<SPAN name="chap25"></SPAN>
<h3> XXV </h3>
<h3> A VOICE IN THE NIGHT </h3>
<p>Late that afternoon there wandered about the gardens two quiet,
inconspicuous, rather poorly dressed boys. They looked at the palace,
the shrubs, and the flower-beds, as strangers usually did, and they sat
on the seats and talked as people were accustomed to seeing boys talk
together. It was a sunny day and exceptionally warm, and there were
more saunterers and sitters than usual, which was perhaps the reason
why the <i><i>portier</i></i> at the entrance gates gave such slight notice to the
pair that he did not observe that, though two boys came in, only one
went out. He did not, in fact, remember, when he saw The Rat swing by
on his crutches at closing-time, that he had entered in company with a
dark-haired lad who walked without any aid. It happened that, when
The Rat passed out, the <i><i>portier</i></i> at the entrance was much interested in
the aspect of the sky, which was curiously threatening. There had been
heavy clouds hanging about all day and now and then blotting out the
sunshine entirely, but the sun had refused to retire altogether. Just
now, however, the clouds had piled themselves in thunderous, purplish
mountains, and the sun had been forced to set behind them.</p>
<p>"It's been a sort of battle since morning," the <i><i>portier</i></i> said. "There
will be some crashes and cataracts to-night." That was what The Rat
had thought when they had sat in the Fountain Garden on a seat which
gave them a good view of the balcony and the big evergreen shrub, which
they knew had the hollow in the middle, though its circumference was so
imposing. "If there should be a big storm, the evergreen will not save
you much, though it may keep off the worst," The Rat said. "I wish
there was room for two."</p>
<p>He would have wished there was room for two if he had seen Marco
marching to the stake. As the gardens emptied, the boys rose and
walked round once more, as if on their way out. By the time they had
sauntered toward the big evergreen, nobody was in the Fountain Garden,
and the last loiterers were moving toward the arched stone entrance to
the streets.</p>
<p>When they drew near one side of the evergreen, the two were together.
When The Rat swung out on the other side of it, he was alone! No one
noticed that anything had happened; no one looked back. So The Rat
swung down the walks and round the flower-beds and passed into the
street. And the <i><i>portier</i></i> looked at the sky and made his remark about
the "crashes" and "cataracts."</p>
<p>As the darkness came on, the hollow in the shrub seemed a very safe
place. It was not in the least likely that any one would enter the
closed gardens; and if by rare chance some servant passed through, he
would not be in search of people who wished to watch all night in the
middle of an evergreen instead of going to bed and to sleep. The
hollow was well inclosed with greenery, and there was room to sit down
when one was tired of standing.</p>
<p>Marco stood for a long time because, by doing so, he could see plainly
the windows opening on the balcony if he gently pushed aside some
flexible young boughs. He had managed to discover in his first visit
to the gardens that the windows overlooking the Fountain Garden were
those which belonged to the Prince's own suite of rooms. Those which
opened on to the balcony lighted his favorite apartment, which
contained his best-loved books and pictures and in which he spent most
of his secluded leisure hours.</p>
<p>Marco watched these windows anxiously. If the Prince had not gone to
Budapest,—if he were really only in retreat, and hiding from his gay
world among his treasures,—he would be living in his favorite rooms
and lights would show themselves. And if there were lights, he might
pass before a window because, since he was inclosed in his garden, he
need not fear being seen. The twilight deepened into darkness and,
because of the heavy clouds, it was very dense. Faint gleams showed
themselves in the lower part of the palace, but none was lighted in the
windows Marco watched. He waited so long that it became evident that
none was to be lighted at all. At last he loosed his hold on the young
boughs and, after standing a few moments in thought, sat down upon the
earth in the midst of his embowered tent. The Prince was not in his
retreat; he was probably not in Vienna, and the rumor of his journey to
Budapest had no doubt been true. So much time lost through making a
mistake—but it was best to have made the venture. Not to have made it
would have been to lose a chance. The entrance was closed for the
night and there was no getting out of the gardens until they were
opened for the next day. He must stay in his hiding-place until the
time when people began to come and bring their books and knitting and
sit on the seats. Then he could stroll out without attracting
attention. But he had the night before him to spend as best he could.
