There is little more to tell.
Shortly after our return Bickley,
like a patriotic Englishman, volunteered for service
at the front and departed in the uniform of the R.A.M.C.
Before he left he took the opportunity of explaining
to Bastin how much better it was in such a national
emergency as existed, to belong to a profession in
which a man could do something to help the bodies
of his countrymen that had been broken in the common
cause, than to one like his in which it was only possible
to pelt them with vain words.
“You think that, do you, Bickley?”
answered Bastin. “Well, I hold that it
is better to heal souls than bodies, because, as even
you will have learned out there in Orofena, they last
so much longer.”
“I am not certain that I learned
anything of the sort,” said Bickley, “or
even that Oro was more than an ordinary old man.
He said that he had lived a thousand years, but what
was there to prove this except his word, which is
worth nothing?”
“There was the Lady Yva’s
word also, which is worth a great deal, Bickley.”
“Yes, but she may have meant
a thousand moons. Further, as according to her
own showing she was still quite young, how could she
know her father’s age?”
“Quite so, Bickley. But
all she actually said was that she was of the same
age as one of our women of twenty-seven, which may
have meant two hundred and seventy for all I know.
However, putting that aside you will admit that they
had both slept for two hundred and fifty thousand
years.”
“I admit that they slept, Bastin,
because I helped to awaken them, but for how long
there is nothing to show, except those star maps which
are probably quite inaccurate.”
“They are not inaccurate,”
I broke in, “for I have had them checked by
leading astronomers who say that they show a marvelous
knowledge of the heavens as these were two hundred
and fifty thousand years ago, and are today.”
Here I should state that those two
metal maps and the ring which I gave to Yva and found
again after the catastrophe, were absolutely the only
things connected with her or with Oro that we brought
away with us. The former I would never part with,
feeling their value as evidence. Therefore, when
we descended to the city Nyo and the depths beneath,
I took them with me wrapped in cloth in my pocket.
Thus they were preserved. Everything else went
when the Rock of Offerings and the cave mouth sank
beneath the waters of the lake.
This may have happened either in the
earth tremor, which no doubt was caused by the advance
of the terrific world-balance, or when the electric
power, though diffused and turned by Yva’s insulated
body, struck the great gyroscope’s travelling
foot with sufficient strength, not to shift it indeed
on to the right-hand path as Oro had designed, but
still to cause it to stagger and even perhaps to halt
for the fraction of a second. Even this pause
may have been enough to cause convulsions of the earth
above; indeed, I gathered from Marama and other Orofenans
that such convulsions had occurred on and around the
island at what must have corresponded with that moment
of the loosing of the force.
This loss of our belongings in the
house of the Rock of Offerings was the more grievous
because among them were some Kodak photographs which
I had taken, including portraits of Oro and one of
Yva that was really excellent, to say nothing of pictures
of the mouth of the cave and of the ruins and crater
lake above. How bitterly I regret that I did not
keep these photographs in my pocket with the map-plates.
“Even if the star-maps are correct,
still it proves nothing,” said Bickley, “since
possibly Oro’s astronomical skill might have
enabled him to draw that of the sky at any period,
though I allow this is impossible.”
“I doubt his taking so much
trouble merely to deceive three wanderers who lacked
the knowledge even to check them,” I said.
“But all this misses the point, Bickley.
However long they had slept, that man and woman did
arise from seeming death. They did dwell in those
marvelous caves with their evidences of departed civilisations,
and they did show us that fearful, world-wandering
gyroscope. These things we saw.”
“I admit that we saw them, Arbuthnot,
and I admit that they are one and all beyond human
comprehension. To that extent I am converted,
and, I may add, humbled,” said Bickley.
“So you ought to be,”
exclaimed Bastin, “seeing that you always swore
that there was nothing in the world that is not capable
of a perfectly natural explanation.”
“Of which all these things may
be capable, Bastin, if only we held the key.”
“Very well, Bickley, but how
do you explain what the Lady Yva did? I may tell
you now what she commanded me to conceal at the time,
namely, that she became a Christian; so much so that
by her own will, I baptised and confirmed her on the
very morning of her sacrifice. Doubtless it was
this that changed her heart so much that she became
willing, of course without my knowledge, to leave
everything she cared for,” here he looked hard
at me, “and lay down her life to save the world,
half of which she believed was about to be drowned
by Oro. Now, considering her history and upbringing,
I call this a spiritual marvel, much greater than any
you now admit, and one you can’t explain, Bickley.”
