<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>FOUR WEIRD TALES</h1>
<h3>BY</h3>
<h2>ALGERNON BLACKWOOD</h2>
<h3>INCLUDING:</h3>
<h4>
<SPAN href="#The_Insanity_of_Jones">The Insanity of Jones</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#The_Man_Who_Found_Out">The Man Who Found Out</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#The_Glamour_of_the_Snow">The Glamour of the Snow</SPAN><br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#Sand">Sand</SPAN><br/></h4>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h3>A NOTE ON THE TEXT</h3>
<p>These stories first appeared in Blackwood's story collections:
"The Insanity of Jones" in <i>The Listener and Other Stories</i> (1907);
"The Man Who Found Out" in <i>The Wolves of God and Other Fey Stories</i> (1921);
"The Glamour of the Snow," and "Sand" in <i>Pan's Garden</i> (1912).</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="The_Insanity_of_Jones" id="The_Insanity_of_Jones"></SPAN><i>The Insanity of Jones</i></h2>
<h2>(A Study in Reincarnation)</h2>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>Adventures come to the adventurous, and mysterious
things fall in the way of those who, with wonder and imagination,
are on the watch for them; but the majority of people go past the
doors that are half ajar, thinking them closed, and fail to notice the
faint stirrings of the great curtain that hangs ever in the form of appearances
between them and the world of causes behind.</p>
<p>For only to the few whose inner senses have been quickened,
perchance by some strange suffering in the depths, or by a natural
temperament bequeathed from a remote past, comes the knowledge,
not too welcome, that this greater world lies ever at their elbow,
and that any moment a chance combination of moods and
forces may invite them to cross the shifting frontier.</p>
<p>Some, however, are born with this awful certainty in their hearts,
and are called to no apprenticeship, and to this select company
Jones undoubtedly belonged.</p>
<p>All his life he had realised that his senses brought to him merely
a more or less interesting set of sham appearances; that space, as
men measure it, was utterly misleading; that time, as the clock
ticked it in a succession of minutes, was arbitrary nonsense; and, in
fact, that all his sensory perceptions were but a clumsy representation
of <i>real</i> things behind the curtain—things he was for ever trying
to get at, and that sometimes he actually did get at.</p>
<p>He had always been tremblingly aware that he stood on the borderland
of another region, a region where time and space were merely
forms of thought, where ancient memories lay open to the sight,
and where the forces behind each human life stood plainly revealed
and he could see the hidden springs at the very heart of the world.
Moreover, the fact that he was a clerk in a fire insurance office, and
did his work with strict attention, never allowed him to forget for
one moment that, just beyond the dingy brick walls where the hundred
men scribbled with pointed pens beneath the electric lamps,
there existed this glorious region where the important part of himself
dwelt and moved and had its being. For in this region he
pictured himself playing the part of a spectator to his ordinary
workaday life, watching, like a king, the stream of events, but untouched
in his own soul by the dirt, the noise, and the vulgar commotion
of the outer world.</p>
<p>And this was no poetic dream merely. Jones was not playing
prettily with idealism to amuse himself. It was a living, working belief.
So convinced was he that the external world was the result of a
vast deception practised upon him by the gross senses, that when he
stared at a great building like St. Paul's he felt it would not very
much surprise him to see it suddenly quiver like a shape of jelly and
then melt utterly away, while in its place stood all at once revealed
the mass of colour, or the great intricate vibrations, or the splendid
sound—the spiritual idea—which it represented in stone.</p>
<p>For something in this way it was that his mind worked.</p>
<p>Yet, to all appearances, and in the satisfaction of all business
claims, Jones was normal and unenterprising. He felt nothing but
contempt for the wave of modern psychism. He hardly knew the
meaning of such words as "clairvoyance" and "clairaudience." He
had never felt the least desire to join the Theosophical Society and
to speculate in theories of astral-plane life, or elementals. He attended
no meetings of the Psychical Research Society, and knew no
anxiety as to whether his "aura" was black or blue; nor was he conscious
of the slightest wish to mix in with the revival of cheap occultism
which proves so attractive to weak minds of mystical
tendencies and unleashed imaginations.</p>
<p>There were certain things he <i>knew</i>, but none he cared to argue
about; and he shrank instinctively from attempting to put names to
the contents of this other region, knowing well that such names
could only limit and define things that, according to any standards
in use in the ordinary world, were simply undefinable and illusive.</p>
<p>So that, although this was the way his mind worked, there was
clearly a very strong leaven of common sense in Jones. In a word,
the man the world and the office knew as Jones <i>was</i> Jones. The
name summed him up and labelled him correctly—John Enderby
Jones.</p>
<p>Among the things that he <i>knew</i>, and therefore never cared to
speak or speculate about, one was that he plainly saw himself as the
inheritor of a long series of past lives, the net result of painful evolution,
always as himself, of course, but in numerous different bodies
each determined by the behaviour of the preceding one. The
present John Jones was the last result to date of all the previous
thinking, feeling, and doing of John Jones in earlier bodies and in
other centuries. He pretended to no details, nor claimed distinguished
ancestry, for he realised his past must have been utterly
commonplace and insignificant to have produced his present; but he
was just as sure he had been at this weary game for ages as that he
breathed, and it never occurred to him to argue, to doubt, or to ask
questions. And one result of this belief was that his thoughts dwelt
upon the past rather than upon the future; that he read much history,
and felt specially drawn to certain periods whose spirit he understood
instinctively as though he had lived in them; and that he
found all religions uninteresting because, almost without exception,
they start from the present and speculate ahead as to what men shall
become, instead of looking back and speculating why men have got
here as they are.</p>
<p>In the insurance office he did his work exceedingly well, but
without much personal ambition. Men and women he regarded as
the impersonal instruments for inflicting upon him the pain or
pleasure he had earned by his past workings, for chance had no
place in his scheme of things at all; and while he recognised that the
practical world could not get along unless every man did his work
thoroughly and conscientiously, he took no interest in the accumulation
of fame or money for himself, and simply, therefore, did his
plain duty, with indifference as to results.</p>
<p>In common with others who lead a strictly impersonal life, he
possessed the quality of utter bravery, and was always ready to face
any combination of circumstances, no matter how terrible, because
he saw in them the just working-out of past causes he had himself
set in motion which could not be dodged or modified. And whereas
the majority of people had little meaning for him, either by way of
attraction or repulsion, the moment he met some one with whom
he felt his past had been <i>vitally</i> interwoven his whole inner being
leapt up instantly and shouted the fact in his face, and he regulated
his life with the utmost skill and caution, like a sentry on watch for
an enemy whose feet could already be heard approaching.</p>
<p>Thus, while the great majority of men and women left him
uninfluenced—since he regarded them as so many souls merely
passing with him along the great stream of evolution—there were,
here and there, individuals with whom he recognised that his smallest
intercourse was of the gravest importance. These were persons
with whom he knew in every fibre of his being he had accounts to
settle, pleasant or otherwise, arising out of dealings in past lives; and
into his relations with these few, therefore, he concentrated as it
were the efforts that most people spread over their intercourse with
a far greater number. By what means he picked out these few individuals
only those conversant with the startling processes of the
subconscious memory may say, but the point was that Jones believed
the main purpose, if not quite the entire purpose, of his present
incarnation lay in his faithful and thorough settling of these
accounts, and that if he sought to evade the least detail of such settling,
no matter how unpleasant, he would have lived in vain, and
would return to his next incarnation with this added duty to perform.
For according to his beliefs there was no Chance, and could
be no ultimate shirking, and to avoid a problem was merely to
waste time and lose opportunities for development.</p>
<p>And there was one individual with whom Jones had long understood
clearly he had a very large account to settle, and towards the
accomplishment of which all the main currents of his being seemed
to bear him with unswerving purpose. For, when he first entered
the insurance office as a junior clerk ten years before, and through a
glass door had caught sight of this man seated in an inner room, one
of his sudden overwhelming flashes of intuitive memory had burst
up into him from the depths, and he had seen, as in a flame of blinding
light, a symbolical picture of the future rising out of a dreadful
past, and he had, without any act of definite volition, marked down
this man for a real account to be settled.</p>
<p>"With <i>that</i> man I shall have much to do," he said to himself, as
he noted the big face look up and meet his eye through the glass.
"There is something I cannot shirk—a vital relation out of the past
of both of us."</p>
<p>And he went to his desk trembling a little, and with shaking
knees, as though the memory of some terrible pain had suddenly
laid its icy hand upon his heart and touched the scar of a great horror.
It was a moment of genuine terror when their eyes had met
through the glass door, and he was conscious of an inward shrinking
and loathing that seized upon him with great violence and convinced
him in a single second that the settling of this account would
be almost, perhaps, more than he could manage.</p>
<p>The vision passed as swiftly as it came, dropping back again into
the submerged region of his consciousness; but he never forgot it,
and the whole of his life thereafter became a sort of natural though
undeliberate preparation for the fulfilment of the great duty when
the time should be ripe.</p>
<p>In those days—ten years ago—this man was the Assistant Manager,
but had since been promoted as Manager to one of the company's
local branches; and soon afterwards Jones had likewise
found himself transferred to this same branch. A little later, again,
the branch at Liverpool, one of the most important, had been in
peril owing to mismanagement and defalcation, and the man had
gone to take charge of it, and again, by mere chance apparently,
Jones had been promoted to the same place. And this pursuit of the
Assistant Manager had continued for several years, often, too, in the
most curious fashion; and though Jones had never exchanged a single
word with him, or been so much as noticed indeed by the great
man, the clerk understood perfectly well that these moves in the
game were all part of a definite purpose. Never for one moment did
he doubt that the Invisibles behind the veil were slowly and surely
arranging the details of it all so as to lead up suitably to the climax
demanded by justice, a climax in which himself and the Manager
would play the leading <i>rôles</i>.</p>
<p>"It is inevitable," he said to himself, "and I feel it may be terrible;
but when the moment comes I shall be ready, and I pray God that I
may face it properly and act like a man."</p>
<p>Moreover, as the years passed, and nothing happened, he felt the
horror closing in upon him with steady increase, for the fact was
Jones hated and loathed the Manager with an intensity of feeling he
had never before experienced towards any human being. He shrank
from his presence, and from the glance of his eyes, as though he remembered
to have suffered nameless cruelties at his hands; and he
slowly began to realise, moreover, that the matter to be settled between
them was one of very ancient standing, and that the nature of
the settlement was a discharge of accumulated punishment which
would probably be very dreadful in the manner of its fulfilment.</p>
<p>When, therefore, the chief cashier one day informed him that the
man was to be in London again—this time as General Manager of
the head office—and said that he was charged to find a private secretary
for him from among the best clerks, and further intimated
that the selection had fallen upon himself, Jones accepted the
promotion quietly, fatalistically, yet with a degree of inward
loathing hardly to be described. For he saw in this merely another
move in the evolution of the inevitable Nemesis which he simply
dared not seek to frustrate by any personal consideration; and at the
same time he was conscious of a certain feeling of relief that the suspense
of waiting might soon be mitigated. A secret sense of satisfaction,
therefore, accompanied the unpleasant change, and Jones was
able to hold himself perfectly well in hand when it was carried into
effect and he was formally introduced as private secretary to the
General Manager.</p>
<p>Now the Manager was a large, fat man, with a very red face and
bags beneath his eyes. Being short-sighted, he wore glasses that
seemed to magnify his eyes, which were always a little bloodshot.
In hot weather a sort of thin slime covered his cheeks, for he perspired
easily. His head was almost entirely bald, and over his turn-down
collar his great neck folded in two distinct reddish collops of
flesh. His hands were big and his fingers almost massive in thickness.</p>
<p>He was an excellent business man, of sane judgment and firm
will, without enough imagination to confuse his course of action by
showing him possible alternatives; and his integrity and ability
caused him to be held in universal respect by the world of business
and finance. In the important regions of a man's character, however,
and at heart, he was coarse, brutal almost to savagery, without consideration
for others, and as a result often cruelly unjust to his helpless
subordinates.</p>
<p>In moments of temper, which were not infrequent, his face
turned a dull purple, while the top of his bald head shone by contrast
like white marble, and the bags under his eyes swelled till it
seemed they would presently explode with a pop. And at these
times he presented a distinctly repulsive appearance.</p>
<p>But to a private secretary like Jones, who did his duty regardless
of whether his employer was beast or angel, and whose mainspring
was principle and not emotion, this made little difference. Within
the narrow limits in which any one <i>could</i> satisfy such a man, he
pleased the General Manager; and more than once his piercing intuitive
faculty, amounting almost to clairvoyance, assisted the chief in
a fashion that served to bring the two closer together than might
otherwise have been the case, and caused the man to respect in his
assistant a power of which he possessed not even the germ himself.
