The dark forest seemed to shut behind
as I entered the gateway of the deserted Hither town,
against which my wood-cutter friend had warned me,
while inside the soft mist hung in the starlight like
grey drapery over endless vistas of ruins. What
was I to do? Without all was black and cheerless,
inside there was at least shelter. Wet and cold,
my courage was not to be put down by the stories of
a silly savage; I would go on whatever happened.
Besides, the soft sound of crying, now apparently
all about, seemed companionable, and I had heard so
much of ghosts of late, the sharp edge of fear at
their presence was wearing off.
So in I went: up a broad, decayed
street, its flagstones heaved everywhere by the roots
of gnarled trees, and finding nothing save ruin, tried
to rest under a wall. But the night air was chilly
and the shelter poor, so out I came again, with the
wailing in the shadows so close about now that I stopped,
and mustering up courage called aloud:
“Hullo, you who weep there in
the dark, are you living or dead?” And after
a minute from the hollows of the empty hearths around
came the sad little responsive echo:
“Are you living or dead?”
It was very delusive and unsatisfactory, and I was
wondering what to do next when a slant of warmer wind
came up behind me under the mist, and immediately
little tongues of blue flame blossomed without visible
cause in every darksome crevice; pale flickers of
miasmic light rising pallid from every lurking nook
and corner in the black desolation as though a thousand
lamps were lit by unseen fingers, and, knee high,
floated out into the thoroughfare where they oscillated
gently in airy grace, and then, forming into procession,
began drifting before the tepid air towards the city
centre. At once I thought of what the woodcutter
had seen, but was too wet and sulky by this time to
care. The fascination of the place was on me,
and dropping into rear of the march, I went forward
with it. By this time the wailing had stopped,
though now and then it seemed a dark form moved in
the empty doorways on either hand, while the mist,
parting into gossamers before the wind, took marvellously
human forms in every alley and lane we passed.
Thus I, a sodden giant, led by those
elfin torches, paced through the city until we came
to an open square with a great lumber of ruins in
the centre all marred and spoiled by vegetation; and
here the lights wavered, and went out by scores and
hundreds, just as the petals drop from spent flowers,
while it seemed, though it may have been only wind
in the rank grass, that the air was full of most plaintive
sighs as each little lamp slipped into oblivion.
The big pile was a mass of fallen
masonry, which, from the broken pillars all about,
might have been a palace or temple once. I pushed
in, but it was as dark as Hades here, so, after struggling
for a time in a labyrinth of chambers, chose a sandy
recess, with some dry herbage by way of bedding in
a corner, and there, thankful at least for shelter,
my night’s wanderings came to an end and I coiled
myself down, ate a last handful of dry fruit, and,
strange as it may seem, was soon sleeping peacefully.
I dreamed that night that a woman,
with a face as white as ivory, came and bent over
me. She led a babe by either hand, while behind
her were scores of other ones, with lovely faces,
but all as pale as the stars themselves, who looked
and sighed, but said nothing, and when they had stared
their fill, dropped out one by one, leaving a wonderful
blank in the monotony where they had been; but beyond
that dream nothing happened.
It was a fine morning when I woke
again, and obviously broad day outside, the sunshine
coming down through cracks in the old palace roof,
and lying in golden pools on the floor with dazzling
effect.
Rubbing my eyes and sitting up, it
took me some time to get my senses together, and at
first an uneasy feeling possessed me that I was somehow
dematerialised and in an unreal world. But a
twinge of cramp in my left arm, and a healthy sneeze,
which frightened a score of bats overhead nearly out
of their senses, was reassuring on this point, and
rubbing away the cramp and staggering to my feet, I
looked about at the strange surroundings. It
was cavernous chaos on every side: magnificent
architecture reduced to the confusion of a debris-heap,
only the hollow chambers being here and there preserved
by massive columns meeting overhead. Into these
the yellow light filtered wherever a rent in a cupola
or side-wall admitted it, and allured by the vision
of corridors one beyond the other, I presently set
off on a tour of discovery.
Twenty minutes’ scrambling brought
me to a place where the fallen jambs of a fine doorway
lay so close together that there was barely room to
pass between them. However, seeing light beyond,
I squeezed through, and I found myself in the best-preserved
chamber of all a wide, roomy hall with
a domed roof, a haze of mural paintings on the walls,
and a marble floor nearly hidden in a century of fallen
dust. I stumbled over something at the threshold,
and picking it up, found it was a baby’s skull!