“No, I cannot explain, or, at
any rate, I will not try,” he answered, also
staring hard at me. “Whatever she believed,
or did not believe, and whatever would or would not
have happened, she was a great and wonderful woman
whose memory I worship.”
“Quite so, Bickley, and now
perhaps you see my point, that what you describe as
mere vain words may also be helpful to mankind; more
so, indeed, than your surgical instruments and pills.”
“You couldn’t convert
Oro, anyway,” exclaimed Bickley, with irritation.
“No, Bickley; but then I have
always understood that the devil is beyond conversion
because he is beyond repentance. You see, I think
that if that old scoundrel was not the devil himself,
at any rate he was a bit of him, and, if I am right,
I am not ashamed to have failed in his case.”
“Even Oro was not utterly bad,
Bastin,” I said, reflecting on certain traits
of mercy that he had shown, or that I dreamed him to
have shown in the course of our mysterious midnight
journeys to various parts of the earth. Also
I remembered that he had loved Tommy and for his sake
had spared our lives. Lastly, I do not altogether
wonder that he came to certain hasty conclusions as
to the value of our modern civilisations.
“I am very glad to hear it,
Humphrey, since while there is a spark left the whole
fire may burn up again, and I believe that to the Divine
mercy there are no limits, though Oro will have a
long road to travel before he finds it. And now
I have something to say. It has troubled me very
much that I was obliged to leave those Orofenans wandering
in a kind of religious twilight.”
“You couldn’t help that,”
said Bickley, “seeing that if you had stopped,
by now you would have been wandering in religious light.”
“Still, I am not sure that I
ought not to have stopped. I seem to have deserted
a field that was open to me. However, it can’t
be helped, since it is certain that we could never
find that island again, even if Oro has not sunk it
beneath the sea, as he is quite capable of doing, to
cover his tracks, so to speak. So I mean to do
my best in another field by way of atonement.”
“You are not going to become a missionary?”
I said.
“No, but with the consent of
the Bishop, who, I think, believes that my locum got
on better in the parish than I do, as no doubt was
the case, I, too, have volunteered for the Front,
and been accepted as a chaplain of the 201st Division.”
“Why, that’s mine!” said Bickley.
“Is it? I am very glad,
since now we shall be able to pursue our pleasant
arguments and to do our best to open each other’s
minds.”
“You fellows are more fortunate
than I am,” I remarked. “I also volunteered,
but they wouldn’t take me, even as a Tommy, although
I misstated my age. They told me, or at least
a specialist whom I saw did afterwards, that the blow
I got on the head from that sorcerer’s boy ”
“I know, I know!” broke
in Bickley almost roughly. “Of course, things
might go wrong at any time. But with care you
may live to old age.”
“I am sorry to hear it,”
I said with a sigh, “at least I think I am.
Meanwhile, fortunately there is much that I can do
at home; indeed a course of action has been suggested
to me by an old friend who is now in authority.”
Once more Bickley and Bastin in their
war-stained uniforms were dining at my table and on
the very night of their return from the Front, which
was unexpected. Indeed Tommy nearly died of joy
on hearing their voices in the hall. They, who
played a worthy part in the great struggle, had much
to tell me, and naturally their more recent experiences
had overlaid to some extent those which we shared
in the mysterious island of Orofena. Indeed we
did not speak of these until, just as they were going
away, Bastin paused beneath a very beautiful portrait
of my late wife, the work of an artist famous for
his power of bringing out the inner character, or
what some might call the soul, of the sitter.
He stared at it for a while in his short-sighted way,
then said: “Do you know, Arbuthnot, it
has sometimes occurred to me, and never more than
at this moment, that although they were different in
height and so on, there was a really curious physical
resemblance between your late wife and the Lady Yva.”
“Yes,” I answered. “I think
so too.”
Bickley also examined the portrait
very carefully, and as he did so I saw him start.
Then he turned away, saying nothing.
