dozen more
-tricks of fence than I possessed, but he could not break through my
-guard. He touched me more than once; but not so as to have inflicted
-any serious wound, had the weapons been sharp.
-
-“You haven’t much to fear from the Prince,” he said in one of the
-breathing spaces. “His is also the Italian style; and he’s better than
-I am; but you have a devil of a defence. Can you force the fighting a
-bit? Try now.”
-
-We crossed again and this time, after a long, defensive play I changed
-my tactics suddenly, and touched him.
-
-“You got me in the arm,” he cried, directly. “And well done, too.
-You’ll wear the Prince down. That’s his one failing--he can’t keep his
-temper. I have no fear for to-morrow. You have an iron wrist.”
-
-We were thus engaged when Buller brought word that the friends of
-Prince Albrevics had arrived. Nikolitch put on his coat and went to
-them. He was in high spirits.
-
-“It is the challenge, of course,” he said when he returned. “Shall we
-make it swords or pistols? I have arranged to meet to-morrow morning
-a mile or two out of the city. If you don’t want to kill him I should
-choose swords.”
-
-“Let it be swords then,” I agreed.
-
-“He’s got a devil of a bruise on his face, they tell me,” he declared
-with obvious glee, as he left me again. “As if a horse had kicked him,
-one of them says.”
-
-“We’ve arranged it all,” he reported when he came back again. “They
-were surprised at your choosing swords, because of his reputation, but
-it will be all right. You’ll wear him down. I know him. And now I’ll be
-off and find someone to act with me. Get to bed early and have as much
-sleep as you can. I’ll be round in time in the morning.”
-
-I sat for some time after he had left me, smoking and thinking. I
-regretted the whole thing more than I can say; but when I found my
-thoughts getting into a very gloomy vein, I put the brake on; and
-taking Nikolitch’s advice, went off to bed and slept soundly until
-Buller called me.
-
-Nikolitch came in good time bringing a friend, a Captain Astic, and we
-drove off. It was a gloriously fine morning, the air cool, refreshing
-and brisk.
-
-“Too much sun,” was Nikolitch’s practical comment. He looked at
-everything as if it affected the matter in hand, and spoke of it as
-though it were the most ordinary course in the world that two sane men
-should go out to do murder if possible.
-
-Of my own sensations I need not say much. I was thoughtful, preoccupied
-indeed, and gloomy. I don’t think I was afraid; although the
-deliberateness of the preparations and the anticipation of having to
-meet a man in cold blood and fight him for my life, made the affair
-appear almost formidable. I was far from having a wish to do the Prince
-any injury, to say nothing of taking his life; and my chief thought was
-the impossible wish that the whole matter, quarrel and all, could have
-been wiped out of the record of things done and be deemed never to have
-occurred.
-
-I don’t think I spoke during the drive out; but I remember taking
-notice of many trifles. There was a loose button in the upholstering
-of the carriage: some stains on Captain Astic’s uniform caught my eye,
-and I contrasted it with the smart grooming of Nikolitch. My friend
-was awkward in handling the pair of swords we had with us; and he and
-the other joked about it. Trifles of that kind struck me; and when the
-drive came to an end and we left the carriage, I can recall my distinct
-sensation of relief, followed by a fidgetty impatience to get the
-affair over.
-
-I was irritated because the other side kept us waiting a considerable
-time. My seconds lit cigarettes and first picked out the best spot for
-the encounter; then in low tones discussed the delay and the probable
-reasons for it; whether the Prince was too ill to come; how long we
-need wait for him; and so on. They appeared to me to speak with a
-certain amount of disappointment, as one might regret being robbed of a
-promised entertainment.
-
-The air began to chill them and they stamped about and clapped their
-gloved hands to keep the blood circulating. But I felt nothing of that.
-I sat quite still on the trunk of a fallen tree and was conscious
-mainly of a sort of impressive awe making everything seem unreal,
-mingled with a growing desire that the fight could be avoided; or
-rather the necessity for it obliterated--for I was perfectly aware of
-its inevitability.
-
-I could not bring myself to wish to harm the man I was to meet. Once or
-twice I sought to rouse my anger against him by recalling the insult
-of the previous evening and the foulness of his words and conduct. But
-even while I appreciated its wantonness and inexcusable grossness, I
-could not stir myself to any real passion. My sense of regret for the
-whole business overshadowed everything.
-
-I believe my companions thought I was suffering from fear; but it was
-not conscious fear, if fear at all. I did not anticipate any serious
-results to myself from the duel. Such a thought never occurred to me:
-it was the lethargy of an overwhelming revolt from the affair as a
-whole.
-
-It began to grow less absorbing when I heard Captain Astic tell
-Nikolitch, in a tone of unmistakable relief and satisfaction, that the
-others were coming.
-
-Nikolitch came and told me, and I noticed a solicitude and anxiety in
-his tone and look that were new.
-
-“Very well,” I said, with half a sigh.
-
-“You have nothing to fear,” he whispered, that Astic might not hear him.
-
-“I do fear nothing, Nikolitch,” I said, with a smile; and his face
-brightened at the smile.
-
-As soon as they came the four seconds busied themselves in settling the
-preliminaries and then Nikolitch introduced a fifth man to me.
-
-“Doctor Astic, the Captain’s brother, Bergwyn.”
-
-We shook hands and the doctor had a steady look into my eyes. “It’s a
-chilly morning although so bright--but we get them here sometimes,” he
-said.
-
-“Any morning’s good enough for this sort of thing,” I answered; and he
-had another stare at me and then put down his case of instruments on
-the tree where I had been sitting.
-
-“Will you get ready, Mr. Bergwyn?” asked Captain Astic.
-
-I saw the Prince already had his coat off and I made ready, the Captain
-meanwhile pointing out the positions we were to take with cheerful but
-professional coolness.
-
-As they placed us, I saw the mark of my blow on the Prince’s face
-and I noticed also that he was none too steady on his feet. I called
-Nikolitch to me and pointed this out.
-
-“It’s his affair,” he answered with a shrug of the shoulders.
-
-“I can’t fight a sick man,” I said, sharply. “Speak to the doctor about
-it.”
-
-“But it’s so irregular,” he objected.
-
-“I insist,” I declared.
-
-He spoke to Astic and then to the Prince’s seconds and after some
-discussion, in which all four took part, they called the doctor up to
-them. Then his seconds spoke to the Prince and some angry words passed;
-and again the four seconds consulted. Then Nikolitch came to me looking
-angry and crestfallen.
-
-“I’m sorry; but they think you’re afraid, Bergwyn,” he said.
-
-“I don’t care a red cent what they think. Does the doctor say the
-Prince is fit to fight? He can hardly stand; look at him lurching
-there.”
-
-“Oh, Astic says he’s all right: and he knows him.”
-
-“Then he takes the responsibility. I won’t.”
-
-“He’s only in a devil of a rage.”
-
-“Very well, then. I’m ready.”
-
-A minute later the word was given and we engaged. I had no lethargy
-left now. The last vestige of it vanished when I felt his blade
-pressing mine and met his scowl of positively devilish hate. I needed
-no more than a glance into his eyes to see that he had come out to kill
-me, and that my life depended upon my skill and coolness.
-
-But he was either too ill or too angry to be really dangerous. He
-attacked me furiously from the start; but he fought so wildly that
-I found myself quite able to hold him in check, and I let him exert
-himself to the utmost with the sure knowledge that in such a state he
-could not keep it up long.
-
-I think he had reckoned upon being able to treat me with the same
-contempt as a swordsman as he had treated me as a man the night before;
-and when he found out his mistake, it provoked his rage until he fought
-with the frenzy of a madman.
-
-Had he been himself and not so furiously reckless, I think he would
-have had an easy enough victory, for he had a hundred tricks of fence
-where I had none.
-
-He seemed to realise something of this, too, when we had been hard at
-it for some time, for he began to fight with less vehemence and much
-more wariness.
-
-But he had wasted his strength by that time; and to waste it still
-further, I commenced to push matters a bit from my side. He began to
-breathe hard. The pressure of his blade against mine weakened. Twice
-his foot slipped and he exposed himself dangerously; and then I knew I
-was going to beat him.
-
-I took no advantage of his slips. The man was ill, or drunk, or
-suffering from the effects of drink; and I could not bring myself even
-to wound him.
-
-I just kept to my tactics of wearing him down, defending myself when he
-attacked me and pressing him whenever he sought to ease off to get his
-breath back.
-
-At last it became little more than a burlesque. He was so winded and
-exhausted and so unsteady on his legs that he could scarcely continue
-the fight, scarcely hold his sword, indeed; and when I realised this
-I made a big, pressing effort, and seizing my moment, whipped his
-sword out of his hand and left him gasping impotently in dismay and
-breathlessness and lurching like a discomfited, angry fool, until he
-began to clamour to renew the fight.
-
-The seconds interfered at this, however; even his own men protesting. I
-stood while they settled it; and then turned away to dress.
-
-Nikolitch was loud in praises of me as I put on my coat, but regretted
-I had not wounded him; as he might want to have another meeting.
-
-“I shouldn’t meet him again. It’s an additional insult that he should
-have come out in such a state. And you’d better let him know I shan’t
-meet him again. If he monkeys with me again I’ll settle it in a more
-American fashion; and if there’s to be another fight of the kind, it
-shall begin where this morning’s has ended.”
-
-To my astonishment Nikolitch carried the message to one of the Prince’s
-seconds and then we left the ground and drove back to the city.
-
-I kept Nikolitch and Captain Astic to breakfast, and they could speak
-of nothing but the fight; criticising it with almost as much fond
-enthusiasm as if they had been experts describing a good game of
-baseball.
-
-I was glad when they left me, indeed, and I could settle down to a
-quiet review of the situation. Nikolitch was to see me again in the
-afternoon; and he declared joyously and with a certain air of rather
-self-congratulatory importance, that they would both have a busy time
-in seeing that a true account of the duel was spread about.
-
-“You are a fortunate man, Mr. Bergwyn, and will be a popular one,” said
-Captain Astic. “The Prince is thoroughly well hated and people will be
-ready to make much of you.”
-
-I did not regard it at all in that light. It was Gatrina’s good-will,
-not that of the crowd, which I sought; and I felt she would hear with
-strong prejudice that I had allowed myself to be drawn into a quarrel
-which she would know well enough could only have arisen on her account.
-
-Estranged as she already was by this monstrous story of my secret
-understanding with Elma, she would be quite incapable of appreciating
-my motives or feelings; and the fact that I could not get to her to
-explain everything irritated me almost beyond endurance.
-
-It was my helplessness in that direction which tried me more than
-anything. She had set up a barrier between us which I could not break
-through. There was nothing I could do but fret and fume and pace up
-and down the room and down and up again, in vain imaginings as to how
-things were to end.
-
-To an active temperament like mine nothing could be more galling.
-Prompt decision and action were mental instincts with me. I was
-accustomed in all affairs of life to take hold of a thing, plan my
-course and follow it up quickly and energetically. And yet here I had
-somehow allowed the reins to be snatched from my grasp and could only
-wring my hands in fatuous futility while I was being carried I could
-not tell where.
-
-Do something I must; so I made another effort to see Gatrina, and
-pushed it until I met with a very ugly rebuff. I was told she was out,
-and I declared I would wait until she returned.
-
-I waited, and waited, and waited until my patience was exhausted,
-only to be told by her servants that while I had been waiting she had
-returned and gone out again without seeing me.
-
-I went home and wrote to her that I must see her on a matter of the
-most urgent importance. I gave the letter to Buller with instructions
-to place it personally in Gatrina’s hands.
-
-An hour and more passed, and when he came he brought a reply in her
-handwriting. I tore the envelope open and my own letter, unopened, was
-enclosed and with it a cutting from a paper of that morning’s date,
-announcing in guarded terms my engagement to Elma.
-
-At first I flushed with mortification and resentment, but then caught a
-glimpse of light.
-
-If it was really the lie about Elma which had estranged her, I had but
-to get the truth to her to change that anger and make her feel the
-injustice she had done me.
-
-I cast about for the means. She would neither see me nor read my
-letters; so that I must find someone who could get access to her.
-
-I thought instantly of Karasch. I would send him to her and let Chris
-go with him as a mute ambassador. This might touch her for the sake of
-the past; and Karasch’s message should be just one sentence--that the
-announcement in the paper was a lie.
-
-I sent for him at once, instructed him how to act, and despatched him
-on the errand; only to be defeated again, however. Gatrina had refused
-to see him.
-
-There was only Nikolitch left, and even he failed me. He did not come
-at the time he had appointed, and when I went to his rooms in search of
-him, I heard that he had been sent away on military business and would
-not return until night or the next morning.
-
-So the whole day passed without anything being done to kill the lie
-which was having such ominous results for me.
-
-It was noon on the next day when I saw Nikolitch; and very anxious and
-disturbed he looked.
-
-“I have grave news for you, Bergwyn,” he said at once. “The officers
-are going to move at once and a day or two, perhaps an hour or two,
-will find the crisis here.”
-
-“I want to see you about something else,” I said, eagerly.
-
-“My news first,” he replied. “Before anything else, you must know it. I
-fear that that condition of no violence will not be kept.”
-
-Instantly my thoughts were for Gatrina and I chilled with fear for her.
-
-“Speak plainly, Nikolitch.”
-
-“I have come back at some risk to do so. I have only the worst to
-report. We moderates have been outvoted.”
-
-Like a flash Elma’s grim word, “Assassination” darted across my mind as
-I waited for him to continue.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-THE SCENT OF PERIL.
-
-
-“I got a scent of the trouble yesterday,” said Nikolitch after a pause,
-long enough to try my patience severely; “and should have come to you
-at once, but I was sent out of the city to Jagodina with part of the
-regiment. I dared not write to you for fear the letter got into wrong
-hands.”
-
-“What did you hear, and how?”
-
-“You know there have been many changes made in the regiments here;
-and no one could understand the reason for them. But I believe I know
-it now. Those officers who are against force have been gradually sent
-out of the city and their places filled by men of the opposite views.
-Yesterday an excuse was made that some manœuvres were to be held round
-Jagodina; and by means of it nearly all of the no-violence men were
-sent away--myself amongst them; while others have been moved in. You
-can guess the object--a _coup d’etat_.”
-
-“And Petrosch?”
-
-“Was like a sphinx when I managed to see him yesterday. Denied the idea
-of force, referred to the arrangement with you; but would say not a
-word as to what was intended. He pleaded entire ignorance.”
-
-“What will happen?”
-
-“I cannot say. We discussed it all last night at Jagodina, and the
-impression there is that some most drastic steps have been decided
-secretly and that we were being got out of the way for them to be
-carried out.”
-
-“What kind of violence do you anticipate?”
-
-“God knows,” he exclaimed, throwing up his hands, almost despairingly.
-
-“We must see Petrosch.”
-
-“I dare not. I am supposed to be in Jagodina. I got leave of absence
-because the chief is very friendly, but he said I must not come to
-Belgrade. He meant I mustn’t let him know if I did. So I said I wished
-to go to Alexinatz. But I felt I must get the news to you somehow; so I
-came here secretly. I shall be broken if my presence is known.”
-
-“Won’t you stay and see it through, now you are here?”
-
-“I owe you no less, Bergwyn, let happen what will. I have got you into
-it. But I should prefer not to go outside this house if we can help it.”
-
-“I wanted you to do me a great service. And it is more important now
-than ever, if what you think is true.”
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“To go to the Princess Gatrina.”
-
-“I have thought of her. That’s largely why I came--after what you told
-me about the hill business.”
-
-“You think she would be in danger?”
-
-“How can it be otherwise? But of course it depends on what is going to
-happen. You must warn her.”
-
-“That’s just it. I can’t get a word to her. I was trying all yesterday.
-She won’t see me, wouldn’t read a letter I sent asking her to see me;
-wouldn’t even let the man who helped us in the hill affair have a word
-with her. I hoped you would be able to help me.”
-
-He hesitated a moment. “Of course I will,” he said then. “The thing’s
-too grave to let any personal considerations weigh with me. She must be
-persuaded to leave the city--at least until the officers have carried
-out their plan.”
-
-“She won’t go.”
-
-“She must, or the worst may happen to her. Some of these men will go to
-any extreme.”
-
-“Put it plainer, Nikolitch. You mean her life will be in danger?”
-
-“I don’t like even to think of it in plain terms, Bergwyn. To tell you
-the truth, I believe I’m horribly afraid and can’t think.”
-
-“I’ll go to Petrosch myself at once, while you go to the Princess. I
-think she will receive you. What I want you particularly to do with her
-is persuade her that there is no foundation for this statement;” and I
-put the newspaper cutting in his hand.
-
-He read it and looked up. “Is it a time to think of this?” he asked.
-
-“Yes; because when that is contradicted she may consent to see me and I
-can add my influence to persuade her to seek safety in flight.”
-
-“Would they let her go?” he asked.
-
-“Get her consent and I’ll do the rest.”
-
-“Send your man to my rooms for clothes. I mustn’t be seen in these;”
-and he shewed me that under a long overcoat he was wearing his uniform.
-
-I rang for Buller and gave him instructions, and then started to find
-Colonel Petrosch. I had much difficulty, driving from place to place
-and losing much time, to catch him after all at his house.
-
-Having heard of my first call he was thus prepared for my visit; and
-must have guessed my object, although he expressed surprise at seeing
-me.
-
-“I wish to see you very particularly, Colonel; you will have heard that
-I called here a couple of hours ago; and I have been seeking you ever
-since.”
-
-“I am very sorry; but of course if you had sent me word beforehand I
-would have waited in or come to you, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-“I could not do that. I have only just heard the news which has brought
-me to you.”
-
-“Indeed. How?”
-
-“I have many sources, as you will understand. Is it true that the
-officers have resolved upon their line of action?”
-
-“Yes. I told you that two days ago.”
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“I told you then I could not disclose it, Mr. Bergwyn. You will
-remember that.”
-
-“Has there been any alteration in their plans?”
-
-He paused. “In a sense, no. No finally decisive step taken.”
-
-“There have been some considerable changes in the disposition of the
-regiments?”
-
-“Oh, yes. We have had some manœuvres at Jagodina and have had to make
-them as imposing as possible.”
-
-“That is the only reason for the changes?”
-
-“Not entirely. Some have been made in connection with the plan of the
-officers.”
-
-“A large number of officers have been brought to the capital. I know
-that. Are these the men who favour a policy of force?”
-
-He flinched from the question. “Is that your information?”
-
-“Yes; just that.”
-
-“To a certain extent you are right, Mr. Bergwyn,” he answered slowly.
-“I had better tell you something. Since I saw you, a formal demand has
-been made to the King to abdicate, backed by the statement ‘that a
-refusal would be followed by the declaration of the army against him.’
-At first he refused; but afterwards withdrew the peremptory refusal and
-asked for time to consider the matter. A week was conceded and there
-the matter was left.”
-
-“Then nothing will be done for a week?”
-
-“Nothing _would_ have been done; but His Majesty or the Government,
-most probably the Queen, has broken faith. Of those who waited upon
-him--there were five--three have been arrested and thrown into prison.
-Naturally the army is embittered.”
-
-“What will be done?”
-
-He shrugged his shoulders. “For whatever happens now, the blame will
-lie with the Court.”
-
-“I suppose that’s about as hopeless news as you could give me.”
-
-“It is not good,” he replied, very gravely.
-
-“You are still in a position to keep the condition of no violence.”
-
-“We have decided to release you from your undertaking so that we may
-not even appear to be guilty of bad faith. The decision has just been
-made; and I should have written you at once or seen you, to return you
-this paper;” and he put my letter back into my hands.
-
-Nothing that he could have said or done would have so deeply impressed
-me as that.
-
-“You told me there had been no change of plan.”
-
-“There has been none--yet,” he answered. “The final decision has still
-to be made.”
-
-“I have heard your policy summed up in the one word--assassination.”
-
-“Our policy has always been liable to misinterpretation; against that,
-in times like these, we cannot guard.”
-
-“I won’t disguise from you that you have alarmed me greatly.”
-
-“Is there a man in the country at the present time who does not view
-the future with alarm? The issues are too fateful for all classes,
-Mr. Bergwyn. But if you are speaking in contemplation of any sort of
-financial business, I would advise you strongly to hold your hand and
-wait.”
-
-“How long?”
-
-“Until the new Government is established, the new King crowned and the
-country once more settled.”
-
-“The new King?” I asked quickly.
-
-“The succession will revert to the Karageorgevics.”
-
-“And Princess Gatrina?”
-
-“It is very unfortunate for her and her friends that she still remains
-in the city.” He spoke with impressive deliberation.
-
-“It is largely on her account I have been influenced in what I have
-done.”
-
-“So I have gathered for myself, Mr. Bergwyn; and so I have thought,
-despite the contradictory rumours which have reached me concerning you
-both--and others.”
-
-“Can you give me no assurance that at least she will be in no personal
-danger?”
-
-He paused a long time to think. “Personally I will do everything in
-my power. You have met me so frankly that you deserve no less. You
-may rely upon me to do my utmost; but although I shall of course have
-considerable influence, I am but one of many.”
-
-“She would be allowed to leave the city?”
-
-“Her departure would be welcome if she would go at once.”
-
-“And if she stays?”
-
-“She may carry her life in her hands, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-“But I could still depend upon your influence?”
-
-“To the uttermost shred. I give you my honour.”
-
-I rose to go then. “I need not assure you that I shall treat in
-confidence what you have said, Colonel Petrosch.”
-
-He shook his head. “It does not matter now, Mr. Bergwyn. I have told
-you nothing--I could tell you nothing, of course--that may not be
-openly repeated. It is too late for anything of that kind to signify
-now. The army is too strong to be shaken from its purpose by anything
-that could happen. You will see that yourself very soon. The die is
-cast.”
-
-This indifference to publicity amazed me as much as anything he had
-said in the interview and confirmed the absorbingly gloomy impression
-which he had created.
-
-I drove back to my house feverishly anxious now to hear how Nikolitch
-had fared with Gatrina. But he had not returned and I sat eating out my
-heart with impatience at his delay. He was so long that I began to fear
-he might have been arrested for having come to the city in defiance of
-his orders, and I sent Buller at length to the Princess’s house for
-news of him.
-
-A line came back from him.
-
-“She is away. I am waiting for her return.”
-
-I scribbled a reply to this.
-
-“I have had the worst confirmed. For God’s sake do all you can;” and
-this I sent back to him by Buller.
