THE LOOSING OF THE POWERS
When I came to myself again, it was
daylight. I saw the calm, gentle face of Qros
bending over me as he poured some strong fluid down
my throat that seemed to shoot through all my body,
and melt a curtain in my mind. I saw also that
beside him stood Ayesha.
“Speak, man, speak,” she
said in a terrible voice. “What hast chanced
here? Thou livest, then where is my lord?
Where hast thou hid my lord? Tell me or
die.”
It was the vision that I saw when
my senses left me in the snow of the avalanche, fulfilled
to the last detail!
“Atene has taken him,” I answered.
“Atene has taken him and thou art left alive?”
“Do not be wrath with me,”
I answered, “it is no fault of mine. Little
wonder we were deceived after thou hadst said that
thou mightest summon us ere dawn.”
Then as briefly as I could I told the story.
She listened, went to where our murdered
guards lay with unstained spears, and looked at them.
“Well for these that they are
dead,” she exclaimed. “Now, Holly,
thou seest what is the fruit of mercy. The men
whose lives I gave my lord have failed him at his
need.”
Then she passed forward to the spot
where Leo was captured. Here lay a broken sword Leo’s that
had been the Khan Rassen’s, and two dead men.
Both of these were clothed in some tight-fitting black
garments, having their heads and faces whitened with
chalk and upon their vests a rude imitation of a human
skeleton, also daubed in chalk.
“A trick fit to frighten fools
with,” she said contemptuously. “But
oh! that Atene should have dared to play the part
of Ayesha, that she should have dared!” and
she clenched her little hand. “See, surprised
and overwhelmed, yet he fought well. Say! was
he hurt, Holly? It comes upon me no,
tell me that I see amiss.”
“Not much, I think,” I
answered doubtfully, “a little blood was running
from his mouth, no more. Look, there go the stains
of it upon that rock.”
“For every drop I’ll take
a hundred lives. By myself I swear it,”
Ayesha muttered with a groan. Then she cried
in a ringing voice,
“Back and to horse, for I have
deeds to do this day. Nay, bide thou here, Holly;
we go a shorter path while the army skirts the gorge.
Oros, give him food and drink and bathe that hurt
upon his head. It is but a bruise, for his hood
and hair are thick.”
So while Oros rubbed some stinging
lotion on my scalp, I ate and drank as best I could
till my brain ceased to swim, for the blow, though
heavy, had not fractured the bone. When I was
ready they brought the horses to us, and mounting
them, slowly we scrambled up the steep bed of the
water-course.
“See,” Ayesha said, pointing
to tracks and hoof-prints on the plain at its head,
“there was a chariot awaiting him, and harnessed
to it were four swift horses. Atene’s scheme
was clever and well laid, and I, grown oversure and
careless, slept through it all!”
On this plain the army of the Tribes
that had broken camp before the dawn was already gathering
fast; indeed, the cavalry, if I may call them so,
were assembled there to the number of about five thousand
men, each of whom had a led horse. Ayesha summoned
the chiefs and captains, and addressed them.
“Servants of Hes,” she said, “the
stranger lord, my betrothed and guest, has been tricked
by a false priest and, falling into a cunning snare,
captured as a hostage. It is necessary that I
follow him fast, before harm comes to him.
We move down to attack the army of the Khania beyond
the river. When its passage is forced I pass
on with the horsemen, for I must sleep in the city
of Kaloon to-night. What sayest thou, Oros?
That a second and greater army defends its walls?
Man, I know it, and if there is need, that army I will
destroy. Nay, stare not at me. Already they
are as dead. Horsemen, you accompany me.
“Captains of the Tribes, you
follow, and woe be to that man who hangs back in the
hour of battle, for death and eternal shame shall be
his portion, but wealth and honour to those who bear
them bravely. Yes, I tell you, theirs shall be
the fair land of Kaloon. You have your orders
for the passing of yonder river. I, with the horsemen,
take the central ford. Let the wings advance.”
