Maskull awoke before the others.
He got up, stretched himself, and walked out into
the sunlight. Branchspell was already declining.
He climbed to the top of the crater edge and looked
away toward Ifdawn. The afterglow of Alppain
had by now completely disappeared. The mountains
stood up wild and grand.
They impressed him like a simple musical
theme, the notes of which are widely separated in
the scale; a spirit of rashness, daring, and adventure
seemed to call to him from them. It was at that
moment that the determination flashed into his heart
to walk to the Marest and explore its dangers.
He returned to the cavern to say good-by to his hosts.
Joiwind looked at him with her brave
and honest eyes. “Is this selfishness,
Maskull?” she asked, “or are you drawn
by something stronger than yourself?”
“We must be reasonable,”
he answered, smiling. “I can’t settle
down in Poolingdred before I have found out something
about this surprising new planet of yours. Remember
what a long way I have come.... But very likely
I shall come back here.”
“Will you make me a promise?”
Maskull hesitated. “Ask
nothing difficult, for I hardly know my powers yet.”
“It is not hard, and I wish
it. Promise this never to raise your
hand against a living creature, either to strike,
pluck, or eat, without first recollecting its mother,
who suffered for it.”
“Perhaps I won’t promise
that,” said Maskull slowly, “but I’ll
undertake something more tangible. I will never
lift my hand against a living creature without first
recollecting you, Joiwind.”
She turned a little pale. “Now
if Panawe knew that Panawe existed, he might be jealous.”
Panawe put his hand on her gently.
“You would not talk like that in Shaping’s
presence,” he said.
“No. Forgive me! I’m
not quite myself. Perhaps it is Maskull’s
blood in my veins.... Now let us bid him adieu.
Let us pray that he will do only honourable deeds,
wherever he may be.”
“I’ll set Maskull on his way,” said
Panawe.
“There’s no need,” replied Maskull.
“The way is plain.”
“But talking shortens the road.”
Maskull turned to go.
Joiwind pulled him around toward her
softly. “You won’t think badly of
other women on my account?”
“You are a blessed spirit,” answered he.
She trod quietly to the inner extremity
of the cave and stood there thinking. Panawe
and Maskull emerged into the open air. Halfway
down the cliff face a little spring was encountered.
Its water was colourless, transparent, but gaseous.
As soon as Maskull had satisfied his thirst he felt
himself different. His surroundings were so real
to him in their vividness and colour, so unreal in
their phantom-like mystery, that he scrambled downhill
like one in a winter’s dream.
When they reached the plain he saw
in front of them an interminable forest of tall trees,
the shapes of which were extraordinarily foreign looking.
The leaves were crystalline and, looking upward, it
was as if he were gazing through a roof of glass.
The moment they got underneath the trees the light
rays of the sun continued to come through white,
savage, and blazing but they were gelded
of heat. Then it was not hard to imagine that
they were wandering through cool, bright elfin glades.
Through the forest, beginning at their
very feet an avenue, perfectly straight and not very
wide, went forward as far as the eye could see.
Maskull wanted to talk to his travelling
companion, but was somehow unable to find words.
Panawe glanced at him with an inscrutable smile stern,
yet enchanting and half feminine. He then broke
the silence, but, strangely enough, Maskull could
not make out whether he was singing or speaking.
From his lips issued a slow musical recitative, exactly
like a bewitching adagio from a low toned stringed
instrument but there was a difference.
Instead of the repetition and variation of one or
two short themes, as in music, Panawe’s theme
was prolonged it never came to an end,
but rather resembled a conversation in rhythm and
melody. And, at the same time, it was no recitative,
for it was not declamatory. It was a long, quiet
stream of lovely emotion.
Maskull listened entranced, yet agitated.
The song, if it might be termed song, seemed to be
always just on the point of becoming clear and intelligible not
with the intelligibility of words, but in the way one
sympathises with another’s moods and feelings;
and Maskull felt that something important was about
to be uttered, which would explain all that had gone
before. But it was invariably postponed, he never
understood and yet somehow he did understand.
Late in the afternoon they came to
a clearing, and there Panawe ceased his recitative.
He slowed his pace and stopped, in the fashion of a
man who wishes to convey that he intends to go no
farther.
“What is the name of this country?” asked
Maskull.
“It is the Lusion Plain.”
“Was that music in the nature
of a temptation do you wish me not to go
on?”
“Your work lies before you, and not behind you.”
“What was it, then? What work do you allude
to?”
“It must have seemed like something to you,
Maskull.”
“It seemed like Shaping music to me.”
The instant he had absently uttered
these words, Maskull wondered why he had done so,
as they now appeared meaningless to him.
Panawe, however, showed no surprise. “Shaping
you will find everywhere.”
“Am I dreaming, or awake?”
“You are awake.”
Maskull fell into deep thought.
“So be it,” he said, rousing himself.
“Now I will go on. But where must I sleep
tonight?”
“You will reach a broad river.