-
-The suspense of the time that followed was agony. My alarm for her took
-a hundred crude and wild shapes as I thought of the peril that would
-encircle her when the desperate schemes of the army were once put in
-operation.
-
-I was maddening myself with such thoughts when Buller brought me
-Elma’s card. I sent a curt message that I would not see her. I felt I
-could not trust myself in that desperate mood.
-
-But he came back with a note.
-
-“You must see me. I have terrible news affecting Gatrina’s safety.”
-
-I went to her then. In such a cause I was ready to go anywhere and do
-anything. She was more serious than I had seen her before, and spoke
-without any of the affectations customary with her.
-
-“There must be peace between us, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-“What have you come for?”
-
-“Gatrina is in danger and you must help to save her.”
-
-“What is your news?”
-
-“A revolution is imminent, and if Gatrina is in the city when it breaks
-out, she will be involved. The King has been told he must abdicate, and
-a conflict between him and the army is now certain. She must be got to
-a place of safety.”
-
-“Why do you come to me?”
-
-“Because you can prevail with her.”
-
-“On the contrary, you have made that impossible. You know how--by the
-false tale you told before the Queen.”
-
-“It can be contradicted. I will contradict it if you agree.”
-
-“Agree to what?”
-
-“To unite with us in saving her to take the Throne.”
-
-“You mean to marry the Duke Barinski?”
-
-“I mean, first, to save her life. This is no time to think of any
-personal ends. She is necessary to the country.”
-
-“She has no chance of succeeding to the Throne. I know that. I know
-what is to be done.”
-
-“You can help us if you will. Get her to trust herself to us instead of
-to the Court, and we will be responsible for her safety.”
-
-“How? Another case of Maglai?”
-
-“You need not sneer. I did not mean that. She would be safe under the
-protection of the Russian flag.”
-
-“With you as her chief adviser and friend. I should not deem that
-safety; nor would she.”
-
-“You abandon her then to her fate?”
-
-“I will not counsel her to play the part of cat’s paw for Russia.”
-
-“Even to save her life?”
-
-“Will you undo the mischief you have caused and let her know the truth?
-Then I will act with you to this extent. If I can, I will prevail with
-her to leave the country for a time and from a position of freedom,
-decide whether to make this marriage or not.”
-
-“She must not leave the country. She must be here when the moment of
-crisis arrives, and the future occupant of the Throne has to be chosen.
-Her absence then might be fatal to everything.”
-
-“Go to her and tell her that all you said was untrue and why you said
-it, and leave the decision to her.”
-
-“You are still dreaming of the impossible. I have shewn her most of
-your old letters to me.”
-
-“Then you had better tell your Russian employers how you have succeeded
-in wrecking their schemes.”
-
-She paused in considerable embarrassment.
-
-“You must have some other aim, however,” I continued. “You have
-contradicted yourself. You said at first that I still had influence
-with her: now that you have kept your word and broken her trust in me;
-and yet that you need my help. You will not be surprised that I find
-it difficult to believe you at all--except as a power for mischief and
-wrong.”
-
-“You do not seem to realise her peril.”
-
-“And you do not explain your inconsistency.”
-
-“I will make it all plain to her.”
-
-“So that I may go to counsel her to marry another man. I will not.”
-
-“Not even to save her life?”
-
-“You said that before. I will find means to save her life, if it should
-be really in danger.”
-
-“What I have proposed is the only way.”
-
-“You may think so. I will find another. I do not trust either you or
-your employers. You can help me by undoing what you have done and
-telling her the truth--by that means you can aid in saving her life.
-But with your help or without, I will find the means.”
-
-“You are very bitter against me.”
-
-“I speak the truth and the truth may well have a bitter sound.”
-
-“If you refuse me, the responsibility for what may occur will be yours.”
-
-“Will you go to her and admit the falsehood?”
-
-“If you agree to my terms. Not otherwise.”
-
-“That was the answer I expected,” I said as I rose.
-
-She made a gesture of impatient dissent. “You make things so difficult.
-We both desire the same end: the Princess’s safety; and yet you will
-not act with me to reach it.”
-
-“You come to me, or you are sent to me, because it is thought I can now
-be of some use as a decoy. I have no fancy for the part. I do not trust
-you or those behind you.”
-
-“You entirely misjudge my motives.”
-
-“Very possibly, if they are genuine. You have taught me not to expect
-that; and I have learnt the lesson. That’s all there is to it. And now,
-I have no wish to say to you any more of the angry things I feel. Shall
-we end this?”
-
-“Will you consider what I have said and let me come to-morrow for an
-answer?”
-
-“No. You have my answer; and I have no wish to see you again.”
-
-“How bitter you can be!” she cried, rising.
-
-My only reply was to open the door for her to leave.
-
-“Do you mean to render me desperate? You underestimate my power to
-revenge myself. You will drive me to take a course which even I might
-afterwards regret. I am not yet Gatrina’s enemy; but ...” a very angry
-glance finished the sentence.
-
-“We shall do better to end this,” I answered, curtly, meeting her look
-as I held the door for her.
-
-“You will be well advised for your own and her sake if I find you in a
-different mood to-morrow;” and with this threat she went.
-
-For her threats I cared little enough; and the only part of the
-interview which made any impression was the confirmation she had
-brought of the coming trouble.
-
-I was thinking this round when Nikolitch returned.
-
-“Well?” I asked eagerly.
-
-He shook his head. “I have done no good,” he said.
-
-My heart fell at the words. The last chance had failed, and I knew
-by my pang of disappointment how much I had built upon my friend’s
-mission.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-A PLAN OF DEFENCE.
-
-
-It was some time before I could even bring myself to ask Nikolitch for
-details of his visit to Gatrina.
-
-“You saw the Princess?” I asked at length.
-
-“I would not come away without. She had been at the Palace, I think.
-She received me graciously at first--she does all things prettily--and
-listened while I warned her that grave troubles were coming. Then
-something I said suggested to her that I had come from you; and her
-manner changed suddenly.”
-
-“It would, I suppose,” I interjected, bitterly.
-
-“She put the question point blank, and I admitted it, of course. Then
-she refused to hear any more. I said that you were very anxious to
-see her; and she got up and was for dismissing me on the spot. But I
-hung on and managed to get out the contradiction of the engagement,
-as she was hurrying away. At the door she turned, her face very pale,
-her manner and tone cold as ice. ‘Under the circumstances, Captain
-Nikolitch, your presence is an insult,’ she said. And never in my life
-have I felt the lash of a woman’s tongue more keenly. I suppose she was
-mad you had told me anything of how matters stood with you. I felt like
-a whipped cur as I stumbled out of the room.”
-
-“Well, it’s just a devil of a mess, that’s all, and we’ll have to find
-some way of helping her against her will.”
-
-I told him of the result of my visit to Petrosch and of the
-confirmation of the news from Elma. His view of the outlook was even
-darker than my own; and when I let drop a hint of the suggestion which
-Elma had made, he was disposed to freeze to it as the best and readiest
-solution of the difficulty.
-
-But I shook my head. “The Princess would never trust herself to them,”
-I said. “I know her too well to think that for a moment.”
-
-“She would be safe. Other things would settle themselves afterwards.
-The hours of peril will be few, whatever happens; and when they are
-once passed, the itch for violence will be appeased.”
-
-“No,” I said again. “I say no, emphatically no. If she believed the
-danger were really so acute, she would go to the Queen and stand or
-fall with her. She would regard it as cowardly to think of herself
-at such a time; and nothing would induce her to set foot inside the
-Russian Minister’s house merely to save herself. It would but drive her
-into greater peril that if she remained in her own. It is there she
-must be protected. Would God I could but learn when the devilment is to
-be done?”
-
-“I think I could learn that. Not here, of course, where if I were
-recognised I should be clapped straight away under arrest; but at
-Jagodina. They will know there.”
-
-“Then for Heaven’s sake get back to Jagodina at once and send me word.
-I will do the rest. I begin to see a way at last--if she will but stay
-in her own house.”
-
-“What is it?” he asked eagerly.
-
-“No, no. Don’t stay another minute in the city. Get to your regiment
-and send me the news I want. Just the time; that’s all; that’s all. It
-may not be safe to send more;” and seizing a time table I found there
-was a train he could catch at once, and I hurried him off.
-
-“My uniform,” he said. “I’m in mufti.”
-
-“Leave it. It may be useful.”
-
-“What do you mean?” he asked, anxiously.
-
-“If I don’t tell you, you can’t be compromised. Do as I ask; that’s
-all. And for Heaven’s sake be off at once.”
-
-I infected him with a degree of my own energy and bundled him off to
-the depot, and sent Buller with him with instructions to get him a
-special train if he missed the regular one.
-
-Then I gave word that the instant Karasch arrived he was to be shewn
-to me; it was close to the hour at which he was accustomed to come for
-instructions; and having done that I set to work to think out my plan
-as I ate a hasty dinner.
-
-The plan was a very simple one--to raise immediately a band of men
-numerous enough to protect Gatrina’s house in case of emergency, and to
-find some place close to it where they could remain in readiness under
-Karasch’s leadership.
-
-The idea took a more daring form at one time, and I was much tempted
-to adopt it. It was to have the men in the uniform of one of the
-regiments and to act the part of guarding the house, as if at the
-army’s command; but the risk which the men would run if the thing were
-discovered was too great. I might not be able to protect them even with
-Petrosch’s influence; and I had, therefore, to abandon the notion. But
-from it came another idea which I saw at once was practicable.
-
-“There is work for you at last, Karasch,” I said to him as soon as he
-arrived; “difficult, and perhaps dangerous; and I am going to trust to
-you.”
-
-“I will do my best, Excellency, whatever it be,” he answered, with his
-customary directness.
-
-“Ugly things are going to occur in the city; a revolution accompanied
-probably with violence is on the eve of taking place; and no one can
-say for certain what will or will not happen. But it is very probable
-that the Princess--Mademoiselle, you know--will be exposed to great
-danger, and I wish you to help me in protecting her. You will do this?”
-
-“With my life, Excellency. Of course you have a plan.”
-
-“Yes. I mean you to get together a strong band of resolute men to be
-instantly available to form a guard round her house. They must be men
-on whom we can depend; and we will pay them liberally. How many can you
-get?”
-
-“I could get a thousand to take your money and promise; and I might
-find fifty or less who might keep their promises; and, perhaps, five or
-six who would be absolutely reliable. It would depend.”
-
-“On what?”
-
-“On whom Mademoiselle had to be defended against. If against the mob
-it would be easy, but not against soldiers, Excellency.”
-
-“It will probably be against the soldiery.”
-
-He shook his head doubtingly. “It would be very difficult,” he said.
-
-“It has to be done, Karasch,” I declared firmly. “The Princess’s life
-may depend upon it.”
-
-“Where twenty men would face the sticks and stones of a mob, scarce
-one of them would stand before the bayonets or bullets of the troops,
-Excellency. Should we be inside the house?”
-
-“No, outside.”
-
-“Ah,” he exclaimed with another very grave shake of the head.
-
-“_You_ would do it?”
-
-“I am different; but I would not do it for money. I have been in
-similar troubles before; and for those who resist the soldiers at such
-times, there are many roads to death and all short and pretty certain.
-Men know this, Excellency. Belgrade is not like the hills in the
-Gravenje district. I might count on five or six, as I say; but what are
-they against the troops in the city?”
-
-I thought a moment. “Could you trust them absolutely?” I asked.
-
-“Yes; as you may trust me. But, I beg your Excellency’s pardon, why
-cannot the Princess remove to a place of safety?”
-
-“She will not, for reasons I cannot explain to you. For one thing she
-does not know of her danger, and will not believe in it.”
-
-“Mademoiselle has a strong will, we know,” he said, with a shrug of his
-broad shoulders.
-
-“She has, therefore, to be saved despite herself. Stay, I have it,” I
-exclaimed as a thought struck me. “You say these five or six men are
-to be relied upon. Could you procure half a dozen uniforms for them to
-wear?”
-
-“I could get half a hundred, but----”
-
-“This is my plan then. Get the other men, fifty or a hundred of
-them--as many as you can--to be available if the only trouble comes
-from the mob. The six we will make up as soldiers, and at the worst we
-will force our way with them into the house and bring off the Princess
-as though she were our prisoner.”
-
-He chewed the notion for a moment and then his grim face relaxed into
-one of his rare smiles. “It is good,” he said; and we set to work and
-threshed out the plan in as much detail as practicable at that stage.
-
-I decided that the half dozen men who with Karasch and myself were to
-take the risk of making the pretended arrest of Gatrina, should wear
-the uniform of soldiers and over that loose civilian’s clothes which
-could be easily slipped off in case of need. The men would in this way
-be available for both parts of the work before us; as civilians to
-resist the mob, or as soldiers to mislead the regular troops.
-
-I based my plans on the calculation that in making any attempt on
-Gatrina’s house the troops were not likely to be in any considerable
-force. The movement would be more in the nature of an arrest; and if
-we could manage to get into the house before the soldiers sent to make
-the arrest, they would be likely to conclude, if they saw Gatrina in
-our hands, that in the confusion some mistake had been made in doubling
-the parties told off for the purpose.
-
-I should be in command and should wear the uniform which Nikolitch had
-left behind him; and in the event of any complication arising, I should
-have to trust to my wits to explain it away.
-
-My intention was to march with Gatrina straight to the house of the
-United States representative, where, of course, she would be safe. I
-knew him already for a man on whom I could rely implicitly.
-
-Karasch went off to find the men and was to return at midnight to
-report progress; and I was to go out into the neighbourhood of
-Gatrina’s house to look for a place in which they could be placed.
-I was getting ready when my eye fell upon Nikolitch’s uniform and I
-tried it on. It was anything but comfortable after the freedom of
-civilian’s dress; and as I was much the broader man of the two, it was
-an uncommonly bad fit.
-
-But I had to get used to it; so I resolved on a dress rehearsal of the
-part, and throwing on a long overcoat, I put a revolver in my pocket
-and set out on my quest, with Chris in close attendance at my heels.
-
-The night was fine but moonless; and as the streets of Belgrade were
-very badly lighted, there was not much chance of my being recognised.
-The restaurants and supper houses were busy enough, and the flare of
-their lights streamed across the streets here and there; but they were
-easy to avoid; and there were none of them in the neighbourhood of
-Gatrina’s house.
-
-As it was of course necessary that I should make myself as familiar
-with the entrances to the house as possible, I had a good look at it,
-being careful to keep well in shadow.
-
-A massive stone house, it stood by itself at a corner and was almost
-surrounded by a high wall. The main door let out on to a broad
-thoroughfare; a strong massive door with a deep portico. In the wall
-at the side there was a smaller doorway--the servants’ entrance, I
-concluded; and this, also, was very heavily and strongly fashioned. All
-the lower windows were heavily barred, a custom I had observed to be
-general in the large houses in the city.
-
-It was altogether a house capable of offering stout resistance to any
-attack; and I saw in a moment that if I could once get inside, with
-a few resolute men, it would be possible to hold it for a long time
-against either mob or troops; and I concluded that, in common with many
-others in the city, it had been strengthened in view of the turbulent
-outbreaks which had been frequent enough in Belgrade.
-
-The strength of the house reassured me somewhat until I found a weak
-spot. Some fifty yards along the smaller street were the stables; and
-I remembered that when I had been in the house on the previous day
-waiting in my vain attempt to see Gatrina, I had noticed a newly made
-door at the end of the garden, just at the point where, as I could now
-see, it would lead to the stables; while from the room where I had
-been placed, a French window quite unprotected led down a flight of
-steps to the garden path.
-
-That was a weak spot indeed. But if it would render the house open to
-attack, it would also provide the means by which I could gain access if
-the need arose.
-
-I was weighing all this in my mind most earnestly as I stood opposite
-the entrance to the stable, when Chris moved and growled. I silenced
-him, laying my hand on his head, and drew back with him into the deep
-shadow of a tree which stood in front of the portico of a house, and
-listened.
-
-He never warned me without cause; and soon I caught the sound of
-approaching footsteps. I had no wish to be seen, so I slipped into the
-portico and pressed close against the wall, while I kept watch on the
-newcomer. He came along at a quick pace until he reached the stable,
-when he paused.
-
-My first idea was that he was a servant who had overstayed his hours
-of leave and was puzzling how to get into the house without attracting
-notice.
-
-But I was wrong. Presently he came out into the roadway and stared at
-the upper windows of the house. Then he went round to the front and
-again he paused and stared up at the windows there; and apparently not
-seeing what he sought--for the whole house was now in darkness--he
-scratched his head as if in perplexity, and came sauntering back toward
-the stables.
-
-He was very slow in his movements, and his slowness irritated me.
-Presently a light shewed for an instant in one of the top windows at
-the back, and was almost instantly extinguished. This was repeated
-twice, at short intervals; and I heard the window raised very
-cautiously.
-
-It was evidently the signal for which the man in the street had been
-waiting, for he whistled, just two notes softly, shewed himself in the
-roadway and then stepped back in the shadow of the stables and waited.
-
-A vulgar assignation, I thought then, not without disgust; and I wished
-that he and his sweetheart would be quick over their love-making. It
-was well past eleven. At midnight I had to be back to receive Karasch’s
-report; and yet could not venture to be seen.
-
-But it was no sweethearting. After some minutes, a small door in the
-large stable gate was opened and a man looked out. I could see all
-that passed by the light of a lamp over the gates. The two whispered
-together a moment; and then the man from the house came out, turned the
-key in the lock, and put it in his pocket.
-
-They both crossed the road toward where I stood, and I pressed yet
-closer against the wall and kept my hand on Chris’s head lest by a
-sound he should betray our presence. They did not enter the portico,
-but stood in the shadow of the tree where I had first concealed myself.
-
-“This will do,” I heard one of them say; and then strain my ears as I
-would I could not catch any other than isolated words. But they were
-enough to set me on fire. “Army,” “Arrest,” “Three hours,” “Yes, two
-o’clock--” this was louder and in an impatient tone. After that there
-was a chink of money passing; and then silence. It lasted so long that,
-unable to contain myself, I peered out cautiously and looked at them.
-
-The man who had come from the house was counting a quantity of paper
-money, and trying to read the value of each bill by the flicker of the
-lamp across the road. It was a tedious business; and his companion
-whispered something to him and they both walked away along the street.
-
-My first inclination was to follow them at once and force an
-explanation; but I checked the impulse. I resolved to wait for the
-return of the servant. He was sure to come back, if I read the thing
-aright. I could deal with him alone much more satisfactorily.
-
-I took Chris across to the stable gates and making him understand
-that he was on guard and must let no one pass in, I returned to my
-hiding-place.
-
-The minutes were leaden as I stood waiting. The man was so long away
-that I began to fear I had blundered and to regret I had not acted on
-the impulse to follow the two.
-
-But he came at length hurrying from the opposite direction; and he
-glanced up at the house windows as he passed, with a gesture of
-uneasiness. When he reached the stable gates, Chris received him with
-a low growl, and he started back in some dismay at the most unexpected
-interruption.
-
-He was trying to pacify the dog with a little coaxing when I crossed to
-him and, assuming a tone of authority, asked, at a venture; “You have
-seen the sergeant? Why have you been so long?”
-
-He was obviously in much perplexity and some fear, and glanced from
-Chris to me. The good dog looked formidable enough to have frightened a
-braver man.
-
-“Who are you?” he asked.
-
-I threw back my long coat and shewed my uniform.
-
-“The plan is changed. You are to come with me. We can’t trust you out
-of sight again.”
-
-He glanced round as if meditating flight.
-
-“The dog will pull you down if you move,” I said, sternly.
-
-“I must get in,” he murmured. “I shall keep my word.”
-
-“Did you hear what I ordered you?” I rapped back with an oath. “Come,”
-and I linked my arm in his to drag him away. He resisted at first; but
-at a word from me Chris shewed his fangs and snarled so angrily that no
-resistance was left in him. I let go his arm then. “A false step or a
-single word, and the dog’s fangs will close on your throat,” I muttered
-fiercely.
-
-He came then, keeping pace anxiously with my quick stride and glancing
-ever and again over his shoulder at Chris who stalked behind him like a
-black shadow.
-
-I got him to my house without trouble; for the streets were now all but
-deserted, and I chose a way which avoided the main roads.
-
-I led him into my study, taking Chris with me, and then turned a lamp
-full on his face. Then I drew my revolver and held it in his full view
-as I considered how best to question him, so as to get the truth out
-of him.
-
-It was a vital matter, and they were anxious moments; for upon his
-answers Gatrina’s life might depend.
-
-He found them anxious, too. I could see that by his pallor, the nervous
-twitchings of hands and features, the sweat that stood on his swarthy
-forehead, and the wild look on his fear-filled eyes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-THE NIGHT OF TERROR.
-
-
-The fear which my prisoner displayed led me to prolong the interval
-before I questioned him. It was essential for my purpose that he should
-be thoroughly frightened; and the suspense was enough to try much
-stouter nerves than his. I let him have some two or three minutes,
-therefore, so that his fears should have full scope; and just as my
-first question was on my lips, a happy thought occurred to me. I saw
-that I could make valuable use of the Russian reputation for doing ugly
-things.
-
-He was more likely to fear the Russians than any other party concerned;
-and if I could make him believe he had now fallen into their hands, he
-would be far more likely to answer my questions than if I played the
-more difficult part of an army officer, believing him false to the army.
-
-“Stand over there,” I cried, sternly and suddenly in Russian, pointing
-to the wall; and the start he gave at hearing the unwelcome language,
-proved to me that I was right. He moved to where I pointed, his eyes on
-me all the time. “Attempt to move and the dog will be on you,” I added,
-as brutally and coarsely as I could.
-
-Then I rang the bell, and when Buller came I said in Russian; “Tell
-General Minzkoff I have the prisoner and am questioning him.” But
-Buller didn’t understand Russian and stood staring at me in hesitation
-what to do; so to give the thing colour, I jumped up, swore vigorously,
-and, as if in a paroxysm of rage, thrust him violently out of the room,
-pretending to kick him, as I shouted: “Do as I say at once.”
-
-I flung myself back in my seat only to jump up again and, as though
-I had forgotten something rushed out of the room after Buller. I
-explained matters, and told him to find a servant who could speak
-Russian and send him to me to say that “I was to see General Minzkoff
-with my report as soon as possible.”
-
-This particular Russian officer had just the reputation for violence
-that was certain to impress the spy; and the more bullying and brutal
-I could make my manner, the more characteristic would it be of the
-general’s agents.
-
-“You speak my language?” I jerked out in Russian.