The chiefs answered with a cheer,
for they were fierce men whose ancestors had loved
war for generations. Moreover, mad as seemed the
enterprise, they trusted in their Oracle, the Hesea,
and, like all hill peoples, were easily fired by the
promise of rich plunder.
An hour’s steady march down
the slopes brought the army to the edge of the marsh
lands. These, as it chanced, proved no obstacle
to our progress, for in that season of great drought
they were quite dry, and for the same reason the shrunken
river was not so impassable a defence as I feared
that it would be. Still, because of its rocky
bottom and steep, opposing banks, it looked formidable
enough, while on the crests of those banks, in squadrons
and companies of horse and foot, were gathered the
regiments of Atene.
While the wings of footmen deployed
to right and left, the cavalry halted in the marshes
and let their horses fill themselves with the long
grass, now a little browned by frost, that grew on
this boggy soil, and afterwards drink some water.
All this time Ayesha stood silent,
for she also had dismounted, that the mare she rode
and her two led horses might graze with the others.
Indeed, she spoke but once, saying “Thou
thinkest this adventure mad, my Holly? Say, art
afraid?”
“Not with thee for captain,”
I answered. “Still, that second army ”
“Shall melt before me like mist
before the gale,” she replied in a low and thrilling
voice. “Holly, I tell thee thou shalt see
things such as no man upon the earth has ever seen.
Remember my words when I loose the Powers and
thou followest the rent veil of Ayesha through the
smitten squadrons of Kaloon. Only what
if Atene should dare to murder him? Oh, if she
should dare!”
“Be comforted,” I replied,
wondering what she might mean by this loosing of the
Powers. “I think that she loves him too
well.”
“I bless thee for the words,
Holly, yet I know he will refuse her, and
then her hate for me and her jealous rage may overcome
her love for him. Should this be so, what will
avail my vengeance? Eat and drink again, Holly nay,
I touch no food until I sit in the palace of Kaloon and
look well to girth and bridle, for thou ridest far
and on a wild errand. Mount thee on Leo’s
horse, which is swift and sure; if it dies the guards
will bring thee others.”
I obeyed her as best I could, and
once more bathed my head in a pool, and with the help
of Oros tied a rag soaked in the liniment on the bruise,
after which I felt sound enough. Indeed, the mad
excitement of those minutes of waiting, and some foreshadowing
of the terrible wonders that were about to befall,
made me forget my hurts.
Now, Ayesha was standing staring upwards,
so that although I could not see her veiled face,
I guessed that her eyes must be fixed on the sky above
the mountain top. I was certain, also, that she
was concentrating her fearful will upon an unknown
object, for her whole frame quivered like a reed shaken
in the wind.
It was a very strange morning cold
and clear, yet curiously still, and with a heaviness
in the air such as precedes a great fall of snow,
although for much snow the season was yet too early.
Once or twice, too, in that utter calm, I thought
that I felt everything shudder; not the ordinary trembling
of earthquake, however, for the shuddering seemed to
be of the atmosphere quite as much as of the land.
It was as though all Nature around us were a living
creature which is very much afraid.
Following Ayesha’s earnest gaze,
I perceived that thick, smoky clouds were gathering
one by one in the clear sky above the peak, and that
they were edged, each of them, with a fiery rim.
Watching these fantastic and ominous clouds, I ventured
to say to her that it looked as though the weather
would change not a very original remark,
but one which the circumstances suggested.
“Aye,” she answered, “ere
night the weather will be wilder even than my heart.
No longer shall they cry for water in Kaloon!
Mount, Holly, mount! The advance begins!”
and unaided she sprang to the saddle of the mare that
Oros brought her.
Then, in the midst of the five thousand
horsemen, we moved down upon the ford. As we
reached its brink I noted that the two divisions of
tribesmen were already entering the stream half a mile
to the right and left of us. Of what befell them
I can tell nothing from observation, although I learned
later that they forced it after great slaughter on
both sides.