It was a curious relationship that grew up between the two, and the
cashier, who enjoyed the credit of having made the selection, profited
by it indirectly as much as any one else.</p>
<p>So for some time the work of the office continued normally and
very prosperously. John Enderby Jones received a good salary, and
in the outward appearance of the two chief characters in this history
there was little change noticeable, except that the Manager grew fatter
and redder, and the secretary observed that his own hair was beginning
to show rather greyish at the temples.</p>
<p>There were, however, two changes in progress, and they both
had to do with Jones, and are important to mention.</p>
<p>One was that he began to dream evilly. In the region of deep
sleep, where the possibility of significant dreaming first develops itself,
he was tormented more and more with vivid scenes and pictures
in which a tall thin man, dark and sinister of countenance, and
with bad eyes, was closely associated with himself. Only the setting
was that of a past age, with costumes of centuries gone by, and the
scenes had to do with dreadful cruelties that could not belong to
modern life as he knew it.</p>
<p>The other change was also significant, but is not so easy to describe,
for he had in fact become aware that some new portion
of himself, hitherto unawakened, had stirred slowly into life out
of the very depths of his consciousness. This new part of himself
amounted almost to another personality, and he never observed its
least manifestation without a strange thrill at his heart.</p>
<p>For he understood that it had begun to <i>watch</i> the Manager!</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>II</h3>
<p>It was the habit of Jones, since he was compelled to work among
conditions that were utterly distasteful, to withdraw his mind
wholly from business once the day was over. During office hours he
kept the strictest possible watch upon himself, and turned the key
on all inner dreams, lest any sudden uprush from the deeps should
interfere with his duty. But, once the working day was over, the
gates flew open, and he began to enjoy himself.</p>
<p>He read no modern books on the subjects that interested him,
and, as already said, he followed no course of training, nor belonged
to any society that dabbled with half-told mysteries; but,
once released from the office desk in the Manager's room, he simply
and naturally entered the other region, because he was an old inhabitant,
a rightful denizen, and because he belonged there. It was,
in fact, really a case of dual personality; and a carefully drawn
agreement existed between Jones-of-the-fire-insurance-office and
Jones-of-the-mysteries, by the terms of which, under heavy penalties,
neither region claimed him out of hours.</p>
<p>For the moment he reached his rooms under the roof in Bloomsbury,
and had changed his city coat to another, the iron doors of the
office clanged far behind him, and in front, before his very eyes,
rolled up the beautiful gates of ivory, and he entered into the places
of flowers and singing and wonderful veiled forms. Sometimes he
quite lost touch with the outer world, forgetting to eat his dinner or
go to bed, and lay in a state of trance, his consciousness working far
out of the body. And on other occasions he walked the streets on
air, half-way between the two regions, unable to distinguish between
incarnate and discarnate forms, and not very far, probably,
beyond the strata where poets, saints, and the greatest artists have
moved and thought and found their inspiration. But this was only
when some insistent bodily claim prevented his full release, and
more often than not he was entirely independent of his physical
portion and free of the real region, without let or hindrance.</p>
<p>One evening he reached home utterly exhausted after the burden
of the day's work. The Manager had been more than usually brutal,
unjust, ill-tempered, and Jones had been almost persuaded out of
his settled policy of contempt into answering back. Everything
seemed to have gone amiss, and the man's coarse, underbred nature
had been in the ascendant all day long: he had thumped the desk
with his great fists, abused, found fault unreasonably, uttered outrageous
things, and behaved generally as he actually was—beneath
the thin veneer of acquired business varnish. He had done and said
everything to wound all that was woundable in an ordinary secretary,
and though Jones fortunately dwelt in a region from which he
looked down upon such a man as he might look down on the blundering
of a savage animal, the strain had nevertheless told severely
upon him, and he reached home wondering for the first time in his
life whether there was perhaps a point beyond which he would be
unable to restrain himself any longer.</p>
<p>For something out of the usual had happened. At the close of a
passage of great stress between the two, every nerve in the secretary's
body tingling from undeserved abuse, the Manager had suddenly
turned full upon him, in the corner of the private room where
the safes stood, in such a way that the glare of his red eyes, magnified
by the glasses, looked straight into his own. And at this very
second that other personality in Jones—the one that was ever
<i>watching</i>—rose up swiftly from the deeps within and held a mirror
to his face.</p>
<p>A moment of flame and vision rushed over him, and for one single
second—one merciless second of clear sight—he saw the Manager
as the tall dark man of his evil dreams, and the knowledge that
he had suffered at his hands some awful injury in the past crashed
through his mind like the report of a cannon.</p>
<p>It all flashed upon him and was gone, changing him from fire to
ice, and then back again to fire; and he left the office with the certain
conviction in his heart that the time for his final settlement with
the man, the time for the inevitable retribution, was at last drawing
very near.</p>
<p>According to his invariable custom, however, he succeeded in
putting the memory of all this unpleasantness out of his mind with
the changing of his office coat, and after dozing a little in his leather
chair before the fire, he started out as usual for dinner in the Soho
French restaurant, and began to dream himself away into the region
of flowers and singing, and to commune with the Invisibles that
were the very sources of his real life and being.</p>
<p>For it was in this way that his mind worked, and the habits of
years had crystallised into rigid lines along which it was now necessary
and inevitable for him to act.</p>
<p>At the door of the little restaurant he stopped short, a half-remembered
appointment in his mind. He had made an engagement
with some one, but where, or with whom, had entirely slipped his
memory. He thought it was for dinner, or else to meet just after dinner,
and for a second it came back to him that it had something to
do with the office, but, whatever it was, he was quite unable to recall
it, and a reference to his pocket engagement book showed only
a blank page. Evidently he had even omitted to enter it; and after
standing a moment vainly trying to recall either the time, place, or
person, he went in and sat down.</p>
<p>But though the details had escaped him, his subconscious memory
seemed to know all about it, for he experienced a sudden sinking
of the heart, accompanied by a sense of foreboding anticipation,
and felt that beneath his exhaustion there lay a centre of tremendous
excitement. The emotion caused by the engagement was at
work, and would presently cause the actual details of the appointment
to reappear.</p>
<p>Inside the restaurant the feeling increased, instead of passing:
some one was waiting for him somewhere—some one whom he had
definitely arranged to meet. He was expected by a person that very
night and just about that very time. But by whom? Where? A curious
inner trembling came over him, and he made a strong effort to
hold himself in hand and to be ready for anything that might come.</p>
<p>And then suddenly came the knowledge that the place of appointment
was this very restaurant, and, further, that the person he
had promised to meet was already here, waiting somewhere quite
close beside him.</p>
<p>He looked up nervously and began to examine the faces round
him. The majority of the diners were Frenchmen, chattering loudly
with much gesticulation and laughter; and there was a fair sprinkling
of clerks like himself who came because the prices were low
and the food good, but there was no single face that he recognised
until his glance fell upon the occupant of the corner seat opposite,
generally filled by himself.</p>
<p>"There's the man who's waiting for me!" thought Jones instantly.</p>
<p>He knew it at once. The man, he saw, was sitting well back into
the corner, with a thick overcoat buttoned tightly up to the chin.
His skin was very white, and a heavy black beard grew far up over
his cheeks. At first the secretary took him for a stranger, but when
he looked up and their eyes met, a sense of familiarity flashed across
him, and for a second or two Jones imagined he was staring at a
man he had known years before. For, barring the beard, it was the
face of an elderly clerk who had occupied the next desk to his own
when he first entered the service of the insurance company, and had
shown him the most painstaking kindness and sympathy in the
early difficulties of his work. But a moment later the illusion
passed, for he remembered that Thorpe had been dead at least five
years. The similarity of the eyes was obviously a mere suggestive
trick of memory.</p>
<p>The two men stared at one another for several seconds, and then
Jones began to act <i>instinctively</i>, and because he had to. He crossed
over and took the vacant seat at the other's table, facing him; for he
felt it was somehow imperative to explain why he was late, and how
it was he had almost forgotten the engagement altogether.</p>
<p>No honest excuse, however, came to his assistance, though his
mind had begun to work furiously.</p>
<p>"Yes, you <i>are</i> late," said the man quietly, before he could find a
single word to utter. "But it doesn't matter. Also, you had forgotten
the appointment, but that makes no difference either."</p>
<p>"I knew—that there was an engagement," Jones stammered,
passing his hand over his forehead; "but somehow—"</p>
<p>"You will recall it presently," continued the other in a gentle
voice, and smiling a little. "It was in deep sleep last night we arranged
this, and the unpleasant occurrences of to-day have for the
moment obliterated it."</p>
<p>A faint memory stirred within him as the man spoke, and a grove
of trees with moving forms hovered before his eyes and then vanished
again, while for an instant the stranger seemed to be capable
of self-distortion and to have assumed vast proportions, with wonderful
flaming eyes.</p>
<p>"Oh!" he gasped. "It was there—in the other region?"</p>
<p>"Of course," said the other, with a smile that illumined his whole
face. "You will remember presently, all in good time, and meanwhile
you have no cause to feel afraid."</p>
<p>There was a wonderful soothing quality in the man's voice, like
the whispering of a great wind, and the clerk felt calmer at once.
They sat a little while longer, but he could not remember that they
talked much or ate anything. He only recalled afterwards that the
head waiter came up and whispered something in his ear, and that
he glanced round and saw the other people were looking at him curiously,
some of them laughing, and that his companion then got up
and led the way out of the restaurant.</p>
<p>They walked hurriedly through the streets, neither of them
speaking; and Jones was so intent upon getting back the whole history
of the affair from the region of deep sleep, that he barely noticed
the way they took. Yet it was clear he knew where they were
bound for just as well as his companion, for he crossed the streets
often ahead of him, diving down alleys without hesitation, and the
other followed always without correction.</p>
<p>The pavements were very full, and the usual night crowds of
London were surging to and fro in the glare of the shop lights, but
somehow no one impeded their rapid movements, and they seemed
to pass through the people as if they were smoke. And, as they
went, the pedestrians and traffic grew less and less, and they soon
passed the Mansion House and the deserted space in front of the
Royal Exchange, and so on down Fenchurch Street and within sight
of the Tower of London, rising dim and shadowy in the smoky air.</p>
<p>Jones remembered all this perfectly well, and thought it was his
intense preoccupation that made the distance seem so short. But it
was when the Tower was left behind and they turned northwards
that he began to notice how altered everything was, and saw that
they were in a neighbourhood where houses were suddenly scarce,
and lanes and fields beginning, and that their only light was the
stars overhead. And, as the deeper consciousness more and more asserted
itself to the exclusion of the surface happenings of his mere
body during the day, the sense of exhaustion vanished, and he realised
that he was moving somewhere in the region of causes behind
the veil, beyond the gross deceptions of the senses, and released
from the clumsy spell of space and time.</p>
<p>Without great surprise, therefore, he turned and saw that his
companion had altered, had shed his overcoat and black hat, and
was moving beside him absolutely <i>without sound</i>. For a brief second
he saw him, tall as a tree, extending through space like a great
shadow, misty and wavering of outline, followed by a sound like
wings in the darkness; but, when he stopped, fear clutching at his
heart, the other resumed his former proportions, and Jones could
plainly see his normal outline against the green field behind.</p>
<p>Then the secretary saw him fumbling at his neck, and at the same
moment the black beard came away from the face in his hand.</p>
<p>"Then you <i>are</i> Thorpe!" he gasped, yet somehow without overwhelming
surprise.</p>
<p>They stood facing one another in the lonely lane, trees meeting
overhead and hiding the stars, and a sound of mournful sighing
among the branches.</p>
<p>"I am Thorpe," was the answer in a voice that almost seemed
part of the wind. "And I have come out of our far past to help you,
for my debt to you is large, and in this life I had but small opportunity
to repay."</p>
<p>Jones thought quickly of the man's kindness to him in the office,
and a great wave of feeling surged through him as he began to remember
dimly the friend by whose side he had already climbed,
perhaps through vast ages of his soul's evolution.</p>
<p>"To help me <i>now</i>?" he whispered.</p>
<p>"You will understand me when you enter into your real memory
and recall how great a debt I have to pay for old faithful kindnesses
of long ago," sighed the other in a voice like falling wind.</p>
<p>"Between us, though, there can be no question of <i>debt</i>," Jones
heard himself saying, and remembered the reply that floated to him
on the air and the smile that lightened for a moment the stern eyes
facing him.</p>
<p>"Not of debt, indeed, but of privilege."</p>
<p>Jones felt his heart leap out towards this man, this old friend,
tried by centuries and still faithful. He made a movement to seize
his hand. But the other shifted like a thing of mist, and for a moment
the clerk's head swam and his eyes seemed to fail.</p>
<p>"Then you are <i>dead</i>?" he said under his breath with a slight
shiver.</p>
<p>"Five years ago I left the body you knew," replied Thorpe. "I
tried to help you then instinctively, not fully recognising you. But
now I can accomplish far more."</p>
<p>With an awful sense of foreboding and dread in his heart, the
secretary was beginning to understand.</p>
<p>"It has to do with—with—?"</p>
<p>"Your past dealings with the Manager," came the answer, as the
wind rose louder among the branches overhead and carried off
the remainder of the sentence into the air.</p>
<p>Jones's memory, which was just beginning to stir among the
deepest layers of all, shut down suddenly with a snap, and he followed
his companion over fields and down sweet-smelling lanes
where the air was fragrant and cool, till they came to a large house,
standing gaunt and lonely in the shadows at the edge of a wood.
