ACROSS THE FRONTIER
That one day, a week later, two tired
and travel-worn boy-mendicants should drag themselves
with slow and weary feet across the frontier line
between Jiardasia and Samavia, was not an incident
to awaken suspicion or even to attract attention.
War and hunger and anguish had left the country stunned
and broken. Since the worst had happened, no one
was curious as to what would befall them next.
If Jiardasia herself had become a foe, instead of
a friendly neighbor, and had sent across the border
galloping hordes of soldiery, there would only have
been more shrieks, and home-burnings, and slaughter
which no one dare resist. But, so far, Jiardasia
had remained peaceful. The two boys—one
of them on crutches—had evidently traveled
far on foot. Their poor clothes were dusty and
travel-stained, and they stopped and asked for water
at the first hut across the line. The one who
walked without crutches had some coarse bread in a
bag slung over his shoulder, and they sat on the roadside
and ate it as if they were hungry. The old grandmother
who lived alone in the hut sat and stared at them
without any curiosity. She may have vaguely wondered
why any one crossed into Samavia in these days.
But she did not care to know their reason. Her
big son had lived in a village which belonged to the
Maranovitch and he had been called out to fight for
his lords. He had not wanted to fight and had
not known what the quarrel was about, but he was forced
to obey. He had kissed his handsome wife and
four sturdy children, blubbering aloud when he left
them. His village and his good crops and his house
must be left behind. Then the Iarovitch swept
through the pretty little cluster of homesteads which
belonged to their enemy. They were mad with rage
because they had met with great losses in a battle
not far away, and, as they swooped through, they burned
and killed, and trampled down fields and vineyards.
The old woman’s son never saw either the burned
walls of his house or the bodies of his wife and children,
because he had been killed himself in the battle for
which the Iarovitch were revenging themselves.
Only the old grandmother who lived in the hut near
the frontier line and stared vacantly at the passers-by
remained alive. She wearily gazed at people and
wondered why she did not hear news from her son and
her grandchildren. But that was all.
When the boys were over the frontier
and well on their way along the roads, it was not
difficult to keep out of sight if it seemed necessary.
The country was mountainous and there were deep and
thick forests by the way—forests so far-reaching
and with such thick undergrowth that full-grown men
could easily have hidden themselves. It was because
of this, perhaps, that this part of the country had
seen little fighting. There was too great opportunity
for secure ambush for a foe. As the two travelers
went on, they heard of burned villages and towns destroyed,
but they were towns and villages nearer Melzarr and
other fortress-defended cities, or they were in the
country surrounding the castles and estates of powerful
nobles and leaders. It was true, as Marco had
said to the white-haired personage, that the Maranovitch
and Iarovitch had fought with the savageness of hyenas
until at last the forces of each side lay torn and
bleeding, their strength, their resources, their supplies
exhausted.
Each day left them weaker and more
desperate. Europe looked on with small interest
in either party but with growing desire that the disorder
should end and cease to interfere with commerce.
All this and much more Marco and The Rat knew, but,
as they made their cautious way through byways of
the maimed and tortured little country, they learned
other things. They learned that the stories of
its beauty and fertility were not romances. Its
heaven-reaching mountains, its immense plains of rich
verdure on which flocks and herds might have fed by
thousands, its splendor of deep forest and broad clear
rushing rivers had a primeval majesty such as the
first human creatures might have found on earth in
the days of the Garden of Eden. The two boys traveled
through forest and woodland when it was possible to
leave the road. It was safe to thread a way among
huge trees and tall ferns and young saplings.
It was not always easy but it was safe. Sometimes
they saw a charcoal-burner’s hut or a shelter
where a shepherd was hiding with the few sheep left
to him. Each man they met wore the same look
of stony suffering in his face; but, when the boys
begged for bread and water, as was their habit, no
one refused to share the little he had. It soon
became plain to them that they were thought to be
two young fugitives whose homes had probably been
destroyed and who were wandering about with no thought
but that of finding safety until the worst was over.
That one of them traveled on crutches added to their
apparent helplessness, and that he could not speak
the language of the country made him more an object
of pity. The peasants did not know what language
he spoke. Sometimes a foreigner came to find
work in this small town or that. The poor lad
might have come to the country with his father and
mother and then have been caught in the whirlpool
of war and tossed out on the world parent-less.
But no one asked questions. Even in their desolation
they were silent and noble people who were too courteous
for curiosity.
“In the old days they were simple
and stately and kind. All doors were open to
travelers. The master of the poorest hut uttered
a blessing and a welcome when a stranger crossed his
threshold. It was the custom of the country,”
Marco said. “I read about it in a book of
my father’s. About most of the doors the
welcome was carved in stone. It was this—’The
Blessing of the Son of God, and Rest within these Walls.’”
