Down nebulous ways they went, the
thin darkness flowing past them. The sloping
avenue ran all the width of the palace grounds, and
here among slim-trunked trees faint fringes of the
light touched away the dimness in the open spaces
and expressed the borders of the dusk. Always
the way led down, dipping deeper in the conjecture
of shadow, and always before them glimmered the mist
of Olivia’s veil, an eidolon of love, of love’s
eternal Vanishing Goal.
And St. George was in pursuit.
So were Amory and Jarvo, and Rollo of the oil-skins,
but these mattered very little, for it was St. George
whose eyes burned in his pale face and were striving
to catch the faintest motion in that fleeing car ahead.
“Faster, Jarvo,” he said,
“we’re not gaining on them. I think
they’re gaining on us. Put ahead, can’t
you?”
Amory vexed the air with frantic questionings.
“How did it happen?” he said. “Who
did it? Was it the guard? What did they do
it for?”
“It looks to me,” said
St. George only, peering distractedly into the gloom,
“as if all those fellows had on uniforms.
Can you see?”
Jarvo spoke softly.
“It is true, adon,” he
said, “they are of the guard. This is what
they had planned,” he added to Amory. “I
feared the harm would be to you. It is the same.
Your turn would be the next.”
“What do you mean?” St. George demanded.
Amory, with some incoherence, told
him what Jarvo had come to them to propose, and heightened
his own excitement by plunging into the business of
that night and the next, as he had had it from the
little brown man’s lips.
“Up the mountain to-morrow night,”
he concluded fervently, “what do you think of
that? Do you see us?”
“Maniac, no,” said St.
George shortly, “what do we want to go up the
mountain for if Miss Holland is somewhere else?
Faster, Jarvo, can’t you?” he urged.
“Why, this thing is built to go sixty miles an
hour. We’re creeping.”
“Perhaps it’s better to
start in gentle and work up a pace, sir,” observed
Rollo inspirationally, “like a man’s legs,
sir, beggin’ your pardon.”
St. George looked at him as if he
had first seen him, so that Amory once more explained
his presence and pointed to the oil-skins. And
St. George said only:
“Now we’re coming up a
little don’t you think we’re
coming up a little? Throw it wide open, Jarvo now,
go!”
“What are you going to do when
you catch them?” demanded Amory. “We
can’t lunge into them, for fear of hurting Miss
Holland. And who knows what devilish contrivance
they’ve got dum-dum bullets
with a poison seal attachment,” prophesied Amory
darkly. “What are you going to do?”
“I don’t know what we’re
going to do,” said St. George doggedly, “but
if we can overtake them it won’t take us long
to find out.”
Never so slightly the pursuers were
gaining. It was impossible to tell whether those
in the flying car knew that they were followed, and
if they did know, and if Olivia knew, St. George wondered
whether the pursuit were to her a new alarm, or whether
she were looking to them for deliverance. If
she knew! His heart stood still at the thought oh,
and if they had both known, that morning at breakfast
at the Boris, that this was the way the genie
would come out of the jar. But how, if he were
unable to help her? And how could he help her
when these others might have Heaven knew what resources
of black art, art of all the colours of the Yaque
spectrum, if it came to that? The slim-trunked
trees flew past them, and the tender branches brushed
their shoulders and hung out their flowers like lamps.
Warm wind was in their faces, sweet, reverberant voices
of the wood-things came chorusing, and ahead there
in the dimness, that misty will-o’-the-wisp was
her veil, Olivia’s veil. St. George would
have followed if it had led him between-worlds.
In a manner it did lead him between-worlds.
Emerging suddenly upon a broader avenue their car
followed the other aside and shot through a great
gateway of the palace wall a wall built
of such massive blocks that the gateway formed a covered
passageway. From there, delicately lighted, greenly
arched, and on this festal night, quite deserted,
went the road by which, the night before, they had
entered Med.
“Now,” said St. George
between set teeth, “now see what you can do,
Jarvo. Everything depends on you.”
Evidently Jarvo had been waiting for
this stretch of open road and expecting the other
car to take it. He bent forward, his wiry little
frame like a quivering spring controlling the motion.
The motor leaped at his touch. Away down the
road they tore with the wind singing its challenge.
Second by second they saw their gain increase.
The uniforms of the guards in the car became distinguishable.
