by
Robert Barr
The room was large, but with a low
ceiling, and at one end of the lengthy, broad apartment stood a gigantic
fireplace, in which was heaped a pile of blazing logs, whose light, rather than
that of several lanterns hanging from nails along the timbered walls,
illuminated the faces of the twenty men who sat within. Heavy timbers,
blackened with age and smoke, formed the ceiling. The long, low, diamond-paned
window in the middle of the wall opposite the door, had been shuttered as
completely as possible, but less care than usual was taken to prevent the light
from penetrating into the darkness beyond, for the night was a stormy and
tempestuous one, the rain lashing wildly against the hunting chalet, which, in
its time, had seen many a merry hunting party gathered under its ample roof.
Every now and then a blast of wind
shook the wooden edifice from garret to foundation, causing a puff of smoke to
come down the chimney, and the white ashes to scatter in little whirlwinds over
the hearth. On the opposite side from the shuttered window was the door,
heavily barred. A long, oaken table occupied the centre of the room, and round
this in groups, seated and standing, were a score of men, all with swords at
their sides; bearing, many of them, that air of careless hauteur which is
supposed to be a characteristic of noble birth.
Flagons were scattered upon the
table, and a barrel of wine stood in a corner of the room farthest from the
fireplace, but it was evident that this was no ordinary drinking party, and that
the assemblage was brought about by some high purport, of a nature so serious
that it stamped anxiety on every brow. No servants were present, and each man
who wished a fresh flagon of wine had to take his measure to the barrel in the
corner and fill for himself.
The hunting chalet stood in a
wilderness, near the confines of the kingdom of Alluria, twelve leagues from
the capital, and was the property of Count Staumn, whose tall, gaunt form stood
erect at the head of the table as he silently listened to the discussion which
every moment was becoming more and more heated, the principal speaking parts
being taken by the obstinate, rough-spoken Baron Brunfels, on the one hand, and
the crafty, fox-like ex-Chancellor Steinmetz on the other.
"I tell you," thundered
Baron Brunfels, bringing his fist down on the table, "I will not have the
King killed. Such a proposal goes beyond what was intended when we banded
ourselves together. The King is a fool, so let him escape like a fool. I am a
conspirator, but not an assassin."
"It is justice rather than
assassination," said the ex-Chancellor suavely, as if his tones were oil
and the Baron's boisterous talk were troubled waters.
"Justice!" cried the
Baron, with great contempt. "You have learned that cant word in the Cabinet
of the King himself, before he thrust you out. He eternally prates of justice,
yet, much as I loathe him, I have no wish to compass his death, either directly
or through gabbling of justice."
"Will you permit me to point
out the reason that induces me to believe his continued exemption, and State
policy, will not run together?" replied the advocate of the King's death.
"If Rudolph escape, he will take up his abode in a neighbouring territory,
and there will inevitably follow plots and counter-plots for his
restoration--thus Alluria will be kept in a state of constant turmoil. There
will doubtless grow up within the kingdom itself a party sworn to his
restoration. We shall thus be involved in difficulties at home and abroad, and
all for what? Merely to save the life of a man who is an enemy to each of us.
We place thousands of lives in jeopardy, render our own positions insecure,
bring continual disquiet upon the State, when all might be avoided by the
slitting of one throat, even though that throat belong to the King."
It was evident that the lawyer's
persuasive tone brought many to his side, and the conspirators seemed about
evenly divided upon the question of life or death to the King. The Baron was
about to break out again with some strenuousness in favour of his own view of
the matter, when Count Staumn made a proposition that was eagerly accepted by
all save Brunfels himself.
"Argument," said Count
Staumn, "is ever the enemy of good comradeship. Let us settle the point at
once and finally, with the dice-box. Baron Brunfels, you are too seasoned a
gambler to object to such a mode of terminating a discussion. Steinmetz, the
law, of which you are so distinguished a representative, is often compared to a
lottery, so you cannot look with disfavour upon a method that is conclusive,
and as reasonably fair as the average decision of a judge. Let us throw,
therefore, for the life of the King. I, as chairman of this meeting, will be
umpire. Single throws, and the highest number wins. Baron Brunfels, you will act
for the King, and, if you win, may bestow upon the monarch his life. Chancellor
Steinmetz stands for the State. If he wins, then is the King's life forfeit.