That would not matter at all. He could tuck his cap under his head and
go to sleep on the ground. He could command himself to waken once
every half-hour and look for the lights. He would not go to sleep until
it was long past midnight—so long past that there would not be one
chance in a hundred that anything could happen. But the clouds which
made the night so dark were giving forth low rumbling growls. At
intervals a threatening gleam of light shot across them and a sudden
swish of wind rushed through the trees in the garden. This happened
several times, and then Marco began to hear the patter of raindrops.
They were heavy and big drops, but few at first, and then there was a
new and more powerful rush of wind, a jagged dart of light in the sky,
and a tremendous crash. After that the clouds tore themselves open and
poured forth their contents in floods. After the protracted struggle
of the day it all seemed to happen at once, as if a horde of huge lions
had at one moment been let loose: flame after flame of lightning, roar
and crash and sharp reports of thunder, shrieks of hurricane wind,
torrents of rain, as if some tidal-wave of the skies had gathered and
rushed and burst upon the earth. It was such a storm as people
remember for a lifetime and which in few lifetimes is seen at all.</p>
<p>Marco stood still in the midst of the rage and flooding, blinding roar
of it. After the first few minutes he knew he could do nothing to
shield himself. Down the garden paths he heard cataracts rushing. He
held his cap pressed against his eyes because he seemed to stand in the
midst of darting flames. The crashes, cannon reports and thunderings,
and the jagged streams of light came so close to one another that he
seemed deafened as well as blinded. He wondered if he should ever be
able to hear human voices again when it was over. That he was drenched
to the skin and that the water poured from his clothes as if he were
himself a cataract was so small a detail that he was scarcely aware of
it. He stood still, bracing his body, and waited. If he had been a
Samavian soldier in the trenches and such a storm had broken upon him
and his comrades, they could only have braced themselves and waited.
This was what he found himself thinking when the tumult and downpour
were at their worst. There were men who had waited in the midst of a
rain of bullets.</p>
<p>It was not long after this thought had come to him that there occurred
the first temporary lull in the storm. Its fury perhaps reached its
height and broke at that moment. A yellow flame had torn its jagged
way across the heavens, and an earth-rending crash had thundered itself
into rumblings which actually died away before breaking forth again.
Marco took his cap from his eyes and drew a long breath. He drew two
long breaths. It was as he began drawing a third and realizing the
strange feeling of the almost stillness about him that he heard a new
kind of sound at the side of the garden nearest his hiding-place. It
sounded like the creak of a door opening somewhere in the wall behind
the laurel hedge. Some one was coming into the garden by a private
entrance. He pushed aside the young boughs again and tried to see, but
the darkness was too dense. Yet he could hear if the thunder would not
break again. There was the sound of feet on the wet gravel, the
footsteps of more than one person coming toward where he stood, but not
as if afraid of being heard; merely as if they were at liberty to come
in by what entrance they chose. Marco remained very still. A sudden
hope gave him a shock of joy. If the man with the tired face chose to
hide himself from his acquaintances, he might choose to go in and out
by a private entrance. The footsteps drew near, crushing the wet
gravel, passed by, and seemed to pause somewhere near the balcony; and
then flame lit up the sky again and the thunder burst forth once more.</p>
<p>But this was its last great peal. The storm was at an end. Only
fainter and fainter rumblings and mutterings and paler and paler darts
followed. Even they were soon over, and the cataracts in the paths had
rushed themselves silent. But the darkness was still deep.</p>
<p>It was deep to blackness in the hollow of the evergreen. Marco stood
in it, streaming with rain, but feeling nothing because he was full of
thought. He pushed aside his greenery and kept his eyes on the place
in the blackness where the windows must be, though he could not see
them. It seemed that he waited a long time, but he knew it only seemed
so really. He began to breathe quickly because he was waiting for
something.</p>
<p>Suddenly he saw exactly where the windows were—because they were all
lighted!</p>
<p>His feeling of relief was great, but it did not last very long. It was
true that something had been gained in the certainty that his man had
not left Vienna. But what next? It would not be so easy to follow him
if he chose only to go out secretly at night. What next? To spend the
rest of the night watching a lighted window was not enough. To-morrow
night it might not be lighted. But he kept his gaze fixed upon it. He
tried to fix all his will and thought-power on the person inside the
room. Perhaps he could reach him and make him listen, even though he
would not know that any one was speaking to him. He knew that thoughts
