I leaned over Jim and kissed his forehead. I arose. I was numb with sorrow. But under that numbness seethed a tortured rage, a tortured horror. Deadly rage against the Witch–woman and the Smith—horror of myself, of what I had been…horror of—Dwayanu!
I must find Tibur and the Witch–woman—but first there was something else to be done. They and Evalie could wait.
"Dara—have them lift him. Carry him into one of the houses."
I followed on foot as they bore Jim away. There was fighting still going on, but far from us. Here were only the dead. I guessed that Sirk was making its last stand at the end of the valley.
Dara, Naral and I and half–dozen more passed through the broken doors of what yesterday had been a pleasant home. In its centre was a little columned hall. The other soldiers clustered round the broken doors, guarding entrance. I ordered chairs and beds and whatever else would burn brought into the little hall and heaped into a pyre. Dara said:
"Lord, let me bathe your wound."
I dropped upon a stool, sat thinking while she washed the gash upon my head with stinging wine. Beyond the strange numbness, my mind was very clear. I was Leif Langdon. Dwayanu was no longer master of my mind—nor ever again would be. Yet he lived. He lived within as part of—myself. It was as though the shock of recognition of Jim had dissolved Dwayanu within Leif Langdon.
As though two opposing currents had merged into one; as though two drops had melted into each other; as though two antagonistic metals had fused.
Crystal clear was every memory of what I had heard and seen, said and done and thought from the time I had been hurled from Nansur Bridge. And crystal clear, agonizingly clear, was all that had gone before. Dwayanu was not dead, no! But part of me, and I was by far the stronger. I could use him, his strength, his wisdom—but he could not use mine. I was in control. I was the master.
And I thought, sitting there, that if I were to save Evalie—if I were to do another thing that now I knew, I would do or die in the doing, I must still outwardly be all Dwayanu. There lay my power. Not easily could such transmutation as I had undergone be explained to my soldiers. They believed in me and followed me as Dwayanu. If Evalie, who had known me as Leif, who had loved me as Leif, who had listened to Jim, could not understand—how much less could these? No, they must see no change.
I touched my head. The cut was deep and long; apparently only the toughness of my skull had saved it from being split.
"Dara—you saw who made this wound?"
"It was Tibur, Lord."
"He tried to kill me…Why did he not finish?"
"Never yet has Tibur's left hand failed to deal death. He thinks it cannot fail. He saw you fall—he thought you dead."
"And death missed me by a hair's–breadth. And would not, had not someone hurled me aside. Was that you, Dara?"
"It was I, Dwayanu. I saw his hand dip into his girdle, knew what was coming. I threw myself at your knees—so he could not see me."
"Why, because you fear Tibur?"
"No—because I wanted him to believe he did not miss."
"Why?"
"So that you would have better chance to kill Tibur, Lord. Your strength was ebbing with your friend's life."
I looked sharply at this bold–eyed captain of mine. How much did she know? Well, time later to find that out. I looked at the pyre. It was nearly complete.
"What was it he threw, Dara?"
She drew from her girdle a curious weapon, one whose like I had never seen. Its end was top–shaped, pointed like a dagger and with four razor–edged ribs on its sides. It had an eight–inch metal haft, round, like the haft of a diminutive javelin. It weighed about five pounds. It was of some metal I did not recognize—denser, harder than the finest of tempered steel. It was, in effect, a casting knife. But no mail could turn aside that adamantine point when hurled with the strength of one like the Smith. Dara took it from me, and pulled the short shaft. Instantly the edged ribs flew open, like flanges. The end of each was shaped like an inverted barb. A devilish tool, if I ever saw one. Once embedded, there was no way to get it out except cutting, and any pull would release the flanges, hooking them at the same time into the flesh. I took it back from Dara, and placed it in my own girdle. If I had had any doubts about what I was going to do to Tibur—I had none now.
The pyre was finished. I walked over to Jim, and laid him on it. I kissed him on the eyes, and put a sword in his dead hand. I stripped the room of its rich tapestries and draped them over him. I struck flint and set flame to the pyre. The wood was dry and resinous, and burned swiftly. I watched the flames creep up and up until smoke and fire made a canopy over him.
Then dry–eyed, but with death in my heart. I walked out of that house and among my soldiers.
Sirk had fallen and its sack was on. Smoke was rising everywhere from the looted homes. A detachment of soldiers marched by, herding along some two–score prisoners—women, all of them, and little children; some bore the marks of wounds. And then I saw that among those whom I had taken for children were a handful of the golden pygmies. At sight of me the soldiers halted, stood rigid, staring at me unbelievingly.
Suddenly one cried out…"Dwayanu! Dwayanu lives!"…They raised their swords in salute, and from them came a shout…"Dwayanu!"
I beckoned their captain.
"Did you think Dwayanu dead then?"
"So ran the tale among us, Lord."
"And did this tale also tell how I was slain?"
She hesitated.
"There were some who said it was by the Lord Tibur…by accident… that he had made cast at Sirk's leader who was menacing you…and that you were struck instead…and that your body had been borne away by those of Sirk…I do not know…"
"Enough, soldier. Go on to Karak with the captives. Do not loiter, and do not speak of seeing me. It is a command. For a while I let the tale stand."
They glanced at each other, oddly, saluted, and went on. The yellow eyes of the pygmies, filled with a venomous hatred, never left me until they had passed out of range. I waited, thinking. So that was to be the story! Hai! But they had fear at their elbows or they would not have troubled to spread that tale of accident! Suddenly I made decision. No use to wander over Sirk searching for Tibur. Folly to be seen, and have the counter–tale that Dwayanu lived be borne to the ears of Tibur and Lur! They should come to me—unknowing.
There was only one way out of Sirk, and that by the bridge. It was there I would await them. I turned to Dara.
"We go to the bridge, but not by this road. We take the lanes until we reach the cliffs."
They wheeled their horses, and for the first time I realized that all this little troop of mine were mounted. And for the first time I realized that all were of my own guard, and that many of them had been foot–soldiers, yet these, too, were riding, and that upon a score of saddles were the colours of nobles who had followed me and the Witch–woman and Tibur through the gap of Sirk. It was Naral who, reading my perplexity, spoke, half–impudently as always:
"These are your most faithful, Dwayanu! The horses were idle—or a few we made so. For your better shield should Tibur—make mistake again."
I said nothing to that until we had gone around the burning house and were under cover of one of the lanes. Then I spoke to them:
"Naral—Dara—let us talk apart for a moment."
And when we had drawn a little away from the others, I said:
"To you two I owe my life—most of all to you, Dara. All that I can give you is yours for the asking. All I ask of you is—truth."
"Dwayanu—you shall have it."
"Why did Tibur want to kill me?"
Naral said, dryly:
"The Smith was not the only one who wanted you killed, Dwayanu."
I knew that, but I wanted to hear it from them.
"Who else, Naral?"
"Lur—and most of the nobles."
"But why? Had I not opened Sirk for them?"
"You were becoming too strong, Dwayanu. It is not in Lur or Tibur to take second place—or third…or maybe no place."
"But they had opportunity before—"
"But you had not taken Sirk for them," said Dara.