Gentlemen, are you agreed?"
"Agreed, agreed," cried
the conspirators, with practically unanimous voice.
Baron Brunfels grumbled somewhat,
but when the dice-horn was brought, and he heard the rattle of the bones within
the leathern cylinder, the light of a gambler's love shone in his eyes, and he
made no further protest.
The ex-Chancellor took the dice-box
in his hand, and was about to shake, when there came suddenly upon them three
stout raps against the door, given apparently with the hilt of a sword. Many
not already standing, started to their feet, and nearly all looked one upon
another with deep dismay in their glances. The full company of conspirators was
present; exactly a score of men knew of the rendezvous, and now the
twenty-first man outside was beating the oaken panels. The knocking was
repeated, but now accompanied by the words:
"Open, I beg of you."
Count Staumn left the table and,
stealthily as a cat, approached the door.
"Who is there?" he asked.
"A wayfarer, weary and wet, who
seeks shelter from the storm."
"My house is already
filled," spoke up the Count. "I have no room for another."
"Open the door
peacefully," cried the outlander, "and do not put me to the necessity
of forcing it."
There was a ring of decision in the
voice which sent quick pallor to more than one cheek. Ex-Chancellor Steinmetz
rose to his feet with chattering teeth, and terror in his eyes; he seemed to
recognise the tones of the invisible speaker. Count Staumn looked over his
shoulder at the assemblage with an expression that plainly said: "What am
I to do?"
"In the fiend's name,"
hissed Baron Brunfels, taking the precaution, however, to speak scarce above
his breath, "if you are so frightened when it comes to a knock at the
door, what will it be when the real knocks are upon you. Open, Count, and let
the insistent stranger in. Whether he leave the place alive or no, there are
twenty men here to answer."
The Count undid the fastenings and
threw back the door. There entered a tall man completely enveloped in a dark
cloak that was dripping wet. Drawn over his eyes was a hunter's hat of felt,
with a drooping bedraggled feather on it.
The door was immediately closed and
barred behind him, and the stranger, pausing a moment when confronted by so
many inquiring eyes, flung off his cloak, throwing it over the back of a chair;
then he removed his hat with a sweep, sending the raindrops flying. The
intriguants gazed at him, speechless, with varying emotions. They saw before
them His Majesty, Rudolph, King of Alluria.
If the King had any suspicion of his
danger, he gave no token of it. On his smooth, lofty forehead there was no
trace of frown, and no sign of fear. His was a manly figure, rather over, than
under, six feet in height; not slim and gaunt, like Count Staumn, nor yet stout
to excess, like Baron Brunfels. The finger of Time had touched with frost the
hair at his temples, and there were threads of white in his pointed beard, but
his sweeping moustache was still as black as the night from which he came.
His frank, clear, honest eyes swept
the company, resting momentarily on each, then he said in a firm voice, without
the suspicion of a tremor in it: "Gentlemen, I give you good evening, and
although the hospitality of Count Staumn has needed spurring, I lay that not up
against him, because I am well aware his apparent reluctance arose through the
unexpectedness of my visit; and, if the Count will act as cup-bearer, we will
drown all remembrance of a barred door in a flagon of wine, for, to tell truth,
gentlemen, I have ridden hard in order to have the pleasure of drinking with
you."
As the King spoke these ominous
words, he cast a glance of piercing intensity upon the company, and more than
one quailed under it. He strode to the fireplace, spurs jingling as he went,
and stood with his back to the fire, spreading out his hands to the blaze.
Count Staumn left the bolted door, took an empty flagon from the shelf, filled
it at the barrel in the corner, and, with a low bow, presented the brimming
measure to the King.
Rudolph held aloft his beaker of
Burgundy, and, as he did so, spoke in a loud voice that rang to the beams of
the ceiling:
"Gentlemen, I give you a
suitable toast. May none here gathered encounter a more pitiless storm than
that which is raging without!"
With this he drank off the wine,
and, inclining his head slightly to the Count, returned the flagon. No one,
save the King, had spoken since he entered. Every word he had uttered seemed
charged with double meaning and brought to the suspicious minds of his hearers
visions of a trysting place surrounded by troops, and the King standing there,
playing with them, as a tiger plays with its victims. His easy confidence
appalled them.