On that you can travel to the foot of the Marest tomorrow;
but tonight you had better sleep where the forest and
river meet.”
“Adieu, then, Panawe! But do you wish to
say anything more to me?”
“Only this, Maskull wherever
you go, help to make the world beautiful, and not
ugly.”
“That’s more than any
of us can undertake. I am a simple man, and have
no ambitions in the way of beautifying life But
tell Joiwind I will try to keep myself pure.”
They parted rather coldly. Maskull
stood erect where they had stopped, and watched Panawe
out of sight. He sighed more than once.
He became aware that something was
about to happen. The air was breathless.
The late-afternoon sunshine, unobstructed, wrapped
his frame in voluptuous heat. A solitary cloud,
immensely high, raced through the sky overhead.
A single trumpet note sounded in the
far distance from somewhere behind him. It gave
him an impression of being several miles away at first;
but then it slowly swelled, and came nearer and nearer
at the same time that it increased in volume.
Still the same note sounded, but now it was as if
blown by a giant trumpeter immediately over his head.
Then it gradually diminished in force, and travelled
away in front of him. It ended very faintly and
distantly.
He felt himself alone with Nature.
A sacred stillness came over his heart. Past
and future were forgotten. The forest, the sun,
the day did not exist for him. He was unconscious
of himself he had no thoughts and no feelings.
Yet never had Life had such an altitude for him.
A man stood, with crossed arms, right
in his path. He was so clothed that his limbs
were exposed, while his body was covered. He was
young rather than old. Maskull observed that
his countenance possessed none of the special organs
of Tormance, to which he had not even yet become reconciled.
He was smooth-faced. His whole person seemed to
radiate an excess of life, like the trembling of air
on a hot day. His eyes had such force that Maskull
could not meet them.
He addressed Maskull by name, in an
extraordinary voice. It had a double tone.
The primary one sounded far away; the second was an
undertone, like a sympathetic tanging string.
Maskull felt a rising joy, as he continued
standing in the presence of this individual.
He believed that something good was happening to him.
He found it physically difficult to bring any words
out. “Why do you stop me?”
“Maskull, look well at me. Who am I?”
“I think you are Shaping.”
“I am Surtur.”
Maskull again attempted to meet his
eyes, but felt as if he were being stabbed.
“You know that this is my world.
Why do you think I have brought you here? I wish
you to serve me.”
Maskull could no longer speak.
“Those who joke at my world,”
continued the vision, “those who make a mock
of its stern, eternal rhythm, its beauty and sublimity,
which are not skin-deep, but proceed from fathomless
roots they shall not escape.”
“I do not mock it.”
“Ask me your questions, and I will answer them.”
“I have nothing.”
“It is necessary for you to
serve me, Maskull. Do you not understand?
You are my servant and helper.”
“I shall not fail.”
“This is for my sake, and not for yours.”
These last words had no sooner left
Surtur’s mouth than Maskull saw him spring suddenly
upward and outward. Looking up at the vault of
the sky, he saw the whole expanse of vision filled
by Surtur’s form not as a concrete
man, but as a vast, concave cloud image, looking down
and frowning at him. Then the spectacle vanished,
as a light goes out.
Maskull stood inactive, with a thumping
heart. Now he again heard the solitary trumpet
note. The sound began this time faintly in the
far distance in front of him, travelled slowly toward
him with regularly increasing intensity, passed overhead
at its loudest, and then grew more and more quiet,
wonderful, and solemn, as it fell away in the rear,
until the note was merged in the deathlike silence
of the forest. It appeared to Maskull like the
closing of a marvellous and important chapter.
Simultaneously with the fading away
of the sound, the heavens seemed to open up with the
rapidity of lightning into a blue vault of immeasurable
height. He breathed a great breath, stretched
all his limbs, and looked around him with a slow smile.
After a while he resumed his journey.
His brain was all dark and confused, but one idea
was already beginning to stand out from the rest huge,
shapeless, and grand, like the growing image in the
soul of a creative artist: the staggering thought
that he was a man of destiny.
The more he reflected upon all that
had occurred since his arrival in this new world and
even before leaving Earth the clearer and
more indisputable it became, that he could not be
here for his own purposes, but must be here for an
end. But what that end was, he could not imagine.
Through the forest he saw Branchspell
at last sinking in the west. It looked a stupendous
ball of red fire now he could realise at
his ease what a sun it was! The avenue took an
abrupt turn to the left and began to descend steeply.
A wide, rolling river of clear and
dark water was visible in front of him, no great way
off. It flowed from north to south. The forest
path led him straight to its banks. Maskull stood
there, and regarded the lapping, gurgling waters pensively.
On the opposite bank, the forest continued. Miles
to the south, Poolingdred could just be distinguished.
On the northern skyline the Ifdawn Mountains loomed
up high, wild, beautiful, and dangerous.
They were not a dozen miles away.
