We paused before thick curtains, through
which came the faint murmur of many voices. They
parted; out came two ushers, I suppose,
they were in cuirasses and kilts that reminded
me somewhat of chain-mail the first armour
of any kind here that I had seen. They held open
the folds.
The chamber, on whose threshold we
stood, was far larger than either anteroom or hall
of audience. Not less than three hundred feet
long and half that in depth, from end to end of it
ran two huge semi-circular tables, paralleling each
other, divided by a wide aisle, and heaped with flowers,
with fruits, with viands unknown to me, and glittering
with crystal flagons, beakers, goblets of as many hues
as the blooms. On the gay-cushioned couches that
flanked the tables, lounging luxuriously, were scores
of the fair-haired ruling class and there rose a little
buzz of admiration, oddly mixed with a half-startled
amaze, as their gaze fell upon O’Keefe in all
his silvery magnificence. Everywhere the light-giving
globes sent their roseate radiance.
The cuirassed dwarfs led us through
the aisle. Within the arc of the inner half circle
was another glittering board, an oval. But of
those seated there, facing us I had eyes
for only one Yolara! She swayed up
to greet O’Keefe and she was like
one of those white lily maids, whose beauty Hoang-Ku,
the sage, says made the Gobi first a paradise, and
whose lusts later the burned-out desert that it is.
She held out hands to Larry, and on her face was passion unashamed,
unhiding.
She was Circe but Circe
conquered. Webs of filmiest white clung to the
rose-leaf body. Twisted through the corn-silk
hair a threaded circlet of pale sapphires shone; but
they were pale beside Yolara’s eyes. O’Keefe
bent, kissed her hands, something more than mere admiration
flaming from him. She saw and, smiling,
drew him down beside her.
It came to me that of all, only these
two, Yolara and O’Keefe, were in white and
I wondered; then with a tightening of nerves ceased
to wonder as there entered Lugur!
He was all in scarlet, and as he strode forward a
silence fell a tense, strained silence.
His gaze turned upon Yolara, rested
upon O’Keefe, and instantly his face grew dreadful there
is no other word than that for it. Marakinoff
leaned forward from the centre of the table, near whose
end I sat, touched and whispered to him swiftly.
With appalling effort the red dwarf controlled himself;
he saluted the priestess ironically, I thought; took
his place at the further end of the oval. And
now I noted that the figures between were the seven
of that Council of which the Shining One’s priestess
and Voice were the heads. The tension relaxed,
but did not pass as though a storm-cloud
should turn away, but still lurk, threatening.
My gaze ran back. This end of
the room was draped with the exquisitely coloured,
graceful curtains looped with gorgeous garlands.
Between curtains and table, where sat Larry and the
nine, a circular platform, perhaps ten yards in diameter,
raised itself a few feet above the floor, its gleaming
surface half-covered with the luminous petals, fragrant,
delicate.
On each side below it, were low carven
stools. The curtains parted and softly entered
girls bearing their flutes, their harps, the curiously
emotion-exciting, octaved drums. They sank into
their places. They touched their instruments;
a faint, languorous measure throbbed through the rosy
air.
The stage was set! What was to be the play?
Now about the tables passed other
dusky-haired maids, fair bosoms bare, their scanty
kirtles looped high, pouring out the wines for the
feasters.
My eyes sought O’Keefe.
Whatever it had been that Marakinoff had said, clearly
it now filled his mind even to the exclusion
of the wondrous woman beside him. His eyes were
stern, cold and now and then, as he turned
them toward the Russian, filled with a curious speculation.
Yolara watched him, frowned, gave a low order to the
Hebe behind her.
The girl disappeared, entered again
with a ewer that seemed cut of amber. The priestess
poured from it into Larry’s glass a clear liquid
that shook with tiny sparkles of light. She raised
the glass to her lips, handed it to him. Half-smiling,
half-abstractedly, he took it, touched his own lips
where hers had kissed; drained it. A nod from
Yolara and the maid refilled his goblet.
