When I woke, feeling as refreshed
as though I had been dreaming through a long night,
An, seeing me open-eyed, helped me to my feet, and
when I had recovered my senses a little, asked if
we should go on. I was myself again by this
time, so willingly took her hand, and soon came out
of the tangle into the open spaces. I must have
been under the spell of the Martian wines longer than
it seemed, for already it was late in the afternoon,
the shadows of trees were lying deep and far-reaching
over the motley crowds of people. Out here as
the day waned they had developed some sort of method
in their sports. In front of us was a broad,
grassy course marked off with garlanded finger-posts,
and in this space rallies of workfolk were taking part
in all manner of games under the eyes of a great concourse
of spectators, doing the Martians’ pleasures
for them as they did their labours. An led me
gently on, leaning on my arm heavier, I thought, than
she had done in the morning, and ever and anon turning
her gazelle-like eyes upon me with a look I could
not understand. As we sauntered forward I noticed
all about lesser circles where the yellow-girted ones
were drawing delighted laughter from good-tempered
crowds by tricks of sleight-of-hand, and posturing,
or tossing gilded cups and balls as though they were
catering, as indeed they were, for outgrown children.
Others fluted or sang songs in chorus to the slow clapping
of hands, while others were doing I knew not what,
sitting silent amongst silent spectators who every
now and then burst out laughing for no cause that
I could see. But An would not let me stop, and
so we pushed on through the crowd till we came to
the main enclosures where a dozen slaves had run a
race for the amusement of those too lazy to race themselves,
and were sitting panting on the grass.
To give them time to get their breath,
perhaps, a man stepped out of the crowd dressed in
a dark blue tunic, a strange vacuous-looking fellow,
and throwing down a sheaf of javelins marched off a
dozen paces, then, facing round, called out loudly
he would give sixteen suits of “summer cloth”
to any one who could prick him with a javelin from
the heap.
“Why,” I said in amazement,
“this is the best of fools no one
could miss from such a distance.”
“Ay but,” replied my guide,
“he is a gifted one, versed in mystics.”
I was just going to say a good javelin,
shod with iron, was a stronger argument than any mystic
I had ever heard of could stand, when out of the crowd
stepped a youth, and amid the derisive cheers of his
friends chose a reed from the bundle. He poised
it in his hand a minute to get the middle, then turned
on the living target. Whatever else they might
be, these Martians were certainly beautiful as the
daytime. Never had I seen such a perfect embodiment
of grace and elegance as that boy as he stood there
for a moment poised to the throw; the afternoon sunshine
warm and strong on his bunched brown hair, a girlish
flush of shyness on his handsome face, and the sleek
perfection of his limbs, clear cut against the dusky
background beyond. And now the javelin was going.
Surely the mystic would think better of it at the last
moment! No! the initiate held his ground with
tight-shut lips and retrospective eyes, and even as
I looked the weapon flew upon its errand.
“There goes the soul of a fool!”
I exclaimed, and as the words were uttered the spear
struck, or seemed to, between the neck and shoulder,
but instead of piercing rose high into the air, quivering
and flashing, and presently turning over, fell back,
and plunged deep into the turf, while a low murmur
of indifferent pleasure went round amongst the onlookers.
Thereat An, yawning gently, looked
to me and said, “A strong-willed fellow, isn’t
he, friend?”
I hesitated a minute and then asked,
“Was it will which turned that shaft?”
She answered with simplicity, “Why,
of course what else?”
By this time another boy had stepped
out, and having chosen a javelin, tested it with hand
and foot, then retiring a pace or two rushed up to
the throwing mark and flung it straight and true into
the bared bosom of the man. And as though it
had struck a wall of brass, the shaft leapt back falling
quivering at the thrower’s feet. Another
and another tried unsuccessfully, until at last, vexed
at their futility, I said, “I have a somewhat
scanty wardrobe that would be all the better for that
fellow’s summer suiting, by your leave I will
venture a throw against him.”
“It is useless,” answered
An; “none but one who knows more magic than
he, or is especially befriended by the Fates can touch
him through the envelope he has put on.”
“Still, I think I will try.”
“It is hopeless, I would not
willingly see you fail,” whispered the girl,
with a sudden show of friendship.
“And what,” I said, bending
down, “would you give me if I succeeded?”
Whereat An laughed a little uneasily, and, withdrawing
her hand from mine, half turned away. So I pushed
through the spectators and stepped into the ring.
