"Piper, H Beam - He Walked Around the Horses" - читать интересную книгу автора (Piper H Beam)
HE WALKED AROUND THE HORSES
BY H. BEAM PIPER
Illustrated by Cartier This tale is based on an authenticated,
documented fact. A man vanished—right
out of this world. And where he went— In November 1809, an Englishman
named Benjamin Bathurst
vanished, inexplicably and utterly. He was en route to Hamburg
from Vienna, where he had been
serving as his government's envoy
to the court of what Napoleon had
left of the Austrian Empire. At an
inn in Perleburg, in Prussia, while
examining a change of horses for
his coach, he casually stepped out of
sight of his secretary and his valet.
He was not seen to leave the inn
yard. He was not seen again, ever. At least, not in this continuum....
(From Baron Eugen von Krutz,
Minister of Police, to His Excellency
the Count von Berchtenwald, Chancellor
to His Majesty Friedrich
Wilhelm III of Prussia.)
25 November, 1809
Your Excellency:
A circumstance has come to the
notice of this Ministry, the significance
of which I am at a loss to
define, but, since it appears to involve
matters of State, both here
and abroad, I am convinced that it
is of sufficient importance to be
brought to your personal attention.
Frankly, I am unwilling to take any
further action in the matter without
your advice.
Briefly, the situation is this: We
are holding, here at the Ministry
of Police, a person giving his name
as Benjamin Bathurst, who claims
to be a British diplomat. This
person was taken into custody by
the police at Perleburg yesterday,
as a result of a disturbance at an
inn there; he is being detained on
technical charges of causing disorder
in a public place, and of being
a suspicious person. When arrested,
he had in his possession a
dispatch case, containing a number
of papers; these are of such an
extraordinary nature that the local
authorities declined to assume any
responsibility beyond having the
man sent here to Berlin.
After interviewing this person
and examining his papers, I am,
I must confess, in much the same
position. This is not, I am convinced,
any ordinary police matter;
there is something very strange and
disturbing here. The man's statements,
taken alone, are so incredible
as to justify the assumption that he
is mad. I cannot, however, adopt
this theory, in view of his demeanor,
which is that of a man of perfect
rationality, and because of the
existence of these papers. The
whole thing is mad; incomprehensible!
The papers in question accompany,
along with copies of the
various statements taken at Perleburg,
a personal letter to me from
my nephew, Lieutenant Rudolf
von Tarlburg. This last is deserving
of your particular attention;
Lieutenant von Tarlburg is a very
level-headed young officer, not at
all inclined to be fanciful or imaginative.
It would take a good deal to
affect him as he describes.
The man calling himself Benjamin
Bathurst is now lodged in
an apartment here at the Ministry;
he is being treated with every consideration,
and, except for freedom
of movement, accorded every privilege.
I am, most anxiously awaiting
your advice, et cetera, et cetera,
Krutz
(Report of Traugott Zeller, Oberwachtmeister,
Staatspolizei, made
at Perleburg, 25 November, 1809.)
At about ten minutes past two of
the afternoon of Saturday, 25
November, while I was at the police
station, there entered a man known
to me as Franz Bauer, an inn servant
employed by Christian Hauck, at
the sign of the Sword & Scepter,
here in Perleburg. This man Franz
Bauer made complaint to Staatspolizeikapitan
Ernst Hartenstein,
saying that there was a madman
making trouble at the inn where
he, Franz Bauer, worked. I was,
therefore, directed, by Staatspolizeikapitan
Hartenstein, to go to the
Sword & Scepter Inn, there to act
at discretion to maintain the peace.
Arriving at the inn in company
with the said Franz Bauer, I found
a considerable crowd of people in
the common room, and, in the midst
of them, the innkeeper, Christian
Hauck, in altercation with a stranger.
This stranger was a gentlemanly-appearing
person, dressed in
traveling clothes, who had under
his arm a small leather dispatch
case. As I entered, I could hear
him, speaking in German with a
strong English accent, abusing the
innkeeper, the said Christian Hauck,
and accusing him of having drugged
his, the stranger's, wine, and of
having stolen his, the stranger's,
coach-and-four, and of having abducted
his, the stranger's, secretary
and servants. This the said Christian
Hauck was loudly denying, and
the other people in the inn were
taking the innkeeper's part, and
mocking the stranger for a madman.
On entering, I commanded everyone
to be silent, in the king's name,
and then, as he appeared to be the
complaining party of the dispute, I
required the foreign gentleman to
state to me what was the trouble.
He then repeated his accusations
against the innkeeper, Hauck, saying
that Hauck, or, rather, another
man who resembled Hauck and who
had claimed to be the innkeeper,
had drugged his wine and stolen
his coach and made off with his
secretary and his servants. At this
point, the innkeeper and the bystanders
all began shouting denials
and contradictions, so that I had
to pound on a table with my truncheon
to command silence.
I then required the innkeeper,
Christian Hauck, to answer the
charges which the stranger had
made; this he did with a complete
denial of all of them, saying that
the stranger had had no wine in his
inn, and that he had not been inside
the inn until a few minutes before,
when he had burst in shouting accusations,
and that there had been
no secretary, and no valet, and no
coachman, and no coach-and-four,
at the inn, and that the gentleman
was raving mad. To all this, he
called the people who were in the
common room to witness.
I then required the stranger to
account for himself. He said that
his name was Benjamin Bathurst,
and that he was a British diplomat,
returning to England from Vienna.
To prove this, he produced from
his dispatch case sundry papers.
One of these was a letter of safe-conduct,
issued by the Prussian
Chancellery, in which he was named
and described as Benjamin Bathurst.
The other papers were English,
all bearing seals, and appearing
to be official documents.
Accordingly, I requested him to
accompany me to the police station,
and also the innkeeper, and three
men whom the innkeeper wanted
to bring as witnesses.
Traugott Zeller Oberwachtmeister
Report approved,
Ernst Hartenstein Staatspolizeikapitan
(Statement of the self-so-called
Benjamin Bathurst, taken at the
police station at Perleburg, 25
November, 1809.)
My name is Benjamin Bathurst,
and I am Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary of the
government of His Britannic Majesty
to the court of His Majesty
Franz I, Emperor of Austria, or,
at least, I was until the events following
the Austrian surrender made
necessary my return to London. I
left Vienna on the morning of Monday,
the 20th, to go to Hamburg
to take ship home; I was traveling
in my own coach-and-four, with
my secretary, Mr. Bertram Jardine,
and my valet, William Small, both
British subjects, and a coachman,
Josef Bidek, an Austrian subject,
whom I had hired for the trip. Because
of the presence of French
troops, whom I was anxious to
avoid, I was forced to make a
detour west as far as Salzburg before
turning north toward Magdeburg,
where I crossed the Elbe. I
was unable to get a change of horses
for my coach after leaving Gera,
until I reached Perleburg, where I
stopped at the Sword & Scepter
Inn.
Arriving there, I left my coach
in the inn yard, and I and my secretary,
Mr. Jardine, went into the inn.
A man, not this fellow here, but
another rogue, with more beard and
less paunch, and more shabbily
dressed, but as like him as though
he were his brother, represented
himself as the innkeeper, and I dealt
with him for a change of horses,
and ordered a bottle of wine for
myself and my secretary, and also
a pot of beer apiece for my valet
and the coachman, to be taken outside
to them. Then Jardine and I
sat down to our wine, at a table in
the common room, until the man
who claimed to be the innkeeper
came back and told us that the
fresh horses were harnessed to the
coach and ready to go. Then we
went outside again.
I looked at the two horses on the
off side, and then walked around
in front of the team to look at the
two nigh-side horses, and as I did
I felt giddy, as though I were about
to fall, and everything went black
before my eyes. I thought I was
having a fainting spell, something
I am not at all subject to, and I put
out my hand to grasp the hitching
bar, but could not find it. I am
sure, now, that I was unconscious
for some time, because when my
head cleared, the coach and horses
were gone, and in their place was
a big farm wagon, jacked up in
front, with the right front wheel
off, and two peasants were greasing
the detached wheel.
I looked at them for a moment,
unable to credit my eyes, and then
I spoke to them in German, saying,
"Where the devil's my coach-and-four?"
They both straightened, startled:
the one who was holding the wheel
almost dropped it.
"Pardon, excellency," he said,
"there's been no coach-and-four
here, all the time we've been here."
"Yes," said his mate, "and we've
been here since just after noon."
I did not attempt to argue with
them. It occurred to me—and it
is still my opinion—that I was the
victim of some plot; that my wine
had been drugged, that I had been
unconscious for some time, during
which my coach had been removed
and this wagon substituted for it,
and that these peasants had been
put to work on it and instructed
what to say if questioned. If my
arrival at the inn had been anticipated,
and everything put in readiness,
the whole business would not
have taken ten minutes.
I therefore entered the inn, determined
to have it out with this
rascally innkeeper, but when I returned
to the common room, he was
nowhere to be seen, and this other
fellow, who has given his name as
Christian Hauck, claimed to be the
innkeeper and denied knowledge of
any of the things I have just stated.
Furthermore, there were four cavalrymen,
Uhlans, drinking beer and
playing cards at the table where
Jardine and I had had our wine,
and they claimed to have been there
for several hours.
I have no idea why such an elaborate
prank, involving the participation
of many people, should be
played on me, except at the instigation
of the French. In that case,
I cannot understand why Prussian
soldiers should lend themselves to
it.
Benjamin Bathurst
(Statement of Christian Hauck,
innkeeper, taken at the police station
at Perleburg, 25 November, 1809.)
May it please your honor, my
name is Christian Hauck, and I
keep an inn at the sign of the Sword
& Scepter, and have these past fifteen
years, and my father, and his
father, before me, for the past fifty
years, and never has there been a
complaint like this against my inn.
Your honor, it is a hard thing for
a man who keeps a decent house,
and pays his taxes, and obeys the
laws, to be accused of crimes of this
sort.
I know nothing of this gentleman,
nor of his coach, nor his secretary,
nor his servants; I never set eyes
on him before he came bursting into
the inn from the yard, shouting and
raving like a madman, and crying
out, "Where the devil's that rogue
of an innkeeper?"
