Somewhat before noon the great doors
of the Palace of the Litany and of the Hall of Kings
were thrown open, and the people streamed in from
the palace grounds and the Eurychorus. Abroad
among them elusive as that by which we
know that a given moment belongs to dawn, not dusk was
the sense of questioning, of unrest, of expectancy
that belongs to the dawn itself. Especially the
youths and maidens who, besides wisdom,
knew something of spells waited with a
certain wistfulness for what might be, for Change is
a kind of god even to the immortals. But there
were also those who weighed the departures incident
to the coming of the strange people from over-seas;
and there were not lacking conservatives of the old
regime to shake wise heads and declare that a barbarian
is a barbarian, the world over.
All that rainbow multitude, clad for
festival, rose with the first light music that stole,
winged and silken, from hidden cedar alcoves, and
some minutes past the sounding of the hour of noon
the chamfered doors set high in the south wall of
the Hall of Kings were swung open, and at the head
of the stair appeared Olivia.
She was alone, for the custom of Yaque
required that the island princesses should on the
day of their recognition first appear alone before
their people in token of their mutual faith. From
the wardrobes at the castle Olivia had chosen the
coronation gown of Queen Mitygen herself. It
was of fine lace woven in a single piece, and it lay
in a foam of shining threads traced with pure lines
of shadow. On her head were a jeweled coronal
and jeweled hair-loops in the Phoenician fashion,
once taken from a king’s casket and sent secretly,
upon the decline of Assyrian ascendancy, to be bartered
in the marts of Coele-Syria. Chains of jewels,
in a noon of colour, lay about her throat, as once
they lay upon the shoulders of the dead queens of
Yaque and, before them, of the women of the elder
dynasties long since recorded in indifferent dust.
Girdling her waist was a zone of rubies that burned
positive in the tempered light. With all her
delicacy, Olivia was like her rubies vivid,
graphic, delineated not by light but by line.
The members of the High Council rustled
in their colour and white, and flashed their golden
stars; the Golden Guards (save the apostate few who
were that day sentenced to be set adrift) were filling
the stairway like a bank of buttercups; and Olivia’s
women, led by Antoinette in a gown of colours not
to be lightly denominated, were entering by an opposite
door. In the raised seats near the High Council,
Mrs. Hastings and Mr. Frothingham leaned to wave a
sustaining greeting. Until that high moment Mrs.
Medora Hastings had been by no means certain that
Olivia would appear at all, though she openly nourished
the hope that “everything would go off smoothly.”
("I don’t care much for foreigners and never
have,” she confided to Mr. Frothingham, “still,
I was thinking while I was at breakfast, after all,
to the prince we are the foreigners. There
is something in that, don’t you think?
And then the dear prince he is so very
metaphysical!”)
Upon the beetling throne Olivia took
her place, and her women sank about her like tiers
of sunset clouds. She was so little and so beautiful
and so unconsciously appealing that when Prince Tabnit
and Cassyrus and the rest of the court entered, it
is doubtful if an eye left Olivia, to homage them.
But Prince Tabnit was the last to note that, for he
saw only Olivia; and the world the world
was an intaglio of his own designing.
With due magnificence the preliminary
ceremonies of the coronation proceeded musty
necessities, like oaths and historical truths, being
mingled with the most delicate observances, such as
the naming of the former princesses of the island,
from Adija, daughter of King Abibaal, to Olivia, daughter
of King Otho; and such as counting the clouds for
the misfortunes of the regime. This last duty
fell to the office of the lord chief-chancellor, and
from an upper porch he returned quickening with the
intelligence that there was not a cloud in the sky,
a state of the heavens known to no coronation since
Babylon was ruled by Assyrian viceroys. The lord
chief-chancellor and Cassyrus themselves brought forth
the crown a beautiful crown, shining like
dust-in-the-sun and Cassyrus, in a voice
that trumpeted, rehearsed its history: how it
had been made of jewels brought from the coffers of
Amasis and Apries, when King Nebuchadnezzar wrested
Phoenicia from Egypt, and, too, of all manner of precious
stones sent by Queen Atossa, wife of Darius, when the
Crotoniat Democedes, with two trirèmes and a trading
vessel, visited Yaque before they went to survey Hellenic
shores, with what disastrous result. And Olivia,
standing in the queen’s gown, listened without
hearing one word, and turned to have her veil lifted
by Antoinette and the daughter of a peer of Yaque;
and she knelt before the people while the lord chief-chancellor
set the crown on her bright hair. It was a picture
that thrilled the lord chief-chancellor himself who
was a worshiper of beauty, and a man given to angling
in the lagoon and making metric translations of the
inscriptions.