Naral said, resentfully:
"Dwayanu, you play with us. You know as well as we—better—what the reason was. You came here with that friend we have just left on his fire couch. All knew it. If you were to die—so must he die. He must not live, perhaps to escape and bring others into this place—for I know, as some others do, that there is life beyond here and that Khalk'ru does not reign supreme, as the nobles tell us. Well—here together are you and this friend of yours. And not only you two, but also the dark girl of the Rrrllya, whose death or capture might break the spirit of the little folk and put them under Karak's yoke. The three of you—together! Why, Dwayanu—it was the one place and the one time to strike! And Lur and Tibur did—and killed your friend, and think they have killed you, and have taken the dark girl."
"And if I kill Tibur, Naral?"
"Then there will be fighting. And you must guard yourself well, for the nobles hate you, Dwayanu. They have been told you are against the old customs—mean to debase them, and raise the people. Intend even to end the Sacrifices…"
She glanced at me, slyly.
"And if that were true?"
"You have most of the soldiers with you now, Dwayanu. If it were true you would also have most of the people. But Tibur has his friends—even among the soldiers. And Lur is no weakling."
She twitched up her horse's head, viciously.
"Better kill Lur, too, while you're in the mood, Dwayanu!"
I made no answer to that. We trotted through the lanes, not speaking again. Everywhere were dead, and gutted houses. We came out of the city, and rode over the narrow plain to the gap between the cliffs. There happened to be none on the open road just then; so we entered the gap unnoticed. We passed through it out into the square behind the fortress. There were soldiers here, in plenty, and groups of captives. I rode in the centre of my troop, bent over the neck of my horse. Dara had roughly bandaged my head. The bandages and cap–helmet I had picked up hid my yellow hair. There was much confusion, and I passed through unnoticed. I rode straight to the door of the tower behind which we had lurked when Karak stormed the bridge. I slipped in with my horse, half–closed the door. My women grouped themselves outside. They were not likely to be challenged. I settled down to wait for Tibur.
It was hard waiting, that! Jim's face over the camp–fire. Jim's face grinning at me in the trenches. Jim's face above mine when I lay on the moss bank of the threshold of the mirage—Jim's face under mine on the street of Sirk…
Tsantawu! Aie—Tsantawu! And you thought that only beauty could come from the forest I
Evalie? I cared nothing for Evalie then, caught in that limbo which at once was ice and candent core of rage.
"Save…Evalie!" Jim had bade. Well, I would save Evalie! Beyond that she mattered no more than did the Witch–woman…yes, a little more…I had a score to satisfy with the Witch–woman…I had none with Evalie…
The face of Jim…always the face of Jim…floating before me. …
I heard a whisper—
"Dwayanu—Tibur comes!"
"Is Lur with him, Dara?"
"No—a group of the nobles. He is laughing. He carries the dark girl on his saddle–bow."
"How far away is he, Dara?"
"Perhaps a bow–shot. He rides slowly."
"When I ride out, close in behind me. The fight will be between me and Tibur. I do not think those with him will dare attack me. If they do…"
Naral laughed.
"If they do, we shall be at their throats, Dwayanu. There are one or two of Tibur's friends I would like to settle accounts with. We ask you only this: waste neither words nor time on Tibur. Kill him quickly. For by the gods, if he kills you, it will be the boiling pot and the knives of the flayers for all of us he captures."
"I will kill him, Naral."
Slowly I opened the great door. Now I could see Tibur, his horse pacing toward the bridge–end. Upon the pommel of his saddle was Evalie. Her body drooped; the hair of blue–black was loosened and covered her face like a veil. Her hands were tied behind her back, and gripped in one of Tibur's. There were a score of his followers around and behind him, nobles—and the majority of them men. I had noticed that although the Witch–woman had few men among her guards and garrisons, the Smith showed a preference for them among his friends and personal escort. His head was turned toward them, his voice, roaring with triumph, and his laughter came plainly to me. By now the enclosure was almost empty of soldiers and captives. There was none between us. I wondered where the Witch–woman was.
Closer came Tibur, and closer.
"Ready Dara—Naral?"
"Ready, Lord!"
I flung open the gate. I raced toward Tibur, head bent low, my little troop behind me. I swung against him with head uplifted, thrust my face close to his.
Tibur's whole body grew rigid, his eyes glared into mine, his jaw dropped. I knew that those who followed him were held in that same incredulous stupefaction. Before the Smith could recover from his paralysis, I had snatched Evalie up from his saddle, had passed her to Dara.
I lifted my sword to slash at Tibur's throat. I gave him no warning. It was no time for chivalry. Twice he had tried treacherously to kill me. I would make quick end.
Swift as had been my stroke, the Smith was swifter. He threw himself back, slipped off his horse, and landed like a cat at its heels. I was down from mine before his great sledge was half–raised to hurl. I thrust my blade forward to pierce his throat. He parried it with the sledge. Then berserk rage claimed him. The hammer fell clanging on the rock. He threw himself on me, howling. His arms circled me, fettering mine to my sides, like living bands of steel. His legs felt for mine, striving to throw me. His lips were drawn back like a mad wolf's, and he bored his head into the pit of my neck, trying to tear my throat with his teeth.
My ribs cracked under the tightening vice of Tibur's arms. My lungs were labouring, sight dimming. I writhed and twisted in the effort to escape the muzzling of that hot mouth and the searching fangs.
I heard shouting around me, heard and dimly saw milling of the horses. The clutching fingers of my left hand touched my girdle—closed on something there—something like the shaft of a javelin—
Tibur's hell–forged dart!
Suddenly I went limp in Tibur's grip. His laughter bellowed, hoarse with triumph. And for a split–second his grip relaxed.
That split–second was enough. I summoned all my strength and broke his grip. Before he could clench me again, my hand had swept down into the girdle and clutched the dart.
I brought it up and drove it into Tibur's throat just beneath his jaw. I jerked the haft. The opened, razor–edged flanges sliced through arteries and muscles. The bellowing laughter of Tibur changed to a hideous gurgling. His hands sought the haft, dragged at it—tore it out—And the blood spurted from Tibur's mangled throat; Tibur's knees buckled beneath him, and he lurched and fell at my feet…choking…his hands still feebly groping to clutch me…
I stood there, dazed, gasping for breath, the pulse roaring in my ears.
"Drink this, Lord!"
I looked up at Dara. She was holding a wine–skin to me. I took it with trembling hands, and drank deep. The good wine whipped through me. Suddenly I took it from my lips.
"The dark girl of the Rrrllya—Evalie. She is not with you."
"There she is. I set her on another horse. There was fighting, Lord."
I stared into Evalie's face. She looked back at me, brown eyes cold, implacable.
"Better use the rest of the wine to wash your face, Lord. You are no sight for any tender maid."
I passed my hand over my face, drew it away wet with blood.
"Tibur's blood, Dwayanu, thank the gods!"
She brought my horse forward. I felt better when I was in its saddle. I glanced down at Tibur. His fingers were still faintly twitching. I looked about me. There was a shattered company of Karak's archers at the bridge–end. They raised their bows in salute.
"Dwayanu! Live Dwayanu!"
My troop seemed strangely shrunken. I called—"Naral!"
"Dead, Dwayanu. I told you there had been fighting."
"Who killed her?"
"Never mind. I slew him. And those left of Tibur's escort have fled. And now what. Lord?"
"We wait for Lur."
"Not long shall we have to linger then, for here she comes."