I said to him, "I am the innkeeper;
what cause have you to call
me a rogue, sir?"
The stranger replied:
"You're not the innkeeper I did
business with a few minutes ago,
and he's the rascal I want to see.
I want to know what the devil's
been done with my coach, and what's
happened to my secretary and my
servants."
I tried to tell him that I knew
nothing of what he was talking
about, but he would not listen, and
gave me the lie, saying that he had
been drugged and robbed, and his
people kidnaped. He even had the
impudence to claim that he and his
secretary had been sitting at a table
in that room, drinking wine, not
fifteen minutes before, when there
had been four noncommissioned
officers of the Third Uhlans at that
table since noon. Everybody in the
room spoke up for me, but he would
not listen, and was shouting that we
were all robbers, and kidnapers, and
French spies, and I don't know
what all, when the police came.
Your honor, the man is mad.
What I have told you about this is
the truth, and all that I know about
this business, so help me God.
Christian Hauck
(Statement of Franz Bauer, inn
servant, taken at the police station
at Perleburg, 25 November, 1809.)
May it please your honor, my
name is Franz Bauer, and I am a
servant at the Sword & Scepter
Inn, kept by Christian Hauck.
This afternoon, when I went into
the inn yard to empty a bucket of
slops on the dung heap by the
stables, I heard voices and turned
around, to see this gentleman speaking
to Wilhelm Beick and Fritz
Herzer, who were greasing their
wagon in the yard. He had not
been in the yard when I had turned
away to empty the bucket, and I
thought that he must have come in
from the street. This gentleman
was asking Beick and Herzer where
was his coach, and when they told
him they didn't know, he turned and
ran into the inn.
Of my own knowledge, the man
had not been inside the inn before
then, nor had there been any coach,
or any of the people he spoke of,
at the inn, and none of the things
he spoke of happened there, for
otherwise I would know, since I
was at the inn all day.
When I went back inside, I
found him in the common room
shouting at my master, and claiming
that he had been drugged and
robbed. I saw that he was mad
and was afraid that he would do
some mischief, so I went for the
police.
Franz Bauer
his (x) mark
(Statements of Wilhelm Beick and
Fritz Herzer, peasants, taken at the
police station at Perleburg, 25
November, 1809.)
May it please your honor, my
name is Wilhelm Beick, and I am
a tenant on the estate of the Baron
von Hentig. On this day, I and
Fritz Herzer were sent into Perleburg
with a load of potatoes and
cabbages which the innkeeper at
the Sword & Scepter had bought
from the estate superintendent.
After we had unloaded them, we
decided to grease our wagon, which
was very dry, before going back,
so we unhitched and began working
on it. We took about two hours,
starting just after we had eaten
lunch, and in all that time, there
was no coach-and-four in the inn
yard. We were just finishing when
this gentleman spoke to us, demanding
to know where his coach was.
We told him that there had been no
coach in the yard all the time we
had been there, so he turned around
and ran into the inn. At the time,
I thought that he had come out of
the inn before speaking to us, for
I know that he could not have come
in from the street. Now I do not
know where he came from, but I
know that I never saw him before
that moment.
Wilhelm Beick
his (x) mark
I have heard the above testimony,
and it is true to my own knowledge,
and I have nothing to add to it.
Fritz Herzer
his (x) mark
(From Staatspolizeikapitan Ernst
Hartenstein, to His Excellency, the
Baron von Krutz, Minister of
Police.)
25 November, 1809
Your Excellency:
The accompanying copies of
statements taken this day will explain
how the prisoner, the self-so-called
Benjamin Bathurst, came into
my custody. I have charged him
with causing disorder and being a
suspicious person, to hold him until
more can be learned about him.
However, as he represents himself
to be a British diplomat, I am unwilling
to assume any further
responsibility, and am having him
sent to your excellency, in Berlin.
In the first place, your excellency,
I have the strongest doubts of the
man's story. The statement which
he made before me, and signed, is
bad enough, with a coach-and-four
turning into a farm wagon, like
Cinderella's coach into a pumpkin,
and three people vanishing as though
swallowed by the earth. But all
this is perfectly reasonable and credible,
beside the things he said to me,
of which no record was made.
Your excellency will have noticed,
in his statement, certain allusions
to the Austrian surrender,
and to French troops in Austria.
After his statement had been taken
down, I noticed these allusions, and
I inquired, what surrender, and
what were French troops doing in
Austria. The man looked at me in
a pitying manner, and said:
"News seems to travel slowly,
hereabouts; peace was concluded at
Vienna on the 14th of last month.
And as for what French troops are
doing in Austria, they're doing the
same things Bonaparte's brigands
are doing everywhere in Europe."
"And who is Bonaparte?" I
asked.
He stared at me as though I had
asked him, "Who is the Lord Jehovah?"
Then, after a moment, a
look of comprehension came into
his face.
"So, you Prussians concede him
the title of Emperor, and refer to
him as Napoleon," he said. "Well,
I can assure you that His Britannic
Majesty's government haven't done
so, and never will; not so long as
one Englishman has a finger left
to pull a trigger. General Bonaparte
is a usurper; His Britannic
Majesty's government do not recognize
any sovereignty in France
except the House of Bourbon."
This he said very sternly, as though
rebuking me.
It took me a moment or so to
digest that, and to appreciate all
its implications. Why, this fellow
evidently believed, as a matter of
fact, that the French Monarchy had
been overthrown by some military
adventurer named Bonaparte, who
was calling himself the Emperor
Napoleon, and who had made war
on Austria and forced a surrender.
I made no attempt to argue with
him—one wastes time arguing with
madmen—but if this man could
believe that, the transformation of
a coach-and-four into a cabbage
wagon was a small matter indeed.
So, to humor him, I asked him if he
thought General Bonaparte's agents
were responsible for his trouble at
the inn.
"Certainly," he replied. "The
chances are they didn't know me to
see me, and took Jardine for the
minister, and me for the secretary,
so they made off with poor Jardine.
I wonder, though, that they left me
my dispatch case. And that reminds
me; I'll want that back.
Diplomatic papers, you know."
I told him, very seriously, that
we would have to check his credentials.
I promised him I would make
every effort to locate his secretary
and his servants and his coach, took
a complete description of all of
them, and persuaded him to go
into an upstairs room, where I kept
him under guard. I did start inquiries,
calling in all my informers
and spies, but, as I expected, I could
learn nothing. I could not find anybody,
even, who had seen him anywhere
in Perleburg before he
appeared at the Sword & Scepter,
and that rather surprised me, as
somebody should have seen him
enter the town, or walk along the
street.
In this connection, let me remind
your excellency of the discrepancy
in the statements of the servant,
Franz Bauer, and of the two peasants.
The former is certain the
man entered the inn yard from the
street; the latter are just as positive
that he did not. Your excellency,
I do not like such puzzles, for I am
sure that all three were telling the
truth to the best of their knowledge.
They are ignorant common folk, I
admit, but they should know what
they did or did not see.
After I got the prisoner into safekeeping,
I fell to examining his
papers, and I can assure your excellency
that they gave me a shock.
I had paid little heed to his ravings
about the King of France being
dethroned, or about this General
Bonaparte who called himself the
Emperor Napoleon, but I found all
these things mentioned in his papers
and dispatches, which had every
appearance of being official documents.
There was repeated mention
of the taking, by the French, of
Vienna, last May, and of the capitulation
of the Austrian Emperor to
this General Bonaparte, and of
battles being fought all over Europe,
and I don't know what other fantastic
things. Your excellency, I
have heard of all sorts of madmen—one
believing himself to be the
Archangel Gabriel, or Mohammed,
or a werewolf, and another convinced
that his bones are made of
glass, or that he is pursued and
tormented by devils—but so help
me God, this is the first time I have
heard of a madman who had documentary
proof for his delusions!
Does your excellency wonder, then,
that I want no part of this business?
But the matter of his credentials
was even worse. He had papers,
sealed with the seal of the British
Foreign Office, and to every appearance
genuine—but they were
signed, as Foreign Minister, by one
George Canning, and all the world
knows that Lord Castlereagh has
been Foreign Minister these last
five years. And to cap it all, he had
a safe-conduct, sealed with the seal
of the Prussian Chancellery—the
very seal, for I compared it, under
a strong magnifying glass, with one
that I knew to be genuine, and they
were identical!—and yet, this letter
was signed, as Chancellor, not by
Count von Berchtenwald, but by
Baron Stein, the Minister of Agriculture,
and the signature, as far
as I could see, appeared to be genuine!
This is too much for me, your
excellency; I must ask to be excused
from dealing with this matter,
before I become as mad as my
prisoner!
I made arrangements, accordingly,
with Colonel Keitel, of the
Third Uhlans, to furnish an officer
to escort this man into Berlin. The
coach in which they come belongs
to this police station, and the driver
is one of my men. He should be
furnished expense money to get back
to Perleburg. The guard is a corporal
of Uhlans, the orderly of the
officer. He will stay with the Herr
Oberleutnant, and both of them will
return here at their own convenience
and expense.
I have the honor, your excellency,
to be, et cetera, et cetera.
Ernst Hartenstein Staatspolizeikapitan
(From Oberleutnant Rudolf von
Tarlburg, to Baron Eugen von
Krutz.)
26 November, 1809
Dear Uncle Eugen;
This is in no sense a formal report;
I made that at the Ministry,
when I turned the Englishman and
his papers over to one of your
officers—a fellow with red hair and
a face like a bulldog. But there
are a few things which you should
be told, which wouldn't look well
in an official report, to let you know
just what sort of a rare fish has
got into your net.
I had just come in from drilling
my platoon, yesterday, when Colonel
Keitel's orderly told me that the
colonel wanted to see me in his
quarters. I found the old fellow
in undress in his sitting room, smoking
his big pipe.
"Come in, lieutenant; come in and
sit down, my boy!" he greeted me,
in that bluff, hearty manner which
he always adopts with his junior
officers when he has some particularly
nasty job to be done. "How
would you like to take a little trip
in to Berlin? I have an errand,
which won't take half an hour, and
you can stay as long as you like,
just so you're back by Thursday,
when your turn comes up for road
patrol."