At once there was a swift transformation
in the Irishman. His abstraction vanished; the
sternness fled; his eyes sparkled. He leaned
caressingly toward Yolara; whispered. Her blue
eyes flashed triumphantly; her chiming laughter rang.
She raised her own glass but within it
was not that clear drink that filled Larry’s!
And again he drained his own; and, lifting it, full
once more, caught the baleful eyes of Lugur, and held
it toward him mockingly. Yolara swayed close alluring,
tempting. He arose, face all reckless gaiety;
rollicking deviltry.
“A toast!” he cried in
English, “to the Shining One and may
the hell where it belongs soon claim it!”
He had used their own word for their
god all else had been in his own tongue,
and so, fortunately, they did not understand.
But the contempt in his action they did recognize and
a dead, a fearful silence fell upon them all.
Lugur’s eyes blazed, little sparks of crimson
in their green. The priestess reached up, caught
at O’Keefe. He seized the soft hand; caressed
it; his gaze grew far away, sombre.
“The Shining One.”
He spoke low. “An’ now again I see
the faces of those who dance with it. It is the
Fires of Mora come, God alone knows how from
Erin to this place. The Fires of Mora!”
He contemplated the hushed folk before him; and then
from his lips came that weirdest, most haunting of
the lyric legends of Erin the Curse of
Mora:
“The fretted fires of
Mora blew o’er him in the night;
He thrills no more to loving,
nor weeps for past delight.
For when those flames have
bitten, both grief and joy take flight
Again Yolara tried to draw him down
beside her; and once more he gripped her hand.
His eyes grew fixed he crooned:
“And through the sleeping
silence his feet must track the tune,
When the world is barred and
speckled with silver of the moon
He stood, swaying, for a moment, and
then, laughing, let the priestess have her way; drained
again the glass.
And now my heart was cold, indeed for
what hope was there left with Larry mad, wild drunk!
The silence was unbroken elfin
women and dwarfs glancing furtively at each other.
But now Yolara arose, face set, eyes flashing grey.
“Hear you, the Council, and
you, Lugur and all who are here!”
she cried. “Now I, the priestess of the
Shining One, take, as is my right, my mate. And
this is he!” She pointed down upon Larry.
He glanced up at her.
“Can’t quite make out
what you say, Yolara,” he muttered thickly.
“But say anything you like I
love your voice!”
I turned sick with dread. Yolara’s
hand stole softly upon the Irishman’s curls
caressingly.
“You know the law, Yolara.”
Lugur’s voice was flat, deadly, “You may
not mate with other than your own kind. And this
man is a stranger a barbarian food
for the Shining One!” Literally, he spat the
phrase.
“No, not of our kind Lugur higher!”
Yolara answered serenely. “Lo, a son of
Siya and of Siyana!”
“A lie!” roared the red dwarf. “A
lie!”
“The Shining One revealed it
to me!” said Yolara sweetly. “And
if ye believe not, Lugur go ask of the
Shining One if it be not truth!”
There was bitter, nameless menace
in those last words and whatever their
hidden message to Lugur, it was potent. He stood,
choking, face hell-shadowed Marakinoff
leaned out again, whispered. The red dwarf bowed,
now wholly ironically; resumed his place and his silence.
And again I wondered, icy-hearted, what was the power
the Russian had so to sway Lugur.
“What says the Council?”
Yolara demanded, turning to them.
Only for a moment they consulted among
themselves. Then the woman, whose face was a
ravaged shrine of beauty, spoke.
“The will of the priestess is
the will of the Council!” she answered.
Defiance died from Yolara’s
face; she looked down at Larry tenderly. He sat
swaying, crooning.
“Bid the priests come,”
she commanded, then turned to the silent room.
“By the rites of Siya and Siyana, Yolara takes
their son for her mate!” And again her hand
stole down possessingly, serpent soft, to the drunken
head of the O’Keefe.
The curtains parted widely.
Through them filed, two by two, twelve hooded figures
clad in flowing robes of the green one sees in forest
vistas of opening buds of dawning spring. Of each
pair one bore clasped to breast a globe of that milky
crystal in the sapphire shrine-room; the other a harp,
small, shaped somewhat like the ancient clarsach of
the Druids.