It was wrapped in utter stillness, with windows heavily draped in
black, and the clerk, as he looked, felt such an overpowering wave
of sadness invade him that his eyes began to burn and smart, and he
was conscious of a desire to shed tears.</p>
<p>The key made a harsh noise as it turned in the lock, and when the
door swung open into a lofty hall they heard a confused sound of
rustling and whispering, as of a great throng of people pressing forward
to meet them. The air seemed full of swaying movement, and
Jones was certain he saw hands held aloft and dim faces claiming
recognition, while in his heart, already oppressed by the approaching
burden of vast accumulated memories, he was aware of the <i>uncoiling
of something</i> that had been asleep for ages.</p>
<p>As they advanced he heard the doors close with a muffled
thunder behind them, and saw that the shadows seemed to retreat
and shrink away towards the interior of the house, carrying the
hands and faces with them. He heard the wind singing round
the walls and over the roof, and its wailing voice mingled with the
sound of deep, collective breathing that filled the house like the
murmur of a sea; and as they walked up the broad staircase and
through the vaulted rooms, where pillars rose like the stems of
trees, he knew that the building was crowded, row upon row, with
the thronging memories of his own long past.</p>
<p>"This is the <i>House of the Past</i>," whispered Thorpe beside him, as
they moved silently from room to room; "the house of <i>your</i> past.
It is full from cellar to roof with the memories of what you have
done, thought, and felt from the earliest stages of your evolution
until now.</p>
<p>"The house climbs up almost to the clouds, and stretches back
into the heart of the wood you saw outside, but the remoter halls
are filled with the ghosts of ages ago too many to count, and even if
we were able to waken them you could not remember them now.
Some day, though, they will come and claim you, and you must
know them, and answer their questions, for they can never rest till
they have exhausted themselves again through you, and justice has
been perfectly worked out.</p>
<p>"But now follow me closely, and you shall see the particular
memory for which I am permitted to be your guide, so that you
may know and understand a great force in your present life, and
may use the sword of justice, or rise to the level of a great forgiveness,
according to your degree of power."</p>
<p>Icy thrills ran through the trembling clerk, and as he walked
slowly beside his companion he heard from the vaults below, as
well as from more distant regions of the vast building, the stirring
and sighing of the serried ranks of sleepers, sounding in the still air
like a chord swept from unseen strings stretched somewhere among
the very foundations of the house.</p>
<p>Stealthily, picking their way among the great pillars, they moved
up the sweeping staircase and through several dark corridors and
halls, and presently stopped outside a small door in an archway
where the shadows were very deep.</p>
<p>"Remain close by my side, and remember to utter no cry," whispered
the voice of his guide, and as the clerk turned to reply he saw
his face was stern to whiteness and even shone a little in the darkness.</p>
<p>The room they entered seemed at first to be pitchy black, but
gradually the secretary perceived a faint reddish glow against the
farther end, and thought he saw figures moving silently to and fro.</p>
<p>"Now watch!" whispered Thorpe, as they pressed close to the
wall near the door and waited. "But remember to keep absolute silence.
It is a torture scene."</p>
<p>Jones felt utterly afraid, and would have turned to fly if he dared,
for an indescribable terror seized him and his knees shook; but
some power that made escape impossible held him remorselessly
there, and with eyes glued on the spots of light he crouched against
the wall and waited.</p>
<p>The figures began to move more swiftly, each in its own dim
light that shed no radiance beyond itself, and he heard a soft clanking
of chains and the voice of a man groaning in pain. Then came
the sound of a door closing, and thereafter Jones saw but one figure,
the figure of an old man, naked entirely, and fastened with chains to
an iron framework on the floor. His memory gave a sudden leap of
fear as he looked, for the features and white beard were familiar,
and he recalled them as though of yesterday.</p>
<p>The other figures had disappeared, and the old man became the
centre of the terrible picture. Slowly, with ghastly groans; as the
heat below him increased into a steady glow, the aged body rose in
a curve of agony, resting on the iron frame only where the chains
held wrists and ankles fast. Cries and gasps filled the air, and Jones
felt exactly as though they came from his own throat, and as if the
chains were burning into his own wrists and ankles, and the heat
scorching the skin and flesh upon his own back. He began to writhe
and twist himself.</p>
<p>"Spain!" whispered the voice at his side, "and four hundred
years ago."</p>
<p>"And the purpose?" gasped the perspiring clerk, though he knew
quite well what the answer must be.</p>
<p>"To extort the name of a friend, to his death and betrayal," came
the reply through the darkness.</p>
<p>A sliding panel opened with a little rattle in the wall immediately
above the rack, and a face, framed in the same red glow, appeared
and looked down upon the dying victim. Jones was only just able to
choke a scream, for he recognised the tall dark man of his dreams.
With horrible, gloating eyes he gazed down upon the writhing form
of the old man, and his lips moved as in speaking, though no words
were actually audible.</p>
<p>"He asks again for the name," explained the other, as the clerk
struggled with the intense hatred and loathing that threatened every
moment to result in screams and action. His ankles and wrists
pained him so that he could scarcely keep still, but a merciless
power held him to the scene.</p>
<p>He saw the old man, with a fierce cry, raise his tortured head and
spit up into the face at the panel, and then the shutter slid back
again, and a moment later the increased glow beneath the body, accompanied
by awful writhing, told of the application of further
heat. There came the odour of burning flesh; the white beard curled
and burned to a crisp; the body fell back limp upon the red-hot
iron, and then shot up again in fresh agony; cry after cry, the most
awful in the world, rang out with deadened sound between the four
walls; and again the panel slid back creaking, and revealed the
dreadful face of the torturer.</p>
<p>Again the name was asked for, and again it was refused; and this
time, after the closing of the panel, a door opened, and the tall thin
man with the evil face came slowly into the chamber. His features
were savage with rage and disappointment, and in the dull red glow
that fell upon them he looked like a very prince of devils. In his
hand he held a pointed iron at white heat.</p>
<p>"Now the murder!" came from Thorpe in a whisper that
sounded as if it was outside the building and far away.</p>
<p>Jones knew quite well what was coming, but was unable even to
close his eyes. He felt all the fearful pains himself just as though he
were actually the sufferer; but now, as he stared, he felt something
more besides; and when the tall man deliberately approached the
rack and plunged the heated iron first into one eye and then into the
other, he heard the faint fizzing of it, and felt his own eyes burst in
frightful pain from his head. At the same moment, unable longer to
control himself, he uttered a wild shriek and dashed forward to
seize the torturer and tear him to a thousand pieces.
Instantly, in a flash, the entire scene vanished; darkness rushed in
to fill the room, and he felt himself lifted off his feet by some force
like a great wind and borne swiftly away into space.</p>
<p>When he recovered his senses he was standing just outside the
house and the figure of Thorpe was beside him in the gloom. The
great doors were in the act of closing behind him, but before they
shut he fancied he caught a glimpse of an immense veiled figure
standing upon the threshold, with flaming eyes, and in his hand a
bright weapon like a shining sword of fire.</p>
<p>"Come quickly now—all is over!" Thorpe whispered.</p>
<p>"And the dark man—?" gasped the clerk, as he moved swiftly by
the other's side.</p>
<p>"In this present life is the Manager of the company."</p>
<p>"And the victim?"</p>
<p>"Was yourself!"</p>
<p>"And the friend he—<i>I</i> refused to betray?"</p>
<p>"I was that friend," answered Thorpe, his voice with every moment
sounding more and more like the cry of the wind. "You gave
your life in agony to save mine."</p>
<p>"And again, in this life, we have all three been together?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Such forces are not soon or easily exhausted, and justice is
not satisfied till all have reaped what they sowed."</p>
<p>Jones had an odd feeling that he was slipping away into some
other state of consciousness. Thorpe began to seem unreal. Presently
he would be unable to ask more questions. He felt utterly sick
and faint with it all, and his strength was ebbing.</p>
<p>"Oh, quick!" he cried, "now tell me more. Why did I see this?
What must I do?"</p>
<p>The wind swept across the field on their right and entered the
wood beyond with a great roar, and the air round him seemed filled
with voices and the rushing of hurried movement.</p>
<p>"To the ends of justice," answered the other, as though speaking
out of the centre of the wind and from a distance, "which sometimes
is entrusted to the hands of those who suffered and were
strong. One wrong cannot be put right by another wrong, but your
life has been so worthy that the opportunity is given to—"</p>
<p>The voice grew fainter and fainter, already it was far overhead
with the rushing wind.</p>
<p>"You may punish or—" Here Jones lost sight of Thorpe's figure
altogether, for he seemed to have vanished and melted away into the
wood behind him. His voice sounded far across the trees, very
weak, and ever rising.</p>
<p>"Or if you can rise to the level of a great forgiveness—"</p>
<p>The voice became inaudible.... The wind came crying out of the
wood again.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Jones shivered and stared about him. He shook himself violently
and rubbed his eyes. The room was dark, the fire was out; he felt
cold and stiff. He got up out of his armchair, still trembling, and lit
the gas. Outside the wind was howling, and when he looked at his
watch he saw that it was very late and he must go to bed.</p>
<p>He had not even changed his office coat; he must have fallen
asleep in the chair as soon as he came in, and he had slept for several
hours. Certainly he had eaten no dinner, for he felt ravenous.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>III</h3>
<p>Next day, and for several weeks thereafter, the business of the office
went on as usual, and Jones did his work well and behaved outwardly
with perfect propriety. No more visions troubled him, and
his relations with the Manager became, if anything, somewhat
smoother and easier.</p>
<p>True, the man <i>looked</i> a little different, because the clerk kept seeing
him with his inner and outer eye promiscuously, so that one
moment he was broad and red-faced, and the next he was tall, thin,
and dark, enveloped, as it were, in a sort of black atmosphere tinged
with red. While at times a confusion of the two sights took place,
and Jones saw the two faces mingled in a composite countenance
that was very horrible indeed to contemplate. But, beyond this occasional
change in the outward appearance of the Manager, there
was nothing that the secretary noticed as the result of his vision,
and business went on more or less as before, and perhaps even with
a little less friction.</p>
<p>But in the rooms under the roof in Bloomsbury it was different,
for there it was perfectly clear to Jones that Thorpe had come to
take up his abode with him. He never saw him, but he knew all the
time he was there. Every night on returning from his work he was
greeted by the well-known whisper, "Be ready when I give the
sign!" and often in the night he woke up suddenly out of deep sleep
and was aware that Thorpe had that minute moved away from his
bed and was standing waiting and watching somewhere in the darkness
of the room. Often he followed him down the stairs, though
the dim gas jet on the landings never revealed his outline; and sometimes
he did not come into the room at all, but hovered outside the
window, peering through the dirty panes, or sending his whisper
into the chamber in the whistling of the wind.</p>
<p>For Thorpe had come to stay, and Jones knew that he would not
get rid of him until he had fulfilled the ends of justice and accomplished
the purpose for which he was waiting.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, as the days passed, he went through a tremendous
struggle with himself, and came to the perfectly honest decision that
the "level of a great forgiveness" was impossible for him, and that
he must therefore accept the alternative and use the secret knowledge
placed in his hands—and execute justice. And once this decision
was arrived at, he noticed that Thorpe no longer left him alone
during the day as before, but now accompanied him to the office
and stayed more or less at his side all through business hours as
well. His whisper made itself heard in the streets and in the train,
and even in the Manager's room where he worked; sometimes
warning, sometimes urging, but never for a moment suggesting the
abandonment of the main purpose, and more than once so plainly
audible that the clerk felt certain others must have heard it as well as
himself.</p>
<p>The obsession was complete. He felt he was always under
Thorpe's eye day and night, and he knew he must acquit himself
like a man when the moment came, or prove a failure in his own
sight as well in the sight of the other.</p>
<p>And now that his mind was made up, nothing could prevent the
carrying out of the sentence. He bought a pistol, and spent his Saturday
afternoons practising at a target in lonely places along the Essex
shore, marking out in the sand the exact measurements of the
Manager's room. Sundays he occupied in like fashion, putting up at
an inn overnight for the purpose, spending the money that usually
went into the savings bank on travelling expenses and cartridges.