When first he came in, several who
were seated remained so, but one by one they rose to their feet, with the
exception of Baron Brunfels, although he, when the King gave the toast, also
stood. It was clear enough their glances of fear were not directed towards the
King, but towards Baron Brunfels. Several pairs of eyes beseeched him in silent
supplication, but the Baron met none of these glances, for his gaze was fixed
upon the King.
Every man present knew the Baron to
be reckless of consequences; frankly outspoken, thoroughly a man of the sword,
and a despiser of diplomacy. They feared that at any moment he might blurt out
the purport of the meeting, and more than one was thankful for the crafty
ex-Chancellor's planning, who throughout had insisted there should be no
documentary evidence of their designs, either in their houses or on their
persons. Some startling rumour must have reached the King's ear to bring him
thus unexpectedly upon them.
The anxiety of all was that some one
should persuade the King they were merely a storm-besieged hunting party. They
trembled in anticipation of Brunfels' open candor, and dreaded the revealing of
the real cause of their conference. There was now no chance to warn the Baron;
a man who spoke his mind; who never looked an inch beyond his nose, even though
his head should roll off in consequence, and if a man does not value his own
head, how can he be expected to care for the heads of his neighbours?
"I ask you to be seated,"
said the King, with a wave of the hand.
Now, what should that stubborn fool
of a Baron do but remain standing, when all but Rudolph and himself had seated
themselves, thus drawing His Majesty's attention directly towards him, and
making a colloquy between them well-nigh inevitable. Those next the
ex-Chancellor were nudging him, in God's name, to stand also, and open whatever
discussion there must ensue between themselves and His Majesty, so that it
might be smoothly carried on, but the Chancellor was ashen grey with fear, and
his hand trembled on the table.
"My Lord of Brunfels,"
said the King, a smile hovering about his lips, "I see that I have
interrupted you at your old pleasure of dicing; while requesting you to
continue your game as though I had not joined you, may I venture to hope the
stakes you play for are not high?"
Every one held his breath, awaiting
with deepest concern the reply of the frowning Baron, and when it came growling
forth, there was little in it to ease their disquiet.
"Your Majesty," said Baron
Brunfels, "the stakes are the highest that a gambler may play for."
"You tempt me, Baron, to guess
that the hazard is a man's soul, but I see that your adversary is my worthy
ex-Chancellor, and as I should hesitate to impute to him the character of the
devil, I am led, therefore, to the conclusion that you play for a human life.
Whose life is in the cast, my Lord of Brunfels?"
Before the Baron could reply,
ex-Chancellor Steinmetz arose, with some indecision, to his feet. He began in a
trembling voice:
"I beg your gracious permission
to explain the reason of our gathering --"
"Herr Steinmetz," cried
the King sternly, "when I desire your interference I shall call for it;
and remember this, Herr Steinmetz; the man who begins a game must play it to
the end, even though he finds luck running against him."
The ex-Chancellor sat down again,
and drew his hand across his damp forehead.
"Your Majesty," spoke up
the Baron, a ring of defiance in his voice, "I speak not for my comrades,
but for myself. I begin no game that I fear to finish. We were about dice in
order to discover whether Your Majesty should live or die."
A simultaneous moan seemed to rise
from the assembled traitors. The smile returned to the King's lips.
"Baron," he said, "I
have ever chided myself for loving you, for you were always a bad example to
weak and impressionable natures. Even when your overbearing, obstinate
intolerance compelled me to dismiss you from the command of my army, I could
not but admire your sturdy honesty. Had I been able to graft your love of truth
upon some of my councillors, what a valuable group of advisers might I have
gathered round me. But we have had enough of comedy and now tragedy sets in.
Those who are traitors to their ruler must not be surprised if a double traitor
is one of their number. Why am I here? Why do two hundred mounted and armed men
surround this doomed chalet? Miserable wretches, what have you to say that
judgment be not instantly passed upon you?"
"I have this to say,"
roared Baron Brunfels, drawing his sword, "that whatever may befall this
assemblage, you, at least, shall not live to boast of it."
The King stood unmoved as Baron
Brunfels was about to rush upon him, but Count Staumn and others threw
themselves between the Baron and his victim, seeing in the King's words some
intimation of mercy to be held out to them, could but actual assault upon his
person be prevented.