Well, I thought, this is the bait.
I waited to see what the hook would
look like, saying that it was entirely
agreeable with me, and asking what
his errand was.
"Well, it isn't for myself, Tarlburg,"
he said. "It's for this fellow
Hartenstein, the Staatspolizeikapitan
here. He has something he wants
done at the Ministry of Police, and
I thought of you because I've heard
you're related to the Baron von
Krutz. You are, aren't you?" he
asked, just as though he didn't know
all about who all his officers are
related to.
"That's right, colonel; the baron
is my uncle," I said. "What does
Hartenstein want done?"
"Why, he has a prisoner whom he
wants taken to Berlin and turned
over at the Ministry. All you have
to do is to take him in, in a coach,
and see he doesn't escape on the
way, and get a receipt for him, and
for some papers. This is a very
important prisoner; I don't think
Hartenstein has anybody he can
trust to handle him. The prisoner
claims to be some sort of a British
diplomat, and for all Hartenstein
knows, maybe he is. Also, he is a
madman."
"A madman?" I echoed.
"Yes, just so. At least, that's
what Hartenstein told me. I wanted
to know what sort of a madman—there
are various kinds of madmen,
all of whom must be handled differently—but
all Hartenstein would
tell me was that he had unrealistic
beliefs about the state of affairs in
Europe."
"Ha! What diplomat hasn't?"
I asked.
Old Keitel gave a laugh, somewhere
between the bark of a dog
and the croaking of a raven.
"Yes, exactly! The unrealistic
beliefs of diplomats are what soldiers
die of," he said. "I said as
much to Hartenstein, but he
wouldn't tell me anything more. He
seemed to regret having said even
that much. He looked like a man
who's seen a particularly terrifying
ghost." The old man puffed hard
at his famous pipe for a while, blowing
smoke through his mustache.
"Rudi, Hartenstein has pulled a hot
potato out of the ashes, this time,
and he wants to toss it to your
uncle, before he burns his fingers.
I think that's one reason why he
got me to furnish an escort for his
Englishman. Now, look; you must
take this unrealistic diplomat, or
this undiplomatic madman, or whatever
in blazes he is, in to Berlin.
And understand this." He pointed
his pipe at me as though it were a
pistol. "Your orders are to take
him there and turn him over at
the Ministry of Police. Nothing
has been said about whether you
turn him over alive, or dead, or
half one and half the other. I know
nothing about this business, and
want to know nothing; if Hartenstein
wants us to play goal warders
for him, then he must be satisfied
with our way of doing it!"
Well, to cut short the story, I
looked at the coach Hartenstein had
placed at my disposal, and I decided
to chain the left door shut on the
outside, so that it couldn't be opened
from within. Then, I would put
my prisoner on my left, so that the
only way out would be past me.
I decided not to carry any weapons
which he might be able to snatch
from me, so I took off my saber
and locked it in the seat box, along
with the dispatch case containing
the Englishman's papers. It was
cold enough to wear a greatcoat in
comfort, so I wore mine, and in the
right side pocket, where my prisoner
couldn't reach, I put a little leaded
bludgeon, and also a brace of pocket
pistols. Hartenstein was going to
furnish me a guard as well as a
driver, but I said that I would take
a servant, who could act as guard.
The servant, of course, was my
orderly, old Johann; I gave him my
double hunting gun to carry, with a
big charge of boar shot in one barrel
and an ounce ball in the other.
In addition, I armed myself with
a big bottle of cognac. I thought
that if I could shoot my prisoner
often enough with that, he would
give me no trouble.
As it happened, he didn't, and
none of my precautions—except the
cognac—were needed. The man
didn't look like a lunatic to me. He
was a rather stout gentleman, of past
middle age, with a ruddy complexion
and an intelligent face. The only
unusual thing about him was his
hat, which was a peculiar contraption,
looking like a pot. I put him
in the carriage, and then offered
him a drink out of my bottle, taking
one about half as big myself. He
smacked his lips over it and said,
"Well, that's real brandy; whatever
we think of their detestable politics,
we can't criticize the French for
their liquor." Then, he said, "I'm
glad they're sending me in the
custody of a military gentleman, instead
of a confounded gendarme.
Tell me the truth, lieutenant; am I
under arrest for anything?"
"Why," I said, "Captain Hartenstein
should have told you about
that. All I know is that I have orders
to take you to the Ministry of
Police, in Berlin, and not to let you
escape on the way. These orders I
will carry out; I hope you don't
hold that against me."
He assured me that he did not,
and we had another drink on it—I
made sure, again, that he got twice
as much as I did—and then the
coachman cracked his whip and we
were off for Berlin.
Now, I thought, I am going to
see just what sort of a madman this
is, and why Hartenstein is making
a State affair out of a squabble at
an inn. So I decided to explore
his unrealistic beliefs about the
state of affairs in Europe.
After guiding the conversation to
where I wanted it, I asked him:
"What, Herr Bathurst, in your
belief, is the real, underlying cause
of the present tragic situation in
Europe?"
That, I thought, was safe enough.
Name me one year, since the days
of Julius Caesar, when the situation
in Europe hasn't been tragic! And
it worked, to perfection.
"In my belief," says this Englishman,
"the whole mess is the result
of the victory of the rebellious colonists
in North America, and their
blasted republic."
Well, you can imagine, that gave
me a start. All the world knows
that the American Patriots lost their
war for independence from England;
that their army was shattered,
that their leaders were either killed
or driven into exile. How many
times, when I was a little boy, did
I not sit up long past my bedtime,
when old Baron von Steuben was a
guest at Tarlburg-Schloss, listening
open-mouthed and wide-eyed to his
stories of that gallant lost struggle!
How I used to shiver at his tales
of the terrible winter camp, or thrill
at the battles, or weep as he told
how he held the dying Washington
in his arms, and listened to his
noble last words, at the Battle of
Doylestown! And here, this man
was telling me that the Patriots had
really won, and set up the republic
for which they had fought! I had
been prepared for some of what
Hartenstein had called unrealistic
beliefs, but nothing as fantastic as
this.
"I can cut it even finer than that,"
Bathurst continued. "It was the
defeat of Burgoyne at Saratoga.
We made a good bargain when we
got Benedict Arnold to turn his
coat, but we didn't do it soon
enough. If he hadn't been on the
field that day, Burgoyne would have
gone through Gates' army like a
hot knife through butter."
But Arnold hadn't been at Saratoga.
I know; I have read much of
the American War. Arnold was
shot dead on New Year's Day of
1776, during the storming of Quebec.
And Burgoyne had done just
as Bathurst had said; he had gone
through Gates like a knife, and down
the Hudson to join Howe.
"But, Herr Bathurst," I asked,
"how could that affect the situation
in Europe? America is thousands
of miles away, across the ocean."
"Ideas can cross oceans quicker
than armies. When Louis XVI decided
to come to the aid of the
Americans, he doomed himself and
his regime. A successful resistance
to royal authority in America was
all the French Republicans needed
to inspire them. Of course, we
have Louis's own weakness to blame,
too. If he'd given those rascals a
whiff of grapeshot, when the mob
tried to storm Versailles in 1790,
there'd have been no French Revolution."
But he had. When Louis XVI
ordered the howitzers turned on
the mob at Versailles, and then sent
the dragoons to ride down the survivors,
the Republican movement
had been broken. That had been
when Cardinal Talleyrand, who was
then merely Bishop of Autun, had
came to the fore and become the
power that he is today in France;
the greatest King's Minister since
Richelieu.
"And, after that, Louis's death
followed as surely as night after
day," Bathurst was saying. "And
because the French had no experience
in self-government, their
republic was foredoomed. If Bonaparte
hadn't seized power, somebody
else would have; when the
French murdered their king, they
delivered themselves to dictatorship.
And a dictator, unsupported by the
prestige of royalty, has no choice
but to lead his people into foreign
war, to keep them from turning
upon him."
It was like that all the way to
Berlin. All these things seem foolish,
by daylight, but as I sat in the
darkness of that swaying coach, I
was almost convinced of the reality
of what he told me. I tell you,
Uncle Eugen, it was frightening,
as though he were giving me a view
of Hell. Gott im Himmel, the things
that man talked of! Armies swarming
over Europe; sack and massacre,
and cities burning; blockades,
and starvation; kings deposed, and
thrones tumbling like tenpins;
battles in which the soldiers of
every nation fought, and in which
tens of thousands were mowed
down like ripe grain; and, over all,
the Satanic figure of a little man
in a gray coat, who dictated peace
to the Austrian Emperor in Schoenbrunn,
and carried the Pope away
a prisoner to Savona.
Madman, eh? Unrealistic beliefs,
says Hartenstein? Well, give me
madmen who drool spittle, and foam
at the mouth, and shriek obscene
blasphemies. But not this pleasant-seeming
gentleman who sat beside
me and talked of horrors in a quiet,
cultured voice, while he drank my
cognac.
But not all my cognac! If your
man at the Ministry—the one with
red hair and the bulldog face—tells
you that I was drunk when I
brought in that Englishman, you
had better believe him!
Rudi.
(From Count von Berchtenwald,
to the British Minister.)
28 November, 1809
Honored Sir:
The accompanying dossier will
acquaint you with the problem confronting
this Chancellery, without
needless repetition on my part.
Please to understand that it is not,
and never was, any part of the
intentions of the government of His
Majesty Friedrich Wilhelm III to
offer any injury or indignity to the
government of His Britannic Majesty
George III. We would never
contemplate holding in arrest the
person, or tampering with the papers,
of an accredited envoy of your
government. However, we have the
gravest doubt, to make a considerable
understatement, that this person
who calls himself Benjamin Bathurst
is any such envoy, and we do
not think that it would be any
service to the government of His
Britannic Majesty to allow an impostor
to travel about Europe in the
guise of a British diplomatic representative.
We certainly should
not thank the government of His
Britannic Majesty for failing to
take steps to deal with some person
who, in England, might falsely
represent himself to be a Prussian
diplomat.
This affair touches us as closely
as it does your own government;
this man had in his possession a
letter of safe-conduct, which you will
find in the accompanying dispatch
case. It is of the regular form, as
issued by this Chancellery, and is
sealed with the Chancellery seal, or
with a very exact counterfeit of it.