Everything was done very thoroughly, for there must be no possibility
of failure; and at the end of several weeks he had become so
expert with his six-shooter that at a distance of 25 feet, which was
the greatest length of the Manager's room, he could pick the inside
out of a halfpenny nine times out of a dozen, and leave a clean, unbroken
rim.</p>
<p>There was not the slightest desire to delay. He had thought the
matter over from every point of view his mind could reach, and his
purpose was inflexible. Indeed, he felt proud to think that he had
been chosen as the instrument of justice in the infliction of so well-deserved
and so terrible a punishment. Vengeance may have had
some part in his decision, but he could not help that, for he still felt
at times the hot chains burning his wrists and ankles with fierce
agony through to the bone. He remembered the hideous pain of his
slowly roasting back, and the point when he thought death <i>must</i> intervene
to end his suffering, but instead new powers of endurance
had surged up in him, and awful further stretches of pain had
opened up, and unconsciousness seemed farther off than ever. Then
at last the hot irons in his eyes.... It all came back to him, and
caused him to break out in icy perspiration at the mere thought of it
... the vile face at the panel ... the expression of the dark face....
His fingers worked. His blood boiled. It was utterly impossible to
keep the idea of vengeance altogether out of his mind.</p>
<p>Several times he was temporarily baulked of his prey. Odd things
happened to stop him when he was on the point of action. The first
day, for instance, the Manager fainted from the heat. Another time
when he had decided to do the deed, the Manager did not come
down to the office at all. And a third time, when his hand was actually
in his hip pocket, he suddenly heard Thorpe's horrid whisper
telling him to wait, and turning, he saw that the head cashier had
entered the room noiselessly without his noticing it. Thorpe evidently
knew what he was about, and did not intend to let the clerk
bungle the matter.</p>
<p>He fancied, moreover, that the head cashier was watching him.
He was always meeting him in unexpected corners and places, and
the cashier never seemed to have an adequate excuse for being there.
His movements seemed suddenly of particular interest to others in
the office as well, for clerks were always being sent to ask him unnecessary
questions, and there was apparently a general design to
keep him under a sort of surveillance, so that he was never much
alone with the Manager in the private room where they worked.
And once the cashier had even gone so far as to suggest that he
could take his holiday earlier than usual if he liked, as the work had
been very arduous of late and the heat exceedingly trying.</p>
<p>He noticed, too, that he was sometimes followed by a certain individual
in the streets, a careless-looking sort of man, who never
came face to face with him, or actually ran into him, but who was
always in his train or omnibus, and whose eye he often caught observing
him over the top of his newspaper, and who on one occasion
was even waiting at the door of his lodgings when he came out
to dine.</p>
<p>There were other indications too, of various sorts, that led him
to think something was at work to defeat his purpose, and that he
must act at once before these hostile forces could prevent.</p>
<p>And so the end came very swiftly, and was thoroughly approved
by Thorpe.</p>
<p>It was towards the close of July, and one of the hottest days London
had ever known, for the City was like an oven, and the particles
of dust seemed to burn the throats of the unfortunate toilers in
street and office. The portly Manager, who suffered cruelly owing
to his size, came down perspiring and gasping with the heat. He
carried a light-coloured umbrella to protect his head.</p>
<p>"He'll want something more than that, though!" Jones laughed
quietly to himself when he saw him enter.</p>
<p>The pistol was safely in his hip pocket, every one of its six chambers
loaded.</p>
<p>The Manager saw the smile on his face, and gave him a long
steady look as he sat down to his desk in the corner. A few minutes
later he touched the bell for the head cashier—a single ring—and
then asked Jones to fetch some papers from another safe in the
room upstairs.</p>
<p>A deep inner trembling seized the secretary as he noticed these
precautions, for he saw that the hostile forces were at work against
him, and yet he felt he could delay no longer and must act that very
morning, interference or no interference. However, he went obediently
up in the lift to the next floor, and while fumbling with the
combination of the safe, known only to himself, the cashier, and the
Manager, he again heard Thorpe's horrid whisper just behind him:</p>
<p>"You must do it to-day! You must do it to-day!"</p>
<p>He came down again with the papers, and found the Manager
alone. The room was like a furnace, and a wave of dead heated air
met him in the face as he went in. The moment he passed the doorway
he realised that he had been the subject of conversation between
the head cashier and his enemy. They had been discussing
him. Perhaps an inkling of his secret had somehow got into their
minds. They had been watching him for days past. They had become
suspicious.</p>
<p>Clearly, he must act now, or let the opportunity slip by perhaps
for ever. He heard Thorpe's voice in his ear, but this time it was no
mere whisper, but a plain human voice, speaking out loud.</p>
<p>"Now!" it said. "Do it now!"</p>
<p>The room was empty. Only the Manager and himself were in it.</p>
<p>Jones turned from his desk where he had been standing, and
locked the door leading into the main office. He saw the army of
clerks scribbling in their shirt-sleeves, for the upper half of the door
was of glass. He had perfect control of himself, and his heart was
beating steadily.</p>
<p>The Manager, hearing the key turn in the lock, looked up
sharply.</p>
<p>"What's that you're doing?" he asked quickly.</p>
<p>"Only locking the door, sir," replied the secretary in a quite even
voice.</p>
<p>"Why? Who told you to—?"</p>
<p>"The voice of Justice, sir," replied Jones, looking steadily into the
hated face.</p>
<p>The Manager looked black for a moment, and stared angrily
across the room at him. Then suddenly his expression changed as he
stared, and he tried to smile. It was meant to be a kind smile evidently,
but it only succeeded in being frightened.</p>
<p>"That <i>is</i> a good idea in this weather," he said lightly, "but it
would be much better to lock it on the <i>outside</i>, wouldn't it, Mr.
Jones?"</p>
<p>"I think not, sir. You might escape me then. Now you can't."</p>
<p>Jones took his pistol out and pointed it at the other's face. Down
the barrel he saw the features of the tall dark man, evil and sinister.
Then the outline trembled a little and the face of the Manager
slipped back into its place. It was white as death, and shining with
perspiration.</p>
<p>"You tortured me to death four hundred years ago," said the
clerk in the same steady voice, "and now the dispensers of justice
have chosen me to punish you."</p>
<p>The Manager's face turned to flame, and then back to chalk
again. He made a quick movement towards the telephone bell,
stretching out a hand to reach it, but at the same moment Jones
pulled the trigger and the wrist was shattered, splashing the wall behind
with blood.</p>
<p>"That's <i>one</i> place where the chains burnt," he said quietly to
himself. His hand was absolutely steady, and he felt that he was a
hero.</p>
<p>The Manager was on his feet, with a scream of pain, supporting
himself with his right hand on the desk in front of him, but Jones
pressed the trigger again, and a bullet flew into the other wrist, so
that the big man, deprived of support, fell forward with a crash on
to the desk.</p>
<p>"You damned madman!" shrieked the Manager. "Drop that
pistol!"</p>
<p>"That's <i>another</i> place," was all Jones said, still taking careful aim
for another shot.</p>
<p>The big man, screaming and blundering, scrambled beneath the
desk, making frantic efforts to hide, but the secretary took a step
forward and fired two shots in quick succession into his projecting
legs, hitting first one ankle and then the other, and smashing them
horribly.</p>
<p>"Two more places where the chains burnt," he said, going a little
nearer.</p>
<p>The Manager, still shrieking, tried desperately to squeeze his
bulk behind the shelter of the opening beneath the desk, but he was
far too large, and his bald head protruded through on the other side.
Jones caught him by the scruff of his great neck and dragged him
yelping out on to the carpet. He was covered with blood, and
flopped helplessly upon his broken wrists.</p>
<p>"Be quick now!" cried the voice of Thorpe.</p>
<p>There was a tremendous commotion and banging at the door,
and Jones gripped his pistol tightly. Something seemed to crash
through his brain, clearing it for a second, so that he thought he saw
beside him a great veiled figure, with drawn sword and flaming
eyes, and sternly approving attitude.</p>
<p>"Remember the eyes! Remember the eyes!" hissed Thorpe in the
air above him.</p>
<p>Jones felt like a god, with a god's power. Vengeance disappeared
from his mind. He was acting impersonally as an instrument in the
hands of the Invisibles who dispense justice and balance accounts.
He bent down and put the barrel close into the other's face, smiling
a little as he saw the childish efforts of the arms to cover his head.
Then he pulled the trigger, and a bullet went straight into the right
eye, blackening the skin. Moving the pistol two inches the other
way, he sent another bullet crashing into the left eye. Then he stood
upright over his victim with a deep sigh of satisfaction.</p>
<p>The Manager wriggled convulsively for the space of a single second,
and then lay still in death.</p>
<p>There was not a moment to lose, for the door was already broken
in and violent hands were at his neck. Jones put the pistol to his
temple and once more pressed the trigger with his finger.</p>
<p>But this time there was no report. Only a little dead click answered
the pressure, for the secretary had forgotten that the pistol
had only six chambers, and that he had used them all. He threw
the useless weapon on to the floor, laughing a little out loud, and
turned, without a struggle, to give himself up.</p>
<p>"I <i>had</i> to do it," he said quietly, while they tied him. "It was simply
my duty! And now I am ready to face the consequences, and
Thorpe will be proud of me. For justice has been done and the gods
are satisfied."</p>
<p>He made not the slightest resistance, and when the two policemen
marched him off through the crowd of shuddering little clerks
in the office, he again saw the veiled figure moving majestically in
front of him, making slow sweeping circles with the flaming sword,
to keep back the host of faces that were thronging in upon him
from the Other Region.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="The_Man_Who_Found_Out" id="The_Man_Who_Found_Out"></SPAN><i>The Man Who Found Out</i></h2>
<h2>(A Nightmare)</h2>
<h3>1</h3>
<p>Professor Mark Ebor, the scientist, led a double life, and the
only persons who knew it were his assistant, Dr. Laidlaw, and his
publishers. But a double life need not always be a bad one, and, as
Dr. Laidlaw and the gratified publishers well knew, the parallel lives
of this particular man were equally good, and indefinitely produced
would certainly have ended in a heaven somewhere that can suitably
contain such strangely opposite characteristics as his remarkable
personality combined.</p>
<p>For Mark Ebor, F.R.S., etc., etc., was that unique combination
hardly ever met with in actual life, a man of science and a mystic.</p>
<p>As the first, his name stood in the gallery of the great, and as the
second—but there came the mystery! For under the pseudonym of
"Pilgrim" (the author of that brilliant series of books that appealed
to so many), his identity was as well concealed as that of the anonymous
writer of the weather reports in a daily newspaper. Thousands
read the sanguine, optimistic, stimulating little books that
issued annually from the pen of "Pilgrim," and thousands bore their
daily burdens better for having read; while the Press generally
agreed that the author, besides being an incorrigible enthusiast and
optimist, was also—a woman; but no one ever succeeded in penetrating
the veil of anonymity and discovering that "Pilgrim" and the
biologist were one and the same person.</p>
<p>Mark Ebor, as Dr. Laidlaw knew him in his laboratory, was one
man; but Mark Ebor, as he sometimes saw him after work was over,
with rapt eyes and ecstatic face, discussing the possibilities of
"union with God" and the future of the human race, was quite another.</p>
<p>"I have always held, as you know," he was saying one evening as
he sat in the little study beyond the laboratory with his assistant
and intimate, "that Vision should play a large part in the life of the
awakened man—not to be regarded as infallible, of course, but to be
observed and made use of as a guide-post to possibilities—"</p>
<p>"I am aware of your peculiar views, sir," the young doctor put in
deferentially, yet with a certain impatience.</p>
<p>"For Visions come from a region of the consciousness where observation
and experiment are out of the question," pursued the
other with enthusiasm, not noticing the interruption, "and, while
they should be checked by reason afterwards, they should not be
laughed at or ignored. All inspiration, I hold, is of the nature of interior
Vision, and all our best knowledge has come—such is my
confirmed belief—as a sudden revelation to the brain prepared to
receive it—"</p>
<p>"Prepared by hard work first, by concentration, by the closest
possible study of ordinary phenomena," Dr. Laidlaw allowed himself
to observe.</p>
<p>"Perhaps," sighed the other; "but by a process, none the less, of
spiritual illumination. The best match in the world will not light a
candle unless the wick be first suitably prepared."</p>
<p>It was Laidlaw's turn to sigh. He knew so well the impossibility
of arguing with his chief when he was in the regions of the mystic,
but at the same time the respect he felt for his tremendous attainments
was so sincere that he always listened with attention and deference,
wondering how far the great man would go and to what end
this curious combination of logic and "illumination" would eventually
lead him.</p>
<p>"Only last night," continued the elder man, a sort of light coming
into his rugged features, "the vision came to me again—the one
that has haunted me at intervals ever since my youth, and that will
not be denied."</p>
<p>Dr. Laidlaw fidgeted in his chair.</p>
<p>"About the Tablets of the Gods, you mean—and that they lie
somewhere hidden in the sands," he said patiently. A sudden gleam
of interest came into his face as he turned to catch the professor's
reply.</p>
<p>"And that I am to be the one to find them, to decipher them, and
to give the great knowledge to the world—"</p>
<p>"Who will not believe," laughed Laidlaw shortly, yet interested
in spite of his thinly-veiled contempt.</p>