There was the blast of a horn. I turned to see the Witch–woman come galloping over the square. Her red braids were loose, her sword was red, and she was nigh as battle–stained as I. With her rode a scant dozen of her women, half as many of her nobles.
I awaited her. She reined up before me, searching me with wild bright eyes.
I should have killed her as I had Tibur. I should have been hating her. But I found I was not hating her at all. All of hate I had held seemed to have poured out upon Tibur. No, I was not hating her.
She smiled faintly:
"You are hard to kill, Yellow–hair!"
"Dwayanu—Witch."
She glanced at me, half–contemptuously.
"You are no longer Dwayanu!"
"Try to convince these soldiers of that, Lur.”
"Oh, I know," she said, and stared down at Tibur. "So you killed the Smith. Well, at least you are still a man."
"Killed him for you, Lur!" I jeered. "Did I not promise you?"
She did not answer, only asked, as Dara had before her:
"And now what?"
"We wait here until Sirk is emptied. Then we ride to Karak, you beside me. I do not like you at my back, Witch–woman."
She spoke quietly to her women, then sat, head bent, thinking, with never another word for me.
I whispered to Dara:
"Can we trust the archers?"
She nodded.
"Bid them wait and march with us. Let them drag the body of Tibur into some corner."
For half an hour the soldiers came by, with prisoners, with horses, with cattle and other booty. Small troops of the nobles and their supporters galloped up, halted, and spoke, but, at my word and Lur's nod, passed on over the bridge. Most of the nobles showed dismayed astonishment at my resurrection; the soldiers gave me glad salute.
The last skeleton company came through the gap. I had been watching for Sri, but he was not with them, and I concluded that he had been taken to Karak with the earliest prisoners or had been killed.
"Come," I said to the Witch–woman. "Let your women go before us."
I rode over to Evalie, lifted her from her saddle and set her on my pommel. She made no resistance, but I felt her shrink from me. I knew she was thinking that she had but exchanged Tibur for another master, that to me she was only spoil of war. If my mind had not been so weary I suppose that would have hurt. But my mind was too weary to care.
We passed over the bridge, through the curling mists of steam. We were halfway to the forest when the Witch–woman threw back her head and sent forth a long, wailing call. The white wolves burst from the ferns. I gave command to the archers to set arrows. Lur shook her head.
"No need to harm them. They go to Sirk. They have earned their pay."
The white wolves coursed over the barren to the bridge–end, streamed over it, vanished. I heard them howling among the dead.
"I, too, keep my promises," said the Witch–woman.
We rode on, into the forest, back to Karak.
We were close to Karak when the drums of the Little People began beating.
The leaden weariness pressed down upon me increasingly. I struggled to keep awake. Tibur's stroke on my head had something to do with that, but I had taken other blows and eaten nothing since long before dawn. I could not think, much less plan what I was going to do after I had got back to Karak.
The drums of the Little People drove away my lethargy, brought me up wide–awake. They crashed out at first like a thunderburst across the white river. After that they settled down into a slow, measured rhythm filled with implacable menace. It was like Death standing on hollow graves and stamping on them before he marched.
At the first crash Evalie straightened, then sat listening with every nerve. I reined up my horse, and saw that the Witch–woman had also halted and was listening with all of Evalie's intentness. There was something inexplicably disturbing in that monotonous drumming. Something that reached beyond and outside of human experience—or reached before it. It was like thousands of bared hearts beating in unison, in one unalterable rhythm, not to be still till the hearts themselves stopped…inexorable…and increasing in steadily widening area…spreading, spreading…until they beat from all the land across white Nanbu.
I spoke to Lur.
"I am thinking that here is the last of my promises, Witch–woman. I killed Yodin, gave you Sirk, I slew Tibur—and here is your war with the Rrrllya."
I had not thought of how that might sound to Evalie! She turned and gave me one long level look of scorn; she said to the Witch–woman, coldly, in halting Uighur:
"It is war. Was that not what you expected when you dared to take me? It will be war until my people have me again. Best be careful how you use me."
The Witch–woman's control broke at that, all the long pent–up fires of her wrath bursting forth.
"Good! Now we shall wipe out your yellow dogs for once and all. And you shall be flayed, or bathed in the cauldron—or given to Khalk'ru. Win or lose—there will be little of you for your dogs to fight over. You shall be used as I choose."
"No," I said, "as I choose, Lur."
The blue eyes flamed on me at that. And the brown eyes met mine as scornfully as before.
"Give me a horse to ride. I do not like the touch of you—Dwayanu.''
"Nevertheless, you ride with me, Evalie."
We passed into Karak. The drums beat now loud, now low. But always with that unchanging, inexorable rhythm. They swelled and fell, swelled and fell. Like Death still stamping on the hollow graves—now fiercely—and now lightly.
There were many people in the streets. They stared at Evalie, and whispered. There were no shouts of welcome, no cheering. They seemed sullen, frightened. Then I knew they were listening so closely to the drums that they hardly knew we were passing. The drums were closer. I could hear them talking from point to point along the far bank of the river. The tongues of the talking drums rose plain above the others. And through their talking, repeated and repeated:
"Ev–ah–lee! Ev–ah–lee!"
We rode over the open square to the gate of the black citadel. There I
stopped.
"A truce, Lur."
She sent a mocking glance at Evalie.
"A truce! What need of a truce between you and me—Dwayanu?"
I said, quietly:
"I am tired of bloodshed. Among the captives are some of the Rrrllya. Let us bring them where they can talk with Evalie and with us two. We will then release a part of them, and send them across Nanbu with the message that no harm is intended Evalie. That we ask the Rrrllya to send us on the morrow an embassy empowered to arrange a lasting peace. And that when that peace is arranged they shall take Evalie back with them unharmed."
She said, smiling:
"So—Dwayanu—fears the dwarfs!"
I repeated:
"I am tired of bloodshed."
"Ah, me," she sighed. "And did I not once hear Dwayanu boast that he kept his promises—and was thereby persuaded to give him payment for them in advance! Ah, me—but Dwayanu is changed!"
She stung me there, but I managed to master my anger; I said:
"If you will not agree to this, Lur, then I myself will give the orders. But then we shall be a beleaguered city which is at its own throat. And easy prey for the enemy."
She considered this.
"So you want no war with the little yellow dogs? And it is your thought that if the girl is returned to them, there will be none? Then why wait? Why not send her back at once with the captives? Take them up to Nansur, parley with the dwarfs there. Drum talk would settle the matter in a little while—if you are right. Then we can sleep this night without the drums disturbing you."
That was true enough, but I read the malice in it. The truth was that I did not want Evalie sent back just then. If she were, then never, I knew, might I have a chance to justify myself with her, break down her distrust—have her again accept me as the Leif whom she had loved. But given a little time—I might. And the Witch–woman knew this.
"Not so quickly should it be done, Lur," I said, suavely. "That would be to make them think we fear them—as the proposal made you think I feared them. We need more than hasty drum talk to seal such treaty. No, we hold the girl as hostage until we make our terms."
She bent her head, thinking, then looked at me with clear eyes, and smiled.
"You are right, Dwayanu. I will send for the captives after I have rid myself of these stains of Sirk. They will be brought to your chamber. And in the meantime I will do more. I will order that word be sent the Rrrllya on Nansur that soon their captured fellows will be among them with a message. At the least it will give us time. And we need time, Dwayanu—both of us."
