AS a we YYW AA a a va All Rights Reserved a Pe AASB ae FRR AMARA PR YY AAAS AA hd YA YYW COUNTESS LOSCHEK’S SECR ET MESSAGE CAUSES A LOT slips away to the park, where he Thorpe, a little American boy. Re made for him, The same night t boy's grandfather, the old king, wh the terrorists to form a republic, ringe to King Karl of that country. to Princess Annunciata, and plots to prevent his message to King Karl. marriage makes the acquaintance of Bobly turning to the palace at night, he esult of the search which has been he chancellor calls to consult the o Is very ill. The chancellor sug- the friendship of the neighboring Countess Loschek, lady-in-waiting is In love with King Karl to Hedwig, She sends a secret CHAPTER V.—Continued. | sel pe “Mother, you cannot look back, and ~—and remember your own life, and al dow me to be wretched. You can- wot I” Hedwig began to cry. The archduchess hated t her softer moments were ments. “Dry your eyes, and silly,” she said coldly. “You ways known that something sort was inevitable.” She moved toward the two princesses and her lady ing remained still until had left | the table. Then they fell in behind | her, and the little procession moved to the stuffy boudoir, for coffee. But Hilda slipped her arm around her sis- and the touch mforted | tal ears, and only n don't be have al- of the 1) The! in wait- door. she ter's waist, Hedwig, “He may be very nice,” Hilda volun. | teered cautiously, “Perhaps it is Karl I am quite mad about Karl, myself." | Hedwig, however, was bevond lis ing. She went slowly to a window, and stood gazing out. Looming the sky-line, in the very center of the Dlace, was the herole figure of her dead grandmother. She to wondering about these royal women ceded. Her mother, fr in her marriage, 1 CoO to ten- against ¢ ied tered; her grandmothe H ever king young. She cotld 1 not picture him £ seen the 8 Wer. fine and lonely f Had he ever t *} alivir ae Sly ped nino nna As closed the Lier eves ores or did 1 Came | old we is f footsteps, nls } % salute the f heels *1 Guie stone pavement, knew even as she knew every vibrant, eager inflection of his He ¥. across the squa one who, havi nee to a saint, turns bac of the world, boudoir the archd: voice, went an re, like * ing ¢ ng “You knits a nay and Hilda reus dozed, countess’ of vn hich venings, ar She no : put down the dreary she filled id moved to walked quietly, wit the the a 3 i like were linked i down 5 ' & EALICSS, ised her ey i to the stars, ovely.' to ttf 414 in. She spend ot POTS, being shut up ne sentence with a shirug of fond of the count | why. The between own in- arm not not know that her countess of barrier of When the she drew aside. said the lady in “I should like to pereding over mount course, waiting be in a in roads, mountains, you know. | ned 1 them,” Hedwig moved, a little top tie but as the countess wont tened. After all, Nikky, from the mountains, wins sorry for homesick, and perhaps because just then had to speak to one, | ele turned to her at last with the thing | that filled her mind, “This marriage,” she said bitterly, “Is it iilked about? Am I the one In the palace who hans not mbout it?” “No, highness, I had heard nothing, [Of course, there are always rumors,” “As to the other, the matte # from the ntly, lige came And because she wns on, she foe, the countess, who she SOE " only | Known r my mother referred to,” Hedwig held her very high, “I—she was unjust, Am I never to have any friends?” “Friends, highness? One may have “What then?” YA lover,” said the countess softly. “It is impossible to see Captain Lar- lsch in your presence, and not realize—"" “Go on.” is in love with you.” “How silly! wig, with glowing eyes, “But highness!" implored the count- “it you would use a caution. Open defiance Is its own de- feat.” “TI an P88, not ashamed of what I do.” Hedwig hotly, “Ashamed ! Of course not. But things that are harmless in others In your you are young. You should friends, gayety. I am,” position have in the « but that I can ig stood still. The old city was preparing for In the a " lovers loitered, standing close, and tinkling of a bell told of the Sacrament arried sleep. place being « treets to some bedside of The Princess Hedwig i ell chance have 11 5 sked scornfu course, 1 before He "hen she turn hen I wish to she sald col . is hall do i She lef openly, countess.” t the balcony abruptly, aban- the countess to solitary fury, triumph had Alone, she went red doning the greater because seemed and white, bit cording to all ditions, And lady-in-waiting fo get even. . * RO near. the even time-honored tra- |SWore fashion, to be » * Things were Nikky Larisch. Perhaps, at been in love with the princess, not the woman. It had fix on the ship it from a to unattainable ~ and f AAA AVILA