<h3><i>"Alexandre—"</i></h3>
<p>Derek turned back to the balcony. It had been a brief interlude. The mob
in the garden, the soldiers at the top of the stairway, and the other
guards high on the bridge of the tower were all standing gazing. Shouts
again arose as Derek appeared. Again he raised his arms. This time his
voice rang out.</p>
<p>"Silence all of you! I am a friend! Silence!"</p>
<p>At first they did not heed him; then someone shouted:</p>
<p>"Quiet! Listen to him! Let him talk!"</p>
<p>The crowd was bellowing, and then they ceased. The bell was still. In
the hush came Derek's voice:</p>
<p>"I am a friend. I come from foreign lands, from distant lands of strange
people and strange magic."</p>
<p>For answer the crowd shouted and milled in confusion. A stone came up
and then another. Derek stood immovable, like a statue gazing down at
them.</p>
<p>"I command you to disperse. You will not? Then look at me! Look at me,
all of you. My will is law beyond this king—beyond these palace
soldiers—beyond any power you have ever known."</p>
<p>Then I knew a part of Derek's purpose! He had pressed the mechanism at
his wrist. He stood imperious with upraised arms. The garden was in a
tumult, but in a moment it died. A wave of horror swept the crowd. A
freezing, incredulous horror. They stood staring, incredulous, silent,
swept with a widening wave of horror.</p>
<p>The figure of Derek on the balcony was fading, turning luminous. A
wraith, a ghost of his menacing shape standing there. It faded until it
was almost gone, and then, as he reversed the mechanism, it materialized
again. A moment passed, then he stood again solid before them.</p>
<p>His voice rang out, "Will you obey me now? I am a friend of the
toilers!"</p>
<p>They were prostrate before him. There is no fear more terrible than the
fear of the supernatural. In all of history there has been in our world
no worship more abject than the worship and fear of a primitive people
for its supernatural God. On the platform beneath the balcony, the
palace soldiers stared up, horrified. Then they too were prostrate
before Derek's threatening gestures and commanding voice.</p>
<p>I stood watching, listening. And suddenly, from the prostrate crowd, a
man leaped up. In the silence his amazed voice carried over the garden.</p>
<p>"Alexandre! It is our Prince Alexandre! Our lost prince!"</p>
<p>He stood staring at Derek, his arms gesturing to his comrade around him.
He shouted it again:</p>
<p>"Our rightful king, come back to us! Don't you recognize him? <i>I</i> saw
him go! He went like that—fading into a ghost. Ten years ago, when
Leonto killed his father and would have killed him had he not escaped!"</p>
<p>The crowd was standing up now. They recognized Derek! There was no doubt
of it. The garden was ringing with the tumultuous shouts,</p>
<p>"Alexandre! Our lost prince has come back to us!"</p>
<p>My head was whirling with it. Derek, prince of this realm? I could see
that it was true. Escaped from here as a young lad, when his throne was
usurped. Returning now, a man, to claim his own.</p>
<p>And suddenly he turned and flashed me his smile.</p>
<p>The din from the garden drowned his words. The crowd was shouting:
"Alexandre! Our lost prince!"</p>
<p>The king's guards on the lower platform stood sullen, confused. I heard
footsteps behind me. I whirled around.</p>
<p>From the room, the group of Rohbar's crimson nobles were rushing toward
me! Their swords were out. One of them shouted, "Kill them now! We must
kill them and have done!"</p>
<p>There were five or six men in the group. They were no more than ten feet
away from me. They came leaping.</p>
<p>I stood in the window opening, with only my dirk to oppose them. I
shouted, "Derek! Derek!"</p>
<p>I think I took a step backward. I was out on the balcony. It flashed
over me—Derek and I were caught out here!</p>
<p>The first of the red cloaked figures came hurtling through the doorway.
I leaped to avoid his sword. I saw the others crowding behind him.</p>
<p>Then I felt Derek shove me violently aside. I half fell, but recovered
myself at the balcony rail. Five of the crimson nobles were on the
balcony. Derek confronted them. His aspect made them pause. They stood,
with outstretched swords. The garden was silent; the crowd stared up.