I went straight up to the pile of weapons, and having
chosen one went over to the mystic. “Good
fellow,” I cried out ostentatiously, trying
the sharpness of the javelin-point with my finger,
“where are all of those sixteen summer suits
of yours lying hid?”
“It matters nothing,” said the man, as
if he were asleep.
“Ay, but by the stars it does,
for it will vex the quiet repose of your soul tomorrow
if your heirs should swear they could not find them.”
“It matters nothing,”
muttered the will-wrapped visionary.
“It will matter something if
I take you at your word. Come, friend Purple-jerkin,
will you take the council with your legs and run while
there is yet time, or stand up to be thrown at?”
“I stand here immoveable in
the confidence of my initiation.”
“Then, by thunder, I will initiate
you into the mysteries of a javelin-end, and your
blood be on your head.”
The Martians were all craning their
necks in hushed eagerness as I turned to the casting-place,
and, poising the javelin, faced the magician.
Would he run at the last moment? I half hoped
so; for a minute I gave him the chance, then, as he
showed no sign of wavering, I drew my hand back, shook
the javelin back till it bent like a reed, and hurled
it at him.
The Martians’ heads turned as
though all on one pivot as the spear sped through
the air, expecting no doubt to see it recoil as others
had done. But it took him full in the centre
of his chest, and with a wild wave of arms and a flutter
of purple raiment sent him backwards, and down, and
over and over in a shapeless heap of limbs and flying
raiment, while a low murmur of awed surprise rose from
the spectators. They crowded round him in a dense
ring, as An came flitting to me with a startled face.
“Oh, stranger,” she burst
out, “you have surely killed him!” but
more astounded I had broken down his guard than grieved
at his injury.
“No,” I answered smilingly;
“a sore chest he may have tomorrow, but dead
he is not, for I turned the lance-point back as I spun
it, and it was the butt-end I threw at him!”
“It was none the less wonderful;
I thought you were a common man, a prince mayhap,
come but from over the hills, but now something tells
me you are more than that,” and she lapsed into
thoughtful silence for a time.
Neither of us were wishful to go back
amongst those who were raising the bruised magician
to his legs, but wandered away instead through the
deepening twilight towards the city over meadows whose
damp, soft fragrance loaded the air with sleepy pleasure,
neither of us saying a word till the dusk deepened
and the quick night descended, while we came amongst
the gardened houses, the thousand lights of an unreal
city rising like a jewelled bank before us, and there
An said she would leave me for a time, meeting me
again in the palace square later on, “To see
Princess Heru read the destinies of the year.”
“What!” I exclaimed, “more
magic? I have been brought up on more substantial
mental stuff than this.”
“Nevertheless, I would advise
you to come to the square,” persisted my companion.
“It affects us all, and who knows? may
affect you more than any.”
Therein poor An was unconsciously
wearing the cloak of prophesy herself, and, shrugging
my shoulders good-humouredly, I kissed her chin, little
realising, as I let her fingers slip from mine, that
I should see her no more.
Turning back alone, through the city, through ways twinkling
with myriad lights as little lamps began to blink out amongst garlands and
flower-decked booths on every hand, I walked on, lost in varying thoughts,
until, fairly tired and hungry, I found myself outside a stall where many
Martians stood eating and drinking to their hearts content. I was known
to none of them, and, forgetting past experience, was looking on rather
enviously, when there came a touch upon my arm, and
“Are you hungry, sir?” asked a bystander.
“Ay,” I said, “hungry,
good friend, and with all the zest which an empty
purse lends to that condition.”
“Then here is what you need,
sir, even from here the wine smells good, and the
fried fruit would make a mouse’s eye twinkle.
Why do you wait?”
“Why wait? Why, because
though the rich man’s dinner goes in at his
mouth, the poor man must often be content to dine through
his nose. I tell you I have nothing to get me
a meal with.”
The stranger seemed to speculate on
this for a time, and then he said, “I cannot
fathom your meaning, sir. Buying and selling,
gold and money, all these have no meaning to me.
Surely the twin blessings of an appetite and food
abundant ready and free before you are enough.”
“What! free is it free
like the breakfast served out this morning?”
“Why, of course,” said
the youth, with mild depreciation; “everything
here is free. Everything is his who will take
it, without exception. What else is the good
of a coherent society and a Government if it cannot
provide you with so rudimentary a thing as a meal?”
