<h2 id="id00547" style="margin-top: 4em">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<h5 id="id00548">"THE KING IS DEAD; LONG LIVE THE KING"</h5>
<p id="id00549">Low he lies, yet high and great<br/>
Looms he, lying thus in state.—<br/>
How exalted o'er ye when<br/>
Dead, my lords and gentlemen!<br/></p>
<p id="id00550">—James Whitcomb Riley.</p>
<p id="id00551" style="margin-top: 2em">John Armitage lingered in New York for a week, not to press the
Claibornes too closely, then went to Washington. He wrote himself down on
the register of the New American as John Armitage, Cinch Tight, Montana,
and took a suite of rooms high up, with an outlook that swept
Pennsylvania Avenue. It was on the evening of a bright April day that he
thus established himself; and after he had unpacked his belongings he
stood long at the window and watched the lights leap out of the dusk over
the city. He was in Washington because Shirley Claiborne lived there, and
he knew that even if he wished to do so he could no longer throw an
air of inadvertence into his meetings with her. He had been very lonely
in those days when he first saw her abroad; the sight of her had lifted
his mood of depression; and now, after those enchanted hours at sea, his
coming to Washington had been inevitable.</p>
<p id="id00552">Many things passed through his mind as he stood at the open window. His
life, he felt, could never be again as it had been before, and he sighed
deeply as he recalled his talk with the old prime minister at Geneva.
Then he laughed quietly as he remembered Chauvenet and Durand and the
dark house on the Boulevard Froissart; but the further recollection of
the attack made on his life on the deck of the <i>King Edward</i> sobered him,
and he turned away from the window impatiently. He had seen the sick
second-cabin passenger leave the steamer at New York, but had taken no
trouble either to watch or to avoid him. Very likely the man was under
instructions, and had been told to follow the Claibornes home; and the
thought of their identification with himself by his enemies angered him.
Chauvenet was likely to appear in Washington at any time, and would
undoubtedly seek the Claibornes at once. The fact that the man was a
scoundrel might, in some circumstances, have afforded Armitage comfort,
but here again Armitage's mood grew dark. Jules Chauvenet was undoubtedly
a rascal of a shrewd and dangerous type; but who, pray, was John
Armitage?</p>
<p id="id00553">The bell in his entry rang, and he flashed on the lights and opened the
door.</p>
<p id="id00554">"Well, I like this! Setting yourself up here in gloomy splendor and never
saying a word. You never deserved to have any friends, John Armitage!"</p>
<p id="id00555">"Jim Sanderson, come in!" Armitage grasped the hands of a red-bearded
giant of forty, the possessor of alert brown eyes and a big voice.</p>
<p id="id00556">"It's my rural habit of reading the register every night in search of
constituents that brings me here. They said they guessed you were in, so
I just came up to see whether you were opening a poker game or had come
to sneak a claim past the watch-dog of the treasury."</p>
<p id="id00557">The caller threw himself into a chair and rolled a fat, unlighted cigar
about in his mouth. "You're a peach, all right, and as offensively hale
and handsome as ever. When are you going to the ranch?"</p>
<p id="id00558">"Well, not just immediately; I want to sample the flesh-pots for a day or
two."</p>
<p id="id00559">"You're getting soft,—that's what's the matter with you! You're afraid
of the spring zephyrs on the Montana range. Well, I'll admit that it's
rather more diverting here."</p>
<p id="id00560">"There is no debating that, Senator. How do you like being a statesman?
