“HELP!”
Did it take you so long to find it?
asked the Lovely Person with the smile. “Of
course I knew you would find it in the end. But
we had to give ourselves time. How long did it
take?”
Marco removed himself from beneath
the touch of her hand. It was quietly done, but
there was a disdain in his young face which made her
wince though she pretended to shrug her shoulders
amusedly.
“You refuse to answer?” she laughed.
“I refuse.”
At that very moment he saw at the
curve of the corridor the Chancellor and his daughter
approaching slowly. The two young officers were
talking gaily to the girl. They were on their
way back to their box. Was he going to lose them?
Was he?
The delicate hand was laid on his
shoulder again, but this time he felt that it grasped
him firmly.
“Naughty boy!” the soft
voice said. “I am going to take you home
with me. If you struggle I shall tell these people
that you are my bad boy who is here without permission.
What will you answer? My escort is coming down
the staircase and will help me. Do you see?”
And in fact there appeared in the crowd at the head
of the staircase the figure of the man he remembered.
He did see. A dampness broke
out on the palms of his hands. If she did this
bold thing, what could he say to those she told her
lie to? How could he bring proof or explain who
he was—and what story dare he tell?
His protestations and struggles would merely amuse
the lookers-on, who would see in them only the impotent
rage of an insubordinate youngster.
There swept over him a wave of remembrance
which brought back, as if he were living through it
again, the moment when he had stood in the darkness
of the wine cellar with his back against the door and
heard the man walk away and leave him alone.
He felt again as he had done then—but now
he was in another land and far away from his father.
He could do nothing to help himself unless Something
showed him a way.
He made no sound, and the woman who
held him saw only a flame leap under his dense black
lashes.
But something within him called out.
It was as if he heard it. It was that strong
self—the self that was Marco, and it called—it
called as if it shouted.
“Help!” it called—to
that Unknown Stranger Thing which had made worlds
and which he and his father so often talked of and
in whose power they so believed. “Help!”
The Chancellor was drawing nearer. Perhaps!
Should he—?
“You are too proud to kick and
shout,” the voice went on. “And people
would only laugh. Do you see?”
The stairs were crowded and the man
who was at the head of them could only move slowly.
But he had seen the boy.
Marco turned so that he could face
his captor squarely as if he were going to say something
in answer to her. But he was not.
Even as he made the movement of turning,
the help he had called for came and he knew what he
should do. And he could do two things at once—save
himself and give his Sign—because, the Sign
once given, the Chancellor would understand.
“He will be here in a moment.
He has recognized you,” the woman said.
As he glanced up the stairs, the delicate
grip of her hand unconsciously slackened.
Marco whirled away from her.
The bell rang which was to warn the audience that
they must return to their seats and he saw the Chancellor
hasten his pace.
A moment later, the old aristocrat
found himself amazedly looking down at the pale face
of a breathless lad who spoke to him in German and
in such a manner that he could not but pause and listen.
“Sir,” he was saying,
“the woman in violet at the foot of the stairs
is a spy. She trapped me once and she threatens
to do it again. Sir, may I beg you to protect
me?”
He said it low and fast. No one
else could hear his words.
“What! What!” the Chancellor exclaimed.
And then, drawing a step nearer and
quite as low and rapidly but with perfect distinctness,
Marco uttered four words:
“The Lamp is lighted.”
The Help cry had been answered instantly.
Marco saw it at once in the old man’s eyes,
notwithstanding that he turned to look at the woman
at the foot of the staircase as if she only concerned
him.
“What! What!” he
said again, and made a movement toward her, pulling
his large moustache with a fierce hand.
Then Marco recognized that a curious
thing happened. The Lovely Person saw the movement
and the gray moustache, and that instant her smile
died away and she turned quite white—so
white, that under the brilliant electric light she
was almost green and scarcely looked lovely at all.
She made a sign to the man on the staircase and slipped
through the crowd like an eel. She was a slim
flexible creature and never was a disappearance more
wonderful in its rapidity. Between stout matrons
and their thin or stout escorts and families she made
her way and lost herself—but always making
toward the exit. In two minutes there was no
sight of her violet draperies to be seen. She
was gone and so, evidently, was her male companion.