Then it was in the room as if a faint
flame had been breathed upon and had upleaped in a
thousand ways of expectancy, and as if a secret sign
had been set in the lift and dip of the music the
music that was so like the great chamber with its
lift and dip of carven line. The thrill with
which one knows the glad news of an unopened letter
was upon them all, and they heard that swift breath
of an event that stirs before its coming. When
Olivia’s women fell back from the dais with
wonder and murmur, the murmur was caught up in the
great hall, and ran from tier to tier as amazement,
as incredulity, and as thanksgiving.
For there, beside the beetling throne,
was standing a man, slenderly built, with a youthful,
sensitive face and critically-drooping lids, and upon
them all his eyes were turned in faint amusement warmed
by an idle approbation.
“Perfect perfect.
Quite perfect,” he was saying below his breath.
Olivia turned. The next moment
she stood with outstretched arms before her father;
and King Otho, in his long, straight robe, encrusted
with purple amethysts, bent with exquisite courtesy
above his daughter’s hands.
“My dear child,” he murmured,
“the picture that you make entirely justifies
my existence, but hardly my absence. Shall we
ask his Highness to do that?”
It mattered little who was to do that
so long as it was done. For to that people, steeped
in dream, risen from the crudity of mere events to
breathe in the rarer atmosphere of their significance,
here was a happening worthy their attention, for it
had the dignity of mystery. Even Mrs. Medora
Hastings, billowing toward the throne with cries,
was less poignantly a challenge to be heard. Upon
her the king laid a tranquillizing hand and, with
a droop of eyelids in recognition of Mr. Frothingham,
he murmured: “Ah, Medora Medora!
Delight in the moment but do not embrace
it,” while beside him, star-eyed, Olivia stood
waiting for Prince Tabnit to speak.
To Olivia, trembling a little as she
leaned upon his arm, King Otho bent with some word,
at which she raised to his her startled face, and
turned from him uncertainly, and burned a heavenly
colour from brow to chin. Then, her father’s
words being insistent in her ear, and her own heart
being tumultuous with what he had told her, she turned
as he bade her, and, following his glance, slipped
beneath a shining curtain that cut from the audience
chamber the still seclusion of the King’s Alcove,
a chamber long sacred to the sovereigns of Yaque.
Confused with her wonder and questioning,
hardly daring to understand the import of her father’s
words, Olivia went down a passage set between two
high white walls of the palace, open to-day to the
upper blue and to the floating pennons of the
dome. Here, prickly-leaved plants had shot to
the cornices with uncouth contorting of angled boughs,
and in their inner green ruffle-feathered birds looked
down on her with the uncanny interest of myriapods.
She caught about her the lace of her skirts and of
her floating veil, and the way echoed musically to
the touch of her little sandals and was bright with
the shining of her diadem. And at the end of
the passage she lifted a swaying curtain of soft dyes
and entered the King’s Alcove.
The King’s Alcove laid upon
one the delicate demands of calm open water for
its floor of white transparent tiles was cunningly
traced with the reflected course of the carven roof,
and one seemed to look into mirrored depths of disappearing
line between spaces shaped like petals and like chevrons.
In the King’s Alcove one stood in a world of
white and one’s sight was exquisitely won, now
by a niche open to a blue well of sea and space, now
by silver plants lucent in high casements. And
there one was spellbound with this mirroring of the
Near which thus became the Remote, until one questioned
gravely which was “there” and which was
“here,” for the real was extended into
vision, and vision was quickened to the real, and nothing
lay between. But to Olivia, entering, none of
these things was clearly evident, for as the curtain
of many dyes fell behind her she was aware of two
figures but the one, with a murmured word
which she managed somehow to answer without an idea
what she said or what it had said either, vanished
down the way that she had come. And she stood
there face to face with St. George.
