Observe the guile of it: he knew that if anything appealed to Franz-Josef it was an honourable scar; he was soldier-daft and had himself risked life and limb with extraordinary stupidity during his various campaigns—all of which he’d lost, by the way. So now you find Flashy lying trowserless while the doctor goggled at the impressive scar on my thigh, and the knee wound I’d taken at Harper’s Ferry, and even the hole in my buttock where the slave catchers shot me while crossing the frozen Ohio, with Willem murmuring to an impressed Franz-Josef that this wasn’t the half of it, you ought to see the rest of the bugger’s carcase, not an inch of it whole, I assure your majesty, hell of a life the boy’s led, honestly. Or words to that effect.
The Emperor shook his head in respectful wonder, and the linseed lancer, taking his cue, muttered about secondary reaction and delayed muscular lesions; it might well be, he opined, that even a minor contusion might render a limb temporarily incapable. At which Willem played his master-stroke.
"Well, old feller, I can see we’ll just have to carry you down to Ischl! Is the thigh very painful? Ne’er mind, I’ll whistle up a chair or something, and a few handy chaps … if your majesty," says he, with another bow and heel-click, "will be gracious enough to allow my friend to rest here while I make arrangements … no more than an hour … profound apologies … great imposition … there, there, old chap, just bite on something …"
It would have had Scrooge piping his eye. Franz-Josef glowered at the doctor and said it would be unwise to move me, surely, and the poultice-walloper agreed that it would be nothing short of bloody reckless. Richtig, announced Franz-Josef, then the gentle-man stays here, at least until he can walk without difficulty, so fall in the loyal attendants.
Willem’s protests were pretty to hear, but Franz-Josef wouldn’t even listen. Unthinkable that I should be moved in my present state. It would be a privilege to entertain so gallant an officer, to whom his majesty was already indebted for services to the royal family. Count Starnberg must remain also. If my injury permitted, we would give the Emperor the pleasure of our company at dinner. In the meantime, affairs required his attendance elsewhere.
By this time I was beginning to wonder if I’d ever walk again, and it was with some relief that I discovered, after I’d been borne upstairs between two servants and left in a comfortable chamber overlooking the garden, that I could move without the least difficulty, and was none the worse except for an uncomfortable bruise. Willem suggested that I should recover sufficiently to hobble by dinner-time. "We’re goin' to be afoot tonight," says he, "and it wouldn’t do for you to be encountered walkin' if you were meant to be bed-bound, you poor old cripple, you." He was in bouncy fettle, inviting me to admire the way everything had gone exactly according to plan, pacing up and down with his cigarette-holder at a jaunty angle. "A heavy limp, I think, with the aid of a stick. Too late for F-J to turn us out of doors now, what?"
I asked how on earth he’d known so much about my wounds, and received his superior grin. "You can’t get it into your head, can you? Bismarck has a genius for detail—why, I know as much about your battle scars as you do!" He reached suddenly to tousle my hair, curse him. "Got yourself scalped by Indians in the wild and woolly west, even! Oh, yes," says the insolent pup, "I’ve seen a dossier on you that I’ll bet contains things you’ve forgotten—perhaps never knew. You’ve been about, though—my stars, I hope I’ll see half as much by the end of the day." He shook his handsome head, and the admiring look of our first meeting was back again.
"The guv’nor was right—you’re the complete hand and no mistake. On that train, there you were, wonderin' what the dooce you’d fallen into, ensnared by a sinister adventuress, menaced by a bravo with a pistol—but did you cry havoc, or bluster, or vow to have the law on us? Well, once—and then mum as an oyster, figurin' chances, listenin' and bidin' your time. I didn’t trust you an inch, then; Kralta did, though, and she’s no fool, even if she is spoony about you. But it took that business of Gunther gettin' scragged at the casino to convince me—then I knew you must be with us!" He grinned, tongue in cheek. "And it ain’t for Franz-Josef or the good o' the peace, is it? It’s just for devilment!" He slapped his knee, merry as a maggot. "I like you, Harry, shot if I don’t! And we’ll have some fun together, just you wait and see!"