Glani waited in the patio for the
reappearance of the master, and as Connor paced with
short, nervous steps on the grass at every turn he
caught the flash of the sun on the stallion. Above
his selfish greed he had one honest desire: he
would have paid with blood to see the great horse
face the barrier. That, however was beyond the
reach of his ambition, and therefore the beauty of
Glani was always a hopeless torment.
The quiet in the patio oddly increased
his excitement. It was one of those bright, still
days when the wind stirs only in soft breaths, bringing
a sense of the open sky. Sometimes the breeze
picked up a handful of drops from the fountain and
showered it with a cool rustling on the grass.
Sometimes it flared the tail of Glani; sometimes the
shadow of the great eucalyptus which stood west of
the house quivered on the turf.
Connor found himself looking minutely
at trivial things, and in the meantime David Eden
in his room was deciding the fate of the American
turf. Even Glani seemed to know, for his glance
never stirred from the door through which the master
had disappeared. What a horse the big fellow
was! He thought of the stallion in the paddock
at the track. He heard the thousands swarm and
the murmur which comes deep out of a man’s throat
when he sees a great horse.
The palms of Connor were wet with
sweat. He kept rubbing them dry on the hips of
his trousers. Rehearsing his talk with David,
he saw a thousand flaws, and a thousand openings which
he had missed. Then all thought stopped; David
had come out into the patio.
He came straight to Connor, smiling, and he said:
“The words were a temptation,
but the mind that conceived them was not the mind
of a tempter.”
Ineffable assurance and good will
shone in his face, and Connor cursed him silently.
“I, leaving the valley, might
be lost in the torrent. And neither the world
nor I should profit. But if I stay here, at least
one soul is saved to God.”
“Your own?” muttered Connor.
But he managed to smile above his rage. “And
after you,” he concluded, “what of the
horses, David?”
“My sons shall have them.”
“And if you have no sons?”
“Before my death I shall kill
all of the horses. They are not meant for other
men than the sons of David.”
The gambler drew off his hat and raised
his face to the sky, asking mutely if Heaven would
permit this crime.
“Yet,” said David, “I forgive you.”
“You forgive me?” echoed Connor through
his teeth.
“Yes, for the fire of the temptation
has burned out. Let us forget the world beyond
the mountains.”
“What is your proof that you are right in staying
here?”
“The voice of God.”
“You have spoken to Him, perhaps?”
The irony passed harmless by the raised head of David.
“I have spoken to Him,” he asserted calmly.
“I see,” nodded the gambler. “You
keep Him in that room, no doubt?”
“It is true. His spirit is in the Room
of Silence.”
“You’ve seen His face?”
A numbness fell on the mind of Connor
as he saw his hopes destroyed by the demon of bigotry.
“Only His voice has come to me,” said
David.
“It speaks to you?”
“Yes.”
Connor stared in actual alarm, for this was insanity.
“The four,” said David,
“spoke to Him always in that room. He is
there. And when Matthew died he gave me this
assurance — that while the walls of this
house stood together God would not desert me or fail
to come to me in that room until I love another thing
more than I love God.”
“And how, David, do you hear
the voice? For while you were there I was in
the patio, close by, and yet I heard no whisper of
a sound from the room.”
“I shall tell you. When
I entered the Room of Silence just now your words
had set me on fire. My mind was hot with desire
of power over other men. I forgot the palace
you built for me with your promises. And then
I knew that it had been a temptation to sin from which
the voice was freeing me.
“Could a human voice have spoken
more clearly than that voice spoke to my heart?
Anxiously I called before my eyes the image of Benjamin
to ask for His judgment, but your face remained an
unclouded vision and was not dimmed by the will of
the Lord as He dims creatures of evil in the Room
of Silence. Thereby I knew that you are indeed
my brother.”
The brain of Connor groped slowly
in the rear of these words. He was too stunned
by disappointment to think clearly, but vaguely he
made out that David had dismissed the argument and
was now asking him to come for a walk by the lake.