In front of us was gathered the main
body of the Khania’s army, massed by regiments
upon the further bank, while hundreds of picked men
stood up to their middles in the water, waiting to
spear or hamstring our horses as we advanced.
Now, uttering their wild, whistling
cry, our leading companies dashed into the river,
leaving us upon the bank, and soon were engaged hotly
with the footmen in midstream. While this fray
went on, Oros came to Ayesha, told her a spy had reported
that Leo, bound in a two-wheeled carriage and accompanied
by Atene, Simbri and a guard, had passed through the
enemy’s camp at night, galloping furiously towards
Kaloon.
“Spare thy words, I know it,”
she answered, and he fell back behind her.
Our squadrons gained the bank, having
destroyed most of the men in the water, but as they
set foot upon it the enemy charged them and drove
them back with loss. Thrice they returned to the
attack, and thrice were repulsed in this fashion.
At length Ayesha grew impatient.
“They need a leader, and I will
give them one,” she said. “Come with
me, my Holly,” and, followed by the main body
of the horsemen, she rode a little way into the river,
and there waited until the shattered troops had fallen
back upon us. Oros whispered to me “It
is madness, the Hesea will be slain.”
“Thinkest thou so?” I
answered. “More like that we shall be slain,”
a saying at which he smiled a little more than usual
and shrugged his shoulders, since for all his soft
ways, Oros was a brave man. Also I believe that
he spoke to try me, knowing that his mistress would
take no harm.
Ayesha held up her hand, in which
there was no weapon, and waved it forwards. A
great cheer answered that signal to advance, and in
the midst of it this frail, white-robed woman spoke
to her horse, so that it plunged deep into the water.
Two minutes later, and spears and
arrows were flying about us so thickly that they seemed
to darken the sky. I saw men and horses fall to
right and left, but nothing touched me or the white
robes that floated a yard or two ahead. Five
minutes and we were gaining the further bank, and
there the worst fight began.
It was fierce indeed, yet never an
inch did the white robes give back, and where they
went men would follow them or fall. We were up
the bank and the enemy was packed about us, but through
them we passed slowly, like a boat through an adverse
sea that buffets but cannot stay it. Yes, further
and further, till at last the lines ahead grew thin
as the living wedge of horsemen forced its path between
them grew thin, broke and vanished.
We had passed through the heart of
the host, and leaving the tribesmen who followed to
deal with its flying fragments, rode on half a mile
or so and mustered. Many were dead and more were
hurt, but the command was issued that all sore-wounded
men should fall out and give their horses to replace
those that had been killed.
This was done, and presently we moved
on, three thousand of us now, not more, heading for
Kaloon. The trot grew to a canter, and the canter
to a gallop, as we rushed forward across that endless
plain, till at midday, or a little after for
this route was far shorter than that taken by Leo
and myself in our devious flight from Rassen and his
death-hounds we dimly saw the city of Kaloon
set upon its hill.
Now a halt was ordered, for here was
a reservoir in which was still some water, whereof
the horses drank, while the men ate of the food they
carried with them; dried meat and barley meal.
Here, too, more spies met us, who said that the great
army of Atene was posted guarding the city bridges,
and that to attack it with our little force would mean
destruction. But Ayesha took no heed of their
words; indeed, she scarcely seemed to hear them.
Only she ordered that all wearied horses should be
abandoned and fresh ones mounted.
Forward again for hour after hour,
in perfect silence save for the thunder of our horses’
hoofs. No word spoke Ayesha, nor did her wild
escort speak, only from time to time they looked over
their shoulders and pointed with their red spears
at the red sky behind.
I looked also, nor shall I forget
its aspect. The dreadful, fire-edged clouds had
grown and gathered so that beneath their shadows the
plain lay almost black. They marched above us
like an army in the heavens, while from time to time
vaporous points shot forward, thin like swords, or
massed like charging horse.
Under them a vast stillness reigned.
It was as though the earth lay dead beneath their
pall.