<p>"Because even the keenest minds, in the right sense of the word,
are hopelessly—unscientific," replied the other gently, his face positively
aglow with the memory of his vision. "Yet what is more
likely," he continued after a moment's pause, peering into space
with rapt eyes that saw things too wonderful for exact language to
describe, "than that there should have been given to man in the first
ages of the world some record of the purpose and problem that had
been set him to solve? In a word," he cried, fixing his shining eyes
upon the face of his perplexed assistant, "that God's messengers in
the far-off ages should have given to His creatures some full statement
of the secret of the world, of the secret of the soul, of the
meaning of life and death—the explanation of our being here, and
to what great end we are destined in the ultimate fullness of
things?"</p>
<p>Dr. Laidlaw sat speechless. These outbursts of mystical enthusiasm
he had witnessed before. With any other man he would not
have listened to a single sentence, but to Professor Ebor, man of
knowledge and profound investigator, he listened with respect, because
he regarded this condition as temporary and pathological, and
in some sense a reaction from the intense strain of the prolonged
mental concentration of many days.</p>
<p>He smiled, with something between sympathy and resignation as
he met the other's rapt gaze.</p>
<p>"But you have said, sir, at other times, that you consider the ultimate
secrets to be screened from all possible—"</p>
<p>"The <i>ultimate</i> secrets, yes," came the unperturbed reply; "but
that there lies buried somewhere an indestructible record of the secret
meaning of life, originally known to men in the days of their
pristine innocence, I am convinced. And, by this strange vision so
often vouchsafed to me, I am equally sure that one day it shall be
given to me to announce to a weary world this glorious and terrific
message."</p>
<p>And he continued at great length and in glowing language to describe
the species of vivid dream that had come to him at intervals
since earliest childhood, showing in detail how he discovered these
very Tablets of the Gods, and proclaimed their splendid contents—whose
precise nature was always, however, withheld from him in
the vision—to a patient and suffering humanity.</p>
<p>"The <i>Scrutator</i>, sir, well described 'Pilgrim' as the Apostle of
Hope," said the young doctor gently, when he had finished; "and
now, if that reviewer could hear you speak and realize from what
strange depths comes your simple faith—"</p>
<p>The professor held up his hand, and the smile of a little child
broke over his face like sunshine in the morning.</p>
<p>"Half the good my books do would be instantly destroyed," he
said sadly; "they would say that I wrote with my tongue in my
cheek. But wait," he added significantly; "wait till I find these
Tablets of the Gods! Wait till I hold the solutions of the old world-problems
in my hands! Wait till the light of this new revelation
breaks upon confused humanity, and it wakes to find its bravest
hopes justified! Ah, then, my dear Laidlaw—"</p>
<p>He broke off suddenly; but the doctor, cleverly guessing the
thought in his mind, caught him up immediately.</p>
<p>"Perhaps this very summer," he said, trying hard to make
the suggestion keep pace with honesty; "in your explorations in
Assyria—your digging in the remote civilization of what was once
Chaldea, you may find—what you dream of—"</p>
<p>The professor held up his hand, and the smile of a fine old face.</p>
<p>"Perhaps," he murmured softly, "perhaps!"</p>
<p>And the young doctor, thanking the gods of science that his
leader's aberrations were of so harmless a character, went home
strong in the certitude of his knowledge of externals, proud that he
was able to refer his visions to self-suggestion, and wondering complaisantly
whether in his old age he might not after all suffer himself
from visitations of the very kind that afflicted his respected chief.</p>
<p>And as he got into bed and thought again of his master's rugged
face, and finely shaped head, and the deep lines traced by years of
work and self-discipline, he turned over on his pillow and fell
asleep with a sigh that was half of wonder, half of regret.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>2</h3>
<p>It was in February, nine months later, when Dr. Laidlaw made his
way to Charing Cross to meet his chief after his long absence of
travel and exploration. The vision about the so-called Tablets of the
Gods had meanwhile passed almost entirely from his memory.</p>
<p>There were few people in the train, for the stream of traffic was
now running the other way, and he had no difficulty in finding the
man he had come to meet. The shock of white hair beneath the low-crowned
felt hat was alone enough to distinguish him by easily.</p>
<p>"Here I am at last!" exclaimed the professor, somewhat wearily,
clasping his friend's hand as he listened to the young doctor's warm
greetings and questions. "Here I am—a little older, and <i>much</i> dirtier
than when you last saw me!" He glanced down laughingly at his
travel-stained garments.</p>
<p>"And <i>much</i> wiser," said Laidlaw, with a smile, as he bustled
about the platform for porters and gave his chief the latest scientific
news.</p>
<p>At last they came down to practical considerations.</p>
<p>"And your luggage—where is that? You must have tons of it, I
suppose?" said Laidlaw.</p>
<p>"Hardly anything," Professor Ebor answered. "Nothing, in fact,
but what you see."</p>
<p>"Nothing but this hand-bag?" laughed the other, thinking he was
joking.</p>
<p>"And a small portmanteau in the van," was the quiet reply. "I
have no other luggage."</p>
<p>"You have no other luggage?" repeated Laidlaw, turning sharply
to see if he were in earnest.</p>
<p>"Why should I need more?" the professor added simply.</p>
<p>Something in the man's face, or voice, or manner—the doctor
hardly knew which—suddenly struck him as strange. There was a
change in him, a change so profound—so little on the surface, that
is—that at first he had not become aware of it. For a moment it was
as though an utterly alien personality stood before him in that
noisy, bustling throng. Here, in all the homely, friendly turmoil of a
Charing Cross crowd, a curious feeling of cold passed over his
heart, touching his life with icy finger, so that he actually trembled
and felt afraid.</p>
<p>He looked up quickly at his friend, his mind working with startled
and unwelcome thoughts.</p>
<p>"Only this?" he repeated, indicating the bag. "But where's all
the stuff you went away with? And—have you brought nothing
home—no treasures?"</p>
<p>"This is all I have," the other said briefly. The pale smile that
went with the words caused the doctor a second indescribable sensation
of uneasiness. Something was very wrong, something was
very queer; he wondered now that he had not noticed it sooner.</p>
<p>"The rest follows, of course, by slow freight," he added tactfully,
and as naturally as possible. "But come, sir, you must be tired and
in want of food after your long journey. I'll get a taxi at once, and
we can see about the other luggage afterwards."</p>
<p>It seemed to him he hardly knew quite what he was saying; the
change in his friend had come upon him so suddenly and now grew
upon him more and more distressingly. Yet he could not make out
exactly in what it consisted. A terrible suspicion began to take
shape in his mind, troubling him dreadfully.</p>
<p>"I am neither very tired, nor in need of food, thank you," the
professor said quietly. "And this is all I have. There is no luggage to
follow. I have brought home nothing—nothing but what you see."</p>
<p>His words conveyed finality. They got into a taxi, tipped the
porter, who had been staring in amazement at the venerable figure
of the scientist, and were conveyed slowly and noisily to the house
in the north of London where the laboratory was, the scene of their
labours of years.</p>
<p>And the whole way Professor Ebor uttered no word, nor did Dr.
Laidlaw find the courage to ask a single question.</p>
<p>It was only late that night, before he took his departure, as the
two men were standing before the fire in the study—that study
where they had discussed so many problems of vital and absorbing
interest—that Dr. Laidlaw at last found strength to come to the
point with direct questions. The professor had been giving him a
superficial and desultory account of his travels, of his journeys by
camel, of his encampments among the mountains and in the desert,
and of his explorations among the buried temples, and, deeper, into
the waste of the pre-historic sands, when suddenly the doctor came
to the desired point with a kind of nervous rush, almost like a
frightened boy.</p>
<p>"And you found—" he began stammering, looking hard at the
other's dreadfully altered face, from which every line of hope and
cheerfulness seemed to have been obliterated as a sponge wipes
markings from a slate—"you found—"</p>
<p>"I found," replied the other, in a solemn voice, and it was the
voice of the mystic rather than the man of science—"I found what I
went to seek. The vision never once failed me. It led me straight to
the place like a star in the heavens. I found—the Tablets of the
Gods."</p>
<p>Dr. Laidlaw caught his breath, and steadied himself on the back
of a chair. The words fell like particles of ice upon his heart. For the
first time the professor had uttered the well-known phrase without
the glow of light and wonder in his face that always accompanied it.</p>
<p>"You have—brought them?" he faltered.</p>
<p>"I have brought them home," said the other, in a voice with a
ring like iron; "and I have—deciphered them."</p>
<p>Profound despair, the bloom of outer darkness, the dead sound
of a hopeless soul freezing in the utter cold of space seemed to fill in
the pauses between the brief sentences. A silence followed, during
which Dr. Laidlaw saw nothing but the white face before him alternately
fade and return. And it was like the face of a dead man.</p>
<p>"They are, alas, indestructible," he heard the voice continue,
with its even, metallic ring.</p>
<p>"Indestructible," Laidlaw repeated mechanically, hardly knowing
what he was saying.</p>
<p>Again a silence of several minutes passed, during which, with a
creeping cold about his heart, he stood and stared into the eyes of
the man he had known and loved so long—aye, and worshipped,
too; the man who had first opened his own eyes when they were
blind, and had led him to the gates of knowledge, and no little distance
along the difficult path beyond; the man who, in another direction,
had passed on the strength of his faith into the hearts of
thousands by his books.</p>
<p>"I may see them?" he asked at last, in a low voice he hardly recognized
as his own. "You will let me know—their message?"</p>
<p>Professor Ebor kept his eyes fixedly upon his assistant's face as
he answered, with a smile that was more like the grin of death than
a living human smile.</p>
<p>"When I am gone," he whispered; "when I have passed away.
Then you shall find them and read the translation I have made. And
then, too, in your turn, you must try, with the latest resources of
science at your disposal to aid you, to compass their utter destruction."
He paused a moment, and his face grew pale as the face of a
corpse. "Until that time," he added presently, without looking up,
"I must ask you not to refer to the subject again—and to keep my
confidence meanwhile—<i>ab—so—lute—ly</i>."</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>3</h3>
<p>A year passed slowly by, and at the end of it Dr. Laidlaw had found
it necessary to sever his working connexion with his friend and
one-time leader. Professor Ebor was no longer the same man. The
light had gone out of his life; the laboratory was closed; he no
longer put pen to paper or applied his mind to a single problem. In
the short space of a few months he had passed from a hale and
hearty man of late middle life to the condition of old age—a man
collapsed and on the edge of dissolution. Death, it was plain, lay
waiting for him in the shadows of any day—and he knew it.</p>
<p>To describe faithfully the nature of this profound alteration in
his character and temperament is not easy, but Dr. Laidlaw summed
it up to himself in three words: <i>Loss of Hope</i>. The splendid mental
powers remained indeed undimmed, but the incentive to use
them—to use them for the help of others—had gone. The character
still held to its fine and unselfish habits of years, but the far goal to
which they had been the leading strings had faded away. The desire
for knowledge—knowledge for its own sake—had died, and the
passionate hope which hitherto had animated with tireless energy
the heart and brain of this splendidly equipped intellect had suffered
total eclipse. The central fires had gone out. Nothing was
worth doing, thinking, working for. There <i>was</i> nothing to work for
any longer!</p>
<p>The professor's first step was to recall as many of his books as
possible; his second to close his laboratory and stop all research. He
gave no explanation, he invited no questions. His whole personality
crumbled away, so to speak, till his daily life became a mere mechanical
process of clothing the body, feeding the body, keeping it
in good health so as to avoid physical discomfort, and, above all,
doing nothing that could interfere with sleep. The professor did
everything he could to lengthen the hours of sleep, and therefore of
forgetfulness.</p>
<p>It was all clear enough to Dr. Laidlaw. A weaker man, he knew,
would have sought to lose himself in one form or another of sensual
indulgence—sleeping-draughts, drink, the first pleasures that came
to hand. Self-destruction would have been the method of a little
bolder type; and deliberate evil-doing, poisoning with his awful
knowledge all he could, the means of still another kind of man.
Mark Ebor was none of these. He held himself under fine control,
facing silently and without complaint the terrible facts he honestly
believed himself to have been unfortunate enough to discover. Even
to his intimate friend and assistant, Dr. Laidlaw, he vouchsafed no
word of true explanation or lament. He went straight forward to
the end, knowing well that the end was not very far away.</p>
<p>And death came very quietly one day to him, as he was sitting
in the arm-chair of the study, directly facing the doors of the
laboratory—the doors that no longer opened. Dr. Laidlaw, by
happy chance, was with him at the time, and just able to reach his
side in response to the sudden painful efforts for breath; just in
time, too, to catch the murmured words that fell from the pallid lips
like a message from the other side of the grave.</p>
<p>"Read them, if you must; and, if you can—destroy. But"—his
voice sank so low that Dr. Laidlaw only just caught the dying
syllables—"but—never, never—give them to the world."</p>
<p>And like a grey bundle of dust loosely gathered up in an old garment
the professor sank back into his chair and expired.</p>
<p>But this was only the death of the body. His spirit had died two
years before.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>4</h3>
<p>The estate of the dead man was small and uncomplicated, and Dr.