"My Lord of Brunfels,"
said the King, calmly, "sheath your sword. Your ancestors have often drawn
it, but always for, and never against the occupant of the Throne. Now,
gentlemen, hear my decision, and abide faithfully by it. Seat yourselves at the
table, ten on each side, the dice-box between you. You shall not be
disappointed, but shall play out the game of life and death. Each dices with
his opposite. He who throws the higher number escapes. He who throws the lower
places his weapons on the empty chair, and stands against yonder wall to be
executed for the traitor that he is. Thus half of your company shall live, and
the other half seek death with such courage as may be granted them. Do you
agree, or shall I give the signal?"
With unanimous voice they agreed,
all excepting Baron Brunfels, who spoke not.
"Come, Baron, you and my
devoted ex-Chancellor were about to play when I came in. Begin the game."
"Very well," replied the
Baron nonchalantly. "Steinmetz, the dice-box is near your hand:
throw."
Some one placed the cubes in the
leathern cup and handed it to the ex- Chancellor, whose shivering fingers
relieved him of the necessity of shaking the box. The dice rolled out on the
table; a three, a four, and a one. Those nearest reported the total.
"Eight!" cried the King.
"Now, Baron."
Baron Brunfels carelessly threw the
dice into their receptacle, and a moment after the spotted bones clattered on
the table.
"Three sixes!" cried the
Baron. "Lord, if I only had such luck when I played for money!"
The ex-Chancellor's eyes were
starting from his head, wild with fear.
"We have three throws," he
screamed.
"Not so," said the King.
"I swear I understood that we
were to have three chances," shrieked Steinmetz, springing from his chair.
"But it is all illegal, and not to be borne. I will not have my life diced
away to please either King or commons."
He drew his sword and placed himself
in an attitude of defence.
"Seize him; disarm him, and
bind him," commanded the King. "There are enough gentlemen in this
company to see that the rules of the game are adhered to."
Steinmetz, struggling and pleading
for mercy, was speedily overpowered and bound; then his captors placed him
against the wall, and resumed their seats at the table. The next man to be
doomed was Count Staumn. The Count arose from his chair, bowed first to the
King and then to the assembled company; drew forth his sword, broke it over his
knee, and walked to the wall of the condemned.
The remainder of the fearful contest
was carried on in silence, but with great celerity, and before a quarter of an
hour was past, ten men had their backs to the wall, while the remaining ten
were seated at the table, some on one side, and some on the other.
The men ranged against the wall were
downcast, for however bravely a soldier may meet death in hostile encounter, it
is a different matter to face it bound and helpless at the hands of an
executioner.
A shade of sadness seemed to
overspread the countenance of the King, who still occupied the position he had
taken at the first, with his back towards the fire.
Baron Brunfels shifted uneasily in
his seat, and glanced now and then with compassion at his sentenced comrades.
He was first to break the silence.
"Your Majesty," he said,
"I am always loath to see a coward die. The whimpering of your former
Chancellor annoys me; therefore, will I gladly take his place, and give to him
the life and liberty you perhaps design for me, if, in exchange, I have the
privilege of speaking my mind regarding you and your precious Kingship."
"Unbind the valiant
Steinmetz," said the King. "Speak your mind freely, Baron
Brunfels."
The Baron rose, drew sword from
scabbard, and placed it on the table.
"Your Majesty, backed by brute
force," he began, "has condemned to death ten of your subjects. You
have branded us as traitors, and such we are, and so find no fault with your
sentence; merely recognising that you represent, for the time being, the upper
hand. You have reminded me that my ancestors fought for yours, and that they
never turned their swords against their sovereign. Why, then, have our blades
been pointed towards your breast? Because, King Rudolph, you are yourself a
traitor. You belong to the ruling class and have turned your back upon your
order. You, a King, have made yourself a brother to the demagogue at the street
corner; yearning for the cheap applause of the serf. You have shorn nobility of
its privileges, and for what?"
"And for what?" echoed the
King with rising voice. "For this; that the ploughman on the plain may
reap what he has sown; that the shepherd on the hillside may enjoy the increase
which comes to his flock; that taxation may be light; that my nobles shall deal
honestly with the people, and not use their position for thievery and
depredation; that those whom the State honours by appointing to positions of
trust shall content themselves with the recompense lawfully given, and refrain
from peculation; that peace and security shall rest on the land; and that
bloodthirsty swashbucklers shall not go up and down inciting the people to
carnage and rapine under the name of patriotism. This is the task I set myself
when I came to the Throne. What fault have you to find with the programme, my
Lord Baron?"
