“THE LAMP IS LIGHTED!”
On his way home, Marco thought of
nothing but the story he must tell his father, the
story the stranger who had been to Samavia had told
The Rat’s father. He felt that it must
be a true story and not merely an invention.
The Forgers of the Sword must be real men, and the
hidden subterranean caverns stacked through the centuries
with arms must be real, too. And if they were
real, surely his father was one of those who knew
the secret. His thoughts ran very fast. The
Rat’s boyish invention of the rising was only
part of a game, but how natural it would be that sometime—perhaps
before long—there would be a real rising!
Surely there would be one if the Secret Party had
grown so strong, and if many weapons and secret friends
in other countries were ready and waiting. During
all these years, hidden work and preparation would
have been going on continually, even though it was
preparation for an unknown day. A party which
had lasted so long—which passed its oath
on from generation to generation—must be
of a deadly determination.
What might it not have made ready
in its caverns and secret meeting-places! He
longed to reach home and tell his father, at once,
all he had heard. He recalled to mind, word for
word, all that The Rat had been told, and even all
he had added in his game, because—well,
because that seemed so real too, so real that it actually
might be useful.
But when he reached No. 7 Philibert
Place, he found Loristan and Lazarus very much absorbed
in work. The door of the back sitting-room was
locked when he first knocked on it, and locked again
as soon as he had entered. There were many papers
on the table, and they were evidently studying them.
Several of them were maps. Some were road maps,
some maps of towns and cities, and some of fortifications;
but they were all maps of places in Samavia.
They were usually kept in a strong box, and when they
were taken out to be studied, the door was always
kept locked.
Before they had their evening meal,
these were all returned to the strong box, which was
pushed into a corner and had newspapers piled upon
it.
“When he arrives,” Marco
heard Loristan say to Lazarus, “we can show him
clearly what has been planned. He can see for
himself.”
His father spoke scarcely at all during
the meal, and, though it was not the habit of Lazarus
to speak at such times unless spoken to, this evening
it seemed to Marco that he looked more silent
than he had ever seen him look before. They were
plainly both thinking anxiously of deeply serious
things. The story of the stranger who had been
to Samavia must not be told yet. But it was one
which would keep.
Loristan did not say anything until
Lazarus had removed the things from the table and
made the room as neat as possible. While that
was being done, he sat with his forehead resting on
his hand, as if absorbed in thought. Then he
made a gesture to Marco.
“Come here, Comrade,” he said.
Marco went to him.
“To-night some one may come
to talk with me about grave things,” he said.
“I think he will come, but I cannot be quite
sure. It is important that he should know that,
when he comes, he will find me quite alone. He
will come at a late hour, and Lazarus will open the
door quietly that no one may hear. It is important
that no one should see him. Some one must go
and walk on the opposite side of the street until he
appears. Then the one who goes to give warning
must cross the pavement before him and say in a low
voice, ‘The Lamp is lighted!’ and at once
turn quietly away.”
What boy’s heart would not have
leaped with joy at the mystery of it! Even a
common and dull boy who knew nothing of Samavia would
have felt jerky. Marco’s voice almost shook
with the thrill of his feeling.
“How shall I know him?”
he said at once. Without asking at all, he knew
he was the “some one” who was to go.
“You have seen him before,”
Loristan answered. “He is the man who drove
in the carriage with the King.”
“I shall know him,” said Marco. “When
shall I go?”
“Not until it is half-past one
o’clock. Go to bed and sleep until Lazarus
calls you.” Then he added, “Look well
at his face before you speak. He will probably
not be dressed as well as he was when you saw him
first.”
Marco went up-stairs to his room and
went to bed as he was told, but it was hard to go
to sleep. The rattle and roaring of the road did
not usually keep him awake, because he had lived in
the poorer quarter of too many big capital cities
not to be accustomed to noise. But to-night it
seemed to him that, as he lay and looked out at the
lamplight, he heard every bus and cab which went past.
He could not help thinking of the people who were
in them, and on top of them, and of the people who
were hurrying along on the pavement outside the broken
iron railings. He was wondering what they would
think if they knew that things connected with the
battles they read of in the daily papers were going
on in one of the shabby houses they scarcely gave
a glance to as they went by them. It must be
something connected with the war, if a man who was
a great diplomat and the companion of kings came in
secret to talk alone with a patriot who was a Samavian.
Whatever his father was doing was for the good of
Samavia, and perhaps the Secret Party knew he was doing
it. His heart almost beat aloud under his shirt
as he lay on the lumpy mattress thinking it over.