However, it has been signed, as
Chancellor of Prussia, with a signature
indistinguishable from that of
the Baron Stein, who is the present
Prussian Minister of Agriculture.
Baron Stein was shown the signature,
with the rest of the letter
covered, and without hesitation acknowledged
it for his own writing.
However, when the letter was uncovered
and shown to him, his
surprise and horror were such as
would require the pen of a Goethe
or a Schiller to describe, and he
denied categorically ever having
seen the document before.
I have no choice but to believe
him. It is impossible to think that
a man of Baron Stein's honorable
and serious character would be party
to the fabrication of a paper of
this sort. Even aside from this, I
am in the thing as deeply as he; if
it is signed with his signature, it is
also sealed with my seal, which has
not been out of my personal keeping
in the ten years that I have been
Chancellor here. In fact, the word
"impossible" can be used to describe
the entire business. It was impossible
for the man Benjamin
Bathurst to have entered the inn
yard—yet he did. It was impossible
that he should carry papers of the
sort found in his dispatch case, or
that such papers should exist—yet
I am sending them to you with this
letter. It is impossible that Baron
von Stein should sign a paper of
the sort he did, or that it should
be sealed by the Chancellery—yet
it bears both Stein's signature and
my seal.
You will also find in the dispatch
case other credentials, ostensibly
originating with the British Foreign
Office, of the same character, being
signed by persons having no connection
with the Foreign Office, or
even with the government, but being
sealed with apparently authentic
seals. If you send these papers to
London, I fancy you will find that
they will there create the same
situation as that caused here by
this letter of safe-conduct.
I am also sending you a charcoal
sketch of the person who calls himself
Benjamin Bathurst. This portrait
was taken without its subject's
knowledge. Baron von Krutz's
nephew, Lieutenant von Tarlburg,
who is the son of our mutual friend
Count von Tarlburg, has a little
friend, a very clever young lady who
is, as you will see, an expert at this
sort of work: she was introduced
into a room at the Ministry of Police
and placed behind a screen,
where she could sketch our prisoner's
face. If you should send
this picture to London, I think that
there is a good chance that it might
be recognized. I can vouch that it
is an excellent likeness.
To tell the truth, we are at our
wits' end about this affair. I cannot
understand how such excellent
imitations of these various seals
could be made, and the signature
of the Baron von Stein is the most
expert forgery that I have ever
seen, in thirty years' experience as
a statesman. This would indicate
careful and painstaking work on the
part of somebody; how, then, do we
reconcile this with such clumsy mistakes, recognizable as such by
any schoolboy, as signing the name of Baron Stein as Prussian Chancellor,
or Mr. George Canning, who is a member of the opposition party
and not connected with your government,
as British Foreign secretary.
These are mistakes which only a
madman would make. There are
those who think our prisoner is
mad, because of his apparent delusions
about the great conqueror,
General Bonaparte, alias the Emperor
Napoleon. Madmen have
been known to fabricate evidence to
support their delusions, it is true,
but I shudder to think of a madman
having at his disposal the resources
to manufacture the papers you will
find in this dispatch case. Moreover,
some of our foremost medical
men, who have specialized in the
disorders of the mind, have interviewed
this man Bathurst and say
that, save for his fixed belief in a
nonexistent situation, he is perfectly
sane.
Personally, I believe that the
whole thing is a gigantic hoax,
perpetrated for some hidden and
sinister purpose, possibly to create
confusion, and to undermine the
confidence existing between your
government and mine, and to set
against one another various persons
connected with both governments,
or else as a mask for some other
conspiratorial activity. Only a few
months ago, you will recall, there
was a Jacobin plot unmasked at
Köln.
But, whatever this business may
portend, I do not like it. I want to
get to the bottom of it as soon as
possible, and I will thank you, my
dear sir, and your government, for
any assistance you may find possible.
I have the honor, sir, to be, et
cetera, et cetera, et cetera,
Berchtenwald
FROM BARON VON KRUTZ,
TO THE COUNT VON BERCHTENWALD.
MOST URGENT;
MOST IMPORTANT.
TO BE DELIVERED IMMEDIATELY
AND IN PERSON
REGARDLESS OF CIRCUMSTANCES.
28 November, 1809
Count von Berchtenwald:
Within the past half hour, that is,
at about eleven o'clock tonight, the
man calling himself Benjamin
Bathurst was shot and killed by a
sentry at the Ministry of Police,
while attempting to escape from
custody.
A sentry on duty in the rear
courtyard of the Ministry observed
a man attempting to leave the building
in a suspicious and furtive manner.
This sentry, who was under
the strictest orders to allow no one
to enter or leave without written
authorization, challenged him; when
he attempted to run, the sentry
fired his musket at him, bringing
him down. At the shot, the
Sergeant of the Guard rushed into
the courtyard with his detail, and
the man whom the sentry had shot
was found to be the Englishman,
Benjamin Bathurst. He had been
hit in the chest with an ounce ball,
and died before the doctor could
arrive, and without recovering consciousness.
An investigation revealed that the
prisoner, who was confined on the
third floor of the building, had
fashioned a rope from his bedding,
his bed cord, and the leather strap
of his bell pull. This rope was only
long enough to reach to the window
of the office on the second floor,
directly below, but he managed to
enter this by kicking the glass out
of the window. I am trying to find
out how he could do this without
being heard. I can assure you that
somebody is going to smart for this
night's work. As for the sentry, he
acted within his orders; I have
commended him for doing his duty,
and for good shooting, and I assume
full responsibility for the death
of the prisoner at his hands.
I have no idea why the self-so-called
Benjamin Bathurst, who, until
now, was well-behaved and
seemed to take his confinement
philosophically, should suddenly
make this rash and fatal attempt,
unless it was because of those infernal
dunderheads of madhouse
doctors who have been bothering
him. Only this afternoon they deliberately
handed him a bundle of
newspapers—Prussian, Austrian,
French, and English—all dated
within the last month. They wanted
they said, to see how he would react.
Well, God pardon them, they've
found out!
What do you think should be
done about giving the body burial?
Krutz
(From the British Minister, to the
Count von Berchtenwald.)
December 20th, 1809
My dear Count von Berchtenwald:
Reply from London to my letter
of the 28th, which accompanied the
dispatch case and the other papers,
has finally come to hand. The papers
which you wanted returned—the
copies of the statements taken at
Perleburg, the letter to the Baron
von Krutz from the police captain,
Hartenstein, and the personal letter
of Krutz's nephew, Lieutenant von
Tarlburg, and the letter of safe-conduct
found in the dispatch case—accompany
herewith. I don't
know what the people at Whitehall
did with the other papers; tossed
them into the nearest fire, for my
guess. Were I in your place, that's
where the papers I am returning
would go.
I have heard nothing, yet, from
my dispatch of the 29th concerning
the death of the man who called
himself Benjamin Bathurst, but I
doubt very much if any official notice
will ever be taken of it. Your
government had a perfect right to
detain the fellow, and, that being
the case, he attempted to escape at
his own risk. After all, sentries are
not required to carry loaded muskets
in order to discourage them
from putting their hands in their
pockets.
To hazard a purely unofficial
opinion, I should not imagine that
London is very much dissatisfied
with this dénouement. His Majesty's
government are a hard-headed and
matter-of-fact set of gentry who do
not relish mysteries, least of all
mysteries whose solution may be
more disturbing than the original
problem.
This is entirely confidential, but
those papers which were in that dispatch
case kicked up the devil's
own row in London, with half the
government bigwigs protesting their
innocence to high Heaven, and the
rest accusing one another of complicity
in the hoax. If that was
somebody's intention, it was literally a howling success. For a while,
it was even feared that there would be questions in Parliament, but
eventually, the whole vexatious business was hushed.
You may tell Count Tarlburg's
son that his little friend is a most
talented young lady; her sketch was
highly commended by no less an
authority than Sir Thomas Lawrence,
and here comes the most
bedeviling part of a thoroughly bedeviled
business. The picture was
instantly recognized. It is a very
fair likeness of Benjamin Bathurst,
or, I should say, Sir Benjamin
Bathurst, who is King's lieutenant
governor for the Crown Colony of
Georgia. As Sir Thomas Lawrence
did his portrait a few years back,
he is in an excellent position to
criticize the work of Lieutenant von
Tarlburg's young lady. However,
Sir Benjamin Bathurst was known
to have been in Savannah, attending
to the duties of his office, and in
the public eye, all the while that his
double was in Prussia. Sir Benjamin
does not have a twin brother.
It has been suggested that this fellow
might be a half-brother, but, as
far as I know, there is no justification
for this theory.
The General Bonaparte, alias the
Emperor Napoleon, who is given
so much mention in the dispatches,
seems also to have a counterpart in
actual life; there is, in the French
army, a Colonel of Artillery by that
name, a Corsican who Gallicized his
original name of Napolione Buonaparte.
He is a most brilliant military
theoretician; I am sure some
of your own officers, like General
Scharnhorst, could tell you about
him. His loyalty to the French
monarchy has never been questioned.
This same correspondence to fact
seems to crop up everywhere in that
amazing collection of pseudo-dispatches
and pseudo-State papers.
The United States of America, you
will recall, was the style by which
the rebellious colonies referred to
themselves, in the Declaration of
Philadelphia. The James Madison
who is mentioned as the current
President of the United States is
now living, in exile, in Switzerland.
His alleged predecessor in office,
Thomas Jefferson, was the author
of the rebel Declaration; after the
defeat of the rebels, he escaped to
Havana, and died, several years ago,
in the Principality of Lichtenstein.
I was quite amused to find our
old friend Cardinal Talleyrand—without
the ecclesiastical title—cast
in the role of chief adviser to the
usurper, Bonaparte. His Eminence,
I have always thought, is the sort
of fellow who would land on his
feet on top of any heap, and who
would as little scruple to be Prime
Minister to His Satanic Majesty as
to His Most Christian Majesty.
I was baffled, however, by one
name, frequently mentioned in those
fantastic papers. This was the English
general, Wellington. I haven't
the least idea who this person might
be.
