<SPAN name="chap27"></SPAN>
<h3> XXVII </h3>
<h3> "IT IS THE LOST PRINCE! IT IS IVOR!" </h3>
<p>Many times since their journey had begun the boys had found their
hearts beating with the thrill and excitement of things. The story of
which their lives had been a part was a pulse-quickening experience.
But as they carefully made their way down the steep steps leading
seemingly into the bowels of the earth, both Marco and The Rat felt as
though the old priest must hear the thudding in their young sides.</p>
<p>"'The Forgers of the Sword.' Remember every word they say," The Rat
whispered, "so that you can tell it to me afterwards. Don't forget
anything! I wish I knew Samavian."</p>
<p>At the foot of the steps stood the man who was evidently the sentinel
who worked the lever that turned the rock. He was a big burly peasant
with a good watchful face, and the priest gave him a greeting and a
blessing as he took from him the lantern he held out.</p>
<p>They went through a narrow and dark passage, and down some more steps,
and turned a corner into another corridor cut out of rock and earth.
It was a wider corridor, but still dark, so that Marco and The Rat had
walked some yards before their eyes became sufficiently accustomed to
the dim light to see that the walls themselves seemed made of arms
stacked closely together.</p>
<p>"The Forgers of the Sword!" The Rat was unconsciously mumbling to
himself, "The Forgers of the Sword!"</p>
<p>It must have taken years to cut out the rounding passage they threaded
their way through, and longer years to forge the solid, bristling
walls. But The Rat remembered the story the stranger had told his
drunken father, of the few mountain herdsmen who, in their savage grief
and wrath over the loss of their prince, had banded themselves together
with a solemn oath which had been handed down from generation to
generation. The Samavians were a long-memoried people, and the fact
that their passion must be smothered had made it burn all the more
fiercely. Five hundred years ago they had first sworn their oath; and
kings had come and gone, had died or been murdered, and dynasties had
changed, but the Forgers of the Sword had not changed or forgotten
their oath or wavered in their belief that some time—some time, even
after the long dark years—the soul of their Lost Prince would be among
them once more, and that they would kneel at the feet and kiss the
hands of him for whose body that soul had been reborn. And for the
last hundred years their number and power and their hiding places had
so increased that Samavia was at last honeycombed with them. And they
only waited, breathless,—for the Lighting of the Lamp.</p>
<p>The old priest knew how breathlessly, and he knew what he was bringing
them. Marco and The Rat, in spite of their fond boy-imaginings, were
not quite old enough to know how fierce and full of flaming eagerness
the breathless waiting of savage full-grown men could be. But there
was a tense-strung thrill in knowing that they who were being led to
them were the Bearers of the Sign. The Rat went hot and cold; he
gnawed his fingers as he went. He could almost have shrieked aloud, in
the intensity of his excitement, when the old priest stopped before a
big black door!</p>
<p>Marco made no sound. Excitement or danger always made him look tall
and quite pale. He looked both now.</p>
<p>The priest touched the door, and it opened.</p>
<p>They were looking into an immense cavern. Its walls and roof were
lined with arms—guns, swords, bayonets, javelins, daggers, pistols,
every weapon a desperate man might use. The place was full of men, who
turned towards the door when it opened. They all made obeisance to the
priest, but Marco realized almost at the same instant that they started
on seeing that he was not alone.</p>
<p>They were a strange and picturesque crowd as they stood under their
canopy of weapons in the lurid torchlight. Marco saw at once that they
were men of all classes, though all were alike roughly dressed. They
were huge mountaineers, and plainsmen young and mature in years. Some
of the biggest were men with white hair but with bodies of giants, and
with determination in their strong jaws. There were many of these,
Marco saw, and in each man's eyes, whether he were young or old, glowed
a steady unconquered flame. They had been beaten so often, they had
been oppressed and robbed, but in the eyes of each one was this
unconquered flame which, throughout all the long tragedy of years had
been handed down from father to son. It was this which had gone on
through centuries, keeping its oath and forging its swords in the