Two by two they stepped upon the raised
platform, placed gently upon it each their globe;
and two by two crouched behind them. They formed
now a star of six points about the petalled dais, and,
simultaneously, they drew from their faces the covering
cowls.
I half-rose youths and
maidens these of the fair-haired; and youths and maids
more beautiful than any of those I had yet seen for
upon their faces was little of that disturbing mockery
to which I have been forced so often, because of the
deep impression it made upon me, to refer. The
ashen-gold of the maiden priestesses’ hair was
wound about their brows in shining coronals.
The pale locks of the youths were clustered within
circlets of translucent, glimmering gems like moonstones.
And then, crystal globe alternately before and harp
alternately held by youth and maid, they began to sing.
What was that song, I do not know nor
ever shall. Archaic, ancient beyond thought,
it seemed not with the ancientness of things
that for uncounted ages have been but wind-driven
dust. Rather was it the ancientness of the golden
youth of the world, love lilts of earth younglings,
with light of new-born suns drenching them, chorals
of young stars mating in space; murmurings of April
gods and goddesses. A languor stole through me.
The rosy lights upon the tripods began to die away,
and as they faded the milky globes gleamed forth brighter,
ever brighter. Yolara rose, stretched a hand to
Larry, led him through the sextuple groups, and stood
face to face with him in the centre of their circle.
The rose-light died; all that immense
chamber was black, save for the circle of the glowing
spheres. Within this their milky radiance grew
brighter brighter. The song whispered
away. A throbbing arpeggio dripped from the harps,
and as the notes pulsed out, up from the globes, as
though striving to follow, pulsed with them tips of
moon-fire cones, such as I had seen before Yolara’s
altar. Weirdly, caressingly, compellingly the
harp notes throbbed in repeated, re-repeated theme,
holding within itself the same archaic golden quality
I had noted in the singing. And over the moon
flame pinnacles rose higher!
Yolara lifted her arms; within her
hands were clasped O’Keefe’s. She
raised them above their two heads and slowly, slowly
drew him with her into a circling, graceful step,
tendrillings delicate as the slow spirallings of twilight
mist upon some still stream.
As they swayed the rippling arpeggios
grew louder, and suddenly the slender pinnacles of
moon fire bent, dipped, flowed to the floor, crept
in a shining ring around those two and began
to rise, a gleaming, glimmering, enchanted barrier rising,
ever rising hiding them!
With one swift movement Yolara unbound
her circlet of pale sapphires, shook loose the waves
of her silken hair. It fell, a rippling, wondrous
cascade, veiling both her and O’Keefe to their
girdles and now the shining coils of moon
fire had crept to their knees was circling
higher higher.
And ever despair grew deeper in my soul!
What was that! I started to
my feet, and all around me in the darkness I heard
startled motion. From without came a blaring of
trumpets, the sound of running men, loud murmurings.
The tumult drew closer. I heard cries of “Lakla!
Lakla!” Now it was at the very threshold and
within it, oddly, as though punctuating the
clamour, a deep-toned, almost abysmal, booming sound thunderously
bass and reverberant.
Abruptly the harpings ceased; the
moon fires shuddered, fell, and began to sweep back
into the crystal globes; Yolara’s swaying form
grew rigid, every atom of it listening. She threw
aside the veiling cloud of hair, and in the gleam
of the last retreating spirals her face glared out
like some old Greek mask of tragedy.
The sweet lips that even at their
sweetest could never lose their delicate cruelty,
had no sweetness now. They were drawn into a
square inhuman as that of the Medusa; in
her eyes were the fires of the pit, and her hair seemed
to writhe like the serpent locks of that Gorgon whose
mouth she had borrowed; all her beauty was transformed
into a nameless thing hideous, inhuman,
blasting! If this was the true soul of Yolara
springing to her face, then, I thought, God help us
in very deed!
I wrested my gaze away to O’Keefe.
