palms of his clenched hands.
His imagination pictures her as she will be to-morrow, and into his soul
there comes a great overwhelming wave of sorrow and of pity for her,
which cleanses and purifies it of the sinful joy which it harboured but a
moment back. "She will pine away and die of it," he tells himself,
"even as I am pining and dying for love of her! Alas! poor Louisa!"
And he sighs heavily and sorrowfully. Then resting his chin upon his
hands and his elbows on his knees, he sits there deep in thought, his
eyes bent upon the floor.
And thus he sits on for nigh upon an hour, thinking strange thoughts in
a strange manner, and revolving in his mind a strange resolve. At last,
chancing to raise his eyes, his glance alights upon the gold and ivory
time-piece. The sight rouses him, for springing suddenly to his feet--
"Himmel!" he cries. "It wants but half-an-hour to midnight--to the
sounding of his knell."
He pauses for a moment, undecided, then walks swiftly towards the
door and disappears.
Chapter III.
Now it chanced that, owing to a fire which had, a few days before,
destroyed the Palais Savignon, in the Klosterstrasse, the marquis found
himself the guest of his future father-in-law, the Graf von Lichtenau.
Upon the night in question--which a scarlet page of the Chronicles of
Sachsenberg tells us was that of the 12th of August of 1635--de
Savignon had retired to the room set apart in his suite as his
bedchamber, just as eleven was striking.
Feeling himself as yet wakeful, the Frenchman, whose mood is
naturally a poetic one, takes down a French translation of the Odyssey,
and, flinging himself into a luxurious chair, is soon lost in the
adventures of Ulysses on the Island of Calypso. His heart is full of
sympathy for the demi-goddess and of contempt for the King of Ithaca,
when a rustling of the window-curtains brings him back to Sachsenberg
and his surroundings, with a start. Glancing up, he beholds a dark
shadow in the casement, and before he can so much as move a finger a
man has sprung into the room, and Kuoni von Stocken stands before
him with a strange look upon his face.
Imagining that the visit has no friendly purport, the Marquis draws a
dagger from his belt, whereat the shadow of a smile flits across the
jester's solemn countenance.
"Put up your weapon, Monsieur de Savignon," he says calmly, "I am no
assassin, but there are others coming after me who deserve the title."
"What do you mean?" enquires the Marquis haughtily.
"I bring you news, Monsieur," replies Kuoni, sinking his voice to a
whisper, "that the plot to overthrow the Sonsbeck dynasty is
discovered."
The Frenchman bounds from his chair as if someone had prodded him
with a dagger.
"You lie!" he shrieks.
"Do I?" answers the other indifferently, "then if it is not yet discovered,
how comes it that I am acquainted with it?"
Then, as if blind to Savignon's agitation, he goes on in the same
deliberate accents.
"I also bring you news that his Majesty is possessed of a list of the
names of the principal leaders; that your name figures upon that list,
and that it is the King's good pleasure that when midnight strikes from
St. Oswald it will announce to ten gentleman that their last hour on
earth is spent; for into the room of each there will penetrate three
executioners to carry out the death-sentence which was passed upon
them without trial, two hours ago, by the King."
The Frenchman is too dazed to reply for a moment; he drops back into
his chair, his cheeks blanched with terror and his eyes staring wildly at
the jester. The matter is too grave, Kuoni's manner too impressive, to
leave any doubts as to the accuracy of his statement.
"And are you one of the three assassins to whom my end has been
entrusted?" says de Savignon at length, a gleam of hatred in his eye and
the memory of his feud with the jester in his mind.
"No," replies Kuoni simply.
"Then why are you here?" the other cries vehemently. "Why? Answer
me! Have you come to gloat over my end?"
"I have come to make an attempt to save you," is the cold, proud
answer.
"To save me? Did I hear you aright?"
"Aye, to save you. But come, my lord, there is not a moment to lose if I
am to be successful. Off with your doublet. Quick!"
And as the Marquis mechanically proceeds to obey him, the jester goes
on:
"In front of the Rathhaus, at the corner of the Klosterstrasse, you will
find a carriage in waiting. Enter it without speaking; the driver has
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