He had risen from a low divan before
a small table set with figs and bread and a decanter
of what would have been bordeaux if it had not
been distilled from the vineyards of Yaque. He
was very pale and haggard, and his eyes were darkly
circled and still fever-bright. But he came toward
her as if he had quite forgotten that this is a world
of danger and that she was a princess and that, little
more than a week ago, her name was to him the unknown
music. He came toward her with a face of unutterable
gladness, and he caught and crushed her hands in his
and looked into her eyes as if he could look to the
distant soul of her. He led her to a great chair
hewn from quarries of things silver and unremembered,
and he sat at her feet upon a bench that might have
been a stone of the altar of some forgotten deity
of dreams, at last worshiped as it should long have
been worshiped by all the host that had passed it by.
He looked up in her face, and the room was like a
place of open water where heaven is mirrored in earth,
and earth reflects and answers heaven.
St. George laughed a little for sheer,
inextinguishable happiness.
“Once,” he said, “once
I breakfasted with you, on tea and if I
remember correctly gold and silver muffins.
Won’t you breakfast with me now?”
Olivia looked down at him, her heart
still clamourous with its anxiety of the night and
of the morning.
“Tell me where you can have
been,” she said only; “didn’t you
know how distressed we would be? We imagined
everything in this dreadful place.
And we feared everything, and we ”
but yet the “we” did not deceive St. George;
how could it with her eyes, for all their avoidings,
so divinely upon him?
“Did you,” he said, “ah did
you wonder? I wish I knew!”
“And my father where
did you find him?” she besought. “It
was you? You found him, did you not?”
St. George looked down at a fold of
her gown that was fallen across his knee. How
on earth was he ever to move, he wondered vaguely,
if the slightest motion meant the withdrawing of that
fold. He looked at her hand, resting so near,
so near, upon the arm of the chair; and last he looked
again into her face; and it seemed wonderful and before
all things wonderful, not that she should be here,
jeweled and crowned, but that he should so unbelievably
be here with her. And yet it might be but a moment,
as time is measured, until this moment would be swept
away. His eyes met hers and held them.
“Would you mind,” he said,
“now just for a little, while we wait
here not asking me that? Not asking
me anything? There will be time enough in there when
they ask me. Just for now I only want to
think how wonderful this is.”
She said: “Yes, it is wonderful unbelievable,”
but he thought that she might have meant the white
room or her queen’s robe or any one of all the
things which he did not mean.
“Is it wonderful to you?”
he asked, and he said again: “I wish I
wish I knew!”
He looked at her, sitting in the moon
of her laces and the stars of her gems, and the sense
of the immeasurableness of the hour came upon him
as it comes to few; the knowledge that the evanescent
moment is very potent, the world where the siren light
of the Remote may at any moment lie quenched in some
ashen present. To him, held momentarily in this
place that was like shoreless, open water, the present
was inestimably precious and it lay upon St. George
like the delicate claim of his love itself. What
the next hour held for them neither could know, and
this universal uncertainty was for him crystallized
in an instant of high wisdom; over the little hand
lying so perilously near, his own closed suddenly and
he crushed her fingers to his lips.
“Olivia dear heart,”
he said, “we don’t know what they may do what
will happen oh, may I tell you now?”
There was no one to say that he might
not, for the hand was not withdrawn from his.
And so he did tell her, told her all his heart as
he had known his heart to be that last night on The
Aloha, and in that divine twilight of his arriving
on the island, and in those hours beside the airy
ramparts of the king’s palace, and in the vigil
that followed, and always always, ever since
he could remember, only that he hadn’t known
that he was waiting for her, and now he knew now
he knew.
“Must you not have known, up
there in the palace,” he besought her, “the
night that I got there? And yesterday, all day
yesterday, you must have known didn’t
you know? I love you, Olivia. I couldn’t
have told you, I couldn’t have let you know,
only now, when we can’t know what may come or
what they may do oh, say you forgive me.
Because I love you I love you.”
She rose swiftly, her veil floating
about her, silver over the gold of her hair; and the
light caught the enchantment of the gems of the strange
crown they had set upon her head, and she looked down
at him in almost unearthly beauty. He stood before
her, waiting for the moment when she should lift her
eyes. And the eyes were lifted, and he held out
his arms, and straight to them, regardless of the
coronation laces of Queen Mitygen, went Olivia, Princess
of Yaque. He put aside her shining hair, as he
had put it aside in that divine moment in the motor
in the palace wood; and their lips met, in that world
that was like the shoreless open sea where earth reflects
heaven, and heaven comes down.