All drunkenness gone, himself again, he was staring
down at her, and in his eyes were loathing and horror
unutterable. So they stood and the
light fled.
Only for a moment did the darkness
hold. With lightning swiftness the blackness
that was the chamber’s other wall vanished.
Through a portal open between grey screens, the silver
sparkling radiance poured.
And through the portal marched, two
by two, incredible, nightmare figures frog-men,
giants, taller by nearly a yard than even tall O’Keefe!
Their enormous saucer eyes were irised by wide bands
of green-flecked red, in which the phosphorescence
flickered. Their long muzzles, lips half-open
in monstrous grin, held rows of glistening, slender,
lancet sharp fangs. Over the glaring eyes arose
a horny helmet, a carapace of black and orange scales,
studded with foot-long lance-headed horns.
They lined themselves like soldiers
on each side of the wide table aisle, and now I could
see that their horny armour covered shoulders and
backs, ran across the chest in a knobbed cuirass, and
at wrists and heels jutted out into curved, murderous
spurs. The webbed hands and feet ended in yellow,
spade-shaped claws.
They carried spears, ten feet, at
least, in length, the heads of which were pointed
cones, glistening with that same covering, from whose
touch of swift decay I had so narrowly saved Rador.
They were grotesque, yes more
grotesque than anything I had ever seen or dreamed,
and they were terrible!
And then, quietly, through their ranks
came a girl! Behind her, enormous
pouch at his throat swelling in and out menacingly,
in one paw a treelike, spike-studded mace, a frog-man,
huger than any of the others, guarding. But of
him I caught but a fleeting, involuntary impression all
my gaze was for her.
For it was she who had pointed out
to us the way from the peril of the Dweller’s
lair on Nan-Tauach. And as I looked at her, I
marvelled that ever could I have thought the priestess
more beautiful. Into the eyes of O’Keefe
rushed joy and an utter abasement of shame.
And from all about came murmurs edged
with anger, half-incredulous, tinged with fear:
“Lakla!”
“Lakla!”
“The handmaiden!”
She halted close beside me.
From firm little chin to dainty buskined feet she
was swathed in the soft robes of dull, almost coppery
hue. The left arm was hidden, the right free
and gloved. Wound tight about it was one of the
vines of the sculptured wall and of Lugur’s circled
signet-ring. Thick, a vivid green, its five tendrils
ran between her fingers, stretching out five flowered
heads that gleamed like blossoms cut from gigantic,
glowing rubies.
So she stood contemplating Yolara.
Then drawn perhaps by my gaze, she dropped her eyes
upon me; golden, translucent, with tiny flecks of
amber in their aureate irises, the soul that looked
through them was as far removed from that flaming
out of the priestess as zenith is above nadir.
I noted the low, broad brow, the proud
little nose, the tender mouth, and the soft sunlight glow
that seemed to transfuse the delicate skin. And
suddenly in the eyes dawned a smile sweet,
friendly, a touch of roguishness, profoundly reassuring
in its all humanness. I felt my heart expand
as though freed from fetters, a recrudescence of confidence
in the essential reality of things as though
in nightmare the struggling consciousness should glimpse
some familiar face and know the terrors with which
it strove were but dreams. And involuntarily
I smiled back at her.
She raised her head and looked again
at Yolara, contempt and a certain curiosity in her
gaze; at O’Keefe and through the softened
eyes drifted swiftly a shadow of sorrow, and on its
fleeting wings deepest interest, and hovering over
that a naïve approval as reassuringly human as had
been her smile.
She spoke, and her voice, deep-timbred,
liquid gold as was Yolara’s all silver, was
subtly the synthesis of all the golden glowing beauty
of her.
“The Silent Ones have sent me,
O Yolara,” she said. “And this is
their command to you that you deliver to
me to bring before them three of the four strangers
who have found their way here. For him there
who plots with Lugur” she pointed
at Marakinoff, and I saw Yolara start “they
have no need. Into his heart the Silent Ones have
looked; and Lugur and you may keep him, Yolara!”
There was honeyed venom in the last words.