It was so sudden and all that. I read an awful roast of you in an English
paper. They took your election to the Senate as another evidence of
the complete domination of our politics by the plutocrats."</p>
<p id="id00561">Sanderson winked prodigiously.</p>
<p id="id00562">"The papers <i>have</i> rather skinned me; but on the whole, I'll do very
well. They say it isn't respectable to be a senator these days, but they
oughtn't to hold it up against a man that he's rich. If the Lord put
silver in the mountains of Montana and let me dig it out, it's nothing
against me, is it?"</p>
<p id="id00563">"Decidedly not! And if you want to invest it in a senatorship it's the<br/>
Lord's hand again."<br/></p>
<p id="id00564">"Why sure!" and the Senator from Montana winked once more. "But it's
expensive. I've got to be elected again next winter—I'm only filling out
Billings' term—and I'm not sure I can go up against it."</p>
<p id="id00565">"But you are nothing if not unselfish. If the good of the country demands
it you'll not falter, if I know you."</p>
<p id="id00566">"There's hot water heat in this hotel, so please turn off the hot air. I
saw your foreman in Helena the last time I was out there, and he was
sober. I mention the fact, knowing that I'm jeopardizing my reputation
for veracity, but it's the Lord's truth. Of course you spent Christmas at
the old home in England—one of those yule-log and plum-pudding
Christmases you read of in novels. You Englishmen—"</p>
<p id="id00567">"My dear Sanderson, don't call me English! I've told you a dozen times
that I'm not English."</p>
<p id="id00568">"So you did; so you did! I'd forgotten that you're so damned sensitive
about it;" and Sanderson's eyes regarded Armitage intently for a moment,
as though he were trying to recall some previous discussion of the
young man's nativity.</p>
<p id="id00569">"I offer you free swing at the bar, Senator. May I summon a Montana
cocktail? You taught me the ingredients once—three dashes orange
bitters; two dashes acid phosphate; half a jigger of whisky; half a
jigger of Italian vermuth. You undermined the constitutions of half
Montana with that mess."</p>
<p id="id00570">Sanderson reached for his hat with sudden dejection.</p>
<p id="id00571">"The sprinkling cart for me! I've got a nerve specialist engaged by the
year to keep me out of sanatoriums. See here, I want you to go with us
to-night to the Secretary of State's push. Not many of the Montana boys
get this far from home, and I want you for exhibition purposes. Say,
John, when I saw Cinch Tight, Montana, written on the register down there
it increased my circulation seven beats! You're all right, and I guess
you're about as good an American as they make—anywhere—John Armitage!"</p>
<p id="id00572">The function for which the senator from Montana provided an invitation
for Armitage was a large affair in honor of several new ambassadors. At
ten o'clock Senator Sanderson was introducing Armitage right and left
as one of his representative constituents. Armitage and he owned
adjoining ranches in Montana, and Sanderson called upon his neighbor to
stand up boldly for their state before the minions of effete monarchies.</p>
<p id="id00573">Mrs. Sanderson had asked Armitage to return to her for a little Montana
talk, as she put it, after the first rush of their entrance was over, and
as he waited in the drawing-room for an opportunity of speaking to her,
he chatted with Franzel, an attaché of the Austrian embassy, to whom
Sanderson had introduced him. Franzel was a gloomy young man with a
monocle, and he was waiting for a particular girl, who happened to be the
daughter of the Spanish Ambassador. And, this being his object, he had
chosen his position with care, near the door of the drawing-room, and
Armitage shared for the moment the advantage that lay in the Austrian's
point of view. Armitage had half expected that the Claibornes would be
present at a function as comprehensive of the higher official world as
this, and he intended asking Mrs. Sanderson if she knew them as soon as
opportunity offered. The Austrian attaché proved tiresome, and Armitage
was about to drop him, when suddenly he caught sight of Shirley Claiborne
at the far end of the broad hall. Her head was turned partly toward him;
he saw her for an instant through the throng; then his eyes fell upon
Chauvenet at her side, talking with liveliest animation. He was not more
than her own height, and his profile presented the clean, sharp effect of
a cameo. The vivid outline of his dark face held Armitage's eyes; then as
Shirley passed on through an opening in the crowd her escort turned,
holding the way open for her, and Armitage met the man's gaze.</p>
<p id="id00574">It was with an accented gravity that Armitage nodded his head to some
declaration of the melancholy attaché at this moment. He had known when
he left Geneva that he had not done with Jules Chauvenet; but the man's
prompt appearance surprised Armitage. He ran over the names of the
steamers by which Chauvenet might easily have sailed from either a German
or a French port and reached Washington quite as soon as himself.