Kaloon, lit in a lurid light, grew
nearer. The pickets of the foe flew homeward
before us, shaking their javelins, and their mocking
laughter reached us in hollow echoes. Now we
saw the vast array, posted rank on rank with silken
banners drooping in that stirless air, flanked and
screened by glittering regiments of horse.
An embassy approached us, and at the
signal of Ayesha’s uplifted arm we halted.
It was headed by a lord of the court whose face I knew.
He pulled rein and spoke boldly.
“Listen, Hes, to the words of
Atene. Ere now the stranger lord, thy darling,
is prisoner in her palace. Advance, and we destroy
thee and thy little band; but if by any miracle thou
shouldst conquer, then he dies. Get thee gone
to thy Mountain fastness and the Khania gives thee
peace, and thy people their lives. What answer
to the words of the Khania?”
Ayesha whispered to Oros, who called
aloud “There is no answer. Go,
if ye love life, for death draws near to you.”
So they went fast as their swift steeds
would carry them, but for a little while Ayesha still
sat lost in thought.
Presently she turned and through her
thin veil I saw that her face was white and terrible
and that the eyes in it glowed like those of a lioness
at night. She said to, me hissing the
words between her clenched teeth “Holly,
prepare thyself to look into the mouth of hell.
I desired to spare them if I could, I swear it, but
my heart bids me be bold, to put off human pity, and
use all my secret might if I would see Leo living.
Holly, I tell thee they are about to murder him!”
Then she cried aloud, “Fear
nothing, Captains. Ye are but few, yet with you
goes the strength of ten thousand thousand. Now
follow the Hesea, and whate’er ye meet, be not
dismayed. Repeat it to the soldiers, that fearing
nothing they follow the Hesea through yonder host and
across the bridge and into the city of Kaloon.”
So the chiefs rode hither and thither,
crying out her words, and the savage tribesmen answered “Aye,
we who followed through the water, will follow across
the plain. Onward, Hes, for darkness swallows
us.”
Now some orders were given, and the
companies fell into a formation that resembled a great
wedge, Ayesha herself being its very point and apex,
for though Oros and I rode on either side of her, spur
as we would, our horses’ heads never passed
her saddle bow. In front of that dark mass she
shone a single spot of white one snowy feather
on a black torrent’s breast.
A screaming bugle note and,
like giant arms, from the shelter of some groves of
poplar trees, curved horns of cavalry shot out to surround
us, while the broad bosom of the opposing army, shimmering
with spears, rolled forward as a wave rolls crowned
with sunlit foam, and behind it, line upon line, uncountable,
lay a surging sea of men.
Our end was near. We were lost, or so it seemed.
Ayesha tore off her veil and held
it on high, flowing from her like a pennon, and lo!
upon her brow blazed that wide and mystic diadem of
light which once only I had seen before.
Denser and denser grew the rushing
clouds above; brighter and brighter gleamed the unearthly
star of light beneath. Louder and louder beat
the sound of the falling hoofs of ten thousand horses.
From the Mountain peak behind us went up sudden sheets
of flame; it spouted fire as a whale spouts foam.
The scene was dreadful. In front,
the towers of Kaloon lurid in a monstrous sunset.
Above, a gloom as of an eclipse. Around the darkling,
sunburnt plain. On it Atene’s advancing
army, and our rushing wedge of horsemen destined,
it would appear, to inevitable doom.
Ayesha let fall her rein. She
tossed her arms, waving the torn, white veil as though
it were a signal cast to heaven.
Instantly from the churning jaws of
the unholy night above belched a blaze of answering
flame, that also wavered like a rent and shaken veil
in the grasp of a black hand of cloud.
Then did Ayesha roll the thunder of
her might upon the Children of Kaloon. Then she
called, and the Terror came, such as men had never
seen and perchance never more will see. Awful
bursts of wind tore past us, lifting the very stones
and soil before them, and with the wind went hail
and level, hissing rain, made visible by the arrows
of perpetual lightnings that leapt downwards from
the sky and upwards from the earth.
