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<h2> XVII. IN THE TOWER </h2>
<p>The two captives who were not prisoners were so dazed by the unexpected
events of the morning that they did not realize the vast seriousness of
the situation for hours. Then it dawned upon them that appearances were
really against them, and that they were alone in a land far beyond the
reach of help from home. One circumstance puzzled them with its damning
mystery: how came the blood stains upon the door-knob? Dangloss
courteously discussed this strange and unfortunate feature with them, but
with ill-concealed skepticism. It was evident that his mind was clear in
regard to the whole affair.</p>
<p>Anguish was of the opinion that the real murderer had stained the knob
intentionally, aiming to cast suspicion on the man who had been
challenged. The assassin had an object in leaving those convicting
finger-marks where they would do the most damage. He either desired the
arrest and death of the American or hoped that his own guilt would escape
attention through the misleading evidence. Lorry held, from his
deductions, that the crime had been committed by a fanatic who loved his
sovereign too devotedly to see her wedded to Lorenz. Then why should he
wantonly cast guilt upon the man who had been her protector, objected
Dangloss.</p>
<p>The police guards came in from the hotel about ten o'clock, bearing marks
of an ugly conflict with the Axphainians. They reported that the avengers
had been quelled for the time being, but that a deputation had already
started for the castle to lay the matter before the Princess. Officers had
searched the rooms of the Americans for blood stains, but had found no
sign of them.</p>
<p>"Did you find bloody water in which hands had been washed?" asked Anguish.</p>
<p>"No," responded one of the guards. "There was nothing to be found in the
bowls and jars except soapy water. There is not a blood stain in the room,
Captain."</p>
<p>"That shakes your theory a little, eh?" cried Anguish, triumphantly.
"Examine Mr. Lorry's hands and see if there is blood upon them." Lorry's
hands were white and uncontaminated. Dangloss wore a pucker on his blow.</p>
<p>Shortly afterward a crowd of Axphain men came to the prison gates and
demanded the person of Grenfall Lorry, departing after an ugly show of
rage. Curious Edelweiss citizens stood afar off, watching the walls and
windows eagerly.</p>
<p>"This may cost Edelweiss a great deal of trouble, gentlemen, but there is
more happiness here this morning than the city has known in months.
Everybody believes you killed him, Mr. Lorry, but they all love you for
the deed," said Dangloss, returning at noon from a visit to the hotel and
a ride through the streets. "The Prince's friends have been at the castle
since nine o'clock, and I am of the opinion that they are having a hard
time with the High Priestess."</p>
<p>"God bless her!" cried Lorry.</p>
<p>"The town is crazy with excitement. Messengers have been sent to old
Prince Bolaroz to inform him of the murder and to urge him to hasten
hither, where he may fully enjoy the vengeance that is to be wreaked upon
his son's slayer. I have not seen a wilder time in Edelweiss since the
close of the siege, fifteen years ago. By my soul, you are in a bad box,
sir. They are lurking in every part of town to kill you if you attempt to
leave the Tower before the Princess signs an order to restrain you
legally. Your life, outside these walls, would not be worth a snap of the
fingers."</p>
<p>Captain Quinnox, of the Princess's bodyguard, accompanied by a half dozen
of his men, rode up to the prison gates about two o'clock and was promptly
admitted. The young captain was in sore distress.</p>
<p>"The Duke of Mizrox has sworn that you are the murderer, Mr. Lorry, and
stakes his life," said he, after greetings. "Her highness has just placed
in my hands an order for your arrest as the assassin of Prince Lorenz."</p>
<p>Lorry turned as pale as death. "You—you don't mean to say that she
has signed a warrant—that she believes me guilty," he cried, aghast.</p>
<p>"She has signed the warrant, but very much against her inclination. Count
Halfont informed me that she pleaded and argued with the Duke for hours,
