The evening of the second day had
already come, when Ar-hap arrived home after weekending
amongst a tribe of rebellious subjects. But any
imposing State entry which might have been intended
was rendered impossible by the heat and the threat
of that baleful world in the western sky.
It was a lurid but disordered spectacle
which I witnessed from my room in the gate-house just
after nightfall. The returning army had apparently
fallen away exhausted on its march through the town;
only some three hundred of the bodyguard straggled
up the hill, limp and sweating, behind a group of
pennons, in the midst of which rode a horseman
whose commanding presence and splendid war harness
impressed me, though I could not make out his features;
a wild, impressionist scene of black outlines, tossing
headgear, and spears glittering and vanishing in front
of the red glare in the sky, but nothing more.
Even the dry throats of the suitors in the courtyard
hardly mustered a husky cry of welcome as the cavalcade
trooped into the enclosure, and then the shadows enfolded
them up in silence, and, too hot and listless to care
much what the morrow brought forth, I threw myself
on the bare floor, tossing and turning in a vain endeavour
to sleep until dawn came once more.
A thin mist which fell with daybreak
drew a veil over the horrible glare in the west for
an hour or two, and taking advantage of the slight
alleviation of heat, I rose and went into the gardens
to enjoy a dip in a pool, making, with its surrounding
jungle of flowers, one of the pleasantest things about
the wood-king’s forest citadel. The very
earth seemed scorched and baking underfoot and
the pool was gone! It had run as dry as a limekiln;
nothing remained of the pretty fall which had fed
it but a miserable trickle of drops from the cascade
above. Down beyond the town shone a gleam of
water where the bitter canal steamed and simmered
in the first grey of the morning, but up here six
months of scorching drought could not have worked more
havoc. The very leaves were dropping from the
trees, and the luxuriant growths of the day before
looked as though a simoon had played upon them.
I staggered back in disgust, and found
some show of official activity about the palace.
It was the king’s custom, it appeared, to hear
petitions and redress wrongs as soon after his return
as possible, but today the ceremony was to be cut
short as his majesty was going out with all his court
to a neighbouring mountain to “pray away the
comet,” which by this time was causing dire
alarm all through the city.
“Heaven’s own particular
blessing on his prayers, my friend,” I said to
the man who told me this. “Unless his majesty’s
orisons are fruitful, we shall all be cooked like
baked potatoes before nightfall, and though I have
faced many kinds of death, that is not the one I would
choose by preference. Is there a chance of myself
being heard at the throne? Your peculiar climate
tempts me to hurry up with my business and begone
if I may.”
“Not only may you be heard,
sir, but you are summoned. The king has heard
of you somehow, and sent me to find and bring you into
his presence at once.”
“So be it,” I said, too
hot to care what happened. “I have no levee
dress with me. I lost my luggage check some time
ago, but if you will wait outside I will be with you
in a moment.”
Hastily tidying myself up, and giving
my hair a comb, as though just off to see Mr. Secretary
for the Navy, or on the way to get a senator to push
a new patent medicine for me, I rejoined my guide outside,
and together we crossed the wide courtyard, entered
the great log-built portals of Ar-hap’s house,
and immediately afterwards found ourselves in a vast
hall dimly lit by rays coming in through square spaces
under the eaves, and crowded on both sides with guards,
courtiers, and supplicants. The heat was tremendous,
the odour of Thither men and the ill-dressed hides
they wore almost overpowering. Yet little I recked
for either, for there at the top of the room, seated
on a dais made of rough-hewn wood inlet with gold
and covered with splendid furs, was Ar-hap himself.
A fine fellow, swarthy, huge, and
hairy, at any other time or place I could have given
him due admiration as an admirable example of the
savage on the borderland of grace and culture, but
now I only glanced at him, and then to where at his
side a girl was crouching, a gem of human loveliness
against that dusky setting. It was Heru, my ravished
princess, and, still clad in her diaphanous Hither
robes, her face white with anxiety, her eyes bright
as stars, the embodiment of helpless, flowery beauty,
my heart turned over at sight of her.