Whereat joyfully I undid my belt,
and, without nicely examining the argument, marched
into the booth, and there put Martian hospitality to
the test, eating and drinking, but this time with growing
wisdom, till I was a new man, and then, paying my
leaving with a wave of the hand to the yellow-girted
one who dispensed the common provender, I sauntered
on again, caring little or nothing which way the road
went, and soon across the current of my meditations
a peal of laughter broke, accompanied by the piping
of a flute somewhere close at hand, and the next minute
I found myself amid a ring of light-hearted roisterers
who were linking hands for a dance to the music a
curly-headed fellow was making close by.
They made me join them! One
rosey-faced damsel at the hither end of the chain
drew up to me, and, without a word, slipped her soft,
baby fingers into my hand; on the other side another
came with melting eyes, breath like a bed of violets,
and banked-up fun puckering her dainty mouth.
What could I do but give her a hand as well?
The flute began to gurgle anew, like a drinking spout
in spring-time, and away we went, faster and faster
each minute, the boys and girls swinging themselves
in time to the tune, and capering presently till their
tender feet were twinkling over the ground in gay
confusion. Faster and faster till, as the infection
of the dance spread even to the outside groups, I capered
too. My word! if they could have seen me that
night from the deck of the old Carolina, how they
would have laughed sword swinging, coat-tails
flying faster and faster, round and round
we went, till limbs could stand no more; the gasping
piper blew himself quite out, and the dance ended
as abruptly as it commenced, the dancers melting away
to join others or casting themselves panting on the
turf.
Certainly these Martian girls were
blessed with an ingratiating simplicity. My
new friend of the violet-scented breath hung back a
little, then after looking at me demurely for a minute
or two, like a child that chooses a new playmate,
came softly up, and, standing on tiptoe, kissed me
on the cheek. It was not unpleasant, so I turned
the other, whereon, guessing my meaning, without the
smallest hesitation, she reached up again, and pressed
her pretty mouth to my bronzed skin a second time.
Then, with a little sigh of satisfaction, she ran
an arm through mine, saying, “Comrade, from
what country have you come? I never saw one quite
like you before.”
“From what country had I come?”
Again the frown dropped down upon my forehead.
Was I dreaming was I mad? Where indeed
had I come from? I stared back over my shoulder,
and there, as if in answer to my thought there,
where the black tracery of flowering shrubs waved in
the soft night wind, over a gap in the crumbling ivory
ramparts, the sky was brightening. As I looked
into the centre of that glow, a planet, magnified
by the wonderful air, came swinging up, pale but splendid,
and mapped by soft colours green, violet,
and red. I knew it on the minute, Heaven only
knows how, but I knew it, and a desperate thrill of
loneliness swept over me, a spasm of comprehension
of the horrible void dividing us. Never did yearning
babe stretch arms more wistfully to an unattainable
mother than I at that moment to my mother earth.
All her meanness and prosaicness was forgotten, all
her imperfections and shortcomings; it was home, the
one tangible thing in the glittering emptiness of
the spheres. All my soul went into my eyes, and
then I sneezed violently, and turning round, found
that sweet damsel whose silky head nestled so friendly
on my shoulder was tickling my nose with a feather
she had picked up.
Womanlike, she had forgotten all about
her first question, and now asked another, “Will
you come to supper with me, stranger? ’Tis
nearly ready, I think.”
“To be able to say no to such
an invitation, lady, is the first thing a young man
should learn,” I answered lightly; but then,
seeing there was nothing save the most innocent friendliness
in those hazel eyes, I went on, “but that stern
rule may admit of variance. Only, as it chances,
I have just supped at the public expense. If,
instead, you would be a sailor’s sweetheart
for an hour, and take me to this show of yours your
princess’s benefit, or whatever it is I
shall be obliged; my previous guide is hull down over
the horizon, and I am clean out of my reckoning in
this crowd.”
By way of reply, the little lady,
light as an elf, took me by the fingertips, and, gleefully
skipping forward, piloted me through the mazes of
her city until we came out into the great square fronting
on the palace, which rose beyond it like a white chalk
cliff in the dull light. Not a taper showed anywhere
round its circumference, but a mysterious kind of
radiance like sea phosphorescence beamed from the
palace porch. All was in such deathlike silence
that the nails in my “ammunition” boots
made an unpleasant clanking as they struck on the
marble pavement; yet, by the uncertain starlight, I
saw, to my surprise, the whole square was thronged
with Martians, all facing towards the porch, as still,
graven images, and as voiceless, for once, as though
they had indeed been marble. It was strange to
see them sitting there in the twilight, waiting for
I knew not what, and my friend’s voice at my
elbow almost startled me as she said, in a whisper,
“The princess knows you are in the crowd, and
desires you to go up upon the steps near where she
will be.”