I looked at her sharply. She laughed, and gave her horse the spurs. I rode behind her through the gate and into the great enclosed square. It was crowded with soldiers and captives. Here the drumming was magnified. The drums seemed to be within the place itself, invisible and beaten by invisible drummers. The soldiers were plainly uneasy, the prisoners excited, and curiously defiant.
Passing into the citadel I called various officers who had not taken part in the attack on Sirk and gave orders that the garrison on the walls facing Nansur Bridge be increased. Also that an alarm should be sounded which would bring in the soldiers and people from the outer–lying posts and farms. I ordered the guard upon the river walls to be strengthened, and the people of the city be told that those who wished to seek shelter in the citadel could come, but must be in by dusk. It was a scant hour before nightfall. There would be little trouble in caring for them in that immense place. And all this I did in event of the message failing. If it failed, I had no desire to be part of a massacre in Karak, which would stand a siege until I could convince the Little People of my good faith. Or convince Evalie of it, and have her bring about a peace.
This done, I took Evalie to my own chambers, not those of the High–priest where the Black Octopus hovered over the three thrones, but a chain of comfortable rooms in another part of the citadel. The little troop, which had stood by me through the sack of Sirk and after, followed us. There I turned Evalie over to Dara. I was bathed, my wound dressed and bandaged, and clothed. Here the windows looked out over the river, and the drums beat through them maddeningly. I ordered food brought, and wine, and summoned Evalie. Dara brought her. She had been well cared for, but she would not eat with me. She said to me:
"I fear my people will have but scant faith in any messages you send, Dwayanu."
"Later we will talk of that other message, Evalie. I did not send it. And Tsantawu, dying in my arms, believed me when I told him I had not."
"I heard you say to Lur that you had promised her Sirk. You did not lie to her, Dwayanu—for Sirk is eaten. How can I believe you?"
I said: "You shall have proof that I speak truth, Evalie, Now, since you will not eat with me, go with Dara."
She had no fault to find with Dara. Dara was no lying traitor, but a soldier, and fighting in Sirk or elsewhere was part of her trade. She went with her.
I ate sparingly and drank heavily. The wine put new life in me, drove away what was left of weariness. I put sorrow for Jim resolutely aside for the moment, thinking of what I intended to do, and how best to do it. And then there was a challenge at the door, and the Witch–woman entered.
Her red braids crowned her and in them shone the sapphires. She bore not the slightest mark of the struggles of the day, nor sign of fatigue. Her eyes were bright and clear, her red lips smiling. Her low, sweet voice, her touch upon my arm, brought back memories I had thought gone with Dwayanu.
She called, and through the door came a file of soldiers, and with them a score of the Little People, unbound, hatred in their yellow eyes as they saw me, curiosity too. I spoke to them, gently. I sent for Evalie. She came, and the golden pygmies ran to her, threw themselves upon her like a crowd of children, twittering and trilling, stroking her hair, touching her feet and hands.
She laughed, called them one by one by name, then spoke rapidly. I could get little of what she said; by the shadow on Lur's face I knew she had understood nothing at all. I repeated to Evalie precisely what I had told Lur—and which, at least in part, she knew, for she had betrayed that she understood the Uighur, or the Ayjir, better than she had admitted. I translated from the tongue of the dwarfs for Lur.
The pact was speedily made. Half of the pygmies were to make their way at once over Nanbu to the garrison on the far side of the bridge. By the talking drums they would send our message to the stronghold of the Little People. If they accepted it, the beating of the war drums would cease. I said to Evalie:
"When they talk on their drums, let them say that nothing will be asked of them that was not contained in the old truce—and that death will no longer lie in wait for them when they cross the river."
The Witch–woman said:
"Just what does that mean, Dwayanu?"
"Now Sirk is done, there is no longer much need for that penalty, Lur. Let them gather their herbs and metals as they will; that is all."
"There is more in your mind than that—" Her eyes narrowed.
"They understood me, Evalie—but do you also tell them."
The Little People trilled among themselves; then ten of them stepped forward, those chosen to take the message. As they were moving away, I stopped them.
"If Sri escaped, let him come with the embassy. Better still—let him come before them. Send word through the drums that he may come as soon as he can. He has my safe–conduct, and shall stay with Evalie until all is settled."
They chattered over that, assented. The Witch–woman made no comment. For the first time I saw Evalie's eyes soften as she looked at me.
When the pygmies were gone, Lur walked to the door, and beckoned. Ouarda entered.
"Ouarda!"
I liked Ouarda. It was good to know she was alive. I went to her with outstretched hands. She took them.
"It was two of the soldiers, Lord. They had sisters in Sirk. They cut the ladder before we could stop them. They were slain," she said.
Would to God they had cut it before any could, have followed me!
Before I could speak, one of my captains knocked and entered.
"It is long after dusk and the gates are closed, Lord. All those who would come are behind them."
"Were there many, soldier?"
"No, Lord—not more than a hundred or so. The others refused."
"And did they say why they refused?"
"Is the question an order, Lord?"
"It is an order."
"They said they were safer where they were. That the Rrrllya had no quarrel with them, who were but meat for Khalk'ru."
"Enough, soldier!" The Witch–woman's voice was harsh. "Go! Take the Rrrllya with you."
The captain saluted, turned smartly and was gone with the dwarfs. I laughed.
"Soldiers cut our ladder for sympathy of those who fled Khalk'ru. The people fear the enemies of Khalk'ru less than they do their own kind who are his butchers! We do well to make peace with the Rrrllya, Lur."
I watched her face pale, then redden and saw the knuckles of her hands whiten as she clenched them. She smiled, poured herself wine, lifted it with a steady hand.
"I drink to your wisdom—Dwayanu!"
A strong soul—the Witch–woman's! A warrior's heart. Somewhat lacking in feminine softness, it was true. But it was no wonder that Dwayanu had loved her—in his way and as much as he could love a woman.
A silence dropped upon the chamber, intensified in some odd fashion by the steady beating of the drums. How long we sat in that silence I do not know. But suddenly the beat of the drums became fainter.
And then all at once the drums ceased entirely. The quiet brought a sense of unreality. I could feel the tense nerves loosening like springs long held taut. The abrupt silence made ears ache, slowed heart–beat.
"They have the message. They have accepted it," Evalie spoke.
The Witch–woman arose.
"You keep the girl beside you to–night, Dwayanu?"
"She sleeps in one of these rooms, Lur. She will be under guard. No one can reach her without passing through my room here," I looked at her, significantly. "And I sleep lightly. You need have no fear of her escape."
"I am glad the drums will not disturb your sleep—Dwayanu."
She gave me a mocking salute, and, with Ouarda, left me.
And suddenly the weariness dropped upon me again. I turned to Evalie, watching me with eyes in which I thought doubt of her own deep doubt had crept. Certainly there was no scorn, nor loathing in them. Well, now I had her where all this manoeuvring had been meant to bring her. Alone with me. And looking at her I felt that in the face of all she had seen of me, all she had undergone because of me—words were useless things. Nor could I muster them as I wanted. No, there would be plenty of time…in the morning, perhaps, when I had slept…or after I had done what I had to do…then she must believe…
"Sleep, Evalie. Sleep without fear…and believe that all that has been wrong is now becoming right. Go with Dara. You shall be well guarded. None can come to you except through this room, and here I will be. Sleep and fear nothing."