Laidlaw, as sole executor and residuary legatee, had no difficulty
in settling it up. A month after the funeral he was sitting alone in
his upstairs library, the last sad duties completed, and his mind
full of poignant memories and regrets for the loss of a friend he
had revered and loved, and to whom his debt was so incalculably
great. The last two years, indeed, had been for him terrible. To
watch the swift decay of the greatest combination of heart and brain
he had ever known, and to realize he was powerless to help, was a
source of profound grief to him that would remain to the end of
his days.</p>
<p>At the same time an insatiable curiosity possessed him. The
study of dementia was, of course, outside his special province as a
specialist, but he knew enough of it to understand how small a matter
might be the actual cause of how great an illusion, and he had
been devoured from the very beginning by a ceaseless and increasing
anxiety to know what the professor had found in the sands of
"Chaldea," what these precious Tablets of the Gods might be, and
particularly—for this was the real cause that had sapped the man's
sanity and hope—what the inscription was that he had believed to
have deciphered thereon.</p>
<p>The curious feature of it all to his own mind was, that whereas
his friend had dreamed of finding a message of glorious hope and
comfort, he had apparently found (so far as he had found anything
intelligible at all, and not invented the whole thing in his dementia)
that the secret of the world, and the meaning of life and death, was
of so terrible a nature that it robbed the heart of courage and the
soul of hope. What, then, could be the contents of the little brown
parcel the professor had bequeathed to him with his pregnant dying
sentences?</p>
<p>Actually his hand was trembling as he turned to the writing-table
and began slowly to unfasten a small old-fashioned desk on which
the small gilt initials "M.E." stood forth as a melancholy memento.
He put the key into the lock and half turned it. Then, suddenly, he
stopped and looked about him. Was that a sound at the back of the
room? It was just as though someone had laughed and then tried to
smother the laugh with a cough. A slight shiver ran over him as he
stood listening.</p>
<p>"This is absurd," he said aloud; "too absurd for belief—that I
should be so nervous! It's the effect of curiosity unduly prolonged."
He smiled a little sadly and his eyes wandered to the blue summer
sky and the plane trees swaying in the wind below his window. "It's
the reaction," he continued. "The curiosity of two years to be
quenched in a single moment! The nervous tension, of course, must
be considerable."</p>
<p>He turned back to the brown desk and opened it without further
delay. His hand was firm now, and he took out the paper parcel that
lay inside without a tremor. It was heavy. A moment later there lay
on the table before him a couple of weather-worn plaques of grey
stone—they looked like stone, although they felt like metal—on
which he saw markings of a curious character that might have been
the mere tracings of natural forces through the ages, or, equally
well, the half-obliterated hieroglyphics cut upon their surface in
past centuries by the more or less untutored hand of a common
scribe.</p>
<p>He lifted each stone in turn and examined it carefully. It seemed
to him that a faint glow of heat passed from the substance into his
skin, and he put them down again suddenly, as with a gesture of uneasiness.</p>
<p>"A very clever, or a very imaginative man," he said to himself,
"who could squeeze the secrets of life and death from such broken
lines as those!"</p>
<p>Then he turned to a yellow envelope lying beside them in the
desk, with the single word on the outside in the writing of the professor—the
word <i>Translation</i>.</p>
<p>"Now," he thought, taking it up with a sudden violence to conceal
his nervousness, "now for the great solution. Now to learn the
meaning of the worlds, and why mankind was made, and why discipline
is worth while, and sacrifice and pain the true law of advancement."</p>
<p>There was the shadow of a sneer in his voice, and yet something
in him shivered at the same time. He held the envelope as though
weighing it in his hand, his mind pondering many things. Then curiosity
won the day, and he suddenly tore it open with the gesture
of an actor who tears open a letter on the stage, knowing there is no
real writing inside at all.</p>
<p>A page of finely written script in the late scientist's handwriting
lay before him. He read it through from beginning to end, missing
no word, uttering each syllable distinctly under his breath as he
read.</p>
<p>The pallor of his face grew ghastly as he neared the end. He began
to shake all over as with ague. His breath came heavily in gasps.
He still gripped the sheet of paper, however, and deliberately, as by
an intense effort of will, read it through a second time from beginning
to end. And this time, as the last syllable dropped from his lips,
the whole face of the man flamed with a sudden and terrible anger.
His skin became deep, deep red, and he clenched his teeth. With all
the strength of his vigorous soul he was struggling to keep control
of himself.</p>
<p>For perhaps five minutes he stood there beside the table without
stirring a muscle. He might have been carved out of stone. His eyes
were shut, and only the heaving of the chest betrayed the fact that
he was a living being. Then, with a strange quietness, he lit a match
and applied it to the sheet of paper he held in his hand. The ashes
fell slowly about him, piece by piece, and he blew them from the
window-sill into the air, his eyes following them as they floated
away on the summer wind that breathed so warmly over the world.</p>
<p>He turned back slowly into the room. Although his actions and
movements were absolutely steady and controlled, it was clear that
he was on the edge of violent action. A hurricane might burst upon
the still room any moment. His muscles were tense and rigid. Then,
suddenly, he whitened, collapsed, and sank backwards into a chair,
like a tumbled bundle of inert matter. He had fainted.</p>
<p>In less than half an hour he recovered consciousness and sat up.
As before, he made no sound. Not a syllable passed his lips. He rose
quietly and looked about the room.</p>
<p>Then he did a curious thing.</p>
<p>Taking a heavy stick from the rack in the corner he approached
the mantlepiece, and with a heavy shattering blow he smashed the
clock to pieces. The glass fell in shivering atoms.</p>
<p>"Cease your lying voice for ever," he said, in a curiously still,
even tone. "There is no such thing as <i>time</i>!"</p>
<p>He took the watch from his pocket, swung it round several times
by the long gold chain, smashed it into smithereens against the wall
with a single blow, and then walked into his laboratory next door,
and hung its broken body on the bones of the skeleton in the corner
of the room.</p>
<p>"Let one damned mockery hang upon another," he said smiling
oddly. "Delusions, both of you, and cruel as false!"</p>
<p>He slowly moved back to the front room. He stopped opposite
the bookcase where stood in a row the "Scriptures of the World,"
choicely bound and exquisitely printed, the late professor's most
treasured possession, and next to them several books signed "Pilgrim."</p>
<p>One by one he took them from the shelf and hurled them
through the open window.</p>
<p>"A devil's dreams! A devil's foolish dreams!" he cried, with a vicious
laugh.</p>
<p>Presently he stopped from sheer exhaustion. He turned his eyes
slowly to the wall opposite, where hung a weird array of Eastern
swords and daggers, scimitars and spears, the collections of many
journeys. He crossed the room and ran his finger along the edge.
His mind seemed to waver.</p>
<p>"No," he muttered presently; "not that way. There are easier and
better ways than that."</p>
<p>He took his hat and passed downstairs into the street.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>5</h3>
<p>It was five o'clock, and the June sun lay hot upon the pavement. He
felt the metal door-knob burn the palm of his hand.</p>
<p>"Ah, Laidlaw, this is well met," cried a voice at his elbow; "I was
in the act of coming to see you. I've a case that will interest you, and
besides, I remembered that you flavoured your tea with orange
leaves!—and I admit—"</p>
<p>It was Alexis Stephen, the great hypnotic doctor.</p>
<p>"I've had no tea to-day," Laidlaw said, in a dazed manner, after
staring for a moment as though the other had struck him in the face.
A new idea had entered his mind.</p>
<p>"What's the matter?" asked Dr. Stephen quickly. "Something's
wrong with you. It's this sudden heat, or overwork. Come, man,
let's go inside."</p>
<p>A sudden light broke upon the face of the younger man, the light
of a heaven-sent inspiration. He looked into his friend's face, and
told a direct lie.</p>
<p>"Odd," he said, "I myself was just coming to see you. I have
something of great importance to test your confidence with. But in
<i>your</i> house, please," as Stephen urged him towards his own door—"in
your house. It's only round the corner, and I—I cannot go back
there—to my rooms—till I have told you.</p>
<p>"I'm your patient—for the moment," he added stammeringly as
soon as they were seated in the privacy of the hypnotist's sanctum,
"and I want—er—"</p>
<p>"My dear Laidlaw," interrupted the other, in that soothing voice
of command which had suggested to many a suffering soul that the
cure for its pain lay in the powers of its own reawakened will, "I am
always at your service, as you know. You have only to tell me what
I can do for you, and I will do it." He showed every desire to help
him out. His manner was indescribably tactful and direct.</p>
<p>Dr. Laidlaw looked up into his face.</p>
<p>"I surrender my will to you," he said, already calmed by the other's
healing presence, "and I want you to treat me hypnotically—and at
once. I want you to suggest to me"—his voice became very tense—"that
I shall forget—forget till I die—everything that has occurred
to me during the last two hours; till I die, mind," he added, with
solemn emphasis, "till I die."</p>
<p>He floundered and stammered like a frightened boy. Alexis
Stephen looked at him fixedly without speaking.</p>
<p>"And further," Laidlaw continued, "I want you to ask me
no questions. I wish to forget for ever something I have recently
discovered—something so terrible and yet so obvious that I can
hardly understand why it is not patent to every mind in the
world—for I have had a moment of absolute <i>clear vision</i>—of merciless
clairvoyance. But I want no one else in the whole world to
know what it is—least of all, old friend, yourself."</p>
<p>He talked in utter confusion, and hardly knew what he was saying.
But the pain on his face and the anguish in his voice were an instant
passport to the other's heart.</p>
<p>"Nothing is easier," replied Dr. Stephen, after a hesitation so
slight that the other probably did not even notice it. "Come into
my other room where we shall not be disturbed. I can heal you.
Your memory of the last two hours shall be wiped out as though it
had never been. You can trust me absolutely."</p>
<p>"I know I can," Laidlaw said simply, as he followed him in.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>6</h3>
<p>An hour later they passed back into the front room again. The sun
was already behind the houses opposite, and the shadows began to
gather.</p>
<p>"I went off easily?" Laidlaw asked.</p>
<p>"You were a little obstinate at first. But though you came in like
a lion, you went out like a lamb. I let you sleep a bit afterwards."</p>
<p>Dr. Stephen kept his eyes rather steadily upon his friend's face.</p>
<p>"What were you doing by the fire before you came here?" he
asked, pausing, in a casual tone, as he lit a cigarette and handed the
case to his patient.</p>
<p>"I? Let me see. Oh, I know; I was worrying my way through
poor old Ebor's papers and things. I'm his executor, you know.
Then I got weary and came out for a whiff of air." He spoke lightly
and with perfect naturalness. Obviously he was telling the truth. "I
prefer specimens to papers," he laughed cheerily.</p>
<p>"I know, I know," said Dr. Stephen, holding a lighted match for
the cigarette. His face wore an expression of content. The experiment
had been a complete success. The memory of the last two
hours was wiped out utterly. Laidlaw was already chatting gaily and
easily about a dozen other things that interested him. Together they
went out into the street, and at his door Dr. Stephen left him with a
joke and a wry face that made his friend laugh heartily.</p>
<p>"Don't dine on the professor's old papers by mistake," he cried,
as he vanished down the street.</p>
<p>Dr. Laidlaw went up to his study at the top of the house. Half
way down he met his housekeeper, Mrs. Fewings. She was flustered
and excited, and her face was very red and perspiring.</p>
<p>"There've been burglars here," she cried excitedly, "or something
funny! All your things is just any'ow, sir. I found everything all
about everywhere!" She was very confused. In this orderly and very
precise establishment it was unusual to find a thing out of place.</p>
<p>"Oh, my specimens!" cried the doctor, dashing up the rest of the
stairs at top speed. "Have they been touched or—"</p>
<p>He flew to the door of the laboratory. Mrs. Fewings panted up
heavily behind him.</p>
<p>"The labatry ain't been touched," she explained, breathlessly,
"but they smashed the libry clock and they've 'ung your gold
watch, sir, on the skelinton's hands. And the books that weren't no
value they flung out er the window just like so much rubbish. They
must have been wild drunk, Dr. Laidlaw, sir!"</p>
<p>The young scientist made a hurried examination of the rooms.
