Page 27 of The Lost Prince


  When The Rat returned with a newspaper, Lazarus interposed between him and Marco with great and respectful ceremony. ‘Sir,’ he said to Marco, ‘I am at your command, but the Master left me with an order which I was to repeat to you. He requested you not to read the newspapers until he himself could see you again.’

  Both boys fell back.

  ‘Not read the papers!’ they exclaimed together.

  Lazarus had never before been quite so reverential and ceremonious.

  ‘Your pardon, sir,’ he said. ‘I may read them at your orders, and report such things as it is well that you should know. There have been dark tales told and there may be darker ones. He asked that you would not read for yourself. If you meet again – when you meet again’ – he corrected himself hastily – ‘when you meet again, he says you will understand. I am your servant. I will read and answer all such questions as I can.’

  The Rat handed him the paper and they returned to the back room together.

  ‘You shall tell us what he would wish us to hear,’ Marco said.

  The news was soon told. The story was not a long one as exact details had not yet reached London. It was briefly that the head of the Maranovitch party had been put to death by infuriated soldiers of his own army. It was an army drawn chiefly from a peasantry which did not love its leaders, or wish to fight, and suffering and brutal treatment had at last roused it to furious revolt.

  ‘What next?’ said Marco.

  ‘If I were a Samavian –’ began The Rat and then he stopped.

  Lazarus stood biting his lips, but staring stonily at the carpet. Not The Rat alone but Marco also noted a grim change in him. It was grim because it suggested that he was holding himself under an iron control. It was as if while tortured by anxiety he had sworn not to allow himself to look anxious and the resolve set his jaw hard and carved new lines in his rugged face. Each boy thought this in secret, but did not wish to put it into words. If he was anxious, he could only be so for one reason, and each realised what the reason must be. Loristan had gone to Samavia – to the torn and bleeding country filled with riot and danger. If he had gone, it could only have been because its danger called him and he went to face it at its worst. Lazarus had been left behind to watch over them. Silence was still the order, and what he knew he could not tell them, and perhaps he knew little more than that a great life might be lost.

  Because his master was absent, the old soldier seemed to feel that he must comfort himself with a greater ceremonial reverence than he had ever shown before. He held himself within call, and at Marco’s orders, as it had been his custom to hold himself with regard to Loristan. The ceremonious service even extended itself to The Rat, who appeared to have taken a new place in his mind. He also seemed now to be a person to be waited upon and replied to with dignity and formal respect.

  When the evening meal was served, Lazarus drew out Loristan’s chair at the head of the table and stood behind it with a majestic air.

  ‘Sir,’ he said to Marco, ‘the Master requested that you take his seat at the table until – while he is not with you.’

  Marco took the seat in silence.

  At two o’clock in the morning, when the roaring road was still, the light from the street lamp, shining into the small bedroom, fell on two pale boy faces. The Rat sat up on his sofa bed in the old way with his hands clasped round his knees. Marco lay flat on his hard pillow. Neither of them had been to sleep and yet they had not talked a great deal. Each had secretly guessed a good deal of what the other did not say.

  ‘There is one thing we must remember,’ Marco had said, early in the night. ‘We must not be afraid.’

  ‘No,’ answered The Rat, almost fiercely, ‘we must not be afraid.’

  ‘We are tired; we came back expecting to be able to tell it all to him. We have always been looking forward to that. We never thought once that he might be gone. And he was gone. Did you feel as if –’ he turned towards the sofa, ‘as if something had struck you on the chest?’

  ‘Yes,’ The Rat answered heavily. ‘Yes.’

  ‘We weren’t ready,’ said Marco. ‘He had never gone before; but we ought to have known he might some day be – called. He went because he was called. He told us to wait. We don’t know what we are waiting for, but we know that we must not be afraid. To let ourselves be afraid would be breaking the Law.’

  ‘The Law!’ groaned The Rat, dropping his head on his hands, ‘I’d forgotten about it.’

