thought of them there also. Let the recollection of them pass entirely from your mind, to be revived only when you receive a direct order under my own hand and seal. From this time onwards you forget all that has passed."
"I forget it, sire," said I.
We rode together to the edge of the town, where he desired that I should separate from him. I had saluted, and was turning my horse, when he called me back.
"It is easy to mistake the points of the compass in the forest," said he. "Would you not say that it was in the north-eastern corner that we buried them?"
"Buried what, sire?"
"The papers, of course," he cried, impatiently.
"What papers, sire?"
"Name of a name! Why, the papers that you have recovered for me."
"I am really at a loss to know what your Majesty is talking about."
He flushed with anger for a moment, and then he burst out laughing.
"Very good, Brigadier!" he cried. "I begin to believe that you are as good a diplomatist as you are a soldier, and I cannot say more than that."
So that was my strange adventure in which I