There are many dreary and dingy rows
of ugly houses in certain parts of London, but there
certainly could not be any row more ugly or dingier
than Philibert Place. There were stories that
it had once been more attractive, but that had been
so long ago that no one remembered the time.
It stood back in its gloomy, narrow strips of uncared-for,
smoky gardens, whose broken iron railings were supposed
to protect it from the surging traffic of a road which
was always roaring with the rattle of busses, cabs,
drays, and vans, and the passing of people who were
shabbily dressed and looked as if they were either
going to hard work or coming from it, or hurrying
to see if they could find some of it to do to keep
themselves from going hungry. The brick fronts
of the houses were blackened with smoke, their windows
were nearly all dirty and hung with dingy curtains,
or had no curtains at all; the strips of ground, which
had once been intended to grow flowers in, had been
trodden down into bare earth in which even weeds had
forgotten to grow. One of them was used as a
stone-cutter’s yard, and cheap monuments, crosses,
and slates were set out for sale, bearing inscriptions
beginning with “Sacred to the Memory of.”
Another had piles of old lumber in it, another exhibited
second-hand furniture, chairs with unsteady legs,
sofas with horsehair stuffing bulging out of holes
in their covering, mirrors with blotches or cracks
in them. The insides of the houses were as gloomy
as the outside. They were all exactly alike.
In each a dark entrance passage led to narrow stairs
going up to bedrooms, and to narrow steps going down
to a basement kitchen. The back bedroom looked
out on small, sooty, flagged yards, where thin cats
quarreled, or sat on the coping of the brick walls
hoping that sometime they might feel the sun; the
front rooms looked over the noisy road, and through
their windows came the roar and rattle of it.
It was shabby and cheerless on the brightest days,
and on foggy or rainy ones it was the most forlorn
place in London.
At least that was what one boy thought
as he stood near the iron railings watching the passers-by
on the morning on which this story begins, which was
also the morning after he had been brought by his
father to live as a lodger in the back sitting-room
of the house No. 7.
He was a boy about twelve years old,
his name was Marco Loristan, and he was the kind of
boy people look at a second time when they have looked
at him once. In the first place, he was a very
big boy—tall for his years, and with a
particularly strong frame. His shoulders were
broad and his arms and legs were long and powerful.
He was quite used to hearing people say, as they glanced
at him, “What a fine, big lad!” And then
they always looked again at his face. It was not
an English face or an American one, and was very dark
in coloring. His features were strong, his black
hair grew on his head like a mat, his eyes were large
and deep set, and looked out between thick, straight,
black lashes. He was as un-English a boy as one
could imagine, and an observing person would have
been struck at once by a sort of silent look
expressed by his whole face, a look which suggested
that he was not a boy who talked much.
This look was specially noticeable
this morning as he stood before the iron railings.
The things he was thinking of were of a kind likely
to bring to the face of a twelve-year-old boy an unboyish
expression.
He was thinking of the long, hurried
journey he and his father and their old soldier servant,
Lazarus, had made during the last few days—the
journey from Russia. Cramped in a close third-class
railway carriage, they had dashed across the Continent
as if something important or terrible were driving
them, and here they were, settled in London as if
they were going to live forever at No. 7 Philibert
Place. He knew, however, that though they might
stay a year, it was just as probable that, in the
middle of some night, his father or Lazarus might waken
him from his sleep and say, “Get up—dress
yourself quickly. We must go at once.”
A few days later, he might be in St. Petersburg, Berlin,
Vienna, or Budapest, huddled away in some poor little
house as shabby and comfortless as No. 7 Philibert
Place.
He passed his hand over his forehead
as he thought of it and watched the busses. His
strange life and his close association with his father
had made him much older than his years, but he was
only a boy, after all, and the mystery of things sometimes
weighed heavily upon him, and set him to deep wondering.
In not one of the many countries he
knew had he ever met a boy whose life was in the least
like his own. Other boys had homes in which they
spent year after year; they went to school regularly,
and played with other boys, and talked openly of the
things which happened to them, and the journeys they
made. When he remained in a place long enough
to make a few boy-friends, he knew he must never forget
that his whole existence was a sort of secret whose
safety depended upon his own silence and discretion.
This was because of the promises he
had made to his father, and they had been the first
thing he remembered. Not that he had ever regretted
anything connected with his father. He threw his
black head up as he thought of that. None of
the other boys had such a father, not one of them.