  ‘Let us remember it,’ said Marco. ‘This is the time. “Hate not. Fear not!”’ He repeated the last words again and again. ‘Fear not! Fear not,’ he said. ‘Nothing can harm him.’

  The Rat lifted his head, and looked at the bed sideways.

  ‘Did you think –’ he said slowly – ‘did you ever think that perhaps he knew where the descendant of the Lost Prince was?’

  Marco answered even more slowly.

  ‘If anyone knew – surely he might. He has known so much,’ he said.

  ‘Listen to this!’ broke forth The Rat. ‘I believe he has gone to tell the people. If he does – if he could show them – all the country would run mad with joy. It wouldn’t be only the Secret Party. All Samavia would rise and follow any flag he chose to raise. They’ve prayed for the Lost Prince for five hundred years, and if they believed they’d got him once more, they’d fight like madmen for him. But there would not be any one to fight. They’d all want the same thing! If they could see the man with Ivor’s blood in his veins, they’d feel he had come back to them – risen from the dead. They’d believe it!’

  He beat his fists together in his frenzy of excitement. ‘It’s the time! It’s the time!’ he cried. ‘No man could let such a chance go by! He must tell them – he must. That must be what he’s gone for. He knows – he knows – he’s always known!’ And he threw himself back on his sofa and flung his arms over his face, lying there panting.

  ‘If it is the time,’ said Marco in a low, strained voice – ‘if it is, and he knows – he will tell them.’ And he threw his arms up over his own face and lay quite still.

  Neither of them said another word, and the street lamp shone in on them as if it were waiting for something to happen. But nothing happened. In time they were asleep.

  chapter twenty-nine

  ’twixt night and morning

  After this, they waited. They did not know what they waited for, nor could they guess even vaguely how the waiting would end. All that Lazarus could tell them he told. He would have been willing to stand respectfully for hours relating to Marco the story of how the period of their absence had passed for his Master and himself. He told how Loristan had spoken each day of his son, how he had often been pale with anxiousness, how in the evenings he had walked to and fro in his room, deep in thought, as he looked down unseeingly at the carpet.

  ‘He permitted me to talk of you, sir,’ Lazarus said. ‘I saw that he wished to hear your name often. I reminded him of the times when you had been so young that most children of your age would have been in the hands of nurses, and yet you were strong and silent and sturdy and travelled with us as if you were not a child at all – never crying when you were tired and were not properly fed. As if you understood – as if you understood,’ he added, proudly. ‘If, through the power of God a creature can be a man at six years old, you were that one. Many a dark day I have looked into your solemn, watching eyes, and have been half afraid; because that a child should answer one’s gaze so gravely seemed almost an unearthly thing.’

  ‘The chief thing I remember of those days,’ said Marco, ‘is that he was with me, and that whenever I was hungry or tired, I knew he must be, too.’

  The feeling that they were ‘waiting’ was so intense that it filled the days with strangeness. When the postman’s knock was heard at the door, each of them endeavoured not to start. A letter might some day come which would tell them – they did not know what. But no letters came. When they went out into the streets, they found themselves hurrying on their
way back in spite of themselves. Something might have happened. Lazarus read the papers faithfully, and in the evening told Marco and The Rat all the news it was ‘well that they should hear’. But the disorders of Samavia had ceased to occupy much space. They had become an old story, and after the excitement of the assassination of Michael Maranovitch had died out, there seemed to be a lull in events. Michael’s son had not dared to try to take his father’s place, and there were rumours that he also had been killed. The head of the Iarovitch had declared himself king but had not been crowned because of disorders in his own party. The country seemed existing in a nightmare of suffering, famine and suspense.

  ‘Samavia is “waiting” too,’ The Rat broke forth one night as they talked together, ‘but it won’t wait long – it can’t. If I were a Samavian and in Samavia –’

  ‘My father is a Samavian and he is in Samavia,’ Marco’s grave young voice interposed.

  The Rat flushed red as he realised what he had said. ‘What a fool I am!’ he groaned. ‘I – I beg your pardon – sir.’ He stood up when he said the last words and added the ‘sir’ as if he suddenly realised that there was a distance between them which was something akin to the distance between youth and maturity – but yet was not the same.