And in the silence Derek roared,</p>
<p>"Get back! All of you, go back inside! Back, or I'll kill you!"</p>
<p>In Derek's right hand he held the cylinder outstretched, leveled at the
menacing nobles.</p>
<p>"Back, I say!"</p>
<p>But instead they rushed him. There was a flash. From the cylinder it
seemed that a ray spat out, a flash of silver light. It caught the three
men who were in advance of the others. Their swords dropped with a
clatter to the balcony floor. They stood, transfixed.</p>
<p>An instant. Derek's silver ray played upon them. Their red cloaks were
painted with its silver sheen.</p>
<p>They were shimmering! I gasped, staring. The other nobles, beyond the
ray, had fallen back. And they too stood staring in horror.</p>
<p>Another instant The three figures wavered. I saw the face of one of
them, with the shock of incredulous horror still upon it. A face turning
luminous! A face, erased, with only the staring eyes to mark where it
had been!</p>
<p>There was a moment when the three stricken men stood like shimmering
ghosts, with Derek's deadly ray upon them. Then they were gone! It
seemed, just as they vanished, that they were falling through the
balcony floor....</p>
<p>Derek snapped off his ray. He rasped, "Back into that room, I tell you!"</p>
<p>The remaining nobles fled before him. He turned again to the balcony
rail.</p>
<p>"My people—yes, I am Alexandre—I had not thought you would recognize
me so soon. But you are right—the time has come for me to claim my
inheritance. And I will rule you justly."</p>
<p>His cylinder was still in his hand; he swept a watchful glance behind
him. I thought of Rohbar. He was in the next room, with the king. Had
they seen this attack upon Derek? They must have heard the crowd
shouting, "Alexandre!" It seemed strange they did not appear.</p>
<p>I recall now, as I look back to this moment on the balcony, that I
suddenly thought of Hope. She had been beside me just before the nobles
attacked. I did not see her now. I was startled, but thought of her was
driven from my mind. From within the palace a scream sounded. A girl
screaming.</p>
<p>But it was not Hope's voice. A girl, screaming, and then shouting:</p>
<p>"The king is dead!"</p>
<p>Derek came rushing at me. "Charlie, that—"</p>
<p>We heard it again. "The king is dead!"</p>
<p>We hurried into the adjoining room. There was no one to stop us—no one
up here now who dared oppose Derek. The terrified nobles in the room
fell cringing before him.</p>
<p>"Alexandre—spare us! We are loyal to you!"</p>
<p>He strode past them. In the adjacent apartment we found the king lying
upon the floor. A wound in his throat welled crimson. He had evidently
been lying here alone, and had just now been found by a girl who had
entered. He was not quite dead. Derek bent over him. He opened his eyes.</p>
<p>He gasped faintly: "Rohbar—killed me. Rohbar and that—accursed crimson
Sensua...."</p>
<p>His voice trailed away. The light went out of his staring eyes. Derek
laid him gently back on the floor.</p>
<p>And as though already the news of his death had miraculously spread, the
bell in the castle tower began tolling. Not clanging now. Tolling, with
slow, solemn accent. The crowd evidently recognized it. We could hear
the shouts: "Death! Death has come!"</p>
<p>Derek's eyes ware blazing as he stood up. "The end, Charlie! I would not
have planned this, and yet...."</p>
<p>He did not finish. He whirled, rushed back to the other room and to the
balcony. The scene was again in confusion the crowd milling, voices
shouting:</p>
<p>"The king is dead!"</p>
<p>At the edge of the garden a woman's shrill, hysterical laughter rose
over the din.</p>
<p>Derek called, "Yes, the king is dead!" He paused. Then he added, "If you
want me—if I have your loyalty—I will claim my throne."</p>
<p>A tumult interrupted him. "Alexandre! King Alexandre!"</p>
<p>He spread his arms, but he could not silence them.</p>
<p>"The king is dead. Long live King Alexandre!"</p>
<p>A wave of it swept over the garden, engulfing the castle. At the main
entrance Leonto's soldiers stood sullen, listening to it.</p>
<p>Derek stood triumphant. His hands were outstretched, palms down. But up
on the circular bridge at the top of the tower there was a sudden
commotion. The soldiers up there had vanished, moved back within the
tower to make room for other figures. I stared amazed, transfixed. A
huge man in leather garments was there, with a sword stuck in his wide
belt. A man with a bullet head, a heavy face, gazing down....</p>
<p>Rohbar!</p>
<p>And held in front of him the slender figure of a girl. Hope! He clutched
her, his thick arm encircling her breast. With sinking heart I realized
what had happened. Hope had moved away from me. Every one in the room
had been intent upon Derek. Rohbar had come quietly in, after murdering
the king, had seized Hope, stifled her outcry, and had taken her up into
the tower.</p>
<p>And I had promised Derek that I would shield this girl from harm! The
horror of it—the self-condemnation of it—swept me, froze me to
numbness. I could not think; I could only stand and stare. Rohbar held
Hope like a shield before him. The low railing hardly reached her knees.
A sheer drop to the garden beneath. He held her tightly, and in his free
hand I saw his dirk come up menacingly against her white throat. His
voice called:</p>
<p>"Silent, down there! Alexandre, you traitor! Silence!"</p>
<p>Derek stared up. The triumph faded from him. He stared, stricken. The
crowd stared. The soldiers on the lower platform ceased their shouting
and gazed up at these new actors, come so unexpectedly upon the stage.
Again Rohbar called, to the guards this time:</p>
<p>"I represent your King Leonto. This Alexandre is a traitor to us all.
And he cannot harm me! I defy him. Look at him! I defy him to use his
evil weapon upon me!"</p>
<p>Derek was silent. A single adverse move and Rohbar's knife would stab
into Hope's throat. Derek's ray was powerless. A flash from it would
have killed Hope, not Rohbar.</p>
<p>The king's soldiers saw Derek's indecision. One of them shouted, "He
cannot harm us! Look, he is frightened!"</p>
<p>The crowd recognized Hope. They began calling her name. And calling,
"Master Rohbar, do not harm our Hope!"</p>
<p>"I will not harm her! Not if you do what I tell you! Leave the
garden—go quietly! I will deal with this traitor!"</p>
<p>He added to the guards, "Go up and seize him! He cannot hurt you!
Traitor! Seize him! If he does not yield—if any of this crowd attacks
you—then I will kill Hope."</p>
<p>Derek stood clinging to the balcony rail. With Rohbar's watchful gaze
upon him he did not dare turn or move. I was standing back from the
balcony, behind Derek and partly in the room. No one thought of me. No
one from outside could see me. And I, who had played no part in this,
save that one I had neglected, suddenly saw my role. My cue was
sounding. My role to play, here upon this tumultuous stage.</p>
<p>I turned back into the dim room. A few frightened men and girls were
here. They were all crowding forward, gazing through the windows at the
scene outside. No one noticed me, but I saw, with sudden realization, my
role to play.</p>
<p>I darted across the room, out into the dim, deserted corridor of the
castle.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
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