were strong things. If angry thoughts in one man's mind will create
anger in the mind of another, why should not sane messages cross the
line?</p>
<p>"I must speak to you. I must speak to you!" he found himself saying in
a low intense voice. "I am outside here waiting. Listen! I must speak
to you!"</p>
<p>He said it many times and kept his eyes fixed upon the window which
opened on to the balcony. Once he saw a man's figure cross the room,
but he could not be sure who it was. The last distant rumblings of
thunder had died away and the clouds were breaking. It was not long
before the dark mountainous billows broke apart, and a brilliant full
moon showed herself sailing in the rift, suddenly flooding everything
with light. Parts of the garden were silver white, and the tree
shadows were like black velvet. A silvery lance pierced even into the
hollow of Marco's evergreen and struck across his face.</p>
<p>Perhaps it was this sudden change which attracted the attention of
those inside the balconied room. A man's figure appeared at the long
windows. Marco saw now that it was the Prince. He opened the windows
and stepped out on to the balcony.</p>
<p>"It is all over," he said quietly. And he stood with his face lifted,
looking at the great white sailing moon.</p>
<p>He stood very still and seemed for the moment to forget the world and
himself. It was a wonderful, triumphant queen of a moon. But something
brought him back to earth. A low, but strong and clear, boy-voice came
up to him from the garden path below.</p>
<p>"The Lamp is lighted. The Lamp is lighted," it said, and the words
sounded almost as if some one were uttering a prayer. They seemed to
call to him, to arrest him, to draw him.</p>
<p>He stood still a few seconds in dead silence. Then he bent over the
balustrade. The moonlight had not broken the darkness below.</p>
<p>"That is a boy's voice," he said in a low tone, "but I cannot see who
is speaking."</p>
<p>"Yes, it is a boy's voice," it answered, in a way which somehow moved
him, because it was so ardent. "It is the son of Stefan Loristan. The
Lamp is lighted."</p>
<p>"Wait. I am coming down to you," the Prince said.</p>
<p>In a few minutes Marco heard a door open gently not far from where he
stood. Then the man he had been following so many days appeared at his
side.</p>
<p>"How long have you been here?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Before the gates closed. I hid myself in the hollow of the big shrub
there, Highness," Marco answered.</p>
<p>"Then you were out in the storm?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Highness."</p>
<p>The Prince put his hand on the boy's shoulder. "I cannot see you—but
it is best to stand in the shadow. You are drenched to the skin."</p>
<p>"I have been able to give your Highness—the Sign," Marco whispered.
"A storm is nothing."</p>
<p>There was a silence. Marco knew that his companion was pausing to turn
something over in his mind.</p>
<p>"So-o?" he said slowly, at length. "The Lamp is lighted, And <i>you</i> are
sent to bear the Sign." Something in his voice made Marco feel that he
was smiling.</p>
<p>"What a race you are! What a race—you Samavian Loristans!"</p>
<p>He paused as if to think the thing over again.</p>
<p>"I want to see your face," he said next. "Here is a tree with a shaft
of moonlight striking through the branches. Let us step aside and
stand under it."</p>
<p>Marco did as he was told. The shaft of moonlight fell upon his
uplifted face and showed its young strength and darkness, quite
splendid for the moment in a triumphant glow of joy in obstacles
overcome. Raindrops hung on his hair, but he did not look draggled,
only very wet and picturesque. He had reached his man. He had given
the Sign.</p>
<p>The Prince looked him over with interested curiosity.</p>
<p>"Yes," he said in his cool, rather dragging voice. "You are the son of
Stefan Loristan. Also you must be taken care of. You must come with
me. I have trained my household to remain in its own quarters until I
require its service. I have attached to my own apartments a good safe
little room where I sometimes keep people. You can dry your clothes
and sleep there. When the gardens are opened again, the rest will be
easy."</p>
<p>But though he stepped out from under the trees and began to move
towards the palace in the shadow, Marco noticed that he moved
hesitatingly, as if he had not quite decided what he should do. He
stopped rather suddenly and turned again to Marco, who was following
him.</p>
<p>"There is some one in the room I just now left," he said, "an old
man—whom it might interest to see you. It might also be a good thing
for him to feel interest in you. I choose that he shall see you—as
you are."</p>
<p>"I am at your command, Highness," Marco answered. He knew his
companion was smiling again.</p>
<p>"You have been in training for more centuries than you know," he said;
"and your father has prepared you to encounter the unexpected without
surprise."</p>
<p>They passed under the balcony and paused at a low stone doorway hidden
behind shrubs. The door was a beautiful one, Marco saw when it was
opened, and the corridor disclosed was beautiful also, though it had an
air of quiet and aloofness which was not so much secret as private. A
perfect though narrow staircase mounted from it to the next floor.
