The Norseman turned toward us.
There was now no madness in his eyes; only a great
weariness. And there was peace on the once tortured
face.
“Helma,” he whispered,
“I go a little before! Soon you will come
to me to me and the Yndling who will await
you Helma, meine liebe!”
Blood gushed from his mouth; he swayed,
fell. And thus died Olaf Huldricksson.
We looked down upon him; nor did Lakla,
nor Larry, nor I try to hide our tears. And as
we stood the Akka brought to us that other mighty
fighter, Rador; but in him there was life, and we attended
to him there as best we could.
Then Lakla spoke.
“We will bear him into the castle
where we may give him greater care,” she said.
“For, lo! the hosts of Yolara have been beaten
back; and on the bridge comes Nak with tidings.”
We looked over the parapet.
It was even as she had said. Neither on ledge
nor bridge was there trace of living men of Muria only
heaps of slain that lay everywhere and
thick against the cavern mouth still danced the flashing
atoms of those the green ray had destroyed.
“Over!” exclaimed Larry
incredulously. “We live then heart
of mine!”
“The Silent Ones recall their
veils,” she said, pointing to the dome.
Back through the slitted opening the radiance was streaming;
withdrawing from sea and island; marching back over
the bridge with that same ordered, intelligent motion.
Behind it the red light pressed, like skirmishers
on the heels of a retreating army.
“And yet ”
faltered the handmaiden as we passed into her chamber,
and doubtful were the eyes she turned upon the O’Keefe.
“I don’t believe,”
he said, “there’s a kick left in them
What was that sound beating into the
chamber faintly, so faintly? My heart gave a
great throb and seemed to stop for an eternity.
What was it coming nearer, ever nearer?
Now Lakla and O’Keefe heard it, life ebbing
from lips and cheeks.
Nearer, nearer a music
as of myriads of tiny crystal bells, tinkling, tinkling a
storm of pizzicati upon violins of glass!
Nearer, nearer not sweetly now, nor luring;
no raging, wrathful, sinister beyond words; sweeping on; nearer
The Dweller! The Shining One!
We leaped to the narrow window; peered
out, aghast. The bell notes swept through and
about us, a hurricane. The crescent strand was
once more a ferment. Back, back were the Akka
being swept, as though by brooms, tottering on the
edge of the ledge, falling into the waters. Swiftly
they were finished; and where they had fought was an
eddying throng clothed in tatters or naked, swaying,
drifting, arms tossing like marionettes
of Satan.
The dead-alive! The slaves of the Dweller!
They swayed and tossed, and then,
like water racing through an opened dam, they swept
upon the bridge-head. On and on they pushed, like
the bore of a mighty tide. The frog-men strove
against them, clubbing, spearing, tearing them.
But even those worst smitten seemed not to fall.
On they pushed, driving forward, irresistible a
battering ram of flesh and bone. They clove the
masses of the Akka, pressing them to the sides
of the bridge and over. Through the open gates
they forced them for there was no room
for the frog-men to stand against that implacable
tide.
Then those of the Akka who
were left turned their backs and ran. We heard
the clang of the golden wings of the portal, and none
too soon to keep out the first of the Dweller’s
dreadful hordes.
Now upon the cavern ledge and over
the whole length of the bridge there were none but
the dead-alive, men and women, black-polled ladala,
sloe-eyed Malays, slant-eyed Chinese, men of every
race that sailed the seas milling, turning,
swaying, like leaves caught in a sluggish current.
The bell notes became sharper, more
insistent. At the cavern mouth a radiance began
to grow a gleaming from which the atoms
of diamond dust seemed to try to flee. As the
radiance grew and the crystal notes rang nearer, every
head of that hideous multitude turned stiffly, slowly
toward the right, looking toward the far bridge end;
their eyes fixed and glaring; every face an inhuman
mask of rapture and of horror!
A movement shook them. Those
in the centre began to stream back, faster and ever
faster, leaving motionless deep ranks on each side.
Back they flowed until from golden doors to cavern
mouth a wide lane stretched, walled on each side by
the dead-alive.
The far radiance became brighter;
it gathered itself at the end of the dreadful lane;
it was shot with sparklings and with pulsings of polychromatic
light. The crystal storm was intolerable, piercing
the ears with countless tiny lances; brighter still
the radiance.
From the cavern swirled the Shining One!
The Dweller paused, seemed to scan
the island of the Silent Ones half doubtfully; then
slowly, stately, it drifted out upon the bridge.
Closer it drew; behind it glided Yolara at the head
of a company of her dwarfs, and at her side was the
hag of the Council whose face was the withered, shattered
echo of her own.