"The simple fault that it is
the programme of a fool," replied the Baron calmly. "In following it
you have gained the resentment of your nobles, and have not even received the
thanks of those pitiable hinds, the ploughman in the valley or the shepherd on
the hills. You have impoverished us so that the clowns may have a few more
coins with which to muddle in drink their already stupid brains. You are hated
in cot and castle alike. You would not stand in your place for a moment, were
not an army behind you. Being a fool, you think the common people love honesty,
whereas, they only curse that they have not a share in the thieving."
"The people," said the
King soberly, "have been misled. Their ear has been abused by calumny and
falsehood. Had it been possible for me personally to explain to them the good
that must ultimately accrue to a land where honesty rules, I am confident I
would have had their undivided support, even though my nobles deserted
me."
"Not so, Your Majesty; they
would listen to you and cheer you, but when the next orator came among them,
promising to divide the moon, and give a share to each, they would gather round
his banner and hoot you from the kingdom. What care they for rectitude of
government? They see no farther than the shining florin that glitters on their
palm. When your nobles were rich, they came to their castles among the people,
and scattered their gold with a lavish hand. Little recked the peasants how it
was got, so long as they shared it. 'There,' they said, 'the coin comes to us
that we have not worked for.'
"But now, with castles
deserted, and retainers dismissed, the people have to sweat to wring from
traders the reluctant silver, and they cry: 'Thus it was not in times of old,
and this King is the cause of it,' and so they spit upon your name, and shrug
their shoulders, when your honesty is mentioned. And now, Rudolph of Alluria, I
have done, and I go the more jauntily to my death that I have had fair speech
with you before the end."
The King looked at the company, his
eyes veiled with moisture. "I thought," he said slowly, "until
to-night, that I had possessed some qualities at least of a ruler of men. I
came here alone among you, and although there are brave men in this assembly,
yet I had the ordering of events as I chose to order them, notwithstanding that
odds stood a score to one against me. I still venture to think that whatever
failures have attended my eight years' rule in Alluria arose from faults of my
own, and not through imperfections in the plan, or want of appreciation in the
people.
"I have now to inform you that
if it is disastrous for a King to act without the co-operation of his nobles,
it is equally disastrous for them to plot against their leader. I beg to
acquaint you with the fact that the insurrection so carefully prepared has
broken out prematurely. My capital is in possession of the factions, who are
industriously cutting each other's throats to settle which one of two
smooth-tongued rascals shall be their President. While you were dicing to
settle the fate of an already deposed King, and I was sentencing you to a
mythical death, we were all alike being involved in common ruin.
"I have seen to-night more
property in flames than all my savings during the last eight years would pay
for. I have no horsemen at my back, and have stumbled here blindly, a much
bedraggled fugitive, having lost my way in every sense of the phrase. And so I
beg of the hospitality of Count Staumn another flagon of wine, and either a
place of shelter for my patient horse, who has been left too long in the storm
without, or else direction towards the frontier, whereupon my horse and I will
set out to find it."
"Not towards the
frontier!" cried Baron Brunfels, grasping again his sword and holding it aloft,
"but towards the capital. We will surround you, and hew for you a way
through that fickle mob back to the throne of your ancestors."
Each man sprang to his weapon and
brandished it above his head, while a ringing cheer echoed to the timbered
ceiling.
"The King! The King!" they
cried.
Rudolph smiled and shook his head.
"Not so," he said. "I
leave a thankless throne with a joy I find it impossible to express. As I sat
on horseback, half-way up the hill above the burning city, and heard the clash
of arms, I was filled with amazement to think that men would actually fight for
the position of ruler of the people. Whether the insurrection has brought
freedom to themselves or not, the future alone can tell, but it has at least
brought freedom to me. I now belong to myself. No man may question either my
motives or my acts. Gentlemen, drink with me to the new President of Alluria,
whoever he may be."
But the King drank alone, none other
raising flagon to lip. Then Baron Brunfels cried aloud:
"Gentlemen: the King!"
And never in the history of Alluria
was a toast so heartily honoured.
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