seeking to avert the act which is bound to give pain to all of us. He was
obdurate, and threatened to carry complaint to Bolaroz, who would
instantly demand satisfaction. As the Duke is willing to die if you are
proved innocent, there was no other course left for her than to dictate
and sign this royal decree. Captain Dangloss, I am instructed to give you
these papers. One is the warrant for Mr. Lorry's arrest, the other orders
you to assume charge of him and to place him in confinement until the day
of trial."</p>
<p>While Quinnox was making this statement the accused stood with bowed head
and throbless heart. He did not see the captain's hand tremble as he
passed the documents to Dangloss, nor did he hear the unhappy sigh that
came from the latter's lips. Anguish, fiery and impulsive, was not to be
subdued.</p>
<p>"Is there no warrant for my arrest?" he demanded.</p>
<p>"There is not. You are at liberty to go, sir," responded Quinnox.</p>
<p>"I'd like to know why there isn't. I am just as guilty as Lorry."</p>
<p>"The Duke charges the crime to but one of you. Baron Dangloss, will you
read the warrant?"</p>
<p>The old chief read the decree of the Princess slowly and impressively. It
was as follows:</p>
<p>"Jacot, Duke of Mizrox, before his God and on his life, swears that
Grenfall Lorry did foully, maliciously and designedly slay Lorenz, Prince
of Axphain, on the 20th day of October, in the year of our Lord 189-, and
in the city of Edelweiss, Graustark. It is therefore my decree that
Grenfall Lorry be declared murderer of Lorenz, Prince of Axphain, until he
be proved innocent, in which instance, his accuser, Jacot, Duke of Mizrox,
shall forfeit his life, according to the law of this land providing
penalty for false witness, and by which he, himself, has sworn to abide
faithfully.</p>
<p>"Signed: Yetive."</p>
<p>There was silence for some moments, broken by the dreary tones of the
accused.</p>
<p>"What chance have I to prove my innocence?" he asked, hopelessly.</p>
<p>"The same opportunity that he has to prove your guilt. The Duke must,
according to our law, prove you guilty beyond all doubt," spoke the young
captain.</p>
<p>"When am I to be tried?"</p>
<p>"Here is my order from the Princess," said Dangloss, glancing over the
other paper. "It says that I am to confine you securely and to produce you
before the tribunal on the 26th day of October."</p>
<p>"A week! That is a long time," said Lorry. "May I have permission to see
the signature affixed to those papers?" Dangloss handed them to him. He
glanced at the name he loved, written by the hand he had kissed, now
signing away his life, perhaps. A mist came over his eyes and a strange
joy filled his soul. The hand that signed the name had trembled in doing
so, had trembled pitifully. The heart had not guided the fingers. "I am
your prisoner, Captain Dangloss. Do with me as you will," he said, simply.</p>
<p>"I regret that I am obliged to place you in a cell, sir, and under guard.
Believe me, I am sorry this happened. I am your friend," said the old man,
gloomily.</p>
<p>"And I," cried Quinnox.</p>
<p>"But what is to become of me?" cried poor Anguish, half in tears. "I won't
leave you, Gren. It's an infernal outrage!"</p>
<p>"Be cool, Harry, and it will come out right. He has no proof, you know,"
said the other, wringing his friend's hand.</p>
<p>"But I'll have to stay here, too. If I go outside these walls, I'll be
killed like a dog," protested Harry.</p>
<p>"You are to have a guard of six men while you are in Edelweiss, Mr.
Anguish. Those are the instructions of the Princess. I do not believe the
scoundrels—I mean the Axphain nobles—will molest you if you do
not cross them, When you are ready to go to your hotel, I will accompany
you."</p>
<p>Half an hour later Larry was in a cell from which there could be no
escape, while Anguish was riding toward the hotel, surrounded by Graustark
soldiers. He had sworn to his friend that he would unearth the murderer if
it lay within the power of man. Captain Dangloss heard the oath and smiled
sadly.</p>
<p>At the castle there was depression and relief, grief and joy. The royal
family, the nobility, even the servants, soldiers and attendants, rejoiced
in the stroke that had saved the Princess from a fate worse than death.