-
-“I understand it a little,” he answered with difficulty.
-
-“Then we’ll use your own cursed tongue,” I said in Serb. “I have no
-time to waste over you, so if you don’t answer plainly I’ll find means
-to make you. How much money did that soldier give you just now?”
-
-He started at finding I knew this and looked about for a lie. “Money? I
-don’t understand your Excellency.”
-
-“It’s in that pocket.” I pointed to where I had seen him place it.
-“Take it out, you lying dog. Quick,” I thundered, as he still
-hesitated. “I know everything.”
-
-Slowly, for it cost him a pang to part with it, he drew out the bundle
-of bills. “It is my own,” he faltered.
-
-“The gold, too. Quick.”
-
-Again he trembled, but dared not refuse. I had now impressed upon him
-that I knew his secrets.
-
-“Put it there,” I said, pointing to a chair. “Now. I’ll test your power
-of speaking the truth. What was that money paid for?”
-
-He stared at me in a sweat of fear, trying to moisten his parched lips
-with a tongue as dry as leather, wishing to lie but yet afraid; and in
-his fright unable to coin a plausible tale.
-
-“It was money--owing to me,” he stammered.
-
-I paused a moment to let him hope the lie had imposed upon me; and then
-pointed to the bell. “If that bell is rung it will bring my men here
-with the means you may have heard we use to make prisoners speak the
-truth. Go and ring it now--or tell me the truth of your own accord.”
-
-It was a touch of refined cruelty eloquent of Russian methods to make
-him summon his own torturers; and it did much to carry conviction now.
-
-“I don’t wish to deceive your Excellency,” he murmured.
-
-“Is that why you want me to believe that when a man owes you money he
-comes in the dead of night to pay it after waiting for your signals
-from the house--the light three times flashed. You lying cur. Ring that
-bell--I have no more time to waste.”
-
-“You won’t torture me?” he cried, in anguish.
-
-“Ring that bell,” I thundered. “It pleases me for you yourself to call
-your torturers;” and I laughed, as if the grim joke were really to my
-taste.
-
-Down he went on his knees. “Not the torture, Excellency. Not the
-torture. For God’s sake, not that.”
-
-“You’ve had a taste of it before, eh?” I said, with another grin,
-feeling an awful beast as I did it. “You can choose--the torture or the
-truth of your own will.”
-
-“My God!” he exclaimed, covering his white face and writhing; and
-then the truth came slowly and with labour, as he thought how little
-he dared to tell and yet save his skin. “It was for my mistress’s
-sake--the Princess. We were all afraid in the house because we are so
-weak. I had arranged to let some soldiers in to protect us all.”
-
-“You must do better than that, dog. Try again,” I sneered, coarsely.
-“Men don’t pay you to come and protect you. You’ll have to lie better
-than that to convince me.” Then I changed the sneer to a tone of anger.
-“I’ll have no more of this; the truth, or--” and I laid my hand on the
-bell.
-
-At that moment the man Buller had sent with the message in Russian came
-in and delivered it.
-
-“Very good,” I said to him; and added; “Tell black Ivan and Loris to
-come the instant I ring. I find I shall need them. They know what to
-bring with them.”
-
-The bluff worked. I saw that the instant the servant left the room.
-
-“I’ll give you one minute; no more,” I declared.
-
-“I’ll tell your Excellency all I know,” he stammered at once. “I was
-paid to let the soldiers into the house at two o’clock in the morning.”
-
-“For what purpose?”
-
-“I don’t know that.”
-
-“For what purpose?” I repeated sternly.
-
-“They wouldn’t tell me.”
-
-At that I appeared to fly into a passion. I seized the revolver and
-going up to him clapped it to his head.
-
-“Answer me, or I’ll scatter your brains here on the floor.”
-
-He shrank and groaned as he felt the cold steel on his forehead.
-
-“To arrest the Princess, Excellency. Oh, my God, my God,” he cried and
-burst into tears.
-
-I went back to my seat. “You are a faithful servant to your mistress.
-Do you know what’s going to happen to-night--the night you’ve chosen
-for this infamy?”
-
-“N--no. Yes,” he changed his words almost eagerly as he caught my eye.
-
-“Give it words then.”
-
-“They told me it was for her safety, Excellency. They did, they did, I
-swear they did, on my soul. When the King and Queen and the others are
-taken from the Palace, the Princess would be in danger in her house,
-and they mean to put her in a place of safety.”
-
-This was news, indeed; and in my consternation at hearing it, this
-coward and his treachery became of little importance. I did not doubt
-he was speaking the truth about that, whatever his own motives may have
-been for his act. And then a plan occurred to me.
-
-“How many men were to carry out the arrest?”
-
-“I don’t know--only a few; four or five at most, we have no means of
-resisting them in the house.”
-
-“You are to let them in by the stable door?”
-
-“Yes, Excellency, at two o’clock. They could force their way in even
-without my help.”
-
-I paid no heed to his attempt at exculpation. “What is your name? The
-name they know you by?”
-
-“Michel.”
-
-“How many men servants are in the house?”
-
-“Two besides myself. Two are away, Excellency.”
-
-“Anyone sleeping in the stables?”
-
-“No one, Excellency.”
-
-“Any of the others know of your plan?”
-
-“No, Excellency.”
-
-“You have the key of that stable door. Give it to me.”
-
-He handed it over with a deep sigh.
-
-“You have saved your skin,” I said curtly; “but you must remain here.
-You will be safe, if you make no effort to resist. If you do that, I
-shall leave orders that you are to be shot.” I said this much as though
-it were my daily custom to catch men and murder them; and the very tone
-I used added to his fears.
-
-I left him a minute in the care of Chris; and as Karasch had arrived I
-told him to have the man bound and locked up in one of the many vaults
-in the basement of the house.
-
-I was glad to be relieved of his presence, and then set to work to
-carry out the scheme which his story had suggested. When Karasch came
-back I told him what I had learnt and asked him how he had fared.
-
-“Except the handful of men on whom I knew I could trust, I have done
-little,” he said.
-
-“They may be enough for my altered plans. Can you get them to-night,
-and above all can you get uniforms for them?”
-
-“I fear not, Excellency. It is past midnight.”
-
-“Get the men then. I’ll find uniforms for them.”
-
-“My plan is to go to the Princess’s house at once; to wait for the men
-who are coming to arrest her; make them prisoners and then play their
-part. They will be able to provide us with the costumes,” I added,
-smiling grimly.
-
-“It is very dangerous,” was his comment.
-
-“You mean for them? Yes, it will be.”
-
-“I mean for you, and all of us.”
-
-“If anyone is afraid, let him stay away. I can go alone. It is no work
-for children, of course,” I exclaimed, impetuously.
-
-“Have I deserved that from your Excellency?”
-
-“No, Karasch; I know you haven’t. I am excited.”
-
-“Tell me what has to be done; and I will do it,” he said, simply;
-and then we discussed very hurriedly the plan and completed the
-preparations which had to be made.
-
-I told him to meet me near the Princess’s house with as many of the
-men as he could get together, and to bring with him a few lengths of
-stout cord for binding the soldiers we hoped to capture. That made
-clear I packed him off to hunt up his men.
-
-It was a desperate step I had resolved to take, and the penalty of
-failure would probably be serious. I realised that to the full; but on
-the other hand, I could see no other means of gaining my end.
-
-If Gatrina would have listened to me, the course would have been simple
-enough. I could have given her warning of her danger and have removed
-her to a place of safety. But she would not let me approach her nor
-admit there was anything perilous to her in the situation. Thus, if
-I was to save her it must be done against her knowledge and almost
-against her will.
-
-I left my house about half an hour after midnight, having appointed
-with Karasch to be at the Princess’s by half past one, or as near to
-that hour as he could reach there. In no event was he to be later than
-a quarter to two, even if he had to come alone.
-
-Having ample time, I resolved to make a detour and see if any movements
-were going on in the neighbourhood of the Palace. With Chris close at
-my heels I walked at a rapid pace, choosing the most unfrequented ways
-I could find.
-
-The whole city appeared sunk in the slumber of unsuspecting security.
-Scarcely a light glimmered in any one of the houses. The streets were
-deserted, and the only sounds to disturb the quietude were those of my
-own footsteps. If the army were really going to move that night, they
-must have kept their intentions entirely secret from all who were not
-concerned in their work.
-
-One o’clock was chimed as I came in view of the Palace; and save for
-the sentries pacing their rounds with mechanical steps, not a soul was
-to be seen. The Palace itself was wrapped in comparative darkness, the
-inmates secure in their belief in the fidelity and watchfulness of
-their guards.
-
-There was absolutely nothing to suggest that a violent outbreak was
-on the very eve of consummation; and that a deed of horror was in the
-making, the shame of which would before morning spread to the uttermost
-confines of the civilised world, to set men seeking its parallel in the
-darkest epochs of history.
-
-I turned from the Palace, indeed, hoping and more than half convinced
-that the spy had been misled, and that if the army really nurtured
-thoughts of force, their plans were not yet matured. I was intensely
-relieved by this apparent dissipation of my gloomy fears and at the
-same time profoundly perplexed as to my own course.
-
-If I forced my way in the dead of night into Gatrina’s house and
-nothing occurred to justify my act, discovery would overwhelm me with
-both confusion and shame. In her eyes I should not only look like a
-rash, intermeddling fool, but my conduct would be open to a thousand
-misinterpretations, all ominous and all ruinous to my hopes.
-
-But I was not long to be a prey to these distracting doubts. On
-leaving the Palace I hurried toward one of the barracks; and then, all
-suddenly, on turning the corner of one of the main streets, I heard
-the measured tramp of many feet; and had just time to conceal myself
-in the gateway of a house, when a large body of troops passed me,
-marching in dead silence.
-
-They numbered some hundreds, marching straight on the Palace; and
-I knew then, indeed, that trouble was abroad and that my worst
-forebodings were to be realised.
-
-The night of terror for Belgrade had come; and when I saw the strength
-of the force and thought of Gatrina, my heart sank within me at the
-paltry effort I was about to make to secure her safety. My plan seemed
-so puny, so less than weak, so hopeless in the face of this overawing
-display of force, that I could have gnashed my teeth in despair.
-
-I gazed after the troops, when they had passed, like a fool bereft of
-his wits by fear, until a sound broke and roused me from my lethargy.
-
-The sound was that of gunshots in the direction of the Palace. I
-guessed that the stern band had met with some opposition from the
-guard, and that the deadly work on which they were bent had already
-commenced. They had staked their lives on the issue; and even thus
-early, some had paid the forfeit.
-
-It was just the spur my sluggish wits needed and I slipped from my
-hiding-place and ran at utmost speed in the direction of Gatrina’s
-house. It was nearly a quarter to two when I reached it, to find with
-intense satisfaction that all was still quiet there and that Karasch
-had arrived and was awaiting me with four companions.
-
-Taking the utmost precaution to make sure we were unobserved, I
-unlocked the little door in the stable gates and we entered. Locking
-it behind me, and leaving the men at the end near the stable under the
-shadow of some trees, Karasch and I stole up the garden to the house,
-and found the unlocked door by which the spy had left.
-
-The time was so short before we were to look for the coming of the
-soldiers that not a moment was to be lost in finding a place where
-we could carry out the plan of capture. Karasch, most thoughtfully,
-had brought a lantern with him, and stealing noiselessly through the
-passages, we explored the whole of the underpart of the house; and I
-decided upon two large cellars and explained to him hurriedly how to
-act.
-
-We would let the men in two at a time, Karasch guiding one, I the
-other; and lead them each to a different cellar, where we would
-overpower and bind them. All would be in darkness on the plea that
-suspicion had been aroused in the house and any light would be
-dangerous; and as each man entered the cellar he would be seized.
-
-He fetched the men and by the light of the lantern I had a good look
-at each. They were a sturdy, resolute lot; and when we explained the
-work to be done, they seemed to enter into it with willingness and
-determination.
-
-The traps were in readiness before the hour struck, and Karasch and I
-went out again to the stable gate to wait for the soldiers.
-
-We stood in deep shadow and I then told him what I had seen in the
-streets and of the firing I had heard at the Palace.
-
-“The city will soon wake,” he muttered. “And if the people side with
-the troops, as I believe they will, we shall soon have the mob here.”
-
-“It will at least convince the Princess of the need to fly.” I sought
-hard to persuade myself of this; for my chief fear was that Gatrina
-herself would yet prove the greatest difficulty.
-
-We stood in silence for many minutes and now and again the sound of
-hurrying footsteps without told us that the news of the doings at the
-Palace was spreading and that the people were scurrying to learn what
-was going forward.
-
-“They are late,” muttered Karasch, impatiently, more than once; and
-then: “They are coming,” he declared, as his quick ear caught the sound
-of slower footsteps before I heard anything.
-
-I soon heard them, however. They halted outside the gates; and someone
-knocked. I opened the little door a couple of inches and peered through.
-
-There were six of them only.
-
-“Is that you, Michel?” came a whisper.
-
-“Hsh. Yes. How many are there of you?”
-
-“Six.”
-
-“There is danger. I am suspected. You must enter two at a time. I
-daren’t let you all pass together through the garden. Cautiously, my
-friend, cautiously,” I said, as someone tried to force the door.
-
-A consultation was held and the man who had spoken to me explained to
-the rest what I had said. Some difficulty was raised by one of the
-soldiers; but I got my way.
-
-Two men slipped through the door as I held it; and the instant the
-second was through, I locked it behind him.
-
-“Follow us,” I said, not giving either of them time to see my face; and
-we led them to the house. “Give me your hand,” I told the man with me.
-“We daren’t have a light, and the place is pitch dark.”
-
-He suspected nothing and I led him into the cellar, clapping my hand on
-his mouth as he entered, while the two men in waiting seized him and in
-less than a minute he lay bound and gagged. The other had been dealt
-with in the same way.
-
-Karasch and I went back to the stables; but the time occupied, swiftly
-as we had acted, had roused some kind of suspicion; and when I opened
-the little door, one of the men thrust the butt of his musket in the
-way and despite my strenuous efforts, before I could close it all four
-had forced themselves through.
-
-“We’ll go in together, my man,” said one of them, linking his arm in
-mine and holding me firmly. Another man did the same to Karasch.
-
-It spelt crisis; and for a moment or two I breathed hard. My fingers
-closed round my revolver, and his life hung by a much thinner thread
-than he dreamt.
-
-I stood fighting with the impulse and thus the chance passed.
-
-“See if he’s armed,” cried the soldier, and his companion plunged a
-hand into my pocket and wrenched my weapon roughly from me. Karasch was
-served in the same way; and from the confidence of success we were thus
-suddenly brought face to face with the threat of disastrous failure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-IN GATRINA’S HOUSE.
-
-
-In the moment of crisis Karasch took his cue from me and neither
-resisted nor protested against the soldiers’ conduct. I knew, however,
-that he would watch me closely and be prepared to help the moment I had
-decided what to do.
-
-“I don’t know why you’ve done this,” I said to the man who held me
-and had given the orders. “I kept faith with you and you arrest me in
-return for it.” I was on fire with anxiety, but I spoke coolly.
-
-“We can do without you now; and mean to see you give no trouble,” was
-the answer.
-
-“Very well; but if you cross the garden in a body like this, there’ll
-be no call for me to give it you; you’ll find it for yourself. You’ll
-be seen; the alarm will be given, and you may look out for resistance.”
-
-“Who is there to resist, fool-head? There are only three men in the
-house, and we’ve got two of you here,” he growled with a chuckle at his
-own cunning. “You come with us to the house; that’s all you’ve got to
-do; and come quietly, or maybe you won’t reach it. This is the army’s
-night, and we’re not in a mood to be soft to those who resist us.”
-
-With that we moved on along the garden and I was in a fever of
-apprehension lest we should be seen by someone in the house. But the
-inmates were apparently fast asleep, and we reached the entrance
-without being observed.
-
-This increased my captors’ suspicions.
-
-“I thought your caution was overdone, friend spy,” he said.
-
-“Then you’re a fool,” I answered, bluntly. “There’s a dog about and if
-he scents you, he’ll soon let everyone know. You’d better let me keep
-him quiet.” I had told Chris to stay, and knew he would remain till I
-called him.
-
-We had entered the house then and stood in the broad, stone-flagged
-passage; and I spoke loud enough to warn our men in the cellars beyond.
-I and the two men holding me were in advance and Karasch and the others
-close behind.
-
-“You hold your tongue. I’m in command here,” said the soldier in a
-bullying tone.
-
-“You’ve made prisoners of us; so you must do as you will. But I won’t
-stand this treatment.”
-
-“Where are my two men?”
-
-“I left them close here. I suppose they’ve gone on into the house.”
-
-“It’s as dark as hell,” growled the fellow. “Can you see anything,
-Andreas?” he asked his companion.
-
-“Nothing but the dark,” was the answer with an oath.
-
-“You can get a light in the room first door to the right,” I said. This
-was where I had left Chris, and if he went to it I knew the dog would
-put him out of the reckoning. But he smelt a trick and would not.
-
-“No, thank you, Mr. Spy. Where we go, you come too. I can’t make out
-where the devil the others are. What does it mean?” and he called the
-men by name.
-
-“Hadn’t you better ring the alarm bell, while you’re about it?” I
-sneered. “You’ll rouse everyone more quickly.”
-
-“Curse the dark. Lead to where I can get a light,” he muttered. “No
-tricks, mind, or you’ll regret it.”
-
-His grip tightened on my arm and we moved forward abreast. But the door
-was too narrow to admit us all at once and he entered the room first.
-
-“Seize him, Chris,” I said in English; and out of the gloom the huge
-black form sprang at him with a fierce growl. In his consternation the
-soldier loosed his hold of me to battle with the dog, and in a moment
-my hand was on his companion’s throat, while I called to the men in
-the cellars to go to the help of Karasch who was now fighting and
-struggling with his two guards.
-
-We were six to three, for Chris kept the leader busy; and the desperate
-struggle in the darkness was soon over. The soldiers fought gamely
-enough; but they had no chance against such odds. We overpowered them,
-but it was not until some hard blows had been given and taken on both
-sides.
-
-I was most afraid for the man whom Chris had attacked; but when I went
-to him was relieved to find that no serious harm had been done. He was
-terribly frightened; as well might be, for Chris was an antagonist
-few men would care to fight. But having got him down the good dog
-had not mauled him. The soldier lay flat on the ground, with Chris
-standing guard over him and growling fiercely whenever the man made the
-slightest movement.
-
-“Call this brute off for God’s sake,” he said, in a frightened voice as
-I approached, lantern in hand. I was glad to hear him speak.
-
-“It serves you right for the trick you played me,” I answered. “Are you
-hurt?” and I called Chris away.
-
-“I thought he’d kill me.”
-
-“Wouldn’t have been much loss if he had,” said I, as he sat up and
-began to feel himself all over.
-
-“I’d like to shoot the brute. What does this all mean?”
-
-“That you’re my prisoner instead of my being yours. If you have any
-weapons put ’em out--or I’ll let the dog find them.”
-
-He glanced round fearsomely at Chris, who snarled.
-
-“I have none.”
-
-“Then we’ll tie you up like the rest of your men,” I answered; and
-tied up he was. “I shall leave you here,” I told him. “The dog will be
-on watch if you try any tricks; and you know whether you want another
-round with him.”
-
-Our victory was complete; and it remained to see how we should use it.
-Karasch and the others set to work to take the soldiers’ uniforms and
-put them on, while I tried to think what step to take next. I was in
-possession of the house; but it seemed as if the real difficulties of
-the business were only at the beginning.
-
-The noise made during the struggle was so great that I knew the
-household must have been roused, and while the men were getting into
-the soldiers’ uniforms, I listened with considerable anxiety for
-someone to come down to us. No one came, however; and I concluded
-that those who had been aroused had also been so frightened that they
-preferred to stop where they were.
-
-The difficulty of the position was increased by my reluctance to see
-Gatrina or be seen by her, if that could be in any way prevented. My
-plan was to play his burlesque of arresting her, and not to shew my
-hand until she was housed safely in the care of the American Minister.
-To do that I intended one of the four men whom Karasch had brought to
-act the part of leader; and I trusted that in the confusion and alarm
-of the arrest, both Karasch and I might manage to pass unnoticed.
-
-I was revolving all this in my thoughts when I heard a movement above
-stairs, and presently a man’s voice called:
-
-“Is that you, Michel? What’s the matter?”
-
-“Come down,” I called in response; but my voice startled him.
-
-“Who are you?”
-
-“Michel wants you. There is trouble. Come down;” but he would not.
-Instead of coming he went away; and I heard the low murmur of voices as
-he spoke with someone else.
-
-Lights shewed then, and I heard people moving about. But I did not want
-the house to be lighted up, for fear of its attracting too much notice
-outside; and I therefore called to my men to make haste with their
-dressing.
-
-When they came I led the way upstairs to find the servants huddled
-together looking very scared; the two men in front of them armed. At
-the sight of so many of us in uniform they uttered cries of surprise
-and alarm.
-
-“Put those guns down,” I said, in a tone of command. “We are too strong
-for you to resist; and if you make any attempt, it will only lead to
-trouble. Do as I say, and no harm will come to you.”
-
-The two men hesitated. “What do you want?” asked one of them.
-
-“Cover them,” I said, stepping to one side, and up went my men’s guns
-to their shoulders.
-
-One of the women screamed and they all huddled back, while the men laid
-their weapons on the ground with discreet speed. At a sign from me the
-muskets were lowered.
-
-“Put out most of those lights,” I said next; and the order was obeyed
-with a celerity that spoke volumes for the impression we had created.
-“Where is your mistress, the Princess Gatrina?”
-
-“In her rooms, sir,” said one of the women servants.
-
-“Tell her to dress at once. She is to come with us. Impress upon her
-that only her safety is being considered. Strange things are doing in
-the city, and she cannot remain here. She must be ready to go with us
-in five minutes.”
-
-The girl sped away up the broad stairs and I turned to Karasch to tell
-him my plan.
-
-“The Princess will probably demand to see us; and as neither you nor I
-can go to her without being recognised, two of these must go. Pick them
-out.”
-
-He chose two, and I told them what to say. That we had been selected to
-protect the Princess and take her to a place where she would be safe
-until the trouble in the city had passed.
-
-The maid came back and her message was pretty much what I had
-anticipated.
-
-“Her highness will see you in a minute, sir. She wishes to know from
-whom you come; and declares she will not leave the house.”
