"I talked to so many," said the other sadly. "They all scoffed at me."
"No, but the first one; the one that showed you that you had a bent towards it. Didn't you say that―"
"Oh, that one. That was at the beginning of our war. Do you remember telling me that your swineherd had an invisible cloak? It was he that―"
Merriwig looked at him sadly and shook his head.
"My poor friend," he said, "it was me."
They gazed at each other earnestly. Each of them was going over in his mind the exact details of that famous meeting.
"Yes," they murmured together, "it was us."
The King of Barodia's mind raced on through all the bitter months that had followed; he shivered as he thought of the things he had said; the things that had been said to him seemed of small account now.
"Not even a swineherd!" he remarked.
"Come, come," said Merriwig, "look on the bright side; you can always be a King again."
The late King of Barodia shook his head.
"It's a come down to a man with any pride," he said. "No, I'll stick to my own job. After all, I've been learning these last weeks; at any rate I know that what I do know isn't worth knowing, and that's something."
"Then stay with me," said Merriwig heartily. "My swineherd will teach you your work, and when he retires you can take it on."
"Do you mean it?"
"Of course I do. I shall be glad to have you about the place. In the evening, when the pigs are asleep, you can come in and have a chat with us."
"Bless you," said the new apprentice; "bless you, your Majesty."
They shook hands on it.
"My dear," said Merriwig to Belvane that evening, "you haven't married a very clever fellow. I discovered this afternoon that I'm not even as clever as I thought I was."
"You don't want cleverness in a King," said Belvane, smiling lovingly at him, "or in a husband."
"What do you want then?"
"Just dearness," said Belvane.
And now my story is done. With a sigh I unload the seventeen volumes of Euralian History from my desk, carrying them one by one across the library and placing them carefully in the shelf which has been built for them. For some months they have stood a rampart between me and the world, behind which I have lived in far–off days with Merriwig and Hyacinth and my Lady Belvane. The rampart is gone, and in the bright light of to–day which streams on to my desk the vision slowly fades. Once on a time . .
Yet I see one figure clearly still. He is tall and thin, with a white peaked face of which the long inquisitive nose is the outstanding feature. His hair is lank and uncared for; his russet smock, tied in at the waist, wants brushing; his untidy cross–gartered hose shows up the meagerness of his legs. No knightly figure this, yet I look upon him very tenderly. For it is Roger Scurvilegs on his way to the Palace for news.
To Roger too I must say good–bye. I say it not without remorse, for I feel that I have been hard upon the man to whom I owe so much. Perhaps it will not be altogether good–bye; in his seventeen volumes there are many other tales to be found. Next time (if there be a next time) I owe it to Roger to stand aside and let him tell the story more in his own way. I think he would like that.
But it shall not be a story about Belvane. I saw Belvane (or some one like her) at a country house in Shropshire last summer, and I know that Roger can never do her justice.