Sessa an YW a Wa {things over. Probably never before in his life had he deliberately done such a thing. He had never, a3 a fact, { thought much at all. It had been his | comfortable habit to let the day take | care of Itself, leyond minor prob- {lems of finance— {come was trifling little. In the last he border war he had a matter of doing, not of thinking. | | But he was young, and the was crisp and beautiful. He took After all, things might not be so bad. | Hedwig might refuse this { They were afraid that she would, or { why have asked his help? When he { thought of King Karl, he drew himself up, and his heels rang hard on the pavement, Karl! A good king—that was Karl. And old. { From the full manhood of his twenty- | most forty, and considered it age. It was typical | that he needed transiated most i motion. So he {Ing Into the crowded And here It was pened on the thing t {him far that night, {many curious things. jof him two men were vent slowly, erm in | talking loquaciously, arm, on which hung =a [ulate. The other walked { head. { Nikky, pausing to | fell behind, But the with his third {into a stone archway, lighted | cigarette, buttoned iis tunle the chill, and emerged hard He his into off briskly, turn- walk. motions a of set that Nikky hap- hat was to nnd bring about Not far ahead They or take talking. arm, One was using his free cane, to gestic. with bent ight a clgarette, wind was tricky, {and match he stepped high i against to a The three two men had others, and loquacious one wer 0 been attacked by as he stared, the down, Instantly ntiined again outlined against it n huge figure of a ma | the light from a street lamp, crouched form of the fallen frog ble sec- ward *3 the si na over the prostrate n. Even In the ond before he started e group, Nikky saw one, unmolested, was ing on. A moment In he : in the thick th tin gloriously. His r #4 reepti to run that t) pe f +} o fic ings and figh dierly cap fell bristled with exel 19 that ng, and with es umed a new {i arn wore ASE the prostrate { fist. | Down we | The pwere not neigh Hungaria, roused grumbled students, and slept again. Perhaps two minutes He was himscif, nt Nikky, still town slept on. uncommon, rhood of the and lay i Street br Those who Some t up. another minute in lo- His cap lay in Ri cating Hedwig was still a whose touched him, but whose warmth for him. He would have dled ting for her with a smile on his A ut he had no hope of living r her, unless, of course, she should mppen to need him, which was most unlikely. He had no vanity whatever, although in parade dress, with white gloves, he hoped he cut a decent figure, So she had been his star, and as cold nnd remote, And then, that very morning, Hedwig had been thrown. Not badly-—she was too expert for that. As a matter of fact feeling her self going, she had flung two strong young around her htrse's neck, and had almost succeeded In lighting on her feet, It was not at all dramntie, But Nikky's heart had stopped beat- ing. He had lifted her up from swhere sat, half vexed and wholly ashamed, and earried her to a chair. That was all. But when it was all over, and Hedwig was only a trifle and horribly humiliated, Nikky Larisch knew the truth about himself, knew that he wis in love star, wns figh lipa ¢ 1 I 0) Arms stunces would he ever be able to tell Knew, then, that happiness thereafter travel different So that night he started out to think » In the Thick of Things and Fighting Gloriously. gutter. Beside him, on his back, lny a sprawling and stertorous figure, with, so quick the downfall, a cane still hooked to his arm. Nikky bent over FPeter Niburg. lending over made his head ache abominably, “Here, man!” he said. “Get up! Rouse yourself!” Peter Niburg made an inarticulate reference to a plece of silk of certain quality, and lay still, X3ut his eyes opened slowly, and he stared «up at the stars, “A fine night,” he sald thickly. “A very fine Suddenly he raised himself to a sitting posture, Terror gave him stren-th. “I've been robbed,” he said, “Robbed, I am ruined. TI am dead.” “Tut,” sald Nikky, Hp. “If you are dead, your spirit spenks with an uncommonly lusty volce! Come, get up. We present to- gether a shameful pleture of defent.” jut he raised Peter Niburg gently from the ground and, finding his knees unstable, from fright or weakness, stood him against a house wall. Peter Niburg, with rolling eves, felt for his letter, and, the saints he praised, found ft, “Ah! he said, and straightened up. “After all, it Is not go bad as I feared. They got nothing.” He made a manful | but tottered, reeled, effort to Nikky walk, caught him. “Careful!” he sald. { wns doubtless the both, and we are weight for some time, live?” Peter Niburg was not for He would have preferred to pursue hi ut Nikky