caverns of the earth, and which to-day was—waiting.</p>
<p>The old priest laid his hand on Marco's shoulder, and gently pushed him
before him through the crowd which parted to make way for them. He did
not stop until the two stood in the very midst of the circle, which
fell back gazing wonderingly. Marco looked up at the old man because
for several seconds he did not speak. It was plain that he did not
speak because he also was excited, and could not. He opened his lips
and his voice seemed to fail him. Then he tried again and spoke so
that all could hear—even the men at the back of the gazing circle.</p>
<p>"My children," he said, "this is the son of Stefan Loristan, and he
comes to bear the Sign. My son," to Marco, "speak!"</p>
<p>Then Marco understood what he wished, and also what he felt. He felt
it himself, that magnificent uplifting gladness, as he spoke, holding
his black head high and lifting his right hand.</p>
<p>"The Lamp is Lighted, brothers!" he cried. "The Lamp is Lighted!"</p>
<p>Then The Rat, who stood apart, watching, thought that the strange world
within the cavern had gone mad! Wild smothered cries broke forth, men
caught each other in passionate embrace, they fell upon their knees,
they clutched one another sobbing, they wrung each other's hands, they
leaped into the air. It was as if they could not bear the joy of
hearing that the end of their waiting had come at last. They rushed
upon Marco, and fell at his feet. The Rat saw big peasants kissing his
shoes, his hands, every scrap of his clothing they could seize. The
wild circle swayed and closed upon him until The Rat was afraid. He
did not know that, overpowered by this frenzy of emotion, his own
excitement was making him shake from head to foot like a leaf, and that
tears were streaming down his cheeks. The swaying crowd hid Marco from
him, and he began to fight his way towards him because his excitement
increased with fear. The ecstasy-frenzied crowd of men seemed for the
moment to have almost ceased to be sane. Marco was only a boy. They
did not know how fiercely they were pressing upon him and keeping away
the very air.</p>
<p>"Don't kill him! Don't kill him!" yelled The Rat, struggling forward.
"Stand back, you fools! I'm his aide-de-camp! Let me pass!"</p>
<p>And though no one understood his English, one or two suddenly
remembered they had seen him enter with the priest and so gave way.
But just then the old priest lifted his hand above the crowd, and spoke
in a voice of stern command.</p>
<p>"Stand back, my children!" he cried. "Madness is not the homage you
must bring to the son of Stefan Loristan. Obey! Obey!" His voice had
a power in it that penetrated even the wildest herdsmen. The frenzied
mass swayed back and left space about Marco, whose face The Rat could
at last see. It was very white with emotion, and in his eyes there was
a look which was like awe.</p>
<p>The Rat pushed forward until he stood beside him. He did not know that
he almost sobbed as he spoke.</p>
<p>"I'm your aide-de-camp," he said. "I'm going to stand here! Your
father sent me! I'm under orders! I thought they'd crush you to
death."</p>
<p>He glared at the circle about them as if, instead of worshippers
distraught with adoration, they had been enemies. The old priest
seeing him, touched Marco's arm.</p>
<p>"Tell him he need not fear," he said. "It was only for the first few
moments. The passion of their souls drove them wild. They are your
slaves."</p>
<p>"Those at the back might have pushed the front ones on until they
trampled you under foot in spite of themselves!" The Rat persisted.</p>
<p>"No," said Marco. "They would have stopped if I had spoken."</p>
<hr>
<p>"Why didn't you speak then?" snapped The Rat.</p>
<p>"All they felt was for Samavia, and for my father," Marco said, "and
for the Sign. I felt as they did."</p>
<p>The Rat was somewhat softened. It was true, after all. How could he
have tried to quell the outbursts of their worship of Loristan—of the
country he was saving for them—of the Sign which called them to
freedom? He could not.</p>
<p>Then followed a strange and picturesque ceremonial. The priest went
about among the encircling crowd and spoke to one man after
another—sometimes to a group. A larger circle was formed. As the
pale old man moved about, The Rat felt as if some religious ceremony
were going to be performed. Watching it from first to last, he was
thrilled to the core.</p>
<p>At the end of the cavern a block of stone had been cut out to look like
an altar. It was covered with white, and against the wall above it
hung a large picture veiled by a curtain. From the roof there swung