Chauvenet was in Washington, at any rate, and not only there, but
socially accepted and in the good graces of Shirley Claiborne.</p>
<p id="id00575">The somber attaché was speaking of the Japanese.</p>
<p id="id00576">"They must be crushed—crushed," said Franzel. The two had been
conversing in French.</p>
<p id="id00577">"Yes, <i>he</i> must be crushed," returned Armitage absent-mindedly, in<br/>
English; then, remembering himself, he repeated the affirmation in<br/>
French, changing the pronoun.<br/></p>
<p id="id00578">Mrs. Sanderson was now free. She was a pretty, vivacious woman, much
younger than her stalwart husband,—a college graduate whom he had found
teaching school near one of his silver mines.</p>
<p id="id00579">"Welcome once more, constituent! We're proud to see you, I can tell you.
Our host owns some marvelous tapestries and they're hung out to-night for
the world to see." She guided Armitage toward the Secretary's gallery on
an upper floor. Their host was almost as famous as a connoisseur as for
his achievements in diplomacy, and the gallery was a large apartment in
which every article of furniture, as well as the paintings, tapestries
and specimens of pottery, was the careful choice of a thoroughly
cultivated taste.</p>
<p id="id00580">"It isn't merely an art gallery; it's the most beautiful room in<br/>
America," murmured Mrs. Sanderson.<br/></p>
<p id="id00581">"I can well believe it. There's my favorite Vibert,—I wondered what had
become of it."</p>
<p id="id00582">"It isn't surprising that the Secretary is making a great reputation
by his dealings with foreign powers. It's a poor ambassador who could
not be persuaded after an hour in this splendid room. The ordinary
affairs of life should not be mentioned here. A king's coronation would
not be out of place,—in fact, there's a chair in the corner against that
Gobelin that would serve the situation. The old gentleman by that cabinet
is the Baron von Marhof, the Ambassador from Austria-Hungary. He's a
brother-in-law of Count von Stroebel, who was murdered so horribly in a
railway carriage a few weeks ago."</p>
<p id="id00583">"Ah, to be sure! I haven't seen the Baron in years. He has changed
little."</p>
<p id="id00584">"Then you knew him,—in the old country?"</p>
<p id="id00585">"Yes; I used to see him—when I was a boy," remarked Armitage.</p>
<p id="id00586">Mrs. Sanderson glanced at Armitage sharply. She had dined at his ranch
house in Montana and knew that he lived like a gentleman,—that his
house, its appointments and service were unusual for a western ranchman.
And she recalled, too, that she and her husband had often speculated as
to Armitage's antecedents and history, without arriving at any conclusion
in regard to him.</p>
<p id="id00587">The room had slowly filled and they strolled about, dividing attention
between distinguished personages and the not less celebrated works of
art.</p>
<p id="id00588">"Oh, by the way, Mr. Armitage, there's the girl I have chosen for you to
marry. I suppose it would be just as well for you to meet her now, though
that dark little foreigner seems to be monopolizing her."</p>
<p id="id00589">"I am wholly agreeable," laughed Armitage. "The sooner the better, and be
done with it."</p>
<p id="id00590">"Don't be so frivolous. There—you can look safely now. She's stopped to
speak to that bald and pink Justice of the Supreme Court,—the girl with
the brown eyes and hair,—have a care!"</p>
<p id="id00591">Shirley and Chauvenet left the venerable Justice, and Mrs. Sanderson
intercepted them at once.</p>
<p id="id00592">"To think of all these beautiful things in our own America!" exclaimed<br/>
Shirley. "And you, Mr. Armitage,—"<br/></p>
<p id="id00593">"Among the other curios, Miss Claiborne," laughed John, taking her hand.</p>
<p id="id00594">"But I haven't introduced you yet"—began Mrs. Sanderson, puzzled.</p>
<p id="id00595">"No; the <i>King Edward</i> did that. We crossed together. Oh, Monsieur
Chauvenet, let me present Mr. Armitage," said Shirley, seeing that the
men had not spoken.</p>