Toward Peter they made “The colossns who got to feel his Where do you one likely saying. “ olitary if uncertain way. was no half Samaritan. Niburg's lodging, then, slow progress, “These recent gentlemen,” said Nik ky, as they went haps, personal enemies?” Peter Niburg reflected. He thought (not, “But I know why they came,” he | sald unguardedly, ing, my friend, you will hear of a man dead In the street. That man rr 1 thought has a moral,” observed “Do not trust yourself out-of- ors at night” But he saw that Peter Niburg kept his hand over his breast pocket. Never having dealt in mysteries Nikky w= slow at recognizing But, he reflected, many things were going on in the old city in these trou- bled days. Came to Nikky, all at once, “Some early morn ye 8 = One, that this man on his arm might be one | of the idden eyes of government. “These are difficult times,” he ven- tured, “for those who are loyal.” Peter Niburg gave him a sidelong ance, “Difficult indeed” h gl briefly “I think,” Nikky observed, after I see yon safely home, I this small matter to the poli here Peter Nil “Not-—-not the sred, “But wv? Yo nd I, my will carry I have a Petor {ped and the police,” he said, “Perhaps “that, shall report But paler. stam Irg turned ev — police he friend, ia for some days. mind to pay our debts.” Nin ed. He stop- faced Nikky. “I do not wish ' I have a private mat- 1 onsider well” But icion. He sy Nikky assented. WAR rising mbled on stupidity stopped. friend must would escape” sis eens Frsller rks and r “Good night to Then, rathe But 10g igged othe { f city. "said Peter Nib “And my you I should now—" he shn shoulders, { “Good night, friend,” sald Nikky. | “And better keep your bed tomorrow.” | He had turned away and Peter Ni- burg entered the house. Nikky inspected himself in the glow {of a street lamp. and a s he Well enough, anyhow, for the empty streets. But bef he looked the { house and the neighborhood over care- fully. He might wish to return to that | house, For two hours he walked, and re. ur thanks, wol ROP, was not unpresentable, re started he | At last, having almost circled the city, ! he to the Cathedral. It was nearly midnight by the clock in the high tower. He stopped and consulted his watch. up the high steps, and look out over the city from the colonnade, Once there, he stood leaning against a column, looking out. There was someone coming along the quiet streets, with a stealthy, shuffling gait that caught hls attention. So, for in- stance, might a weary or a wounded man drag along. Exactly so, indeed, had Peter Niburg shambled into his house but two hours gone, The footsteps paused, hesitated, commenced a painful struggle up the ascent, Nikky moved behind his col- umn, and waited, Up and up, weary step after weary step. The shadowy figure, coming close, took a form, be- came a man-became Peter Niburg. Now, indeed, Nikky roused. Beaten and sorely bruised, Peter Niburg should have been in bed. stealthy business of the night brought him out? Fortunately for Nikky's hiding place, the last step or two proved too much for the spy. He groaned, and eat down painfully, pear the top, His head lolled forward, and he supported it on two shaking hands. Thus he sat, huddled and miserable, for five mip- uted or thereabouts, The chime rang came out the hour, ® pe ~ At ten minutes past the hour, Nikky henrd the engine of an automobile, No machine came In sight, but the throbbing kept on, from which he judged that a car had been stopped | around the corner, Peter Niburg heard it, and rose. A moment later a man, with the springiness of youth, mounted the steps and confronted the messen- | ger, Nikky saw a great light. | Peter Niburg put his hand to his | breast pocket, there was no longer | { room for doubt, nor, for that matter, {time for thinking. As a matter of | { fact, never afterward could Nikky re- | call thinking at all. He moved away quietly, hidden by the shadows of the | | colonnade. Behind him, on the steps, | the two men were talking. Absorbed in themselves and their business neither heard nor saw the figure | slipped through the « , and | dropped, a blood curdlir 2 di wp, fre | the high end of it to the street low, Nikky's first impulse, be ire Iv tire, ’¥ When they i that donnade m be id getting his op- posi over e the car, Wis to cut a into a tion, ponent the damaged $ tooping wheel, it driver acts from the spina) cord, and not from the bralp. Therefore his brain may be seething with a thousand frenzies, but he wiil shove out clutch and brake feet in an emergency, and hold them out, So It happened. The man's hands ar, Not before it had struck f Not too goon. curve out toward the edge of But stop It did, on the eternity, the very of and the chauffeur edge “Bet the hand brake!” Nikky said, The