Poor girl! When she saw me stride
into the hall she rose swiftly from Ar-hap’s
side, clasped her pretty hands, and giving a cry of
joy would have rushed towards me, but the king laid
a mighty paw upon her, under which she subsided with
a shiver as though the touch had blanched all the
life within.
“Good morning, your majesty,”
I said, walking boldly up to the lower step of the
dais.
“Good morning, most singular-looking
vagrant from the Unknown,” answered the monarch.
“In what way can I be of service to you?’’
“I have come about that girl,”
I said, nodding to where Heru lay blossoming in the
hot gloom like some night-flowering bud. “I
do not know whether your majesty is aware how she
came here, but it is a highly discreditable incident
in what is doubtless your otherwise blameless reign.
Some rough scullions intrusted with the duty of collecting
your majesty’s customs asked Prince Hath of the
Hither people to point out the most attractive young
person at his wedding feast, and the prince indicated
that lady there at your side. It was a dirty
trick, and all the worse because it was inspired by
malice, which is the meanest of all weaknesses.
I had the pleasure of knocking down some of your
majesty’s representatives, but they stole the
girl away while I slept, and, briefly, I have come
to fetch her back.”
The monarch had followed my speech,
the longest ever made in my life, with fierce, blinking
eyes, and when it stopped looked at poor shrinking
Heru as though for explanation, then round the circle
of his awestruck courtiers, and reading dismay at
my boldness in their faces, burst into a guttural
laugh.
“I suppose you have the great
and puissant Hither nation behind you in this request,
Mr. Spirit?”
“No, I came alone, hoping to
find justice here, and, if not, then prepared to do
all I could to make your majesty curse the day your
servants maltreated my friends.”
“Tall words, stranger!
May I ask what you propose to do if Ar-hap, in his
own palace, amongst his people and soldiers, refuses
to disgorge a pretty prize at the bidding of one shabby
interloper muddy and friendless?”
“What should I do?”
“Yes,” said the king, with a haughty frown.
“What would you do?”
I do not know what prompted the reply.
For a moment I was completely at a loss what to say
to this very obvious question, and then all on a sudden,
remembering they held me to be some kind of disembodied
spirit, by a happy inspiration, fixing my eyes grimly
on the king, I answered,
“What would I do? Why, I would haunt
you!”
It may not seem a great stroke of
genius here, but the effect on the Martian was instantaneous.
He sat straight up, his hands tightened, his eyes
dilated, and then fidgeting uneasily, after a minute
he beckoned to an over-dressed individual, whom Heru
afterwards told me was the Court necromancer, and
began whispering in his ear.
After a minute’s consultation
he turned again, a rather frightened civility struggling
in his face with anger, and said, “We have no
wish, of course, stranger, to offend you or those
who had the honour of your patronage. Perhaps
the princess here was a little roughly handled, and,
I confess, if she were altogether as reluctant as she
seems, a lesser maid would have done as well.
I could have wooed this one in Seth, where I may
shortly come, and our espousals would possibly have
lent, in the eyes of your friends, quite a cheerful
aspect to my arrival. But my ambassadors have
had no great schooling in diplomacy; they have brought
Princess Heru here, and how can I hand her over to
one I know nothing of? How do I know you are a
ghost, after all? How do I know you have anything
but a rusty sword and much impertinence to back your
astounding claim?”
“Oh, let it be just as you like,”
I said, calmly shelling and eating a nut I had picked
up. “Only if you do not give the maid back,
why, then ” And I stopped as though
the sequel were too painful to put into words.
Again that superstitious monarch of
a land thronged with malicious spirits called up his
magician, and, after they had consulted a moment,
turned more cheerfully to me.
“Look here, Mister-from-Nowhere,
if you are really a spirit, and have the power to
hurt as you say, you will have the power also to go
and come between the living and the dead, between
the present and the past. Now I will set you
an errand, and give you five minutes to do it in.”