  ‘You are a good Samavian but – you forget,’ was Marco’s answer.

  Lazarus’ intense grimness increased with each day that passed. The ceremonious respectfulness of his manner toward Marco increased also. It seemed as if the more anxious he felt the more formal and stately his bearing became. It was as though he braced his own courage by doing the smallest things life in the back sitting room required as if they were of the dignity of services performed in a much larger place and under much more imposing circumstances. The Rat found himself feeling almost as if he were an equerry in a court, and that dignity and ceremony were necessary on his own part. He began to experience a sense of being somehow a person of rank, for whom doors were opened grandly and who had vassals at his command. The watchful obedience of fifty vassals embodied itself in the manner of Lazarus.

  ‘I am glad,’ The Rat said once, reflectively, ‘that, after all my father was once – different. It makes it easier to learn things perhaps. If he had not talked to me about people who – well, who had never seen places like Bone Court – this might have been harder for me to understand.’

  When at last they managed to call The Squad together, and went to spend a morning at the Barracks behind the churchyard, that body of armed men stared at their commander in great and amazed uncertainty. They felt that something had happened to him. They did not know what had happened, but it was some experience which had made him mysteriously different. He did not look like Marco, but in some extraordinary way he seemed more akin to him. They only knew that some necessity in Loristan’s affairs had taken the two away from London and the Game. Now they had come back, and they seemed older.

  At first, The Squad felt awkward and shuffled its feet uncomfortably. After the first greetings it did not know exactly what to say. It was Marco who saved the situation.

  ‘Drill us first,’ he said to The Rat, ‘then we can talk about the Game.’

  ‘’Tention!’ shouted The Rat, magnificently. And then they forgot everything else and sprang into line. After the drill was ended, and they sat in a circle on the broken flags, the Game became more resplendent than it had ever been.

  ‘I’ve had time to read and work out new things,’ The Rat said. ‘Reading is like travelling.’

  Marco himself sat and listened, enthralled by the adroitness of the imagination he displayed. Without revealing a single dangerous fact he built up, of their journeyings and experiences, a totally new structure of adventures which would have fired the whole being of any group of lads. It was safe to describe places and people, and he so described them that The Squad squirmed in its delight at feeling itself marching in a procession attending the Emperor in Vienna; standing in line before palaces; climbing, with knapsacks strapped tight, up precipitous mountain roads; defending mountain-fortresses; and storming Samavian castles.

  The Squad glowed and exulted. The Rat glowed and exulted himself. Marco watched his sharp-featured, burning-eyed face with wonder and admiration. This strange power of making things alive was, he knew, what his father would call ‘genius’.

  ‘Let’s take the oath of ’legiance again,’ shouted Cad, when the Game was over for the morning.

  ‘The papers never said nothin’ more about the Lost Prince, but we are all for him yet! Let’s take it!’ So they stood in line again, Marco at the head, and renewed their oath.

  ‘The sword in my hand – for Samavia!

  ‘The heart in my breast – for Samavia!

  ‘The swiftness of my sight, the thought of my brain, the life of my life – for Samavia.

  ‘Here grow twelve men – for Samavia.

  ‘God be thanked!’

  It was more solemn than it had been the first time. The Squad felt it tremendously. Both Cad and Ben were conscious that thrills ran down their spines into their boots. When Marco and The Rat left them, they first stood at salute and then broke out into a ringing cheer.

  On their way home, The Rat asked Marco a question.

  ‘Did you see Mrs Beedle standing at the top of the basement steps and looking after us when we went out this morning?’

  Mrs Beedle was the landlady of the lodgings at No. 7 Philibert Place. She was a mysterious and dusty female, who lived in the ‘cellar kitchen’ part of the house and was seldom seen by her lodgers.

  ‘Yes,’ answered Marco, ‘I have seen her two or three times lately, and I do not think I ever saw her before. My father has never seen her, though Lazarus says she used to watch him round corners. Why is she suddenly so curious about us?’