It was plain to Marco that to follow
the profession of a spy was not by any means a safe
thing. The Chancellor had recognized her—she
had recognized the Chancellor who turned looking ferociously
angry and spoke to one of the young officers.
“She and the man with her are
two of the most dangerous spies in Europe, She is
a Rumanian and he is a Russian. What they wanted
of this innocent lad I don’t pretend to know.
What did she threaten?” to Marco.
Marco was feeling rather cold and
sick and had lost his healthy color for the moment.
“She said she meant to take
me home with her and would pretend I was her son who
had come here without permission,” he answered.
“She believes I know something I do not.”
He made a hesitating but grateful bow. “The
third act, sir—I must not keep you.
Thank you! Thank you!”
The Chancellor moved toward the entrance
door of the balcony seats, but he did it with his
hand on Marco’s shoulder.
“See that he gets home safely,”
he said to the younger of the two officers. “Send
a messenger with him. He’s young to be attacked
by creatures of that kind.”
Polite young officers naturally obey
the commands of Chancellors and such dignitaries.
This one found without trouble a young private who
marched with Marco through the deserted streets to
his lodgings. He was a stolid young Bavarian
peasant and seemed to have no curiosity or even any
interest in the reason for the command given him.
He was in fact thinking of his sweetheart who lived
near Konigsee and who had skated with him on the frozen
lake last winter. He scarcely gave a glance to
the schoolboy he was to escort, he neither knew nor
wondered why.
The Rat had fallen asleep over his
papers and lay with his head on his folded arms on
the table. But he was awakened by Marco’s
coming into the room and sat up blinking his eyes
in the effort to get them open.
“Did you see him? Did you get near enough?”
he drowsed.
“Yes,” Marco answered. “I got
near enough.”
The Rat sat upright suddenly.
“It’s not been easy,”
he exclaimed. “I’m sure something
happened—something went wrong.”
“Something nearly went wrong—very
nearly,” answered Marco. But as he spoke
he took the sketch of the Chancellor out of the slit
in his sleeve and tore it and burned it with a match.
“But I did get near enough. And that’s
two.”
* * * *
*
They talked long, before they went
to sleep that night. The Rat grew pale as he
listened to the story of the woman in violet.
“I ought to have gone with you!”
he said. “I see now. An aide-de-camp
must always be in attendance. It would have been
harder for her to manage two than one. I must
always be near to watch, even if I am not close by
you. If you had not come back—if you
had not come back!” He struck his clenched hands
together fiercely. “What should I have done!”
When Marco turned toward him from
the table near which he was standing, he looked like
his father.
“You would have gone on with
the Game just as far as you could,” he said.
“You could not leave it. You remember the
places, and the faces, and the Sign. There is
some money; and when it was all gone, you could have
begged, as we used to pretend we should. We have
not had to do it yet; and it was best to save it for
country places and villages. But you could have
done it if you were obliged to. The Game would
have to go on.”
The Rat caught at his thin chest as
if he had been struck breathless.
“Without you?” he gasped. “Without
you?”
“Yes,” said Marco.
“And we must think of it, and plan in case anything
like that should happen.”
He stopped himself quite suddenly,
and sat down, looking straight before him, as if at
some far away thing he saw.
“Nothing will happen,” he said. “Nothing
can.”
“What are you thinking of?”
The Rat gulped, because his breath had not quite come
back. “Why will nothing happen?”
“Because—”
the boy spoke in an almost matter-of-fact tone—in
quite an unexalted tone at all events, “you
see I can always make a strong call, as I did tonight.”
“Did you shout?” The Rat
asked. “I didn’t know you shouted.”
“I didn’t. I said
nothing aloud. But I—the myself that
is in me,” Marco touched himself on the breast,
“called out, ‘Help! Help!’ with
all its strength. And help came.”
The Rat regarded him dubiously.
“What did it call to?” he asked.
“To the Power—to
the Strength-place—to the Thought that does
things. The Buddhist hermit, who told my father
about it, called it ’The Thought that thought
the World.’”