“The lake’s well enough,”
he answered, “but it occurs to me that I’ve
got to get on with my journey.”
“You must leave me?”
There was such real anxiety in his voice that Connor
softened a little.
“I’ve got a lot to do,”
he explained. “I only stopped over to rest
my nags, in the first place. Then this other
idea came along, but since the voice has rapped it
there’s nothing for me to do but to get on my
way again.”
“It is a long trip?”
“Long enough.”
“The Garden of Eden is a lonely place.”
“You’ll have the voice to cheer you up.”
“The voice is an awful thing.
There is no companionship in it. This thought
comes to me. Leave the mule and the horse.
Take Shakra. She will carry you swiftly and safely
over the mountains and bring you back again.
And I shall be happy to know that she is with you while
you are away. Then go, brother, if you must,
and return in haste.”
It was the opening of the gates of
heaven to Connor at the very moment when he had surrendered
the last hope. He heard David call the servants,
heard an order to bring Shakra saddled at once.
The canteen was being filled for the journey.
Into the incredulous mind of the gambler the truth
filtered by degrees, as candlelight probes a room full
of treasure, flashing ever and anon into new corners
filled with undiscovered riches.
Shakra was his to ride over the mountains.
And why stop there? There was no mark on her,
and his brand would make her his. She would be
safe in an Eastern racing stable before they even
dreamed of pursuit. And when her victories on
the track had built his fortune he could return her,
and raise a breed of peerless horses. A theft?
Yes, but so was the stealing of the fire from heaven
for the use of mankind.
He would have been glad to leave the
Garden of Eden at once, but that was not in David’s
scheme of things. To him a departure into the
world beyond the mountains was as a voyage into an
uncharted sea. His dignity kept him from asking
questions, but it was obvious that he was painfully
anxious to learn the necessity of Connor’s going.
That night in the patio he held forth
at length of the things they would do together when
the gambler returned. “The Garden is a book,”
he explained. “And I must teach you to
turn the pages and read in them.”
There was little sleep for Connor
that night. He lay awake, turning over the possibilities
of a last minute failure, and when he finally dropped
into a deep, aching slumber it was to be awakened almost
at once by the voice of David calling in the patio.
He wakened and found it was the pink of the dawn.
“Shakra waits at the gate of
the patio. Start early, Benjamin, and thereby
you will return soon.”
It brought Connor to his feet with
a leap. As if he required urging! Through
the hasty breakfast he could not retain his joyous
laughter until he saw David growing thoughtful.
But that breakfast was over, and David’s kind
solicitations, at length. Shakra was brought to
him; his feet were settled into the stirrups, and
the dream changed to a sense of the glorious reality.
She was his — Shakra!
“A journey of happiness for
your sake and a speed for mine, Benjamin.”
Connor looked down for the last time
into the face of the master of the Garden, half wild
and half calm — the face of a savage with
the mind of a man behind it. “If he should
take my trail!” he thought with horror.
“Good-by!” he called aloud,
and in a burst of joy and sudden compunction, “God
bless you, David!”
“He has blessed me already,
for He has given to me a friend.”
A touch of the rope — for
no Eden Gray would endure a bit — whirled
Shakra and sent her down the terraces like the wind.
The avenue of the eucalyptus trees poured behind them,
and out of this, with astonishing suddenness, they
reached the gate.
The fire already burned, for the night
was hardly past, and Joseph squatted with the thin
smoke blowing across his face unheeded. He was
grinning with savage hatred and muttering.
Connor knew what profound curse was
being called down upon his head, but he had only a
careless glance for Joseph. His eye up yonder
where the full morning shone on the mountains, his
mind was out in the world, at the race track, seeing
in prospect beautiful Shakra fleeing away from the
finest of the thoroughbreds. And he saw the face
of Ruth, as her eyes would light at the sight of Shakra.
He could have burst into song.
Connor looking forward, high-headed,
threw up his arm with a low shout, and Shakra burst
into full gallop down the ravine.