“Who brought her message?”
I asked, gazing vaguely round, for none had spoken
to us for an hour or more.
“No one,” said my companion,
gently pushing me up an open way towards the palace
steps left clear by the sitting Martians. “It
came direct from her to me this minute.”
“But how?” I persisted.
“Nay,” said the girl,
“if we stop to talk like this we shall not be
placed before she comes, and thus throw a whole year’s
knowledge out.”
So, bottling my speculations, I allowed
myself to be led up the first flight of worn, white
steps to where, on the terrace between them and the
next flight leading directly to the palace portico,
was a flat, having a circle about twenty feet across,
inlaid upon the marble with darker coloured blocks.
Inside that circle, as I sat down close by it in
the twilight, showed another circle, and then a final
one in whose inmost middle stood a tall iron tripod
and something atop of it covered by a cloth.
And all round the outer circle were magic symbols I
started as I recognised the meaning of some of them within
these again the inner circle held what looked like
the representations of planets, ending, as I have
said, in that dished hollow made by countless dancers’
feet, and its solitary tripod. Back again, I
glanced towards the square where the great concourse ten
thousand of them, perhaps were sitting
mute and silent in the deepening shadows, then back
to the magic circles, till the silence and expectancy
of a strange scene began to possess me.
Shadow down below, star-dusted heaven
above, and not a figure moving; when suddenly something
like a long-drawn sigh came from the lips of the expectant
multitude, and I was aware every eye had suddenly turned
back to the palace porch, where, as we looked, a figure,
wrapped in pale blue robes, appeared and stood for
a minute, then stole down the steps with an eagerness
in every movement holding us spellbound. I have
seen many splendid pageants and many sights, each of
which might be the talk of a lifetime, but somehow
nothing ever so engrossing, so thrilling, as that
ghostly figure in flowing robes stealing across the
piazza in starlight and silence the princess
of a broken kingdom, the priestess of a forgotten
faith coming to her station to perform a jugglery
of which she knew not even the meaning. It was
my versatile friend Heru, and with quick, incisive
steps, her whole frame ambent for the time with the
fervour of her mission, she came swiftly down to within
a dozen yards of where I stood. Heru, indeed,
but not the same princess as in the morning; an inspired
priestess rather, her slim body wrapped in blue and
quivering with emotion, her face ashine with Delphic
fire, her hair loose, her feet bare, until at last
when, as she stood within the limit of the magic circle,
her white hands upon her breast, her eyes flashing
like planets themselves in the starshine she looked
so ghostly and unreal I felt for a minute I was dreaming.
Then began a strange, weird dance
amongst the imagery of the rings, over which my earth
planet was beginning to throw a haze of light.
At first it was hardly more than a walk, a slow procession
round the twin circumferences of the centred tripod.
But soon it increased to an extraordinary graceful
measure, a cadenced step without music or sound that
riveted my eyes to the dancer. Presently I saw
those mystic, twinkling feet of hers as
the dance became swifter were performing
a measured round amongst the planet signs spelling
out something, I knew not what, with quick, light
touch amongst the zodiac figures, dancing out a soundless
invocation of some kind as a dumb man might spell a
message by touching letters. Quicker and quicker,
for minute after minute, grew the dance, swifter and
swifter the swing of the light blue drapery as the
priestess, with eager face and staring eyes, swung
panting round upon her orbit, and redder and redder
over the city tops rose the circumference of the earth.
It seemed to me all the silent multitude were breathing
heavily as we watched that giddy dance, and whatever
they felt, all my own senses seemed to be winding
up upon that revolving figure as thread winds on a
spindle.
“When will she stop?”
I whispered to my friend under my breath.
“When the earth-star rests in
the roof-niche of the temple it is climbing,”
she answered back.
“And then?”
“On the tripod is a globe of
water. In it she will see the destiny of the
year, and will tell us. The whiter the water
stays, the better for us; it never varies from white.
But we must not talk; see! she is stopping.”