I have the honor, your excellency,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera,
Sir Arthur Wellesley
THE END.
HE WALKED AROUND THE HORSES
BY H. BEAM PIPER
Illustrated by Cartier This tale is based on an authenticated,
documented fact. A man vanished—right
out of this world. And where he went— In November 1809, an Englishman
named Benjamin Bathurst
vanished, inexplicably and utterly. He was en route to Hamburg
from Vienna, where he had been
serving as his government's envoy
to the court of what Napoleon had
left of the Austrian Empire. At an
inn in Perleburg, in Prussia, while
examining a change of horses for
his coach, he casually stepped out of
sight of his secretary and his valet.
He was not seen to leave the inn
yard. He was not seen again, ever. At least, not in this continuum....
(From Baron Eugen von Krutz,
Minister of Police, to His Excellency
the Count von Berchtenwald, Chancellor
to His Majesty Friedrich
Wilhelm III of Prussia.)
25 November, 1809
Your Excellency:
A circumstance has come to the
notice of this Ministry, the significance
of which I am at a loss to
define, but, since it appears to involve
matters of State, both here
and abroad, I am convinced that it
is of sufficient importance to be
brought to your personal attention.
Frankly, I am unwilling to take any
further action in the matter without
your advice.
Briefly, the situation is this: We
are holding, here at the Ministry
of Police, a person giving his name
as Benjamin Bathurst, who claims
to be a British diplomat. This
person was taken into custody by
the police at Perleburg yesterday,
as a result of a disturbance at an
inn there; he is being detained on
technical charges of causing disorder
in a public place, and of being
a suspicious person. When arrested,
he had in his possession a
dispatch case, containing a number
of papers; these are of such an
extraordinary nature that the local
authorities declined to assume any
responsibility beyond having the
man sent here to Berlin.
After interviewing this person
and examining his papers, I am,
I must confess, in much the same
position. This is not, I am convinced,
any ordinary police matter;
there is something very strange and
disturbing here. The man's statements,
taken alone, are so incredible
as to justify the assumption that he
is mad. I cannot, however, adopt
this theory, in view of his demeanor,
which is that of a man of perfect
rationality, and because of the
existence of these papers. The
whole thing is mad; incomprehensible!
The papers in question accompany,
along with copies of the
various statements taken at Perleburg,
a personal letter to me from
my nephew, Lieutenant Rudolf
von Tarlburg. This last is deserving
of your particular attention;
Lieutenant von Tarlburg is a very
level-headed young officer, not at
all inclined to be fanciful or imaginative.
It would take a good deal to
affect him as he describes.
The man calling himself Benjamin
Bathurst is now lodged in
an apartment here at the Ministry;
he is being treated with every consideration,
and, except for freedom
of movement, accorded every privilege.
I am, most anxiously awaiting
your advice, et cetera, et cetera,
Krutz
(Report of Traugott Zeller, Oberwachtmeister,
Staatspolizei, made
at Perleburg, 25 November, 1809.)
At about ten minutes past two of
the afternoon of Saturday, 25
November, while I was at the police
station, there entered a man known
to me as Franz Bauer, an inn servant
employed by Christian Hauck, at
the sign of the Sword & Scepter,
here in Perleburg. This man Franz
Bauer made complaint to Staatspolizeikapitan
Ernst Hartenstein,
saying that there was a madman
making trouble at the inn where
he, Franz Bauer, worked. I was,
therefore, directed, by Staatspolizeikapitan
Hartenstein, to go to the
Sword & Scepter Inn, there to act
at discretion to maintain the peace.
Arriving at the inn in company
with the said Franz Bauer, I found
a considerable crowd of people in
the common room, and, in the midst
of them, the innkeeper, Christian
Hauck, in altercation with a stranger.
This stranger was a gentlemanly-appearing
person, dressed in
traveling clothes, who had under
his arm a small leather dispatch
case. As I entered, I could hear
him, speaking in German with a
strong English accent, abusing the
innkeeper, the said Christian Hauck,
and accusing him of having drugged
his, the stranger's, wine, and of
having stolen his, the stranger's,
coach-and-four, and of having abducted
his, the stranger's, secretary
and servants. This the said Christian
Hauck was loudly denying, and
the other people in the inn were
taking the innkeeper's part, and
mocking the stranger for a madman.
On entering, I commanded everyone
to be silent, in the king's name,
and then, as he appeared to be the
complaining party of the dispute, I
required the foreign gentleman to
state to me what was the trouble.
He then repeated his accusations
against the innkeeper, Hauck, saying
that Hauck, or, rather, another
man who resembled Hauck and who
had claimed to be the innkeeper,
had drugged his wine and stolen
his coach and made off with his
secretary and his servants. At this
point, the innkeeper and the bystanders
all began shouting denials
and contradictions, so that I had
to pound on a table with my truncheon
to command silence.
I then required the innkeeper,
Christian Hauck, to answer the
charges which the stranger had
made; this he did with a complete
denial of all of them, saying that
the stranger had had no wine in his
inn, and that he had not been inside
the inn until a few minutes before,
when he had burst in shouting accusations,
and that there had been
no secretary, and no valet, and no
coachman, and no coach-and-four,
at the inn, and that the gentleman
was raving mad. To all this, he
called the people who were in the
common room to witness.
I then required the stranger to
account for himself. He said that
his name was Benjamin Bathurst,
and that he was a British diplomat,
returning to England from Vienna.
To prove this, he produced from
his dispatch case sundry papers.
One of these was a letter of safe-conduct,
issued by the Prussian
Chancellery, in which he was named
and described as Benjamin Bathurst.
The other papers were English,
all bearing seals, and appearing
to be official documents.
Accordingly, I requested him to
accompany me to the police station,
and also the innkeeper, and three
men whom the innkeeper wanted
to bring as witnesses.
Traugott Zeller Oberwachtmeister
Report approved,
Ernst Hartenstein Staatspolizeikapitan
(Statement of the self-so-called
Benjamin Bathurst, taken at the
police station at Perleburg, 25
November, 1809.)
My name is Benjamin Bathurst,
and I am Envoy Extraordinary and
Minister Plenipotentiary of the
government of His Britannic Majesty
to the court of His Majesty
Franz I, Emperor of Austria, or,
at least, I was until the events following
the Austrian surrender made
necessary my return to London. I
left Vienna on the morning of Monday,
the 20th, to go to Hamburg
to take ship home; I was traveling
in my own coach-and-four, with
my secretary, Mr. Bertram Jardine,
and my valet, William Small, both
British subjects, and a coachman,
Josef Bidek, an Austrian subject,
whom I had hired for the trip. Because
of the presence of French
troops, whom I was anxious to
avoid, I was forced to make a
detour west as far as Salzburg before
turning north toward Magdeburg,
where I crossed the Elbe. I
was unable to get a change of horses
for my coach after leaving Gera,
until I reached Perleburg, where I
stopped at the Sword & Scepter
Inn.
Arriving there, I left my coach
in the inn yard, and I and my secretary,
Mr. Jardine, went into the inn.
A man, not this fellow here, but
another rogue, with more beard and
less paunch, and more shabbily
dressed, but as like him as though
he were his brother, represented
himself as the innkeeper, and I dealt
with him for a change of horses,
and ordered a bottle of wine for
myself and my secretary, and also
a pot of beer apiece for my valet
and the coachman, to be taken outside
to them. Then Jardine and I
sat down to our wine, at a table in
the common room, until the man
who claimed to be the innkeeper
came back and told us that the
fresh horses were harnessed to the
coach and ready to go. Then we
went outside again.
I looked at the two horses on the
off side, and then walked around
in front of the team to look at the
two nigh-side horses, and as I did
I felt giddy, as though I were about
to fall, and everything went black
before my eyes. I thought I was
having a fainting spell, something
I am not at all subject to, and I put
out my hand to grasp the hitching
bar, but could not find it. I am
sure, now, that I was unconscious
for some time, because when my
head cleared, the coach and horses
were gone, and in their place was
a big farm wagon, jacked up in
front, with the right front wheel
off, and two peasants were greasing
the detached wheel.
I looked at them for a moment,
unable to credit my eyes, and then
I spoke to them in German, saying,
"Where the devil's my coach-and-four?"
They both straightened, startled:
the one who was holding the wheel
almost dropped it.
"Pardon, excellency," he said,
"there's been no coach-and-four
here, all the time we've been here."
"Yes," said his mate, "and we've
been here since just after noon."
I did not attempt to argue with
them. It occurred to me—and it
is still my opinion—that I was the
victim of some plot; that my wine
had been drugged, that I had been
unconscious for some time, during
which my coach had been removed
and this wagon substituted for it,
and that these peasants had been
put to work on it and instructed
what to say if questioned. If my
arrival at the inn had been anticipated,
and everything put in readiness,
the whole business would not
have taken ten minutes.
I therefore entered the inn, determined
to have it out with this
rascally innkeeper, but when I returned
to the common room, he was
nowhere to be seen, and this other
fellow, who has given his name as
Christian Hauck, claimed to be the
innkeeper and denied knowledge of
any of the things I have just stated.
Furthermore, there were four cavalrymen,
Uhlans, drinking beer and
playing cards at the table where
Jardine and I had had our wine,
and they claimed to have been there
for several hours.
I have no idea why such an elaborate
prank, involving the participation
of many people, should be
played on me, except at the instigation
of the French. In that case,
I cannot understand why Prussian
soldiers should lend themselves to
it.
Benjamin Bathurst
(Statement of Christian Hauck,
innkeeper, taken at the police station
at Perleburg, 25 November, 1809.)
May it please your honor, my
name is Christian Hauck, and I
keep an inn at the sign of the Sword
& Scepter, and have these past fifteen
years, and my father, and his
father, before me, for the past fifty
years, and never has there been a
complaint like this against my inn.
Your honor, it is a hard thing for
a man who keeps a decent house,
and pays his taxes, and obeys the
laws, to be accused of crimes of this
sort.
I know nothing of this gentleman,
nor of his coach, nor his secretary,
nor his servants; I never set eyes
on him before he came bursting into
the inn from the yard, shouting and
raving like a madman, and crying
out, "Where the devil's that rogue
of an innkeeper?"