The white of Olivia’s veil merged in the brightness
of her gown was it only the shining of the
gold of the uniforms or could St. George see the floating
gold of her hair? Ah, wonderful, past all speech
it was wonderful to be fleeing toward her through
this pale light that was like a purer element than
light itself. With the phantom moving of the boughs
in the wood on either side light seemed to dance and
drip from leaf to leaf the visible spirit
of the haunted green. The unreality of it all
swept over him almost stiflingly. Olivia was
it indeed Olivia whom he was following down lustrous
ways of a land vague as a star; or was his pursuit
not for her, but for the exquisite, incommunicable
Idea, and was he following it through a world forth-fashioned
from his own desire?
Suddenly indistinguishable sounds
were in his ears, words from Amory, from Jarvo certain
exultant gutturals. He felt the car slacken speed,
he looked ahead for the swift beckoning of the veil,
and then he saw that where, in the delicate distance,
the other motor had sped its way, it now stood inactive
in the road before them, and they were actually upon
it. The four guards in the motor were standing
erect with uplifted faces, their gold uniforms shining
like armour. But this was not all. There,
in the highway beside the car, the mist of her veil
like a halo about her, Olivia stood alone.
St. George did not reckon what they
meant to do. He dropped over the side of the
tonneau and ran to her. He stood before her, and
all the joy that he had ever known was transcended
as she turned toward him. She threw out her hands
with a little cry was it gladness, or relief,
or beseeching? He could not be certain that there
was even recognition in her eyes before she tottered
and swayed, and he caught her unconscious form in
his arms. As he lifted her he looked with apprehension
toward the car that held the guards. To his bewilderment
there was no car there. The pursued motor, like
a winged thing of the most innocent vagaries, had
taken itself off utterly. And on before, the
causeway was utterly empty, dipping idly between murmurous
green. But at the moment St. George had no time
to spend on that wonder.
He carried Olivia to the tonneau of
Jarvo’s car, jealous when Rollo lifted her gown’s
hem from the dust of the road and when Amory threw
open the door. He held her in his arms, half kneeling
beside her, profoundly regardless where it should
please the others to dispose themselves. He had
no recollection of hearing Jarvo point the way through
the trees to a path that led away, as far from them
as a voice would carry, to the Ilex Tower whose key
burned in Amory’s pocket, promising radiant,
intangible things to his imagination. St. George
understood with magnificent unconcern that Amory and
Rollo were gone off there to wait for the return of
him and Jarvo; he took it for granted that Jarvo had
grasped that Olivia must be taken back to her aunt
and her friends at the palace; and afterward he knew
only, for an indeterminate space, that the car was
moving across some dim, heavenly foreground to some
dim, ultimate destination in which he found himself
believing with infinite faith.
For this was Olivia, in his arms.
St. George looked down at her, at the white, exquisite
face with its shadow of lashes, and it seemed to him
that he must not breathe, or remember, or hope, lest
the gods should be jealous and claim the moment, and
leave him once more forlorn. That was the secret,
he thought, not to touch away the elusive moment by
hope or memory, but just to live it, filled with its
ecstasies, borne on the crest of its consciousness.
It seemed to him in some intimately communicated fashion,
that the moment, the very world of the island, was
become to him a more intense object of consciousness
than himself. And somehow Olivia was its expression Olivia,
here in his arms, with the stir of her breath and
the light, light pressure of her body and the fall
of her hair, not only symbols of the sovereign hour,
but the hour’s realities.
On either side the phantom wood pressed
close about them, and its light seemed coined by goblin
fingers. Dissolving wind, persuading little voices
musical beyond the domain of music that he knew, quick,
poignant vistas of glades where the light spent itself
in its longed-for liberty of colour, labyrinthine
ways of shadow that taught the necessity of mystery.
There was something lyric about it all. Here
Nature moved on no formal lines, understood no frugality
of beauty, but was lavish with a divine and special
errantry to a divine and special understanding.
And it had been given St. George to move with her
merely by living this hour, with Olivia in his arms.
The sweet of life the sweet
of life and the world his own. The words had
never meant so much. He had often said them in
exultation, but he had never known their truth:
the world was literally his own, under the law.
Nothing seemed impossible. His mind went back
to the unexplained disappearing of that other motor
and, however it had been, that did not seem impossible
either. It seemed natural, and only a new doorway
to new points of contact. In this amazing land
no speculation was too far afield to be the food of
every day. Here men understood miracle as the
rest of the world understands invention. Already
the mere existence of Yaque proved that the space of
experience is transcended and with the thought
a fancy, elusive and profound, seized him and gripped
at his heart with an emotion wider than fear.