before it an ancient lamp of metal suspended by chains. In front of
the altar was a sort of stone dais. There the priest asked Marco to
stand, with his aide-de-camp on the lower level in attendance. A knot
of the biggest herdsmen went out and returned. Each carried a huge
sword which had perhaps been of the earliest made in the dark days gone
by. The bearers formed themselves into a line on either side of
Marco. They raised their swords and formed a pointed arch above his
head and a passage twelve men long. When the points first clashed
together The Rat struck himself hard upon his breast. His exultation
was too keen to endure. He gazed at Marco standing still—in that
curiously splendid way in which both he and his father COULD stand
still—and wondered how he could do it. He looked as if he were
prepared for any strange thing which could happen to him—because he
was "under orders." The Rat knew that he was doing whatsoever he did
merely for his father's sake. It was as if he felt that he was
representing his father, though he was a mere boy; and that because of
this, boy as he was, he must bear himself nobly and remain outwardly
undisturbed.</p>
<p>At the end of the arch of swords, the old priest stood and gave a sign
to one man after another. When the sign was given to a man he walked
under the arch to the dais, and there knelt and, lifting Marco's hand
to his lips, kissed it with passionate fervor. Then he returned to the
place he had left. One after another passed up the aisle of swords,
one after another knelt, one after the other kissed the brown young
hand, rose and went away. Sometimes The Rat heard a few words which
sounded almost like a murmured prayer, sometimes he heard a sob as a
shaggy head bent, again and again he saw eyes wet with tears. Once or
twice Marco spoke a few Samavian words, and the face of the man spoken
to flamed with joy. The Rat had time to see, as Marco had seen, that
many of the faces were not those of peasants. Some of them were clear
cut and subtle and of the type of scholars or nobles. It took a long
time for them all to kneel and kiss the lad's hand, but no man omitted
the ceremony; and when at last it was at an end, a strange silence
filled the cavern. They stood and gazed at each other with burning
eyes.</p>
<p>The priest moved to Marco's side, and stood near the altar. He leaned
forward and took in his hand a cord which hung from the veiled
picture—he drew it and the curtain fell apart. There seemed to stand
gazing at them from between its folds a tall kingly youth with deep
eyes in which the stars of God were stilly shining, and with a smile
wonderful to behold. Around the heavy locks of his black hair the
long dead painter of missals had set a faint glow of light like a halo.</p>
<p>"Son of Stefan Loristan," the old priest said, in a shaken voice, "it
is the Lost Prince! It is Ivor!"</p>
<p>Then every man in the room fell on his knees. Even the men who had
upheld the archway of swords dropped their weapons with a crash and
knelt also. He was their saint—this boy! Dead for five hundred
years, he was their saint still.</p>
<p>"Ivor! Ivor!" the voices broke into a heavy murmur. "Ivor! Ivor!" as
if they chanted a litany.</p>
<p>Marco started forward, staring at the picture, his breath caught in his
throat, his lips apart.</p>
<p>"But—but—" he stammered, "but if my father were as young as he is—he
would be LIKE him!"</p>
<p>"When you are as old as he is, YOU will be like him—YOU!" said the
priest. And he let the curtain fall.</p>
<p>The Rat stood staring with wide eyes from Marco to the picture and from
the picture to Marco. And he breathed faster and faster and gnawed his
finger ends. But he did not utter a word. He could not have done it,
if he tried.</p>
<p>Then Marco stepped down from the dais as if he were in a dream, and the
old man followed him. The men with swords sprang to their feet and
made their archway again with a new clash of steel. The old man and
the boy passed under it together. Now every man's eyes were fixed on
Marco. At the heavy door by which he had entered, he stopped and
turned to meet their glances. He looked very young and thin and pale,
but suddenly his father's smile was lighted in his face. He said a few
words in Samavian clearly and gravely, saluted, and passed out.</p>
<p>"What did you say to them?" gasped The Rat, stumbling after him as the
door closed behind them and shut in the murmur of impassioned sound.</p>
<p>"There was only one thing to say," was the answer. "They are men—I am
only a boy. I thanked them for my father, and told them he would
never—never forget."</p>
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