After ascending it, the Prince led the way through a short corridor and
stopped at the door at the end of it. "We are going in here," he said.</p>
<p>It was a wonderful room—the one which opened on to the balcony. Each
piece of furniture in it, the hangings, the tapestries, and pictures on
the wall were all such as might well have found themselves adorning a
museum. Marco remembered the common report of his escort's favorite
amusement of collecting wonders and furnishing his house with the
things others exhibited only as marvels of art and handicraft. The
place was rich and mellow with exquisitely chosen beauties.</p>
<p>In a massive chair upon the hearth sat a figure with bent head. It was a
tall old man with white hair and moustache. His elbows rested upon the
arm of his chair and he leaned his forehead on his hand as if he were
weary.</p>
<p>Marco's companion crossed the room and stood beside him, speaking in a
lowered voice. Marco could not at first hear what he said. He himself
stood quite still, waiting. The white-haired man lifted his head and
listened. It seemed as though almost at once he was singularly
interested. The lowered voice was slightly raised at last and Marco
heard the last two sentences:</p>
<p>"The only son of Stefan Loristan. Look at him."</p>
<p>The old man in the chair turned slowly and looked, steadily, and with
questioning curiosity touched with grave surprise. He had keen and
clear blue eyes.</p>
<p>Then Marco, still erect and silent, waited again. The Prince had
merely said to him, "an old man whom it might interest to see you." He
had plainly intended that, whatsoever happened, he must make no outward
sign of seeing more than he had been told he would see—"an old man."
It was for him to show no astonishment or recognition. He had been
brought here not to see but to be seen. The power of remaining still
under scrutiny, which The Rat had often envied him, stood now in good
stead because he had seen the white head and tall form not many days
before, surmounted by brilliant emerald plumes, hung with jeweled
decorations, in the royal carriage, escorted by banners, and helmets,
and following troops whose tramping feet kept time to bursts of
military music while the populace bared their heads and cheered.</p>
<p>"He is like his father," this personage said to the Prince. "But if any
one but Loristan had sent him—His looks please me." Then suddenly to
Marco, "You were waiting outside while the storm was going on?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," Marco answered.</p>
<p>Then the two exchanged some words still in the lowered voice.</p>
<p>"You read the news as you made your journey?" he was asked. "You know
how Samavia stands?"</p>
<p>"She does not stand," said Marco. "The Iarovitch and the Maranovitch
have fought as hyenas fight, until each has torn the other into
fragments—and neither has blood or strength left."</p>
<p>The two glanced at each other.</p>
<p>"A good simile," said the older person. "You are right. If a strong
party rose—and a greater power chose not to interfere—the country
might see better days." He looked at him a few moments longer and then
waved his hand kindly.</p>
<p>"You are a fine Samavian," he said. "I am glad of that. You may go.