“They are big and strong,”
said The Rat. “And they have good faces.
They carry themselves as if they had been drilled—both
men and women.”
It was not through the blood-drenched
part of the unhappy land their way led them, but they
saw hunger and dread in the villages they passed.
Crops which should have fed the people had been taken
from them for the use of the army; flocks and herds
had been driven away, and faces were gaunt and gray.
Those who had as yet only lost crops and herds knew
that homes and lives might be torn from them at any
moment. Only old men and women and children were
left to wait for any fate which the chances of war
might deal out to them.
When they were given food from some
poor store, Marco would offer a little money in return.
He dare not excite suspicion by offering much.
He was obliged to let it be imagined that in his flight
from his ruined home he had been able to snatch at
and secrete some poor hoard which might save him from
starvation. Often the women would not take what
he offered. Their journey was a hard and hungry
one. They must make it all on foot and there
was little food to be found. But each of them
knew how to live on scant fare. They traveled
mostly by night and slept among the ferns and undergrowth
through the day. They drank from running brooks
and bathed in them. Moss and ferns made soft and
sweet-smelling beds, and trees roofed them. Sometimes
they lay long and talked while they rested. And
at length a day came when they knew they were nearing
their journey’s end.
“It is nearly over now,”
Marco said, after they had thrown themselves down
in the forest in the early hours of one dewy morning.
“He said ’After Samavia, go back to London
as quickly as you can—as quickly as
you can.’ He said it twice. As
if—something were going to happen.”
“Perhaps it will happen more
suddenly than we think—the thing he meant,”
answered The Rat.
Suddenly he sat up on his elbow and leaned towards
Marco.
“We are in Samavia!” he
said “We two are in Samavia! And we are
near the end!”
Marco rose on his elbow also.
He was very thin as a result of hard travel and scant
feeding. His thinness made his eyes look immense
and black as pits. But they burned and were beautiful
with their own fire.
“Yes,” he said, breathing
quickly. “And though we do not know what
the end will be, we have obeyed orders. The Prince
was next to the last one. There is only one more.
The old priest.”
“I have wanted to see him more
than I have wanted to see any of the others,”
The Rat said.
“So have I,” Marco answered.
“His church is built on the side of this mountain.
I wonder what he will say to us.”
Both had the same reason for wanting
to see him. In his youth he had served in the
monastery over the frontier—the one which,
till it was destroyed in a revolt, had treasured the
five-hundred-year-old story of the beautiful royal
lad brought to be hidden among the brotherhood by
the ancient shepherd. In the monastery the memory
of the Lost Prince was as the memory of a saint.
It had been told that one of the early brothers, who
was a decorator and a painter, had made a picture of
him with a faint halo shining about his head.
The young acolyte who had served there must have heard
wonderful legends. But the monastery had been
burned, and the young acolyte had in later years crossed
the frontier and become the priest of a few mountaineers
whose little church clung to the mountain side.
He had worked hard and faithfully and was worshipped
by his people. Only the secret Forgers of the
Sword knew that his most ardent worshippers were those
with whom he prayed and to whom he gave blessings
in dark caverns under the earth, where arms piled
themselves and men with dark strong faces sat together
in the dim light and laid plans and wrought schemes.
This Marco and The Rat did not know
as they talked of their desire to see him.
“He may not choose to tell us
anything,” said Marco. “When we have
given him the Sign, he may turn away and say nothing
as some of the others did. He may have nothing
to say which we should hear. Silence may be the
order for him, too.”
It would not be a long or dangerous
climb to the little church on the rock. They
could sleep or rest all day and begin it at twilight.
So after they had talked of the old priest and had
eaten their black bread, they settled themselves to
sleep under cover of the thick tall ferns.
It was a long and deep sleep which
nothing disturbed. So few human beings ever climbed
the hill, except by the narrow rough path leading to
the church, that the little wild creatures had not
learned to be afraid of them. Once, during the
afternoon, a hare hopping along under the ferns to
make a visit stopped by Marco’s head, and, after
looking at him a few seconds with his lustrous eyes,
began to nibble the ends of his hair. He only
did it from curiosity and because he wondered if it
might be a new kind of grass, but he did not like
it and stopped nibbling almost at once, after which
he looked at it again, moving the soft sensitive end
of his nose rapidly for a second or so, and then hopped
away to attend to his own affairs. A very large
and handsome green stag-beetle crawled from one end
of The Rat’s crutches to the other, but, having
done it, he went away also. Two or three times
a bird, searching for his dinner under the ferns,
was surprised to find the two sleeping figures, but,
as they lay so quietly, there seemed nothing to be
frightened about. A beautiful little field mouse
running past discovered that there were crumbs lying
about and ate all she could find on the moss.