And there were more of them now that my eyes became
accustomed to the light. The whole floor was
mottled with them scores and hundreds of
bones and those poor little relics of humanity jutting
out of the sand everywhere. In the hush of that
great dead nursery the little white trophies seemed
inexpressibly pathetic, and I should have turned back
reverently from that chamber of forgotten sorrows but
that something caught my eye in the centre of it.
It was an oblong pile of white stone,
very ill-used and chipped, wrist-deep in dust, yet
when a slant of light came in from above and fell
straight upon it, the marble against the black gloom
beyond blazed like living pearl. It was dazzling;
and shading my eyes and going tenderly over through
the poor dead babes, I looked, and there, full in
the shine, lay a woman’s skeleton, still wrapped
in a robe of which little was left save the hard gold
embroidery. Her brown hair, wonderful to say,
still lay like lank, dead seaweed about her, and amongst
it was a fillet crown of plain iron set with gems such
as eye never looked upon before. There were not
many, but enough to make the proud simplicity of that
circlet glisten like a little band of fire a
gleaming halo on her dead forehead infinitely fascinating.
At her sides were two other little bleached human
flowers, and I stood before them for a long time in
silent sympathy.
Could this be Queen Yang, of whom
the woodcutter had told me? It must be who
else? And if it were, what strange chance had
brought me here a stranger, yet the first
to come, since her sorrow, from her distant kindred?
And if it were, then that fillet belonged of right
to Heru, the last representative of her kind.
Ought I not to take it to her rather than leave it
as spoil to the first idle thief with pluck enough
to deride the mysteries of the haunted city? Long
time I thought over it in the faint, heavy atmosphere
of that hall, and then very gently unwound the hair,
lifted the circlet, and, scarcely knowing what I did,
put it in my shoulder-bag.
After that I went more cheerfully
into the outside sunshine, and setting my clothes
to dry on a stone, took stock of the situation.
The place was, perhaps, not quite so romantic by day
as by night, and the scattered trees, matted by creepers,
with which the whole were overgrown, prevented anything
like an extensive view of the ruined city being obtained.
But what gave me great satisfaction was to note over
these trees to the eastward a two-humped mountain,
not more than six or seven miles distant the
very one I had mislaid the day before. Here was
reality and a chance of getting back to civilisation.
I was as glad as if home were in sight, and not,
perhaps, the less so because the hill meant villages
and food; and you who have doubtless lunched well
and lately will please bear in mind I had had nothing
since breakfast the day before; and though this may
look picturesque on paper, in practice it is a painful
item in one’s programme.
Well, I gave my damp clothes but a
turn or two more in the sun, and then, arguing that
from the bare ground where the forest ended half-way
up the hill, a wide view would be obtained, hurried
into my garments and set off thither right gleefully.
A turn or two down the blank streets, now prosaic
enough, an easy scramble through a gap in the crumbling
battlements, and there was the open forest again, with
a friendly path well marked by the passage of those
wild animals who made the city their lair trending
towards my landmark.
A light breakfast of soft green nuts,
plucked on the way, and then the ground began to bend
upwards and the woods to thin a little. With
infinite ardour, just before midday, I scrambled on
to a bare knoll on the very hillside, and fell exhausted
before the top could be reached.
But what were hunger or fatigue to
the satisfaction of that moment? There was the
sea before me, the clear, strong, gracious sea, blue
leagues of it, furrowed by the white ridges of some
distant storm. I could smell the scent of it
even here, and my sailor heart rose in pride at the
companionship of that alien ocean. Lovely and
blessed thing! how often have I turned from the shallow
trivialities of the land and found consolation in
the strength of your stately solitudes! How often
have I turned from the tinselled presence of the shore,
the infinite pretensions of dry land that make life
a sorry, hectic sham, and found in the black bosom
of the Great Mother solace and comfort! Dear,
lovely sea, man half of every sphere, as
far removed in the sequence of your strong emotions
from the painted fripperies of the woman-land as pole
from pole the grateful blessing of the humblest
of your followers on you!
The mere sight of salt water did me
good. Heaven knows our separation had not been
long, and many an unkind slap has the Mother given
me in the bygone; yet the mere sight of her was tonic,
a lethe of troubles, a sedative for tired nerves;
and I gazed that morning at the illimitable blue,
the great, unfettered road to everywhere, the ever-varied,
the immutable, the thing which was before everything
and shall be last of all, in an ecstasy of affection.