-
-“Our orders are peremptory. In five minutes she must go with us,” I
-replied, and she carried the message.
-
-While we waited for the reply I went into the room where I had once
-before been, and saw that my fears as to the unguarded window were only
-too well justified. I called Karasch’s attention to it.
-
-“If we have to remain in the house that window must be barricaded,
-or we may as well throw open the front door,” I said; and we were
-discussing it when I heard one of the maids say to the other servants
-that the street in the front of the house was getting full of people.
-
-We went and looked out. It was only too true; and that it probably had
-a very sinister meaning for us all I knew to my infinite concern.
-
-The city was indeed awaking to a knowledge of the dread doings of
-the night of terror, and the crowd was beginning to gather here in
-expectation that the house would become the scene of some stirring and
-exciting act of the tragedy.
-
-I noticed with relief, however, that no troops were present. None had
-been sent yet under the belief that Gatrina would be made prisoner by
-the handful of men whose parts we were now playing. But how long this
-belief would continue it was impossible to conjecture.
-
-Someone somewhere was waiting to receive the Princess from the hands of
-the men; and when they did not arrive with her, the sands of patience
-would be few and would soon run out, and a fresh guard sent to know the
-reason. When they came, they would bring a heap of trouble with them;
-unless I could hurry Gatrina from the house in time.
-
-The need for haste was thus imperative; and I fretted and worried at
-the delay she made, all unconscious as she was of the peril it meant to
-her and all.
-
-The instant the five minutes’ grace had expired, I sent the two men
-upstairs to bring her down, despatching one of the scared maid-servants
-to shew them her room.
-
-At that moment we heard sounds below and Chris growled and barked.
-Karasch and I, followed by the two men, ran down instantly and found
-trouble; one of the soldiers, carelessly bound, had wriggled out of his
-cords and liberated a companion; and as we reached the bottom of the
-stairs, the two were in the passage with the dog blocking the way to
-the door and snarling fiercely.
-
-We rushed toward them, but they slipped into the room where Chris had
-had the fight with the leader; and slamming the door in our faces, set
-up a clatter loud enough to wake the dead.
-
-Karasch and I dashed ourselves against the door and as we strained to
-force it, we heard the crash of glass.
-
-“The garden, Karasch,” I cried; and we unfastened the door and rushed
-out. Chris darted out with a growl and in a moment had brought one of
-the men to bay. The other fled toward the stable and we ran in pursuit
-of him. But he was a quick, agile fellow, and using the little door at
-the end as a means of escape, he sprang up it, mounted the wall and
-disappeared--to carry the news of our doings heaven alone knew where.
-
-“Back to the house, Karasch. We must get away before that man can bring
-help.” We took back his comrade, thrust him into a room, turned the key
-upon him, and hurried again up the stairs.
-
-Matters were going against me in the house also; and I was beginning to
-realise that I had grievously bungled matters in choosing such a method
-to serve Gatrina.
-
-She had done precisely what, if I had not been a dolt, I might have
-known a girl of her courage and resolution would do. She had used the
-minutes of grace to barricade herself into the room.
-
-The men were waiting for me with the story.
-
-“She has fastened herself into her room, she and her maids, and we
-could hear them piling things against the door to keep us out. We tried
-to call your message through the door, but at first she wouldn’t
-answer; and then she said she was quite safe where she was and would
-yield to nothing but force. We didn’t like to force the door without
-your orders.”
-
-I clenched my hands in impotent chagrin. Had we been the soldiers whose
-part we were playing, there would have been little enough difficulty,
-of course; and a few minutes would have sufficed to break a way in and
-take her prisoner.
-
-But force was out of the question for me; and I felt like a flustered
-fool as the infinitely precious moments slipped away one after another
-bringing perilously nearer the troops who would come hurrying to the
-house the instant the man who had escaped got his story to headquarters.
-
-To add to the strain of the situation, cries and calls began to be
-heard from the crowd in the street. Presently a stone was flung through
-one of the windows; and the crash of the glass sent a shiver of fear
-through the clustered servants and was followed by a loud cheer from
-the crowd and a cry of “Down with the Obrenovics!”
-
-“Shew me the Princess’s room,” I said, and followed by the men I ran
-upstairs and knocked on the panel of the door.
-
-There was no answer.
-
-I knocked again.
-
-“For God’s sake open the door and come out,” I said, eagerly.
-
-Still there was no reply; and while we waited more stones were flung
-and more windows broken, followed as before by the shouts and hoarse
-cries of the mob.
-
-But not a sign would Gatrina make in response to my knocking and appeal.
-
-Every second was bringing the danger nearer--and it was growing to
-a double peril now; for Karasch brought me word that the mob was
-increasing fast in numbers and were growing so angry that it looked as
-though they would attack the house.
-
-I clamoured again at the door and called out that there was imminent
-danger; but either she did not hear my voice because of the clamour of
-the people without, or hearing it, did not recognise the tone; and held
-it to be a ruse of the soldiers to induce her to open the door.
-
-I felt just mad as I cursed my stupidity for having planned this
-soldier business, which had thus driven Gatrina to regard these
-desperate efforts of ours to save her as the violence of her enemies
-bent upon her destruction.
-
-Meanwhile the temper of the populace without was rising so fast
-that it seemed as if a few minutes would make escape from the house
-impracticable for us all, even if more troops did not arrive.
-
-I hammered again at the door and called her in my loudest tones; I told
-the servants of the peril in which she stood if we could not get her
-away, and urged them to join with me in appealing to her to yield. But
-it was all to no purpose. Not a word would she answer either to them or
-to me.
-
-“Get me paper quickly,” I told them; and when one, a white-faced girl,
-rushed away on the errand, I whistled up Chris and set him barking in
-the hope that she would hear him and know by the sound who was there.
-
-Chris succeeded where I had failed.
-
-“What is that?” It was Gatrina’s voice; and hearing it the dog whined
-and barked joyfully.
-
-“It is Chris,” I called. “We are here to save you. Open the door for
-the love of God at once.”
-
-“Who is that speaking?”
-
-“It is I, Bourgwan,” I replied, my voice unsteady in my excitement.
-“There is not a moment to lose.”
-
-“Where are the soldiers?”
-
-“I will explain all. For God’s sake come or it will be too late. Every
-second is precious.”
-
-We heard them drag away something they had placed before the door; and
-burning with impatience called again to them to make haste.
-
-At that moment a loud knocking came at the front door of the house; and
-one of Karasch’s men came running to say that the soldiers were in the
-street.
-
-“We daren’t stay to be caught in these uniforms. We shall be shot
-off-hand at a time like this,” he said; and the others agreed.
-
-“You’ll be shot by me if you attempt to desert me now,” I answered
-desperately. “Before anyone can get in, we shall be away. Stop them,
-Karasch. In a few moments we shall all be away.”
-
-Again there came the loud knocking and clanging of the bell, followed
-by the cries of the mob and another shower of stones at the house.
-
-Unable to hold their courage longer my men turned and ran down the
-stairs helter-skelter.
-
-There was a moment’s calm without and in the silence the room door
-unlocked and Gatrina came out.
-
-Not recognising me for an instant in the surprise at seeing my
-officer’s uniform, and Karasch by me dressed also as a soldier, she
-started back as if fearing treachery; but Chris rushed up to her and
-disarmed her fear.
-
-“Would God you had come out before,” I cried.
-
-Before she could reply we heard the sound of a scuffle and two of the
-men came running back.
-
-“We are too late. The soldiers are already in the house below,” cried
-one, breathlessly. “We are as good as dead men.”
-
-Even Karasch changed colour at the news.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-CHRIS TO THE RESCUE.
-
-
-It was the delay which had been fatal to the plan. The minutes during
-which we had had to wait before Gatrina could be made to understand who
-we were and what our object was had just turned the balance against us.
-
-“What dreadful thing has happened?” she asked.
-
-“I cannot spare a moment to explain. If you will play the part of being
-my prisoner there is yet a chance of getting away.”
-
-“I am sorry,” she said, as her maid brought her a cloak and hat.
-
-“Silence there,” I cried in a loud voice. “Fall in. I am sorry my
-duty is so unpleasant, your highness; but I can answer no questions.
-Forward.”
-
-I led the way motioning to Karasch to walk at Gatrina’s side, with two
-of the men in front and two bringing up the rear. The women thinking
-the thing real began to weep.
-
-I had heard the soldiers coming up and they met us on the stairs. The
-only chance was to put as bold a face as possible on the matter and
-with as much show of authority as I could assume, I said:
-
-“Is the way from the house clear? I shall take the prisoner by the back
-through the garden.”
-
-I had expected to be faced by some of the men we had fought with
-earlier, but to my intense relief there were none but private soldiers
-and one sergeant; and on seeing my captain’s uniform they stood aside
-and saluted.
-
-“We have not been to the back of the house, captain,” replied the
-sergeant.
-
-“Is Colonel Petrosch here yet?” I asked this as I thought the mention
-of the name might impress him.
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“Who’s in command of the soldiers in the front?”
-
-“Lieutenant Bulver, captain.”
-
-“Is he in sufficient force to control the mob?”
-
-“He has a strong body of troops, captain.”
-
-“What are you doing in the house?” I was curious to know whether the
-escape of the soldiers had anything to do with it.
-
-“We were detailed to see if the arrest had yet been made, captain, and
-to assist you if necessary.”
-
-I breathed a little more freely.
-
-“All I need is that the mob there be kept in the front of the house so
-that I can get away with the prisoner quietly at the back. That side
-street must be cleared of people. How did you get into the house?”
-
-“We forced a small door at the side, captain.”
-
-This accounted for his not knowing anything of what had gone on below
-stairs in the basement.
-
-Then came the sound of more hooting and groaning from the front of the
-house; and another volley of stones breaking more of the windows. This
-in turn was followed by sharp words of command; and a knocking at the
-front door.
-
-Keeping up my policy of bluff, I opened it myself. The officer was on
-the step and started in surprise at seeing me. He was a pleasant-faced
-young fellow, and taking me for a superior officer was disposed to
-offer an apology. Bluff is an excellent policy while you can keep your
-end up.
-
-“Oh, I thought only a sergeant was here,” he said.
-
-“I deemed it best to come myself,” I answered. “Can’t you keep the
-crowd in order?”
-
-“They are very strong and inclined to violence. We’ve driven them back
-for a bit; but I’ve sent for more men.”
-
-I knew they would be on hand sooner than he thought or I wished; but I
-replied, seriously: “Very prudent. This sort of thing is not what we
-want at all. The house was to be protected.”
-
-“We did not look for such a demonstration,” he said again,
-apologetically.
-
-“Well, I have made the arrest, but I had more trouble than I
-anticipated; there was a stout resistance. I wish to take the prisoner
-away without exposing her to the mob. Let your men clear the side
-street of people, and prevent anyone passing into it. I shall leave the
-house by the garden through the stables.”
-
-“We are strong enough to protect her from the crowd.”
-
-“I prefer the other way, lieutenant. Be good enough to see my order
-carried out,” I replied sharply.
-
-“I’ll have it done at once,” and he went away.
-
-“You had better help the lieutenant, sergeant; he will need all the men
-he can have.”
-
-In this way I got rid of him and his men also, and I shut the door
-again, with a fervent sigh of thankfulness that my imposture had not
-been detected. I had caught the lieutenant eyeing me curiously more
-than once during the short colloquy; but I concluded that he took me
-for one of the officers who had been drafted in from the provincial
-regiments for the grim work of that night. And probably my air and tone
-of authority had stopped him from putting any questions which I should
-have found exceedingly hard to answer.
-
-Whatever his reasons, I had succeeded in bluffing him, even at the very
-moment when I had given up all as lost; and my hopes began to rise that
-even in the teeth of all this force and despite the anger of the mob,
-Gatrina would be saved.
-
-“We’ll make for the garden at once,” I said; and we passed through the
-room with the French window opening on to the garden, and hurried to
-the stables.
-
-As we passed we could hear the troops clearing the street amid the
-expostulations and cries of the crowd, as they were swept on toward the
-front.
-
-Until now Gatrina had not spoken to me, but we had to wait while the
-way was cleared and we stood side by side and a little apart from the
-rest.
-
-“You have run a terrible risk, Mr. Bergwyn,” she said.
-
-“I have been in no danger; and we shall get away all right.”
-
-“What has happened at the Palace?”
-
-“I don’t know. I got wind of this intended arrest of you and came here
-in the hope of intercepting the soldiers. As I was on my way, a very
-large body of troops, some hundreds of men, passed me marching on the
-Palace; and afterwards I heard the sound of firing. But what occurred
-after that I have no knowledge whatever.”
-
-She wrung her hands despairingly.
-
-“Do you think--oh, God, it is maddening.”
-
-“It is the work of the army. I know so much. And I hope they have done
-no more than to force an abdication.”
-
-“You say that as if you feared--I know not what horrors.”
-
-“If we once get clear of this we shall find out what has occurred. But
-we could do nothing if we wished. You have seen for yourself the temper
-of the people. They have sided with the army.”
-
-“You mean the attack on my house?”
-
-“Yes. The city is mad to-night, and would do anything. The only thing
-to think of now is your safety. Karasch, look over if we can go yet.”
-
-I was on fire with impatience to be away; but Karasch reported that the
-street was not yet clear.
-
-“Is there no other way we could escape?” I asked Gatrina.
-
-She shook her head. “No, none,” she replied.
-
-“I dare not wait here, Karasch; we shall be caught in a trap;” and
-opening the door in the stable gates I looked out; but only to shut it
-again quickly as I caught my breath in dismay at what I saw.
-
-Another body of troops were coming towards us at the double, and by the
-side of the officer in command ran a man in his shirt sleeves. It was
-the soldier who had escaped from us.
-
-“We are too late,” I said, as calmly as I could speak. “There are more
-troops, Karasch, and that man is guiding them. We must go back to the
-house and try to get away from the front.”
-
-We hurried back through the garden, and before we reached the house the
-newcomers were already clamouring at the stable gates.
-
-Dashing through the house I flung open the front door.
-
-But that way was impossible. The very orders I had given, to have the
-crowd massed in the front of the house, had effectually barred the
-chance of escape. They had been driven from the side street and were
-now surging and swaying in a dense mass to the right of the house, too
-vast a crowd for me to hope of pushing my way through them with the
-handful of men I had.
-
-To go to the left meant only running into the arms of the fresh troops;
-certain capture.
-
-I called Karasch and pointed to the hopelessness of the attempt.
-
-“We can do nothing. You and the men must get away.”
-
-“And you?” he asked.
-
-“I shall stay with the Princess.”
-
-“Then I stay too, with you,” he said sturdily.
-
-“No, you can do better. You can save us both. You and the others. You
-can pretend to carry a message from me to the lieutenant--that I want
-to speak to him; and then lose yourselves among the soldiers or in the
-crowd. Get away as fast as you can, and search high and low to find
-Colonel Petrosch. Don’t forget the name, and find him at any hazard.
-Tell him that my life is in danger and that he must come here if it is
-not to be lost. If he questions you, tell him plainly all I have done.
-Now go.”
-
-“I don’t like leaving you,” he insisted.
-
-“For God’s sake, man, don’t be a fool. It’s the only way out of the
-tightest fix I was ever in. You must reach him before he hears the news
-these others are bringing. Go;” and I half pushed him out of the house.
-
-The rest were only too eager to be off, and I watched breathlessly as
-Karasch crossed the cleared space, spoke to the lieutenant, who looked
-over at me and after hesitating, walked toward me.
-
-As he came, I saw Karasch and his men move back to the soldiers, push
-through the ranks, and disappear in the crowd behind them.
-
-“What have you done?” asked Gatrina.
-
-“I have sent for someone who may get us out of the mess I have been
-clever enough to get us into. I don’t know what’s going to happen
-first.”
-
-The lieutenant entered the house then.
-
-“You wish to speak to me, captain?” he asked.
-
-“It’s just as well to you as to another. I’m only masquerading in this
-uniform. I am not an officer at all.”
-
-He stared at me openmouthed in sheer amazement.
-
-“No officer?” he stammered. “I don’t understand.”
-
-“You soon will. There are those coming who will make it all plain to
-you. But having misled you purposely, I wished to tell you; that’s
-all.” I spoke as coolly as though I had been announcing a mere business
-fact.
-
-“The soldiers who were with you?” he asked then, glancing round as if
-in search of them.
-
-“They are gone,” I told him.
-
-Then we heard a noise in the basement. Loud voices, the tramp of many
-feet, and a rush up the stairs.
-
-“We’ll wait for them here,” I said to Gatrina, pointing to a room at
-the back of the house; and we all three went into it, Chris keeping
-close by her side.
-
-“You are my prisoner, sir,” said the lieutenant.
-
-“I shall offer no resistance,” I replied, making it sound as much like
-a concession on my part as I could.
-
-I put a chair for Gatrina and she sat down, while I stood beside her.
-
-The next minute the soldiers came crowding into the room with the
-sergeant and men whose uniforms we had taken in their midst. They
-were all talking at once and gesticulating at once angrily, making a
-sort of Babel of tongues, in which fierce denunciations of me were
-disquietingly loud and conspicuous.
-
-The officer in charge of the newcomers exchanged a few words with the
-lieutenant, describing excitedly the heinous deed of which I had been
-guilty. I disliked the look of him intensely--a heavy, red-haired
-bully of a man, and when he addressed me he did so in a hectoring tone
-difficult to hear without anger.
-
-“So we’ve arrived in time to take you red-handed, my fine fellow, eh?”
-
-“Red-handed? In doing what?” I asked, meeting his beetle-browed stare
-firmly.
-
-“Don’t try to bluster with me. I’m the wrong man,” he cried, hotly. “It
-won’t pay you, I promise you.”
-
-“He was one of them, captain. I’ll swear to him. And that’s the dog
-that flew at me,” said the sergeant.
-
-“Take the beast out and shoot it,” ordered the captain, brutally.
-
-Chris was in no immediate danger of that fate, however. Two of the
-soldiers went toward him but he shewed his great fangs and looked so
-dangerous, that they stopped and stepped back; and no other volunteers
-offered for the job.
-
-Angered at this the captain himself drew a revolver and pointed it at
-the dog, but I checkmated this by calling Chris round behind me.
-
-“Don’t you dare to interfere with my orders,” cried the bully,
-furiously.
-
-I answered this by putting myself right in the line of fire. “I will
-not have the dog shot in this way.”
-
-“The dog is in my house and under my protection,” exclaimed Gatrina.
-
-“You are my prisoners, both of you; and as for you,” he said, with a
-coarse sneer to Gatrina, “your day is done, and your protection will
-avail nothing. You’ll find that out soon enough.” But he put up his
-revolver; and as we had gained the point, it wasn’t policy to anger him
-further with the hot remonstrance that rose to my lips.
-
-“Did this man give you his name?” he asked the lieutenant, who shook
-his head and shrugged his shoulders. I think he was more than a little
-ashamed of his superior’s manner. “What’s your name, prisoner?”
-demanded the captain next.
-
-“I am perfectly willing to explain everything I have done; but I should
-prefer to do so before a smaller audience.”
-
-“I daresay you would, but you’re not in a position to choose. I settle
-that. Now answer my questions and don’t try to lie to me.”
-
-The colour leapt to my face at this. “There is no need to insult me,
-captain. It will neither hurt my case, nor help yours.”
-
-“By God, if you don’t answer me at once I’ll have you marched down into
-the garden there and shot for a traitor and a cur.”
-
-I couldn’t take that. It made me mad. Clipping my words short I
-answered, deliberately:
-
-“I think that would be the better plan, then. It will at least free me
-from the presence of a cad and a bully; and the lieutenant there will,
-I am sure, have the courage and justice to tell the truth of your act.”
-
-He swore a deep oath, beside himself with rage.
-
-“Seize him,” he shouted. “By God, seize him, and take him out and shoot
-him.”
-
-I was seized by three soldiers.
-
-“Lieutenant, you will tell Colonel Petrosch how I, his personal friend,
-have been condemned without a hearing.”
-
-“Away with him,” shouted the captain, stamping with rage. The men began
-to lead me away.
-
-“This is murder, and shall not be done,” cried Gatrina, jumping to her
-feet.
-
-“Silence, woman,” exclaimed the bully. “Your doom is near, too.”
-
-“I will not be silent while murder is being done. I call upon all of
-you to stop this murder. You, sir,” turning to the lieutenant. “You
-will not----”
-
-The captain, like a maniac in his fury at this interruption, drew his
-sword and shouting out a vile epithet, rushed at Gatrina, intending, I
-believe, to strike her down.
-
-But Chris, whose ominous growl at my treatment I had had to pacify,
-went almost as mad at this as the bully himself and with a savage growl
-launched himself right at the captain’s throat, bore him to the ground,
-and pinned him down, despite the blows and kicks which the soldiers
-rained upon him.
-
-“Loose him, Chris,” I cried, fearing the man would be killed; and at my
-voice he obeyed. Then, as he was looking up to me, one of the soldiers
-who had picked up the captain’s sword slashed at the dog’s leg and
-when he dropped, the brute thrust the blade between his ribs.
-
-With a cry of rage I broke from the men who held me and rushed to
-Chris, but Gatrina was before me.
-
-“You coward!” she cried to the soldier, who stood half gloating, half
-dismayed at his act; and the next moment my fist crashed into his face,
-knocking him sprawling among his comrades.
-
-As I bent over my gallant dog, my heart full of sadness and pity for
-him, I was seized again by the men, and such a scene of confusion and
-riot followed as baffles description.
-
-They beat me, of course, and I was dragged back and held panting,
-struggling, straining, breathing out impotent threats, and cursing all
-who had had a hand in the cruel work, as I strove vainly to get again
-to the spot where Gatrina, white-faced and pitying, knelt by the dear
-dog, who had so valiantly given his life to save her.
-
-Another group had the bully of a captain for its centre. He was getting
-up, all bloody about the throat where Chris had fastened on him, and
-madder than ever with rage, gasped out a repetition of his orders to
-have Gatrina seized and me taken away and shot.
-
-Still fighting with the men about me I was being lugged and hustled and
-thrust out of the room, oblivious to everything but my insensate rage,
-and they had got me to the door when two officers entered the house.
-
-“What is this riot?” cried one in a loud, stern tone; and the men
-about me started instantly at the voice and I felt their grip on me to
-relax.
-
-“It is murder; nothing else,” I shouted; and taking advantage of my
-captors’ surprise, I broke from them and rushed back into the room to
-Gatrina and my poor Chris.
-
-“Is he dead?” I asked her.