Nothing of value was missing. He began to wonder what kind of
burglars they were. He looked up sharply at Mrs. Fewings standing
in the doorway. For a moment he seemed to cast about in his mind
for something.</p>
<p>"Odd," he said at length. "I only left here an hour ago and everything
was all right then."</p>
<p>"Was it, sir? Yes, sir." She glanced sharply at him. Her room
looked out upon the courtyard, and she must have seen the books
come crashing down, and also have heard her master leave the
house a few minutes later.</p>
<p>"And what's this rubbish the brutes have left?" he cried, taking
up two slabs of worn gray stone, on the writing-table. "Bath brick,
or something, I do declare."</p>
<p>He looked very sharply again at the confused and troubled
housekeeper.</p>
<p>"Throw them on the dust heap, Mrs. Fewings, and—and let me
know if anything is missing in the house, and I will notify the police
this evening."</p>
<p>When she left the room he went into the laboratory and took his
watch off the skeleton's fingers. His face wore a troubled expression,
but after a moment's thought it cleared again. His memory
was a complete blank.</p>
<p>"I suppose I left it on the writing-table when I went out to take
the air," he said. And there was no one present to contradict him.</p>
<p>He crossed to the window and blew carelessly some ashes of
burned paper from the sill, and stood watching them as they floated
away lazily over the tops of the trees.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="The_Glamour_of_the_Snow" id="The_Glamour_of_the_Snow"></SPAN><i>The Glamour of the Snow</i></h2>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>Hibbert, always conscious of two worlds, was in this mountain
village conscious of three. It lay on the slopes of the Valais
Alps, and he had taken a room in the little post office, where he
could be at peace to write his book, yet at the same time enjoy
the winter sports and find companionship in the hotels when he
wanted it.</p>
<p>The three worlds that met and mingled here seemed to his imaginative
temperament very obvious, though it is doubtful if another
mind less intuitively equipped would have seen them so well-defined.
There was the world of tourist English, civilised, quasi-educated,
to which he belonged by birth, at any rate; there was the
world of peasants to which he felt himself drawn by sympathy—for
he loved and admired their toiling, simple life; and there was this
other—which he could only call the world of Nature. To this last,
however, in virtue of a vehement poetic imagination, and a tumultuous
pagan instinct fed by his very blood, he felt that most of him
belonged. The others borrowed from it, as it were, for visits. Here,
with the soul of Nature, hid his central life.</p>
<p>Between all three was conflict—potential conflict. On the
skating-rink each Sunday the tourists regarded the natives as intruders;
in the church the peasants plainly questioned: "Why do
you come? We are here to worship; you to stare and whisper!" For
neither of these two worlds accepted the other. And neither did Nature
accept the tourists, for it took advantage of their least mistakes,
and indeed, even of the peasant-world "accepted" only those who
were strong and bold enough to invade her savage domain with sufficient
skill to protect themselves from several forms of—death.</p>
<p>Now Hibbert was keenly aware of this potential conflict and
want of harmony; he felt outside, yet caught by it—torn in the three
directions because he was partly of each world, but wholly in only
one. There grew in him a constant, subtle effort—or, at least,
desire—to unify them and decide positively to which he should belong
and live in. The attempt, of course, was largely subconscious.
It was the natural instinct of a richly imaginative nature seeking the
point of equilibrium, so that the mind could feel at peace and his
brain be free to do good work.</p>
<p>Among the guests no one especially claimed his interest. The
men were nice but undistinguished—athletic schoolmasters, doctors
snatching a holiday, good fellows all; the women, equally
various—the clever, the would-be-fast, the dare-to-be-dull, the
women "who understood," and the usual pack of jolly dancing girls
and "flappers." And Hibbert, with his forty odd years of thick experience
behind him, got on well with the lot; he understood them
all; they belonged to definite, predigested types that are the same
the world over, and that he had met the world over long ago.</p>
<p>But to none of them did he belong. His nature was too "multiple"
to subscribe to the set of shibboleths of any one class. And,
since all liked him, and felt that somehow he seemed outside of
them—spectator, looker-on—all sought to claim him.</p>
<p>In a sense, therefore, the three worlds fought for him: natives,
tourists, Nature....</p>
<p>It was thus began the singular conflict for the soul of Hibbert. <i>In</i>
his own soul, however, it took place. Neither the peasants nor the
tourists were conscious that they fought for anything. And Nature,
they say, is merely blind and automatic.</p>
<p>The assault upon him of the peasants may be left out of account,
for it is obvious that they stood no chance of success. The tourist
world, however, made a gallant effort to subdue him to themselves.
But the evenings in the hotel, when dancing was not in order,
were—English. The provincial imagination was set upon a throne
and worshipped heavily through incense of the stupidest conventions
possible. Hibbert used to go back early to his room in the post
office to work.</p>
<p>"It is a mistake on my part to have <i>realised</i> that there is any conflict
at all," he thought, as he crunched home over the snow at midnight
after one of the dances. "It would have been better to have
kept outside it all and done my work. Better," he added, looking
back down the silent village street to the church tower, "and—safer."</p>
<p>The adjective slipped from his mind before he was aware of it.
He turned with an involuntary start and looked about him. He
knew perfectly well what it meant—this thought that had thrust its
head up from the instinctive region. He understood, without being
able to express it fully, the meaning that betrayed itself in the choice
of the adjective. For if he had ignored the existence of this conflict
he would at the same time, have remained outside the arena.
Whereas now he had entered the lists. Now this battle for his soul
must have issue. And he knew that the spell of Nature was greater
for him than all other spells in the world combined—greater than
love, revelry, pleasure, greater even than study. He had always been
afraid to let himself go. His pagan soul dreaded her terrific powers
of witchery even while he worshipped.</p>
<p>The little village already slept. The world lay smothered in snow.
The châlet roofs shone white beneath the moon, and pitch-black
shadows gathered against the walls of the church. His eye rested a
moment on the square stone tower with its frosted cross that
pointed to the sky: then travelled with a leap of many thousand feet
to the enormous mountains that brushed the brilliant stars. Like a
forest rose the huge peaks above the slumbering village, measuring
the night and heavens. They beckoned him. And something born of
the snowy desolation, born of the midnight and the silent grandeur,
born of the great listening hollows of the night, something that lay
'twixt terror and wonder, dropped from the vast wintry spaces
down into his heart—and called him. Very softly, unrecorded in any
word or thought his brain could compass, it laid its spell upon him.
Fingers of snow brushed the surface of his heart. The power and
quiet majesty of the winter's night appalled him....</p>
<p>Fumbling a moment with the big unwieldy key, he let himself in
and went upstairs to bed. Two thoughts went with him—apparently
quite ordinary and sensible ones:</p>
<p>"What fools these peasants are to sleep through such a night!"
And the other:</p>
<p>"Those dances tire me. I'll never go again. My work only suffers
in the morning." The claims of peasants and tourists upon him
seemed thus in a single instant weakened.</p>
<p>The clash of battle troubled half his dreams. Nature had sent her
Beauty of the Night and won the first assault. The others, routed
and dismayed, fled far away.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>II</h3>
<p>"Don't go back to your dreary old post office. We're going to
have supper in my room—something hot. Come and join us.
Hurry up!"</p>
<p>There had been an ice carnival, and the last party, tailing up the
snow-slope to the hotel, called him. The Chinese lanterns smoked
and sputtered on the wires; the band had long since gone. The cold
was bitter and the moon came only momentarily between high,
driving clouds. From the shed where the people changed from
skates to snow-boots he shouted something to the effect that he was
"following"; but no answer came; the moving shadows of those
who had called were already merged high up against the village
darkness. The voices died away. Doors slammed. Hibbert found
himself alone on the deserted rink.</p>
<p>And it was then, quite suddenly, the impulse came to—stay and
skate alone. The thought of the stuffy hotel room, and of those
noisy people with their obvious jokes and laughter, oppressed him.
He felt a longing to be alone with the night; to taste her wonder all
by himself there beneath the stars, gliding over the ice. It was not
yet midnight, and he could skate for half an hour. That supper
party, if they noticed his absence at all, would merely think he had
changed his mind and gone to bed.</p>
<p>It was an impulse, yes, and not an unnatural one; yet even at the
time it struck him that something more than impulse lay concealed
behind it. More than invitation, yet certainly less than command,
there was a vague queer feeling that he stayed because he had to, almost
as though there was something he had forgotten, overlooked,
left undone. Imaginative temperaments are often thus; and impulse
is ever weakness. For with such ill-considered opening of the doors
to hasty action may come an invasion of other forces at the same
time—forces merely waiting their opportunity perhaps!</p>
<p>He caught the fugitive warning even while he dismissed it as absurd,
and the next minute he was whirling over the smooth ice in
delightful curves and loops beneath the moon. There was no fear of
collision. He could take his own speed and space as he willed. The
shadows of the towering mountains fell across the rink, and a wind
of ice came from the forests, where the snow lay ten feet deep. The
hotel lights winked and went out. The village slept. The high wire
netting could not keep out the wonder of the winter night that grew
about him like a presence. He skated on and on, keen exhilarating
pleasure in his tingling blood, and weariness all forgotten.</p>
<p>And then, midway in the delight of rushing movement, he saw a
figure gliding behind the wire netting, watching him. With a start
that almost made him lose his balance—for the abruptness of the
new arrival was so unlooked for—he paused and stared. Although
the light was dim he made out that it was the figure of a woman and
that she was feeling her way along the netting, trying to get in.
Against the white background of the snow-field he watched her
rather stealthy efforts as she passed with a silent step over the
banked-up snow. She was tall and slim and graceful; he could see
that even in the dark. And then, of course, he understood. It was
another adventurous skater like himself, stolen down unawares
from hotel or châlet, and searching for the opening. At once, making
a sign and pointing with one hand, he turned swiftly and skated
over to the little entrance on the other side.</p>
<p>But, even before he got there, there was a sound on the ice behind
him and, with an exclamation of amazement he could not suppress,
he turned to see her swerving up to his side across the width
of the rink. She had somehow found another way in.</p>
<p>Hibbert, as a rule, was punctilious, and in these free-and-easy
places, perhaps, especially so. If only for his own protection he did
not seek to make advances unless some kind of introduction paved
the way. But for these two to skate together in the semi-darkness
without speech, often of necessity brushing shoulders almost, was
too absurd to think of. Accordingly he raised his cap and spoke.
His actual words he seems unable to recall, nor what the girl said in
reply, except that she answered him in accented English with some
commonplace about doing figures at midnight on an empty rink.
Quite natural it was, and right. She wore grey clothes of some kind,
though not the customary long gloves or sweater, for indeed her
hands were bare, and presently when he skated with her, he wondered
with something like astonishment at their dry and icy coldness.</p>
<p>And she was delicious to skate with—supple, sure, and light, fast
as a man yet with the freedom of a child, sinuous and steady at the
same time. Her flexibility made him wonder, and when he asked
where she had learned she murmured—he caught the breath against
his ear and recalled later that it was singularly cold—that she could
hardly tell, for she had been accustomed to the ice ever since she
could remember.</p>
<p>But her face he never properly saw. A muffler of white fur buried
her neck to the ears, and her cap came over the eyes. He only saw
that she was young. Nor could he gather her hotel or châlet, for she
pointed vaguely, when he asked her, up the slopes. "Just over
there—" she said, quickly taking his hand again. He did not press
her; no doubt she wished to hide her escapade. And the touch of
her hand thrilled him more than anything he could remember; even
through his thick glove he felt the softness of that cold and delicate
softness.</p>
<p>The clouds thickened over the mountains. It grew darker. They
talked very little, and did not always skate together. Often they separated,
curving about in corners by themselves, but always coming
together again in the centre of the rink; and when she left him thus
Hibbert was conscious of—yes, of missing her. He found a peculiar
satisfaction, almost a fascination, in skating by her side. It was quite
an adventure—these two strangers with the ice and snow and night!</p>
<p>Midnight had long since sounded from the old church tower before
they parted. She gave the sign, and he skated quickly to the
shed, meaning to find a seat and help her take her skates off. Yet
when he turned—she had already gone. He saw her slim figure gliding
away across the snow ... and hurrying for the last time round
the rink alone he searched in vain for the opening she had twice
used in this curious way.</p>
<p>"How very queer!" he thought, referring to the wire netting.
"She must have lifted it and wriggled under ...!"</p>
<p>Wondering how in the world she managed it, what in the world
had possessed him to be so free with her, and who in the world she
was, he went up the steep slope to the post office and so to bed, her
promise to come again another night still ringing delightfully in his
ears. And curious were the thoughts and sensations that accompanied
him. Most of all, perhaps, was the half suggestion of some
dim memory that he had known this girl before, had met her
somewhere, more—that she knew him. For in her voice—a low,
soft, windy little voice it was, tender and soothing for all its quiet
coldness—there lay some faint reminder of two others he had
known, both long since gone: the voice of the woman he had loved,
and—the voice of his mother.</p>
<p>But this time through his dreams there ran no clash of battle. He
was conscious, rather, of something cold and clinging that made
him think of sifting snowflakes climbing slowly with entangling
touch and thickness round his feet. The snow, coming without
noise, each flake so light and tiny none can mark the spot whereon
it settles, yet the mass of it able to smother whole villages, wove
through the very texture of his mind—cold, bewildering, deadening
effort with its clinging network of ten million feathery touches.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>III</h3>
<p>In the morning Hibbert realised he had done, perhaps, a foolish
thing. The brilliant sunshine that drenched the valley made him see
this, and the sight of his work-table with its typewriter, books, papers,
and the rest, brought additional conviction. To have skated
with a girl alone at midnight, no matter how innocently the thing
had come about, was unwise—unfair, especially to her. Gossip in
these little winter resorts was worse than in a provincial town. He
hoped no one had seen them. Luckily the night had been dark.