I called Dara, gave her instructions, and Evalie went with her. At the curtains masking the entrance to the next room she hesitated, half turned as though to speak, but did not. And not long after Dara returned. She said:
"She is already asleep, Dwayanu."
"As you should be, friend," I told her. "And all those others who stood by me this day. I think there is nothing to fear to–night. Select those whom you can trust and have them guard the corridor and my door. Where have you put her?"
"In the chamber next this, Lord."
"It would be better if you and the others slept here, Dara. There are half a dozen rooms for you. Have wine and food brought for you—plenty of it."
She laughed.
"Do you expect a siege, Dwayanu?"
"One never knows."
"You do not greatly trust Lur, Lord?"
"I trust her not at all, Dara."
She nodded, turned to go. Upon the impulse I said:
"Dara, would it make you sleep better to–night and those with you, and would it help you in picking your guard if I told you this: there will be no more sacrifices to Khalk'ru while I live?"
She started; her face lightened, softened. She thrust out her hand to me:
"Dwayanu—I had a sister who was given to Khalk'ru. Do you mean this?"
"By the life of my blood! By all the living gods! I mean it!"
"Sleep well, Lord!" Her voice was choked. She walked away, through the curtain, but not before I had seen the tears on her cheeks.
Well, a woman had a right to weep—even if she was a soldier. I myself had wept to–day.
I poured myself wine, sat thinking as I drank. Mainly my thoughts revolved around the enigma of Khalk'ru. And there was a good reason for that.
What was Khalk'ru?
I slipped the chain from round my neck, opened the locket and studied the ring. I closed it, and threw it on the table. Somehow I felt that it was better there than over my heart while I was doing this thinking.
Dwayanu had had his doubts about that dread Thing being any Spirit of the Void, and I, who now was Leif Langdon and a passive Dwayanu, had no doubts whatever that it was not. Yet I could not accept Barr's theory of mass hypnotism—and trickery was out of the question.
Whatever Khalk'ru might be, Khalk'ru—as the Witch–woman had said—was. Or at least that Shape which became material through ritual, ring and screen—was.
I thought that I might have put the experience in the temple of the oasis down as hallucination if it had not been repeated here in the Shadowed–land. But there could be no possible doubt about the reality of the sacrifice I had conducted; no possible doubt as to the destruction—absorption—dissolvement—of the twelve girls. And none of Yodin's complete belief in the power of the tentacle to remove me, and none of his complete effacement. And I thought that if the sacrifices and Yodin were standing in the wings laughing at me, as Barr had put it—then it was in the wings of a theatre in some other world than this. And there was the deep horror of the Little People, the horror of so many of the Ayjir—and there was the revolt in ancient Ayjirland born of this same horror, which had destroyed Ayjirland by civil war.
No, whatever the Thing was, no matter how repugnant to science its recognition as a reality might be—still it was Atavism, superstition—call it what Barr would—I knew the Thing was real! Not of this earth—no, most certainly not of this earth. Not even supernatural. Or rather, supernatural only insofar as it might come from another dimension or even another world which our five senses could not encompass.
And I reflected, now, that science and religion are really blood brothers, which is largely why they hate each other so, that scientists and religionists are quite alike in their dogmatism, their intolerance, and that every bitter battle of religion over some interpretation of creed or cult has its parallel in battles of science over a bone or rock.
Yet just as there are men in the churches whose minds have not become religiously fossilized, so there are men in the laboratories whose minds have not become scientifically fossilized…Einstein, who dared challenge all conceptions of space and time with his four dimensional space in which time itself was a dimension, and who followed that with proof of five dimensional space instead of the four which are all our senses can apprehend, and which apprehends one of them wrongly…the possibility of a dozen worlds spinning interlocked with this one…in the same space…the energy which we call matter of each of them keyed to the different vibration, and each utterly unaware of the other…and utterly overturning the old axiom that two bodies cannot occupy the same place at the same time.
And I thought—what if far and far back in time, a scientist of that day, one of the Ayjir people, had discovered all that! Had discovered the fifth dimension beyond length, breadth, thickness and time. Or had discovered one of those interlocking worlds whose matter streams through the interstices of the matter of ours. And discovering dimension or world, had found the way to make dwellers in that dimension or that other world both aware of and manifest to those of this. By sound and gesture, by ring and screen, had made a gateway through which such dwellers could come—or at least, appear! And then what a weapon this discoverer had—what a weapon the inevitable priests of that Thing would have! And did have ages gone, just as they had here in Karak.
If so, was it one dweller or many who lurked in those gateways for its drink of life? The memories bequeathed me by Dwayanu told me there had been other temples in Ayjirland besides that one of the oasis. Was it the same Being that appeared in each? Was the Shape that came from the shattered stone of the oasis the same that had fed in the temple of the mirage? Or were there many of them—dwellers in other dimension or other world—avidly answering the summons? Nor was it necessarily true that in their own place these Things had the form of the Kraken. That might be the shape, through purely natural laws, which entrance into this world forced upon them.
I thought over that for quite awhile. It seemed to me the best explanation of Khalk'ru. And if it was, then the way to be rid of Khalk'ru was to destroy his means of entrance. And that, I reflected, was precisely how the ancient Ayjirs had argued.
But it did not explain why only those of the old blood could summon—
I heard a low voice at the door. I walked softly over to it, listened. I opened the door and there was Lur, talking to the guards.
"What is it you are seeking, Lur?"
"To speak with you. I will keep you only a little time, Dwayanu."
I studied the Witch–woman. She stood, very quietly, in her eyes nothing of defiance nor resentment nor subtle calculation—only appeal. Her red braids fell over her white shoulders; she was without weapon or ornament. She looked younger than ever I had seen her, and somewhat forlorn. I felt no desire to mock her nor to deny her. I felt instead the stirrings of a deep pity.
"Enter, Lur—and say all that is in your mind."
I closed the door behind her. She walked over to the window, looked out into the dim greenly glimmering night. I went to her.
"Speak softly, Lur. The girl is asleep there in the next chamber. Let her rest."
She said, tonelessly:
"I wish you had never come here, Yellow–hair." I thought of Jim, and I answered:
"I wish that too, Witch–woman. But here I am." She leaned towards me, put her hand over my heart. "Why do you hate me so greatly?"
"I do not hate you, Lur. I have no hate left in me—except for one thing."
"And that—?"
Involuntarily I looked at the table. One candle shone there and its light fell on the locket that held the ring. Her glance followed mine. She said:
"What do you mean to do? Throw Karak open to the dwarfs? Mend Nansur? Rule here over Karak and the Rrrllya with their dark girl at your side? Is it that…and if it is that—what is to become of Lur? Answer me. I have the right to know. There is a bond between us…I loved you when you were Dwayanu…you know how well…"
"And would have killed me while I was still Dwayanu," I said, sombrely.
"Because I saw Dwayanu dying as you looked into the eyes of the stranger," she answered. "You whom Dwayanu had mastered was killing Dwayanu. I loved Dwayanu. Why should I not avenge him?"
"If you believe I am no longer Dwayanu, then I am the man whose friend you trapped and murdered—the man whose love you trapped and would have destroyed. And if that be so—what claim have you upon me, Lur?"