-
-She looked up and I read the truth by the tears in her eyes.
-
-“Poor, faithful Chris,” she murmured, with a deep sigh, as her hand
-gently caressed the great head.
-
-I could not speak. I had loved the dog so well--and never better than
-in the manner of his death. I bent over him for a moment with a feeling
-of irreparable loss, as at the death of a friend.
-
-“He gave his life for me, Bourgwan. Poor old comrade,” murmured Gatrina
-using, unconsciously I think, the old term.
-
-In that moment the tie of our common sorrow for the dog’s death brought
-us as close together as even in those past days in the hills.
-
-I made no reply. I could not. I was tongue-tied by the hampering rush
-of mingled emotions.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-MY DEFENCE.
-
-
-The grip of a hand on my shoulder roused me from my reverie. A couple
-of soldiers stood one on either side of me; and as I turned I saw the
-red brute of a captain being supported out of the room. The officer who
-had arrived last had taken command and was sitting at a table with the
-lieutenant standing at his side. With much relief I recognised him at
-once. He was a Major Kireef whom I had met at the Palace reception.
-
-I was placed in front of him, and two or three of the soldiers took up
-positions by Gatrina. As the major held my fate and perhaps my life
-in his hands, I scrutinised him closely. He was a man between forty
-and fifty years of age; his face strong but not harsh; his manner
-peremptory as of one accustomed to exact prompt obedience; but he gave
-me the impression that he would deal justly even if sternly. A vastly
-different type of man from the red-headed, passionate beast whose place
-he had taken. And I was heartily thankful for the exchange.
-
-He glanced sharply at me and with a slight start turned to some notes
-he had made of what the others had told him. I guessed that he had some
-recollection of my features and was probably looking for my name.
-
-“You are Major Kireef, I think?” I said, while his eyes were still on
-the papers. He looked up quickly and frowned.
-
-“You are not to question me,” he rapped out, very curtly. Then: “I see
-no mention of your name here. What is it?”
-
-“The man who has just left was going to have me shot without troubling
-to find out,” I replied, getting that fact out as soon as I could.
-
-“Be good enough to remember you are a prisoner, and that you will not
-help your case by either evading my questions or attempting to bring
-charges against others. Now, your name?”
-
-“Chase F. Bergwyn, a citizen of the United States.”
-
-He dropped his pen in surprise and half started to his feet.
-
-“Mr. Bergwyn?” he exclaimed. “It is not possible.”
-
-“If you can send a message to Colonel Petrosch he will confirm what
-I say, major. I met you at the Reception at the Palace just after my
-arrival in Belgrade. You may remember me.”
-
-I had every cause to be satisfied with the effect of my words. He
-paused a moment as if in doubt what to do, and then waved back the
-soldiers who stood by me.
-
-“Have the room cleared,” he said to the lieutenant. “Put a chair for
-Mr. Bergwyn there.” I moved my chair near to Gatrina and while the room
-was cleared, he busied himself with his notes.
-
-“Shall I remain, major?” asked the lieutenant, when the men had gone.
-
-“Yes, for the present;” and the young officer went back to his place,
-having to step over poor old Chris, whose body, now that the place was
-empty, lay in full view, a conspicuous, ghastly evidence of the wild
-scene just ended.
-
-“There must surely have been some unaccountable mistake, Mr. Bergwyn?”
-he said, interrogatively and courteously when we four were alone;
-“judging, that is, by the extraordinary story which has been told to
-me. I invite you to explain.”
-
-“I asked the captain who has been hurt to allow me to do so privately;
-but he declined. Let me thank you for having cleared the room. There
-is a further favour you can do me, and a much more important one. Let
-someone go at once in search of Colonel Petrosch. I won’t disguise
-from you I have placed myself in a very awkward position, and as he
-and I have had some very confidential relations--you may perhaps know
-that--it is of vital importance I should have his assistance.”
-
-“This matter is in my hands, and I must investigate the facts before
-taking any other action. The charges against you are very grave--if you
-are indeed the person implicated.”
-
-“If you will put any questions I will answer them,” I said,
-disappointed by his refusal of my request.
-
-“You have represented yourself as an officer of the Servian army?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“You, with others who appear to have escaped, violently ill-treated the
-guard who were sent here to arrest this lady--Princess Gatrina?”
-
-“It may pass at that; although the ill-treatment was not very violent.”
-
-“You set your dog on one of them?”
-
-“The man was going to arrest me, and I would not permit that. But he
-was not hurt.”
-
-“You then forcibly took from five of the men their uniforms that your
-men might wear them as a disguise and personate troops of the line.”
-
-“Yes, that is true.”
-
-His eyebrows went up and he pursed his lips and shrugged his shoulders.
-Very ominous gestures.
-
-“Who were the men with you?”
-
-“That I cannot answer. The responsibility is mine and mine only. They
-were men whom I paid to assist me.”
-
-“That is a very grave admission, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-“I am quite aware of it. It’s a very tight corner, indeed.”
-
-“Was anyone cognisant of your plans?”
-
-“No one.”
-
-“This lady?”
-
-“No, certainly not.”
-
-“You are wearing a captain’s uniform. How did you get it?”
-
-“I borrowed it without leave--stole it, perhaps I ought to say; except
-that I shall return it to the owner.”
-
-“Who is the owner?”
-
-“That I cannot answer.”
-
-“Yet you say no one--not even the owner of the uniform--was in league
-with you?”
-
-“Not even the owner of this uniform.”
-
-He appeared to find this difficult to believe; and it began to look as
-if I had done Nikolitch a bad turn.
-
-“It is very extraordinary.”
-
-“I have told you the truth, major. I give you my word of honour as an
-American citizen.”
-
-“Now then as to your object. What was that?”
-
-“I wished to prevent the Princess Gatrina being arrested by the army,
-and to place her in safety until the passions of this night’s doings
-in the city had cooled sufficiently for the officers to have time to
-consider their course in regard to her.”
-
-“I am loath to take that answer, Mr. Bergwyn--it only makes your case
-worse.”
-
-“I can’t help that, major. It is the truth.”
-
-“You interfered deliberately to oppose the plans of the army?”
-
-“I interfered to prevent at least one deed of blood being done in the
-frenzy of to-night’s passion.”
-
-“Who are you to set yourself against the army, sir?” he retorted very
-sternly.
-
-“The English blood in my veins and my instincts as an American citizen
-alike revolt against the insensate violence of such an act as that
-intended, and I used such means as I had to prevent it. I staked my
-life on the issue; and if the army choose to claim the forfeit, I will
-pay it.”
-
-“Why do you say such an act was intended?”
-
-“The answer is supplied in what has occurred to-night at the Palace,
-Major Kireef. That I could not prevent, although, God knows, I would
-have done so had I had the power.”
-
-Gatrina, who had been listening breathlessly to all this, intervened
-then. “What has occurred at the Palace?” she asked strenuously. “Surely
-no violence.”
-
-“The King and Queen have come in conflict with the troops, and their
-Majesties have lost their lives in consequence.” The answer was given
-with cold deliberation; and I took it for the official version of
-Elma’s one word prophecy--assassination.
-
-Gatrina was overcome by the news and threw herself back in her seat,
-her face covered by her hands.
-
-“Are they the only lives that have been--lost?” I asked.
-
-“I cannot answer you, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-“Perhaps not; but you can at any rate see in my question the reason for
-all I have done to-night--even if to you it does not appear to be a
-justification.”
-
-“The arrest of the Princess will of course take place,” he answered,
-“and you, Mr. Bergwyn, will have to answer to the army for what you
-have done.”
-
-“I am ready to face the band; but I am not the only one who will have
-to do that. That red-headed murderer who was here just now----”
-
-“I cannot hear this,” he interposed.
-
-“It’s part of my case, if you please,” said I, warmly. “He not only
-told the Princess, like the coward he is, that she was to die, but he
-himself drew his sword upon her. Then it was that my dog there flew at
-him--and I only wish he had torn his cowardly life out of him.”
-
-“You may have an opportunity of defence.”
-
-“‘May have,’” I cried, indignantly. “You are talking to an American
-citizen, sir, and you’ll find out how that Government views the acts
-of her people when they try to prevent innocent blood being shed, even
-if the acts themselves are wrong. I demand, right now, to have the
-protection of my country’s representative.”
-
-“Your crime has been committed against the army, sir,” he said, coldly.
-
-“Crime? Crime you call it?” I answered, passionately. “Crime? To tie
-up half a dozen men in order to prevent a real crime, murder, being
-committed? If mine is the crime, all I can say is I am guilty of it,
-and would be guilty of it a hundred times over.”
-
-“This heat will serve no purpose, Mr. Bergwyn,” said the major, after a
-pause.
-
-“You’re right there; we’ll have no more of it. I’ll tell you how the
-thing arose--for I’ve nothing to conceal;” and I told him plainly how
-I had overheard the talk between the spy from Gatrina’s house and just
-what I had done afterwards.
-
-“And now, if you’ll send out in search of Colonel Petrosch, it will
-save much time, anxiety and trouble for all concerned.”
-
-“I must consider my course. I am not answerable to Colonel Petrosch
-alone, I fear. The Princess must be prepared to go with my men.”
-
-“I will go,” declared Gatrina, with instant readiness.
-
-“The Princess is already under arrest, Major Kireef. She is at your
-disposal here just as much as anywhere else. Why can she not remain
-until Colonel Petrosch comes? I have his word of honour that he will do
-everything in his power to protect her.”
-
-“I have my duty to do, Mr. Bergwyn.”
-
-“I am sure it cannot be your conception of duty to place her where she
-will be in danger of her life. It is but a matter of an hour or two.
-You are in possession of the house. No attempt will be made by her, I
-am sure, any more than by me, to escape; and if it were made, you are
-in such force here that it would be impossible. Let her remain here
-until at least Colonel Petrosch arrives.”
-
-He shook his head. “My instructions are definite.”
-
-“Well, I’ll give you another reason. You know, perhaps, the general
-nature of the matters which have been discussed between Colonel
-Petrosch and myself. The result of them may depend upon your decision
-now. The Colonel would confirm this.”
-
-He thought a moment. “I should like to do as you wish. Will you give me
-your word of honour to attempt no escape?”
-
-“Certainly, I will. If I’m to get out of this mess, it will be by very
-different means, I assure you.”
-
-He considered again for a space, and then rose. “I accept your word,
-Mr. Bergwyn, and will leave you while I send for Colonel Petrosch, and
-consider what else to do.”
-
-I gave a deep sigh of relief when he left the room. I had pulled
-through the first stage; and that was something. I glanced at Gatrina’s
-face, ashen, horror-filled, and drawn with trouble and suffering. I
-could not bear to witness it, so I turned away and stared blankly out
-of the window into the darkness, now changing rapidly to the grey of
-the dawn.
-
-For a long time not a word was spoken. Her agony of mind was far beyond
-words; and nothing that I could do or say could relieve it.
-
-She was not thinking of herself, I knew. All thought of self, even the
-uncertainty of her own fate involving as it did the issue of life and
-death, was lost in the numbing, staggering blow dealt by the news of
-the Queen’s murder.
-
-Now and again a moaning sigh burst from her lips and told me how
-acute was her agony. Twice I turned to make some clumsy attempt at
-consolation; but each time the look her face bore stopped the words on
-my lips, and I turned back to watch the light without strengthening
-slowly as the time crept on.
-
-I had one consoling thought. The longer the interval between the fell
-occurrences at the Palace and the coming of the soldiers for Gatrina,
-the stronger grew the hope that she might escape the fate which had
-been decreed for her.
-
-That thought led me slowly to another--the necessity of having
-a definite proposal to make as to Gatrina’s future movements. I
-remembered what Colonel Petrosch had said as to the wish of the army
-that she would go from Belgrade.
-
-Now that the King was dead, the question of the succession had become
-acute. Gatrina’s presence in the city might be a greater embarrassment
-than before in the settlement of that question. I recalled, too, Elma’s
-statement of the Russian scheme in this respect. Even those who, like
-that brute of a captain, had resolved to cut the knot of the difficulty
-with a sword blade, might be glad to be relieved of her presence.
-
-Foul, dastardly, inhuman even, as was the policy of assassination, it
-was yet founded upon a sort of crude, barbarous logic. The resolve
-to exterminate the dynasty was the murderous major premise; and the
-relentless and hideous resolve to put to death all who, by claims of
-family, stood in the way, followed as a ruthless consequence.
-
-That was Gatrina’s danger. But if she would consent to abrogate her
-claims and could be prevailed upon to leave the city at once, there
-was the chance that she might even yet be spared. Colonel Petrosch
-had avowed his desire to spare her; and if he could be assured that
-she would offer no opposition to the army, his hands would be greatly
-strengthened.
-
-I might at least use the fact to induce him to allow nothing to be done
-that night; and the delay of a few hours might mean everything. I had
-calculated throughout that when the wild passions of all concerned in
-the night of horror had had time to abate, the craving for blood even
-of the most reckless of the reckless would cease. A reaction against
-further violence would be almost certain to follow, and counsels of
-sanity, reason and prudence would prevail once more.
-
-The light of day and the hours of reflection would thus bring hope,
-and I watched the light increase with unspeakable thankfulness. But
-question Gatrina I must, and at length I went back to my seat and
-turned to her.
-
-“We must speak about yourself,” I said.
-
-In her absorption and suffering she had not noticed my movement, and
-started nervously at the sound of my voice; but said nothing.
-
-“Your danger is not yet passed,” I continued; “and when the officers
-return we must have something definite to say about yourself.”
-
-“I care nothing for myself,” she murmured, desolately.
-
-“Your life is in danger, and you must care,” I said, firmly. I must
-rouse her by some means.
-
-“If they covet my life, let them take it--after this.”
-
-“I will not let you say that. You are speaking now under the influence
-of these horrors, and from the feelings of desperation which they
-naturally prompt. But you must think of yourself, and you shall. You
-have no right to throw your life away because things have been done
-which you were powerless to prevent.”
-
-“Do you think I fear death? If they covet my life, let them take it,”
-she repeated.
-
-“The sacrifice of your life can do no good to those who are already
-dead, Princess. It is only cowardly to feel this indifference.”
-
-“I would rather be a coward and die than beg my life at the hands of
-these murderers. I will hear no more.”
-
-She spoke with more animation than before: and so long as I could rouse
-her from the stupor of her grief and horror, I knew I was doing good.
-If she could be provoked to anger, so much the better. I cared not what
-I said.
-
-“You cannot avoid hearing me, and I am resolved to speak,” I continued,
-deliberately. “And you owe it to me to listen carefully.”
-
-The curl of her lip shewed that she thought this about as mean as it
-sounded. But she did not reply.
-
-“You must have heard me, and if you are not a coward of another kind,
-you will reply.” I felt an awful brute as I said this; but it had its
-effect. She started up, clasping the arms of her chair and leaning
-forward, looked at me with amazement, anger and bitterness. But I went
-on doggedly: “Not your life only but mine also is in the balance, and I
-have the right to expect you to make an effort.”
-
-“The right?” The words came like a flash of contempt.
-
-“Yes, a double right,” I said, in the same stubborn tone, intending to
-anger her. “I saved your life in the Gravenje hills and I came here now
-to save you again.”
-
-“My God, I did not think a man could be found to speak thus at such
-a time,” she cried. She was angry enough now even to forget for the
-moment her grief.
-
-“You are angry because I remind you of this, and consequently do me the
-injustice of such a taunt.”
-
-“I heard your words, sir,” she cried.
-
-“But you didn’t understand them. I spoke as I did to rouse your anger
-and make you think of other things beside your trouble, and having
-gained that end, we’ll go back to where we began to speak of yourself.”
-
-“How could you? How dared you?” she wailed, sinking back in her seat
-again.
-
-“I would do anything and dare anything to make you think of
-yourself--even let you deem me as mean a hound as my words implied. You
-must face this thing resolutely. I have one thought that may give us
-hope.”
-
-“I cannot think or speak of anything now. I--I am sorry for my words
-just now.”
-
-“They don’t matter any. If you had thought or said anything less, you
-wouldn’t have been yourself, and I should have been disappointed in
-you. Now, there’s one thing that may help us. Let me be able to tell
-Colonel Petrosch when he comes that you renounce all claims to the
-succession and consent to leave Belgrade before nightfall.”
-
-“Would you have me run away in the hour of danger from a crowd of
-dastardly assassins?”
-
-“I would have you recognise facts as they are--that the army have the
-upper hand, for the time at any rate, and that they are resolved no
-member of your family shall sit on the throne of this country. I would
-have you save your life, Princess, by the only means that I believe it
-can be saved.”
-
-“No,” she cried, vehemently. “No one shall ever say I ran away. That
-I----”
-
-“Wait,” I interposed. “Don’t take an oath about it. An oath is an
-awkward thing to break; but a resolve one can argue against.”
-
-“Nothing shall persuade me to be such a coward.”
-
-“Well, let us argue it out,” I answered.
-
-But there was to be no chance of doing that; for as I was speaking
-Colonel Petrosch and the Major entered the room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-“I CANNOT LEAVE MY COUNTRY.”
-
-
-The black tragedy of the night had scored its mark deep on Colonel
-Petrosch, and I shall not readily forget the look of high-wrought
-strain which his face wore. All the lines had deepened; the eyes shone
-with unnatural brilliance, the sockets were sunken, and the face skin
-had that dead steely colour which comes after hours of fierce and
-passionate tension.
-
-He looked as though he had lived ten years in as many hours, and knew
-himself to be still confronted by uncontrollable dangers full of the
-menace of utter ruin and incalculable disaster.
-
-Twice before I had seen such a look on men’s faces. Once in the case
-of a reckless Westerner who, in the teeth of warning, started a
-forest fire only to see it spread with fierce violence down upon his
-own homestead, menacing his wife and children and all he had in the
-world, and barring the path of rescue with a wall of impassable flame.
-The other was a millionaire who, in a desperate plunge to double his
-millions, was caught by the market, and had to look on helplessly while
-he and his friends were beggared in a day.
-
-And I read Petrosch’s look now to mean that he had helped to set in
-motion this wild revolt and was shocked by the violence already done
-and appalled by the prospect of what might yet have to follow.
-
-I was glad to find it so. He might prove to be in a better mood to
-judge on its merits the effort I had made to save Gatrina. There had
-been enough horrors already to glut his anger; and he looked to the
-future with apprehension genuine enough to render him willing to
-prevent the commission of more.
-
-He greeted Gatrina and me very formally, as he and Major Kireef took
-their seats at the table.
-
-“You have incurred a fearful responsibility, Mr. Bergwyn,” he began.
-“Major Kireef has told me the facts. You have taken an unwarrantable
-course in attempting to thwart the army’s purpose, and have used means
-which are inexcusable.”
-
-“They were the only means I could find to use.”
-
-“You have compromised yourself and all with you; you have opposed the
-soldiers when carrying out the army’s orders, and have subjected them
-to gross ill-treatment, in order that you might obtain disguises for
-your purpose. And in doing this, you have committed acts for which you
-must have known you would have to answer. I can see neither excuse nor
-palliation for such conduct.”
-
-I made no reply to that tirade. I judged that he had not taken the
-trouble to come at such a time merely to lecture me on the heinousness
-of my conduct; and as I cared nothing for what he said, and only for
-what he meant to do, I let him talk.
-
-“You yourself see there is no answer,” he continued; and went on to
-condemn at considerable length with much detail the enormity of my
-offences, until I began to be perplexed as to his motive. He couldn’t
-have made the thing worse had he been going to order my instant
-execution.
-
-I guessed at length, however, that his real object was to make me
-appreciate the extreme difficulty of the task I had set him to get me
-out of the mess. But the harangue had a very different effect upon
-Gatrina. The blacker he made my conduct appear and the more vividly
-he painted the danger in which I stood, the greater was her manifest
-agitation; and when he declared with very stern and significant
-deliberation that at such times men had lost their lives who had done
-less than I, I resolved to try and stop him.
-
-“It will save time, Colonel Petrosch, if you are going to order me
-to be shot, to have it done at once,” I said. “I am not in the least
-ashamed of a single thing I have done, except that I blundered and
-failed.”
-
-“Do I understand you to mean, Mr. Bergwyn,” he cried, very sternly,
-“that you would have me report to my colleagues that in the face of all
-I have said you take pride in having set their authority at defiance?”
-
-A hot retort rose to my lips, but just before it passed, I caught his
-meaning and paused to consider my reply.
-
-“No, I don’t mean that. I recognise their authority fully. In so far
-as my actions have involved an apparent defiance of that authority, I
-must, of course, regret them.”
-
-“It would be impossible for the army to take any but the sternest view
-of such acts, when committed by one who is avowedly their enemy.”
-
-“You know better than anyone in Belgrade whether I am to be classed as
-an enemy, Colonel. I am quite prepared to recognise their authority in
-the country; although feeling nothing but the strongest aversion from
-the hopeless deeds by which it has been enforced.”
-
-“These are no concerns of yours, sir.”
-
-“Except as they are the concerns of humanity. I do not set up to be
-the judge of their acts: the world will do that. I am a stranger
-and a foreigner, and speak as one; no more. God send that the after
-consequences may prove in some sort the justification for what has been
-done.”
-
-“That is the prayer of us all,” he answered, very solemnly, speaking
-out of that secret fear which possessed him.
-
-A pause followed which Gatrina broke to ask: “Has any blood been shed
-beside that of the King and Queen, Colonel Petrosch?”
-
-“Madam, I cannot speak of these matters with you,” he replied,
-brusquely. “I came for other purposes--one of them to find a way if I
-can to place you out of--of the reach of harm.” His hesitation over the
-last phrase was significant; but the declaration gave me intense and
-unbounded satisfaction.
-
-“I will deal with your case first, Mr. Bergwyn. May I take it that
-you regret your defiance of the army, and are prepared now to submit
-yourself unconditionally to their authority?”
-
-“Unconditionally? What does that mean?”
-
-“That you will not again attempt to dispute it.”
-
-“I am prepared to express my regret and to recognise their authority.”
-
-“That is the same thing,” he said. It was not, of course, but I
-concluded he needed some kind of assurance from me; and when I had
-given it, he conferred in an undertone with Major Kireef. Then he rose.
-“I must speak with you in private, Mr. Bergwyn;” and he led me to
-another room.
-
-As soon as we were alone he took my hand and wrung it.
-
-“You have caused a great deal of trouble, but personally I thank you
-for what you have done. I believe you have saved the Princess’s life;
-and God knows there have been too many taken.”