I said to him, "I am the innkeeper;
what cause have you to call
me a rogue, sir?"
The stranger replied:
"You're not the innkeeper I did
business with a few minutes ago,
and he's the rascal I want to see.
I want to know what the devil's
been done with my coach, and what's
happened to my secretary and my
servants."
I tried to tell him that I knew
nothing of what he was talking
about, but he would not listen, and
gave me the lie, saying that he had
been drugged and robbed, and his
people kidnaped. He even had the
impudence to claim that he and his
secretary had been sitting at a table
in that room, drinking wine, not
fifteen minutes before, when there
had been four noncommissioned
officers of the Third Uhlans at that
table since noon. Everybody in the
room spoke up for me, but he would
not listen, and was shouting that we
were all robbers, and kidnapers, and
French spies, and I don't know
what all, when the police came.
Your honor, the man is mad.
What I have told you about this is
the truth, and all that I know about
this business, so help me God.
Christian Hauck
(Statement of Franz Bauer, inn
servant, taken at the police station
at Perleburg, 25 November, 1809.)
May it please your honor, my
name is Franz Bauer, and I am a
servant at the Sword & Scepter
Inn, kept by Christian Hauck.
This afternoon, when I went into
the inn yard to empty a bucket of
slops on the dung heap by the
stables, I heard voices and turned
around, to see this gentleman speaking
to Wilhelm Beick and Fritz
Herzer, who were greasing their
wagon in the yard. He had not
been in the yard when I had turned
away to empty the bucket, and I
thought that he must have come in
from the street. This gentleman
was asking Beick and Herzer where
was his coach, and when they told
him they didn't know, he turned and
ran into the inn.
Of my own knowledge, the man
had not been inside the inn before
then, nor had there been any coach,
or any of the people he spoke of,
at the inn, and none of the things
he spoke of happened there, for
otherwise I would know, since I
was at the inn all day.
When I went back inside, I
found him in the common room
shouting at my master, and claiming
that he had been drugged and
robbed. I saw that he was mad
and was afraid that he would do
some mischief, so I went for the
police.
Franz Bauer
his (x) mark
(Statements of Wilhelm Beick and
Fritz Herzer, peasants, taken at the
police station at Perleburg, 25
November, 1809.)
May it please your honor, my
name is Wilhelm Beick, and I am
a tenant on the estate of the Baron
von Hentig. On this day, I and
Fritz Herzer were sent into Perleburg
with a load of potatoes and
cabbages which the innkeeper at
the Sword & Scepter had bought
from the estate superintendent.
After we had unloaded them, we
decided to grease our wagon, which
was very dry, before going back,
so we unhitched and began working
on it. We took about two hours,
starting just after we had eaten
lunch, and in all that time, there
was no coach-and-four in the inn
yard. We were just finishing when
this gentleman spoke to us, demanding
to know where his coach was.
We told him that there had been no
coach in the yard all the time we
had been there, so he turned around
and ran into the inn. At the time,
I thought that he had come out of
the inn before speaking to us, for
I know that he could not have come
in from the street. Now I do not
know where he came from, but I
know that I never saw him before
that moment.
Wilhelm Beick
his (x) mark
I have heard the above testimony,
and it is true to my own knowledge,
and I have nothing to add to it.
Fritz Herzer
his (x) mark
(From Staatspolizeikapitan Ernst
Hartenstein, to His Excellency, the
Baron von Krutz, Minister of
Police.)
25 November, 1809
Your Excellency:
The accompanying copies of
statements taken this day will explain
how the prisoner, the self-so-called
Benjamin Bathurst, came into
my custody. I have charged him
with causing disorder and being a
suspicious person, to hold him until
more can be learned about him.
However, as he represents himself
to be a British diplomat, I am unwilling
to assume any further
responsibility, and am having him
sent to your excellency, in Berlin.
In the first place, your excellency,
I have the strongest doubts of the
man's story. The statement which
he made before me, and signed, is
bad enough, with a coach-and-four
turning into a farm wagon, like
Cinderella's coach into a pumpkin,
and three people vanishing as though
swallowed by the earth. But all
this is perfectly reasonable and credible,
beside the things he said to me,
of which no record was made.
Your excellency will have noticed,
in his statement, certain allusions
to the Austrian surrender,
and to French troops in Austria.
After his statement had been taken
down, I noticed these allusions, and
I inquired, what surrender, and
what were French troops doing in
Austria. The man looked at me in
a pitying manner, and said:
"News seems to travel slowly,
hereabouts; peace was concluded at
Vienna on the 14th of last month.
And as for what French troops are
doing in Austria, they're doing the
same things Bonaparte's brigands
are doing everywhere in Europe."
"And who is Bonaparte?" I
asked.
He stared at me as though I had
asked him, "Who is the Lord Jehovah?"
Then, after a moment, a
look of comprehension came into
his face.
"So, you Prussians concede him
the title of Emperor, and refer to
him as Napoleon," he said. "Well,
I can assure you that His Britannic
Majesty's government haven't done
so, and never will; not so long as
one Englishman has a finger left
to pull a trigger. General Bonaparte
is a usurper; His Britannic
Majesty's government do not recognize
any sovereignty in France
except the House of Bourbon."
This he said very sternly, as though
rebuking me.
It took me a moment or so to
digest that, and to appreciate all
its implications. Why, this fellow
evidently believed, as a matter of
fact, that the French Monarchy had
been overthrown by some military
adventurer named Bonaparte, who
was calling himself the Emperor
Napoleon, and who had made war
on Austria and forced a surrender.
I made no attempt to argue with
him—one wastes time arguing with
madmen—but if this man could
believe that, the transformation of
a coach-and-four into a cabbage
wagon was a small matter indeed.
So, to humor him, I asked him if he
thought General Bonaparte's agents
were responsible for his trouble at
the inn.
"Certainly," he replied. "The
chances are they didn't know me to
see me, and took Jardine for the
minister, and me for the secretary,
so they made off with poor Jardine.
I wonder, though, that they left me
my dispatch case. And that reminds
me; I'll want that back.
Diplomatic papers, you know."
I told him, very seriously, that
we would have to check his credentials.
I promised him I would make
every effort to locate his secretary
and his servants and his coach, took
a complete description of all of
them, and persuaded him to go
into an upstairs room, where I kept
him under guard. I did start inquiries,
calling in all my informers
and spies, but, as I expected, I could
learn nothing. I could not find anybody,
even, who had seen him anywhere
in Perleburg before he
appeared at the Sword & Scepter,
and that rather surprised me, as
somebody should have seen him
enter the town, or walk along the
street.
In this connection, let me remind
your excellency of the discrepancy
in the statements of the servant,
Franz Bauer, and of the two peasants.
The former is certain the
man entered the inn yard from the
street; the latter are just as positive
that he did not. Your excellency,
I do not like such puzzles, for I am
sure that all three were telling the
truth to the best of their knowledge.
They are ignorant common folk, I
admit, but they should know what
they did or did not see.
After I got the prisoner into safekeeping,
I fell to examining his
papers, and I can assure your excellency
that they gave me a shock.
I had paid little heed to his ravings
about the King of France being
dethroned, or about this General
Bonaparte who called himself the
Emperor Napoleon, but I found all
these things mentioned in his papers
and dispatches, which had every
appearance of being official documents.
There was repeated mention
of the taking, by the French, of
Vienna, last May, and of the capitulation
of the Austrian Emperor to
this General Bonaparte, and of
battles being fought all over Europe,
and I don't know what other fantastic
things. Your excellency, I
have heard of all sorts of madmen—one
believing himself to be the
Archangel Gabriel, or Mohammed,
or a werewolf, and another convinced
that his bones are made of
glass, or that he is pursued and
tormented by devils—but so help
me God, this is the first time I have
heard of a madman who had documentary
proof for his delusions!
Does your excellency wonder, then,
that I want no part of this business?
But the matter of his credentials
was even worse. He had papers,
sealed with the seal of the British
Foreign Office, and to every appearance
genuine—but they were
signed, as Foreign Minister, by one
George Canning, and all the world
knows that Lord Castlereagh has
been Foreign Minister these last
five years. And to cap it all, he had
a safe-conduct, sealed with the seal
of the Prussian Chancellery—the
very seal, for I compared it, under
a strong magnifying glass, with one
that I knew to be genuine, and they
were identical!—and yet, this letter
was signed, as Chancellor, not by
Count von Berchtenwald, but by
Baron Stein, the Minister of Agriculture,
and the signature, as far
as I could see, appeared to be genuine!
This is too much for me, your
excellency; I must ask to be excused
from dealing with this matter,
before I become as mad as my
prisoner!
I made arrangements, accordingly,
with Colonel Keitel, of the
Third Uhlans, to furnish an officer
to escort this man into Berlin. The
coach in which they come belongs
to this police station, and the driver
is one of my men. He should be
furnished expense money to get back
to Perleburg. The guard is a corporal
of Uhlans, the orderly of the
officer. He will stay with the Herr
Oberleutnant, and both of them will
return here at their own convenience
and expense.
I have the honor, your excellency,
to be, et cetera, et cetera.
Ernst Hartenstein Staatspolizeikapitan
(From Oberleutnant Rudolf von
Tarlburg, to Baron Eugen von
Krutz.)
26 November, 1809
Dear Uncle Eugen;
This is in no sense a formal report;
I made that at the Ministry,
when I turned the Englishman and
his papers over to one of your
officers—a fellow with red hair and
a face like a bulldog. But there
are a few things which you should
be told, which wouldn't look well
in an official report, to let you know
just what sort of a rare fish has
got into your net.
I had just come in from drilling
my platoon, yesterday, when Colonel
Keitel's orderly told me that the
colonel wanted to see me in his
quarters. I found the old fellow
in undress in his sitting room, smoking
his big pipe.
"Come in, lieutenant; come in and
sit down, my boy!" he greeted me,
in that bluff, hearty manner which
he always adopts with his junior
officers when he has some particularly
nasty job to be done. "How
would you like to take a little trip
in to Berlin? I have an errand,
which won't take half an hour, and
you can stay as long as you like,
just so you're back by Thursday,
when your turn comes up for road
patrol."
