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me things are inevitable." Suddenly the car stopped. The girl made a movement as though she would rise, but the man's arm quietly stretched itself across before her, not touching her, but forming an effective barrier. She did not speak, but her eyes blazed indignantly. For the first time he was able to return her gaze directly, and as she looked into the unflinching gray pupils, under the level brows, there was a momentary combat, then her own dropped. He sat for a space with his arm outstretched, holding her prisoner in the seat. "Your Highness"--he spoke as impersonally as a judge ruling from the bench--"I must remind you again that I am your escort to-night only in order that someone else may not be. What his plans were, I need not now say, but I know, and it became my duty to thwart him. It is hardly necessary to explain how I discovered Mr. Benton's purpose. It was not easy, but it has been accomplished. I have acquainted myself with his movements, his intention, and his preparations; I have even counterfeited his masquerade and stolen his car. There are bigger things at stake than individual wishes. I stand for the throne. Mr. Benton has played a daring game--and lost." He paused, and she found herself watching with a strange fascination the face almost marble-like in its steadiness. "Some day--perhaps soon," he went on, the arm unmoved, "you will be Queen of Galavia." She shuddered. "You can then strip away my epaulets if you choose. For the moment, however, I must regard you as a prisoner of war and ask your parole, as a gentleman and an officer, not to leave the car while I investigate the trouble with the motor. Otherwise--" he added composedly, "we shall have to remain as we are." She hesitated, her chin thrown up and her eyes blazing; then, with a glance at the unmoving arm, she bowed reluctant assent. "All I promise is to remain in the car," she said. "May I go back into the tonneau?" Satisfying himself that the engine was temporarily dead, he responded, with a half-smile, "That promise I think is sufficient." He bent to his task of diagnosis. After much futile spinning of the crank, he rose and contemplated the stalled engine. "Since this machine went out with lamps unlighted, and I have no matches in this garb, I must go to that farmhouse up the hillside--where the light shines through the trees--. Will Your Highness regard your parole as effective until my return, not to leave the
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