The Lost Prince eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about The Lost Prince.

The Lost Prince eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about The Lost Prince.

He paused as if to think the thing over again.

“I want to see your face,” he said next.  “Here is a tree with a shaft of moonlight striking through the branches.  Let us step aside and stand under it.”

Marco did as he was told.  The shaft of moonlight fell upon his uplifted face and showed its young strength and darkness, quite splendid for the moment in a triumphant glow of joy in obstacles overcome.  Raindrops hung on his hair, but he did not look draggled, only very wet and picturesque.  He had reached his man.  He had given the Sign.

The Prince looked him over with interested curiosity.

“Yes,” he said in his cool, rather dragging voice.  “You are the son of Stefan Loristan.  Also you must be taken care of.  You must come with me.  I have trained my household to remain in its own quarters until I require its service.  I have attached to my own apartments a good safe little room where I sometimes keep people.  You can dry your clothes and sleep there.  When the gardens are opened again, the rest will be easy.”

But though he stepped out from under the trees and began to move towards the palace in the shadow, Marco noticed that he moved hesitatingly, as if he had not quite decided what he should do.  He stopped rather suddenly and turned again to Marco, who was following him.

“There is some one in the room I just now left,” he said, “an old man—­whom it might interest to see you.  It might also be a good thing for him to feel interest in you.  I choose that he shall see you—­as you are.”

“I am at your command, Highness,” Marco answered.  He knew his companion was smiling again.

“You have been in training for more centuries than you know,” he said; “and your father has prepared you to encounter the unexpected without surprise.”

They passed under the balcony and paused at a low stone doorway hidden behind shrubs.  The door was a beautiful one, Marco saw when it was opened, and the corridor disclosed was beautiful also, though it had an air of quiet and aloofness which was not so much secret as private.  A perfect though narrow staircase mounted from it to the next floor.  After ascending it, the Prince led the way through a short corridor and stopped at the door at the end of it.  “We are going in here,” he said.

It was a wonderful room—­the one which opened on to the balcony.  Each piece of furniture in it, the hangings, the tapestries, and pictures on the wall were all such as might well have found themselves adorning a museum.  Marco remembered the common report of his escort’s favorite amusement of collecting wonders and furnishing his house with the things others exhibited only as marvels of art and handicraft.  The place was rich and mellow with exquisitely chosen beauties.

In a massive chair upon the heart sat a figure with bent head.  It was a tall old man with white hair and moustache.  His elbows rested upon the arm of his chair and he leaned his forehead on his hand as if he were weary.

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Project Gutenberg
The Lost Prince from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.