Slower grew the Dweller’s pace
as it drew nearer. Did I sense in it a doubt,
an uncertainty? The crystal-tongued, unseen choristers
that accompanied it subtly seemed to reflect the doubt;
their notes were not sure, no longer insistent; rather
was there in them an undertone of hesitancy, of warning!
Yet on came the Shining One until it stood plain beneath
us, searching with those eyes that thrust from and
withdrew into unknown spheres, the golden gateway,
the cliff face, the castle’s rounded bulk and
more intently than any of these, the dome wherein
sat the Three.
Behind it each face of the dead-alive
turned toward it, and those beside it throbbed and
gleamed with its luminescence.
Yolara crept close, just beyond the
reach of its spirals. She murmured and
the Dweller bent toward her, its seven globes steady
in their shining mists, as though listening.
It drew erect once more, resumed its doubtful scrutiny.
Yolara’s face darkened; she turned abruptly,
spoke to a captain of her guards. A dwarf raced
back between the palisades of dead-alive.
Now the priestess cried out, her voice
ringing like a silver clarion.
“Ye are done, ye Three!
The Shining One stands at your door, demanding entrance.
Your beasts are slain and your power is gone.
Who are ye, says the Shining One, to deny it entrance
to the place of its birth?”
“Ye do not answer,” she
cried again, “yet know we that ye hear!
The Shining One offers these terms: Send forth
your handmaiden and that lying stranger she stole;
send them forth to us and perhaps ye may
live. But if ye send them not forth, then shall
ye too die and soon!”
We waited, silent, even as did Yolara and
again there was no answer from the Three.
The priestess laughed; the blue eyes flashed.
“It is ended!” she cried.
“If you will not open, needs must we open for
you!”
Over the bridge was marching a long
double file of the dwarfs. They bore a smoothed
and handled tree-trunk whose head was knobbed with
a huge ball of metal. Past the priestess, past
the Shining One, they carried it; fifty of them to
each side of the ram; and behind them stepped Marakinoff!
Larry awoke to life.
“Now, thank God,” he rasped, “I
can get that devil, anyway!”
He drew his pistol, took careful aim.
Even as he pressed the trigger there rang through
the abode a tremendous clanging. The ram was
battering at the gates. O’Keefe’s
bullet went wild. The Russian must have heard
the shot; perhaps the missile was closer than we knew.
He made a swift leap behind the guards; was lost to
sight.
Once more the thunderous clanging rang through the
castle.
Lakla drew herself erect; down upon
her dropped the listening aloofness. Gravely
she bowed her head.
“It is time, O love of mine.”
She turned to O’Keefe. “The Silent
Ones say that the way of fear is closed, but the way
of love is open. They call upon us to redeem
our promise!”
For a hundred heart-beats they clung
to each other, breast to breast and lip to lip.
Below, the clangour was increasing, the great trunk
swinging harder and faster upon the metal gates.
Now Lakla gently loosed the arms of the O’Keefe,
and for another instant those two looked into each
other’s souls. The handmaiden smiled tremulously.
“I would it might have been
otherwise, Larry darlin’,” she whispered.
“But at least we pass together, dearest
of mine!”
She leaped to the window.
“Yolara!” the golden voice
rang out sweetly. The clanging ceased.
“Draw back your men. We open the Portal
and come forth to you and the Shining One Larry
and I.”
The priestess’s silver chimes
of laughter rang out, cruel, mocking.
“Come, then, quickly,”
she jeered. “For surely both the Shining
One and I yearn for you!” Her malice-laden laughter
chimed high once more. “Keep us not lonely
long!” the priestess mocked.
Larry drew a deep breath, stretched
both hands out to me.
“It’s good-by, I guess,
Doc.” His voice was strained. “Good-by
and good luck, old boy. If you get out, and you
will, let the old Dolphin know I’m
gone. And carry on, pal and always
remember the O’Keefe loved you like a brother.”
I squeezed his hands desperately.
Then out of my balanceshaking woe a strange comfort
was born.
“Maybe it’s not good-by,
Larry!” I cried. “The banshee has
not cried!”
A flash of hope passed over his face;
the old reckless grin shone forth.
“It’s so!” he said. “By
the Lord, it’s so!”
Then Lakla bent toward me, and for the second time kissed
me.
“Come!” she said to Larry.
Hand in hand they moved away, into the corridor that
led to the door outside of which waited the Shining
One and its priestess.
And unseen by them, wrapped as they
were within their love and sacrifice, I crept softly
behind. For I had determined that if enter the
Dweller’s embrace they must, they should not
go alone.
They paused before the Golden Portals;
the handmaiden pressed its opening lever; the massive
leaves rolled back.