After that she crept into Marco’s pocket and
found some excellent ones and had quite a feast.
But she disturbed nobody and the boys slept on.
It was a bird’s evening song
which awakened them both. The bird alighted on
the branch of a tree near them and her trill was rippling
clear and sweet. The evening air had freshened
and was fragrant with hillside scents. When Marco
first rolled over and opened his eyes, he thought the
most delicious thing on earth was to waken from sleep
on a hillside at evening and hear a bird singing.
It seemed to make exquisitely real to him the fact
that he was in Samavia—that the Lamp was
lighted and his work was nearly done. The Rat
awakened when he did, and for a few minutes both lay
on their backs without speaking. At last Marco
said, “The stars are coming out. We can
begin to climb, Aide-de-camp.”
Then they both got up and looked at each other.
“The last one!” The Rat
said. “To-morrow we shall be on our way
back to London—Number 7 Philibert Place.
After all the places we’ve been to—what
will it look like?”
“It will be like wakening out
of a dream,” said Marco. “It’s
not beautiful—Philibert Place. But
he will be there,” And it was as if a
light lighted itself in his face and shone through
the very darkness of it.
And The Rat’s face lighted in
almost exactly the same way. And he pulled off
his cap and stood bare-headed. “We’ve
obeyed orders,” he said. “We’ve
not forgotten one. No one has noticed us, no one
has thought of us. We’ve blown through
the countries as if we had been grains of dust.”
Marco’s head was bared, too,
and his face was still shining. “God be
thanked!” he said. “Let us begin to
climb.”
They pushed their way through the
ferns and wandered in and out through trees until
they found the little path. The hill was thickly
clothed with forest and the little path was sometimes
dark and steep; but they knew that, if they followed
it, they would at last come out to a place where there
were scarcely any trees at all, and on a crag they
would find the tiny church waiting for them.
The priest might not be there. They might have
to wait for him, but he would be sure to come back
for morning Mass and for vespers, wheresoever he wandered
between times.
There were many stars in the sky when
at last a turn of the path showed them the church
above them. It was little and built of rough stone.
It looked as if the priest himself and his scattered
flock might have broken and carried or rolled bits
of the hill to put it together. It had the small,
round, mosque-like summit the Turks had brought into
Europe in centuries past. It was so tiny that
it would hold but a very small congregation—and
close to it was a shed-like house, which was of course
the priest’s.
The two boys stopped on the path to look at it.
“There is a candle burning in one of the little
windows,” said Marco.
“There is a well near the door—and
some one is beginning to draw water,” said The
Rat, next. “It is too dark to see who it
is. Listen!”
They listened and heard the bucket
descend on the chains, and splash in the water.
Then it was drawn up, and it seemed some one drank
long. Then they saw a dim figure move forward
and stand still. Then they heard a voice begin
to pray aloud, as if the owner, being accustomed to
utter solitude, did not think of earthly hearers.
“Come,” Marco said. And they went
forward.
Because the stars were so many and
the air so clear, the priest heard their feet on the
path, and saw them almost as soon as he heard them.
He ended his prayer and watched them coming.
A lad on crutches, who moved as lightly and easily
as a bird—and a lad who, even yards away,
was noticeable for a bearing of his body which was
neither haughty nor proud but set him somehow aloof
from every other lad one had ever seen. A magnificent
lad—though, as he drew near, the starlight
showed his face thin and his eyes hollow as if with
fatigue or hunger.
“And who is this one?”
the old priest murmured to himself. “Who?”
Marco drew up before him and made
a respectful reverence. Then he lifted his black
head, squared his shoulders and uttered his message
for the last time.
“The Lamp is lighted, Father,”
he said. “The Lamp is lighted.”
The old priest stood quite still and
gazed into his face. The next moment he bent
his head so that he could look at him closely.
It seemed almost as if he were frightened and wanted
to make sure of something. At the moment it flashed
through The Rat’s mind that the old, old woman
on the mountain-top had looked frightened in something
the same way.
“I am an old man,” he
said. “My eyes are not good. If I had
a light”—and he glanced towards the
house.
It was The Rat who, with one whirl,
swung through the door and seized the candle.
He guessed what he wanted. He held it himself
so that the flare fell on Marco’s face.
The old priest drew nearer and nearer.
He gasped for breath. “You are the son
of Stefan Loristan!” he cried. “It
is his son who brings the Sign.”
He fell upon his knees and hid his
face in his hands. Both the boys heard him sobbing
and praying—praying and sobbing at once.
They glanced at each other. The
Rat was bursting with excitement, but he felt a little
awkward also and wondered what Marco would do.
An old fellow on his knees, crying, made a chap feel
as if he didn’t know what to say. Must
you comfort him or must you let him go on?
Marco only stood quite still and looked
at him with understanding and gravity.
“Yes, Father,” he said.
“I am the son of Stefan Loristan, and I have
given the Sign to all. You are the last one.
The Lamp is lighted. I could weep for gladness,
too.”
The priest’s tears and prayers
ended. He rose to his feet—a rugged-faced
old man with long and thick white hair which fell on
his shoulders—and smiled at Marco while
his eyes were still wet.
“You have passed from one country
to another with the message?” he said.
“You were under orders to say those four words?”
“Yes, Father,” answered Marco.
“That was all? You were to say no more?”
“I know no more. Silence
has been the order since I took my oath of allegiance
when I was a child. I was not old enough to fight,
or serve, or reason about great things. All I
could do was to be silent, and to train myself to
remember, and be ready when I was called. When
my father saw I was ready, he trusted me to go out
and give the Sign. He told me the four words.
Nothing else.”
The old man watched him with a wondering face.
“If Stefan Loristan does not know best,”
he said, “who does?”
“He always knows,” answered
Marco proudly. “Always.” He waved
his hand like a young king toward The Rat. He
wanted each man they met to understand the value of
The Rat. “He chose for me this companion,”
he added. “I have done nothing alone.”
“He let me call myself his aide-de-camp!”
burst forth The Rat. “I would be cut into
inch-long strips for him.”
Marco translated.
Then the priest looked at The Rat
and slowly nodded his head. “Yes,”
he said. “He knew best. He always
knows best. That I see.”
“How did you know I was my father’s
son?” asked Marco. “You have seen
him?”
“No,” was the answer;
“but I have seen a picture which is said to be
his image—and you are the picture’s
self. It is, indeed, a strange thing that two
of God’s creatures should be so alike. There
is a purpose in it.” He led them into his
bare small house and made them rest, and drink goat’s
milk, and eat food. As he moved about the hut-like
place, there was a mysterious and exalted look on
his face.
“You must be refreshed before
we leave here,” he said at last. “I
am going to take you to a place hidden in the mountains
where there are men whose hearts will leap at the
sight of you. To see you will give them new power
and courage and new resolve. To-night they meet
as they or their ancestors have met for centuries,
but now they are nearing the end of their waiting.
And I shall bring them the son of Stefan Loristan,
who is the Bearer of the Sign!”
They ate the bread and cheese and
drank the goat’s milk he gave them, but Marco
explained that they did not need rest as they had slept
all day. They were prepared to follow him when
he was ready.
The last faint hint of twilight had
died into night and the stars were at their thickest
when they set out together. The white-haired old
man took a thick knotted staff in his hand and led
the way. He knew it well, though it was a rugged
and steep one with no track to mark it. Sometimes
they seemed to be walking around the mountain, sometimes
they were climbing, sometimes they dragged themselves
over rocks or fallen trees, or struggled through almost
impassable thickets; more than once they descended
into ravines and, almost at the risk of their lives,
clambered and drew themselves with the aid of the
undergrowth up the other side. The Rat was called
upon to use all his prowess, and sometimes Marco and
the priest helped him across obstacles with the aid
of his crutch.
“Haven’t I shown to-night
whether I’m a cripple or not?” he said
once to Marco. “You can tell him
about this, can’t you? And that the crutches
helped instead of being in the way?”
They had been out nearly two hours
when they came to a place where the undergrowth was
thick and a huge tree had fallen crashing down among
it in some storm. Not far from the tree was an
outcropping rock. Only the top of it was to be
seen above the heavy tangle.
They had pushed their way through
the jungle of bushes and young saplings, led by their
companion. They did not know where they would
be led next and were supposed to push forward further
when the priest stopped by the outcropping rock.
He stood silent a few minutes—quite motionless—as
if he were listening to the forest and the night.
But there was utter stillness. There was not
even a breeze to stir a leaf, or a half-wakened bird
to sleepily chirp.
He struck the rock with his staff—twice,
and then twice again.
Marco and The Rat stood with bated breath.
They did not wait long. Presently
each of them found himself leaning forward, staring
with almost unbelieving eyes, not at the priest or
his staff, but at the rock itself!
It was moving! Yes, it moved.
The priest stepped aside and it slowly turned, as
if worked by a lever. As it turned, it gradually
revealed a chasm of darkness dimly lighted, and the
priest spoke to Marco. “There are hiding-places
like this all through Samavia,” he said.
“Patience and misery have waited long in them.
They are the caverns of the Forgers of the Sword.
Come!”