Her preserver's misfortune was deplored deeply; expressions of sympathy
were whispered among them all, high and low. The Axphainians were detested—the
Prince most of all—and the crime had come as a joy instead of a
shock. There were, of course, serious complications for the future,
involving ugly conditions that were bound to force themselves upon the
land. The dead man's father would demand the life of his murderer. If not
Lorry, who? Graustark would certainly be asked to produce the man who
killed the heir to the throne of Axphain, or to make reparation—bloody
reparation, no doubt.</p>
<p>In the privacy of her room the stricken Princess collapsed from the
effects of the ordeal. Her poor brain had striven in vain to invent means
by which she might save the man she loved. She had surrendered to the
inevitable because there was justice in the claims of the inexorable Duke
and his vindictive friends. Against her will she had issued the decree,
but not, however, until she had learned that he was in prison and unable
to fly the country. The hope that delay might aid him in escaping was
rudely crushed when her uncle informed her of Lorry's whereabouts. She
signed the decree as if in a dream, a nightmare, with trembling hand and
broken heart. His death warrant! And yet, like all others, she believed
him guilty. Guilty for her sake! And this was how she rewarded him.</p>
<p>Mizrox and his friends departed in triumph, revenge written on every face.
She walked blindly, numbly to her room, assisted by her uncle, the Count.
Without observing her aunt or the Countess Dagmar, she staggered to the
window and looked below. The Axphainians were crossing the parade ground
jubilantly. Then came the clatter of a horse's hoof and Captain Quinnox,
with the fatal papers in his possession, galloped down the avenue. She
clutched the curtains distractedly, and, leaning far forward, cried from
the open window:</p>
<p>"Quinnox! Quinnox! Come back! I forbid—I forbid! Destroy those
papers! Quinnox!'"</p>
<p>But Quinnox heard not the pitiful wail. He rode on, his dark face stamped
with pity for the man whose arrest he was to make. Had he heard that cry
from his sovereign the papers would have been in her destroying grasp with
the speed that comes only to the winged birds. Seeing him disappear down
the avenue, she threw her hands to her head and sank back with a moan,
fainting. Count Halfont caught her in his arms. It was nightfall before
she was fully revived. The faithful young Countess clung to her
caressingly, lovingly, uttering words of consolation until long after the
shades of night had dropped. They were alone in the Princess's boudoir,
seated together upon the divan, the tired head of the one resting wearily
against the shoulder of the other. Gentle fingers toyed with the tawny
tresses, and a soft voice lulled with its consoling promises of hope. Wide
and dark and troubled were the eyes of the ruler of Graustark.</p>
<p>An attendant appeared and announced the arrival of one of the American
gentlemen, who insisted on seeing Her Royal Highness. The card on the tray
bore the name of Harry Anguish. At once the Princess was aflutter with
eagerness and excitement.</p>
<p>"Anguish! Show him to this room quickly! Oh, Dagmar, he brings word from
him! He comes from him! Why is he so slow? Ach, I cannot wait!"</p>
<p>Far from being slow, Anguish was exceedingly swift in approaching the room
to which he feared admittance might be denied. He strode boldly,
impetuously into the apartment, his feet muddy, his clothing splashed with
rain, his appearance far from that of a gentleman.</p>
<p>"Tell me! What is it?" she cried, as he stopped in the center of the room
and glared at her.</p>
<p>"I don't care whether you like it and it doesn't matter if you are a
Princess," he exploded, "there are a few things I'm going to say to you.