She did not answer for moments; then she said:
"I have some justice on my side. I tell you I loved Dwayanu. Something I knew of your case from the first, Yellow–hair. But I saw Dwayanu awaken within you. And I knew it was truly he! I knew, too, that as long as that friend of yours and the dark girl lived there was danger for Dwayanu. That was why I plotted to bring them into Sirk. I threw the dice upon the chance of killing them before you had seen them. Then, I thought, all would be well. There would be none left to rouse that in you which Dwayanu had mastered. I lost. I knew I had lost when by whim of Luka she threw you three together. And rage and sorrow caught me—and I did…what I did."
"Lur," I said, "answer me truly. That day you returned to the Lake of the Ghosts after pursuit of the two women—were they not your spies who bore that lying message into Sirk? And did you not wait until you learned my friend and Evalie were in the trap before you gave me word to march? And was it not in your thought that you would then—if I opened the way into Sirk—rid yourself not only of those two but of Dwayanu? For remember—you may have loved Dwayanu, but as he told you, you loved power better than he. And Dwayanu threatened your power. Answer me truly."
For the second time I saw tears in the eyes of the Witch–woman. She said, brokenly:
"I sent the spies, yes. I waited until the two were in the trap. But I never meant harm to Dwayanu!"
I did not believe her. But still I felt no anger, no hate. The pity grew.
"Lur, now I will tell you truth. It is not in my mind to rule with Evalie over Karak and the Rrrllya. I have no more desire for power. That went with Dwayanu. In the peace I make with the dwarfs, you shall rule over Karak—if that be your desire. The dark girl shall go back with them. She will not desire to remain in Karak. Nor do I…"
"You cannot go with her," she interrupted me. "Never would the yellow dogs trust you. Their arrows would be ever pointed at you."
I nodded—that thought had occurred to me long before.
"All that must adjust itself," I said. "But there shall be no more sacrifices. The gate of Khalk'ru shall be closed against him for ever. And I will close it."
Her eyes dilated.
"You mean—"
"I mean that I will shut Khalk'ru for ever from Karak—unless Khalk'ru proves stronger than I."
She wrung her hands, helplessly.
"What use rule over Karak to me then…how could I hold the people?"
"Nevertheless—I will destroy the gate of Khalk'ru."
She whispered:
"Gods—if I had Yodin's ring…"
I smiled at that.
"Witch–woman, you know as well as I that Khalk'ru comes to no woman's call."
The witch–lights flickered in her eyes; a flash of green shone through them.
"There is an ancient prophecy, Yellow–hair, that Dwayanu did not know—or had forgotten. It says that when Khalk'ru comes to a woman's call, he—stays! That was the reason no woman in ancient Ayjilrand might be priestess at the sacrifice."
I laughed at that.
"A fine pet, Lur—to add to your wolves."
She walked toward the door, paused.
"What if I could love you—as I loved Dwayanu? Could make you love me as Dwayanu loved me? And more! Send the dark girl to join her people and take the ban of death from them on this side of Nanbu. Would you let things be as they are—rule with me over Karak?"
I opened the door for her.
"I told you I no longer care for power, Lur."
She walked away.
I went back to the window, drew a chair to it, and sat thinking. Suddenly from somewhere close to the citadel I heard a wolf cry. Thrice it howled, then thrice again.
"Leif!"
I jumped to my feet. Evalie was beside me. She peered at me through the veils of her hair; her clear eyes shone upon me—no longer doubting, hating, fearing. They were as they were of old.
"Evalie!"
My arms went round her; my lips found hers.
"I listened, Leif!"
"You believe, Evalie!"
She kissed me, held me tight.
"But she was right—Leif. You could not go with me again into the land of the Little People. Never, never would they understand. And I would not dwell in Karak."
"Will you go with me, Evalie—to my own land? After I have done what I must do…and if I am not destroyed in its doing?"
"I will go with you, Leif!"
And she wept awhile, and after another while she fell asleep in my arms. And I lifted her, and carried her into her chamber and covered her with the sleep silks. Nor did she awaken.
I returned to my own room. As I passed the table I picked up the locket, started to put it round my neck. I threw it back. Never would I wear that chain again, I dropped upon the bed, sword at hand. I slept.
Twice I awakened. The first time it was the howling of the wolves that aroused me. It was as though they were beneath my window. I listened drowsily, and sank back to sleep.
The second time I came wide awake from a troubled dream. Some sound in the chamber had roused me, of that I was sure. My hand dropped to my sword lying on the floor beside my bed. I had the feeling that there was someone in the room. I could see nothing in the green darkness that filled the chamber. I called, softly:
"Evalie! Is that you?"
There was no answer, no sound.
I sat up in the bed, even thrust a leg out to rise. And then I remembered the guards at my door, and Dara and her soldiers beyond, and I told myself that it had been only my troubled dream that had awakened me. Yet for a time I lay awake listening, sword in hand. And then the silence lulled me back to sleep.
There was a knocking upon my door, and I struggled out of that sleep. I saw that it was well after dawn. I went to the door softly so that I might not awaken Evalie. I opened it, and there with the guards was Sri. The little man had come well armed, with spear and sickle–sword and between his shoulders one of the small, surprisingly resonant talking drums. He looked at me in the friendliest fashion. I patted his hand and pointed to the curtains.
"Evalie is there, Sri. Go waken her."
He trotted past me. I gave greeting to the guards, and turned to follow Sri. He stood at the curtains, looking at me with eyes in which was now no friendliness at all. He said:
"Evalie is not there."
I stared at him, incredulously, brushed by him and into that chamber. It was empty. I crossed to the pile of silks and cushions on which Evalie had slept, touched them. There was no warmth. I went, Sri at my heels, into the next room. Dara and a half dozen of the women lay there, asleep. Evalie was not among them. I touched Dara on the shoulder. She sat up, yawning.
"Dara—the girl is gone!"
"Gone!" she stared at me as incredulously as I had at the golden pygmy. She leaped to her feet, ran to the empty room, then with me through the other chambers. There lay the soldier women, asleep, but not Evalie.
I ran back to my own room, and to its door. A bitter rage began to possess me. Swiftly, harshly, I questioned the guards. They had seen no one. None had entered; none had gone forth. The golden pygmy listened, his eyes never leaving me.
I turned toward Evalie's room. I passed the table on which I had thrown the locket. My hand fell on it, lifted it; it was curiously light…I opened it…The ring of Khalk'ru was not there! I glared at the empty locket—and like a torturing flame realization of what its emptiness and the vanishment of Evalie might signify came to me. I groaned, leaned against the table to keep from falling.
"Drum, Sri! Call your people! Bid them come quickly! There may yet be time!"
The golden pygmy hissed; his eyes became little pools of yellow fire. He could not have known all the horror of my thoughts—but he read enough. He leaped to the window, swung his drum and sent forth call upon call—peremptory, raging, vicious. At once he was answered—answered from Nansur, and then from all the river and beyond it the drums of the Little People roared out.
Would Lur hear them? She could not help but hear them…but would she heed…would their threat stop her…it would tell her that I was awake and that the Little People knew of their betrayal…and Evalie's.
God! If she did hear—was it in time to save Evalie?
"Quick, Lord!" Dara called from the curtains. The dwarf and I ran through. She pointed to the side of the wall. There, where one of the carved stones jointed another, hung a strip of silk.
