1 . " 6 THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 16, 1895. 'II r i -' V t Copyright, MM. bv A. H. Hawklu. CHAPTER IV. At thU Instant In the room In the irate-tower of the castle overlooking the moat there had fallen a dead silence. Here Count Nikolas had raised the princess, set her on a couch, and waited till her falntness and flight were K"ne. Then he had come near to her and In brief, harsh tones told Iher his nilml. For him Indeed the dice were now cust; he had In his fury and fear dared all. He was calm now, with the calmness of a man at a great turn of rate. That room, he told her, she should never leave alive, save as his promised wife, sworn and held to secrecy and silence by t'he force of that bond and of her oath. If he killed her, he must die. whether by his own hand or the kind's mattered little. IJut 'he would die for a --. ' "If I Have a l air Face It Should Inspire Fair lceJs." ereat cause and In a great attempt. "I shall not be called a cheating gamester, nore effort, seeking- to move her by an .". I'l'al to wlwca women are not wont 10 be insensible. "A cheat, yes!" nld he. "I. Nikola's of Kestenberg. am a cheat. I say It. though no other man shall while I live to hear him. Hut to g:iln what stake?" "Why. my brother's castle of 55end:i." "I swear to you It was not." he cried, coming nearer t her. "I did not fear losing on thut cast, hut I did not endure dure not to win. Not my stake, ruadaine, but yours, lured me to my foul play. Have you your face and yet do not know to what it drives men?" "If I have a fair face, It should Inspire fair deeds." said she. "Ihi not touch me, sir, do not touch me. I loathe breathing the ranif air with you or so much as seeing your face. Aye, and I cun die. Kven the women of our house know how to die." At her scorn and contempt a great rage came upon him, and he gripped the hilt of his swiml and drew It from the scahbard. Hut she stood still, fac ing him with calm eyes. Her lips moved for a moment In prayer, but she did net flu Ink. "I pray you." said 'he. In trembling speech, and mastering himself for nn Instant. "I pray you!" and he could say no more. "I will cry your cheating In all Strel sau." said she. "Then commend your soul to Ood. For In one minute you shall die." iSt III she stood motionless: and he be gan to come tu-ar to her. his sword now drawn In his hands. And. coming with in the distance from which 'he could strike 'her, he paused and gased Into her eyes. She answered him with a smile. Then there was for an Instant the utter stillness In the room: and in that instant the Hl.-hop of Modcnstcin set his foot on the staircase' and cam running up. On a sudden Osia heard Mie step, and a gleam Hashed In her eye. The count .heard It also, and his sword was nirvstetl In Its stroke. A smile came on his face. He was glad, a't the coming of some one whom ho might kill in tight: for it turned him sick to butcher her, unresisting. Yet he dared not let her go to cry his cheating In the streets of Strelsau. The fteps came nearer. He dropped his sword on tJie floor and sprang upon 'her. A shriek rang out. but he pressed his hand on her mouth and seized her in his arms. She had no strength to madame." ald he. a smile on his pale I resist, and he carried her swiftly across face. "I choose death sooner than dis honor. Such is my choice. What Is yours? It stands between death and Hence and no man but your husband will dare to trust your silence." "You dare not kill me," said she de fiantly. "Madame. I dare do nothing else. They may write murderer on my tomb; they shall not throw 'cheat' in my living face." "I will not be silent," cried Osra. springing to her feet. "And rather than be your -wife, I would die a thous and times. For a cheat you are a cheat a cheat." And her voice rose till he feared that she would be heard, If any one chanced to listen, even from to far off in the hall. Yet he made one the room to a Unor in the wall. He pulled the door open it was very mas sive and 'heavy and he flung her roughly down on the stone floor of a little chamber, square and lofty, hav ing but one. small window high up t'hrough which the moonlight scarcely pierced. She fell with a moan of pain. Unheeding he turned on his heel and shut the door. And as he turned, he heard a man throw himself against the door of the room. It also was strong: and twice the man flung himself with all his force against It. At last' It strained and gave wayfand the Bishop of Motlensteln burst Into the room breathless.. And he saw no trace of the princess' presence, but only Count Nikolas standing sword In hand in rVont of the door In the wall with & sneering smile on his face. The