It was as she had warned me.
It was as though hell had broken loose upon the world,
yet through that hell we rushed on unharmed. For
always these furies passed before us. No arrow
flew, no javelin was stained. The jagged hail
was a herald of our coming; the levens that smote and
stabbed were our sword and spear, while ever the hurricane
roared and screamed with a million separate voices
which blended to one yell of sound, hideous and indescribable.
As for the hosts about us they melted and were gone.
Now the darkness was dense, like to
that of thickest night; yet in the fierce flares of
the lightnings I saw them run this way and that, and
amidst the volleying, elemental voices I heard their
shouts of horror and of agony. I saw horses and
riders roll confused upon the ground; like storm-drifted
leaves I saw their footmen piled in high and whirling
heaps, while the brands of heaven struck and struck
them till they sank together and grew still.
I saw the groves of trees bend, shrivel
up and vanish. I saw the high walls of Kaloon
blown in and flee away, while the houses within the
walls took fire, to go out beneath the torrents of
the driving rain, and again take fire. I saw
blackness sweep over us with great wings, and when
I looked, lo! those wide wings were flame, floods of
pulsing flame that flew upon the tormented air.
Blackness, utter blackness; turmoil,
doom, dismay! Beneath me the labouring horse;
at my side the steady crest of light which sat on
Ayesha’s brow, and through the tumult a clear,
exultant voice that sang “I promised
thee wild weather! Now, Holly, dost thou believe
that I can loose the prisoned Powers of the world?”
Lo! all was past and gone, and above
us shone the quiet evening sky, and before us lay
the empty bridge, and beyond it the flaming city of
Kaloon. But the armies of Atene, where were they?
Go, ask of those great cairns that hide their bones.
Go, ask it of her widowed land.
Yet of our wild company of horsemen
not one was lost. After us they galloped trembling,
white-lipped, like men who face to face had fought
and conquered Death, but triumphant ah,
triumphant!
On the high head of the bridge Ayesha
wheeled her horse, and so for one proud moment stood
to welcome them. At the sight of her glorious,
star-crowned countenance, which now her Tribes beheld
for the first time and the last, there went up such
a shout as men have seldom heard.
“The Goddess!”
that shout thundered. “Worship the Goddess!”
Then she turned her horse’s
head again, and they followed on through the long
straight street of the burning city, up to the palace
on its crest.
As the sun set we sped beneath its
gateway. Silence in the courtyard, silence everywhere,
save for the distant roar of fire and the scared howlings
of the death-hounds in their kennel.
Ayesha sprang from her horse, and
waving back all save Oros and myself, swept through
the open doors into the halls beyond.
They were empty, every one all
were fled or dead. Yet she never paused or doubted,
but so swiftly that we scarce could follow her, flitted
up the wide stone stair that led to the topmost tower.
Up, still up, until we reached the chamber where had
dwelt Simbri the Shaman, that same chamber whence
he was wont to watch his stars, in which Atene had
threatened us with death.
Its door was shut and barred; still,
at Ayesha’s coming, yes, before the mere breath
of her presence, the iron bolts snapped like twigs,
the locks flew back, and inward burst that massive
portal.
Now we were within the lamp-lit chamber,
and this is what we saw. Seated in a chair, pale-faced,
bound, yet proud and defiant-looking, was Leo.
Over him, a dagger in his withered hand yes,
about to strike, in the very act stood
the old Shaman, and on the floor hard by, gazing upward
with wide-set eyes, dead and still majestic in her
death, lay Atene, Khania of Kaloon.
Ayesha waved her arm and the knife
fell from Simbri’s hand, clattering on the marble,
while in an instant he who had held it was smitten
to stillness and became like a man turned to stone.
She stooped, lifted the dagger, and
with a swift stroke severed Leo’s bonds; then,
as though overcome at last, sank on to a bench in silence.
Leo rose, looking about him bewildered, and said in
the strained voice of one who is weak with much suffering “But
just in time, Ayesha. Another second, and that
murderous dog” and he pointed to the
Shaman “well, it was in time.