They sat upon the white-cushioned
divan, and St. George half knelt beside her as he
had knelt that night in the fleeing motor, and there
were an hundred things to say and an hundred things
to hear. And because this fragment of the past
since they had met was incontestably theirs, and because
the future hung trembling before them in a mist of
doubt, they turned happy, hopeful eyes to that future,
clinging to each other’s hands. The little
chamber of translucent white, where one looked down
to a mirrored dome and up to a kind of sky, became
to them a place bounded by the touch and the look
and the voice of each other, as every place in the
world is bounded for every heart that beats.
“Sweetheart,” said St.
George presently, “do you remember that you
are a princess, and I’m merely a kind of man?”
Was it not curious, he thought, that
his lips did not speak a new language of their own
accord?
“I know,” corrected Olivia
adorably, “that I’m a kind of princess.
But what use is that when it only makes trouble for
us?”
“Us” “makes
trouble for us.” St. George wondered how
he could ever have thought that he even guessed what
happiness might be when “trouble for us”
was like this. He tried to say so, and then:
“But do you know what you are
doing?” he persisted. “Don’t
you see dear, don’t you see that
by loving me you are giving up a world that you can
never, never get back?”
Olivia looked down at the fair disordered
hair on his temples. It seemed incredible that
she had the right to push it from his forehead.
But it was not incredible. To prove it Olivia
touched it back. To prove that that was
not incredible, St. George turned until his lips brushed
her wrist.
“Don’t you know, don’t
you, dear,” he pressed the matter, “that
very possibly these people here have really got the
secret that all the rest of the world is talking about
and hoping about and dreaming they will sometime know?”
Olivia heard of this likelihood with
delicious imperturbability.
“I know a secret,” she
said, just above her breath, “worth two of that.”
“You’ll never be sorry never?”
he urged wistfully, resolutely denying himself the
entire bliss of that answer.
“Never,” said Olivia, “never.
Shall you?”
That was exceptionally easy to make
clear, and thereafter he whimsically remembered something
else:
“You live in the king’s
palace now,” he reminded her, “and this
is another palace where you might live if you chose.
And you might be a queen, with drawing-rooms and a
poet laureate and all the rest. And in New York in
New York, perhaps we shall live in a flat.”
“No,” she cried, “no,
indeed! Not ‘perhaps,’ I insist
upon a flat.” She looked about the room
with its bench brought from the altar of a forgotten
deity of dreams, with its line and colour dissolving
to mirrored point and light the mystic union
of sight with dream and she smiled at the
divine incongruity and the divine resemblance.
“It wouldn’t be so very different a
flat,” she said shyly.
Wouldn’t it wouldn’t
it, after all, be so very different?
“Ah, if you only think so, really,” cried
St. George.
“But it will be different, just
different enough to like better,” she admitted
then. “You know that I think so,”
she said.
“If only you knew how much I
think so,” he told her, “how I have thought
so, day and night, since that first minute at the Boris.
Olivia, dear heart when did you think so
first ”
She shook her head and laid her hands
upon his and drew them to her face.
“Now, now now!”
she cried, “and there never was any time but
now.”
“But there will be there
will be,” he said, his lips upon her hair.
After a time for Time,
that seems to have no boundaries in the abstract,
is a very fiend for bounding the divine concrete after
a time Amory spoke hesitatingly on the other side
of the curtain of many dyes.
“St. George,” he said,
“I’m afraid they want you. Mr. Holland the
king, he’s got through playing them. He
wants you to get up and give ’em the truth,
I think.”
“Come in come in,
Amory,” St. George said and lifted the curtain,
and “I beg your pardon,” he added, as his
eyes fell upon Antoinette in a gown of colours not
to be lightly denominated. She had followed Olivia
from the hall, and had met Amory midway the avenue
of prickly trees, and they had helpfully been keeping
guard. Now they went on before to the Hall of
Kings, and St. George, remembering what must happen
there, turned to Olivia for one crowning moment.
“You know,” she said fearfully,
“before father came the prince intended the
most terrible things to set you and Mr.
Amory adrift in a rudderless airship ”
St. George laughed in amusement.
The poor prince with his impossible devices, thinking
to harm him, St. George now.
“He meant to marry you, he thought,”
he said, “but, thank Heaven, he has your father
to answer to and me!” he ended jubilantly.