A reluctant suspicion betrayed itself in The Rat’s
eyes.
“Do you mean you prayed?” he inquired,
with a slight touch of disfavor.
Marco’s eyes remained fixed
upon him in vague thoughtfulness for a moment or so
of pause.
“I don’t know,”
he said at last. “Perhaps it’s the
same thing—when you need something so much
that you cry out loud for it. But it’s not
words, it’s a strong thing without a name.
I called like that when I was shut in the wine-cellar.
I remembered some of the things the old Buddhist told
my father.”
The Rat moved restlessly.
“The help came that time,” he admitted.
“How did it come to-night?”
“In that thought which flashed
into my mind almost the next second. It came
like lightning. All at once I knew if I ran to
the Chancellor and said the woman was a spy, it would
startle him into listening to me; and that then I
could give him the Sign; and that when I gave him the
Sign, he would know I was speaking the truth and would
protect me.”
“It was a splendid thought!”
The Rat said. “And it was quick. But
it was you who thought of it.”
“All thinking is part of the
Big Thought,” said Marco slowly. “It
knows—It knows. And the
outside part of us somehow broke the chain that linked
us to It. And we are always trying to mend the
chain, without knowing it. That is what our thinking
is—trying to mend the chain. But we
shall find out how to do it sometime. The old
Buddhist told my father so—just as the
sun was rising from behind a high peak of the Himalayas.”
Then he added hastily, “I am only telling you
what my father told me, and he only told me what the
old hermit told him.”
“Does your father believe what
he told him?” The Rat’s bewilderment had
become an eager and restless thing.
“Yes, he believes it. He
always thought something like it, himself. That
is why he is so calm and knows so well how to wait.”
“Is that it!” breathed
The Rat. “Is that why? Has—has
he mended the chain?” And there was awe in his
voice, because of this one man to whom he felt any
achievement was possible.
“I believe he has,” said
Marco. “Don’t you think so yourself?”
“He has done something,” The Rat said.
He seemed to be thinking things over
before he spoke again—and then even more
slowly than Marco.
“If he could mend the chain,”
he said almost in a whisper, “he could find
out where the descendant of the Lost Prince is.
He would know what to do for Samavia!”
He ended the words with a start, and
his whole face glowed with a new, amazed light.
“Perhaps he does know!”
he cried. “If the help comes like thoughts—as
yours did—perhaps his thought of letting
us give the Sign was part of it. We—just
we two every-day boys—are part of it!”
“The old Buddhist said—” began
Marco.
“Look here!” broke in
The Rat. “Tell me the whole story.
I want to hear it.”
It was because Loristan had heard
it, and listened and believed, that The Rat had taken
fire. His imagination seized upon the idea, as
it would have seized on some theory of necromancy
proved true and workable.
With his elbows on the table and his
hands in his hair, he leaned forward, twisting a lock
with restless fingers. His breath quickened.
“Tell it,” he said, “I want to hear
it all!”
“I shall have to tell it in
my own words,” Marco said. “And it
won’t be as wonderful as it was when my father
told it to me. This is what I remember:
“My father had gone through
much pain and trouble. A great load was upon
him, and he had been told he was going to die before
his work was done. He had gone to India, because
a man he was obliged to speak to had gone there to
hunt, and no one knew when he would return. My
father followed him for months from one wild place
to another, and, when he found him, the man would
not hear or believe what he had come so far to say.
Then he had jungle-fever and almost died. Once
the natives left him for dead in a bungalow in the
forest, and he heard the jackals howling round him
all the night. Through all the hours he was only
alive enough to be conscious of two things—all
the rest of him seemed gone from his body: his
thought knew that his work was unfinished—and
his body heard the jackals howl!”
“Was the work for Samavia?”
The Rat put in quickly. “If he had died
that night, the descendant of the Lost Prince never
would have been found—never!” The
Rat bit his lip so hard that a drop of blood started
from it.
“When he was slowly coming alive
again, a native, who had gone back and stayed to wait
upon him, told him that near the summit of a mountain,
about fifty miles away, there was a ledge which jutted
out into space and hung over the valley, which was
thousands of feet below. On the ledge there was
a hut in which there lived an ancient Buddhist, who
was a holy man, as they called him, and who had been
there during time which had not been measured.