Like the first mutterings of a thunderstorm,
the first faint breaths of cool wind, Maskull felt
the stirrings of passion in his heart. In spite
of his bodily fatigue, he wished to test his strength
against something. This craving he identified
with the crags of the Marest. They seemed to
have the same magical attraction for his will as the
lodestone for iron. He kept biting his nails,
as he turned his eyes in that direction wondering
if it would not be possible to conquer the heights
that evening. But when he glanced back again at
Poolingdred, he remembered Joiwind and Panawe, and
grew more tranquil. He decided to make his bed
at this spot, and to set off as soon after daybreak
as he should awake.
He drank at the river, washed himself,
and lay down on the bank to sleep. By this time,
so far had his idea progressed, that he cared nothing
for the possible dangers of the night he
confided in his star.
Branchspell set, the day faded, night
with its terrible weight came on, and through it all
Maskull slept. Long before midnight, however,
he was awakened by a crimson glow in the sky.
He opened his eyes, and wondered where he was.
He felt heaviness and pain. The red glow was a
terrestrial phenomenon; it came from among the trees.
He got up and went toward the source of the light.
Away from the river, not a hundred
feet off, he nearly stumbled across the form of a
sleeping woman. The object which emitted the crimson
rays was lying on the ground, several yards away from
her. It was like a small jewel, throwing off
sparks of red light. He barely threw a glance
at that, however.
The woman was clothed in the large
skin of an animal. She had big, smooth, shapely
limbs, rather muscular than fat. Her magn was
not a thin tentacle, but a third arm, terminating
in a hand. Her face, which was upturned, was
wild, powerful, and exceedingly handsome. But
he saw with surprise that in place of a breve on her
forehead, she possessed another eye. All three
were closed. The colour of her skin in the crimson
glow he could not distinguish.
He touched her gently with his hand.
She awoke calmly and looked up at him without stirring
a muscle. All three eyes stared at him; but the
two lower ones were dull and vacant mere
carriers of vision. The middle, upper one alone
expressed her inner nature. Its haughty, unflinching
glare had yet something seductive and alluring in it.
Maskull felt a challenge in that look of lordly, feminine
will, and his manner instinctively stiffened.
She sat up.
“Can you speak my language?”
he asked. “I wouldn’t put such a question,
but others have been able to.”
“Why should you imagine that
I can’t read your mind? Is it so extremely
complex?”
She spoke in a rich, lingering, musical
voice, which delighted him to listen to.
“No, but you have no breve.”
“Well, but haven’t I a
sorb, which is better?” And she pointed to the
eye on her brow.
“What is your name?”
“Oceaxe.”
“And where do you come from?”
“Ifdawn.”
These contemptuous replies began to
irritate him, and yet the mere sound of her voice
was fascinating.
“I am going there tomorrow,” he remarked.
She laughed, as if against her will, but made no comment.
“My name is Maskull,” he went on.
“I am a stranger from another world.”
“So I should judge, from your absurd appearance.”
“Perhaps it would be as well
to say at once,” said Maskull bluntly, “are
we, or are we not, to be friends?”
She yawned and stretched her arms,
without rising. “Why should we be friends?
If I thought you were a man, I might accept you as
a lover.”
“You must look elsewhere for that.”
“So be it, Maskull! Now go away, and leave
me in peace.”
She dropped her head again to the
ground, but did not at once close her eyes.
“What are you doing here?” he interrogated.
“Oh, we Ifdawn folk occasionally
come here to sleep, for there often enough it is a
night for us which has no next morning.”
“Being such a terrible place,
and seeing that I am a total stranger, it would be
merely courteous if you were to warn me what I have
to expect in the way of dangers.”
“I am perfectly and utterly
indifferent to what becomes of you,” retorted
Oceaxe.
“Are you returning in the morning?” persisted
Maskull.
“If I wish.”
“Then we will go together.”
She got up again on her elbow.
“Instead of making plans for other people, I
would do a very necessary thing.”
“Pray, tell me.”
“Well, there’s no reason
why I should, but I will. I would try to convert
my women’s organs into men’s organs.
It is a man’s country.”
“Speak more plainly.”
“Oh, it’s plain enough.
If you attempt to pass through Ifdawn without a sorb,
you are simply committing suicide. And that magn
too is worse than useless.”
“You probably know what you
are talking about, Oceaxe. But what do you advise
me to do?”
She negligently pointed to the light-emitting
stone lying on the ground.
“There is the solution.
If you hold that drude to your organs for a good while,
perhaps it will start the change, and perhaps nature
will do the rest during the night. I promise
nothing.”
Oceaxe now really turned her back on Maskull.
He considered for a few minutes, and
then walked over and to where the stone was lying,
and took it in his hand. It was a pebble the size
of a hen’s egg, radiant with crimson light,
as though red-hot, and throwing out a continuous shower
of small, blood-red sparks.
Finally deciding that Oceaxe’s
advice was good, he applied the drude first to his
magn, and then to his breve. He experienced a
cauterising sensation a feeling of healing
pain.