THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL, PA. LONG LIVE THE. KIN ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 208-0000000000000000000000000000000000000 00000004 P FIFE NE bbl iililiididsddsdoddtdtdtttttttttd TPP rYVyYRT RTwRTSSTSETRTSETW PPT ITITITTTTITIT TTY YT EYEE YE TYPO ITTITITITT TY YY YR EW Copyright, 1917, by the Ridgway Company Copyright, 1917, by Mary Roberts Rinehart Ld aA i AAS AALSASLARAAAAALALL ALLA LLSLSLLLHSHHO0000000000F Peer SHPO VPTITTTITTTTTTIT TTT TT TR TVETYTTRTTRRRE EE CHAPTER IL san The Crown Prince Runs Away. The Crown Prince sat in the royal box and swung his legs. This was hardly princely, but the royal legs did pot quite reach the floor from the high | crimson-velvet seat of his chair. Prince Ferdinand Willlam Otto was bored. His royal robes, consisting of a pair of blue serge trousers, a short Eton jacket, and a stiff, rolling collar of white linen, irked him. He had been brought to the opera house under a misapprehension. His aunt, the Archduchess Annunciata, had strongly advocated “The Flying Dutch- man,” and his English governess, Miss Braithwaite, had read him some in- | spiring literature about It. So here he was. and the Flying Dutchman was pot ghostly at all, nor did it fly. And in- stead of flying, after dreary eons of singing, it was moved off on creaky rollers by men whose were | thrown grotesquely on the sea back- | ing. The orchestra, Not quite! At the top of the pri- vate staircase reserved for the royal family a guard commonly stood. He had moved a few feet from his post, however, and was watching the stage through the half-open door of a private loge. : Prince Ferdinand William Otto passed behind him with outward calm- At the top of the public stair- case, however, he hesitated. Here, everywhere, were brass-buttoned offi- clals of the opera house. A garderobe | woman stared at him curiously. The | little prince looked at the woman with appeal In his Then, with his heart thumping, he ran past her, down the white marble staircase, to where the great doors promised liberty. the wardrobe woman, out from behind her counter and stood looking down the marble after the small flying figure. The old rented glasses at the second landing, and who | had left a leg in Bosnia, leaned over | the ralling. “Look at that!" he ex- | claimed. “He will break a leg, the | solo and Intermittent thunder in the | couns rascal! Once I could have ! wings. was making a deafening din. | hut. there, he Is safe! The good God | One of the shadows on the sea back- | watches over fools | ing out its handkerchief and | “It looked wiped nose. | the Prince Ferdinand William Otto look- | } ed across at the other royal box, and | hair. caught Hedwig's eye. She | , . 0 opern-glass man was not | { to: also had handkerchief; she : . % a . SS yi | A id : rince Ferdinand 11iis i i took out and mimicked Her Royal Highness the Archduchess An- nunciata occupied with the storm Prince Fer nd William In consins, Hilda, casional rumble that told of some pal- | then they were off, up an endless, click- pitating soul being at that moment ing roadway, where at the top the car hurled and twisted and joyously | hung for a breathless gecond over the thrilled, as per the lieutenant's descrip- | gulf below : then, falrly launched, out tion, Now it is a strange thing, but true, that one does not reach the land of | desire alone; the half of | pleasure 18 the sharing of it with some | one else, and the land of desire, alone, | is not the land of desire at all. Quite | lowed in his wake. Messengers clat- {tered down the staircase to the court | vard, Other messengers, breathless | | and eager, flew that lighted on a trestle, with the city far beneath | where the council sat, and where them, and only the red, white, and blue | old king, propped up in bed, lights far company; and into a tunnel, | and fought terror. illed with roaring nolses and swift-| Hig eyes, weary with many years of moving shadows, Then came the end | ryiing, of disappointments and bitter- of all things—a flying leap down, a |pnegs, roved the They came to | heart-breaking, delirious thrill, an up- | rest last on the photograph of al suddenly, Prince Ferdinand William | ward sweep just as the strain was 100 | young man, stood on his bed- | Otto discovered that he was lonely, At | great for endurance, side table. that moment there was a soft whirring| Above the roaring of the wind In He was a off to one side of him, and a yellow | thelr ears, neither child had heard the He bird, rising and falling erratically on | flying feet of a dozen was the breeze, careened suddenly and fell | down the allee, They never knew that his feet. ia hatless young lleutenant, Prince Ferdinand Willlam Otto bent | lipped with fear, had checked | down and picked it up. It was a small | horse to its haunches at the | toy aeroplane, with yellow slik planes, booth, and demanded to know lin the land of “Omnis 800 “that you have alarmed people.” sorry, didn’t think to think. 'm sir. 1 wing | “A prince's duty 1s the | did you go?” ia park, sir. to the park hard end to waited | the River because to ness, room. at hich wil “By ‘Nikky’ you lLarisch?’ “Yes, sir. “Go on.” “We lke Pike's-Peak-or-Bust The king raised “What was that? Ferdinan mean "” very young man, in a uni- | boyish, and smiling. beside him, and {ts knee, Wherever one the eyes the one, The king was quite form. eyes. horses coming | There the same things head wa white- tood In his | ticket his room, nt on nt the himsel or of bow. Olga, came | knew this, and because he Prince who was blushed, explained, dares to speak his pes manager, at {nNOS ourhts he qanently Spo he scenic railway He He hac carried anda for the old. and because there were few peo- desire, of the staircase soldier who opera | shadows he assisted by a bass we ta out of my search of the followed by his and children.” took ike the little prince,” sald | woman. “I have iim often—he has the same bright | 5 { J the last ree leaped the its wardrobe geen his Cousin seen the her own scrap of linen, shadow. Then, the tel across at Otto. box Princesses by Hedw wie 1 posite ; one hears th the ea he f attended h the ear, he di CHAPTER IL. ro Chri : and toward old Adelbert. " op ssl here,” she honest but “An ago eves, her own carr ar then Am i moment wig's name, Ferdinand Willlnm Otto ran ingers through which God-bles . lina William Hedwig blushed The arch- | known the backs ’ ind the fact mu sore roma Wb neti was the a | The and 1 re SOT his father was ing of England and the e seem Kings : directly of them And Prince Otte up his mind to 14s . to's a mn oF te wt %, but ailroads a part of his own h “I had thought of taking a it.” he mid, after a second’s re- ‘ tod “ { wheele at the Ido you think your father ~ A me a ticket?” il. Grimm will, I 81 if strange taking by the shoul to shaking. In sound any with falling were, 3 Ferdi scenic say, ta v is and a illiam \ oO tH nea k Otto was uriou ine 80 10 RpOaA Wi uriou ine, rince's hit {lent } of cavalry came out from the in im sient; Whit i | that the crown prince had not only initiative—witness his flight + . nurnesy ’ a thundering of and with anclusively : street, Ferdinand Otto 11 4 con- flection ery wearisome, If one ander around the corridor Lucky and at | prospect such a Kin i or. het- hut aelf-control sell country, to 1 yon." The prince rose with alacrity. Then he stopped. He must, of course, Very unusual, all of it. The Prince Ferdinand Otto ; v | felt in his pocket for his handkerchief, j ES tache } corner with his | plomacy. go with | sandwich from the st Crown 1 of the great staircase if alone, and | nse Prince Ferdinand William Otto had the fulfillment of a small, active mind. a ¢ the of the one could only get to and, molstening a tongue, wiped his face, Then he wiped | great desire In his ask one This was the that Braithwa pised! The crown prince felt anen ite RO le in his ance untou He pocket, where his week's of pocket money lay comfortably hed. meditated. - He could out quickly, and be back before they knew it. Even if he wandered about the corridor, it would stretch his short legs, And it was an fine day. It looked already like spring With the trepidation of na who finds his cage door open, hopping to the threshold, surveys the world before venturing to explore it, Prince Ferdinand William Otto to his feet, tiptoed past the go Onty outside rose and looked around him