They said that their grandparents and great-grandparents
had known of him, though very few persons had ever
seen him. It was told that the most savage beast
was tame before him. They said that a man-eating
tiger would stop to salute him, and that a thirsty
lioness would bring her whelps to drink at the spring
near his hut.”
“That was a lie,” said The Rat promptly.
Marco neither laughed nor frowned.
“How do we know?”
he said. “It was a native’s story,
and it might be anything. My father neither said
it was true nor false. He listened to all that
was told him by natives. They said that the holy
man was the brother of the stars. He knew all
things past and to come, and could heal the sick.
But most people, especially those who had sinful thoughts,
were afraid to go near him.”
“I’d like to have seen—”
The Rat pondered aloud, but he did not finish.
“Before my father was well,
he had made up his mind to travel to the ledge if
he could. He felt as if he must go. He thought
that if he were going to die, the hermit might tell
him some wise thing to do for Samavia.”
“He might have given him a message
to leave to the Secret Ones,” said The Rat.
“He was so weak when he set
out on his journey that he wondered if he would reach
the end of it. Part of the way he traveled by
bullock cart, and part, he was carried by natives.
But at last the bearers came to a place more than
halfway up the mountain, and would go no further.
Then they went back and left him to climb the rest
of the way himself. They had traveled slowly
and he had got more strength, but he was weak yet.
The forest was more wonderful than anything he had
ever seen. There were tropical trees with foliage
like lace, and some with huge leaves, and some of
them seemed to reach the sky. Sometimes he could
barely see gleams of blue through them. And vines
swung down from their high branches, and caught each
other, and matted together; and there were hot scents,
and strange flowers, and dazzling birds darting about,
and thick moss, and little cascades bursting out.
The path grew narrower and steeper, and the flower
scents and the sultriness made it like walking in
a hothouse. He heard rustlings in the undergrowth,
which might have been made by any kind of wild animal;
once he stepped across a deadly snake without seeing
it. But it was asleep and did not hurt him.
He knew the natives had been convinced that he would
not reach the ledge; but for some strange reason he
believed he should. He stopped and rested many
times, and he drank some milk he had brought in a canteen.
The higher he climbed, the more wonderful everything
was, and a strange feeling began to fill him.
He said his body stopped being tired and began to
feel very light. And his load lifted itself from
his heart, as if it were not his load any more but
belonged to something stronger. Even Samavia
seemed to be safe. As he went higher and higher,
and looked down the abyss at the world below, it appeared
as if it were not real but only a dream he had wakened
from—only a dream.”
The Rat moved restlessly.
“Perhaps he was light-headed with the fever,”
he suggested.
“The fever had left him, and
the weakness had left him,” Marco answered.
“It seemed as if he had never really been ill
at all—as if no one could be ill, because
things like that were only dreams, just as the world
was.”
“I wish I’d been with
him! Perhaps I could have thrown these away—down
into the abyss!” And The Rat shook his crutches
which rested against the table. “I feel
as if I was climbing, too. Go on.”
Marco had become more absorbed than
The Rat. He had lost himself in the memory of
the story.
“I felt that I was climbing,
when he told me,” he said. “I felt
as if I were breathing in the hot flower-scents and
pushing aside the big leaves and giant ferns.
There had been a rain, and they were wet and shining
with big drops, like jewels, that showered over him
as he thrust his way through and under them.
And the stillness and the height—the stillness
and the height! I can’t make it real to
you as he made it to me! I can’t!
I was there. He took me. And it was so high—and
so still—and so beautiful that I could
scarcely bear it.”
But the truth was, that with some
vivid boy-touch he had carried his hearer far.
The Rat was deadly quiet. Even his eyes had not
moved. He spoke almost as if he were in a sort
of trance. “It’s real,” he said.
“I’m there now. As high as you—go
on—go on. I want to climb higher.”
And Marco, understanding, went on.
“The day was over and the stars
were out when he reached the place were the ledge
was. He said he thought that during the last part
of the climb he never looked on the earth at all.
