Call me Kronstein now with a sneer in your voice, Dennis. They'll all call me Emperor soon enough. I take you now. All of you. And then you die.

DENNIS

Why not before? Why did you wait until now?

THE EMPEROR

Because I needed the strength that came from one last performance – your strength and mine. Your strength become mine. Now you die – you, the imposter, the madman – and I become you. I become Dennis Hamilton. The actor became the character, and now the character becomes the actor. Artistic perfection. You should be very proud.

''You shall not let me make my announcement?''

To the audience and Curt Wynn in his aerie, Kronstein's line came only a second upon the heels of Dennis's. 'They're picking it up,' Curt said. 'Thank God they're actually picking it up.'

''If you were to make it looking like that, I should be the one bound to it.'“

“Enough talk.' Curt thought he saw Wallace Drummond's mouth move, but it was Dennis's voice he heard. 'We end it now.'

'That's not the line,' Curt moaned, his legendary calm at the breaking point. 'And who the hell said it?' He pressed his face to the glass as he saw what Kronstein did next. 'He's drawing his saber. His goddamned saber! And so's Dennis! They're going to start the duel early!' With a sigh of frustration, Curt dropped into his chair. 'What about Kronstein and Kruger killing Maria? Where did the plot go?' He turned to the electrician. 'Did we have a plot here somewhere?'

The electrician shrugged, and in another moment Curt was relieved to hear a close approximation of one of the original lines.

''Pray to your God. From this day on, I am the Emperor.''

'God damn,' Curt whispered, finally beginning to be scared. 'Which one of them said that?'

~* ~

Dex Colangelo gave the downbeat to the orchestra when he saw the sabers cross. He didn't know what else to do. At least with the music under way he would be kept busy, and if Dennis and Wallace Drummond wanted to just keep improvising, Dex could have the orchestra play repeat after repeat. Hell, they could play all night if they had to, until somebody finally extemporized an exit line.

~* ~

Cissy Morrison had a grip of iron on Evan's arm. She was not the first to whisper, 'That's not Dennis,' but her surprise at that conclusion was as great as anyone's. 'Evan, that's your dad! He's playing Kronstein! Is this a trick or what?'

Evan leaned forward, looked closely at the two men dueling with sabers on the stage. He had been paying such close attention to Dennis and his condition that he had glanced at Kronstein only once, and marveled at how close the resemblance was before he had turned his attention back to Dennis. Now, as he examined both men, he realized that they were identical, perfectly identical, and, with a shock, he knew who was playing Kronstein.

'The Emperor,' he said, his eyes wide enough to still Cissy Morrison. 'It's him.'

What ran through Evan then was that he should push himself to his feet, run up onto the stage, and aid his father in any way he could, but when he thought of standing alone in front of all those thousands of people, a vicious jolt of fear shot through him. It weakened his legs, set him sweating, constricted the muscles of his throat, and he knew that even if the Emperor were to slice his father apart, he could do nothing but watch.

'The Emperor,' Cissy repeated, and looked back to the stage. 'It is. Dennis is the Emperor. But that Kronstein… oh my God… how can they both be Dennis?'

~* ~

The sabers were out now, and both Dennis and the Emperor went into an en garde stance. The Emperor advanced first, a furious attack that drove Dennis up right to the back flat, so that he bumped against it, making the canvas ripple.

The thought struck Dennis that it was a revelation of artifice to the audience, and he was surprised to find that it angered him. To an audience, the theatre should be real.

At the Emperor's next attack, Dennis parried weakly but effectively, gaining his freedom so that he and the creature now stood parallel to the line of the proscenium. They stood there for only a moment.

~* ~

THE EMPEROR

You fight like an old woman. Is this the best that your dancing master could teach you?

DENNIS

It won't work. Your plot won't work.

THE EMPEROR

It will.

DENNIS

They see me, they see you. They know who I am now.

THE EMPEROR

Now they do. Yes…

~* ~

'Dan, I can hardly tell them apart, it's wonderful.'

Patty Munro clutched her husband's arm, her attention glued to the duel on the stage. As far as she was concerned, the whole night had been wonderful. She had never expected to see so many celebrities in one place, and here she was sitting among them. Thank God she had gone out and bought a new dress for the occasion. At first she had felt like a housewife amidst the glitterati, but that feeling had been quickly replaced by awe, as she brushed shoulders with the famous, recognized faces she had seen before only on the television screen or in the movies.

The only stage shows Patty Munro had seen, short of her high school's productions of Damn Yankees and Arsenic and Old Lace, were a local dinner theatre's truncated version of Sweeney Todd and a touring company of Cats in Philadelphia, to which Dan had taken her for their fifteenth wedding anniversary. She had loved it, but it hadn't had all the dialogue that A Private Empire had.

Patty, to give her credit, had been very uncritical of Dennis Hamilton's performance. At intermission, when Dan had mentioned that the Emperor Frederick seemed far less imperial toward the end of the act, Patty said, 'It's no wonder. After what you've told me, I'm sure he had a lot on his mind. I don't know how he can remember all those lines in the first place.'

Now she watched the duel with intense interest. The seats, she thought, were wonderful – second row of the loge, so that the entire stage was visible, and Patty's view was further aided by the shortness of the woman in front of her, who Patty knew she had seen in a TV movie, but couldn't remember which.

'Now this is good,' she whispered to Dan. 'I mean, it seems so real right now. Oh!'

This last exclamation was produced by a savage move on the part of the actor playing Kronstein's part. He pressed Frederick back with a rapid series of feints and attacks which Frederick seemed scarcely to be able to parry…

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