dUshop of iModensteln never loved 'to speak afterwards of what fol lowed, saying always -that he rather deplored than gloried In It, and that w'aen a man of his sacred profession was forced to use the mumiis of this world It was a matter of grief to him, not of vauir.lns. Hut the king com pelled him by urgent requests to tle cribt. the whole mutter, while 'the prlnces was never wt ary of telling all that the knew or of blessing all bhrhopsj for the sake of the bishop of MoUin steln. Yet the bU!iop blamed himself, pei'iups, if the truth were known, not for the necessity that drove him to what he did, as for a secret and ashamed joy that he had detected In himself. For certainly, as he burst into the room now, there was no tlgn of re luctance or of unwillingness in his face; he took off his feathered cap, bowed politely to the count, and, resting the point of his sword on the floor asked: "My lord, where Is the princess?" "What do you want here, and who are you?" cried the count, with u blasphemous oath. "When we were boys together, you knew Frederick of ilftutzuu. Do you not now know the Bishop Modensteln?" "Itlshop! This 'Is not the place for bishops. et back to your prayers, my lord." "It' wants some time yet before ma tins." answered the bishop. "My lord, where Is the princess?" "What do you want of her?" "I am here to escort her wherever It may be her pleasure to go." He sm1 confidently, but he was In his heart alarmed and uneasy because he had not found tfhe princess. "I do not know where she is," said Nikolas of Festenberg. "My lord, you lie," said the Hlshop of Modensteln. The count had wanted nothing but an excuse for attacking the Intruder. He had it now, and an angry flush mounted in his cheeks as he walked across to where the bbhop stood. Shift ing his f word to his left hand, he struck the bishop on the face with his gloved hand. The bishop smiled and turned the other cheek to Count Nikolas, who struck him again wKlt all his force, so that he reeled back, catt'hlng hold of the open door to avoid falling; and the Mood started dull red under the skin of his face. Hut he still smiled, and he bowed, saying: "I find nothing about the third blow in Holy Scripture." A'i this instant theprincess Osra, who had been half stunned by the violence with which Nikolas had thrown her on the floor, came to her 'full senses, and, hearing the bishop's voice, she cried out loudly for help. He hearing her, dart ed in an instant across the room and was at the door of the little chamber before 'the count could stop him. He pulled the door open and Osra sprang out to him, saying: "Save me! Save me!" "You are safe, madame, have no fear," answered the bishop. And turning to the count, he continued, "Let us go outside, my lord, and dis cuss this matter. Our dispute will dis turb and perhaps alarm the princess." And a man might have read the pur pose in his eyes, though his manner und words were gentle: for he had sworn in his heart thst th count sliould not escape. liut the count cared as little for the presence of the princess as he had for her dignity, her honor, or her life; and now that she was no longer wholly at his mercy, but there was a new chance that she might escape, his rage and the fear of exposure lashed him to fury; and, without more talking, he made at the bishop, crying. "You tlrst and then her. I'll be rid of the pair of youl" The bishop faced him, standing be tween Princess Osra and his assault; while she shrank back a little, shelter ing herself behind the heavy door. For. although she had been ready to die without fear, yet the sight of men lighting frightened her, and she veiled her face with her hands, and waited in dread to hear the sound of their swords clashing. But the bishop looked very happy, and setting his cap on his head with a Jaunty air, he stood on guard. For ten years or more he had not used his sword, but the secret of Its mastery seemed to revive, fresh and clcur in his mind, and let his soul say what it would, his body rejoiced to be at the exercise again; so that his blood kindled and his eyes gleamed In the rlee of strife. Thus he stepped forward, guarding himself, and Inns he met the count's Impetuous onset; and he neither flinched nor gave back, but finding himself holding his own he pressed on and on. not violently at tacking and yit never resting, ami turning every thrust with a wrist of iron. And while Osra gazed with wUli eyes and close-held hrtath. and count Nikolas muttered oaths nnd grew more furious, the bishop seemed as gay as when he talked to the king, moro gaily, maybe, than bishops - should. Again his eye danced as in the days when he had been called the "wildest of the llentzaus." And still he drove Count 'Nikolas back und back. 