banged on the door with his crutch to save time.
Both Loristan and Lazarus came to answer.
The Rat leaned against the door gasping.
“He’s found! He’s all right!” he panted. “Some one had locked him in a house and left him. They’ve sent for the keys. I’m going back. Brandon Terrace, No. 10.”
Loristan and Lazarus exchanged glances. Both of them were at the moment as pale as The Rat.
“Help him into the house,” said Loristan to Lazarus. “He must stay here and rest. We will go.” The Rat knew it was an order.
He did not like it, but he obeyed.
“This is a bad sign, Master,” said Lazarus, as they went out together.
“It is a very bad one,” answered Loristan.
“God of the Right, defend us!” Lazarus groaned.
“Amen!” said Loristan. “Amen!”
The group had become a small crowd by the time they reached Brandon Terrace. Marco had not found it easy to leave the place because he was being questioned. Neither the policeman nor the agent’s clerk seemed willing to relinquish the idea that he could give them some information about the absconding pair.
The entrance of Loristan produced its usual effect. The agent’s clerk lifted his hat, and the policeman stood straight and made salute. Neither of them realized that the tall man’s clothes were worn and threadbare. They felt only that a personage was before them, and that it was not possible to question his air of absolute and serene authority. He laid his hand on Marco’s shoulder and held it there as he spoke. When Marco looked up at him and felt the closeness of his touch, it seemed as if it were an embrace—as if he had caught him to his breast.
“My boy knew nothing of these people,” he said. “That I can guarantee. He had seen neither of them before. His entering the house was the result of no boyish trick. He has been shut up in this place for nearly twenty-four hours and has had no food. I must take him home. This is my address.” He handed the young man a card.
Then they went home together, and all the way to Philibert Place Loristan’s firm hand held closely to his boy’s shoulder as if he could not endure to let him go. But on the way they said very little.
“Father,” Marco said, rather hoarsely, when they first got away from the house in the terrace, “I can’t talk well in the street. For one thing, I am so glad to be with you again. It seemed as if—it might turn out badly.”
“Beloved one,” Loristan said the words in their own Samavian, “until you are fed and at rest, you shall not talk at all.”
Afterward, when he was himself again and was allowed to tell his strange story, Marco found that both his father and Lazarus had at once had suspicions when he had not returned. They knew no ordinary event could have kept him. They were sure that he must have been detained against his will, and they were also sure that, if he had been so detained, it could only have been for reasons they could guess at.
“This was the card that she gave me,” Marco said, and he handed it to Loristan. “She said you would remember the name.” Loristan looked at the lettering with an ironic half-smile.
“I never heard it before,” he replied. “She would not send me a name I knew. Probably I have never seen either of them. But I know the work they do. They are spies of the Maranovitch, and suspect that I know something of the Lost Prince. They believed they could terrify you into saying things which would be a clue. Men and women of their class will use desperate means to gain their end.”
“Might they—have left me as they threatened?” Marco asked him.
“They would scarcely have dared, I think. Too great a hue and cry would have been raised by the discovery of such a crime. Too many detectives would have been set at work to track them.”
But the look in his father’s eyes as he spoke, and the pressure of the hand he stretched out to touch him, made Marco’s heart thrill. He had won a new love and trust from his father. When they sat together and talked that night, they were closer to each other’s souls than they had ever been before.
They sat in the firelight, Marco upon the worn hearthrug, and they talked about Samavia—about the war and its heartrending struggles, and about how they might end.
“Do you think that some time we might be exiles no longer?” the boy said wistfully. “Do you think we might go there together—and see it—you and I, Father?”
There was a silence for a while. Loristan looked into the sinking bed of red coal.
“For years—for years I have made for my soul that image,” he said slowly. “When I think of my friend on the side of the Himalayan Mountains, I say, ‘The Thought which Thought the World may give us that also!’”
XVIII
“CITIES AND FACES”
The hours of Marco’s unexplained absence had been terrible to Loristan and to Lazarus. They had reason for fears which it was not possible for them to express. As the night drew on, the fears took stronger form. They forgot the existence of The Rat, who sat biting his nails in the bedroom, afraid to go out lest he might lose the chance of being given some errand to do but also afraid to show himself lest he should seem in the way.
“I’ll stay upstairs,” he had said to Lazarus. “If you just whistle, I’ll come.”
The anguish he passed through as the day went by and Lazarus went out and came in and he himself received no orders, could not have been expressed in any ordinary words. He writhed in his chair, he bit his nails to the quick, he wrought himself into a frenzy of misery and terror by recalling one by one all the crimes his knowledge of London police-courts supplied him with. He was doing nothing, yet he dare not leave his post. It was his post after all, though they had not given it to him. He must do something.
In the middle of the night Loristan opened the door of the back sitting-room, because he knew he must at least go upstairs and throw himself upon his bed even if he could not sleep.
He started back as the door opened. The Rat was sitting huddled on the floor near it with his back against the wall. He had a piece of paper in his hand and his twisted face was a weird thing to see.
“Why are you here?” Loristan asked.
“I’ve been here three hours, sir. I knew you’d have to come out sometime and I thought you’d let me speak to you. Will you—will you?”
“Come into the room,” said Loristan. “I will listen to anything you want to say. What have you been drawing on that paper?” as The Rat got up in the wonderful way he had taught himself. The paper was covered with lines which showed it to be another of his plans.
“Please look at it,” he begged. “I daren’t go out lest you might want to send me somewhere. I daren’t sit doing nothing. I began remembering and thinking things out. I put down all the streets and squares he MIGHT have walked through on his way home. I’ve not missed one. If you’ll let me start out and walk through every one of them and talk to the policemen on the beat and look at the houses—and think out things and work at them—I’ll not miss an inch—I’ll not miss a brick or a flagstone—I’ll—” His voice had a hard sound but it shook, and he himself shook.
Loristan touched his arm gently.
“You are a good comrade,” he said. “It is well for us that you are here. You have thought of a good thing.”
“May I go now?” said The Rat.
“This moment, if you are ready,” was the answer. The Rat swung himself to the door.
Loristan said to him a thing which was like the sudden lighting of a great light in the very center