There was also other satisfaction
at hand. Not a mile away lay a well-defined
road doubtless the one spoken of by the
wood-cutter and where the track pointed
to the seashore the low roofs and circling smoke of
a Thither township showed.
There I went hot-footed, and, much
too hungry to be nice in formality, swung up to the
largest building on the waterside quay and demanded
breakfast of the man who was lounging by its doorway
chewing a honey reed. He looked me up and down
without emotion, then, falling into the common mistake,
said,
“This is not a hostel for ghosts,
sir. We do not board and lodge phantoms here;
this is a dry fish shop.”
“Thrice blessed trade!”
I answered. “Give me some dried fish, good
fellow, or, for the matter of that, dried horse or
dog, or anything mortal teeth can bite through, and
I will show you my tastes are altogether mundane.”
But he shook his head. “This
is no place for the likes of you, who come, mayhap,
from the city of Yang or some other abode of disembodied
spirits you, who come for mischief and pay
harbourage with mischance is it likely
you could eat wholesome food?”
“Indeed I could, and plenty
of it, seeing I have dined and breakfasted along the
hedges with the blackbirds this two days. Look
here, I will pay in advance. Will that get me
a meal?” and, whipping out my knife, cut off
another of my fast-receding coat buttons.
The man took it with great interest,
as I hoped he would, the yellow metal being apparently
a very scarce commodity in his part of the planet.
“Gold?” he asked.
“Well ahem!
I forgot to ask the man who sewed them on for me what
they were exactly, but it looks like gold, doesn’t
it?”
“Yes,” he answered, turning
it to and fro admiringly in his hand, “you are
the first ghost I ever knew to pay in advance, and
plenty of them go to and fro through here. Such
a pretty thing is well worth a meal if,
indeed, you can stomach our rough fare. Here,
you woman within,” he called to the lady whom
I presume was his wife, “here is a gentleman
from the nether regions who wants some breakfast and
has paid in advance. Give him some of your best,
for he has paid well.”
“And what,” said a female
voice from inside, “what if I refused to serve
another of these plaguy wanderers you are always foisting
upon me?”
“Don’t mind her tongue,
sir. It’s the worst part of her, though
she is mighty proud of it. Go in and she will
see you do not come out hungry,” and the Thither
man returned calmly to his honey stick.
“Come on, you Soul-with-a-man’s-stomach,”
growled the woman, and too hungry to be particular
about the tone of invitation, I strode into the parlour
of that strange refreshment place. The woman
was the first I had seen of the outer race, and better
than might have been expected in appearance.
Big, strong, and ruddy, she was a mental shock after
the slender slips of girlhood on the far side of the
water, half a dozen of whom she could have carried
off without effort in her long arms. Yet there
was about her the credential of rough health, the dignity
of muscle, an upright carriage, an animal grace of
movement, and withal a comely though strongly featured
face, which pleased me at once, and later on I had
great cause to remember her with gratitude. She
eyed me sulkily for a minute, then her frown gradually
softened, and the instinctive love of the woman for
the supernatural mastered her other feelings.
“Is that how you looked in another world?”
she asked.
“Yes, exactly, cap to boots. What do you
think of the attire, ma’am?”
“Not much,” replied the
good woman frankly. “It could not have
been becoming even when new, and you appear as though
you had taken a muddy road since then. What
did you die of?”
“I will tell you so much as
this, madam that what I am like to die of
now is hunger, plain, unvarnished hunger, so, in Heaven’s
name, get out what you have and let me fall-to, for
my last meal was yesterday morning.”
Whereat, with a shrug of her shoulders
at the eccentricities of nether folk, the woman went
to the rear of the house, and presently came back
with a meal which showed her husband had done scant
justice to the establishment by calling it a dry fish
shop. It is true, fish supplied the staple of
the repast, as was inevitable in a seaport, but, like
all Martian fish, it was of ambrosial kind, with a
savour about it of wine and sunshine such as no fish
on our side of space can boast of. Then there
were cakes, steaming and hot, vegetables which fitted
into the previous course with exquisite nicety, and,
lastly, a wooden tankard of the invariable Thither
beer to finish off. Such a meal as a hungry man
might consider himself fortunate to meet with any day.