chauffeur ceased struggling set the hand brake. His head was But having done that commenced a struggle than forceful, for } and tiny he furious both of them # more were andicapped, And now Nikk fore at | the dri strength, ie to forget, For unexpected the himself courage veloped to submit, ind got seeing He besid at Niki after a 1 31 only, took pick le hi ane «1 up a wren 11 i $47 1 1 5 head. stru the then Nikky raised and stunned hi tef v1} iti. seeured over 8 in the It was wren It was ha of It bad 5 man very dull And there when ent. Th his seat, a human flesh busines g, was horrified. The chauffeur wakened, ten ming later, to find himself securely his tremely close was sicker siry or ing minute or tw he in word whose 8, in a way, own towin doald ‘ Im on or 3 ie him on the Bre eyed young man wi young man had Ii it ] «1 side of his oouth, “Just ord 4 zi carefull; as BOOND a8 yo hail $d A Sentry Stepped Into the Road. a has wt his jut revealed that he had I th And sect fn better plan. letter not know its destination woul tant. He had no time to er, The messenger to overcome him. nd the After everyth ng. 1 be impor. think e melee, the was far. +1 lown the ste Ds 1 losr *th % ng 12 into the re cron 1 the to « disliked ead. He | yor OR After a time he raised de out that they toward the mountains, the luck that had left his Still he had no plan Two hours’ ride, at the! lent rate, would take ther border and into Karnia. | With a squealing of brakes the wa) chine drew up at Here in across the highway, with 8 of guards. Long before they reached it, a sentry stepped into the | road and waved his lantern. | were east, | and he £2 Rr cursed home, { watch, the frontier. was a cha two set Nikky burrowed lower into the car, | {and atte mpted to look like a rug. In| the silence, while the sentry evidently | ned a passport and flashed a lantern over auffeur, Nikky cursed the ticking his watch, the | | beating of his own rt. | Then came a ¢l g as the chain | | dropped in the road. The car bumped | | over it, and halted again. The same { formalities, this time by Karnian sentries, Then the jerk following a | hasty letting-in of the clutch, and they | were off again, For some time they climbed steadily, | But Nikky, who knew the road. bided | his time. Then at last, at two o'clock. came the steep ascent to the very | crest of the mountain, and a falling back, gear hy gear, until they climbed slowly In the lowest. Nikky unfolded his length quietly. The gears were grinding, the driver bent low over his wheel. Very de liberately, now that he knew what he was going to do, Nikky unbuttoned his tunic and slipped it off. It was a rash thing, this plan he had in mind, rash under any circumstances, in a moving car-partienlarly rash here, where be. tween the cliff and a precipice that fell far away below, was only a wind. ing ribbon of uneven road. Nikky, he waited his moment, and then, with one singularly efficient ges ture, he flung his tunic over the chauffeur's head. He drove a car himself, did Nikky-not his own, of course; he was far too poor—and he counted on one thing—en automobile ch f O hea +4 wy The chauffeur muttered is of Kar you are The e letter aga dressed t 2a border town But the town lay far bel address, then, was a foals istied softly. Nikky fierce? He look swollen lip did ths ne t silN His was nervous, It occurres that his prisoner, in ht roll over the edge h uncomf desperatie mself, whic would be most mfortable, But the precipice, and Nikky's fierce lip, and other things, had got in their work. The man on the ground stopped muttering In his patois, and turned on Nikky eyes full of hate. “I will tell you.” he sald will free me. And after “Certainly,” Nikky replie “You will follow me though 1g will not esary, because { intend to there—and finish me off.” Then ly: “Now, where does the letter po? I have a fancy for delivering it my- self.” “If I tell you, what then?” “This: If you tell me properly, and all goes well, I will return and release you. If I do not ret: naturally youn will not be released. And for fear you meditate a treachery, | shall gag you and leave you, not here, but back a short distance, in the wood we just passed. And, because you are a brave man, and this thing may be less seri- ous than I think it is, I give you my word of honor that if you advise ne correctly, 1 shall return and liberate you." “I have only your word” "And I yours,” said Nikky, The chauffeur took a final glance around, as far as he could seo, nnd a final shuddering look at the valley of the Ar, far below. *T will tell you,” he said sullenly, " — mo — The crown prince and Prin. cess Hedwig wait in vain for the return of Nikky, whose disap. pearance they are unable to on. derstand. Watch Tor the next instaliment. nec gtern- ws ith,