Then old Sapt rubbed his knuckles into his
eyes, gave one great gasp, and was himself again. As the clock on the
mantelpiece struck one he stamped his foot on the floor, saying:
"They've got the King!"
"Yes," said I, "'all's well!' as Black Michael's despatch said. What
a moment it must have been for him when the royal salutes fired at
Strelsau this morning! I wonder when he got the message?"
"It must have been sent in the morning," said Sapt. "They must have sent
it before news of your arrival at Strelsau reached Zenda—I suppose it
came from Zenda."
"And he's carried it about all day!" I exclaimed. "Upon my honour, I'm
not the only man who's had a trying day! What did he think, Sapt?"
"What does that matter? What does he think, lad, now?"
I rose to my feet.
"We must get back," I said, "and rouse every soldier in Strelsau. We
ought to be in pursuit of Michael before midday."
Old Sapt pulled out his pipe and carefully lit it from the candle which
guttered on the table.
"The King may be murdered while we sit here!" I urged.
Sapt smoked on for a moment in silence.
"That cursed old woman!" he broke out. "She must have attracted their
attention somehow. I see the game. They came up to kidnap the King,
and—as I say—somehow they found him. If you hadn't gone to Strelsau,
you and I and Fritz had been in heaven by now!"
"And the King?"
"Who knows where the King is now?" he asked.
"Come, let's be off!" said I; but he sat still. And suddenly he burst
into one of his grating chuckles:
"By Jove, we've shaken up Black Michael!"
"Come, come!" I repeated impatiently.
"And we'll shake him up a bit more," he added, a cunning smile
broadening on his wrinkled, weather-beaten face, and his teeth working
on an end of his grizzled moustache. "Ay, lad, we'll go back to
Strelsau. The King shall be in his capital again tomorrow."
"The King?"
"The crowned King!"
"You're mad!" I cried.
"If we go back and tell the trick we played, what would you give for our
lives?"
"Just what they're worth," said I.
"And for the King's throne? Do you think that the nobles and the people
will enjoy being fooled as you've fooled them? Do you think they'll love
a King who was too drunk to be crowned, and sent a servant to personate
him?"
"He was drugged—and I'm no servant."
"Mine will be Black Michael's version."
He rose, came to me, and laid his hand on my shoulder.
"Lad," he said, "if you play the man, you may save the King yet. Go back
and keep his throne warm for him."
"But the duke knows—the villains he has employed know—"
"Ay, but they can't speak!" roared Sapt in grim triumph.
"We've got 'em! How can they denounce you without denouncing themselves?
This is not the King, because we kidnapped the King and murdered his
servant. Can they say that?"
The position flashed on me. Whether Michael knew me or not, he could not
speak. Unless he produced the King, what could he do? And if he produced
the King, where was he? For a moment I was carried away headlong; but in
an instant the difficulties came strong upon me.
"I must be found out," I urged.
"Perhaps; but every hour's something. Above all, we must have a King in
Strelsau, or the city will be Michael's in four-and-twenty hours, and
what would the King's life be worth then—or his throne? Lad, you must
do it!"
"Suppose they kill the King?"
"They'll kill him, if you don't."
"Sapt, suppose they have killed the King?"
"Then, by heaven, you're as good an Elphberg as Black Michael, and you
shall reign in Ruritania! But I don't believe they have; nor will they
kill him if you're on the throne. Will they kill him, to put you in?"
It was a wild plan—wilder even and more hopeless than the trick we
had already carried through; but as I listened to Sapt I saw the strong
points in our game. And then I was a young man and I loved action, and I
was offered such a hand in such a game as perhaps never man played yet.
"I shall be found out," I said.
"Perhaps," said Sapt. "Come! to Strelsau! We shall be caught like rats
in a trap if we stay here."
"Sapt," I cried, "I'll try it!"
"Well played!" said he. "I hope they've left us the horses. I'll go and
see."
"We must bury that poor fellow," said I.
"No time," said Sapt.
"I'll do it."
"Hang you!" he grinned. "I make you a King, and—Well, do it. Go and
fetch him, while I look to the horses. He can't lie very deep, but I
doubt if he'll care about that. Poor little Josef! He was an honest bit
of a man."
He went out, and I went to the cellar. I raised poor Josef in my arms
and bore him into the passage and thence towards the door of the house.
Just inside I laid him down, remembering that I must find spades for our
task. At this instant Sapt came up.
"The horses are all right; there's the own brother to the one that
brought you here. But you may save yourself that job."
"I'll not go before he's buried."
"Yes, you will."
"Not I, Colonel Sapt; not for all Ruritania."
"You fool!" said he.
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