<p id="id00596">The situation amused Armitage and he smiled rather more broadly than was
necessary in expressing his pleasure at meeting Monsieur Chauvenet. They
regarded each other with the swift intentness of men who are used to the
sharp exercise of their eyes; and when Armitage turned toward Shirley and
Mrs. Sanderson, he was aware that Chauvenet continued to regard him with
fixed gaze.</p>
<p id="id00597">"Miss Claiborne is a wonderful sailor; the Atlantic is a little
tumultuous at times in the spring, but she reported to the captain every
day."</p>
<p id="id00598">"Miss Claiborne is nothing if not extraordinary," declared Mrs. Sanderson
with frank admiration.</p>
<p id="id00599">"The word seems to have been coined for her," said Chauvenet, his white
teeth showing under his thin black mustache.</p>
<p id="id00600">"And still leaves the language distinguished chiefly for its poverty,"
added Armitage; and the men bowed to Shirley and then to Mrs. Sanderson,
and again to each other. It was like a rehearsal of some trifle in a
comedy.</p>
<p id="id00601">"How charming!" laughed Mrs. Sanderson. "And this lovely room is just the
place for it."</p>
<p id="id00602">They were still talking together as Franzel, with whom Armitage had
spoken below, entered hurriedly. He held a crumpled note, whose contents,
it seemed, had shaken him out of his habitual melancholy composure.</p>
<p id="id00603">"Is Baron von Marhof in the room?" he asked of Armitage, fumbling
nervously at his monocle.</p>
<p id="id00604">The Austrian Ambassador, with several ladies, and led by Senator<br/>
Sanderson, was approaching.<br/></p>
<p id="id00605">The attaché hurried to his chief and addressed him in a low tone. The
Ambassador stopped, grew very white, and stared at the messenger for a
moment in blank unbelief.</p>
<p id="id00606">The young man now repeated, in English, in a tone that could be heard in
all parts of the hushed room:</p>
<p id="id00607">"His Majesty, the Emperor Johann Wilhelm, died suddenly to-night, in<br/>
Vienna," he said, and gave his arm to his chief.<br/></p>
<p id="id00608">It was a strange place for the delivery of such a message, and the
strangeness of it was intensified to Shirley by the curious glance that
passed between John Armitage and Jules Chauvenet. Shirley remembered
afterward that as the attaché's words rang out in the room, Armitage
started, clenched his hands, and caught his breath in a manner very
uncommon in men unless they are greatly moved. The Ambassador walked
directly from the room with bowed head, and every one waited in silent
sympathy until he had gone.</p>
<p id="id00609">The word passed swiftly through the great house, and through the open
windows the servants were heard crying loudly for Baron von Marhof's
carriage in the court below.</p>
<p id="id00610">"The King is dead; long live the King!" murmured Shirley.</p>
<p id="id00611">"Long live the King!" repeated Chauvenet and Mrs. Sanderson, in unison;
and then Armitage, as though mastering a phrase they were teaching him,
raised his head and said, with an unction that surprised them, "Long live
the Emperor and King! God save Austria!"</p>
<p id="id00612">Then he turned to Shirley with a smile.</p>
<p id="id00613">"It is very pleasant to see you on your own ground. I hope your family
are well."</p>
<p id="id00614">"Thank you; yes. My father and mother are here somewhere."</p>
<p id="id00615">"And Captain Claiborne?"</p>
<p id="id00616">"He's probably sitting up all night to defend Fort Myer from the crafts
and assaults of the enemy. I hope you will come to see us, Mr. Armitage."</p>
<p id="id00617">"Thank you; you are very kind," he said gravely. "I shall certainly give
myself the pleasure very soon."</p>
<p id="id00618">As Shirley passed on with Chauvenet Mrs. Sanderson launched upon the
girl's praises, but she found him suddenly preoccupied.</p>
<p id="id00619">"The girl has gone to your head. Why didn't you tell me you knew the<br/>
Claibornes?"<br/></p>
<p id="id00620">"I don't remember that you gave me a chance; but I'll say now that I