His father was his idol and his chief. He had
scarcely ever seen him when his clothes had not been
poor and shabby, but he had also never seen him when,
despite his worn coat and frayed linen, he had not
stood out among all others as more distinguished than
the most noticeable of them. When he walked down
a street, people turned to look at him even oftener
than they turned to look at Marco, and the boy felt
as if it was not merely because he was a big man with
a handsome, dark face, but because he looked, somehow,
as if he had been born to command armies, and as if
no one would think of disobeying him. Yet Marco
had never seen him command any one, and they had always
been poor, and shabbily dressed, and often enough
ill-fed. But whether they were in one country
or another, and whatsoever dark place they seemed to
be hiding in, the few people they saw treated him
with a sort of deference, and nearly always stood
when they were in his presence, unless he bade them
sit down.
“It is because they know he
is a patriot, and patriots are respected,” the
boy had told himself.
He himself wished to be a patriot,
though he had never seen his own country of Samavia.
He knew it well, however. His father had talked
to him about it ever since that day when he had made
the promises. He had taught him to know it by
helping him to study curious detailed maps of it—maps
of its cities, maps of its mountains, maps of its roads.
He had told him stories of the wrongs done its people,
of their sufferings and struggles for liberty, and,
above all, of their unconquerable courage. When
they talked together of its history, Marco’s
boy-blood burned and leaped in his veins, and he always
knew, by the look in his father’s eyes, that
his blood burned also. His countrymen had been
killed, they had been robbed, they had died by thousands
of cruelties and starvation, but their souls had never
been conquered, and, through all the years during
which more powerful nations crushed and enslaved them,
they never ceased to struggle to free themselves and
stand unfettered as Samavians had stood centuries
before.
“Why do we not live there,”
Marco had cried on the day the promises were made.
“Why do we not go back and fight? When I
am a man, I will be a soldier and die for Samavia.”
“We are of those who must live
for Samavia—working day and night,”
his father had answered; “denying ourselves,
training our bodies and souls, using our brains, learning
the things which are best to be done for our people
and our country. Even exiles may be Samavian soldiers—I
am one, you must be one.”
“Are we exiles?” asked Marco.
“Yes,” was the answer.
“But even if we never set foot on Samavian soil,
we must give our lives to it. I have given mine
since I was sixteen. I shall give it until I
die.”
“Have you never lived there?” said Marco.
A strange look shot across his father’s face.
“No,” he answered, and
said no more. Marco watching him, knew he must
not ask the question again.
The next words his father said were
about the promises. Marco was quite a little
fellow at the time, but he understood the solemnity
of them, and felt that he was being honored as if
he were a man.
“When you are a man, you shall
know all you wish to know,” Loristan said.
“Now you are a child, and your mind must not
be burdened. But you must do your part.
A child sometimes forgets that words may be dangerous.
You must promise never to forget this. Wheresoever
you are; if you have playmates, you must remember
to be silent about many things. You must not
speak of what I do, or of the people who come to see
me. You must not mention the things in your life
which make it different from the lives of other boys.
You must keep in your mind that a secret exists which
a chance foolish word might betray. You are a
Samavian, and there have been Samavians who have died
a thousand deaths rather than betray a secret.
You must learn to obey without question, as if you
were a soldier. Now you must take your oath of
allegiance.”
He rose from his seat and went to
a corner of the room. He knelt down, turned back
the carpet, lifted a plank, and took something from
beneath it. It was a sword, and, as he came back
to Marco, he drew it out from its sheath. The
child’s strong, little body stiffened and drew
itself up, his large, deep eyes flashed. He was
to take his oath of allegiance upon a sword as if
he were a man. He did not know that his small
hand opened and shut with a fierce understanding grip
because those of his blood had for long centuries
past carried swords and fought with them.
Loristan gave him the big bared weapon,
and stood erect before him.
“Repeat these words after me
sentence by sentence!” he commanded.
And as he spoke them Marco echoed
each one loudly and clearly.
“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 grows a man for Samavia.
“God be thanked!”
Then Loristan put his hand on the
child’s shoulder, and his dark face looked almost
fiercely proud.
“From this hour,” he said, “you
and I are comrades at arms.”
And from that day to the one on which
he stood beside the broken iron railings of No. 7
Philibert Place, Marco had not forgotten for one hour.