What had become of the other car? Had it gone
down some road of the wood which the guards knew,
or ... The words of Prince Tabnit came back to
him as they had been spoken in that wonderful tour
of the island. “The higher dimensions are
being conquered. Nearly all of us can pass into
the fifth at will, ‘disappearing,’ as
you have the word.” Was it possible that
in the vanishing of the pursued car this had been
demonstrated before him? Into this space, inclusive
of the visible world and of Yaque as well, had the
car passed without the pursuers being able to point
to the direction which it had taken? St. George
smiled in derision as this flashed upon him, and it
hardly held his thought for a moment, for his eyes
were upon Olivia’s face, so near, so near his
own ... Undoubtedly, he thought vaguely, that
other motor had simply swerved aside to some private
opening of the grove and, from being hard-pressed and
almost overtaken, was now well away in safety.
Yet if this were so, would they not have taken Olivia
with them? But to that strange and unapparent
hyperspace they could not have taken her, because she
did not understand. “...just as one,”
Prince Tabnit had said, “who understands how
to die and come to life again would not be able to
take with him any one who himself did not understand
how to accompany him...”
Some terrifying and exalting sense
swept him into a new intimacy of understanding as
he realized glimmeringly what heights and depths lay
about his ceasing to see that car of the guard.
Yet, with Olivia’s head upon his arm, all that
he theorized in that flash of time hung hardly beyond
the border of his understanding. Indeed, it seemed
to St. George as if almost almost he could
understand, as if he could pierce the veil and know
utterly all the secrets of spirit and sense that confound.
“We shall all know when we are able to bear
it,” he had once heard another say, and it
seemed to him now that at last he was able to bear
it, as if the sense of the uninterrupted connection
between the two worlds was almost a part of his own
consciousness. A moment’s deeper thought,
a quicker flowing of the imagination, a little more
poignant projecting of himself above the abyss and
he, too, would understand. It came to him that
he had almost understood every time that he had looked
at Olivia. Ah, he thought, and how exquisite,
how matchless she was, and what Heaven beyond Heaven
the world would hold for him if only she were to love
him. St. George lifted the little hand that hung
at her side, and stooped momentarily to touch his
cheek to the soft hair that swept her shoulder.
Here for him lay the sweet of life the
sweet of the world, ay, and the sweet of all the world’s
mysteries. This alien land was no nearer the
truth than he. His love was the expression of
its mystery. They went back through the great
archway, and entered the palace park. Once more
the slim-trunked trees flew past them with the fringes
of light expressing the borders of the dusk.
St. George crouched, half-kneeling, on the floor of
the tonneau, his free hand protecting Olivia’s
face from the leaning branches of heavy-headed flowers.
He had been so passionately anxious that she should
know that he was on the island, near her, ready to
serve her; but now, save for his alarm and anxiety
about her, he felt a shy, profound gratitude that the
hour had fallen as it had fallen. Whatever was
to come, this nearness to her would be his to remember
and possess. It had been his supreme hour.
Whether she had recognized him in that moment on the
road, whether she ever knew what had happened made,
he thought, no difference. But if she was to
open her eyes as they reached the border of the park,
and if she was to know that it was like this that
the genie had come out of the jar the mere
notion made him giddy, and he saw that Heaven may
have little inner Heaven-courts which one is never
too happy to penetrate.
But Olivia did not stir or unclose
her eyes. The great strain of the evening, the
terror and shock of its ending, the very relief with
which she had, at all events, realized herself in the
hands of friends were more than even an island princess
could pass through in serenity. And when at last
from the demesne of enchantment the car emerged in
the court of the palace, Olivia knew nothing of it
and, as nearly as he could recall afterward, neither
did St. George. He understood that the courtyard
was filled with murmurs, and that as Olivia was lifted
from the car the voice of Mrs. Medora Hastings, in
all its excesses of tone and pitch, was tilted in a
kind of universal reproving. Then he was aware
that Jarvo, beseeching him not to leave the motor,
had somehow got him away from all the tumult and the
questioning and the crush of the other motors setting
tardily off down the avenue in a kind cf majestic pursuit
of the princess. After that he remembered nothing
but the grateful gloom of the wood and the swift flight
of the car down that nebulous way, thin darkness flowing
about him.
He was to go back to join Amory in
some kind of tower, he knew; and he was infinitely
resigned, for he remembered that this was in some
way essential to his safety, and that it had to do
with the ascent of Mount Khalak to-morrow night.
For the rest St. George was certain of nothing save
that he was floating once more in a sea of light,
with the sweet of the world flowing in his veins; and
upon his arm and against his shoulder he could still
feel the thrill of the pressure of Olivia’s
head.
The genie had come out of the jar and
never, never would he go back.