And as I looked back, the dance was
certainly ebbing now with such smoothly decreasing
undulations, that every heart began to beat calmer
in response. There was a minute or two of such
slow cessation, and then to say she stopped were too
gross a description. Motion rather died away
from her, and the priestess grounded as smoothly as
a ship grounds in fine weather on a sandy bank.
There she was at last, crouched behind the tripod,
one corner of the cloth covering it grasped in her
hand, and her eyes fixed on the shining round just
poised upon the distant run.
Keenly the girl watched it slide into
zenith, then the cloth was snatched from the tripod-top.
As it fell it uncovered a beautiful and perfect globe
of clear white glass, a foot or so in diameter, and
obviously filled with the thinnest, most limpid water
imaginable. At first it seemed to me, who stood
near to the priestess of Mars, with that beaming sphere
directly between us, and the newly risen world, that
its smooth and flawless face was absolutely devoid
of sign or colouring. Then, as the distant planet
became stronger in the magnifying Martian air, or
my eyes better accustomed to that sudden nucleus of
brilliancy, a delicate and infinitely lovely network
of colours came upon it. They were like the radiant
prisms that sometimes flush the surface of a bubble
more than aught else for a time. But as I watched
that mosaic of yellow and purple creep softly to and
fro upon the globe it seemed they slowly took form
and meaning. Another minute or two and they
had certainly congealed into a settled plan, and then,
as I stared and wondered, it burst upon me in a minute
that I was looking upon a picture, faithful in every
detail, of the world I stood on; all its ruddy forests,
its sapphire sea, both broad and narrow ones, its
white peaked mountains, and unnumbered islands being
mapped out with startling clearness for a spell upon
that beaming orb.
Then a strange thing happened.
Heru, who had been crouching in a tremulous heap
by the tripod, rose stealthily and passed her hands
a few times across the sphere. Colour and picture
vanished at her touch like breath from a mirror.
Again all was clear and pellucid.
“Now,” said my companion,
“now listen! For Heru reads the destiny;
the whiter the globe stays the better for us ”
and then I felt her hand tighten on mine with a startled
grasp as the words died away upon her lips.
Even as the girl spoke, the sphere,
which had been beaming in the centre of the silent
square like a mighty white jewel, began to flush with
angry red. Redder and redder grew the gleam a
fiery glow which seemed curdling in the interior of
the round as though it were filled with flame; redder
and redder, until the princess, staring into it, seemed
turned against the jet-black night behind, into a form
of molten metal. A spasm of terror passed across
her as she stared; her limbs stiffened; her frightened
hands were clutched in front, and she stood cowering
under that great crimson nucleus like one bereft of
power and life, and lost to every sense but that of
agony. Not a syllable came from her lips, not
a movement stirred her body, only that dumb, stupid
stare of horror, at the something she saw in the globe.
What could I do? I could not sit and see her
soul come out at her frightened eyes, and not a Martian
moved a finger to her rescue; the red shine gleamed
on empty faces, tier above tier, and flung its broad
flush over the endless rank of open-mouthed spectators,
then back I looked to Heru that winsome
little lady for whom, you will remember, I had already
more than a passing fancy and saw with a
thrill of emotion that while she still kept her eyes
on the flaming globe like one in a horrible dream
her hands were slowly, very slowly, rising in supplication
to me! It was not vanity. There was
no mistaking the direction of that silent, imploring
appeal.
Not a man of her countrymen moved,
not even black Hath! There was not a sound in
the world, it seemed, but the noisy clatter of my own
shoenails on the marble flags. In the great red
eye of that unholy globe the Martians glimmered like
a picture multitude under the red cliff of their ruined
palace. I glared round at them with contempt
for a minute, then sprang forward and snatched the
princess up. It was like pulling a flower up
by the roots. She was stiff and stark when I
lay hold of her, but when I tore her from the magic
ground she suddenly gave a piercing shriek, and fainted
in my arms.
Then as I turned upon my heels with
her upon my breast my foot caught upon the cloths
still wound about the tripod of the sphere. Over
went that implement of a thousand years of sorcery,
and out went the red fire. But little I cared the
princess was safe! And up the palace steps,
amidst a low, wailing hum of consternation from the
recovering Martians, I bore that bundle of limp and
senseless loveliness up into the pale shine of her
own porch, and there, laying her down upon a couch,
watched her recover presently amongst her women with
a varied assortment of emotions tingling in my veins.