Yolara was herself now; only the edge
of shrillness on her voice revealed her wrath as she
answered.
“And whence have the Silent
Ones gained power to command, choya?”
This last, I knew, was a very vulgar
word; I had heard Rador use it in a moment of anger
to one of the serving maids, and it meant, approximately,
“kitchen girl,” “scullion.”
Beneath the insult and the acid disdain, the blood
rushed up under Lakla’s ambered ivory skin.
“Yolara” her
voice was low “of no use is it to
question me. I am but the messenger of the Silent
Ones. And one thing only am I bidden to ask you do
you deliver to me the three strangers?”
Lugur was on his feet; eagerness,
sardonic delight, sinister anticipation thrilling
from him and my same glance showed Marakinoff,
crouched, biting his finger-nails, glaring at the Golden
Girl.
“No!” Yolara spat the
word. “No! Now by Thanaroa and by
the Shining One, no!” Her eyes blazed, her nostrils
were wide, in her fair throat a little pulse beat
angrily. “You, Lakla take you
my message to the Silent Ones. Say to them that
I keep this man” she pointed to Larry “because
he is mine. Say to them that I keep the yellow-haired
one and him” she pointed to me “because
it pleases me.
“Tell them that upon their mouths
I place my foot, so!” she stamped
upon the dais viciously “and that
in their faces I spit!” and her action
was hideously snakelike. “And say last to
them, you handmaiden, that if you they dare
send to Yolara again, she will feed you to
the Shining One! Now go!”
The handmaiden’s face was white.
“Not unforeseen by the three
was this, Yolara,” she replied. “And
did you speak as you have spoken then was I bidden
to say this to you.” Her voice deepened.
“Three tal have you to take counsel, Yolara.
And at the end of that time these things must you
have determined either to do or not to
do: first, send the strangers to the Silent Ones;
second, give up, you and Lugur and all of you, that
dream you have of conquest of the world without; and,
third, forswear the Shining One! And if you do
not one and all these things, then are you done, your
cup of life broken, your wine of life spilled.
Yea, Yolara, for you and the Shining One, Lugur and
the Nine and all those here and their kind shall pass!
This say the Silent Ones, ’Surely shall all of
ye pass and be as though never had ye been!’”
Now a gasp of rage and fear arose
from all those around me but the priestess
threw back her head and laughed loud and long.
Into the silver sweet chiming of her laughter clashed
that of Lugur and after a little the nobles
took it up, till the whole chamber echoed with their
mirth. O’Keefe, lips tightening, moved toward
the Handmaiden, and almost imperceptibly, but peremptorily,
she waved him back.
“Those are great words great
words indeed, choya,” shrilled Yolara
at last; and again Lakla winced beneath the word.
“Lo, for laya upon laya, the Shining
One has been freed from the Three; and for laya
upon laya they have sat helpless, rotting.
Now I ask you again whence comes their
power to lay their will upon me, and whence comes
their strength to wrestle with the Shining One and
the beloved of the Shining One?”
And again she laughed and
again Lugur and all the fairhaired joined in her laughter.
Into the eyes of Lakla I saw creep
a doubt, a wavering; as though deep within her the
foundations of her own belief were none too firm.
She hesitated, turning upon O’Keefe
gaze in which rested more than suggestion of appeal!
And Yolara saw, too, for she flushed with triumph,
stretched a finger toward the handmaiden.
“Look!” she cried.
“Look! Why, even she does not believe!”
Her voice grew silk of silver merciless,
cruel. “Now am I minded to send another
answer to the Silent Ones. Yea! But not by
you, Lakla; by these” she
pointed to the frog-men, and, swift as light, her hand
darted into her bosom, bringing forth the little shining
cone of death.
But before she could level it the
Golden Girl had released that hidden left arm and
thrown over her face a fold of the metallic swathings.
Swifter than Yolara, she raised the arm that held the
vine and now I knew this was no inert blossoming
thing.
It was alive!
It writhed down her arm, and its five
rubescent flower heads thrust out toward the priestess vibrating,
quivering, held in leash only by the light touch of
the handmaiden at its very end.