First, I want to know what kind of a woman you are to throw into prison a
man like—like Oh, it drives me crazy to think of it! I don't care if
you are insulted. He's a friend of mine and he is no more guilty than you
are, and I want to know what you mean by ordering his arrest?"</p>
<p>Her lips parted as if to speak, her face grew deathly pale, her fingers
clutched the edge o' the divan. She stared at him piteously, unable to
move, to speak. Then the blue eyes filled with tears, a sob came to her
lips, and her tortured heart made a last, brave effort at defense.</p>
<p>"I—I—Mr. Anguish, you wrong me,—I—I—" She
tried to whisper through the closed throat and stiffened lips. Words
failed her, but she pleaded with those wet, imploring eyes. His heart
melted, his anger was swept away in a twinkling. He saw that he had
wounded her most unjustly.</p>
<p>"You brute!" hissed the Countess, with flashing, indignant eyes, throwing
her arms about the Princess and drawing her head to her breast.</p>
<p>"Forgive me," he cried, sinking to his knee before the Princess, shame and
contrition in his face. "I have been half mad this whole day, and I have
thought harshly of you. I now see that you are suffering more intensely
than I. I love Lorry, and that is my only excuse. He is being foully
wronged, your Highness, foully wronged."</p>
<p>"I deserve your contempt, after all. Whether he be guilty or innocent, I
should have refused to sign the decree. It is too late now. I have signed
away something that is very dear to me,—his life. You are his friend
and mine. Can you tell me what he thinks of me—what he says—how
he feels?" She asked the triple question breathlessly.</p>
<p>"He believes you were forced into the act and said as much to me. As to
how he feels, I can only ask how you would feel if you were in his place,
innocent and yet almost sure of conviction. These friends of Axphain will
resort to any subterfuge, now that one of their number has staked his
life. Mark my word, some one will deliberately swear that he saw Grenfall
Lorry strike the blow and that will be as villainous a lie as man ever
told. What I am here for, your Highness, is to ask if that decree cannot
be withdrawn."</p>
<p>"Alas, it cannot! I would gladly order his release if I could, but you can
see what that would mean to us. A war, Mr. Anguish," she sighed miserably.</p>
<p>"But you will not see an innocent man condemned?" cried he, again
indignant.</p>
<p>"I have only your statement for that, sir, if you will pardon me. I hope,
from the bottom of my heart, that he did not murder the Prince after being
honorably challenged."</p>
<p>"He is no coward!" thundered Anguish; startling both women with his
vehemence. "I say he did not kill the Prince, but I'll stake my life he
would have done so had they met this morning. There's no use trying to
have the decree rescinded, I see, so I'll take my departure. I don't blame
you, your Highness; it is your duty, of course. But it's pretty hard on
Lorry, that's all."</p>
<p>"He may be able to clear himself," suggested the Countess, nervously.</p>
<p>"And he may not, so there you have it. What chance have two Americans over
here with everybody against us?"</p>
<p>"Stop! You shall not say that! He shall have full justice, at any cost,
and there is one here who is not against him," cried the Princess, with
flashing eyes.</p>
<p>"I am aware that everybody admires him because he has done Graustark a
service in ridding it of something obnoxious—a prospective husband.
But that does not get him out of jail."</p>
<p>"You are unkind again," said the Princess, slowly. "I chose my husband,
and you assume much when you intimate that I am glad because he was
murdered."</p>
<p>"Do not be angry," cried the Countess, impatiently. "We all regret what
has happened, and I, for one, hope that Mr. Lorry may escape from the
Tower and laugh forevermore at his pursuers. If he could only dig his way
out!"</p>
<p>The Princess shot a startled look toward the speaker as a new thought
entered her wearied brain; a short, involuntary gasp told that it had
lodged and would grow. She laughed at the idea of an escape from the
Tower, but as she laughed a tiny spot of red began to spread upon her
cheek, and her eyes glistened strangely.</p>
<p>Anguish remained with them for half an hour. When he left the castle it
was with a more hopeful feeling in his breast. In the Princess's
bed-chamber late that night, two girls, in loose, silken gowns sat before
a low fire and talked of something that caused the Countess to tremble
with excitement when first her pink-cheeked sovereign mentioned it in
confidence.</p>
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