He must indeed look well at the stranger before he
even moved toward him. He must be sure he was
the right man. The game he had amused himself
with so long—the game of trying to remember
pictures and people and places clearly and in detail—had
been a wonderful training. If he could draw,
he knew he could have made a sketch of the keen-eyed,
clever, aquiline face with the well-cut and delicately
close mouth, which looked as if it had been shut upon
secrets always—always. If he could
draw, he found himself saying again. He could
draw, though perhaps only roughly. He had often
amused himself by making sketches of things he wanted
to ask questions about. He had even drawn people’s
faces in his untrained way, and his father had said
that he had a crude gift for catching a likeness.
Perhaps he could make a sketch of this face which
would show his father that he knew and would recognize
it.
He jumped out of bed and went to a
table near the window. There was paper and a
pencil lying on it. A street lamp exactly opposite
threw into the room quite light enough for him to
see by. He half knelt by the table and began
to draw. He worked for about twenty minutes steadily,
and he tore up two or three unsatisfactory sketches.
The poor drawing would not matter if he could catch
that subtle look which was not slyness but something
more dignified and important. It was not difficult
to get the marked, aristocratic outline of the features.
A common-looking man with less pronounced profile would
have been less easy to draw in one sense. He
gave his mind wholly to the recalling of every detail
which had photographed itself on his memory through
its trained habit. Gradually he saw that the
likeness was becoming clearer. It was not long
before it was clear enough to be a striking one.
Any one who knew the man would recognize it.
He got up, drawing a long and joyful breath.
He did not put on his shoes, but crossed
his room as noiselessly as possible, and as noiselessly
opened the door. He made no ghost of a sound
when he went down the stairs. The woman who kept
the lodging-house had gone to bed, and so had the
other lodgers and the maid of all work. All the
lights were out except the one he saw a glimmer of
under the door of his father’s room. When
he had been a mere baby, he had been taught to make
a special sign on the door when he wished to speak
to Loristan. He stood still outside the back
sitting-room and made it now. It was a low scratching
sound—two scratches and a soft tap.
Lazarus opened the door and looked troubled.
“It is not yet time, sir,” he said very
low.
“I know,” Marco answered.
“But I must show something to my father.”
Lazarus let him in, and Loristan turned round from
his writing-table questioningly.
Marco went forward and laid the sketch down before
him.
“Look at it,” he said.
“I remember him well enough to draw that.
I thought of it all at once—that I could
make a sort of picture. Do you think it is like
him?” Loristan examined it closely.
“It is very like him,”
he answered. “You have made me feel entirely
safe. Thanks, Comrade. It was a good idea.”
There was relief in the grip he gave
the boy’s hand, and Marco turned away with an
exultant feeling. Just as he reached the door,
Loristan said to him:
“Make the most of this gift.
It is a gift. And it is true your mind has had
good training. The more you draw, the better.
Draw everything you can.”
Neither the street lamps, nor the
noises, nor his thoughts kept Marco awake when he
went back to bed. But before he settled himself
upon his pillow he gave himself certain orders.
He had both read, and heard Loristan say, that the
mind can control the body when people once find out
that it can do so. He had tried experiments himself,
and had found out some curious things. One was
that if he told himself to remember a certain thing
at a certain time, he usually found that he did
remember it. Something in his brain seemed to
remind him. He had often tried the experiment
of telling himself to awaken at a particular hour,
and had awakened almost exactly at the moment by the
clock.
“I will sleep until one o’clock,”
he said as he shut his eyes. “Then I will
awaken and feel quite fresh. I shall not be sleepy
at all.”
He slept as soundly as a boy can sleep.
And at one o’clock exactly he awakened, and
found the street lamp still throwing its light through
the window. He knew it was one o’clock,
because there was a cheap little round clock on the
table, and he could see the time. He was quite
fresh and not at all sleepy. His experiment had
succeeded again.
He got up and dressed. Then he
went down-stairs as noiselessly as before. He
carried his shoes in his hands, as he meant to put
them on only when he reached the street. He made
his sign at his father’s door, and it was Loristan
who opened it.
“Shall I go now?” Marco asked.
“Yes. Walk slowly to the
other side of the street. Look in every direction.
We do not know where he will come from. After
you have given him the sign, then come in and go to
bed again.”
Marco saluted as a soldier would have
done on receiving an order.
Then, without a second’s delay,
he passed noiselessly out of the house.
Loristan turned back into the room
and stood silently in the center of it. The long
lines of his handsome body looked particularly erect
and stately, and his eyes were glowing as if something
deeply moved him.
“There grows a man for Samavia,”
he said to Lazarus, who watched him. “God
be thanked!”
Lazarus’s voice was low and
hoarse, and he saluted quite reverently.
“Your—sir!” he said. “God
save the Prince!”
