THE SNAKE AND THE SWORD.
The dak-bungalow again at last!
But how terribly dreary, depressing, and horrible
it looked now the hut that had once
seemed a kind of heaven on earth to the starving wanderer.
Then, Lucille was thousands of miles away (geographically,
and millions of miles away in imagination). Now,
she was but thirty miles away and it was
almost more than human endurance could bear....
Should he turn back even now, ride straight to Kot
Ghazi, fall at her feet and say: “I can
struggle no longer. Come back to Monksmead and
let what will be, be. I have no more courage.”
And go mad, one day, and kill her?
Keep sane, and sully her fair name? On to the
hovel. Rest for the night, and, at dawn, strike
into the desert and there let what will be, be.
Making the camel kneel, Damocles de
Warrenne removed its saddle, fastened its rein-cord
tightly to a post, fed it, and then detached the saddle-bags
that hung flatly on either side of the saddle frame,
as well as a patent-leather sword-cover which contained
a sword of very different pattern from that for which
it had been made.
Entering the hut, of which the doors
and windows were bolted on the outside, he flung open
the shutters of the glassless windows, lit a candle,
and prepared to eat a frugal meal. From the saddlebags
he took bread, eggs, chocolate, sardines, biscuits
and apples. With a mixture of permanganate of
potash, tea and cold water from the well, if the puddle
at the bottom of a deep hole could be so termed, he
made a drink that, while drinkable by one who has
known worse, was unlikely to cause an attack upon
an enfeebled constitution, of cholera, enteric, dysentery
or any other of India’s specialities. What
would he not have given for a clean whisky-and-soda
in the place of the nauseating muck but
what should be the end of a man who, in his position,
turned to alcohol for help and comfort?
“The last state of that man ...”
After striking a judicious balance
between what he should eat for dinner and what he
should reserve for breakfast, he fell to, ate sparingly,
lit his pipe, and gazed around the wretched room, of
which the walls were blue-washed with a most offensive
shade of blue, the bare floor was frankly dry mud
and dust, the roof was bare cob-webbed thatch and
rafter, and the furniture a rickety table, a dangerous-looking
cane-bottomed settee and a leg-rest arm-chair from
which some one had removed the leg-rests. Had
some scoundrelly oont-wallah pinched them for
fuel? (No, Damocles, an ex-Colonel of the Indian Medical
Service “pinched” them for splints.) A
most depressing human habitation even for the most
cheerful and care-free of souls, a terrible place
for a man in a dangerous mental state of unstable
equilibrium and cruel agony.... Only thirty miles
away and a camel at the door. Lucille
still within a night’s ride. Lucille and
absolute joy.... The desert and certain death a
death of which she must be assured, that in time she
might marry Ormonde Delorme or some such sound, fine
man. Abdul must find his body and it
must be the body not of an obvious suicide, but of
a man who, lost in the desert, had evidently travelled
in circles, trying to find his way to the hut he had
left, on a shooting expedition. Yes he
knew all about travelling in circles and
what he had done in ignorance (as well as in agony
and horror), he would now do intentionally and with
grim purpose. Hard on the poor camel!...
Perhaps he could manage so that it was set free in
time to find its way back somehow. It would if
it were loosed within smell of water.... He must
die fairly and squarely of hunger and thirst no
blowing out of brains or throat-cutting, no trace
of suicide; just lost, poor chap, and no more to be
said.... Death of thirst in
that awful desert again No!
God in Heaven he had faced the actual pangs of it
once, and escaped he could not face
it again he wasn’t strong enough ...
and the unhappy man sprang to his feet to rush from
the room and saddle-up the camel for Life
and Lucille and then his eye fell on the
Sword, the Sword of his Fathers, brought to him by
Lucille, who had said, “Have it with you always,
Dearest. It can talk to you, as even I
can not....”
He sat down and drew it from the incongruous
modern case and from its scabbard. Ha! What
did it say but “Honour!” What was
its message but “Do the right thing. Death
is nothing Honour is everything. Be
worthy of your Name, your Traditions, your Ancestors ”
He would die.
Let him die that Lucille’s honour,
Lucille’s happiness, Lucille’s welfare,
might live and he kissed the hilt of the
Sword as he had so often done in childhood. Having
removed boots, leggings and socks, he lay down on
the settee innocent of bedding and pillows,
pulled over him the coat that had been rolled and
strapped trooper-fashion behind the saddle and fell
asleep....
And dreamed that he was shut naked
in a tiny cell with a gigantic python upon whose yard-long
fangs he was about to be impaled and, as usual, awoke
trembling and bathed in perspiration, with dry mouth
and throbbing head, sickness, and tingling extremities.
