Stenovics had been driven to this; he feared greatly. Not a soul heeded him; every eye now was on the woman. She struggled--she struggled to lie; she struggled to do what she believed would bring perdition to her soul. Her voice was forced and harsh when at last she broke silence.
"As I shall answer in that day--"
"As you shall answer to G.o.d for your soul in that day--" the King repeated.
She gave a wild glance at Stenovics, seeking succor, finding no refuge.
Her eyes came back to the King"s face. "As I shall answer--" Every word came forth by its own self, with its separate birth-pang--"As I shall answer to G.o.d for my soul--"
She stopped. There was silence while a man might count ten. She threw her hands above her head and broke into a violent torrent of sobs. "I can"t! I can"t!" they heard her say through her tumultuous weeping.
The King suddenly started back in his chair as though somebody had offered to strike him. "You--you--you, my wife! You, Stenovics! You, whom I trusted--trusted--trusted like--! Ah, is that you, Lepage? Did I hear rightly--wouldn"t she swear?"
"With the utmost respect to Madame la Comtesse, she could not swear, sir."
The King sprang to his feet. "Go!" he cried.
They all rose--the Countess shaken with unconquerable sobs. But the next moment the King made a quick in-drawing of the breath, like a man suddenly p.r.i.c.ked by some sharp thing. He dropped back in his chair; his head fell to meet his hands on the table in front. The hands were palms downward, and his forehead rested on his knuckles.
There was a moment"s pause. Then Lepage darted from the room, crying: "Dr. Natcheff! Dr. Natcheff!" Stenovics wiped his brow. Stafnitz raised his head with a queer look at the King, and his mouth shaped for a whistle. The Countess"s sobs seemed as though frozen, her whole frame was rigid. The King did not move.
Natcheff came rushing in; Lepage, who followed closely, shut the door after him. They both went to the King. There was silence while Natcheff made his examination. In a couple of minutes he turned round to them.
"Something has caused his Majesty strong agitation?"
"Yes," answered Stenovics.
"Yes!" said Natcheff. He cleared his throat and glanced doubtfully at the Countess.
"Well?" asked Stenovics.
Natcheff threw out his hands, shrugging his shoulders ever so slightly:
"I regret to say that the effect is the worst possible. His Majesty is dead."
Silence again--a silence strangely broken. Stafnitz sprang across the room with a bound like a cat"s, and caught the physician by the shoulder.
"No!" he said. "Not for twenty-four hours yet! His Majesty dies--to-morrow!"
XV
A JOB FOR CAPTAIN HERCULES
"His Majesty dies--to-morrow!"
Stafnitz"s words seemed to freeze them all stiff where they stood; even Countess Ellenburg"s sobs, which had threatened to break forth again, were arrested in their flow.
"Markart, lock the door leading to the King"s apartments. Natcheff and Lepage, carry the King into his bedroom; lay him on the bed; stay there till I call you. Countess, General, I invite your earnest attention."
Stenovics"s mind excelled in the waiting game, the slow, tortuous approach, the inch-by-inch advance of leisurely diplomacy. For him this crisis was at first too sudden. The swift and daring intellect of Stafnitz naturally and inevitably took the lead; his strong will fascinated his confederates.
"Is this to be the beginning or the end?" he asked. "For us and our friends--which? If we send a courier to Praslok to call King Sergius to his capital--what then? For you, Countess, and your son, oblivion and obscurity at Dobrava--for all the rest of your life, just that! For you, General, and for me, and our friends--yes, you too, Markart!--our _conge_, more or less civilly given. There won"t be more insignificant men in all Slavna on the day King Sergius enters. But there"s no King Sergius yet!"
Stenovics was regaining the use of his brain; his eyes grew distant in deep meditation. Countess Ellenburg looked eager and grim; her lips could not swear a false oath--well, she was not asked to swear any oath now. Markart could not think; he stood staring at Stafnitz.
"In half an hour that courier must start for Praslok, if he starts at all. Of all things, we mustn"t hesitate."
He had painted the result to them of the coming of King Sergius; it meant the defeat of years of effort; it entailed the end of hopes, of place, of power or influence. There was no future for those three in Kravonia if King Sergius came. And Markart, of course, seemed no more than one of Stenovics"s train.
"And if the courier doesn"t start?" asked Stenovics. He took out and lit a cigar, asking no leave of the Countess; probably he hardly knew that he was smoking it.
Stafnitz looked at his watch. "Five o"clock! We have twenty-four hours--it would be risky to keep the secret longer. There"s not much time; we must be prompt. But we mustn"t sacrifice anything to hurry. For instance, it would look odd to present the King"s orders to Baroness Dobrava in the middle of the night! She"d smell a rat, if she"s as clever as they say. And so would the Prince, I think. I could have a hundred men at Praslok by midnight, but I shouldn"t propose to have them there before eleven o"clock to-morrow. Well, they could be back here by five in the afternoon! In the course of the day we"ll occupy all the important points of the city with troops we can trust. Then, in the evening--as soon as we see how matters have gone at Praslok--we proclaim King Alexis!"
The Countess gave a little shiver--whether of fear or of eagerness it was impossible to tell. Stenovics drummed his fingers on the table and turned his cigar quickly round and round in his mouth. Markart had recovered his clearness of mind and closely watched all the scene.
The Countess rose suddenly--in strong agitation. "I--I can"t bear it,"
she said. "With him lying there! Let me go! Presently--presently you shall tell me--anything."
Stenovics laid down his cigar and went to her. "Wait in there"--he pointed to Natcheff"s room--"till you"re quite composed. Then go to your own room and wait till I come. Mind, Countess, no sign of agitation!" He led her out. Stafnitz shrugged his shoulders.
"She"ll be all right," he said to Markart with a pa.s.sing smile.
"I think she was fond of the King," said Markart.
Stenovics returned. "Now!" he said, seating himself again and resuming his cigar. "You suggest that we still use that order--for the arrest of Baroness Dobrava?"
"It"s signed "Alexis," and King Alexis lives till five to-morrow.
Moreover, if all goes well, King Alexis lives again for many years after that."
Stenovics nodded slightly. "The Baroness comes willingly--or you bring her? At any rate, one way or the other, she"s in our hands by this time to-morrow?"
"Exactly, General. I fail to perceive that this lamentable event"--he waved his hand towards the King"s empty chair--"alters the case as regards the Baroness one jot."
"Not the least--unless you consider that risking our heads on the throw has any such effect," replied Stenovics; and for the first time he smiled.
"Once you wanted to play the big stake on a bad hand, General. Won"t you put it on the table now, when you"ve a good one?"
"I"m thinking of a certain strong card in the other hand which you haven"t mentioned yet. Baroness Dobrava is to be in our power by this time to-morrow. But what will the Prince of Slavna be doing? Still drilling his men at Volseni, still waiting for his guns?"
Stafnitz looked him full in the face. "No," he said. "The Prince had better not still be drilling his men at Volseni, nor waiting for his guns."
"I think not, too," Stenovics agreed, twisting his cigar round again.
"General, do you think the Prince will let Baroness Dobrava come to Slavna without him?"
"I don"t know. He might have confidence enough in you; he wouldn"t wish to annoy or agitate the King. He might await his summons to an audience.