The woman"s agitation increased with each word.
"It must not be. It shall not be. You dare not," she cried.
"There is no dare not in schemes like these," I answered grimly.
"But I was promised there should be no violence."
"You had not then played us false and worn that domino."
"I will go at once and tell all I know," she exclaimed excitedly.
Good. She had not told.
"It is too late. You were the decoy, but the duke is now in the hands of my men, and no power on earth can save him if I but issue the order. Do you think I do my work so poorly as to leave him where you, or those whom you send, could find him?"
She sat, her fingers interlocked and her eyes staring in a fixed, set gaze of abject fright, while her breath came and went with quick catches of agitation.
"You have played the subtle part of double treachery, and you will find it deadly dangerous," I went on sternly.
It was necessary to frighten her thoroughly for the object I had, and I let a couple of minutes pa.s.s in silence, while this conviction of her danger forced itself home. Then I opened the door of relief.
"It rests with you to save his life, and your own, and Praga"s," I said.
She was too panic-stricken to act, and the hope in her face at my words made me rejoice.
"Save the Countess Minna von Gramberg. Help me to find her."
The light died out as suddenly as it had come.
"I cannot. I know nothing of her whereabouts."
"Tell me all you know about this trick by which you personated her."
At that moment a man dressed as a Venetian gondolier approached to claim her for a dance.
"I must know everything at once," I whispered hurriedly. "You must refuse him."
It was a test of my power. If she went off to dance I should accept it as a sign of defeat.
"I must not refuse. I dare not," she said nervously.
"You understand what it means," I replied in the same undertone.
The man came up, and the nervous movements of my companion"s fingers showed me something of her agitation.
"This is our dance, I think," he murmured, bowing.
"Yes, I--yes, it is," and she half rose from her seat, but then sank back again. "But I am not quite well enough to dance. I am sitting here for the cooler air. Please excuse me."
"Permit me to sit it out with you then," he said, and he turned toward me as if expecting me to give way.
I did not budge, of course, but stared out in front of me as if I had not seen his look.
"I am sorry, but--a friend has--has brought me some important--news, and it has distressed me--and I wish to continue the conversation."
It was as clumsy an excuse as any child in her teens could have mumbled out, and given in a manner altogether unlike her own. But fortunately the man took umbrage at the obvious slight, and with a stiff bow went off.
I had won again.
"Now you can tell me all you know."
"Wait a moment. Let me be quiet, or I shall faint."
She was now trembling violently, and I sat waiting until she should have recovered her self-composure sufficiently to tell me the news I was burning to learn.
CHAPTER XIX
THE MAID"S STORY
"I have really very little to tell you," said the actress after a long silence, in which she had been making strenuous efforts to recover self-possession. "I know very little. I have known, of course, for a long time that there was to be special interest attaching to the proceedings here to-night, and for Signor Praga"s sake I had learned all that I could."
"I wish to know the particular facts in connection with your taking the place of the countess, that"s all," for the time was slipping by and my anxiety on Minna"s account was growing to fever heat.
"I was merely told that I had to play the part of another woman, and that I was to be paid for doing so. More than that, I was given to understand that in the event of the matter being carried through successfully I should gain the favor of some of those high in authority."
"Do you mean you were doing this for money only?"
"No, but because I believed there was some other great advantage to be gained."
"Did you tell Praga?"
"No. Why should I tell him everything? I did not know for certain until my return to-night what was really intended. I might have drawn back then if I could--if I had not also known that I should be dealing a blow at you and revenging myself."
"How did you get possession of the countess"s domino, and when did you take her place by the side of the man guarding her?"
"I did not get her domino. The one I wore was ready for me when I arrived here to-night. Some one had described exactly the dress the Countess Minna was to wear, and everything was ready for me when I arrived."
"Did you know it was the Countess Minna you were to personate?"
"Yes. I was not told, but I guessed; and when they told me that you would come up to me and lead me forward to the throne, I knew of course all that was meant. I did not do all I was told to do, however. I was to have kept my mask on and to have walked across the room with you to the dais, and then have thrown it off, to shame and confuse you before every one."
"And why didn"t you?"
"I preferred to enjoy my revenge privately. And I had it when I saw your look of dismay on catching sight of my face."