Heads high, proudly, serenely, they
passed through and out upon the hither span.
I followed.
On each side of us stood the Dweller’s
slaves, faces turned rigidly toward their master.
A hundred feet away the Shining One pulsed and spiralled
in its evilly glorious lambency of sparkling plumes.
Unhesitating, always with that same
high serenity, Lakla and the O’Keefe, hands
clasped like little children, drew closer to that
wondrous shape. I could not see their faces, but
I saw awe fall upon those of the watching dwarfs,
and into the burning eyes of Yolara crept a doubt.
Closer they drew to the Dweller, and closer, I following
them step by step. The Shining One’s whirling
lessened; its tinklings were faint, almost stilled.
It seemed to watch them apprehensively. A silence
fell upon us all, a thick silence, brooding, ominous,
palpable. Now the pair were face to face with
the child of the Three so near that with
one of its misty tentacles it could have enfolded
them.
And the Shining One drew back!
Yes, drew back and back
with it stepped Yolara, the doubt in her eyes deepening.
Onward paced the handmaiden and the O’Keefe and
step by step, as they advanced, the Dweller withdrew;
its bell notes chiming out, puzzled questioning half
fearful!
And back it drew, and back until it
had reached the very centre of that platform over
the abyss in whose depths pulsed the green fires of
earth heart. And there Yolara gripped herself;
the hell that seethed within her soul leaped out of
her eyes, a cry, a shriek of rage, tore from her lips.
As at a signal, the Shining One flamed
high; its spirals and eddying mists swirled madly,
the pulsing core of it blazed radiance. A score
of coruscating tentacles swept straight upon the pair
who stood intrepid, unresisting, awaiting its embrace.
And upon me, lurking behind them.
Through me swept a mighty exaltation.
It was the end then and I was to meet
it with them.
Something drew us back, back with
an incredible swiftness, and yet as gently as a summer
breeze sweeps a bit of thistle-down! Drew us back
from those darting misty arms even as they were a hair-breadth
from us! I heard the Dweller’s bell notes
burst out ragingly! I heard Yolara scream.
What was that?
Between the three of us and them was
a ring of curdled moon flames, swirling about the
Shining One and its priestess, pressing in upon them,
enfolding them!
And within it I glimpsed the faces
of the Three implacable, sorrowful, filled
with a supernal power!
Sparks and flashes of white flame
darted from the ring, penetrating the radiant swathings
of the Dweller, striking through its pulsing nucleus,
piercing its seven crowning orbs.
Now the Shining One’s radiance
began to dim, the seven orbs to dull; the tiny sparkling
filaments that ran from them down into the Dweller’s
body snapped, vanished! Through the battling nebulosities
Yolara’s face swam forth horror-filled,
distorted, inhuman!
The ranks of the dead-alive quivered,
moved, writhed, as though each felt the torment of
the Thing that had enslaved them. The radiance
that the Three wielded grew more intense, thicker,
seemed to expand. Within it, suddenly, were scores
of flaming triangles scores of eyes like
those of the Silent Ones!
And the Shining One’s seven
little moons of amber, of silver, of blue and amethyst
and green, of rose and white, split, shattered, were
gone! Abruptly the tortured crystal chimings ceased.
Dulled, all its soul-shaking beauty
dead, blotched and shadowed squalidly, its gleaming
plumes tarnished, its dancing spirals stripped from
it, that which had been the Shining One wrapped itself
about Yolara wrapped and drew her into
itself; writhed, swayed, and hurled itself over the
edge of the bridge down, down into the green
fires of the unfathomable abyss with its
priestess still enfolded in its coils!
From the dwarfs who had watched that
terror came screams of panic fear. They turned
and ran, racing frantically over the bridge toward
the cavern mouth.
The serried ranks of the dead-alive
trembled, shook. Then from their faces tied
the horror of wedded ecstasy and anguish. Peace,
utter peace, followed in its wake.
And as fields of wheat are bent and
fall beneath the wind, they fell. No longer dead-alive,
now all of the blessed dead, freed from their dreadful
slavery!
Abruptly from the sparkling mists
the cloud of eyes was gone. Faintly revealed
in them were only the heads of the Silent Ones.
And they drew before us; were before us! No flames
now in their ebon eyes for the flickering
fires were quenched in great tears, streaming down
the marble white faces. They bent toward us,
over us; their radiance enfolded us. My eyes
darkened. I could not see. I felt a tender
hand upon my head and panic and frozen
dread and nightmare web that held me fled.
Then they, too, were gone.
Upon Larry’s breast the handmaiden
was sobbing sobbing out her heart but
this time with the joy of one who is swept up from
the very threshold of hell into paradise.