Part 8 (1/2)

CHAPTER VIII

The Queen, closely followed by Phillips, hurried through the cellars, along narrow pa.s.sages, up a dozen different flights of stairs. They lost themselves several times. Twice they arrived by different routes at the large central kitchen. Twice they left it by different doors.

They grew hot with laughter and bewilderment. Then they heard the steamer's syren and grew hotter still with impatience. At last, breathless and flushed, they reached the steps at which they had landed.

Eight boats lay cl.u.s.tered round the steamer. One of them was her own, a heavy white boat, carvel built, with high freeboard. Four men sat in her, resting on their oars. The other seven were island boats, gaily painted red and green, high prowed, high sterned. The biggest of them had a mast stepped right forward, a mast which raked steeply aft, across which lay the yard of a lateen sail. Six oarsmen sat in her.

The other island boats were smaller. There were only two rowers in each. They had the same high bows and high sterns curving inwards, the same low freeboard amids.h.i.+ps where the rowers sat. In them were many women and children.

On the deck of the _Ida_ stood a little group of men. Captain Wilson's neat alert figure was easily recognizable. Mr. Donovan's white Panama hat was unmistakable. Phillips declared that the smaller man who stood beside Mr. Donovan was Smith, the steward. A little apart from them stood a tall bare-headed man. He had a long white beard. There seemed to be some kind of consultation going on. When the Queen and Phillips appeared on the steps below the castle the group on the steamer broke up. Captain Wilson, Mr. Donovan and Smith took places in the _Ida's_ lifeboat. The old man went into the largest of the island boats. He stood in the stern, his hand on the carved end of her huge tiller. The eight boats, tailing out in a long procession, rowed slowly towards the castle steps.

”They must be your subjects,” said Phillips. ”They are coming to swear allegiance.”

”My!” said the Queen. ”What shall I say? What shall I do? What will they do? They can't all kiss my hand. There must be forty of them.”

”I think,” he said, ”that you'd better stand beside the flagstaff.

It's a commanding sort of position. They'll have to climb up the steps to get to you. I wish the breeze had not died away. The flag would look ever so much better if it blew out.”

The Queen climbed the steps and took her place beneath the limp royal standard. Mr. Phillips bared his head and stood behind her.

The boats reached the steps. Mr. Donovan landed. Smith stepped ash.o.r.e after him. Captain Wilson bade his men push off. He remained, a critical observer of the scene, some twenty or thirty yards from the sh.o.r.e.

”Daisy,” said Mr. Donovan, ”there's going to be a pageant. The inhabitants of this island are going to demonstrate.”

”How shall I talk to them?” said the Queen. ”What language do they speak?”

”Don't you fret any about that. I've brought Smith along. Smith is the only living Englishman who speaks the Megalian language. He's been explaining the situation to the high priest of the island for the last half-hour while we blew bugle calls on the syren to attract your attention. Smith is a wonderful man, worth any salary to a firm with a big foreign business.”

Smith bowed.

”It's hardly a language, sir,” he said. ”A dialect, a patois. Partly Turkish, partly Slavonic, with a Greek base.”

”Some language that,” said Mr. Donovan. ”It would interest our college professors. If you found a university on the island, Daisy, you must inst.i.tute a system of visiting lecturers from the colleges on our side.”

”Oh, here they are!” said the Queen. ”How lovely! Look at all their bright dresses. And the men are as gay as the women. Oh! there's the d.i.n.kiest little baby with a brown face. He's smiling at me. I know I shall just love them all, especially the brown babies.”

The islanders were disembarking from their boats. They crowded together on the lower steps of the staircase which led up to the flagstaff. They talked rapidly in low voices and gazed with frank curiosity at the little group above them. Women held babies high in their arms. Men took up toddling children and set them on their shoulders. Evidently all, even the youngest, were to have their chance of gazing at the new queen.

The old man who had stood at the tiller of the leading boat disengaged himself from the crowd. He mounted the steps slowly, pausing now and then to bow low. He was a picturesque figure. He wore a short black jacket, heavily embroidered with gold thread. Underneath it was a blue tunic reaching to his knees. Round his waist was a broad crimson sash.

He advanced with a grave dignity. Each bow--and he bowed often--was an act of ceremonial courtesy. There was no trace of servility, nor of any special desire to please or propitiate in his manner. He reached the step below the terrace on which the flagstaff stood. He bowed once more and then stood upright, looking straight at the Queen with calm, untroubled eyes.

He spoke a few words in a soft, low tone. Smith stepped forward to explain and interpret.

”This is Stephanos,” he said, ”the Elder of Salissa.”

”Minister of religion?” said Donovan.

”He acts as such, sir,” said Smith, ”at marriages and such-like among his own people; but I don't know that the Church of England would consider him as a regular clergyman. He appears to be more of the nature of a Lord Mayor than an Archbishop.”