The stars were so immense that he could not look away
from them. They seemed to be drawing him up.
And all overhead was like violet velvet, and they
hung there like great lamps of radiance. Can
you see them? You must see them. My father
saw them all night long. They were part of the
wonder.”
“I see them,” The Rat
answered, still in his trance-like voice and without
stirring, and Marco knew he did.
“And there, with the huge stars
watching it, was the hut on the ledge. And there
was no one there. The door was open. And
outside it was a low bench and table of stone.
And on the table was a meal of dates and rice, waiting.
Not far from the hut was a deep spring, which ran away
in a clear brook. My father drank and bathed
his face there. Then he went out on the ledge,
and sat down and waited, with his face turned up to
the stars. He did not lie down, and he thought
he saw the stars all the time he waited. He was
sure he did not sleep. He did not know how long
he sat there alone. But at last he drew his eyes
from the stars, as if he had been commanded to do
it. And he was not alone any more. A yard
or so away from him sat the holy man. He knew
it was the hermit because his eyes were different
from any human eyes he had ever beheld. They were
as still as the night was, and as deep as the shadows
covering the world thousands of feet below, and they
had a far, far look, and a strange light was in them.”
“What did he say?” asked The Rat hoarsely.
“He only said, ’Rise,
my son. I awaited thee. Go and eat the food
I prepared for thee, and then we will speak together.’
He didn’t move or speak again until my father
had eaten the meal. He only sat on the moss and
let his eyes rest on the shadows over the abyss.
When my father went back, he made a gesture which
meant that he should sit near him.
“Then he sat still for several
minutes, and let his eyes rest on my father, until
he felt as if the light in them were set in the midst
of his own body and his soul. Then he said, ’I
cannot tell thee all thou wouldst know. That
I may not do.’ He had a wonderful gentle
voice, like a deep soft bell. ’But the
work will be done. Thy life and thy son’s
life will set it on its way.’
“They sat through the whole
night together. And the stars hung quite near,
as if they listened. And there were sounds in
the bushes of stealthy, padding feet which wandered
about as if the owners of them listened too.
And the wonderful, low, peaceful voice of the holy
man went on and on, telling of wonders which seemed
like miracles but which were to him only the ‘working
of the Law.’”
“What is the Law?” The Rat broke in.
“There were two my father wrote
down, and I learned them. The first was the law
of The One. I’ll try to say that,”
and he covered his eyes and waited through a moment
of silence.
It seemed to The Rat as if the room
held an extraordinary stillness.
“Listen!” came next. “This
is it:
“’There are a myriad
worlds. There is but One Thought out of which
they grew. Its Law is Order which cannot swerve.
Its creatures are free to choose. Only they can
create Disorder, which in itself is Pain and Woe and
Hate and Fear. These they alone can bring forth.
The Great One is a Golden Light. It is not remote
but near. Hold thyself within its glow and thou
wilt behold all things clearly. First, with all
thy breathing being, know one thing! That thine
own thought—when so thou standest—is
one with That which thought the Worlds!’”
“What?” gasped The Rat.
“My thought—the things I
think!”
“Your thoughts—boys’ thoughts—anybody’s
thoughts.”
“You’re giving me the jim-jams!”
“He said it,” answered
Marco. “And it was then he spoke about the
broken Link—and about the greatest books
in the world—that in all their different
ways, they were only saying over and over again one
thing thousands of times. Just this thing—’Hate
not, Fear not, Love.’ And he said that
was Order. And when it was disturbed, suffering
came—poverty and misery and catastrophe
and wars.”
“Wars!” The Rat said sharply.
“The World couldn’t do without war—and
armies and defences! What about Samavia?”
“My father asked him that.
And this is what he answered. I learned that
too. Let me think again,” and he waited
as he had waited before. Then he lifted his head.
“Listen! This is it:
“’Out of the blackness
of Disorder and its outpouring of human misery, there
will arise the Order which is Peace. When Man
learns that he is one with the Thought which itself
creates all beauty, all power, all splendor, and all
repose, he will not fear that his brother can rob him
of his heart’s desire. He will stand in
the Light and draw to himself his own.’”
