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<h2> XIV. How Otto Saw the Great Emperor. </h2>
<p>Through weakness and sickness and faintness, Otto had lain in a half swoon
through all that long journey under the hot May sun. It was as in a
dreadful nightmare that he had heard on and on and on that monotonous
throbbing of galloping hoofs upon the ground; had felt that last kiss that
his father had given him upon his cheek. Then the onward ride again, until
all faded away into a dull mist and he knew no more. When next he woke it
was with the pungent smell of burned vinegar in his nostrils and with the
feeling of a cool napkin bathing his brow. He opened his eyes and then
closed them again, thinking he must have been in a dream, for he lay in
his old room at the peaceful monastery of the White Cross on the hill; the
good Father Abbot sat near by, gazing upon his face with the old absent
student look, Brother John sat in the deep window seat also gazing at him,
and Brother Theodore, the leech of the monastery, sat beside him bathing
his head. Beside these old familiar faces were the faces of those who had
been with him in that long flight; the One-eyed Hans, old Master Nicholas
his kinsman, and the others. So he closed his eyes, thinking that maybe it
was all a dream. But the sharp throbbing of the poor stump at his wrist
soon taught him that he was still awake.</p>
<p>"Am I then really home in St. Michaelsburg again?" he murmured, without
unclosing his eyes.</p>
<p>Brother Theodore began snuffling through his nose; there was a pause.
"Yes," said the old Abbot at last, and his gentle voice trembled as he
spoke; "yes, my dear little child, thou art back again in thine own home;
thou hast not been long out in the great world, but truly thou hast had a
sharp and bitter trial of it."</p>
<p>"But they will not take me away again, will they?" said Otto quickly,
unclosing his blue eyes.</p>
<p>"Nay," said the Abbot, gently; "not until thou art healed in body and art
ready and willing to go."</p>
<p>Three months and more had passed, and Otto was well again; and now,
escorted by One-eyed Hans and those faithful few who had clung to the
Baron Conrad through his last few bitter days, he was riding into the
quaint old town of Nurnburg; for the Emperor Rudolph was there at that
time, waiting for King Ottocar of Bohemia to come thither and answer the
imperial summons before the Council, and Otto was travelling to the court.</p>
<p>As they rode in through the gates of the town, Otto looked up at the
high-peaked houses with their overhanging gables, the like of which he had
never seen before, and he stared with his round blue eyes at seeing them
so crowded together along the length of the street. But most of all he
wondered at the number of people that passed hither and thither, jostling
each other in their hurry, and at the tradesmen's booths opening upon the
street with the wonderful wares hanging within; armor at the smiths,
glittering ornaments at the goldsmiths, and rich fabrics of silks and
satins at the mercers. He had never seen anything so rich and grand in all
of his life, for little Otto had never been in a town before.</p>
<p>"Oh! look," he cried, "at that wonderful lady; see, holy father! sure the
Emperor's wife can be no finer than that lady."</p>
<p>The Abbot smiled. "Nay, Otto," said he, "that is but a burgher's wife or
daughter; the ladies at the Emperor's court are far grander than such as
she."</p>
<p>"So!" said Otto, and then fell silent with wonder.</p>
<p>And now, at last the great moment had come when little Otto with his own
eyes was to behold the mighty Emperor who ruled over all the powerful
kingdoms of Germany and Austria, and Italy and Bohemia, and other kingdoms
and principalities and states. His heart beat so that he could hardly
speak as, for a moment, the good Abbot who held him by the hand stopped
outside of the arrased doorway to whisper some last instructions into his
ear. Then they entered the apartment.</p>
<p>It was a long, stone-paved room. The floor was covered with rich rugs and
the walls were hung with woven tapestry wherein were depicted knights and
ladies in leafy gardens and kings and warriors at battle. A long row of
high glazed windows extended along the length of the apartment, flooding
it with the mellow light of the autumn day. At the further end of the
room, far away, and standing by a great carved chimney place wherein
smouldered the remains of a fire, stood a group of nobles in gorgeous
dress of velvet and silks, and with glittering golden chains hung about
their necks.</p>
<p>One figure stood alone in front of the great yawning fireplace. His hands
were clasped behind him, and his look bent thoughtfully upon the floor. He
was dressed only in a simple gray robe without ornament or adornment, a
plain leathern belt girded his waist, and from it hung a sword with a bone
hilt encased in a brown leathern scabbard. A noble stag-hound lay close
behind him, curled up upon the floor, basking in the grateful warmth of
the fire.</p>
<p>As the Father Abbot and Otto drew near he raised his head and looked at
them. It was a plain, homely face that Otto saw, with a wrinkled forehead
and a long mouth drawn down at the corners. It was the face of a good,
honest burgher burdened with the cares of a prosperous trade. "Who can he
be," thought Otto, "and why does the poor man stand there among all the
great nobles?"</p>
<p>But the Abbot walked straight up to him and kneeled upon the floor, and
little Otto, full of wonder, did the same. It was the great Emperor
Rudolph.</p>
<p>"Who have we here," said the Emperor, and he bent his brow upon the Abbot
and the boy.</p>
<p>"Sire," said Abbot Otto, "we have humbly besought you by petition, in the
name of your late vassal, Baron Conrad of Vuelph of Drachenhausen, for
justice to this his son, the Baron Otto, whom, sire, as you may see, hath
been cruelly mutilated at the hands of Baron Henry of Roderburg of
Trutz-Drachen. He hath moreover been despoiled of his lands, his castle
burnt, and his household made prisoner."</p>
<p>The Emperor frowned until the shaggy eyebrows nearly hid the keen gray
twinkle of the eyes beneath. "Yes," said he, "I do remember me of that
petition, and have given it consideration both in private and in council."
