The Shadow of the Czar Part 37
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"May I have you for my secretary?"
Paul, though sometimes given to day-dreams, had certainly never antic.i.p.ated the time when a fair princess would be kneeling at his feet. He attempted to raise her.
"I will not rise till you grant my request."
No post could be more acceptable to Paul than this secretarys.h.i.+p, since he would thus live in daily companions.h.i.+p with Barbara; and, moreover, the handling of her correspondence would initiate him into the secrets of that fascinating subject, European diplomacy.
"Are you won over yet?" she asked.
"Who may gainsay a princess?" said Paul. "But are you certain that my appointment will not give offence?"
"I reign over a divided realm. If I appoint a Pole I shall have the Muscovites against me; if I appoint a Muscovite I shall have the Poles against me. Therefore I will choose my secretary from neither party."
"In order to unite both against you," smiled Paul. "But I fear, Barbara, that I am ill-qualified for the post."
"So much the better, Paul, for it will be charming to be your instructress," she replied, delighted that he had accepted the appointment. "What will your sovereign say at losing a brave soldier?"
"The princess is now my sovereign."
"Nay, not your sovereign, Paul, but your equal."
She rose and walked to a buhl table on which rested a golden diadem, and returning with it, she placed it playfully upon his head.
"See how well it becomes you," she said, drawing him gently towards a mirror. "There! every inch a prince."
Paul smiled oddly at his reflection in the gla.s.s. He to wear the crown of Czernova! The idea seemed too fantastic to be entertained. For the last four and twenty hours he seemed to have been playing a _role_ in some romantic opera rather than to have been living in the world of reality.
He put the diadem aside.
"It is not a crown I want, Barbara, but your own sweet self."
"And you have me, Paul," she said, kissing him affectionately.
"Nothing but death shall part us. And now," she continued, quitting his arms with reluctance, "we must put on our masks and play our parts, for I am about to summon the chamberlain."
On the appearance of Silver Staff, Barbara said,--
"Call the marshal to our presence."
Zabern was soon found. On entering he glanced keenly at Paul's face as if expecting to gain from it some idea of the character of his long interview with the princess; but Paul, when he chose, could be as inscrutable as Zabern himself, and his face revealed nothing.
"What news of Russakoff?" asked the princess.
"Your Highness, I regret to say that the spy is still at large."
"The ruffians of Russograd, who slew Trevisa because he was an Englishman and loyal to me, shall find that they have gained little by their deed, for I herewith replace him by an Englishman equally as loyal. Marshal, my new secretary."
Zabern bowed and answered like a courtier.
"No appointment could give the cabinet and the Diet greater pleasure,"
he replied, knowing that he was committing himself to a doubtful statement.
"It is a matter in which the cabinet and the Diet have no concern,"
replied Barbara with a touch of hauteur in her voice.
"Your Highness, Miroslav is without, charged with a question from the Duke of Bora."
"What says that law-breaker?"
"His grace is desirous of learning from the princess how long his detention is to last."
"Till the mark on my secretary's cheek shall have disappeared. If his grace be dissatisfied with our justice, it is open to him to appeal to the law-courts of Czernova, whose sentence he will find considerably less lenient than our own."
"Your Highness, I shall have extreme pleasure in conveying that message to the duke."
CHAPTER IX
A DISPLAY OF SWORDSMANs.h.i.+P
On quitting the presence of the princess, Paul and Zabern took their way through the palace gardens, where they were met by two individuals in uniform, whom the marshal introduced to Paul. The more youthful of the two, who had fair hair, blue eyes, and a comely face that seemed to indicate habitual good humor, was Dorislas, and he held the office of Minister of Finance. The other, a somewhat sullen-looking personage, was Miroslav, the governor of the Citadel, "and," added Zabern, "the present guardian of your friend the duke."
"Ah! the duke," said Dorislas to the governor. "I marvel, Miroslav, that you have not yet been called upon to defend your Bastille. What are your friends in Russograd thinking of, that they so tamely submit to the duke's imprisonment?"
"The marshal's placards explain the reason. At the first attempt upon the Citadel the duke is to be brought forth upon the battlements, and summarily shot."
"And therefore," commented Zabern, "it is a pity that they do not make the attempt."
"Well, you know the marshal and his ways by this time," laughed Dorislas, addressing Miroslav. "When to-night you see a wild mob with blackened faces advancing upon the Citadel and crying out for the release of the duke, be sure that Zabern is somewhere among them, disguised and playing the part of chief instigator."
Zabern and his two friends, so it appeared, were on their way to the _salle d'armes_, which stood in the centre of the palace gardens. In this hall it was their custom, provided that state affairs were not too pressing, to fence daily. Zabern invited Paul to accompany them.
"And the cipher despatch, marshal?" said the new secretary, who, having Barbara's interests at heart, was desirous of beginning work at once.
"A little fencing on your part will quicken both blood and brain."
So Paul acquiesced, somewhat reluctantly, and while he and the governor of the Citadel strode on in front, Zabern, adopting a more tardy pace, followed in the rear conversing with Dorislas.
"Marshal, what is this mystery?" asked the Finance Minister with a significant glance in Paul's direction. "There is a strange rumor that he and the princess were together in Dalmatia, and that she there presented him with a sapphire seal which had been given to her by the duke himself. Within twelve hours of his coming to Czernova he is challenged to a duel by Bora. Her Highness, on hearing of the affair, flies to rescue the Englishman, sends her affianced husband to prison, but permits the other duellist to go free. And now you bring the amazing news that the princess has made this Woodville her secretary.
What is the meaning of it all?"
"You had better ask her Highness," said Zabern dryly, and abruptly changing the subject of conversation, he added: "Did anything of importance take place at the Diet last night?"
"What, marshal! haven't you heard?" cried Dorislas, his face expressing the extreme of amazement.
"Heard? I've heard nothing. I was occupied in searching for that a.s.sa.s.sin Russakoff till seven this morning, since when I have been asleep. What new folly, then, did you and the rest of the ministry perpetrate in my absence?"
The Shadow of the Czar Part 37
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The Shadow of the Czar Part 37 summary
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