The shell carried us straight back
to the house of Yolara. Larry was awaiting me.
We stood again before the tenebrous wall where first
we had faced the priestess and the Voice. And
as we stood, again the portal appeared with all its
disconcerting, magical abruptness.
But now the scene was changed.
Around the jet table were grouped a number of figures Lugur,
Yolara beside him; seven others all of them
fair-haired and all men save one who sat at the left
of the priestess an old, old woman, how
old I could not tell, her face bearing traces of beauty
that must once have been as great as Yolara’s
own, but now ravaged, in some way awesome; through
its ruins the fearful, malicious gaiety shining out
like a spirit of joy held within a corpse!
Began then our examination, for such
it was. And as it progressed I was more and
more struck by the change in the O’Keefe.
All flippancy was gone, rarely did his sense of humour
reveal itself in any of his answers. He was like
a cautious swordsman, fencing, guarding, studying
his opponent; or rather, like a chess-player who keeps
sensing some far-reaching purpose in the game:
alert, contained, watchful. Always he stressed
the power of our surface races, their multitudes, their
solidarity.
Their questions were myriad.
What were our occupations? Our system of government?
How great were the waters? The land? Intensely
interested were they in the World War, querying minutely
into its causes, its effects. In our weapons
their interest was avid. And they were exceedingly
minute in their examination of us as to the ruins which
had excited our curiosity; their position and surroundings and
if others than ourselves might be expected to find
and pass through their entrance!
At this I shot a glance at Lugur.
He did not seem unduly interested. I wondered
if the Russian had told him as yet of the girl of the
rosy wall of the Moon Pool Chamber and the real reasons
for our search. Then I answered as briefly as
possible omitting all reference to these
things. The red dwarf watched me with unmistakable
amusement and I knew Marakinoff had told
him. But clearly Lugur had kept his information
even from Yolara; and as clearly she had spoken to
none of that episode when O’Keefe’s automatic
had shattered the Keth-smitten vase. Again I
felt that sense of deep bewilderment of
helpless search for clue to all the tangle.
For two hours we were questioned and
then the priestess called Rador and let us go.
Larry was sombre as we returned.
He walked about the room uneasily.
“Hell’s brewing here all
right,” he said at last, stopping before me.
“I can’t make out just the particular brand that’s
all that bothers me. We’re going to have
a stiff fight, that’s sure. What I want
to do quick is to find the Golden Girl, Doc.
Haven’t seen her on the wall lately, have you?”
he queried, hopefully fantastic.
“Laugh if you want to,”
he went on. “But she’s our best bet.
It’s going to be a race between her and the
O’Keefe banshee but I put my money
on her. I had a queer experience while I was in
that garden, after you’d left.” His
voice grew solemn. “Did you ever see a
leprechaun, Doc?” I shook my head again, as solemnly.
“He’s a little man in green,” said
Larry. “Oh, about as high as your knee.
I saw one once in Carntogher Woods.
And as I sat there, half asleep, in Yolara’s
garden, the living spit of him stepped out from one
of those bushes, twirling a little shillalah.
“‘It’s a tight box
ye’re gettin’ in, Larry avick,’ said
he, ’but don’t ye be downhearted, lad.’
“‘I’m carrying on,’
said I, ‘but you’re a long way from Ireland,’
I said, or thought I did.
“‘Ye’ve a lot o’
friends there,’ he answered. ‘An’
where the heart rests the feet are swift to follow.
Not that I’m sayin’ I’d like to
live here, Larry,’ said he.
“‘I know where my heart
is now,’ I told him. ’It rests on
a girl with golden eyes and the hair and swan-white
breast of Eilidh the Fair but me feet don’t
seem to get me to her,’ I said.”
The brogue thickened.
“An’ the little man in
green nodded his head an’ whirled his shillalah.
“‘It’s what I came
to tell ye,’ says he. ’Don’t
ye fall for the Bhean-Nimher, the serpent woman wit’
the blue eyes; she’s a daughter of Ivor, lad an’
don’t ye do nothin’ to make the brown-haired
coleen ashamed o’ ye, Larry O’Keefe.
I knew yer great, great grandfather an’ his
before him, aroon,’ says he, ‘an’
wan o’ the O’Keefe failin’s is to
think their hearts big enough to hold all the wimmen
o’ the world. A heart’s built to
hold only wan permanently, Larry,’ he says, ‘an’
I’m warnin’ ye a nice girl don’t
like to move into a place all cluttered up wid another’s
washin’ an’ mendin’ an’ cookin’
an’ other things pertainin’ to general
wife work. Not that I think the blue-eyed wan
is keen for mendin’ an’ cookin’!’
says he.
“‘You don’t have
to be comin’ all this way to tell me that,’
I answer.
“‘Well, I’m just
a tellin’ you,’ he says. ’Ye’ve
got some rough knocks comin’, Larry. In
fact, ye’re in for a devil of a time. But,
remember that ye’re the O’Keefe,’
says he. ‘An’ while the bhoys are
all wid ye, avick, ye’ve got to be on the job
yourself.’
“‘I hope,’ I tell
him, ’that the O’Keefe banshee can find
her way here in time that is, if it’s
necessary, which I hope it won’t be.’