  ‘I’d like to know,’ said The Rat. ‘I’ve been trying to work it out. Ever since we came back, she’s been peeping round the door of the kitchen stairs, or over balustrades, or through the cellar-kitchen windows. I believe she wants to speak to you, and knows Lazarus won’t let her if he catches her at it. When Lazarus is about, she always darts back.’

  ‘What does she want to say?’ said Marco.

  ‘I’d like to know,’ said The Rat again.

  When they reached No. 7 Philibert Place, they found out, because when the door opened they saw at the top of the cellar-kitchen stairs at the end of the passage, the mysterious Mrs Beedle, in her dusty black dress and with a dusty black cap on, evidently having that minute mounted from her subterranean hiding place. She had come up the steps so quickly that Lazarus had not yet seen her.

  ‘Young Master Loristan!’ she called out authoritatively. Lazarus wheeled about fiercely.

  ‘Silence!’ he commanded. ‘How dare you address the young Master?’

  She snapped her fingers at him, and marched forward folding her arms tightly. ‘You mind your own business,’ she said. ‘It’s young Master Loristan I’m speaking to, not his servant. It’s time he was talked to about this.’

  ‘Silence, woman!’ shouted Lazarus.

  ‘Let her speak,’ said Marco. ‘I want to hear. What is it you wish to say, Madam? My father is not here.’

  ‘That’s just what I want to find out about,’ put in the woman. ‘When is he coming back?’

  ‘I do not know,’ answered Marco.

  ‘That’s it,’ said Mrs Beedle. ‘You’re old enough to understand that two big lads and a big fellow like that can’t have food and lodgin’s for nothing. You may say you don’t live high – and you don’t – but lodgin’s are lodgin’s and rent is rent. If your father’s coming back and you can tell me when, I mayn’t be obliged to let the rooms over your heads; but I know too much about foreigners to let bills run when they are out of sight. Your father’s out of sight. He,’ jerking her head towards Lazarus, ‘paid me for last week. How do I know he will pay me for this week!’

  ‘The money is ready,’ roared Lazarus.

  The Rat longed to burst forth. He knew what people
in Bone Court said to a woman like that; he knew the exact words and phrases. But they were not words and phrases an aide-de-camp might deliver himself of in the presence of his superior officer; they were not words and phrases an equerry uses at court. He dare not allow himself to burst forth. He stood with flaming eyes and a flaming face, and bit his lips till they bled. He wanted to strike with his crutches. The son of Stefan Loristan! The Bearer of the Sign! There sprang up before his furious eyes the picture of the luridly lighted cavern and the frenzied crowd of men kneeling at this same boy’s feet, kissing them, kissing his hands, his garments, the very earth he stood upon, worshipping him, while above the altar the kingly young face looked on with the nimbus of light like a halo above it. If he dared speak his mind now, he felt he could have endured it better. But being an aide-de-camp he could not.

  ‘Do you want the money now?’ asked Marco. ‘It is only the beginning of the week and we do not owe it to you until the week is over. Is it that you want to have it now?’

  Lazarus had become deadly pale. He looked huge in his fury, and he looked dangerous.

  ‘Young Master,’ he said slowly, in a voice as deadly as his pallor, and he actually spoke low, ‘this woman –’

  Mrs Beedle drew back towards the cellar-kitchen steps.

  ‘There’s police outside,’ she shrilled. ‘Young Master Loristan, order him to stand back.’

  ‘No one will hurt you,’ said Marco. ‘If you have the money here, Lazarus, please give it to me.’

  Lazarus literally ground his teeth. But he drew himself up and saluted with ceremony. He put his hand in his breast pocket and produced an old leather wallet. There were but a few coins in it. He pointed to a gold one.

  ‘I obey you, sir – since I must –’ he said, breathing hard. ‘That one will pay her for the week.’ Marco took out the sovereign and held it out to the woman.

  ‘You hear what he says,’ he said. ‘At the end of this week if there is not enough to pay for the next, we will go.’