The wind had got up and had blown
out the candle which should have lasted till dawn!...
As he lay shaking, terrified (uncertain
as to whether he were a soul in torment or a human
being still alive), and debating as to whether he
could get off the couch, relight the candle, and close
the windward window, he heard a sound that caused
his heart to miss a beat and his hair to rise on end.
A strange, dry rustle merged in the sound of paper
being dragged across the floor, and he knew that he
was shut in with a snake, shut up in a blue
room, cut off from the matches on the table, and
doomed to lie and await the Death he dreaded more than
ten thousand others or, going mad, to rush
upon that Death.
He was shut in with the SNAKE.
At last it had come for him in its own concrete form
and had him bound and gagged by fascination and fear in
the Dark, the awful cruel Dark. No more mere
myrmidons. The SNAKE ITSELF.
He tried to scream and could not.
He tried to strike out at an imaginary serpent-head,
huge as an elephant, that reared itself above him and
could not.
He could not even draw his bare foot
in under the overcoat. And steadily the paper
dragged across the floor ... Was it approaching?
Was it progressing round and round by the walls?
Would the Snake find the bed and climb on to it?
Would it coil round his throat and gaze with-luminescent
eyes into his, and torture him thus for hours ere
thrusting its fangs into his brain? Would it coil
up and sleep upon his body for hours before doing
so, knowing that he could not move? Here were
his Snake-Dreams realized, and in the actual flesh
he lay awake and conscious, and could neither move
nor cry aloud!
In the Dark he lay bound and gagged,
in a blue-walled room, and the Snake enveloped him
with its Presence, and he could in no wise save himself.
Oh, God, why let a sentient creature
suffer thus? He himself would have shot any human
being guilty of inflicting a tithe of the agony on
a pariah dog. There could be no God!...
and then the beams of the rising moon fell upon the
blade of the Sword, making it shine like a lamp, and,
with a roar as of a charging lion, Damocles de Warrenne
sprang from the bed, seized it by the hilt, and was
aware, without a tremor, of a cobra that reared itself
before him in the moonlight, swaying in the Dance
of Death.
With a mere flick of the sword he
laid the reptile twitching on the floor and
for a few minutes was madder with Joy than ever in
his life he had been with Fear.
For Fear was gone. The World
of Woe had fallen from his shoulders. The Snake
was to him but a wretched reptile whose head he would
crush ere it bruised his heel. He was sane he
was safe he was a Man again, and ere many
days were past he would be the husband of Lucille and
the master of Monksmead.
“Oh, God forgive me for a blind,
rebellious worm,” he prayed. “Forgive
me, and strike not this cup from my lips. You
would not punish the blasphemy of a madman? I
cannot pray in ordered forms, but I beg forgiveness
for my hasty cry ‘There is on God’ ...”
and then pressed the Sword to his lips the
Sword that, under God, had overthrown the "Darling,
I am cured! I have not the slightest fear of snakes.
The Sword has saved me. I am a Man again."
He told her all as she sat laughing
and sobbing for joy and the dying snake lay at their
feet.
In her heart of hearts Lucille determined
that the wedding should take place immediately, so
that if this were but a temporary respite, the result
of the flash of daring inspired by the Sword, she would
have the right to care for him for the rest of his
life ... She would
“Look!” she suddenly shrieked,
and pointed to where, in the doorway, cutting them
off from escape, was the mate of the cobra that lay
mangled before them. Had the injured reptile in
some way called its mate or were they regular
inhabitants of this deserted hut?
It was Lucille’s first experience
of cobras and she shuddered to see the second evidently
comprehending, aggressive, vengeful would
it spring from there ... and the Sword lay on the
bed, out of reach.
Dam arose with a laugh, picked up
his heavy boot as he did so, and, all in one swift
movement, hurled it at the half-coiled swaying creature,
with the true aim of the first-class cricketer and
trained athlete; then, following his boot with a leap,
he snatched at the tail of the coiling, thrashing
reptile and “cracked” the snake as a carter
cracks a whip whereafter it dangled limp
and dead from his hand! Lucille shrieked, paled,
and sprang towards him.
“Oh, Dam!” she cried, “how could
you!”
“Pooh, Kiddy,” he replied.
“I’m going to invite the Harley Street
cove to have a match at that and I’m
going to give a little exhibition of it on the lawn
at Monksmead to all the good folk who witnessed
my disgrace.... What’s a snake after all?
It’s my turn now;” and Lucille’s
heart was at rest and very thankful. This was
not a temporary “cure”. Oh, thank
God for her inspiration anent the Sword ... Thank
God, thank God!...