He turned to the group of listening nobles. "Look," said he, "at this
little child marred by the inhumanity and the cruelty of those robber
villains. By heavens! I will put down their lawless rapine, if I have to
give every castle from the north to the south to the flames and to the
sword." Then turning to Otto again, "Poor little child," said he, "thy
wrongs shall be righted, and so far as they are able, those cruel
Roderburgs shall pay thee penny for penny, and grain for grain, for what
thou hast lost; and until such indemnity hath been paid the family of the
man who wrought this deed shall be held as surety."</p>
<p>Little Otto looked up in the kind, rugged face above him. "Nay, Lord
Emperor," said he, in his quaint, quiet way, "there are but two in the
family—the mother and the daughter—and I have promised to
marry the little girl when she and I are old enough; so, if you please, I
would not have harm happen to her."</p>
<p>The Emperor continued to look down at the kneeling boy, and at last he
gave a short, dry laugh. "So be it," said he, "thy plan is not without its
wisdom. Mayhap it is all for the best that the affair should be ended thus
peacefully. The estates of the Roderburgs shall be held in trust for thee
until thou art come of age; otherwise it shall be as thou hast proposed,
the little maiden shall be taken into ward under our own care. And as to
thee—art thou willing that I should take thee under my own charge in
the room of thy father, who is dead?"</p>
<p>"Aye," said Otto, simply, "I am willing, for it seems to me that thou art
a good man."</p>
<p>The nobles who stood near smiled at the boy's speech. As for the Emperor,
he laughed outright. "I give thee thanks, my Lord Baron," said he; "there
is no one in all my court who has paid me greater courtesy than that."</p>
<p>So comes the end of our tale.</p>
<p>But perhaps you may like to know what happened afterward, for no one cares
to leave the thread of a story without tying a knot in it.</p>
<p>Eight years had passed, and Otto grew up to manhood in the Emperor's
court, and was with him through war and peace.</p>
<p>But he himself never drew sword or struck a blow, for the right hand that
hung at his side was of pure silver, and the hard, cold fingers never
closed. Folks called him "Otto of the Silver Hand," but perhaps there was
another reason than that for the name that had been given him, for the
pure, simple wisdom that the old monks of the White Cross on the hill had
taught him, clung to him through all the honors that the Emperor bestowed
upon his favorite, and as he grew older his words were listened to and
weighed by those who were high in Council, and even by the Emperor
himself.</p>
<p>And now for the end of all.</p>
<p>One day Otto stood uncertainly at the doorway of a room in the imperial
castle, hesitating before he entered; and yet there was nothing so very
dreadful within, only one poor girl whose heart fluttered more than his.
Poor little Pauline, whom he had not seen since that last day in the black
cell at Trutz-Drachen.</p>
<p>At last he pushed aside the hangings and entered the room.</p>
<p>She was sitting upon a rude bench beside the window, looking at him out of
her great, dark eyes.</p>
<p>He stopped short and stood for a moment confused and silent; for he had no
thought in his mind but of the little girl whom he had last seen, and for
a moment he stood confused before the fair maiden with her great,
beautiful dark eyes.</p>
<p>She on her part beheld a tall, slender youth with curling, golden hair,
one hand white and delicate, the other of pure and shining silver.</p>
<p>He came to her and took her hand and set it to his lips, and all that she
could do was to gaze with her great, dark eyes upon the hero of whom she
had heard so many talk; the favorite of the Emperor; the wise young Otto
of the Silver Hand.</p>
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<h2> Afterword </h2>
<p>The ruins of Drachenhausen were rebuilt, for the walls were as sound as
ever, though empty and gaping to the sky; but it was no longer the den of
a robber baron for beneath the scutcheon over the great gate was carved a
new motto of the Vuelphs; a motto which the Emperor Rudolph himself had
given:</p>
<p>"Manus argentea quam manus ferrea melior est."</p>
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