“Yes,” Loristan answered,
after a moment’s hesitation,—“when
he is found.” And he went back to his table
smiling his beautiful smile.
* * * *
*
The wonder of silence in the deserted
streets of a great city, after midnight has hushed
all the roar and tumult to rest, is an almost unbelievable
thing. The stillness in the depths of a forest
or on a mountain top is not so strange. A few
hours ago, the tumult was rushing past; in a few hours
more, it will be rushing past again.
But now the street is a naked thing;
a distant policeman’s tramp on the bare pavement
has a hollow and almost fearsome sound. It seemed
especially so to Marco as he crossed the road.
Had it ever been so empty and deadly silent before?
Was it so every night? Perhaps it was, when he
was fast asleep on his lumpy mattress with the light
from a street lamp streaming into the room. He
listened for the step of the policeman on night-watch,
because he did not wish to be seen. There was
a jutting wall where he could stand in the shadow
while the man passed. A policeman would stop
to look questioningly at a boy who walked up and down
the pavement at half-past one in the morning.
Marco could wait until he had gone by, and then come
out into the light and look up and down the road and
the cross streets.
He heard his approaching footsteps
in a few minutes, and was safely in the shadows before
he could be seen. When the policeman passed, he
came out and walked slowly down the road, looking
on each side, and now and then looking back.
At first no one was in sight. Then a late hansom-cab
came tinkling along. But the people in it were
returning from some festivity, and were laughing and
talking, and noticed nothing but their own joking.
Then there was silence again, and for a long time,
as it seemed to Marco, no one was to be seen.
It was not really so long as it appeared, because
he was anxious. Then a very early vegetable-wagon
on the way from the country to Covent Garden Market
came slowly lumbering by with its driver almost asleep
on his piles of potatoes and cabbages. After
it had passed, there was stillness and emptiness once
more, until the policeman showed himself again on
his beat, and Marco slipped into the shadow of the
wall as he had done before.
When he came out into the light, he
had begun to hope that the time would not seem long
to his father. It had not really been long, he
told himself, it had only seemed so. But his
father’s anxiousness would be greater than his
own could be. Loristan knew all that depended
on the coming of this great man who sat side by side
with a king in his carriage and talked to him as if
he knew him well.
“It might be something which
all Samavia is waiting to know—at least
all the Secret Party,” Marco thought. “The
Secret Party is Samavia,”—he started
at the sound of footsteps. “Some one is
coming!” he said. “It is a man.”
It was a man who was walking up the
road on the same side of the pavement as his own.
Marco began to walk toward him quietly but rather
rapidly. He thought it might be best to appear
as if he were some boy sent on a midnight errand—perhaps
to call a doctor. Then, if it was a stranger
he passed, no suspicion would be aroused. Was
this man as tall as the one who had driven with the
King? Yes, he was about the same height, but
he was too far away to be recognizable otherwise.
He drew nearer, and Marco noticed that he also seemed
slightly to hasten his footsteps. Marco went
on. A little nearer, and he would be able to make
sure. Yes, now he was near enough. Yes, this
man was the same height and not unlike in figure,
but he was much younger. He was not the one who
had been in the carriage with His Majesty. He
was not more than thirty years old. He began
swinging his cane and whistling a music-hall song
softly as Marco passed him without changing his pace.
It was after the policeman had walked
round his beat and disappeared for the third time,
that Marco heard footsteps echoing at some distance
down a cross street. After listening to make
sure that they were approaching instead of receding
in another direction, he placed himself at a point
where he could watch the length of the thoroughfare.
Yes, some one was coming. It was a man’s
figure again. He was able to place himself rather
in the shadow so that the person approaching would
not see that he was being watched. The solitary
walker reached a recognizable distance in about two
minutes’ time. He was dressed in an ordinary
shop-made suit of clothes which was rather shabby
and quite unnoticeable in its appearance. His
common hat was worn so that it rather shaded his face.
But even before he had crossed to Marco’s side
of the road, the boy had clearly recognized him.
It was the man who had driven with the King!
Chance was with Marco. The man
crossed at exactly the place which made it easy for
the boy to step lightly from behind him, walk a few
paces by his side, and then pass directly before him
across the pavement, glancing quietly up into his
face as he said in a low voice but distinctly, the
words “The Lamp is lighted,” and without
pausing a second walk on his way down the road.
He did not slacken his pace or look back until he
was some distance away. Then he glanced over his
shoulder, and saw that the figure had crossed the street
and was inside the railings. It was all right.
His father would not be disappointed. The great
man had come.
He walked for about ten minutes, and
then went home and to bed. But he was obliged
to tell himself to go to sleep several times before
his eyes closed for the rest of the night.