But how went the battle, and how earnest thou here
through that awful hurricane? And, oh, Horace,
thank heaven they did not kill you after all!”
“The battle went ill for some,”
Ayesha answered, “and I came not through the
hurricane, but on its wings. Tell me now, what
has befallen thee since we parted?”
“Trapped, overpowered, bound,
brought here, told that I must write to thee and stop
thy advance, or die refused, of course,
and then ” and he glanced
at the dead body on the floor.
“And then?” repeated Ayesha.
“Then that fearful tempest,
which seemed to drive me mad. Oh! if thou couldst
have heard the wind howling round these battlements,
tearing off their stones as though they were dry leaves;
if thou hadst seen the lightnings falling thick and
fast as rain ”
“They were my messengers.
I sent them to save thee,” said Ayesha simply.
Leo stared at her, making no comment,
but after a pause, as though he were thinking the
matter over, he went on “Atene said
as much, but I did not believe her. I thought
the end of the world had come, that was all.
Well, she returned just now more mad even than I was,
and told me that her people were destroyed and that
she could not fight against the strength of hell,
but that she could send me thither, and took a knife
to kill me.
“I said, ‘Kill on,’
for I knew that wherever I went thou wouldst follow,
and I was sick with the loss of blood from some hurt
I had in that struggle, and weary of it all.
So I shut my eyes waiting for the stroke, but instead
I felt her lips pressed upon my forehead, and heard
her say “’Nay, I will not do
it. Fare thee well; fulfil thou thine own destiny,
as I fulfil mine. For this cast the dice have
fallen against me; elsewhere it may be otherwise.
I go to load them if I may.’
“I opened my eyes and looked.
There Atene stood, a glass in her hand see,
it lies beside her.
“‘Defeated, yet I win,’
she cried, ’for I do but pass before thee to
prepare the path that thou shalt tread, and to make
ready thy place in the Under-world. Till we meet
again I pledge thee, for I am destroyed. Ayesha’s
horsemen are in my streets, and, clothed in lightnings
at their head, rides Ayesha’s avenging self.’
“So she drank, and fell dead but
now. Look, her breast still quivers. Afterwards,
that old man would have murdered me, for, being roped,
I could not resist him, but the door burst in and
thou camest. Spare him, he is of her blood, and
he loved her.”
Then Leo sank back into the chair
where we had discovered him bound, and seemed to fall
into a kind of torpor, for of a sudden he grew to look
like an old man.
“Thou art sick,” said
Ayesha anxiously. “Oros, thy medicine, the
draught I bade thee bring! Be swift, I say.”
The priest bowed, and from some pocket
in his ample robe produced a phial which he opened
and gave to Leo, saying “Drink, my
lord; this stuff will give thee back thy health, for
it is strong.”
“The stronger the better,”
answered Leo, rousing himself, and with something
like his old, cheerful laugh. “I am thirsty
who have touched nothing since last night, and have
fought hard and been carried far, yes and
lived through that hellish storm.”
Then he took the draught and emptied
it. There must have been virtue in that potion;
at least, the change which it produced in him was
wonderful. Within a minute his eyes grew bright
again, and the colour returned into his cheeks.
“Thy medicines are very good,
as I have learned of old,” he said to Ayesha;
“but the best of all of them is to see thee safe
and victorious before me, and to know that I, who
looked for death, yet live to greet thee, my beloved.
There is food,” and he pointed to a board upon
which were meats, “say, may I eat of them, for
I starve?”
“Aye,” she answered softly,
“eat, and, my Holly, eat thou also.”
So we fell to, yes, we fell to and
ate even in the presence of that dead woman who looked
so royal in her death; of the old magician who stood
there powerless, like a man petrified, and of Ayesha,
the wondrous being that could destroy an army with
the fearful weapons which were servant to her will.
Only Oros ate nothing, but remained
where he was, smiling at us benignantly, nor did Ayesha
touch any food.