“Draw to himself?” The
Rat said. “Draw what he wants? I don’t
believe it!”
“Nobody does,” said Marco.
“We don’t know. He said we stood in
the dark of the night—without stars—and
did not know that the broken chain swung just above
us.”
“I don’t believe it!” said The Rat.
“It’s too big!”
Marco did not say whether he believed
it or not. He only went on speaking.
“My father listened until he
felt as if he had stopped breathing. Just at
the stillest of the stillness the Buddhist stopped
speaking. And there was a rustling of the undergrowth
a few yards away, as if something big was pushing
its way through—and there was the soft pad
of feet. The Buddhist turned his head and my
father heard him say softly: ‘Come forth,
Sister.’
“And a huge leopardess with
two cubs walked out on to the ledge and came to him
and threw herself down with a heavy lunge near his
feet.”
“Your father saw that!”
cried out The Rat. “You mean the old fellow
knew something that made wild beasts afraid to touch
him or any one near him?”
“Not afraid. They knew
he was their brother, and that he was one with the
Law. He had lived so long with the Great Thought
that all darkness and fear had left him forever.
He had mended the Chain.”
The Rat had reached deep waters.
He leaned forward—his hands burrowing in
his hair, his face scowling and twisted, his eyes boring
into space. He had climbed to the ledge at the
mountain-top; he had seen the luminous immensity of
the stars, and he had looked down into the shadows
filling the world thousands of feet below. Was
there some remote deep in him from whose darkness
a slow light was rising? All that Loristan had
said he knew must be true. But the rest of it—?
Marco got up and came over to him.
He looked like his father again.
“If the descendant of the Lost
Prince is brought back to rule Samavia, he will teach
his people the Law of the One. It was for that
the holy man taught my father until the dawn came.”
“Who will—who will
teach the Lost Prince—the new King—when
he is found?” The Rat cried. “Who
will teach him?”
“The hermit said my father would.
He said he would also teach his son—and
that son would teach his son—and he would
teach his. And through such as they were, the
whole world would come to know the Order and the Law.”
Never had The Rat looked so strange
and fierce a thing. A whole world at peace!
No tactics—no battles—no slaughtered
heroes—no clash of arms, and fame!
It made him feel sick. And yet—something
set his chest heaving.
“And your father would teach
him that—when he was found! So that
he could teach his sons. Your father believes
in it?”
“Yes,” Marco answered.
He said nothing but “Yes.” The Rat
threw himself forward on the table, face downward.
“Then,” he said, “he
must make me believe it. He must teach me—if
he can.”
They heard a clumping step upon the
staircase, and, when it reached the landing, it stopped
at their door. Then there was a solid knock.
When Marco opened the door, the young
soldier who had escorted him from the Hof-Theater
was standing outside. He looked as uninterested
and stolid as before, as he handed in a small flat
package.
“You must have dropped it near
your seat at the Opera,” he said. “I
was to give it into your own hands. It is your
purse.”
After he had clumped down the staircase
again, Marco and The Rat drew a quick breath at one
and the same time.
“I had no seat and I had no
purse,” Marco said. “Let us open it.”
There was a flat limp leather note-holder
inside. In it was a paper, at the head of which
were photographs of the Lovely Person and her companion.
Beneath were a few lines which stated that they were
the well known spies, Eugenia Karovna and Paul Varel,
and that the bearer must be protected against them.
It was signed by the Chief of the Police. On a
separate sheet was written the command: “Carry
this with you as protection.”
“That is help,” The Rat
said. “It would protect us, even in another
country. The Chancellor sent it—but
you made the strong call—and it’s
here!”
There was no street lamp to shine
into their windows when they went at last to bed.
When the blind was drawn up, they were nearer the sky
than they had been in the Marylebone Road. The
last thing each of them saw, as he went to sleep,
was the stars—and in their dreams, they
saw them grow larger and larger, and hang like lamps
of radiance against the violet—velvet sky
above a ledge of a Himalayan Mountain, where they
listened to the sound of a low voice going on and on
and on.