intend to know them better."</p>
<p id="id00621">She bade him take her to the drawing-room. As they went down through the
house they found that the announcement of the Emperor Johann Wilhelm's
death had cast a pall upon the company. All the members of the diplomatic
corps had withdrawn at once as a mark of respect and sympathy for Baron
von Marhof, and at midnight the ball-room held all of the company that
remained. Armitage had not sought Shirley again. He found a room that had
been set apart for smokers, threw himself into a chair, lighted a cigar
and stared at a picture that had no interest for him whatever. He put
down his cigar after a few whiffs, and his hand went to the pocket in
which he had usually carried his cigarette case.</p>
<p id="id00622">"Ah, Mr. Armitage, may I offer you a cigarette?"</p>
<p id="id00623">He turned to find Chauvenet close at his side. He had not heard the man
enter, but Chauvenet had been in his thoughts and he started slightly at
finding him so near. Chauvenet held in his white-gloved hand a gold
cigarette case, which he opened with a deliberate care that displayed its
embellished side. The smooth golden surface gleamed in the light, the
helmet in blue, and the white falcon flashed in Armitage's eyes. The
meeting was clearly by intention, and a slight smile played about
Chauvenet's lips in his enjoyment of the situation. Armitage smiled up at
him in amiable acknowledgment of his courtesy, and rose.</p>
<p id="id00624">"You are very considerate, Monsieur. I was just at the moment regretting
our distinguished host's oversight in providing cigars alone. Allow me!"</p>
<p id="id00625">He bent forward, took the outstretched open case into his own hands,
removed a cigarette, snapped the case shut and thrust it into his
trousers pocket,—all, as it seemed, at a single stroke.</p>
<p id="id00626">"My dear sir," began Chauvenet, white with rage.</p>
<p id="id00627">"My dear Monsieur Chauvenet," said Armitage, striking a match, "I am
indebted to you for returning a trinket that I value highly."</p>
<p id="id00628">The flame crept half the length of the stick while they regarded each
other; then Armitage raised it to the tip of his cigarette, lifted his
head and blew a cloud of smoke.</p>
<p id="id00629">"Are you able to prove your property, Mr. Armitage?" demanded Chauvenet
furiously.</p>
<p id="id00630">"My dear sir, they have a saying in this country that possession is nine
points of the law. You had it—now I have it—wherefore it must be mine!"</p>
<p id="id00631">Chauvenet's rigid figure suddenly relaxed; he leaned against a chair with
a return of his habitual nonchalant air, and waved his hand carelessly.</p>
<p id="id00632">"Between gentlemen—so small a matter!"</p>
<p id="id00633">"To be sure—the merest trifle," laughed Armitage with entire good humor.</p>
<p id="id00634">"And where a gentleman has the predatory habits of a burglar and
housebreaker—"</p>
<p id="id00635">"Then lesser affairs, such as picking up trinkets—"</p>
<p id="id00636">"Come naturally—quite so!" and Chauvenet twisted his mustache with an
air of immense satisfaction.</p>
<p id="id00637">"But the genial art of assassination—there's a business that requires a
calculating hand, my dear Monsieur Chauvenet!"</p>
<p id="id00638">Chauvenet's hand went again to his lip.</p>
<p id="id00639">"To be sure!" he ejaculated with zest.</p>
<p id="id00640">"But alone—alone one can do little. For larger operations one
requires—I should say—courageous associates. Now in my affairs—would
you believe me?—I am obliged to manage quite alone."</p>
<p id="id00641">"How melancholy!" exclaimed Chauvenet.</p>
<p id="id00642">"It is indeed very sad!" and Armitage sighed, tossed his cigarette into
the smoldering grate and bade Chauvenet a ceremonious good night.</p>
<p id="id00643">"Ah, we shall meet again, I dare say!"</p>
<p id="id00644">"The thought does credit to a generous nature!" responded Armitage, and
passed out into the house.</p>
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