-
-“What has occurred?”
-
-“The King and Queen are dead; the Queen’s brothers have been shot;
-several of the members of the Government have also fallen; and the
-Princess was to have shared the same fate, because of her succession
-claims. But it may be possible to save her now.”
-
-“Possible only?”
-
-“I used the term advisedly--possible. It must depend upon the course of
-events to-day. Why did you not prevail upon her to leave the country or
-at least seek some place of safety?”
-
-“You forget. You told me nothing of the imminence of these horrors.”
-
-“When I saw you I did not know myself. I helped to raise the storm,
-but when once it broke it was ungovernable.”
-
-“What will happen to-day?”
-
-“Who can tell? The army holds the power; and we believe from what we
-have already seen that the people will stand behind us to a man. The
-city has already broken out into rejoicings, and the soldiers are
-cheered everywhere. But a mob is as fickle as a summer breeze; and if
-a change comes over them, nothing can save a conflict which may deluge
-the city, aye, the whole country with blood. I am dazed when I think of
-it.”
-
-“And the Princess?”
-
-“I would not answer even for your safety, Mr. Bergwyn; nor even for my
-own; to say nothing of hers. But I hope all will be well. The leaders
-of the army have had their fill of horrors; and if the day finds the
-people supporting them, this night will have seen the last of these
-measures of despair. God give that it may be so,” he cried with
-impressive earnestness.
-
-“Let us get to details,” I said after a pause. I was terribly anxious
-again. “What do you advise?”
-
-“That you leave Belgrade at once for a time. Let me carry an expression
-of your regret back with me, and a pledge that the matter of the loan
-will be considered as soon as the new Government is established. You
-have acted in a way that, had you been other than you are, the army
-would never have forgiven; but when once the present fever is past,
-there is no one who would think of dealing harshly with the man who can
-render the assistance you can. But much must depend on what happens
-later to-day when the facts about the night’s doings at the Palace are
-published. Therefore I say, go for the time.”
-
-“And the men who were with me?”
-
-“Are they known?”
-
-“I think not. They were not arrested.”
-
-“Then no inquiries will be made; but it would be safer for them also to
-leave for a time.”
-
-“And now the great question--the Princess?”
-
-He paused and looked at me. “Would she leave with you?”
-
-“Would she be allowed to leave?”
-
-“She would be allowed to escape,” he answered. “If she remains, she
-will be placed in confinement; and if the army’s plans go right, she
-will be sent out of the country. The Queen’s sisters have been placed
-in similar confinement; and they too will be liberated and exiled
-unless trouble comes. If that happens, the Princess would be again in
-imminent peril. She would be a menace to the only real solution of the
-crisis--the change of dynasty. And the army have given stern enough
-proofs of its resolve in that matter. It has already decided upon the
-future King--Peter Karageorgevics.”
-
-“Can I speak to her alone?”
-
-“Yes! tell her what I have just said; and if you have any influence
-with her use every shred of it to prevail upon her to go. You will be
-doing not only her a service but the country also. I will return in an
-hour or so to learn the result.”
-
-“If she refuses to go?”
-
-He threw up his hands. “There will be only one course open.”
-
-“Arrest?”
-
-“Arrest, yes; with all its possibilities.”
-
-I went back then to Gatrina, and her eyes fastened upon my face
-instantly, full of apprehensive questioning anxiety. I looked probably
-as grave as I felt; the Colonel’s last words having made me fully alive
-to the vital issues which depended upon the coming interview; and her
-anxiety deepened into fear as I took my seat without speaking.
-
-An orderly came in almost directly with a message for the major, who
-went out, and then we two were alone again.
-
-“About yourself?” asked Gatrina, eagerly, as the door closed behind
-them.
-
-“I have no longer anything to fear. All that the Colonel said was for
-the other man’s benefit, I think. I am free to leave Belgrade when I
-will; and indeed he urged me to do so at once.”
-
-“I am glad--so glad,” she answered, with a wan smile and a sigh of
-relief. “He succeeded in frightening me. I did not realise before he
-spoke so, all you risked in this. I have been thinking while you were
-with him, and I see it now.”
-
-“I don’t think there was ever any real risk of trouble. I had his
-promise from the outset to do all he could for me; and of course there
-were other reasons.”
-
-“No risk, you say, after the conduct of that awful man whom poor old
-Chris attacked?”
-
-“Ah, poor old dog. How we shall miss him. Yet he could not have given
-his life for a better cause. If we ever come back to Belgrade, I’ll
-have a reckoning with that bully.”
-
-She noticed that “we.” She glanced sharply at me, and appeared as if to
-be going to speak of it, but stopped. “What has occurred at the Palace?”
-
-“The news is about as black as it can be;” and I told her all that
-Petrosch had said to me. I was relieved to see that although she was
-deeply and indeed intensely affected, her grief was less poignant than
-before. Finding this, I dwelt with emphasis upon the position of the
-Queen’s sisters; until she understood my purpose.
-
-“You are speaking of what you think will be my lot,” she said.
-
-“Yes. I don’t wish to alarm you, but I know that that is what will be
-done--with this difference: that if the opposition to the army takes
-any active form, your danger will be greater even than theirs.”
-
-“I am not afraid.”
-
-“No one thinks that; and I should be the last to think it.”
-
-“It is my duty to remain at whatever risk.” She was very firm, very
-dignified, very much the Princess as she said this.
-
-“Do you wish the Throne?”
-
-“Do you mean am I ambitious to rule? No, no, a thousand times no. I am
-not fit for it. I am more a woman than a Princess; but I cannot think
-of myself.”
-
-“If you could think of yourself what would you do?”
-
-“Why put idle questions?”
-
-“Is it altogether idle? As a woman, you are barred from the succession
-by yourself. Even if your claims were admitted, you would have to marry
-someone who as your husband would be accepted by the nation as King;
-but he, not you, would be the ruler--even if the army were not bent
-upon changing the dynasty and had not already chosen their King.”
-
-“Is that so?”
-
-“Yes, Colonel Petrosch has told me;” and I repeated the message he had
-authorised me to deliver.
-
-“He told you to tell me that?”
-
-“Yes, expressly and authoritatively.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“I think that you should see quite clearly the wisdom of adopting the
-course which will help the army leaders and so serve the country.”
-
-“You mean that I should play coward and run away. He set you to tempt
-me?”
-
-“Is it a temptation?”
-
-She thought earnestly and then exclaimed; “I cannot go. I cannot.”
-
-It was not now “I will not;” and I was glad to note the difference.
-
-“If you could think of yourself what would you do?” I asked again.
-
-“I answer as I did just now--why put that idle question to me?”
-
-I paused and then plunged.
-
-“Because--I love you, Gatrina.”
-
-“No, no, no; any answer but that; give any reason but that,” she
-cried, as the red flushed into her cheeks till they flamed, and she
-sank back in her seat and hid them from me with her trembling hands.
-
-I knelt by her side.
-
-“It is the truth, Gatrina; why should I not say it? Once before our
-hearts spoke. You remember that day on the hill at Samac. We knew it
-then; what need to hide it now? It is all in all to me. What is it to
-you?”
-
-“No, no, no,” she murmured hurriedly. She was trembling violently. “It
-is impossible. It is impossible. I told you then.”
-
-“That is just what it is not now, whatever it may have seemed then. It
-is true I am only a----”
-
-“Hsh!” Just a whisper and a hand laid impulsively upon mine, and a
-glance of reproach from tender, loving eyes.
-
-I closed my hand on hers and held it.
-
-“Well, only Bourgwan then,” I said, and she smiled. “If you could think
-for yourself....” I began again.
-
-“No,” she whispered. “Don’t tempt me. You make it so hard for me.”
-
-“It must be as you decide,” I pleaded. “But the world holds no other
-woman for me than you.”
-
-At that she started, drew her hand away quickly, and bit her lip. “I
-had forgotten,” she murmured.
-
-I read her thought. It was of Elma’s lie. “In that you did me grave
-wrong. I had no thought but for you in coming here; and none in
-staying. You might have trusted me after that day at Samac.”
-
-“I did not mistrust you. I thought only of your----” she hesitated in
-sudden embarrassment.
-
-“Let all be clear now between us, Gatrina. We may never meet again or
-we may never part again--as you decide it. The stake is too great for
-us to risk it all for the lack of plain words. I know what is in your
-thoughts; but on my honour it was never for an instant in mine, and
-never could be. Do believe that.”
-
-“I thought you felt it would be impossible for us--oh, it is so
-difficult.”
-
-“Then put your hand in mine again and I shall know the slander is
-understood.”
-
-“It is still impossible, Bourgwan,” she whispered. “I am so sorry;” and
-as is in pity for the pain I must feel she gave me her hand again.
-
-“If you could think for yourself only?”
-
-“God knows I would so gladly do as you wish.”
-
-It was sweet but yet sad hearing.
-
-“I do wish it and do press it, not for my sake only but for yours,” I
-urged.
-
-“I cannot, Bourgwan; I cannot leave my country.”
-
-“That is final?” I asked, looking into her eyes.
-
-“You make it so hard for me. I cannot. I cannot.”
-
-I lifted her hand and pressed my lips to it. I had failed; and with
-a heavy sigh rose and went back to my seat, with a feeling of blank
-desolateness.
-
-“I have grieved you,” she said gently when I had sat silent some while.
-“And you have done so much for----”
-
-“Not that, please,” I interposed, forcing a smile.
-
-“I can never forget it,” she replied. “We shall not meet again, as you
-said; but I can never forget it.”
-
-“May I ask one thing? If matters go with you so that you should ever
-have to leave the country, may I seek you again?”
-
-“It is all sad for you--and for me, too, you know that--but it is
-kinder, if harder, not to give you groundless hope.”
-
-“I shall never cease to hope.”
-
-“I shall never leave my country,” she answered, earnestly.
-
-“I am answered, but not convinced,” I replied, in quite as earnest a
-tone as hers; and then, to lighten the strain, I smiled and added: “If
-you will not leave it, I may have to leave mine and turn Serb.”
-
-“I should have at least one loyal subject then, I am sure.”
-
-As the words left her lips, the door opened and Colonel Petrosch
-returned.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-PETROSCH HAS A PLAN.
-
-
-A single glance at Colonel Petrosch convinced me that some change had
-taken place in the situation during his absence which he considered
-favourable. His step was less heavy; the air of oppressed anxiousness
-was gone; his face had lost that depressed, care-haunted, apprehensive
-look which I had seen before; and his bearing was almost confident and
-bright.
-
-He went at once to the matter in hand.
-
-“I am glad to tell you you are free to leave, Mr. Bergwyn,” he said,
-with obvious satisfaction.
-
-“I am deeply obliged to you for your intervention, Colonel.”
-
-“Shew it by leaving Belgrade by the first available train and remaining
-away for some days at least until matters have settled. Then we shall
-be ready to receive you.”
-
-“You have had news which you consider good?” I asked.
-
-“Yes. I think the best we could have. There is now no room for
-reasonable doubt that the people will not only support the army’s
-action, but will do so with enthusiasm. The news is known everywhere
-now, and reports from all over the city from all classes are to this
-effect. Every minute brings added proof of this. It is an intense and
-consummate relief.”
-
-“It is consummate shame and scandal that murder should be thus hailed
-with acclamation,” cried Gatrina, indignantly.
-
-“Those will be dangerous views to express to-day, madam,” said
-Petrosch, turning to her. “You and I must of necessity look upon this
-revolution with very different feelings. What to you appears murder, I
-and those with me regard as the only gate to national liberty which was
-left open to us.”
-
-“Mr. Bergwyn has told me that many murders have been committed in the
-night. There will be a heavy reckoning for each of them.”
-
-“Lives have been taken, it is true, because, as we believe, no other
-course was left, if a violent revolution, followed by the horrors of
-a civil war, was to be avoided. Better for half a dozen lives to be
-taken deliberately than as many thousands in a civil war. What we have
-done we have done; and we leave the issue to God. The future will judge
-whether we have done right.”
-
-“Cold blooded murder cannot be justified by an appeal to the Almighty,”
-said Gatrina, indignantly. “Who draws the sword himself shall feel the
-blade. You may seem to be successful; the people may shout for you and
-applaud you because you are strong; you may for the time carry all
-before you with a powerful hand; but by this fearsome appeal to blood
-you have raised a force which will crush you in the end with infinite
-disaster to the country.”
-
-Colonel Petrosch listened with pent brows, and replied with impressive
-deliberation. “I am disturbed to hear this from you, madam, and it
-compels me to put to you a question which I beg you to answer with
-due regard to the solemn consequences which your words may have for
-yourself. Do I understand you to mean that you yourself would take part
-in any movement or plans which might be made against the army and its
-decisions, and for the restoration of your family upon the throne?”
-
-“No, no, indeed. God forbid that for any mere personal ends either word
-or act of mine should ever tend to plunge the country into the horrors
-of such a conflict.”
-
-Alarmed by his sudden change to severity, I was greatly relieved to
-hear Gatrina’s words. So I think was he. He looked across to me.
-
-“Have you told the Princess what I said to you before, Mr. Bergwyn?”
-
-“Yes; but she does not see her way to leave the country.”
-
-“Voluntarily, you mean? But you cannot remain, madam,” he said to her.
-“It is absolutely impossible.”
-
-“I will not leave, Colonel Petrosch.”
-
-He sighed. “I regret exceedingly to hear that unfortunate decision and
-trust you will recall it. I am authorised to tell you that if you will
-sign a document abandoning all claim to the succession and leave the
-country voluntarily, your property and fortune shall not be forfeit.”
-
-“I shall not change my decision for a bribe, Colonel Petrosch,” she
-answered instantly and proudly.
-
-“It is not meant as a bribe; but your presence will be an embarrassment
-to the new Government, and in any case you must go. Must: it is
-imperative. Pray think, then, before you set the Government at
-defiance.”
-
-“I have given my decision, and nothing will alter it, Colonel Petrosch.”
-
-“That is your last word?”
-
-“On that point, my last word.”
-
-“I regret it deeply. I have now no option but to tell you that you
-will be a prisoner. I can, at any rate for the present, spare you the
-harassment of being removed from your own house. But the house is in
-possession of our troops and I must ask you to remain in your own
-apartments, pending our decision in regard to your movements.”
-
-“I shall make no attempt to run away,” said Gatrina, getting up as she
-spoke.
-
-“Wait,” I broke in. “I should like to put a question or two.”
-
-Petrosch turned upon me an inscrutable look and replied with a shew
-of sternness: “You can do nothing to influence our decision in such a
-matter, Mr. Bergwyn. The Princess has refused our offer. That is all.”
-
-“I don’t think so,” I answered, bluntly. “Are we to understand that the
-Princess is in any danger from the acts of your agents? We have seen
-already what some of them are capable of doing.”
-
-“I am glad to be able to give an assurance that ample precautions will
-be taken for the Princess’s personal safety during the few hours she
-will remain here. If you will take counsel from me, madam, I would
-urge you to lose no time in preparing for your departure. We shall
-decide very quickly. I will now call the guard;” and he left the room.
-
-I turned to Gatrina and impulsively she put both her hands in mine and
-lifted her face and smiled.
-
-“Good-bye,” she murmured, her lips quivering.
-
-“I wish you could have done as he asked.”
-
-“I wish I could--for your sake; but ...” she shook her head. “You have
-done so much for me. I can see your hand in all this.”
-
-“Give it up, Gatrina, for my sake,” I cried, passionately, the love in
-me breaking all bounds. “You would trust yourself to me?”
-
-“Ah, yes, gladly, if I could but be a coward. I should be a happy
-coward, Bourgwan; but....”
-
-“I cannot lose you. My God, I will not.”
-
-“Please, please be strong enough for us both. I am so weak when I think
-of you: of all that I am losing. But--I must stay. You know that in
-your heart. I must be true to my duty. For Heaven’s sake help to save
-me from my weakness.”
-
-“I cannot lose you,” I cried again.
-
-“No, no. Leave it me to think of you as always doing the right thing. I
-want my memory of you undimmed. It must be good-bye. It must.”
-
-“I cannot say it.”
-
-“There is no other word to say, Bourgwan. No other word. Do you know
-how hard you are making this for me?” she added gently after a pause.
-
-I caught her and held her passionately.
-
-“You love me?”
-
-Again she raised her face, now close to mine, and gazed into my eyes
-frankly.
-
-“If I did not, should I care?” she whispered.
-
-Slowly I bent my head till my lips touched hers, and as they met she
-yielded to me and kissed me in return, and then let her head rest on my
-shoulder.
-
-“Oh, how you make me wish I were a coward,” she murmured. “It is harder
-than ever; but it must be good-bye.”
-
-Gently she drew away and put her hands in mine as before.
-
-“We must never meet again, Bourgwan,” she said, with one of her sweet
-smiles. “You tempt me so. I could not trust myself again.”
-
-“God keep you, Gatrina. Good-bye;” and I pressed my lips to her hand
-and then led her to the door.
-
-“It is even harder than the day at Samac,” she whispered, smiling
-again; and with those words and a last long look she passed out, and I
-was alone in the room--alone for always.
-
-I was staring desolately out into the garden when Colonel Petrosch came
-back.
-
-“I thought perhaps you might wish to say a word or two to the Princess,
-Mr. Bergwyn; and now I want to speak to you.”
-
-“Yes; what is it?” I answered, indifferently. Nothing mattered now.
-What he said or didn’t say was all one to me.
-
-“I am going to ask you for your confidence.”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“About the--the Princess.”
-
-“Except to know that she will be safe, I would rather not speak of
-her,” I answered, abruptly.
-
-“I have heard the story that you met her when you were in the Bosnian
-hills under circumstances....”
-
-But I wasn’t having that and cut him short pretty brusquely.
-
-“I should regard any question on such a subject as verging upon
-impertinence, Colonel Petrosch. Please ask none.”
-
-He smiled. “That is very much like confirmation. You must not lose your
-temper with me. I am an old man, you a young one, and I want to help
-you. If the Princess had been other than....”
-
-“Stop right there, if you please,” I cried, angrily.
-
-But he only smiled. “Well, I’ll put it another way. The Princess is a
-very obstinate young woman and----”
-
-“The Princess has decided rightly, Colonel Petrosch.”
-
-“And the result of her decision is that in a few hours she will be
-sorely in need of a friend.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“May I speak plainly what’s in my mind--what was in it when I went out
-of the room just now?”
-
-“Yes,” I returned after a pause. “Have I been a fool?”
-
-He did not answer that question in direct terms; but he spoke very
-plainly, and what he said answered it indirectly. We had a brief but
-very pithy conversation; and at the end of it I got up and shook
-his hand effusively and “God blessed him,” bade him good-bye, and
-scampered off to my house more like a school-boy than a man of many
-cares, and with no longer any thought of the prospect of desolate
-loneliness which had appeared to threaten me so gloomily only a few
-minutes before.
-
-As I passed through the streets there were already abundant signs of
-the popular feeling. Early though the hour was, flags were flying,
-decorations being hurriedly prepared, men and women were abroad gaily
-dressed, and everyone getting ready to join in what was clearly to be a
-public holiday.
-
-Death and terror had had their grim reign in the frowning gloom of
-the night; but the scene had shifted with the daylight. The Army were
-hailed as the deliverers of the people; the tragic means were condoned
-for the sake of the end attained; and on all sides the people were
-making haste to parade the evidences of satisfaction at the change and
-gratitude to those who had wrought it.
-
-How much of the demonstration was genuine, how far it was wire-pulled,
-or to what extent it was dictated by that prudence which impels the
-crowd to side with the strongest I did not stop to think. It was enough
-that the city would side with the Army and that its leaders would
-therefore go on with their work undisturbed by fears of turbulence and
-resistance. That meant much to me just then.
-
-I found my servants vastly uneasy at my absence during the night. Even
-the placid Buller was excited.
-
-“Thank God you have come, sir. We dursen’t go to bed. We didn’t know
-what to think or do.”
-
-“I daresay you didn’t, but get a hustle on you now and pack up. I’m
-leaving in a couple of hours and want my light baggage with me. Pick
-out enough for a few days; and express all the heavy trunks to Vienna.”
-
-“Thank God, sir,” he exclaimed, fervently.
-
-“Well, get going then--you’ll have time for thanksgiving on the cars,”
-I said, as he hesitated. “And tell someone to get me some breakfast.”
-
-I dashed into my bedroom, had a bath and changed out of Nikolitch’s
-uniform--which was a good deal the worse for the night’s wear--had my
-breakfast, establishing probably an American record for eating speed,
-and sat down to knock off the cables and letters which my hurried
-departure necessitated.
-
-I was deep in one to Nikolitch explaining things and telling him I had
-made all excuses for him with Petrosch, when Karasch arrived.
-
-“I hardly hoped to find you----” he began.
-
-“You must shelve all that, Karasch,” I interposed. “You’ve got to leave
-the city with me in less than an hour from now; and see here, take
-money to pay those men liberally for what they did last night and tell
-them they’d better hold their tongues and skip for a while. You must be
-at the depot in an hour ready to go.”
-
-“Are you....”
-
-“Don’t ask a question now. All has gone right. Be off with you,” and I
-got up and opened the door to hustle him off. As I did so, Elma was in
-the hall, and Buller was protesting that I could not receive her.
-
-At sight of me she pushed past him and came into my room. She was as
-full of agitation as a setting hen over her first chick; and when
-she saw from my face that I was in high spirits her astonishment was
-boundless.
-
-“I’m leaving,” I said, pithily.
-
-“Running away?” she exclaimed.
-
-“That’s about the size of it. Can I do anything for you in Vienna?” I
-had no anger left for her, or indeed for anyone.
-
-“You have heard the news?”
-
-“Some.”
-
-“About the murders last night?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Are you going to run away while she is in danger?”
-
-“Who?”
-
-“Who?” she repeated with a scoff. “Gatrina, I mean, of course.”
-
-“I don’t know that she’s in any particular peril. I called there last
-night.”
-
-“How can you speak so lightly as that? She must be saved at any cost.
-I’ve come to offer to help you save her.”
-
-“From what?”
-
-“Death,” she said, with tragic earnestness.
-
-“What can one do? The army is all powerful. I must think of myself.”
-
-“Good God, are you such a coward?”
-
-I shrugged my shoulders. “A man must think of his own life. I’ve no
-fancy to risk mine.”
-
-Her face was a study in contempt. “You mean you will not attempt to
-save her?”
-
-“I tell you I’m bolting. I don’t suppose her fate will be anything very
-terrible, and perhaps after all she deserves it. Anyway, I shall not
-think of opposing the army in the matter.”
