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"Then, in the name of goodness, why didn't my protectors find out about the attack made by the Seventh Regiment? Surely there were enough concerned in that to supply at least one spy?"
Bosko hesitated. He glanced surrept.i.tiously at Alec's mother. "Things went wrong that day, monsieur," he said. "Information that ought to have reached the General was withheld."
And Alec left it at that; for the man who might reasonably be suspected of offsetting Stampoff's vigilance was dead, and no good purpose could be served by adding one more to his mother's host of bitter memories.
A bell sounded, and Bosko went to the front door. He returned, his stolid features exhibiting the closest approach to excitement that they were capable of. Evidently he meant to announce a visitor; but before he could open his mouth a high and singularly musical voice came from the entrance hall in the exquisite opening bars of the "Salve Dimora."
With one amazed cry of "Felix!" Joan and Alec rushed to the door. Yes, there stood Felix, thinner, more wizened, more shrunken, than when last they saw him on the quay at Southampton. Joan, impulsive as ever, welcomed him with a hearty kiss.
"You dear creature!" she said. "Why did you not tell us you were in America?"
"An envoy always delivers his message in person, my belle. I am here on affairs of state. The telegraph is but a crude herald, and I was forbidden to write."
Alec dragged him into the room. "Business first, Felix," he said. "That is the motto of strenuous America. Now, what is it?"
"Beliani came to me in Paris," said the hunchback, affecting the weighty delivery of one charged with matters of imperial import. "He brought with him letters from Stampoff and Nesimir, which I shall deliver. He also intrusted me with a copy of a unanimous resolution of the Kosnovian a.s.sembly, pa.s.sed in secret session."
Joan's face suddenly paled, Mrs. Talbot's hands clenched the arms of the chair in which she was sitting, and the two women exchanged glances.
None of this escaped Alec, who was seemingly unmoved.
"Behold in me, then," continued Poluski, "the Amba.s.sador of Kosnovia.
Delgratz wants again to see its Alexis, who is invited to reoccupy the throne on his own terms,--wife, infant, mother, Bosko, Pauline, even myself and the domestic cat, all are welcome. There are no restrictions.
At a word from the King even the a.s.sembly itself will dissolve."
Somehow, Poluski's manner conveyed that this was no elaborate jest, and Joan's lips trembled pitifully when, after one look at the youthful Alec, who was lying on a cus.h.i.+on and saying "Coo-coo" to a rattle, she awaited her husband's reply. He too looked at her in silence, and even Joan became dematerialized for one fateful moment. In his mind's eye he saw the sunlit domes and minarets of the White City. The blue Danube sparkled as of yore beneath its ancient walls. Through the peaceful air of that quiet Denver suburb he caught the sound of cheering crowds, the cras.h.i.+ng of bells, the booming of cannon, that would welcome his return.
But he thought, too, of the fret and fume of Kings.h.i.+p, of the brave men and gracious women who had occupied an unstable throne and were now crumbling to dust in the vaults of that gloomy cathedral. He smiled tenderly at his wife, and his hand stole out to meet hers.
"I refuse, Felix!" he said quietly.
Poluski's piercing gray eyes peered at him under the s.h.a.ggy eyebrows.
"Is that final?"
"Absolutely final!"
Felix broke into a hearty laugh. "I warned Beliani," he chuckled. "No one could have written to me as Joan has done and yet want to return to that whited sepulcher down there in the Balkans. Well, here are my credentials," and he threw a bundle of papers on the table. "I have done what I was asked to do, and thus earned my pa.s.sage money; and now, when I have kissed the baby and shaken hands all round, I will bring in my wedding present."
A minute later he danced out into the hall and returned with a huge roll of canvas. "I unpacked it at the station," he said; "so it is ready for inspection," and he spread out on the table a replica of the famous Murillo. "There," he cried, "since Joan would not come to the Louvre, I am bringing the Louvre's chief treasure to her. As it is the last, so is it the best of my copies. My hand was losing its cunning, I felt myself growing old, so I prayed to that sweet Madonna to give me one last flicker of the immortal fire ere it left me a dry cinder. Well, she listened, I think. _Ave Maria!_ the great Spaniard himself would rub his eyes if he could see this. Now, I shall go back contented, and dream of the days that are gone."
His voice broke. He was gazing at Joan, at the glory of maternity in her face.
"You are not going back, Felix," said Alec. "Kosnovia has now lost both its King and its Amba.s.sador. You are here, and here you shall stay."
"Yes, dear Felix," whispered Joan, "we have found our Kingdom. Our court is small; but there is always room in it for you."
So Denver heard wild s.n.a.t.c.hes of song, and listened, and marveled, and a baby cultivated a strange taste in lullabies, and Pallas Athene forgot that one of her chosen sons dwelt in Colorado, or, if she remembered, her heart was softened and she forbore.
THE END