"A door there, Dwayanu! That is how they took her. They went hurriedly. The cloth caught when the stone closed."
I looked for something to batter at the stone. But Dara was pressing here and there. The stone swung open. Sri darted past and into the black passage it had masked. I stumbled after him, Dara at my heels, the others following. It was a narrow passage, and not long. Its end was a solid wall of stone. And here Dara pressed again until that wall opened.
We burst into the chamber of the High–priest. The eyes of the Kraken stared at me and through me with their inscrutable malignancy. Yet it seemed to me that in them now was challenge.
All my senseless fury, all blind threshing of my rage, fell from me. A cold deliberation, an ordered purpose that had in it nothing of haste took its place…Is it too late to save Evalie?…It is not too late to destroy you, my enemy…
"Dara—get horses for us. Gather quickly as many as you can trust. Take only the strongest. Have them ready at the gate of the road to the temple…We go to end Khalk'ru. Tell them that."
I spoke to the golden pygmy.
"I do not know if I can help Evalie. But I go to put an end to Khalk'ru. Do you wait for your people—or do you go with me?"
"I go with you."
I knew where the Witch–woman dwelt in the black citadel, and it was not far away. I knew I would not find her there, but I must be sure. And she might have taken Evalie to the Lake of the Ghosts, I was thinking as I went on, past groups of silent, uneasy, perplexed and saluting soldiers. But deep in me I knew she had not. Deep within me I knew that it had been Lur who had awakened me in the night. Lur, who had stolen through the curtains to take the ring of Khalk'ru. And there was only one reason why she should have done that. No, she would not be at the Lake of the Ghosts.
Yet, if she had come into my room—why had she not slain me? Or had she meant to do this, and had my awakening and calling out to Evalie stayed her? Had she feared to go further? Or had she deliberately spared me?
I reached her rooms. She was not there. None of her women was there. The place was empty, not even soldiers on guard.
I broke into a run. The golden pygmy followed me, shrilling, javelins in left hand, sickle–sword in right. We came to the gate to the temple road.
There were three or four hundred soldiers awaiting me. Mounted—and every one a woman. I threw myself on a horse Dara held for me, swung Sri up on the saddle. We raced toward the temple.
We were half–way there when out from the trees that bordered the temple road poured the white wolves. They sprang from the sides like a white torrent, threw themselves upon the riders. They checked our rush, our horses stumbled, falling over those the fangs of the wolves had dropped in that swift, unexpected ambuscade; soldiers falling with them, ripped and torn by the wolves before they could struggle to their feet. We milled among them—horses and men and wolves in a whirling, crimson–flecked ring.
Straight at my throat leaped the great dog–wolf, leader of Lur's pack, green eyes naming. I had no time for sword thrust. I caught its throat in my left hand, lifted it and flung it over my back. Even so, its fangs had struck and gashed me.
We were through the wolves. What was left of them came coursing behind us. But they had taken toll of my troop.
I heard the clang of an anvil…thrice stricken…the anvil of Tubalka!
God! It was true…Lur in the temple…and Evalie…and Khalk'ru!
We swept up to the door of the temple. I heard voices raised in the ancient chant. The entrance swarmed…It bristled with swords of the nobles, women and men.
"Ride through them, Dara! Ride them down!"
We swept through them like a ram. Sword against sword, hammers and battleaxes beating at them, horses trampling them.
The shrill song of Sri never ceased. His javelin thrust, his sickle–sword slashed.
We burst into Khalk'ru's temple. The chanting stopped. The chanters arose against us; they struck with sword and axe and hammer at us; they stabbed and hacked our horses; pulled us down. The amphitheatre was a raging cauldron of death…
The lip of the platform was before me. I spurred my horse to it, stood upon its back and leaped upon the platform. Close to my right was the anvil of Tubalka; beside it, hammer raised to smite, was Ouarda. I heard the roll of drums, the drums of Khalk'ru's evocation. The backs of the priests were bent over them.
In front of the priests, the ring of Khalk'ru raised high, stood Lur.
And between her and the bubble ocean of yellow stone that was the gate of Khalk'ru, fettered dwarfs swung two by two in the golden girdles…
Within the warrior's ring—Evalie!
The Witch–woman never looked at me; she never looked behind her at the roaring cauldron of the amphitheatre where the soldiers and nobles battled.
She launched into the ritual!
Shouting, I rushed on Ouarda. I wrested the great sledge from her hands. I hurled it straight at the yellow screen…straight at the head of Khalk'ru. With every ounce of my strength I hurled that great hammer.
The screen cracked! The hammer was thrown back from it…fell.
The Witch–woman's voice went on…and on…never faltering.
There was a wavering in the cracked screen. The Kraken floating in the bubble ocean seemed to draw back…to thrust forward…
I ran toward it…to the hammer.
An instant I halted beside Evalie. I thrust my hands through the golden girdle, broke it as though it had been wood. I dropped my sword at her feet.
"Guard yourself, Evalie!"
I picked up the hammer. I raised it. The eyes of Khalk'ru moved… they glared at me, were aware of me…the tentacles stirred! And the paralysing cold began to creep round me…I threw all my will against it.
I smashed the sledge of Tubalka against the yellow stone…again… and again—
The tentacles of Khalk'ru stretched toward me!
There was a crystalline crashing, like a lightning bolt striking close. The yellow stone of the screen shattered. It rained round me like sleet driven by an icy hurricane. There was an earthquake trembling. The temple rocked. My arms fell, paralysed. The hammer of Tubalka dropped from hands that could no longer feel it. The icy cold swirled about me …higher…higher…there was a shrill and dreadful shrieking…
For an instant the shape of the Kraken hovered where the screen had been. Then it shrank. It seemed to be sucked away into immeasurable distances. It vanished.
And life rushed back into me!
There were jagged streamers of the yellow stone upon the rocky floor…black of the Kraken within them…I beat them into dust…
"Leif!"
Evalie's voice, shrill, agonized. I swung round. Lur was rushing upon me, sword raised. Before I could move Evalie had darted between us, flung herself in front of the Witch–woman, struck at her with my own sword.
The blade of Lur parried the stroke, swept in…bit deep…and Evalie fell…Lur leaped toward me…I watched her come, not moving, not caring…there was blood upon her sword…Evalie's blood…
Something like a flash of light touched her breast. She halted as though a hand had thrust her back. Slowly, she dropped to her knees. She sank to the rock.
Over the rim of the platform leaped the dog–wolf, howling as it ran. It hurled itself straight at me. There was another flash of light. The dog–wolf somersaulted and fell—in mid–leap.
I saw Sri, crouching. One of his javelins was in Lur's breast, the mate to it in the dog–wolf's throat…I saw the golden pygmy running to Evalie…saw her rise, holding a hand to a shoulder from which streamed blood…
I walked toward Lur, stiffly, like an automaton. The white wolf tried to stagger to its feet, then crawled to the Witch–woman, dragging itself on its belly. It reached her before I did. It dropped its head upon her breast. It turned its head, and lay glaring at me, dying.
The Witch–woman looked up at me. Her eyes were soft and her mouth had lost all cruelty. It was tender. She smiled at me.
"I wish you had never come here, Yellow–hair!"
And then—
"Ai—and—Ai! My Lake of the Ghosts!"
Her hand crept up, and dropped on the head of the dying wolf, caressingly. She sighed—
The Witch–woman was dead.