Well, I thought, this is the bait.
I waited to see what the hook would
look like, saying that it was entirely
agreeable with me, and asking what
his errand was.
"Well, it isn't for myself, Tarlburg,"
he said. "It's for this fellow
Hartenstein, the Staatspolizeikapitan
here. He has something he wants
done at the Ministry of Police, and
I thought of you because I've heard
you're related to the Baron von
Krutz. You are, aren't you?" he
asked, just as though he didn't know
all about who all his officers are
related to.
"That's right, colonel; the baron
is my uncle," I said. "What does
Hartenstein want done?"
"Why, he has a prisoner whom he
wants taken to Berlin and turned
over at the Ministry. All you have
to do is to take him in, in a coach,
and see he doesn't escape on the
way, and get a receipt for him, and
for some papers. This is a very
important prisoner; I don't think
Hartenstein has anybody he can
trust to handle him. The prisoner
claims to be some sort of a British
diplomat, and for all Hartenstein
knows, maybe he is. Also, he is a
madman."
"A madman?" I echoed.
"Yes, just so. At least, that's
what Hartenstein told me. I wanted
to know what sort of a madman—there
are various kinds of madmen,
all of whom must be handled differently—but
all Hartenstein would
tell me was that he had unrealistic
beliefs about the state of affairs in
Europe."
"Ha! What diplomat hasn't?"
I asked.
Old Keitel gave a laugh, somewhere
between the bark of a dog
and the croaking of a raven.
"Yes, exactly! The unrealistic
beliefs of diplomats are what soldiers
die of," he said. "I said as
much to Hartenstein, but he
wouldn't tell me anything more. He
seemed to regret having said even
that much. He looked like a man
who's seen a particularly terrifying
ghost." The old man puffed hard
at his famous pipe for a while, blowing
smoke through his mustache.
"Rudi, Hartenstein has pulled a hot
potato out of the ashes, this time,
and he wants to toss it to your
uncle, before he burns his fingers.
I think that's one reason why he
got me to furnish an escort for his
Englishman. Now, look; you must
take this unrealistic diplomat, or
this undiplomatic madman, or whatever
in blazes he is, in to Berlin.
And understand this." He pointed
his pipe at me as though it were a
pistol. "Your orders are to take
him there and turn him over at
the Ministry of Police. Nothing
has been said about whether you
turn him over alive, or dead, or
half one and half the other. I know
nothing about this business, and
want to know nothing; if Hartenstein
wants us to play goal warders
for him, then he must be satisfied
with our way of doing it!"
Well, to cut short the story, I
looked at the coach Hartenstein had
placed at my disposal, and I decided
to chain the left door shut on the
outside, so that it couldn't be opened
from within. Then, I would put
my prisoner on my left, so that the
only way out would be past me.
I decided not to carry any weapons
which he might be able to snatch
from me, so I took off my saber
and locked it in the seat box, along
with the dispatch case containing
the Englishman's papers. It was
cold enough to wear a greatcoat in
comfort, so I wore mine, and in the
right side pocket, where my prisoner
couldn't reach, I put a little leaded
bludgeon, and also a brace of pocket
pistols. Hartenstein was going to
furnish me a guard as well as a
driver, but I said that I would take
a servant, who could act as guard.
The servant, of course, was my
orderly, old Johann; I gave him my
double hunting gun to carry, with a
big charge of boar shot in one barrel
and an ounce ball in the other.
In addition, I armed myself with
a big bottle of cognac. I thought
that if I could shoot my prisoner
often enough with that, he would
give me no trouble.
As it happened, he didn't, and
none of my precautions—except the
cognac—were needed. The man
didn't look like a lunatic to me. He
was a rather stout gentleman, of past
middle age, with a ruddy complexion
and an intelligent face. The only
unusual thing about him was his
hat, which was a peculiar contraption,
looking like a pot. I put him
in the carriage, and then offered
him a drink out of my bottle, taking
one about half as big myself. He
smacked his lips over it and said,
"Well, that's real brandy; whatever
we think of their detestable politics,
we can't criticize the French for
their liquor." Then, he said, "I'm
glad they're sending me in the
custody of a military gentleman, instead
of a confounded gendarme.
Tell me the truth, lieutenant; am I
under arrest for anything?"
"Why," I said, "Captain Hartenstein
should have told you about
that. All I know is that I have orders
to take you to the Ministry of
Police, in Berlin, and not to let you
escape on the way. These orders I
will carry out; I hope you don't
hold that against me."
He assured me that he did not,
and we had another drink on it—I
made sure, again, that he got twice
as much as I did—and then the
coachman cracked his whip and we
were off for Berlin.
Now, I thought, I am going to
see just what sort of a madman this
is, and why Hartenstein is making
a State affair out of a squabble at
an inn. So I decided to explore
his unrealistic beliefs about the
state of affairs in Europe.
After guiding the conversation to
where I wanted it, I asked him:
"What, Herr Bathurst, in your
belief, is the real, underlying cause
of the present tragic situation in
Europe?"
That, I thought, was safe enough.
Name me one year, since the days
of Julius Caesar, when the situation
in Europe hasn't been tragic! And
it worked, to perfection.
"In my belief," says this Englishman,
"the whole mess is the result
of the victory of the rebellious colonists
in North America, and their
blasted republic."
Well, you can imagine, that gave
me a start. All the world knows
that the American Patriots lost their
war for independence from England;
that their army was shattered,
that their leaders were either killed
or driven into exile. How many
times, when I was a little boy, did
I not sit up long past my bedtime,
when old Baron von Steuben was a
guest at Tarlburg-Schloss, listening
open-mouthed and wide-eyed to his
stories of that gallant lost struggle!
How I used to shiver at his tales
of the terrible winter camp, or thrill
at the battles, or weep as he told
how he held the dying Washington
in his arms, and listened to his
noble last words, at the Battle of
Doylestown! And here, this man
was telling me that the Patriots had
really won, and set up the republic
for which they had fought! I had
been prepared for some of what
Hartenstein had called unrealistic
beliefs, but nothing as fantastic as
this.
"I can cut it even finer than that,"
Bathurst continued. "It was the
defeat of Burgoyne at Saratoga.
We made a good bargain when we
got Benedict Arnold to turn his
coat, but we didn't do it soon
enough. If he hadn't been on the
field that day, Burgoyne would have
gone through Gates' army like a
hot knife through butter."
But Arnold hadn't been at Saratoga.
I know; I have read much of
the American War. Arnold was
shot dead on New Year's Day of
1776, during the storming of Quebec.
And Burgoyne had done just
as Bathurst had said; he had gone
through Gates like a knife, and down
the Hudson to join Howe.
"But, Herr Bathurst," I asked,
"how could that affect the situation
in Europe? America is thousands
of miles away, across the ocean."
"Ideas can cross oceans quicker
than armies. When Louis XVI decided
to come to the aid of the
Americans, he doomed himself and
his regime. A successful resistance
to royal authority in America was
all the French Republicans needed
to inspire them. Of course, we
have Louis's own weakness to blame,
too. If he'd given those rascals a
whiff of grapeshot, when the mob
tried to storm Versailles in 1790,
there'd have been no French Revolution."
But he had. When Louis XVI
ordered the howitzers turned on
the mob at Versailles, and then sent
the dragoons to ride down the survivors,
the Republican movement
had been broken. That had been
when Cardinal Talleyrand, who was
then merely Bishop of Autun, had
came to the fore and become the
power that he is today in France;
the greatest King's Minister since
Richelieu.
"And, after that, Louis's death
followed as surely as night after
day," Bathurst was saying. "And
because the French had no experience
in self-government, their
republic was foredoomed. If Bonaparte
hadn't seized power, somebody
else would have; when the
French murdered their king, they
delivered themselves to dictatorship.
And a dictator, unsupported by the
prestige of royalty, has no choice
but to lead his people into foreign
war, to keep them from turning
upon him."
It was like that all the way to
Berlin. All these things seem foolish,
by daylight, but as I sat in the
darkness of that swaying coach, I
was almost convinced of the reality
of what he told me. I tell you,
Uncle Eugen, it was frightening,
as though he were giving me a view
of Hell. Gott im Himmel, the things
that man talked of! Armies swarming
over Europe; sack and massacre,
and cities burning; blockades,
and starvation; kings deposed, and
thrones tumbling like tenpins;
battles in which the soldiers of
every nation fought, and in which
tens of thousands were mowed
down like ripe grain; and, over all,
the Satanic figure of a little man
in a gray coat, who dictated peace
to the Austrian Emperor in Schoenbrunn,
and carried the Pope away
a prisoner to Savona.
Madman, eh? Unrealistic beliefs,
says Hartenstein? Well, give me
madmen who drool spittle, and foam
at the mouth, and shriek obscene
blasphemies. But not this pleasant-seeming
gentleman who sat beside
me and talked of horrors in a quiet,
cultured voice, while he drank my
cognac.
But not all my cognac! If your
man at the Ministry—the one with
red hair and the bulldog face—tells
you that I was drunk when I
brought in that Englishman, you
had better believe him!
Rudi.
(From Count von Berchtenwald,
to the British Minister.)
28 November, 1809
Honored Sir:
The accompanying dossier will
acquaint you with the problem confronting
this Chancellery, without
needless repetition on my part.
Please to understand that it is not,
and never was, any part of the
intentions of the government of His
Majesty Friedrich Wilhelm III to
offer any injury or indignity to the
government of His Britannic Majesty
George III. We would never
contemplate holding in arrest the
person, or tampering with the papers,
of an accredited envoy of your
government. However, we have the
gravest doubt, to make a considerable
understatement, that this person
who calls himself Benjamin Bathurst
is any such envoy, and we do
not think that it would be any
service to the government of His
Britannic Majesty to allow an impostor
to travel about Europe in the
guise of a British diplomatic representative.
We certainly should
not thank the government of His
Britannic Majesty for failing to
take steps to deal with some person
who, in England, might falsely
represent himself to be a Prussian
diplomat.
This affair touches us as closely
as it does your own government;
this man had in his possession a
letter of safe-conduct, which you will
find in the accompanying dispatch
case. It is of the regular form, as
issued by this Chancellery, and is
sealed with the Chancellery seal, or
with a very exact counterfeit of it.
