upon. Marco had had things handed to him all his
life, and it did not make him feel awkward. The
Rat knew that his own father had once lived like this.
He himself would have been at ease if chance had treated
him fairly. It made him scowl to think of it.
But in a few minutes Loristan began to talk about
the copy of the map of Samavia. Then The Rat
forgot everything else and was ill at ease no more.
He did not know that Loristan was leading him on to
explain his theories about the country and the people
and the war. He found himself telling all that
he had read, or overheard, or
thought as he
lay awake in his garret. He had thought out a
great many things in a way not at all like a boy’s.
His strangely concentrated and over-mature mind had
been full of military schemes which Loristan listened
to with curiosity and also with amazement. He
had become extraordinarily clever in one direction
because he had fixed all his mental powers on one thing.
It seemed scarcely natural that an untaught vagabond
lad should know so much and reason so clearly.
It was at least extraordinarily interesting.
There had been no skirmish, no attack, no battle which
he had not led and fought in his own imagination,
and he had made scores of rough queer plans of all
that had been or should have been done. Lazarus
listened as attentively as his master, and once Marco
saw him exchange a startled, rapid glance with Loristan.
It was at a moment when The Rat was sketching with
his finger on the cloth an attack which
ought
to have been made but was not. And Marco knew
at once that the quickly exchanged look meant “He
is right! If it had been done, there would have
been victory instead of disaster!”
It was a wonderful meal, though it was only of bread
and coffee. The Rat knew he should never be able
to forget it.
Afterward, Loristan told him of what he had done the
night before. He had seen the parish authorities
and all had been done which a city government provides
in the case of a pauper’s death.
His father would be buried in the usual manner.
“We will follow him,” Loristan said in
the end. “You and I and Marco and Lazarus.”
The Rat’s mouth fell open.
“You—and Marco—and Lazarus!”
he exclaimed, staring. “And me! Why
should any of us go? I don’t want to.
He wouldn’t have followed me if I’d been
the one.”
Loristan remained silent for a few moments.
“When a life has counted for nothing, the end
of it is a lonely thing,” he said at last.
“If it has forgotten all respect for itself,
pity is all that one has left to give. One would
like to give something to anything so lonely.”
He said the last brief sentence after a pause.
“Let us go,” Marco said suddenly; and
he caught The Rat’s hand.
The Rat’s own movement was sudden. He slipped
from his crutches to a chair, and sat and gazed at
the worn carpet as if he were not looking at it at
all, but at something a long way off. After a
while he looked up at Loristan.