Arms and the Woman eBook

Harold MacGrath
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about Arms and the Woman.

Arms and the Woman eBook

Harold MacGrath
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 268 pages of information about Arms and the Woman.

So he was still desiring for something he could never have!  I got out of patience with the fellow.  Even if she loved him, what chance had he against the legions of the King?  Hillars was a wild-headed fellow, and, if at liberty, was not incapable of creating a disturbance.  It might land him in jail, or on the gallows.  The phlegmatic German is not particular whom he hangs.  In that wide domain there is always some petty revolution going on.  In each of those petty kingdoms, or principalities, or duchies, there are miniature Rousseaus and Voltaires who shout liberty and equality in beer halls and rouse the otherwise peaceful citizens to warfare; short, it is true, but none the less warfare.  Military despotism is the tocsin.  When the King presses an unwilling subject into the army, upon his discharge the unwilling subject, usually a peasant, becomes a socialist.  These Rousseaus and Voltaires have a certain amount of education, but they lack daring.  If a man like Hillars, who had not only brains but daring, should get mixed up in one of these embroglios, some blood would be spilled before the trouble became adjusted.  Still, Hillars, with all his love of adventure, was not ordinarily reckless.  Yet, if he met the Princess, she would find a willing tool in him for her slightest caprice.  Whatever happened the brunt would fall upon him.  My opinion, formed from various stories I had heard of the Princess, was not very flattering to her.  The letter and its possibilities disturbed me.

The second letter was from headquarters in New York.

Dear Winthrop—­We want a good Sunday special.  Her Serene Highness the Princess Hildegarde of Hohenphalia has taken it into her head to disappear again.  Go over and see Rockwell in B——­; he will give you a good yarn.  It has never been in type yet, and I daresay that it will make good reading.  London seems particularly dull just now, and you can easily turn over your affairs to the assistant.  This woman’s life is more full of romance than that of any other woman of the courts of Europe.  The most interesting part of it is her reputation is said to be like that of Caesar’s wife—­above reproach.  Get a full history of her life and of the Prince whom she is to marry.  If you can get any photographs do so.  I know how you dislike this sort of work, prying into private affairs, as you call it, but with all these sensational sheets springing up around us, we must keep in line now and then.  Do you know anything about Hillars; is he dead or alive?  Take all the time you want for the story and send it by mail.”

“The Princess Hildegarde!” I cried aloud.  “The deuce take the woman!”

“What’s that?” asked my assistant, who had overheard my outburst.

“Oh, I am to go across on a special story,” I said with a snarl, “just as I was fixing for a week’s fishing.  I’ve got to concern myself with the Princess Hildegarde of Hohenphalia.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Arms and the Woman from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.