'Now behind the count was a window which he had himself caused to w en larged and mude low and wide, In By on Aec It Missed Her Head. order that he might look from It over the surrounding country, but In time of war It was covered with a close and strong iron grating. Hut now the grat ing was off and the window open: and beneath this window was a fall of seventy feet or hard upon It Into the moat below. The count looked Into the bishop's face and saw him smile, and suddenly he recollected the window, and fancied that It was the bishop's design to drive him on to It so that he could give back no more; and, since he knew by now that the bishop was his master with the sword, a despairing rage settled upon him, and, determin ing to die swiftly since die he must, he rushed forward, making a desperate lunge at his enemy. But the bishop parried the lunge, and, always seem ing to lie about to run the count through the body, again forced him to retreat, till his back was close to the. opening of the window. Here Nikolas stood, his eyes glaring like a mad man's; then a sudden devilish smile spread over his face. "Will you yield yourself, my lord?" cried the bishop, putting a restraint on the wicked Impulse to kill the man, and lowering his point for an instant. In that short moment the count made his last throw; for all at once, as it seemed, and almost in one motion he thrust and wounded the bishop In the left side of the body, hlsh In the chest near the shoulder, and though the wound was slight, the blood flowed freely: then, drawing back his sword, he seized It by the blade halfway up and flung It like u javelin at the prin cess, who stood still by the door, breathlessly watching the fight. By an ace It missed her hend, and It pinned a tress of her hair to the door and quivered deepset In the wood of the door. When the Bishop of Modensteln saw this, hesitation and mercy passed out of his heart, and though the man hud now no weapon, he thought of sparing him no more than he would huve spared any cruel and savage beast; he drove his sword into his body, and the count, not being able to endure the thrust without flinching, against his own will gave way before it. Then came from his lips a loud cry of dismay and despair, for at the same moment that the sword was In him he, staggering back, fell wounded to death through the open window. Tha bishop looked out after him, and Princess Osra heard the sound of a great splash In the water of the moat below. For very horror she sank against the door. seiMiilng to be held up more by the sword thut had pinned her hair than by .her own strength. Then came up through the window, from which the bishop still looked with a strange smile, the clutter of a hundred feet running to the gate of the castle. The bridge was let down; the confused sound of many men talking, of whispers, of shouts, and of cries of horror, mounted up through the air. For the count's men In the hull also hud heard the splash, and run out to see what It was; und there they beheld the body of their muster dead in the moat; and their eyes were wide open and they could hardly lay their tongues to the words as they pointed at the body ami whlspeivd to one another, very low, "The bishop has killed him the bishop hus killed him." But the bishop saw them from the window and leant out, crying: "Yes, I have killed him. 60 perish all six'h villains:" And when they looked up and saw In the moonlight the bishop's face, they were amazed. But he hastily drew his head in, so that they might not see him any more. For he knew that his face had been fierce, and exultant, and Joy ful. Then dropping his sword, he ran across to the princess und drew the count's sword, that was wet with his own blood, out of the door, releasing the princess' hair; and seeing that she was very faint, he put his arm about her and led 'her to the couch: and she sank down upon k, trembling and white us her white gown and murmur ing, "Fearful, fearful!" and she clutched his arm, and for a long while she would not let him go; and her eyes were fixed on the count's eword that lay on the floor by the entrance of the little room. (To be concluded.) MarLKiiutjiHiii'tiUpHiii!.'itriM,:iit MII.D APHTHA (INC 1 -iLXTH Ft 'inn; 7T IK MIIIMI TCHECO tOWIH SltUHQfk '"A ABSOLUTELY PURE THE OLD RELIABLE SWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTE Hit stood Hit Tell ol Timo MORE SOLD THAN ALL OTHER BRANDS COMBINED Use CORES THE TOBACCO HABIT IN 4 TO 10 DAYS OR MONEY REFUNDED. All the Tobacco You Want Till Your "Craving" Is Gone. 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