Such is the summary of all that has
been important in my life. It is, I admit, an
odd story and one which suggests problems that I cannot
solve. Bastin deals with such things by that
acceptance which is the privilege and hall-mark of
faith; Bickley disposes, or used to dispose, of them
by a blank denial which carries no conviction, and
least of all to himself.
What is life to most of us who, like
Bickley, think ourselves learned? A round, short
but still with time and to spare wherein to be dull
and lonesome; a fateful treadmill to which we were
condemned we know not how, but apparently through
the casual passions of those who went before us and
are now forgotten, causing us, as the Bible says, to
be born in sin; up which we walk wearily we know not
why, seeming never to make progress; off which we
fall outworn we know not when or whither.
Such upon the surface it appears to
be, nor in fact does our ascertained knowledge, as
Bickley would sum it up, take us much further.
No prophet has yet arisen who attempted to define
either the origin or the reasons of life. Even
the very Greatest of them Himself is quite silent on
this matter. We are tempted to wonder why.
Is it because life as expressed in the higher of human
beings, is, or will be too vast, too multiform and
too glorious for any definition which we could understand?
Is it because in the end it will involve for some,
if not for all, majesty on unfathomed majesty, and
glory upon unimaginable glory such as at present far
outpass the limits of our thought?
The experiences which I have recorded
in these pages awake in my heart a hope that this
may be so. Bastin is wont, like many others, to
talk in a light fashion of Eternity without in the
least comprehending what he means by that gigantic
term. It is not too much to say that Eternity,
something without beginning and without end, and involving,
it would appear, an everlasting changelessness, is
a state beyond human comprehension. As a matter
of fact we mortals do not think in constellations,
so to speak, or in aeons, but by the measures of our
own small earth and of our few days thereon.
We cannot really conceive of an existence stretching
over even one thousand years, such as that which Oro
claimed and the Bible accords to a certain early race
of men, omitting of course his two thousand five hundred
centuries of sleep. And yet what is this but
one grain in the hourglass of time, one day in the
lost record of our earth, of its sisters the planets
and its father the sun, to say nothing of the universes
beyond?
It is because I have come in touch
with a prolonged though perfectly finite existence
of the sort, that I try to pass on the reflections
which the fact of it awoke in me. There are other
reflections connected with Yva and the marvel of her
love and its various manifestations which arise also.
But these I keep to myself. They concern the wonder
of woman’s heart, which is a microcosm of the
hopes and fears and desires and despairs of this humanity
of ours whereof from age to age she is the mother.
Humphrey Arbuthnot.
Note By J. R. Bickley, M.R.C.S.
Within about six months of the date
on which he wrote the last words of this history of
our joint adventures, my dear friend, Humphrey Arbuthnot,
died suddenly, as I had foreseen that probably he would
do, from the results of the injury he received in
the island of Orofena.
He left me the sole executor to his
will, under which he divided his property into three
parts. One third he bequeathed to me, one third
(which is strictly tied up) to Bastin, and one third
to be devoted, under my direction, to the advancement
of Science.
His end appears to have been instantaneous,
resulting from an effusion of blood upon the brain.
When I was summoned I found him lying dead by the
writing desk in his library at Fulcombe Priory.
He had been writing at the desk, for on it was a piece
of paper on which appear these words: “I
have seen her. I ” There the
writing ends, not stating whom he thought he had seen
in the moments of mental disturbance or delusion which
preceded his decease.
Save for certain verbal corrections,
I publish this manuscript without comment as the will
directs, only adding that it sets out our mutual experiences
very faithfully, though Arbuthnot’s deductions
from them are not always my own.
I would say also that I am contemplating
another visit to the South Sea Islands, where I wish
to make some further investigations. I dare say,
however, that these will be barren of results, as the
fountain of Life-water is buried for ever, nor, as
I think, will any human being stand again in the Hades-like
halls of Nyo. It is probable also that it would
prove impossible to rediscover the island of Orofena,
if indeed that volcanic land still remains above the
waters of the deep.
Now that he is a very wealthy man,
Bastin talks of accompanying me for purposes quite
different from my own, but on the whole I hope he will
abandon this idea. I may add that when he learned
of his unexpected inheritance he talked much of the
“deceitfulness of riches,” but that he
has not as yet taken any steps to escape their golden
snare. Indeed he now converses of his added “opportunities
of usefulness,” I gather in connection with
missionary enterprise.