“‘Don’t ye worry
about that,’ says he. ’Not that she’s
keen on leavin’ the ould sod, Larry. The
good ould soul’s in quite a state o’ mind
about ye, aroon. I don’t mind tellin’
ye, lad, that she’s mobilizing all the clan
an’ if she has to come for ye, avick,
they’ll be wid her an’ they’ll sweep
this joint clean before ye go. What they’ll
do to it’ll make the Big Wind look like a summer
breeze on Lough Lene! An’ that’s
about all, Larry. We thought a voice from the
Green Isle would cheer ye. Don’t fergit
that ye’re the O’Keefe an’ I say
it again all the bhoys are wid ye.
But we want t’ kape bein’ proud o’
ye, lad!’
“An’ I looked again and there was only
a bush waving.”
There wasn’t a smile in my heart or
if there was it was a very tender one.
“I’m going to bed,”
he said abruptly. “Keep an eye on the wall,
Doc!”
Between the seven sleeps that followed,
Larry and I saw but little of each other. Yolara
sought him more and more. Thrice we were called
before the Council; once we were at a great feast,
whose splendours and surprises I can never forget.
Largely I was in the company of Rador. Together
we two passed the green barriers into the dwelling-place
of the ladala.
They seemed provided with everything
needful for life. But everywhere was an oppressiveness,
a gathering together of hate, that was spiritual rather
than material as tangible as the latter
and far, far more menacing!
“They do not like to dance with
the Shining One,” was Rador’s constant
and only reply to my efforts to find the cause.
Once I had concrete evidence of the
mood. Glancing behind me, I saw a white, vengeful
face peer from behind a tree-trunk, a hand lift, a
shining dart speed from it straight toward Rador’s
back. Instinctively I thrust him aside.
He turned upon me angrily. I pointed to where
the little missile lay, still quivering, on the ground.
He gripped my hand.
“That, some day I will repay!”
he said. I looked again at the thing. At
its end was a tiny cone covered with a glistening,
gelatinous substance.
Rador pulled from a tree beside us
a fruit somewhat like an apple.
“Look!” he said.
He dropped it upon the dart and at once,
before my eyes, in less than ten seconds, the fruit
had rotted away!
“That’s what would have
happened to Rador but for you, friend!” he said.
Come now between this and the prelude
to the latter half of the drama whose history this
narrative is only scattering and necessarily
fragmentary observations.
First the nature of the
ebon opacities, blocking out the spaces between the
pavilion-pillars or covering their tops like roofs,
These were magnetic fields, light absorbers, negativing
the vibrations of radiance; literally screens of electric
force which formed as impervious a barrier to light
as would have screens of steel.
They instantaneously made night appear
in a place where no night was. But they interposed
no obstacle to air or to sound. They were extremely
simple in their inception no more miraculous
than is glass, which, inversely, admits the vibrations
of light, but shuts out those coarser ones we call
air and, partly, those others which produce
upon our auditory nerves the effects we call sound.
Briefly their mechanism was this:
[For the same reason that Dr. Goodwin’s
exposition of the mechanism of the atomic engines
was deleted, his description of the light-destroying
screens has been deleted by the Executive Council. J.
B. F., President, I. A. of S.]
There were two favoured classes of
the ladala the soldiers and the dream-makers.
The dream-makers were the most astonishing social
phenomena, I think, of all. Denied by their circumscribed
environment the wider experiences of us of the outer
world, the Murians had perfected an amazing system
of escape through the imagination.
They were, too, intensely musical.
Their favourite instruments were double flutes; immensely
complex pipe-organs; harps, great and small.
They had another remarkable instrument made up of a
double octave of small drums which gave forth percussions
remarkably disturbing to the emotional centres.
It was this love of music that gave
rise to one of the few truly humorous incidents of
our caverned life. Larry came to me it
was just after our fourth sleep, I remember.
“Come on to a concert,” he said.
We skimmed off to one of the bridge
garrisons. Rador called the two-score guards
to attention; and then, to my utter stupefaction, the
whole company, O’Keefe leading them, roared out
the anthem, “God Save the King.”
They sang in a closer approach to the English
than might have been expected scores of miles below
England’s level. “Send him victorious!
Happy and glorious!” they bellowed.
He quivered with suppressed mirth
at my paralysis of surprise.
“Taught ’em that for Marakinoff’s
benefit!” he gasped. “Wait till that
Red hears it. He’ll blow up.
“Just wait until you hear Yolara
lisp a pretty little thing I taught her,” said
Larry as we set back for what we now called home.
There was an impish twinkle in his eyes.
And I did hear. For it was not
many minutes later that the priestess condescended
to command me to come to her with O’Keefe.
“Show Goodwin how much you have
learned of our speech, O lady of the lips of honeyed
flame!” murmured Larry.
She hesitated; smiled at him, and
then from that perfect mouth, out of the exquisite
throat, in the voice that was like the chiming of little
silver bells, she trilled a melody familiar to me indeed:
“She’s only a
bird in a gilded cage,
A bee-yu-tiful
sight to see
And so on to the bitter end.
“She thinks it’s a love-song,”
said Larry when we had left. “It’s
only part of a repertoire I’m teaching her.
Honestly, Doc, it’s the only way I can keep
my mind clear when I’m with her,” he went
on earnestly. “She’s a devil-ess
from hell but a wonder. Whenever I
find myself going I get her to sing that, or Take
Back Your Gold! or some other ancient lay, and I’m
back again pronto with the right
perspective! POP goes all the mystery! ‘Hell!’
I say, ‘she’s only a woman!’”