“Five minutes!” I exclaimed in incautious
alarm.
“Five minutes,” said the
monarch savagely. “And if in that time
the errand is not done, I shall hold you to be an
impostor, an impudent thief from some scoundrel tribe
of this world of mine, and will make of you an example
which shall keep men’s ears tingling for a century
or two.”
Poor Heru dropped in a limp and lovely
heap at that dire threat, while I am bound to say
I felt somewhat uncomfortable, not unnaturally when
all the circumstances are considered, but contented
myself with remarking, with as much bravado as could
be managed,
“And now to the errand, Ar-hap.
What can I do for your majesty?”
The king consulted with the rogue
at his elbow, and then nodding and chuckling in expectancy
of his triumph, addressed me.
“Listen,” he cried, smiting
a huge hairy hand upon his knee, “listen, and
do or die. My magician tells me it is recorded
in his books that once, some five thousand years ago,
when this land belonged to the Hither people, there
lived here a king. It is a pity he died, for
he seems to have been a jovial old fellow; but he
did die, and, according to their custom, they floated
him down the stream that flows to the regions of eternal
ice, where doubtless he is at this present moment,
caked up with ten million of his subjects. Now
just go and find that sovereign for me, oh you bold-tongued
dweller in other worlds!”
“And if I go how am I to know
your ancient king, as you say, amongst ten million
others?”
“That is easy enough,”
quoth Ar-hap lightly. “You have only to
pass to and fro through the ice mountains, opening
the mouths of the dead men and women you meet, and
when you come to a middle-sized man with a fillet
on his head and a jaw mended with gold, that will be
he whom you look for. Bring me that fillet here
within five minutes and the maid is yours.”
I started, and stared hard in amazement.
Was this a dream? Was the royal savage in front
playing with me? By what incredible chance had
he hit upon the very errand I could answer to best,
the very trophy I had brought away from the grim valley
of ice and death, and had still in my shoulder-bag?
No, he was not playing; he was staring hard in turn,
joying in my apparent confusion, and clearly thinking
he had cornered me beyond hope of redemption.
“Surely your mightiness is not
daunted by so simple a task,” scowled the sovereign,
playing with the hilt of his huge hunting-knife, “and
all amongst your friends’ kindred too.
On a hot day like this it ought to be a pleasant saunter
for a spirit such as yourself.”
“Not daunted,” I answered
coldly, turning on my heels towards the door, “only
marvelling that your majesty’s skull and your
necromancer’s could not between them have devised
a harder task.”
Out into the courtyard I went, with
my heart beating finely in spite of my assumed indifference;
got the bag from a peg in my sleeping-room, and was
back before the log throne ere four minutes were gone.
“The old Hither king’s
compliments to your majesty,” I said, bowing,
while a deathly hush fell on all the assembly, “and
he says though your ancestors little liked to hear
his voice while alive, he says he has no objection
to giving you some jaw now he is dead,” and I
threw down on the floor the golden circlet of the
frozen king.
Ar-hap’s eyes almost started
from his head as, with his courtiers, he glared in
silent amazement at that shining thing while the great
drops of fear and perspiration trickled down his forehead.
As for poor Heru, she rose like a spirit behind them,
gazed at the jaw-bone of her mythical ancestor, and
then suddenly realising my errand was done and she
apparently free, held out her hands, and, with a tremulous
cry, would have come to me.
But Ar-hap was too quick for her.
All the black savage blood swelled into his veins
as he swept her away with one great arm, and then with
his foot gave the luckless jaw a kick that sent it
glittering and spinning through the far doorway out
into the sunshine.
“Sit down,” he roared,
“you brazen wench, who are so eager to leave
a king’s side for a nameless vagrant’s
care! And you, sir,” turning to me, and
fairly trembling with rage and dread, “I will
not gainsay that you have done the errand set you,
but it might this once be chance that got you that
cursed token, some one happy turn of luck. I
will not yield my prize on one throw of the dice.