Good night."</p>
<p>Marco bowed respectfully and the man with the tired face led him out of
the room.</p>
<p>It was just before he left him in the small quiet chamber in which he
was to sleep that the Prince gave him a final curious glance. "I
remember now," he said. "In the room, when you answered the question
about Samavia, I was sure that I had seen you before. It was the day
of the celebration. There was a break in the crowd and I saw a boy
looking at me. It was you."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Marco, "I have followed you each time you have gone out
since then, but I could never get near enough to speak. To-night seemed
only one chance in a thousand."</p>
<p>"You are doing your work more like a man than a boy," was the next
speech, and it was made reflectively. "No man could have behaved more
perfectly than you did just now, when discretion and composure were
necessary." Then, after a moment's pause, "He was deeply interested
and deeply pleased. Good night."</p>
<hr>
<p>When the gardens had been thrown open the next morning and people were
passing in and out again, Marco passed out also. He was obliged to
tell himself two or three times that he had not wakened from an amazing
dream. He quickened his pace after he had crossed the street, because
he wanted to get home to the attic and talk to The Rat. There was a
narrow side-street it was necessary for him to pass through if he
wished to make a short cut. As he turned into it, he saw a curious
figure leaning on crutches against a wall. It looked damp and forlorn,
and he wondered if it could be a beggar. It was not. It was The Rat,
who suddenly saw who was approaching and swung forward. His face was
pale and haggard and he looked worn and frightened. He dragged off his
cap and spoke in a voice which was hoarse as a crow's.</p>
<p>"God be thanked!" he said. "God be thanked!" as people always said it
when they received the Sign, alone. But there was a kind of anguish in
his voice as well as relief.</p>
<p>"Aide-de-camp!" Marco cried out—The Rat had begged him to call him so.
"What have you been doing? How long have you been here?"</p>
<p>"Ever since I left you last night," said The Rat clutching tremblingly
at his arm as if to make sure he was real. "If there was not room for
two in the hollow, there was room for one in the street. Was it my
place to go off duty and leave you alone—was it?"</p>
<p>"You were out in the storm?"</p>
<p>"Weren't you?" said The Rat fiercely. "I huddled against the wall as
well as I could. What did I care? Crutches don't prevent a fellow
waiting. I wouldn't have left you if you'd given me orders. And that
would have been mutiny. When you did not come out as soon as the gates
opened, I felt as if my head got on fire. How could I know what had
happened? I've not the nerve and backbone you have. I go half mad."
For a second or so Marco did not answer. But when he put his hand on
the damp sleeve, The Rat actually started, because it seemed as though
he were looking into the eyes of Stefan Loristan.</p>
<p>"You look just like your father!" he exclaimed, in spite of himself.
"How tall you are!"</p>
<p>"When you are near me," Marco said, in Loristan's own voice, "when you
are near me, I feel—I feel as if I were a royal prince attended by an
army. You ARE my army." And he pulled off his cap with quick
boyishness and added, "God be thanked!"</p>
<p>The sun was warm in the attic window when they reached their lodging,
and the two leaned on the rough sill as Marco told his story. It took
some time to relate; and when he ended, he took an envelope from his
pocket and showed it to The Rat. It contained a flat package of money.</p>
<p>"He gave it to me just before he opened the private door," Marco
explained. "And he said to me, 'It will not be long now. After
Samavia, go back to London as quickly as you can—AS QUICKLY AS YOU
CAN!'"</p>
<p>"I wonder—what he meant?" The Rat said, slowly. A tremendous thought
had shot through his mind. But it was not a thought he could speak of
to Marco.</p>
<p>"I cannot tell. I thought that it was for some reason he did not
expect me to know," Marco said. "We will do as he told us. As quickly
as we can." They looked over the newspapers, as they did every day.
All that could be gathered from any of them was that the opposing
armies of Samavia seemed each to have reached the culmination of
disaster and exhaustion. Which party had the power left to take any
final step which could call itself a victory, it was impossible to say.
Never had a country been in a more desperate case.</p>
<p>"It is the time!" said The Rat, glowering over his map. "If the Secret
Party rises suddenly now, it can take Melzarr almost without a blow.
It can sweep through the country and disarm both armies. They're
weakened—they're half starved—they're bleeding to death; they WANT to
be disarmed. Only the Iarovitch and the Maranovitch keep on with the
struggle because each is fighting for the power to tax the people and
make slaves of them. If the Secret Party does not rise, the people
will, and they'll rush on the palaces and kill every Maranovitch and
Iarovitch they find. And serve them right!"</p>
<p>"Let us spend the rest of the day in studying the road-map again," said
Marco. "To-night we must be on the way to Samavia!"</p>
<br/><br/><br/>
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