Fandor sat up in bed as the door of his room opened to admit the cautious head of Wulf. "Your Majesty is awake?" he inquired. "Yes, my Majesty is awake and ready to get up. Wulf, we are going out to-day." "As your Majesty wishes." "The Queen has written to say that she is getting bored, and wants me home again. That being the case we had better make the most of our few remaining days, you understand?" "Not very well." "Why, this afternoon we must look up some pretty girls and, as my cousin the King of England says, 'Honi soit qui mal y pense.' Evil to him who evil thinks. And now, au revoir, my dear Wulf; by and by I'll invite you to crack a bottle with me." The punctilious Wulf made the three bows demanded by etiquette, turned on his heel, and left the room. Fandor sprang out of bed and began to dress. "After all, it's not altogether a joke," he muttered. Fandor and Wulf had just finished a very excellent dinner, which Fandor paid for out of his own pocket. He was careful not to take any of the royal funds for his personal use. Wulf hovered on the borderland of drunkenness, but his ideas still showed some coherence. For the twentieth time he asked Fandor the same question: "But, Sire, why the deuce are you wearing a false moustache and whiskers to-day?" "So that I may not be recognized, my friend. I don't like having to give royal tips everywhere." Fandor was not speaking the truth. His disguise was assumed for other reasons. He did not wish to be recognized either as Frederick-Christian or as Fandor. Since noon—and it was now ten o'clock at night—the two men had been doing Paris together, and Wulf had received the very gratifying appellations of "my excellent friend," "my subtle detective," and Fandor interrupted his thoughts by patting him familiarly on the shoulder: "Now that we've had dinner, I'm going to tell you something. We've had quite a day of it; we've visited the Bois, where you spat in the lake, the action of a reflective mind; we've been to the top of the Arc de Triomphe and to the Madeleine, so now there is only one joy remaining." Wulf nodded: "To pay for the dinner." "Not exactly," laughed Fandor, "that's more of a penance. No, I was referring to a chance meeting, a charming feminine figure, a kiss, a caress. Wulf, what would you say to two plump white arms around your neck?" Wulf became purple in the face. "Oh, Sire, that would be great! But when I am with your Majesty, I don't look at women." "And why not, Wulf?" "Because the women only look at you." "That's so, Wulf, that's so; but there is a way of fixing that. You order a drink which I will pay for, then sit here and count all the carriages that pass in the street while I do an errand, it will only take twenty-five "Yes, Sire. Must I count all the carriages?" "No, only those drawn by white horses. Au revoir, Wulf." Fandor left the cafÉ and hailed a cab: "Rue Bonaparte. I'll tell you where to stop." He settled back in his seat, an anxious frown on his face. "I'll just drop a hint to Juve," he thought. "One never knows what may happen.... I suppose he'll be back soon ... to-morrow morning or evening ... and won't he be glad to hear the result of my search!" Fandor tapped on the glass with his cane, got out, paid the driver and made his way to the house where Juve lived. He still had his pass-key and let himself in, calling: "Hello! Juve, are you in?" There was no answer, so Fandor sat at Juve's desk and wrote a long letter, then tracing a diagram upon another sheet, he put them into an envelope addressed to "Monsieur Juve—Urgent." When he rejoined Wulf, he found the faithful detective on his job. "I've counted up to 99, Sire, but I'm not quite sure "That's all right, we'll take this up another time. I've spoken of you to my little friend and she is crazy to meet you, Wulf." "Oh, Sire! Sire!" "Yes ... so come along." "To her house?" "Oh, no—this lady is poetic, she wants the first meeting to take place in appropriate surroundings." While Wulf was cudgeling his brains to think up a verse or two to fit the occasion, Fandor guided him down the Rue Castiglione, the Rue de Rivoli and at length reached the Place de la Concorde. He cast an anxious glance as he passed at the mysterious repairs, repairs not indexed by the administration, and then turned to the Singing Fountains. "Sire, is this the place?" "Yes, Wulf, but first there are a few formalities to be gone through." The two men had reached the parapet overlooking the Seine. "You are to stand here, Wulf, and look down at the water. You are not to take your eyes off it." "Why? What does your Majesty mean?" "Because I have a surprise in store for you, and "Your Majesty is most kind." Fandor moved away and after glancing back to make sure Wulf was obeying orders, he quickly drew his revolver and approached the works. "I must remember Juve's precept," he muttered, "never fire first, and then only when you're sure to hit." The journalist now examined the palisade which surrounded a ditch of some depth dug in the angle made by the Orangery walls. "Can't see anything from the outside," he thought, "so I'll go in." With a running jump he succeeded in catching hold of the palisade top and in a moment was sitting astride of it. Nobody was in sight. Fandor was a little surprised. He expected to be confronted by some sinister individual. "All right," he growled, "if you don't mind I'll come in." Letting go of the top he slid down to the ground. "Ah," he exclaimed, "it looks as though some perfectly natural repair work was going on." He then went down listening at each pipe mouth. One of them gave out a peculiar sound, steady and cadenced, in fact, a snore, a real snore. "Can he be asleep," he muttered. Climbing quickly out of the ditch, Fandor reached the street again and ran toward the Singing Fountains. "Either the 'Curiosities of Paris' which I read yesterday in the library is a collection of bad jokes, or the body of the third statue ..." He did not complete his thought. After once more making sure that nobody was about, and that the excellent Wulf was still absorbed in contemplation of the Seine, he climbed into the basin at the foot of one of the bronze naiads and waded through mud and water to the base of the statue. "Now, then, let's see, what must I do next? Seize the statue by the neck, place the left hand in the middle of the body and sway it." Suiting the action to the word, the journalist applied all his force and in a moment the statue parted in two and swung toward him. The hollow interior appeared like a black hole. Bending forward, Fandor cried: "Sire, Sire, can you hear me?" His voice came echoing back to him, but there was no reply from the depths. "Ah, I can't be mistaken!" he cried, desperately. "Wulf heard this fountain singing the national anthem of Hesse-Weimar, the statue is hollow, therefore the King should be hidden in it." Again he stood, listening. After a pause an exclamation of surprise escaped him. "Why, it's the same noise I heard in the pipe ... it's a snore ... the unfortunate man is somewhere asleep!" To call louder would have been dangerous, and besides, quick action was necessary. "Nothing venture, nothing gain," he whispered, as, revolver in hand, he stepped inside the statue. He slid rapidly down for a distance of six or eight feet and then landed on earth. There he lay for a minute or two, reasoning that if he should be met by a fusillade, he would be safer in that position. However, complete silence reigned about him, broken only by the steady and distant snoring. Then, lighting his electric lamp, Fandor began a survey of the premises into which he had so daringly intruded. |