The woman watched me eat with much
satisfaction, and when I had answered a score of artless
questions about my previous state, or present condition
and prospects, more or less to her satisfaction, she
supplied me in turn with some information which was
really valuable to me just then.
First I learned that Ar-hap’s
men, with the abducted Heru, had passed through this
very port two days before, and by this time were probably
in the main town, which, it appeared, was only about
twelve hours’ rowing up the salt-water estuary
outside. Here was news! Heru, the prize
and object of my wild adventure, close at hand and
well. It brought a whole new train of thoughts,
for the last few days had been so full of the stress
of travel, the bare, hard necessity of getting forward,
that the object of my quest, illogical as it may seem,
had gone into the background before these things.
And here again, as I finished the last cake and drank
down to the bottom of the ale tankard, the extreme
folly of the venture came upon me, the madness of venturing
single-handed into the den of the Wood King.
What had I to hope for? What chance, however
remote, was there of successfully wresting that blooming
prize from the arms of her captor? Force was out
of the question; stealth was utterly impractical;
as for cajolery, apparently the sole remaining means
of winning back the Princess why, one might
as well try the persuasion of a penny flute upon a
hungry eagle as seek to rouse Ar-hap’s sympathies
for bereaved Hath in that way. Surely to go
forward would mean my own certain destruction, with
no advantage, no help to Heru; and if I was ever to
turn back or stop in the idle quest, here was the
place and time. My Hither friends were behind
the sea; to them I could return before it was too
late, and here were the rough but honest Thither folk,
who would doubtless let me live amongst them if that
was to be my fate. One or other alternative were
better than going to torture and death.
“You seem to take the fate of
that Hither girl of yours mightily to heart, stranger,”
quoth my hostess, with a touch of feminine jealousy,
as she watched my hesitation. “Do you know
anything of her?”
“Yes,” I answered gloomily.
“I have seen her once or twice away in Seth.”
“Ah, that reminds me!
When they brought her up here from the boats to dry
her wet clothes, she cried and called in her grief
for just such a one as you, saying he alone who struck
down our men at her feast could rescue her
“What! Heru here in this
room but yesterday! How did she look? Was
she hurt? How had they treated her?”
My eagerness gave me away. The
woman looked at me through her half-shut eyes a space,
and then said, “Oh! sits the wind in that
quarter? So you can love as well as eat.
I must say you are well-conditioned for a spirit.”
I got up and walked about the room
a space, then, feeling very friendless, and knowing
no woman was ever born who was not interested in another
woman’s loves, I boldly drew my hostess aside
and told her about Heru, and that I was in pursuit
of her, dwelling on the girl’s gentle helplessness,
my own hare-brained adventure, and frankly asking
what sort of a sovereign Ar-hap was, what the customs
of his court might be, and whether she could suggest
any means, temporal or spiritual, by which he might
be moved to give back Heru to her kindred.
Nor was my confidence misplaced.
The woman, as I guessed, was touched somewhere back
in her female heart by my melting love-tale, by my
anxiety and Heru’s peril. Besides, a ghost
in search of a fairy lady and such the
slender folk of Seth were still considered to be by
the race which had supplanted them this
was romance indeed. To be brief, that good woman
proved invaluable.
She told me, firstly, that Ar-hap
was believed to be away at war, “weekending”
as was his custom, amongst rebellious tribes, and by
starting at once up the water, I should very probably
get to the town before he did. Secondly, she
thought if I kept clear of private brawls there was
little chance of my receiving injury, from the people
at all events, as they were accustomed to strange
visitors, and civil enough until they were fired by
war. “Sickle cold, sword hot,” was
one of their proverbs, meaning thereby that in peaceful
times they were lambs, however lionlike they might
be in contest.
This was reassuring, but as to recovering
the lady, that was another matter over which the good
woman shook her head. It was ill coming between
Ar-hap and his tribute, she said; still, if I wanted
to see Heru once again, this was my opportunity, and,
for the rest, that chance, which often favours the
enamoured, must be my help.
Briefly, though I should probably
have gone forward in any case out of sheer obstinacy,
had it been to certain destruction, this better aspect
of the situation hastened my resolution. I thanked
the woman for help, and then the man outside was called
in to advise as to the best and speediest way of getting
within earshot of his hairy sovereignty, the monarch
of Thitherland.