I looked into the awed faces of Evalie and Dara. "Evalie—your wound—"
"Not deep, Leif…Soon it will heal…it does not matter…"
Dara said:
"Hail—Dwayanu! It is a great thing you have done this day!"
She dropped on her knees, kissed my hand. And now I saw that those of mine who had survived the battle in the temple had come up on the platform, and were kneeling—to me. And that Ouarda lay beside Tubalka's anvil, and that Sri too was on his knees, staring at me, eyes filled with worship.
I heard the tumult of the drums of the Little People…no longer on Nanbu's far side…in Karak…and closer.
Dara spoke again:
"Let us be going back to Karak, Lord. It is now all yours to rule."
I said to Sri:
"Sound your drum, Sri. Tell them that Evalie lives. That Lur is dead. That the gate of Khalk'ru is closed forever. Let there be no more killing."
Sri answered:
"What you have done has wiped out all war between my people and Karak. Evalie and you we will obey. I will tell them what you have done."
He swung the little drum, raised his hands to beat it I stopped him.
"Wait, Sri, I shall not be here to obey."
Dara cried: "Dwayanu—you will not leave us!"
"Yes, Dara…I go now to that place whence I came…I do not return to Karak. I am done with the Little People, Sri."
Evalie spoke, breathlessly:
"What of me—Leif?"
I put my hands on her shoulders, looked into her eyes:
"Last night you whispered that you would go with me, Evalie. I release you from that promise…I am thinking you would be happier here with your small folk…"
She said, steadily:
"I know where happiness lies for me. I hold to my promise…unless you do not want me…"
"I do want you—dark girl!"
She turned to Sri: "Carry my love to my people, Sri. I shall not see them again."
The little man clung to her, cast himself down before her, wailed and wept while she talked to him. At last he squatted on his haunches, and stared long at the shattered gate of the Kraken. I saw the secret knowledge touch him. He came to me, held up his arms for me to lift him. He raised my lids and looked deep into my eyes. He thrust his hand in my breast, and placed his head on my breast, and listened to the beating of my heart. He dropped, bent Evalie's head to his, whispering.
Dara said: "Dwayanu's will is our will. Yet it is hard to understand why he will not stay with us."
"Sri knows…more than I do. I cannot, Dara."
Evalie came to me. Her eyes were bright with unshed tears.
"Sri says we must go now, Leif…quickly. My people must—not see me. He will tell them a tale upon his drum…there will be no fighting…and henceforth there will be peace."
The golden pygmy began to beat the talking drum. At the first strokes the hosts of other drums were silent. When he had ended they began again…jubilant, triumphant…until in them crept a note of questioning. Once more he beat a message…the answer came—angry, peremptory—in some queer fashion, incredulous.
Sri said to me: "Haste! Haste!"
Dara said: "We stay with you, Dwayanu, until the last."
I nodded, and looked at Lur. Upon her hand the ring of Khalk'ru sent out a sudden gleam. I went to her, lifted the dead hand and took from it the ring. I smashed it on the anvil of Tubalka as I had the ring of Yodin.
Evalie said: "Sri knows a way that will lead us out into your world, Leif. It lies at the head of Nanbu. He will take us."
"Is the way past the Lake of Ghosts, Evalie?"
"I will ask him…yes, it passes there."
"That is good. We go into a country where the clothing I wear would be hardly fitting. And some provision must be made for you."
We rode from the temple with Sri on my saddle, and Evalie and Dara on either side. The drums were very close. They were muted when we emerged from the forest upon the road. We went swiftly. It was mid–afternoon when we reached the Lake of the Ghosts. The drawbridge was down. There was no one in the garrison. The Witch–woman's castle was empty. I searched, and found my roll of clothes; I stripped the finery of Dwayanu from me. I took a battle–ax, thrust a short sword in my belt, picked javelins for Evalie and myself. They would help us win through, would be all we had to depend upon to get us food later on. We took food with us from Lur's castle, and skins to clothe Evalie when she passed from the Mirage.
I did not go up into the chamber of the Witch–woman. I heard the whispering of the waterfall—and did not dare to look upon it.
All the rest of that afternoon we galloped along the white river's banks. The drums of the Little People followed us…searching… questioning…calling…"Ev–ah–lee…Ev–ah–lee… Ev–ah–lee…"
By nightfall we had come to the cliffs at the far end of the valley. Here Nanbu poured forth in a mighty torrent from some subterranean source. We picked our way across. Sri led us far into a ravine running steeply upward, and here we camped.
And that night I sat thinking long of what Evalie must meet in that new world awaiting her beyond the Mirage—the world of sun and stars and wind and cold. I thought long of what must be done to shield her until she could adjust herself to that world. And I listened to the drums of the Little People calling her, and I watched her while she slept, and wept and smiled in dream.
She must be taught to breathe. I knew that when she emerged from this atmosphere in which she had lived since babyhood, she would cease instantly to breathe—deprivation of the accustomed stimulus of the carbon–dioxide would bring that about at once. She must will herself to breathe until the reflexes again became automatic and she need give them no conscious thought. And at night, when she slept, this would be trebly difficult. I would have to remain awake, watch beside her.
And she must enter this new world with eyes bandaged, blind, until the nerves accustomed to the green luminosity of the Mirage could endure the stronger light. Warm clothing we could contrive from the skins and furs. But the food—what was it Jim had said in the long and long ago—that those who had eaten the food of the Little People would die if they ate other. Well, that was true in part. Yet, only in part—it could be managed.
With dawn came a sudden memory—the pack I had hidden on Nanbu's bank when we had plunged into the white river with the wolves at our heels. If that could be found, it would help solve the problem of Evalie's clothing at least. I told Dara about it. And she and Sri set out to find it. And while they were gone the soldier–women foraged for food and I instructed Evalie upon what she must do to cross in safety that bridge which lay, perilous, between her world and mine.
Two days they were gone—but they had found the pack. They brought word of peace between the Ayjir and the Little People. As for me—
Dwayanu the Deliverer had come even as the prophecy had promised… had come and freed them from the ancient doom…and had gone back as was his right to that place from which, answering the prophecy, he had come…and had taken with him Evalie as was also his right. Sri had spread the tale.
And next morning when the light showed that the sun had risen over the peaks that girdled the Valley of the Mirage, we set forth—Evalie like a slim boy beside me.
We climbed until we were within the green mists. And here we bade farewell, Sri clinging to Evalie, kissing her hands and feet, weeping. And Dara clasped my shoulders:
"You will come back to us, Dwayanu? We will be waiting!"
It was like the echo of the Uighur captain's voice—long and long ago…
I turned and began to climb, Evalie following. I thought that so might Euridice have followed her lover up from the Land of Shades in another long and long ago.
The figures of Sri and the watching women became dim. They were hidden under the green mists…
I felt the bitter cold touch my face. I caught Evalie up in my arms—and climbed up and on—and staggered at last out into the sun–lit warmth of the slopes beyond the pit of the precipices.
The day dawned when we had won the long, hard fight for Evalie's life. Not easily was the grip of the Mirage loosed. We turned our faces to the South and set our feet upon the Southward trail.
And yet…
Ai! Lur—Witch–woman! I see you lying there, smiling with lips grown tender—the—white wolf's head upon your breast! And Dwayanu still lives within me!