From the swelling throat pouch of
the monster behind her came a succession of the reverberant
boomings. The frogmen wheeled, raised their lances,
levelled them at the throng. Around the reaching
ruby flowers a faint red mist swiftly grew.
The silver cone dropped from Yolara’s
rigid fingers; her eyes grew stark with horror; all
her unearthly loveliness fled from her; she stood
pale-lipped. The Handmaiden dropped the protecting
veil and now it was she who laughed.
“It would seem, then, Yolara,
that there is a thing of the Silent Ones ye
fear!” she said. “Well the
kiss of the Yekta I promise you in return for
the embrace of your Shining One.”
She looked at Larry, long, searchingly,
and suddenly again with all that effect of sunlight
bursting into dark places, her smile shone upon him.
She nodded, half gaily; looked down upon me, the little
merry light dancing in her eyes; waved her hand to
me.
She spoke to the giant frog-man.
He wheeled behind her as she turned, facing the priestess,
club upraised, fangs glistening. His troop moved
not a jot, spears held high. Lakla began to pass
slowly almost, I thought, tauntingly and
as she reached the portal Larry leaped from the dais.
“Alanna!” he cried.
“You’ll not be leavin’ me just when
I’ve found you!”
In his excitement he spoke in his
own tongue, the velvet brogue appealing. Lakla
turned, contemplated O’Keefe, hesitant, unquestionably
longingly, irresistibly like a child making up her
mind whether she dared or dared not take a delectable
something offered her.
“I go with you,” said
O’Keefe, this time in her own speech. “Come
on, Doc!” He reached out a hand to me.
But now Yolara spoke. Life and
beauty had flowed back into her face, and in the purple
eyes all her hosts of devils were gathered.
“Do you forget what I promised
you before Siya and Siyana? And do you think
that you can leave me me as though
I were a choya like her.”
She pointed to Lakla. “Do you
“Now, listen, Yolara,”
Larry interrupted almost plaintively. “No
promise has passed from me to you and why
would you hold me?” He passed unconsciously
into English. “Be a good sport, Yolara,”
he urged, “You have got a very devil
of a temper, you know, and so have I; and we’d
be really awfully uncomfortable together. And
why don’t you get rid of that devilish pet of
yours, and be good!”
She looked at him, puzzled, Marakinoff
leaned over, translated to Lugur. The red dwarf
smiled maliciously, drew near the priestess; whispered
to her what was without doubt as near as he could come
in the Murian to Larry’s own very colloquial
phrases.
Yolara’s lips writhed.
“Hear me, Lakla!” she
cried. “Now would I not let you take this
man from me were I to dwell ten thousand laya
in the agony of the Yekta’s kiss.
This I swear to you by Thanaroa, by my heart,
and by my strength and may my strength
wither, my heart rot in my breast, and Thanaroa forget
me if I do!”
“Listen, Yolara” began O’Keefe
again.
“Be silent, you!” It was
almost a shriek. And her hand again sought in
her breast for the cone of rhythmic death.
Lugur touched her arm, whispered again,
The glint of guile shone in her eyes; she laughed
softly, relaxed.
“The Silent Ones, Lakla, bade
you say that they allowed me
three tal to decide,” she said suavely.
“Go now in peace, Lakla, and say that Yolara
has heard, and that for the three tal they allow her
she will take council.” The handmaiden hesitated.
“The Silent Ones have said it,”
she answered at last. “Stay you here,
strangers” the long lashes
drooped as her eyes met O’Keefe’s and a
hint of blush was in her cheeks “stay
you here, strangers, till then. But, Yolara,
see you on that heart and strength you have sworn by
that they come to no harm else that which
you have invoked shall come upon you swiftly indeed and
that I promise you,” she added.
Their eyes met, clashed, burned into
each other black flame from Abaddon and
golden flame from Paradise.
“Remember!” said Lakla,
and passed through the portal. The gigantic frog-man
boomed a thunderous note of command, his grotesque
guards turned and slowly followed their mistress;
and last of all passed out the monster with the mace.