from the door. way. He picked up his hat and concealed it by his side. Then nonchalantly, as if to stretch his legs by walking ten feet up the corridor end back, he passed the dressing room door. An- other moment, and he was out of sight around a bend of the passageway, and before him lay liberty. nothing American secured a the park. had deseribed it less than a ride on the railroad, which had concession in a far corner of Hedwig's lieutenant to him one weenie how vas taken in a small loose on a track which dropped giddily and rose which hurled through sheetdron tunnels of incredible thrust one out over a gorge, ugain, one blackness, ners of precipitous heights, and finally landed one, panting, breathless, shock- ed. and reeling, but safe, at the very platform shere one had purchased ticket three eternities, which were only minutes, before. As the early spring twilight fell, the made a twin row of pale stars ahead. At the end, even as the wan- deter gazed, he saw myriads of tiny red, white, and blue lights, rising high fn the air, outlining the crags and peaks of the sheet iron mountain | which was his destination, The land of desire was very near! There came to his ears, too, the oc | strange boy to be his guest tickets! Perhaps his wns not sufficient. “1 must see first how much it costs,’ he sald with dignity. The other boy laughed, You come with me. It won't cost thing.” he said, and led the toward the towering lights, jut nilowance i two “Oh, gee! nny- way boy to ride with him was an everyday affair. Billy Grimm, at the ticket win- dow, hardly glanced at the boy who stood, trembling with anticipation, In the shadow of the booth, The car came, and they climbed in. Perhaps, ns they moved off, Prince Ferdinand William Otto had a qualm, occasioned by the remembrance of the English child who had met an une timely end; but if he did, he pluckily hid it. “put your 1id on the floor of the car,” gald Bobby Thorpe, depositing his own atom there. “Father says, if you do that, you're perfectly safe.” Prince Ferdinand William Otto di. vined that this referred to his hat, and drew a smsdl! breath of relief. And his shoes, Then, with his hands in trousers pockets, he sauntered In gsentries made when they Ferdinand Otto approaching. But one of them to bring his musket to salute. himself instead. something strained around the sentry’'s lower jaw suddenly ns his royal The two no Willinm saw crossed smile luted. He glanced at oie, then at the gecurely, and marched in. “The young rascal!” said the sec. ond sentry to himself, And by turn. ing his head slightly—-for a sentry learns to see all around like a horse, without twisting his neck--he watched the runaway into the palace, Prince Ferdinand William Otto went up the stone staircase. Here and there he passed guards who stared and saluted. Had he not been ohgessed with the vision of Miss Braithwaite, he would have known that relief fol “Mere | Am, Sir" Said the Prince. Crown things as they were would sound un- grateful. Would, indeed, be most im- polite. And then, exactly why had he run away? “Suppors,” said the king, “you draw | up a chair and tell me about it. We'd i better talk it over, I think.” His royal highness drew up a chair, and =at on it. His feet not reaching | the floor, he hooked them around the | chair rung. This was permissible be- cause, first, the king could not woe | them from his bed. Second, it kept his knees from shaking. “Probably yoa are aware,” sald the | ing had ' They and then. It w= ho would quarrel with to him as 1 y to man quarreled hrave man Ferdinand IL his nustache So now d hi 1 i eyebrows came wp. “Hov an went lone, sire?” “You do not English woman you?” “She is a thoughtful and | tious woman, sire,” he said stiffly. It | happened that he had selected her. | “She does her duty. And to | boy being lonely, he has no time to be lonely, His tutors—" “How old is he?” “Ten next month.” The king sald nothing for a time, Then-*It is hard,” he said at last, “for seventy-four to see with the eyes As for this afternoon--why in the name of a thoasand devils did they take him to see the ‘Flying Dutchman? I detest it." (TO BE CONTINUED) that bi companion, regard as a goted do oonscion- ns the