-
-She drew her breath quickly and looked at me with almost fierce
-disdain. “You coward! Oh, you coward,” she cried.
-
-“I suppose it isn’t very brave. But then I never set up for a hero.”
-
-“But if I tell you that I know her death has been decided upon and that
-if you will help, we can save her?”
-
-“It wouldn’t make any difference to me. You see I’m packed up, and even
-my train is chosen. I simply can’t stop. Besides, I expect you’ve been
-misinformed.”
-
-“I tell you I know it,” she cried, fiercely, as if seeking to rouse me.
-
-“Then I’m afraid the bottom will be knocked out of your marriage scheme
-in regard to her. Still, I daresay you’ll hatch another.”
-
-This was the limit. She fell back a pace, stared at me aghast, and
-then broke out into a violent tirade of denunciation and abuse of my
-cowardice and generally contemptible conduct.
-
-“Now, let me say half a dozen plain words, Baroness,” I replied, when
-she paused for lack of breath. “During the last days I have been here
-you have done your utmost against me; every weapon you could find you
-have used without scruple to try and ruin me. You failed every time;
-and now you come with some other plan in that subtle and beautiful
-head of yours to try and lure me into a last net. For the time I came
-very near to fearing you; I don’t like saying ugly things to a woman;
-and I’ll just content myself with the confession that I no longer fear
-anything you can do, and pay no heed whatever to anything you can say.
-That’s all. And now, as I’m busy getting ready to run away, as you call
-it, I must ask you to excuse me.”
-
-“You have some other scheme?” she cried.
-
-“You can put it that I’m running away; and leave it at that.”
-
-“I don’t believe it.”
-
-“That’s not polite, to say the least of it.” I rang the bell. “Buller,
-have you packed up yet?” I asked when he came.
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“And directed that the heavy luggage is expressed through to Vienna?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“And the carriage?”
-
-“Yes, sir. It will be at the door in a quarter of an hour, sir.”
-
-“That will do. You hear that?” I asked Elma.
-
-She made a gesture of angry impatience. “I can’t understand you.”
-
-“It means good-bye, Baroness. I have still some letters to finish and
-arrangements to complete, and have, as you hear, only fifteen minutes.
-I part without any anger;” and I held out my hand.
-
-“I will save Gatrina without you,” she exclaimed, not taking my hand.
-
-“I don’t think anyone can do that, but it’s very good of you to try,” I
-replied with a conventional smile.
-
-This appeared to kindle all her rage again to white heat. She stared at
-me a moment, then raised her arms above her head and with a passionate
-ejaculation of disgust, swept out of the room.
-
-Her complete mystification and indignant wrath gave me intense
-satisfaction, and with a chuckle of enjoyment I sat down again and
-finished my letters just in time to drive hurriedly to the depot and
-catch my train.
-
-But I did not take tickets for Vienna, for that was not my destination.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-
-THE CAMP AGAIN.
-
-
-Buller’s patience and respectful stolidity were sorely strained that
-day. In the first place I told him nothing about our destination; and
-when we made several changes during the journey only to alight at the
-exceedingly unpromising depot at Samac in the afternoon, his manner
-began to afford me genuine amusement.
-
-“Do we wait here long for the train, sir?” he asked, as if the sooner
-we were off again the better.
-
-“Only until Karasch can get a carriage or some horses, Buller. I
-suppose you can ride, by the by?”
-
-“Yes, sir; that is--oh, yes, sir--a little.”
-
-Karasch got four horses after some difficulty but no carriage; one to
-carry my valises. They were four rank bad animals; but they carried
-us to Poabja, albeit with much discomfort for Buller. But his disgust
-appeared to reach a climax when he saw the little inn and I told him it
-was our hotel.
-
-“That, sir?” he exclaimed incredulously, with a very wry face.
-
-“They have some excellent black bread there, Buller, and the water is
-as fine as any in the district.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” he replied mechanically, as he got off his horse awkwardly.
-He was very stiff and discomfited. “Beg pardon, sir, but do we stay
-long here?” he asked, dejectedly.
-
-“Not more than a month or two--till we start to rough it in the hills.”
-
-He groaned and his face fell so that I laughed, and to hide it
-dismounted and told him to go into the house and make such arrangements
-as he could for our accommodation, without mentioning my name. “Be very
-guarded, Buller, for much hangs upon your discretion, and I don’t want
-our lives to be imperilled by any loose talk.”
-
-Then I walked away up the narrow hilly street, whistling. I was in such
-spirits that I could not resist the temptation of playing this small
-joke upon my superlatively proper and decorous servant. In my humour,
-the veriest trifle set me smiling, the minutest detail of life in the
-little place interested me.
-
-The children came out to stare at me and I scattered some small coins
-among them and brought them about me in a scrambling, laughing,
-boisterous crowd. Some of the men recognised me; and I stopped now and
-again to exchange a word or two with them and gave them money. The
-whole of the little street was full of smiling faces and I had such a
-body guard when I reached Father Michel’s cottage, that the good priest
-came out in some surprise to learn the cause of the clatter.
-
-“I need your protection again, father,” I cried cheerily; “but from a
-different sort of crowd this time. Let me come in and talk to you, and
-send these young brigands away. They take _me_ for the witch this time
-with a power to coin money.”
-
-“I bid you welcome, sir,” he said gravely as he bade the youngsters
-run home and led me indoors.
-
-I was closeted with him for an hour or more, telling him many things
-which vastly surprised him, gaining his help for the purpose I had in
-view, preparing him for what was coming, and binding him to secresy
-until the time arrived for all to be explained.
-
-When I got back to the inn Karasch, as the result of my instructions
-had a carriage ready, and Buller looking very glum and very much out of
-his element was standing by a saddle horse for me.
-
-“You can go on, Karasch, I shall overtake you,” I said, and he drove
-off.
-
-“Am I not to go, sir?” asked Buller, nervously.
-
-“No, Buller, thank you. You stay here. And mind, don’t get quarrelling;
-these people are very good-natured, but very handy with the knife.”
-
-“Beg pardon, sir, but how long am I to stay here alone?”
-
-“You’re not frightened, are you?”
-
-“No, I hope not, sir, but if anything’s likely to happen--to you, sir,
-I mean I’d like to know of it, in case I could help.”
-
-“I think I’ve done you some injustice, Buller, and I’m sorry.” I was
-pleased by his words. “Nothing will happen--nothing dangerous that is.
-All is as right as it could be. I’ve come here for a special purpose;
-and we shall all be away to-morrow or very soon after, for Vienna I
-expect. All you need do is--to amuse yourself for an hour or two. If
-you go out, walk down the hill and not up; I don’t want you to be seen
-up that way. I shall be back soon after dark; and you can hunt around
-and get me the best thing in the way of dinner you can contrive.”
-
-“Thank you, sir,” he said in a tone of obvious relief; and stepped
-back, as I mounted and rode after Karasch on the road back to the
-station at Samac.
-
-“All you’ve got to be careful about, Karasch,” I told him when we
-reached there; “is not to let your face be seen. It’s quite dark, so
-there’s very little risk.”
-
-I tethered my horse out of sight and walked up the little hill where
-Gatrina and I had had our talk that day, and waited there, thinking
-of her and of much that had passed since we had parted there, and she
-had sent poor old Chris back to me. The picture was very vivid in my
-thoughts; her retreating figure on the winding path, and the old dog
-coming slowly up the path toward me and turning to look after her; when
-the reverie was broken by the noise of the coming train, and I hurried
-down the hill back to the station.
-
-I found a spot where I could get close enough to observe what occurred
-without being seen.
-
-The last car was a saloon from which three men in the uniform of
-officers alighted. One of them turned and helped out a lady, a somewhat
-portly person who appeared to be stiff and cramped with a long journey.
-Then without assistance another lady stepped out and looked about her
-as if recognising the place.
-
-All five passed through the station house, and one of the men spoke
-to Karasch, who murmured some reply and touched his hat. Four of them
-entered the carriage and the fifth got up by Karasch who then drove
-off.
-
-The station master and his assistants stood looking after the carriage
-and gossipping with three peasants and a woman, the only other
-passengers by the train; and were still discussing the possible meaning
-of the unusual event as I mounted and rode away.
-
-I kept well behind but I was near enough to the carriage when it
-reached the priest’s house to see him come out, exchange a few words
-with the officers, and then lead someone into the house. He returned
-and spoke again to the officers, all three of whom entered the carriage
-which passed me directly afterwards on the return to Samac.
-
-I rode on to the inn, and having an hour to wait, I filled up the time
-by changing my clothes and eating the dinner which Buller had had
-prepared. I was in a condition of intense nervous excitement, and kept
-glancing at my watch wishing the time to pass, impatient of the delay.
-I was intensely absorbed by the thought of what was to follow, and yet
-curiously conscious of Buller’s consequential pride at having provided
-so good a meal under such circumstances and profound disappointment at
-my failure to be impressed by his cleverness.
-
-At last the time was up and I started for the priest’s house, followed
-by a look of blank dismay from Buller because I left before his chief
-dish was served. I was half way up the street when the reason of his
-look flashed upon me, and I burst out laughing.
-
-Someone was waiting for me in the priest’s garden and fetched him
-immediately.
-
-“She is very sad and depressed, but she asked to be brought to me, it
-seems. She is in there;” and he pointed to a door which stood ajar.
-
-I pushed it open and entered.
-
-She was sitting with her back to the door in a very dejected attitude,
-and thinking it was Father Michel who had returned, she did not look
-round, but said, as I closed the door:
-
-“You have many calls on your time.”
-
-“Well, I’ve been pretty busy during the last week,” I answered.
-
-She jumped up at the sound of my voice and turned to me a face pale
-for a fleeting second and then flushing with the glory of rich, deep
-crimson.
-
-“Bourgwan!”
-
-“Yes, Mademoiselle, Bourgwan, no other;” and I stretched my hands to
-her.
-
-She held hers back and tried to look indignant.
-
-“What does this mean?”
-
-“You must blame Petrosch. He’s the villain of the piece.”
-
-Despite her efforts her eyes smiled.
-
-“This is a conspiracy, then,” she cried.
-
-“That’s about the size of it. They’ve been pretty plentiful lately, you
-see.”
-
-“I had no idea....”
-
-“That was the conspiracy, of course,” I broke in. “He’s a subtle
-villain, Petrosch. I was a mere child in his hands.”
-
-The smile was spreading very fast all over her face now.
-
-“I ought to be very angry,” she exclaimed.
-
-“Yes, he’s broken up all my plans shamefully. Instead of being in
-Vienna on my way back to the States, here I am, just Bourgwan again,
-and you’re just Mademoiselle. And goodness knows now what’s going to
-happen.”
-
-We both laughed then and she no longer held back her hands. I held them
-instead.
-
-“I don’t understand yet in the least.”
-
-“Well, you see it was like this. I thought you would rather that Father
-Michel than any other priest should----”
-
-“Bourgwan!” she cried, quickly.
-
-“Wasn’t that right?” I asked, with an air of innocence.
-
-“Do you mean that Colonel Petrosch....”
-
-“Yes. He’s a dreadful scoundrel to guess things.”
-
-“Do you know that I am a beggar and an exile?”
-
-“Yes, indeed. He told me all about it; and I was awfully glad. There’s
-another country over seas which will be glad to adopt you. It’s a free
-country, too; with a home in it where we shan’t be quite beggars.”
-
-“Bourgwan! I told you it was impossible.”
-
-“And I told you that we’re forgetting how to spell that word in the
-States; although I came near learning it in Belgrade.”
-
-“But I--I have nothing.”
-
-“Oh yes, you have. You can draw a bill on the bank of my affection and
-I’ll honour it right now--to any amount.”
-
-“You make a jest of it,” she said, now between laughter and tears.
-
-“Well, don’t you think they made things serious enough for us in
-Belgrade? What you’ve got to do is just to forget all that, and to
-laugh and be glad--if you are glad; and then to--well, there _is_
-something else to do;” and I looked grave.
-
-“What is that?”
-
-“It’s a very serious thing, very serious, indeed. But I think I ought
-to tell you, and I think you ought to do it if your laughter is to ring
-true.”
-
-“Are you in earnest?”
-
-“Yes, quite. Did you know that when we were here before there was a
-man very badly wounded--desperately, in fact. I was speaking to Father
-Michel to-day about it and I told him I was sure you would not like to
-have such a thing on your conscience without doing all you could to
-help him. That was right, wasn’t it?”
-
-“Of course. Was it that struggle in the street here?”
-
-“No, the man doesn’t belong to Poabja; but he was here to-day. The poor
-fellow will never get over the wound. And he blames you, and feels that
-you alone can save him.”
-
-“Wound? Blames me? What can I do?”
-
-“Marry him.”
-
-“Bourgwan!” she cried, changing on the instant from puzzled pity to
-laughing confusion; and then--well, no matter what then.
-
-Soon afterwards we sat down together and had a good, square talk which
-did not end until she had agreed that we had better consult Father
-Michel about the details.
-
-I was a happier man than ever when, after a very informal little
-ceremony in Father Michel’s quaint, crude church very early in the
-morning, we started to indulge a mutual wish to have a last look at the
-camp which had been so much to us.
-
-What a ride that was! What memories it roused! How delighted was
-Gatrina with everything! And in what spirits! How we chattered and
-laughed, and laughed and chattered, forgetting for the time, selfishly
-if you will in our own happiness, the gloom and tragedy from which we
-had just emerged. The world appeared all bright and glorious for us,
-and care and trouble far away.
-
-Karasch was with us, of course; solemn, reserved and taciturn as ever;
-but breaking into a sort of grim smile whenever Gatrina spoke to him to
-point out some bit of the road where some incident of that other ride
-had occurred.
-
-Buller I packed off to Samac to go by rail and meet us afterwards at a
-place to which we could get the train from Tuzla on the other side of
-the camp. He did not belong to our hill comradeship and would have been
-in the way.
-
-We were careful to have a guide this time; and how we laughed now when
-he told us we must have come at least ten or fifteen miles out of our
-way during that comradeship ride of ours by the compass. We could laugh
-at anything.
-
-We turned aside to visit the hill where we had slept on the morning
-after the check by the two rivers, and Gatrina recognised with a
-positive relish the spot where she had washed on the brink of the
-stream.
-
-And when at last we came near the long, stiff hill in the middle of
-which was the ravine leading to the camp, her excitement and pleasure
-were greater than ever. We chattered just like two glad children, first
-about the incidents of her flight and rescue, and then about that
-little contest of wills we had had the following morning, and indeed
-about every incident of the time at the camp.
-
-Then came the camp itself, and Gatrina’s unbounded surprise that
-already men were there getting ready for the mining work. I told her
-what I had done in Vienna and that in the superintendent we might look
-to find our old enemy, Captain Hanske, the Austrian official with whom
-we had taken such rough liberties that memorable night.
-
-We could stay but an hour there if we were to reach Tuzla before
-nightfall, the guide told us; and Gatrina and I spent the first few
-minutes in the little hut which she had occupied.
-
-It was a place full of mingled reminiscences for us; and while we were
-there our thoughts slipped back to the moment when, as I knew and my
-sweet wife now confessed, we had fallen in love.
-
-“I think I knew it first,” she said, with a winsome blush, “when we
-came back here alone after that trial of will, Bourgwan. You were very
-obstinate; but I--I--I won’t tell you any more.”
-
-“I knew it before that; when you stood at bay against those scoundrels
-out on the hills there. But you must have thought me an awful
-scarecrow.”
-
-“I did think you were a peasant, when I knew you were not a brigand.
-And when I found out my mistake, I could have bitten out my tongue for
-the way I had spoken to you.”
-
-“I was a brigand. I stole your heart.”
-
-She looked up with a bright, merry smile and was about to answer when
-some noise and confusion outside startled her.
-
-“What’s that?” she asked.
-
-“Quite realistic--like it used to be. We’ll see.”
-
-We went out and I laughed aloud at what we saw. Karasch had been seized
-by a couple of men who were leading him towards us while the little
-Austrian ex-official, now the superintendent, was abusing him volubly
-and with almost frantic gesticulations.
-
-He was a sharp fellow and the instant his eyes fell on us he recognised
-us, and calling some more men from the tent, he ran toward me shouting,
-“Here’s the other man. So we meet at last, eh? And you, too?” he cried
-to Gatrina, who was inclined to be frightened and held my arm tight.
-
-“You have good eyes and a keen memory for faces, Captain Hanske. I
-congratulate you. We only met in the dark and I see you recognise us.”
-
-“Ah, you admit it, you admit it, do you?” he said, very excitedly. “Now
-I’ll shew you what it is to assault me, and I’ll know who you are and
-all about you.”
-
-“There isn’t the least doubt about that. But don’t be excited. I am Mr.
-Bergwyn, the American, associated with Graf von Hartstein of Vienna in
-working the mines here. I told him how I had treated you that night
-and as a recompense had you appointed here.”
-
-His jaw dropped as he gazed at me in amazement.
-
-The silence was broken by a laugh, deep, raucous and loud, from
-Karasch--the only loud laugh I ever heard from him.
-
-“It’s all right, superintendent,” I added. “I can understand your
-bewilderment and your mistake. Tell me how the work promises. Let
-Karasch there go.”
-
-“Mr. Bergwyn,” he stammered, “I am--I don’t know what to say.”
-
-“Then don’t try. We’ve had enough of it. Just show the things.”
-
-He was a very humble and bewildered superintendent then, and so ashamed
-that Gatrina spoke to him to try and put him at his ease while he
-shewed us about the place until the guide sent word that we must start.
-
-We were standing in the tent then and were alone.
-
-“This is where you had the fight with Karasch, Bourgwan, and his arm
-was broken, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes, when Chris, the other member of the comradeship was on guard with
-you.”
-
-“Dear old Chris,” she replied. “I am so sorry.”
-
-“Something else happened here beside that fight.”
-
-“What was that?”
-
-“You told me just now when you think you--knew. Well, it was here I
-first hoped.”
-
-“Hoped?” she cried, her face wrinkling and her eyes questioning.
-
-“Yes, hoped. You remember I lay here after that blow on the head.”
-
-“Yes, there;” and she pointed to the very spot.
-
-“Someone watched by me here, when I was unconscious.”
-
-She began to understand.
-
-“You mean Chris?” she asked with an air of unconcern.
-
-“No; I mean I wasn’t unconscious quite so long as you thought and
-you----”
-
-“Bourgwan! The guide says we must go,” she cried quickly, with a lovely
-blush.
-
-“And when you did, I began to hope.”
-
-“We mustn’t keep him any longer.”
-
-“I think he could wait while you--do it again.”
-
-But she laughed and tossed her head and walked out of the tent.
-
-As we crossed to the horses, she said: “I don’t know what you must have
-thought.”
-
-“I thought you might do it again so I remained unconscious.”
-
-As I put her on her horse, she whispered: “I was going to, but Karasch
-came;” and then shook the reins and started.
-
-I caught her up a moment afterwards and by a mutual impulse we turned
-and had a last look. It was a wild, meagre, rough, dirty and abominably
-squalid place--but very dear to us.
-
-“Good-bye, old comradeship camp,” said Gatrina, smiling, with a tear in
-close attendance, I think. “It might be lovelier,” she added, “but it
-couldn’t be dearer in my thoughts.”
-
-“Nor in mine--for it gave me you.”
-
-“And me my Bourgwan--I may well love it.”
-
-We sat on the horses just gazing back, both heart full, until the
-silence was broken by a shout from the now impatient guide; and we
-wheeled about and hurried after him.
-
-
-
-
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- =THE BRETHREN= H. Rider Haggard
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-By G. P. R. James. Cloth, 12mo, with four illustrations by J. Watson
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-
- In point of publication, “Darnley” is that work by Mr. James which
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- to the advice and insistence of our own Washington Irving that we
- are indebted primarily for the story, the young author questioning
- whether he could properly paint the difference in the characters of
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-
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-
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-
- The “Gunpowder Plot” was a modest attempt to blow up Parliament, the
- King and his Counsellors. James of Scotland, then King of England,
- was weak-minded and extravagant. He hit upon the efficient scheme of
- extorting money from the people by imposing taxes on the Catholics.
- In their natural resentment to this extortion, a handful of bold
- spirits concluded to overthrow the government. Finally the plotters
- were arrested, and the King put to torture Guy Fawkes and the other
- prisoners with royal vigor. A very intense love story runs through
- the entire romance.
-
-
-=THE SPIRIT OF THE BORDER.= A Romance of the Early Settlers in the Ohio
-Valley. By Zane Grey. Cloth, 12mo. with four illustrations by J. Watson
-Davis. Price, $1.00.
-
- A book rather out of the ordinary is this “Spirit of the Border.”
- The main thread of the story has to do with the work of the Moravian
- missionaries in the Ohio Valley. Incidentally the reader is given
- details of the frontier life of those hardy pioneers who broke the
- wilderness for the planting of this great nation. Chief among these,
- as a matter of course, is Lewis Wetzel, one of the most peculiar, and
- at the same time the most admirable of all the brave men who spent
- their lives battling with the savage foe, that others might dwell in
- comparative security.
-
- Details of the establishment and destruction of the Moravian “Village
- of Peace” are given at some length, and with minute description.
- The efforts to Christianize the Indians are described as they never
- have been before, and the author has depicted the characters of the
- leaders of the several Indian tribes with great care, which of itself
- will be of interest to the student.
-
- By no means least among the charms of the story are the vivid
- word-pictures of the thrilling adventures, and the intense paintings
- of the beauties of nature, as seen in the almost unbroken forests.
-
- It is the spirit of the frontier which is described, and one can by
- it, perhaps, the better understand why men, and women, too, willingly
- braved every privation and danger that the westward progress of the
- star of empire might be the more certain and rapid. A love story,
- simple and tender, runs through the book.
-
-
-=RICHELIEU.= A tale of France In the reign of King Louis XIII. By G.
-P. E. James. Cloth, 12mo. with four illustrations by J. Watson Davis.
-Price, $1.00.
-
- In 1829 Mr. James published his first romance, “Richelieu,” and was
- recognized at once as one of the masters of the craft.
-
- In this book he laid the story during those later days of the great
- cardinal’s life, when his power was beginning to wane, but while
- it was yet sufficiently strong to permit now and then of volcanic
- outbursts which overwhelmed foes and carried friends to the topmost
- wave of prosperity. One of the most striking portions of the story
- is that of Cinq Mar’s conspiracy; the method of conducting criminal
- cases, and the political trickery resorted to by royal favorites,
- affording a better insight into the statecraft of that day than can
- be had even by an exhaustive study of history. It is a powerful
- romance of love and diplomacy, and in point of thrilling and
- absorbing interest has never been excelled.