And yet, after all, Heaven knew what
possibilities hemmed them round. And Heaven knew
what she was going to think of him when she heard
his story. He turned and caught her to him, for
the crowning moment.
“You love me you
love me,” he said, “no matter what happens
or what they say no matter what?”
She met his eyes and, of her own will,
she drew his face down to hers.
“No matter what,” she
answered. So they went together toward the chamber
which they had both forgotten.
When they reached the Hall of Kings
they heard King Otho’s voice suave,
mellow, of perfect enunciation:
“ some one,”
the king was concluding, “who can tell this
considerably better than I. And it seems to me singularly
fitting that the recognition of the part eternally
played by the ‘possible’ be temporarily
deferred while we listen to I dislike to
use the word, but shall I say the facts.”
It seemed to St. George when he stood
beside the dais, facing that strange, eager multitude
with his strange unbelievable story upon his lips the
story of the finding of the king as if his
own voice were suddenly a part of all the gigantic
incredibility. Yet the divinely real and the
fantastic had been of late so fused in his consciousness
that he had come to look upon both as the normal which
is perhaps the only sane view. But how could he
tell to others the monstrous story of last night,
and hope to be believed?
None the less, as simply as if he
had been narrating to Chillingworth the high moment
of a political convention, St. George told the people
of Yaque what had happened in that night in the room
of the tombs with that mad old Malakh whom they all
remembered. It came to him as he spoke that it
was quite like telling to a field of flowers the real
truth about the wind of which they might be supposed
to know far more than he; and yet, if any one were
to tell the truth about the wind who would know how
to listen? He was not amazed that, when he had
done, the people of Yaque sat in a profound silence
which might have been the silence of innocent amazement
or of utter incredulity.
But there was no mistaking the face
of Prince Tabnit. Its cool tolerant amusement
suddenly sent the blood pricking to St. George’s
heart and filled him with a kind of madness. What
he did was the last thing that he had intended.
He turned upon the prince, and his voice went cutting
to the farthest corner of the hall:
“Men and women of Yaque,”
he cried, “I accuse your prince of the knowledge
that can take from and add to the years of man at will.
I accuse him of the deliberate and criminal use of
that knowledge to take King Otho from his throne!”
St. George hardly knew what effect
his words had. He saw only Olivia, her hands
locked, her lips parted, looking in his face in anguish;
and he saw Prince Tabnit smile. Prince Tabnit
sat upon the king’s left hand, and he leaned
and whispered a smiling word in the ear of his sovereign
and turned a smiling face to Olivia upon her father’s
right.
“I know something of your American
newspapers, your Majesty,” the prince said aloud,
“and these men are doing their part excellently,
excellently.”
“What do you mean, your Highness?”
demanded St. George curtly.
“But is it not simple?”
asked the prince, still smiling. “You have
contrived a sensation for the great American newspaper.
No one can doubt.”
King Otho leaned back in the beetling throne.
“Ah, yes,” he said, “it
is true. Something has been contrived. But is
the sensation of his contriving, Prince?”
Olivia stood silent. It was not
possible, it was not possible, she said over mechanically.
For St. George to have come with this story of a potion a
drug that had restored youth to her father, had transformed
him from that mad old Malakh
“Father!” she cried appealingly,
“don’t you remember don’t
you know?”
King Otho, watching the prince, shook
his head, smiling.
“At dawn,” he said, “there
are few of us to be found remaining still at table
with Socrates. I seem not to have been of that
number.”
“Olivia!” cried St. George suddenly.
She met his eyes for a moment, the
eyes that had read her own, that had given message
for message, that had seen with her the glory of a
mystic morning willingly relinquished for a diviner
dawn. Was she not princess here in Yaque?
She laid her hand upon her father’s hand; the
crown that they had given her glittered as she turned
toward the multitude.
“My people,” she said
ringingly, “I believe that that man speaks the
truth. Shall the prince not answer to this charge
before the High Council now here before
you all?”
At this King Otho did something nearly
perceptible with his eyebrows. “Perfect.
Perfect. Quite perfect,” he said below his
breath. The next instant the eyelids of the sovereign
drooped considerably less than one would have supposed
possible. For from every part of the great chamber,
as if a storm long-pent had forced the walls of the
wind, there came in a thousand murmurs soft,
tremulous, definitive the answering voice
to Olivia’s question:
“Yes. Yes. Yes...”