Another task you must do. Once might be chance,
but such chance comes not twice.”
“You swore to give me the maid this time.”
“And why should I keep my word to a half-proved
spirit such as you?”
“There are some particularly
good reasons why you should,” I said, striking
an attitude which I had once seen a music-hall dramatist
take when he was going to blast somebody’s future a
stick with a star on top of it in his hand and forty
lines of blank verse in his mouth.
The king writhed, and begged me with a sign to desist.
“We have no wish to anger you.
Do us this other task and none will doubt that you
are a potent spirit, and even I, Ar-hap, will listen
to you.”
“Well, then,” I answered sulkily, “what
is it to be this time?”
After a minute’s consultation,
and speaking slowly as though conscious of how much
hung on his words, the king said,
“Listen! My soothsayer
tells me that somewhere there is a city lost in a
forest, and a temple lost in the city, and a tomb lost
in the temple; a city of ghosts and djins given over
to bad spirits, wherefore all human men shun it by
day and night. And on the tomb is she who was
once queen there, and by her lies her crown.
Quick! oh you to whom all distances are nothing, and
who see, by your finer essence, into all times and
places. Away to that city! Jostle the memories
of the unclean things that hide in its shadows; ask
which amongst them knows where dead Queen Yang still
lies in dusty state. Get guides amongst your
comrade ghosts. Find Queen Yang, and bring me
here in five minutes the bloody circlet from her hair.”
Then, and then for the first time,
I believed the planet was haunted indeed, and I myself
unknowingly under some strange and watchful influence.
Spirits, demons! Oh! what but some incomprehensible
power, some unseen influence shaping my efforts to
its ends, could have moved that hairy barbarian to
play a second time into my hands like this, to choose
from the endless records of his world the second of
the two incidents I had touched in hasty travel through
it? I was almost overcome for a minute; then,
pulling myself together, strode forward fiercely,
and, speaking so that all could hear me, cried, “Base
king, who neither knows the capacities of a spirit
nor has learned as yet to dread its anger, see! your
commission is executed in a thought, just as your
punishment might be. Heru, come here.”
And when the girl, speechless with amazement, had
risen and slipped over to me, I straightened her pretty
hair from her forehead, and then, in a way which would
make my fortune if I could repeat it at a conjuror’s
table, whipped poor Yang’s gemmy crown from
my pocket, flashed its baleful splendour in the eyes
of the courtiers, and placed it on the tresses of
the first royal lady who had worn it since its rightful
owner died a hundred years before.
A heavy silence fell on the hall as
I finished, and nothing was heard for a time save
Heru sobbing on my breast and a thirsty baby somewhere
outside calling to its mother for the water that was
not to be had. But presently on those sounds
came the fall of anxious feet, and a messenger, entering
the doorway, approached the throne, laid himself out
flat twice, after which obeisance he proceeded to remind
the king of the morning’s ceremonial on a distant
hill to “pray away the comet,” telling
his majesty that all was ready and the procession anxiously
awaiting him.
Whereon Ar-hap, obviously very well
content to change the subject, rose, and, coming down
from the dais, gave me his hand. He was a fine
fellow, as I have said, strong and bold, and had not
behaved badly for an autocrat, so that I gripped his
mighty fist with great pleasure.
“I cannot deny, stranger,”
he said, “that you have done all that has been
asked of you, and the maid is fairly yours. Yet
before you take away the prize I must have some assurance
of what you yourself will do with her. Therefore,
for the moment, until this horrible thing in the sky
which threatens my people with destruction has gone,
let it be truce between us you to your
lodgings, and the princess back, unharmed, amongst
my women till we meet again.”
“But
“No, no,” said the king,
waving his hand. “Be content with your
advantage. And now to business more important
than ten thousand silly wenches,” and gathering
up his robes over his splendid war-gear the wood king
stalked haughtily from the hall.