-
-
-For sale by all booksellers, or sent postpaid on receipt of price by
-the publishers, A. L. BURT COMPANY, 52-58 Duane St., New York.
-
-
-
-
-_POPULAR LITERATURE FOR THE MASSES, COMPRISING CHOICE SELECTIONS FROM
-THE TREASURES OF THE WORLD’S KNOWLEDGE, ISSUED IN A SUBSTANTIAL AND
-ATTRACTIVE CLOTH BINDING, AT A POPULAR PRICE_
-
-
-BURT’S HOME LIBRARY is a series which includes the standard works of
-the world’s best literature, bound in uniform cloth binding, gilt tops,
-embracing chiefly selections from writers of the most notable English,
-American and Foreign Fiction, together with many important works in
-the domains of History, Biography, Philosophy, Travel, Poetry and the
-Essays.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A glance at the following annexed list of titles and authors will
-endorse the claim that the publishers make for it--that it is the most
-comprehensive, choice, interesting, and by far the most carefully
-selected series of standard authors for world-wide reading that has
-been produced by any publishing house in any country, and that at
-prices so cheap, and in a style so substantial and pleasing, as to win
-for it millions of readers and the approval and commendation, not only
-of the book trade throughout the American continent, but of hundreds
-of thousands of librarians, clergymen, educators and men of letters
-interested in the dissemination of instructive, entertaining and
-thoroughly wholesome reading matter for the masses.
-
-
-
-
-BURT’S HOME LIBRARY. Cloth. Gilt Tops. Price, $1.00
-
-
- =Abbe Constantin.= BY LUDOVIC HALEVY.
-
- =Abbott.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Adam Bede.= BY GEORGE ELIOT.
-
- =Addison’s Essays.= EDITED BY JOHN RICHARD GREEN.
-
- =Aeneid of Virgil.= TRANSLATED BY JOHN CONNINGTON.
-
- =Aesop’s Fables.=
-
- =Alexander, the Great, Life of.= BY JOHN WILLIAMS.
-
- =Alfred, the Great, Life of.= BY THOMAS HUGHES.
-
- =Alhambra.= BY WASHINGTON IRVING.
-
- =Alice in Wonderland, and Through the Looking-Glass.= BY LEWIS CARROLL.
-
- =Alice Lorraine.= BY R. D. BLACKMORE.
-
- =All Sorts and Conditions of Men.= BY WALTER BESANT.
-
- =Alton Locke.= BY CHARLES KINGSLEY.
-
- =Amiel’s Journal.= TRANSLATED BY MRS. HUMPHREY WARD.
-
- =Andersen’s Fairy Tales.=
-
- =Anne of Geirstein.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Antiquary.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Arabian Nights’ Entertainments.=
-
- =Ardath.= BY MARIE CORELLI.
-
- =Arnold, Benedict, Life of.= BY GEORGE CANNING HILL.
-
- =Arnold’s Poems.= BY MATTHEW ARNOLD.
-
- =Around the World in the Yacht Sunbeam.= BY MRS. BRASSEY.
-
- =Arundel Motto.= BY MARY CECIL HAY.
-
- =At the Back of the North Wind.= BY GEORGE MACDONALD.
-
- =Attic Philosopher.= BY EMILE SOUVESTRE.
-
- =Auld Licht Idylls.= BY JAMES M. BARRIE.
-
- =Aunt Diana.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin.=
-
- =Autocrat of the Breakfast Table.= BY O. W. HOLMES.
-
- =Averil.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Bacon’s Essays.= BY FRANCIS BACON.
-
- =Barbara Heathcote’s Trial.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Barnaby Rudge.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Barrack Room Ballads.= BY RUDYARD KIPLING.
-
- =Betrothed.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Beulah.= BY AUGUSTA J. EVANS.
-
- =Black Beauty.= BY ANNA SEWELL.
-
- =Black Dwarf.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Black Rock.= BY RALPH CONNOR.
-
- =Black Tulip.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Bleak House.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Blithedale Romance.= BY NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE.
-
- =Bondman.= BY HALL CAINE.
-
- =Book of Golden Deeds.= BY CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.
-
- =Boone, Daniel, Life of.= BY CECIL B. HARTLEY.
-
- =Bride of Lammermoor.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Bride of the Nile.= BY GEORGE EBERS.
-
- =Browning’s Poems.= BY ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING.
-
- =Browning’s Poems.= (SELECTIONS.) BY ROBERT BROWNING.
-
- =Bryant’s Poems.= (EARLY.) BY WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT.
-
- =Burgomaster’s Wife.= BY GEORGE EBERS.
-
- =Burn’s Poems.= BY ROBERT BURNS.
-
- =By Order of the King.= BY VICTOR HUGO.
-
- =Byron’s Poems.= BY LORD BYRON.
-
- =Caesar, Julius, Life of.= BY JAMES ANTHONY FROUDE.
-
- =Carson, Kit, Life of.= BY CHARLES BURDETT.
-
- =Cary’s Poems.= BY ALICE AND PHOEBE CARY.
-
- =Cast Up by the Sea.= BY SIR SAMUEL BAKER.
-
- =Charlemagne (Charles the Great), Life of.= BY THOMAS HODGKIN. D. C. L.
-
- =Charles Auchester.= BY E. BERGER.
-
- =Character.= BY SAMUEL SMILES.
-
- =Charles O’Malley.= BY CHARLES LEVER.
-
- =Chesterfield’s Letters.= BY LORD CHESTERFIELD.
-
- =Chevalier de Maison Rouge.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Chicot the Jester.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Children of the Abbey.= BY REGINA MARIA ROCHE.
-
- =Child’s History of England.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Christmas Stories.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Cloister and the Hearth.= BY CHARLES READE.
-
- =Coleridge’s Poems.= BY SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE.
-
- =Columbus, Christopher, Life of.= BY WASHINGTON IRVING.
-
- =Companions of Jehu.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Complete Angler.= BY WALTON AND COTTON.
-
- =Conduct of Life.= BY RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
-
- =Confessions of an Opium Eater.= BY THOMAS DE QUINCEY.
-
- =Conquest of Granada.= BY WASHINGTON IRVING.
-
- =Conscript.= BY ERCKMANN-CHATRIAN.
-
- =Conspiracy of Pontiac.= BY FRANCIS PARKMAN, JR.
-
- =Conspirators.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Consuelo.= BY GEORGE SAND.
-
- =Cook’s Voyages.= BY CAPTAIN JAMES COOK.
-
- =Corinne.= BY MADAME DE STAHL.
-
- =Countess de Charney.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Countess Gisela.= BY E. MARLITT.
-
- =Countess of Rudolstadt.= BY GEORGE SAND.
-
- =Count Robert of Paris.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Country Doctor.= BY HONORE DE BALZAC.
-
- =Courtship of Miles Standish.= BY H. W. LONGFELLOW.
-
- =Cousin Maude.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Cranford.= BY MRS. GASKELL.
-
- =Crockett, David, Life of.= AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
-
- =Cromwell, Oliver, Life of.= BY EDWIN PAXTON HOOD.
-
- =Crown of Wild Olive.= BY JOHN RUSKIN.
-
- =Crusades.= BY GEO. W. COX, M. A.
-
- =Daniel Deronda.= BY GEORGE ELIOT.
-
- =Darkness and Daylight.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Data of Ethics.= BY HERBERT SPENCER.
-
- =Daughter of an Empress, The.= BY LOUISA MUHLBACH.
-
- =David Copperfield.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Days of Bruce.= BY GRACE AGUILAR.
-
- =Deemster, The.= BY HALL CAINE.
-
- =Deerslayer, The.= BY JAMES FENIMORE COOPER.
-
- =Descent of Man.= BY CHARLES DARWIN.
-
- =Discourses of Epictetus.= TRANSLATED BY GEORGE LONG.
-
- =Divine Comedy.= (DANTE.) TRANSLATED BY REV. H. F. CAREY.
-
- =Dombey & Son.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Donal Grant.= BY GEORGE MACDONALD.
-
- =Donovan.= BY EDNA LYALL.
-
- =Dora Deane.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Dove in the Eagle’s Nest.= BY CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.
-
- =Dream Life.= BY IK MARVEL.
-
- =Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.= BY R. L. STEVENSON.
-
- =Duty.= BY SAMUEL SMILES.
-
- =Early Days of Christianity.= BY F. W. FARRAR.
-
- =East Lynne.= BY MRS. HENRY WOOD.
-
- =Edith Lyle’s Secret.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Education.= BY HERBERT SPENCER.
-
- =Egoist.= BY GEORGE MEREDITH.
-
- =Egyptian Princess.= BY GEORGE EBERS.
-
- =Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon.= BY JULES VERNE.
-
- =Eliot’s Poems.= BY GEORGE ELIOT.
-
- =Elizabeth and her German Garden.=
-
- =Elizabeth (Queen of England), Life of.= BY EDWARD SPENCER BEESLY, M.A.
-
- =Elsie Venner.= BY OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES.
-
- =Emerson’s Essays.= (COMPLETE.) BY RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
-
- =Emerson’s Poems.= BY RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
-
- =English Orphans.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =English Traits.= BY R. W. EMERSON.
-
- =Essays in Criticism.= (FIRST AND SECOND SERIES.) BY MATTHEW ARNOLD.
-
- =Essays of Elia.= BY CHARLES LAMB.
-
- =Esther.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Ethelyn’s Mistake.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Evangeline.= (WITH NOTES.) BY H. W. LONGFELLOW.
-
- =Evelina.= BY FRANCES BURNEY.
-
- =Fair Maid of Perth.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Fairy Land of Science.= BY ARABELLA B. BUCKLEY.
-
- =Faust.= (GOETHE.) TRANSLATED BY ANNA SWANWICK.
-
- =Felix Holt.= BY GEORGE ELIOT.
-
- =Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World.= BY E. S. CREASY.
-
- =File No. 113.= BY EMILE GABORIAU.
-
- =Firm of Girdlestone.= BY A. CONAN DOYLE.
-
- =First Principles.= BY HERBERT SPENCER.
-
- =First Violin.= BY JESSIE FOTHERGILL.
-
- =For Lilias.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Fortunes of Nigel.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Forty-Five Guardsmen.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Foul Play.= BY CHARLES READE.
-
- =Fragments of Science.= BY JOHN TYNDALL.
-
- =Frederick, the Great, Life of.= BY FRANCIS KUGLER.
-
- =Frederick the Great and His Court.= BY LOUISA MUHLBACH.
-
- =French Revolution.= BY THOMAS CARLYLE.
-
- =From the Earth to the Moon.= BY JULES VERNE.
-
- =Garibaldi, General, Life of.= BY THEODORE DWIGHT.
-
- =Gil Blas, Adventures of.= BY A. R. LE SAGE.
-
- =Gold Bug and Other Tales.= BY EDGAR A. POE.
-
- =Gold Elsie.= BY E. MARLITT.
-
- =Golden Treasury.= BY FRANCIS T. PALGRAVE.
-
- =Goldsmith’s Poems.= BY OLIVER GOLDSMITH.
-
- =Grandfather’s Chair.= BY NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE.
-
- =Grant, Ulysses S., Life of.= BY J. T. HEADLEY.
-
- =Gray’s Poems.= BY THOMAS GRAY.
-
- =Great Expectations.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Greek Heroes. Fairy Tales for My Children.= BY CHARLES KINGSLEY.
-
- =Green Mountain Boys, The.= BY D. P. THOMPSON.
-
- =Grimm’s Household Tales.= BY THE BROTHERS GRIMM.
-
- =Grimm’s Popular Tales.= BY THE BROTHERS GRIMM.
-
- =Gulliver’s Travels.= BY DEAN SWIFT.
-
- =Guy Mannering.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Hale, Nathan, the Martyr Spy.= BY CHARLOTTE MOLYNEUX HOLLOWAY.
-
- =Handy Andy.= BY SAMUEL LOVER.
-
- =Hans of Iceland.= BY VICTOR HUGO.
-
- =Hannibal, the Carthaginian, Life of.= BY THOMAS ARNOLD, M. A.
-
- =Hardy Norseman, A.= BY EDNA LYALL.
-
- =Harold.= BY BULWER-LYTTON.
-
- =Harry Lorrequer.= BY CHARLES LEVER.
-
- =Heart of Midlothian.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Heir of Redclyffe.= BY CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.
-
- =Hemans’ Poems.= BY MRS. FELICIA HEMANS.
-
- =Henry Esmond.= BY WM. M. THACKERAY.
-
- =Henry, Patrick, Life of.= BY WILLIAM WIRT.
-
- =Her Dearest Foe.= BY MRS. ALEXANDER.
-
- =Hereward.= BY CHARLES KINGSLEY.
-
- =Heriot’s Choice.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Heroes and Hero-Worship.= BY THOMAS CARLYLE.
-
- =Hiawatha=, (WITH NOTES.) BY H. W. LONGFELLOW.
-
- =Hidden Hand, The.= (COMPLETE.) BY MRS. E. D. E. N. SOUTHWORTH.
-
- =History of a Crime.= BY VICTOR HUGO.
-
- =History of Civilization in Europe.= BY M. GUIZOT.
-
- =Holmes’ Poems.= (EARLY.) BY OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES.
-
- =Holy Roman Empire.= BY JAMES BRYCE.
-
- =Homestead on the Hillside.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Hood’s Poems.= BY THOMAS HOOD.
-
- =House of the Seven Gables.= BY NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE.
-
- =Hunchback of Notre Dame.= BY VICTOR HUGO.
-
- =Hypatia.= BY CHARLES KINGSLEY.
-
- =Hyperion.= BY HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW.
-
- =Iceland Fisherman.= BY PIERRE LOTI.
-
- =Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow.= BY JEROME K. JEROME.
-
- =Iliad.= POPE’S TRANSLATION.
-
- =Inez.= BY AUGUSTA J. EVANS.
-
- =Ingelow’s Poems.= BY JEAN INGELOW.
-
- =Initials.= BY THE BARONESS TAUTPHOEUS.
-
- =Intellectual Life.= BY PHILIP G. HAMERTON.
-
- =In the Counsellor’s House.= BY E. MARLITT.
-
- =In the Golden Days.= BY EDNA LYALL.
-
- =In the Heart of the Storm.= BY MAXWELL GRAY.
-
- =In the Schillingscourt.= BY E. MARLITT.
-
- =Ishmael.= (COMPLETE.) BY MRS. E. D. E. N. SOUTHWORTH.
-
- =It Is Never Too Late to Mend.= BY CHARLES READE.
-
- =Ivanhoe.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Jane Eyre.= BY CHARLOTTE BRONTE.
-
- =Jefferson, Thomas, Life of.= BY SAMUEL M. SCHMUCKER, LL.D.
-
- =Joan of Arc, Life of.= BY JULES MICHELET.
-
- =John Halifax, Gentleman.= BY MISS MULOCK.
-
- =Jones, John Paul, Life of.= BY JAMES OTIS.
-
- =Joseph Balsamo.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Josephine, Empress of France, Life of.= BY FREDERICK A. OBER.
-
- =Keats’ Poems.= BY JOHN KEATS.
-
- =Kenilworth.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Kidnapped.= BY R. L. STEVENSON.
-
- =King Arthur and His Noble Knights.= BY MARY MACLEOD.
-
- =Knickerbocker’s History of New York.= BY WASHINGTON IRVING.
-
- =Knight Errant.= BY EDNA LYALL.
-
- =Koran.= TRANSLATED BY GEORGE SALE.
-
- =Lady of the Lake.= (WITH NOTES.) BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Lady with the Rubies.= BY E. MARLITT.
-
- =Lafayette, Marquis de, Life of.= BY P. C. HEADLEY.
-
- =Lalla Rookh.= (WITH NOTES.) BY THOMAS MOORE.
-
- =Lamplighter.= BY MARIA S. CUMMINS.
-
- =Last Days of Pompeii.= BY BULWER-LYTTON.
-
- =Last of the Barons.= BY BULWER-LYTTON.
-
- =Last of the Mohicans.= BY JAMES FENIMORE COOPER.
-
- =Lay of the Last Minstrel.= (WITH NOTES.) BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Lee, General Robert E., Life of.= BY G. MERCER ADAM.
-
- =Lena Rivers.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Life of Christ.= BY FREDERICK W. FARRAR.
-
- =Life of Jesus.= BY ERNEST RENAN.
-
- =Light of Asia.= BY SIR EDWIN ARNOLD.
-
- =Light That Failed.= BY RUDYARD KIPLING.
-
- =Lincoln, Abraham, Life of.= BY HENRY KETCHAM.
-
- =Lincoln’s Speeches.= SELECTED AND EDITED BY G. MERCER ADAM.
-
- =Literature and Dogma.= BY MATTHEW ARNOLD.
-
- =Little Dorrit.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Little Minister.= BY JAMES M. BARRIE.
-
- =Livingstone, David, Life of.= BY THOMAS HUGHES.
-
- =Longfellow’s Poems.= (EARLY.) BY HENRY W. LONGFELLOW.
-
- =Lorna Doone.= BY R. D. BLACKMORE.
-
- =Louise de la Valliere.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Love Me Little, Love Me Long.= BY CHARLES READE.
-
- =Lowell’s Poems.= (EARLY.) BY JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.
-
- =Lucile.= BY OWEN MEREDITH.
-
- =Macaria.= BY AUGUSTA J. EVANS.
-
- =Macaulay’s Literary Essays.= BY T. B. MACAULAY.
-
- =Macaulay’s Poems.= BY THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY.
-
- =Madame Therese.= BY ERCKMANN-CHATRIAN.
-
- =Maggie Miller.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Magic Skin.= BY HONORE DE BALZAC.
-
- =Mahomet, Life of.= BY WASHINGTON IRVING.
-
- =Makers of Florence.= BY MRS. OLIPHANT.
-
- =Makers of Venice.= BY MRS. OLIPHANT.
-
- =Man and Wife.= BY WILKIE COLLINS.
-
- =Man in the Iron Mask.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Marble Faun.= BY NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE.
-
- =Marguerite de la Valois.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Marian Grey.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Marius, The Epicurian.= BY WALTER PATER.
-
- =Marmion.= (WITH NOTES.) BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Marquis of Lossie.= BY GEORGE MACDONALD.
-
- =Martin Chuzzlewit.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Mary, Queen of Scots, Life of.= BY P. C. HEADLEY.
-
- =Mary St. John.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Master of Ballantrae, The.= BY R. L. STEVENSON.
-
- =Masterman Ready.= BY CAPTAIN MARRYATT.
-
- =Meadow Brook.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Meditations of Marcus Aurelius.= TRANSLATED BY GEORGE LONG.
-
- =Memoirs of a Physician.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Merle’s Crusade.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Micah Clarke.= BY A. CONAN DOYLE.
-
- =Michael Strogoff.= BY JULES VERNE.
-
- =Middlemarch.= BY GEORGE ELIOT.
-
- =Midshipman Easy.= BY CAPTAIN MARRYATT.
-
- =Mildred.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Millbank.= BY MARY J. HOLMES.
-
- =Mill on the Floss.= BY GEORGE ELIOT.
-
- =Milton’s Poems.= BY JOHN MILTON.
-
- =Mine Own People.= BY RUDYARD KIPLING.
-
- =Minister’s Wooing, The.= BY HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
-
- =Monastery.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Moonstone.= BY WILKIE COLLINS.
-
- =Moore’s Poems.= BY THOMAS MOORE.
-
- =Mosses from an Old Manse.= BY NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE.
-
- =Murders in the Rue Morgue.= BY EDGAR ALLEN POE.
-
- =Mysterious Island.= BY JULES VERNE.
-
- =Napoleon Bonaparte, Life of.= BY P. C. HEADLEY.
-
- =Napoleon and His Marshals.= BY J. T. HEADLEY.
-
- =Natural Law in the Spiritual World.= BY HENRY DRUMMOND.
-
- =Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym.= BY EDGAR ALLAN POE.
-
- =Nature, Addresses and Lectures.= BY R. W. EMERSON.
-
- =Nellie’s Memories.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Nelson, Admiral Horatio, Life of.= BY ROBERT SOUTHEY.
-
- =Newcomes.= BY WILLIAM M. THACKERAY.
-
- =Nicholas Nickleby.= BY CHAS. DICKENS.
-
- =Ninety-Three.= BY VICTOR HUGO.
-
- =Not Like Other Girls.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Odyssey.= POPE’S TRANSLATION.
-
- =Old Curiosity Shop.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Old Mam’selle’s Secret.= BY E. MARLITT.
-
- =Old Mortality.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Old Myddleton’s Money.= BY MARY CECIL HAY.
-
- =Oliver Twist.= BY CHAS. DICKENS.
-
- =Only the Governess.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =On the Heights.= BY BERTHOLD AUERBACH.
-
- =Oregon Trail.= BY FRANCIS PARKMAN.
-
- =Origin of Species.= BY CHARLES DARWIN.
-
- =Other Worlds than Ours.= BY RICHARD PROCTOR.
-
- =Our Bessie.= BY ROSA N. CAREY.
-
- =Our Mutual Friend.= BY CHARLES DICKENS.
-
- =Outre-Mer.= BY H. W. LONGFELLOW.
-
- =Owl’s Nest.= BY E. MARLITT.
-
- =Page of the Duke of Savoy.= BY ALEXANDRE DUMAS.
-
- =Pair of Blue Eyes.= BY THOMAS HARDY.
-
- =Pan Michael.= BY HENRYK SIENKIEWICZ.
-
- =Past and Present.= BY THOS. CARLYLE.
-
- =Pathfinder.= BY JAMES FENIMORE COOPER.
-
- =Paul and Virginia.= BY B. DE ST. PIERRE.
-
- =Pendennis, History of.= BY WM. M. THACKERAY.
-
- =Penn, William, Life of.= BY W. HEPWORTH DIXON.
-
- =Pere Goriot.= BY HONORE DE BALZAC.
-
- =Peter the Great, Life of.= BY JOHN BARROW.
-
- =Peveril of the Peak.= BY SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
- =Phantom Rickshaw, The.= BY RUDYARD KIPLING.
-
- =Philip II. of Spain, Life of.= BY MARTIN A. S. HUME.
-
- =Picciola.= BY X. B. SAINTINE.
-
-
-
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