However, it has been signed, as
Chancellor of Prussia, with a signature
indistinguishable from that of
the Baron Stein, who is the present
Prussian Minister of Agriculture.
Baron Stein was shown the signature,
with the rest of the letter
covered, and without hesitation acknowledged
it for his own writing.
However, when the letter was uncovered
and shown to him, his
surprise and horror were such as
would require the pen of a Goethe
or a Schiller to describe, and he
denied categorically ever having
seen the document before.
I have no choice but to believe
him. It is impossible to think that
a man of Baron Stein's honorable
and serious character would be party
to the fabrication of a paper of
this sort. Even aside from this, I
am in the thing as deeply as he; if
it is signed with his signature, it is
also sealed with my seal, which has
not been out of my personal keeping
in the ten years that I have been
Chancellor here. In fact, the word
"impossible" can be used to describe
the entire business. It was impossible
for the man Benjamin
Bathurst to have entered the inn
yard—yet he did. It was impossible
that he should carry papers of the
sort found in his dispatch case, or
that such papers should exist—yet
I am sending them to you with this
letter. It is impossible that Baron
von Stein should sign a paper of
the sort he did, or that it should
be sealed by the Chancellery—yet
it bears both Stein's signature and
my seal.
You will also find in the dispatch
case other credentials, ostensibly
originating with the British Foreign
Office, of the same character, being
signed by persons having no connection
with the Foreign Office, or
even with the government, but being
sealed with apparently authentic
seals. If you send these papers to
London, I fancy you will find that
they will there create the same
situation as that caused here by
this letter of safe-conduct.
I am also sending you a charcoal
sketch of the person who calls himself
Benjamin Bathurst. This portrait
was taken without its subject's
knowledge. Baron von Krutz's
nephew, Lieutenant von Tarlburg,
who is the son of our mutual friend
Count von Tarlburg, has a little
friend, a very clever young lady who
is, as you will see, an expert at this
sort of work: she was introduced
into a room at the Ministry of Police
and placed behind a screen,
where she could sketch our prisoner's
face. If you should send
this picture to London, I think that
there is a good chance that it might
be recognized. I can vouch that it
is an excellent likeness.
To tell the truth, we are at our
wits' end about this affair. I cannot
understand how such excellent
imitations of these various seals
could be made, and the signature
of the Baron von Stein is the most
expert forgery that I have ever
seen, in thirty years' experience as
a statesman. This would indicate
careful and painstaking work on the
part of somebody; how, then, do we
reconcile this with such clumsy mistakes, recognizable as such by
any schoolboy, as signing the name of Baron Stein as Prussian Chancellor,
or Mr. George Canning, who is a member of the opposition party
and not connected with your government,
as British Foreign secretary.
These are mistakes which only a
madman would make. There are
those who think our prisoner is
mad, because of his apparent delusions
about the great conqueror,
General Bonaparte, alias the Emperor
Napoleon. Madmen have
been known to fabricate evidence to
support their delusions, it is true,
but I shudder to think of a madman
having at his disposal the resources
to manufacture the papers you will
find in this dispatch case. Moreover,
some of our foremost medical
men, who have specialized in the
disorders of the mind, have interviewed
this man Bathurst and say
that, save for his fixed belief in a
nonexistent situation, he is perfectly
sane.
Personally, I believe that the
whole thing is a gigantic hoax,
perpetrated for some hidden and
sinister purpose, possibly to create
confusion, and to undermine the
confidence existing between your
government and mine, and to set
against one another various persons
connected with both governments,
or else as a mask for some other
conspiratorial activity. Only a few
months ago, you will recall, there
was a Jacobin plot unmasked at
Köln.
But, whatever this business may
portend, I do not like it. I want to
get to the bottom of it as soon as
possible, and I will thank you, my
dear sir, and your government, for
any assistance you may find possible.
I have the honor, sir, to be, et
cetera, et cetera, et cetera,
Berchtenwald
FROM BARON VON KRUTZ,
TO THE COUNT VON BERCHTENWALD.
MOST URGENT;
MOST IMPORTANT.
TO BE DELIVERED IMMEDIATELY
AND IN PERSON
REGARDLESS OF CIRCUMSTANCES.
28 November, 1809
Count von Berchtenwald:
Within the past half hour, that is,
at about eleven o'clock tonight, the
man calling himself Benjamin
Bathurst was shot and killed by a
sentry at the Ministry of Police,
while attempting to escape from
custody.
A sentry on duty in the rear
courtyard of the Ministry observed
a man attempting to leave the building
in a suspicious and furtive manner.
This sentry, who was under
the strictest orders to allow no one
to enter or leave without written
authorization, challenged him; when
he attempted to run, the sentry
fired his musket at him, bringing
him down. At the shot, the
Sergeant of the Guard rushed into
the courtyard with his detail, and
the man whom the sentry had shot
was found to be the Englishman,
Benjamin Bathurst. He had been
hit in the chest with an ounce ball,
and died before the doctor could
arrive, and without recovering consciousness.
An investigation revealed that the
prisoner, who was confined on the
third floor of the building, had
fashioned a rope from his bedding,
his bed cord, and the leather strap
of his bell pull. This rope was only
long enough to reach to the window
of the office on the second floor,
directly below, but he managed to
enter this by kicking the glass out
of the window. I am trying to find
out how he could do this without
being heard. I can assure you that
somebody is going to smart for this
night's work. As for the sentry, he
acted within his orders; I have
commended him for doing his duty,
and for good shooting, and I assume
full responsibility for the death
of the prisoner at his hands.
I have no idea why the self-so-called
Benjamin Bathurst, who, until
now, was well-behaved and
seemed to take his confinement
philosophically, should suddenly
make this rash and fatal attempt,
unless it was because of those infernal
dunderheads of madhouse
doctors who have been bothering
him. Only this afternoon they deliberately
handed him a bundle of
newspapers—Prussian, Austrian,
French, and English—all dated
within the last month. They wanted
they said, to see how he would react.
Well, God pardon them, they've
found out!
What do you think should be
done about giving the body burial?
Krutz
(From the British Minister, to the
Count von Berchtenwald.)
December 20th, 1809
My dear Count von Berchtenwald:
Reply from London to my letter
of the 28th, which accompanied the
dispatch case and the other papers,
has finally come to hand. The papers
which you wanted returned—the
copies of the statements taken at
Perleburg, the letter to the Baron
von Krutz from the police captain,
Hartenstein, and the personal letter
of Krutz's nephew, Lieutenant von
Tarlburg, and the letter of safe-conduct
found in the dispatch case—accompany
herewith. I don't
know what the people at Whitehall
did with the other papers; tossed
them into the nearest fire, for my
guess. Were I in your place, that's
where the papers I am returning
would go.
I have heard nothing, yet, from
my dispatch of the 29th concerning
the death of the man who called
himself Benjamin Bathurst, but I
doubt very much if any official notice
will ever be taken of it. Your
government had a perfect right to
detain the fellow, and, that being
the case, he attempted to escape at
his own risk. After all, sentries are
not required to carry loaded muskets
in order to discourage them
from putting their hands in their
pockets.
To hazard a purely unofficial
opinion, I should not imagine that
London is very much dissatisfied
with this dénouement. His Majesty's
government are a hard-headed and
matter-of-fact set of gentry who do
not relish mysteries, least of all
mysteries whose solution may be
more disturbing than the original
problem.
This is entirely confidential, but
those papers which were in that dispatch
case kicked up the devil's
own row in London, with half the
government bigwigs protesting their
innocence to high Heaven, and the
rest accusing one another of complicity
in the hoax. If that was
somebody's intention, it was literally a howling success. For a while,
it was even feared that there would be questions in Parliament, but
eventually, the whole vexatious business was hushed.
You may tell Count Tarlburg's
son that his little friend is a most
talented young lady; her sketch was
highly commended by no less an
authority than Sir Thomas Lawrence,
and here comes the most
bedeviling part of a thoroughly bedeviled
business. The picture was
instantly recognized. It is a very
fair likeness of Benjamin Bathurst,
or, I should say, Sir Benjamin
Bathurst, who is King's lieutenant
governor for the Crown Colony of
Georgia. As Sir Thomas Lawrence
did his portrait a few years back,
he is in an excellent position to
criticize the work of Lieutenant von
Tarlburg's young lady. However,
Sir Benjamin Bathurst was known
to have been in Savannah, attending
to the duties of his office, and in
the public eye, all the while that his
double was in Prussia. Sir Benjamin
does not have a twin brother.
It has been suggested that this fellow
might be a half-brother, but, as
far as I know, there is no justification
for this theory.
The General Bonaparte, alias the
Emperor Napoleon, who is given
so much mention in the dispatches,
seems also to have a counterpart in
actual life; there is, in the French
army, a Colonel of Artillery by that
name, a Corsican who Gallicized his
original name of Napolione Buonaparte.
He is a most brilliant military
theoretician; I am sure some
of your own officers, like General
Scharnhorst, could tell you about
him. His loyalty to the French
monarchy has never been questioned.
This same correspondence to fact
seems to crop up everywhere in that
amazing collection of pseudo-dispatches
and pseudo-State papers.
The United States of America, you
will recall, was the style by which
the rebellious colonies referred to
themselves, in the Declaration of
Philadelphia. The James Madison
who is mentioned as the current
President of the United States is
now living, in exile, in Switzerland.
His alleged predecessor in office,
Thomas Jefferson, was the author
of the rebel Declaration; after the
defeat of the rebels, he escaped to
Havana, and died, several years ago,
in the Principality of Lichtenstein.
I was quite amused to find our
old friend Cardinal Talleyrand—without
the ecclesiastical title—cast
in the role of chief adviser to the
usurper, Bonaparte. His Eminence,
I have always thought, is the sort
of fellow who would land on his
feet on top of any heap, and who
would as little scruple to be Prime
Minister to His Satanic Majesty as
to His Most Christian Majesty.
I was baffled, however, by one
name, frequently mentioned in those
fantastic papers. This was the English
general, Wellington. I haven't
the least idea who this person might
be.
I have the honor, your excellency,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera,