It was useless to fight further, so with another shrug of the shoulders I gave up.
"I warn you the whole thing"s a farce, though I can"t make you believe it. I"ll go with you; but you must put up with the consequences."
In another moment I was free, and he was profuse with his apologies.
As he opened the door to leave some one came running up the stairs looking hot and agitated. To my relief it was von Fromberg.
"How is it you"re back so soon?" I cried. "Never mind how it is; you come in the nick of time anyhow. This is Herr von Fromberg, gentlemen.
These gentlemen are from your uncle, and wish you to go with them."
"You said you would go freely with us, sir," whispered the elder man at my side. "You gave your word of honor."
"But this is the man you want," I cried, pointing to von Fromberg, who was staring like one panic-stricken from me to the others.
The elder man turned to him.
"Are you the Herr von Fromberg?"
"Certainly not," he stammered, with a quick look of appeal to me. "This is----" He quailed before the look I gave him and stopped.
"You are not going to deny yourself, man?" I cried.
"Deny myself, von Fromberg," he answered, with a forced, uneasy laugh.
"Why should I? My name is Fisher. Do you want me?" he said to the two.
"Certainly not. Our business is with this gentleman. This is Herr von Fromberg, is it not?"
"Yes, certainly," was the reply, with another forced laugh.
"Now, will you keep your word?" said the man in a meaning tone to me.
"Or will you compel me ..." He did not finish the sentence.
"Oh, just as you like. Only I warn you it"s all an infernal blunder,"
and with that I went with them.
At the bottom of the stairs I turned and looked up at the man for whom I was mistaken. He nodded and made signs to me as if thanking me, and urging me to keep up the deception.
I said not a word more, but went with the two men in dogged silence.
When we reached the station, I flung myself into a corner of the railway carriage, my companions mounting guard over me, one at my side, the other in the opposite corner.
We travelled through the night, changing trains more than once--sometimes travelling at express speed, sometimes crawling, and now and again making long stops at junctions. I scarcely spoke, except to protest that it was all a fool"s journey; and when the elder man attempted to talk to me, I stopped him peremptorily, saying that as a stranger I had not the least wish to learn anything of the family"s affairs. I would not hear a word until we reached the castle.
There, however, a surprise awaited me that pierced the sh.e.l.l of my apathy in an instant, and filled me with a sudden longing to go on with the strange part for which my companions had thus cast me.
The greatest deference was shown to me on my arrival, and I was ushered into a large and lofty room, while the elder man went to inform the Prince of my arrival, the younger man remaining with me.
The castle was certainly magnificent; and I could not refrain from an intense wish that I were indeed the heir to such a glorious place and position. My thoughts slipped back to the old life that I had thrown away, contrasting it with the mockery of my stale, humdrum existence, and I asked myself what I would not give for such a career as I felt I could build out of the materials Fortune had now shovelled into my lap with this taunting munificence.
Then I saw from the window a young golden-haired girl, standing among the flower-beds. She was dressed all in black, the exquisitely beautiful and regular features set and saddened with an expression of profound grief and melancholy. She was holding some freshly plucked roses in her hand, and after she had plucked one or two others a serving-maid approached and said something to her; and she turned and looked toward the window at which I stood. Probably mere curiosity was the motive, but to me it seemed as if the look were instinct with anxiety, doubt, and appeal.
Suddenly I saw her start and glance round; and if ever a face told of fear and repulsion hers did, for all the struggle that her pride made to repress the evidence of her emotion, and to force up a smile to cover an aching heart.
Then I saw the cause of the change.
A man came into view, and my heart gave a great leap of anger that had long slumbered. I had known him in the old life for the falsest scoundrel that ever cheated a friend or ruined a woman. The mere sight of him set me on fire. He had dealt me a foul and treacherous wrong, and when I had sought him to call him to account he had fled, and I could never trace him.
I watched him now as he spoke to the girl, and my old hate awoke till I could have found it in me to rush out there and then to cast his foulness in his face and choke his life out of him. And my brow gathered in an angry scowl as I watched the girl"s struggle between pride and loathing when she answered him, and shrank back from the sensual brute stare of his eyes.
As soon as I could keep my voice steady I called my companion to the window.
"Who are those?" I asked.
"The Countess Minna, the Prince"s only daughter, now his only child. It is she who, under heaven, will be the Queen of----"
He checked himself when he caught my look of intense surprise.
"And the man. Who is he?"
"The Count von Nauheim, her future husband."
"G.o.d help her, then," said I, with involuntary fervor.
My companion started and looked at me.
"Do you know----"
"I know nothing," I replied very curtly. "These are no concerns of mine.
But I can read a face." He looked at me searchingly, but I had taken my watch out and was playing with the guard. "This Prince seems a devil of a long time sending for me. If he keeps me much longer I shall lose my train back."
I spoke indifferently, and threw myself into a chair to think.
I sat a long time buried in these old rustled reflections, until the chain of thought was snapped abruptly, and I sprang to my feet as a great cry ran through the castle, and the sound of a woman"s sobbing.
"What"s that?" I asked of the man with me, who had changed color and was manifestly disturbed.
"I don"t understand it," he said, after a long pause, during which he went and stood by the door, as if doubting whether I might try to leave.
The sounds of confusion in the castle increased. Servants were hurrying in all directions; but no one came to us.
Later on the toll of a heavy bell sounded with vibrating echoes through the hot, heavy, sleepy air. A minute after it was repeated; and before the sound had died away the elder of the two men came back into the room. He was deadly pale, and so agitated that his voice trembled. He approached me and bowed with signs of deep respect.
"I bring you the worst of news. The Prince is dead; and your Highness is master in his stead."
"Dead!" I cried, in the profoundest astonishment.
"He was stricken this morning, and lay dying when we entered the castle.
And he was dead before your Highness could be summoned."