Most likely none had heard the ring of skates.</p>
<p>Deciding that in future he would be more careful, he plunged
into work, and sought to dismiss the matter from his mind.</p>
<p>But in his times of leisure the memory returned persistently to
haunt him. When he "ski-d," "luged," or danced in the evenings,
and especially when he skated on the little rink, he was aware that
the eyes of his mind forever sought this strange companion of the
night. A hundred times he fancied that he saw her, but always sight
deceived him. Her face he might not know, but he could hardly fail
to recognise her figure. Yet nowhere among the others did he catch
a glimpse of that slim young creature he had skated with alone beneath
the clouded stars. He searched in vain. Even his inquiries as to
the occupants of the private châlets brought no results. He had lost
her. But the queer thing was that he felt as though she were somewhere
close; he <i>knew</i> she had not really gone. While people came
and left with every day, it never once occurred to him that she had
left. On the contrary, he felt assured that they would meet again.</p>
<p>This thought he never quite acknowledged. Perhaps it was the
wish that fathered it only. And, even when he did meet her, it was a
question how he would speak and claim acquaintance, or whether
<i>she</i> would recognise himself. It might be awkward. He almost came
to dread a meeting, though "dread," of course, was far too strong a
word to describe an emotion that was half delight, half wondering
anticipation.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the season was in full swing. Hibbert felt in perfect
health, worked hard, ski-d, skated, luged, and at night danced fairly
often—in spite of his decision. This dancing was, however, an act of
subconscious surrender; it really meant he hoped to find her among
the whirling couples. He was searching for her without quite acknowledging
it to himself; and the hotel-world, meanwhile, thinking
it had won him over, teased and chaffed him. He made excuses
in a similar vein; but all the time he watched and searched and—waited.</p>
<p>For several days the sky held clear and bright and frosty, bitterly
cold, everything crisp and sparkling in the sun; but there was no
sign of fresh snow, and the ski-ers began to grumble. On the mountains
was an icy crust that made "running" dangerous; they wanted
the frozen, dry, and powdery snow that makes for speed, renders
steering easier and falling less severe. But the keen east wind
showed no signs of changing for a whole ten days. Then, suddenly,
there came a touch of softer air and the weather-wise began to
prophesy.</p>
<p>Hibbert, who was delicately sensitive to the least change in earth
or sky, was perhaps the first to feel it. Only he did not prophesy. He
knew through every nerve in his body that moisture had crept into
the air, was accumulating, and that presently a fall would come. For
he responded to the moods of Nature like a fine barometer.</p>
<p>And the knowledge, this time, brought into his heart a strange
little wayward emotion that was hard to account for—a feeling of
unexplained uneasiness and disquieting joy. For behind it, woven
through it rather, ran a faint exhilaration that connected remotely
somewhere with that touch of delicious alarm, that tiny anticipating
"dread," that so puzzled him when he thought of his next meeting
with his skating companion of the night. It lay beyond all words, all
telling, this queer relationship between the two; but somehow the
girl and snow ran in a pair across his mind.</p>
<p>Perhaps for imaginative writing-men, more than for other workers,
the smallest change of mood betrays itself at once. His work at
any rate revealed this slight shifting of emotional values in his soul.
Not that his writing suffered, but that it altered, subtly as those
changes of sky or sea or landscape that come with the passing of afternoon
into evening—imperceptibly. A subconscious excitement
sought to push outwards and express itself ... and, knowing the
uneven effect such moods produced in his work, he laid his pen
aside and took instead to reading that he had to do.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the brilliance passed from the sunshine, the sky grew
slowly overcast; by dusk the mountain tops came singularly close
and sharp; the distant valley rose into absurdly near perspective.
The moisture increased, rapidly approaching saturation point, when
it must fall in snow. Hibbert watched and waited.</p>
<p>And in the morning the world lay smothered beneath its fresh
white carpet. It snowed heavily till noon, thickly, incessantly, chokingly,
a foot or more; then the sky cleared, the sun came out in
splendour, the wind shifted back to the east, and frost came down
upon the mountains with its keenest and most biting tooth. The
drop in the temperature was tremendous, but the ski-ers were jubilant.
Next day the "running" would be fast and perfect. Already the
mass was settling, and the surface freezing into those moss-like,
powdery crystals that make the ski run almost of their own accord
with the faint "sishing" as of a bird's wings through the air.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>IV</h3>
<p>That night there was excitement in the little hotel-world, first because
there was a <i>bal costumé</i>, but chiefly because the new snow
had come. And Hibbert went—felt drawn to go; he did not go in
costume, but he wanted to talk about the slopes and ski-ing with
the other men, and at the same time....</p>
<p>Ah, there was the truth, the deeper necessity that called. For the
singular connection between the stranger and the snow again betrayed
itself, utterly beyond explanation as before, but vital and insistent.
Some hidden instinct in his pagan soul—heaven knows how
he phrased it even to himself, if he phrased it at all—whispered that
with the snow the girl would be somewhere about, would emerge
from her hiding place, would even look for him.</p>
<p>Absolutely unwarranted it was. He laughed while he stood before
the little glass and trimmed his moustache, tried to make his
black tie sit straight, and shook down his dinner jacket so that it
should lie upon the shoulders without a crease. His brown eyes
were very bright. "I look younger than I usually do," he thought. It
was unusual, even significant, in a man who had no vanity about his
appearance and certainly never questioned his age or tried to look
younger than he was. Affairs of the heart, with one tumultuous exception
that left no fuel for lesser subsequent fires, had never troubled
him. The forces of his soul and mind not called upon for
"work" and obvious duties, all went to Nature. The desolate, wild
places of the earth were what he loved; night, and the beauty of the
stars and snow. And this evening he felt their claims upon him
mightily stirring. A rising wildness caught his blood, quickened his
pulse, woke longing and passion too. But chiefly snow. The snow
whirred softly through his thoughts like white, seductive dreams....
For the snow had come; and She, it seemed, had somehow come
with it—into his mind.</p>
<p>And yet he stood before that twisted mirror and pulled his tie
and coat askew a dozen times, as though it mattered. "What in the
world is up with me?" he thought. Then, laughing a little, he turned
before leaving the room to put his private papers in order. The
green morocco desk that held them he took down from the shelf
and laid upon the table. Tied to the lid was the visiting card with his
brother's London address "in case of accident." On the way down
to the hotel he wondered why he had done this, for though imaginative,
he was not the kind of man who dealt in presentiments.
Moods with him were strong, but ever held in leash.</p>
<p>"It's almost like a warning," he thought, smiling. He drew his
thick coat tightly round the throat as the freezing air bit at him.
"Those warnings one reads of in stories sometimes ...!"</p>
<p>A delicious happiness was in his blood. Over the edge of the hills
across the valley rose the moon. He saw her silver sheet the world
of snow. Snow covered all. It smothered sound and distance. It
smothered houses, streets, and human beings. It smothered—life.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>V</h3>
<p>In the hall there was light and bustle; people were already arriving
from the other hotels and châlets, their costumes hidden beneath
many wraps. Groups of men in evening dress stood about smoking,
talking "snow" and "ski-ing." The band was tuning up. The claims
of the hotel-world clashed about him faintly as of old. At the big
glass windows of the verandah, peasants stopped a moment on their
way home from the <i>café</i> to peer. Hibbert thought laughingly of that
conflict he used to imagine. He laughed because it suddenly seemed
so unreal. He belonged so utterly to Nature and the mountains, and
especially to those desolate slopes where now the snow lay thick
and fresh and sweet, that there was no question of a conflict at all.
The power of the newly fallen snow had caught him, proving it
without effort. Out there, upon those lonely reaches of the moonlit
ridges, the snow lay ready—masses and masses of it—cool, soft,
inviting. He longed for it. It awaited him. He thought of the intoxicating
delight of ski-ing in the moonlight....</p>
<p>Thus, somehow, in vivid flashing vision, he thought of it while
he stood there smoking with the other men and talking all the
"shop" of ski-ing.</p>
<p>And, ever mysteriously blended with this power of the snow,
poured also through his inner being the power of the girl. He could
not disabuse his mind of the insinuating presence of the two together.
He remembered that queer skating-impulse of ten days ago,
the impulse that had let her in. That any mind, even an imaginative
one, could pass beneath the sway of such a fancy was strange
enough; and Hibbert, while fully aware of the disorder, yet found a
curious joy in yielding to it. This insubordinate centre that drew
him towards old pagan beliefs had assumed command. With a kind
of sensuous pleasure he let himself be conquered.</p>
<p>And snow that night seemed in everybody's thoughts. The dancing
couples talked of it; the hotel proprietors congratulated one another;
it meant good sport and satisfied their guests; every one was
planning trips and expeditions, talking of slopes and telemarks, of
flying speed and distance, of drifts and crust and frost. Vitality and
enthusiasm pulsed in the very air; all were alert and active, positive,
radiating currents of creative life even into the stuffy atmosphere of
that crowded ball-room. And the snow had caused it, the snow had
brought it; all this discharge of eager sparkling energy was due primarily
to the—Snow.</p>
<p>But in the mind of Hibbert, by some swift alchemy of his pagan
yearnings, this energy became transmuted. It rarefied itself, gleaming
in white and crystal currents of passionate anticipation, which
he transferred, as by a species of electrical imagination, into the personality
of the girl—the Girl of the Snow. She somewhere was waiting
for him, expecting him, calling to him softly from those leagues
of moonlit mountain. He remembered the touch of that cool, dry
hand; the soft and icy breath against his cheek; the hush and softness
of her presence in the way she came and the way she had gone
again—like a flurry of snow the wind sent gliding up the slopes.
She, like himself, belonged out there. He fancied that he heard her
little windy voice come sifting to him through the snowy branches
of the trees, calling his name ... that haunting little voice that dived
straight to the centre of his life as once, long years ago, two other
voices used to do....</p>
<p>But nowhere among the costumed dancers did he see her slender
figure. He danced with one and all, distrait and absent, a stupid
partner as each girl discovered, his eyes ever turning towards the
door and windows, hoping to catch the luring face, the vision that
did not come ... and at length, hoping even against hope. For the
ball-room thinned; groups left one by one, going home to their
hotels and châlets; the band tired obviously; people sat drinking
lemon-squashes at the little tables, the men mopping their foreheads,
everybody ready for bed.</p>
<p>It was close on midnight. As Hibbert passed through the hall to
get his overcoat and snow-boots, he saw men in the passage by the
"sport-room," greasing their ski against an early start. Knapsack
luncheons were being ordered by the kitchen swing doors. He
sighed. Lighting a cigarette a friend offered him, he returned a confused
reply to some question as to whether he could join their party
in the morning. It seemed he did not hear it properly. He passed
through the outer vestibule between the double glass doors, and
went into the night.</p>
<p>The man who asked the question watched him go, an expression
of anxiety momentarily in his eyes.</p>
<p>"Don't think he heard you," said another, laughing. "You've got
to shout to Hibbert, his mind's so full of his work."</p>
<p>"He works too hard," suggested the first, "full of queer ideas and
dreams."</p>
<p>But Hibbert's silence was not rudeness. He had not caught the
invitation, that was all. The call of the hotel-world had faded. He no
longer heard it. Another wilder call was sounding in his ears.</p>
<p>For up the street he had seen a little figure moving. Close against
the shadows of the baker's shop it glided—white, slim, enticing.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>VI</h3>
<p>And at once into his mind passed the hush and softness of the
snow—yet with it a searching, crying wildness for the heights. He
knew by some incalculable, swift instinct she would not meet him
in the village street. It was not there, amid crowding houses, she
would speak to him. Indeed, already she had disappeared, melted
from view up the white vista of the moonlit road. Yonder, he divined,
she waited where the highway narrowed abruptly into the
mountain path beyond the châlets.</p>
<p>It did not even occur to him to hesitate; mad though it seemed,
and was—this sudden craving for the heights with her, at least for
open spaces where the snow lay thick and fresh—it was too imperious
to be denied. He does not remember going up to his room, putting
the sweater over his evening clothes, and getting into the fur
gauntlet gloves and the helmet cap of wool. Most certainly he has
no recollection of fastening on his ski; he must have done it automatically.
Some faculty of normal observation was in abeyance, as it
were. His mind was out beyond the village—out with the snowy
mountains and the moon.</p>
<p>Henri Défago, putting up the shutters over his <i>café</i> windows,
saw him pass, and wondered mildly: "Un monsieur qui fait du ski à
cette heure! Il est Anglais, done ...!" He shrugged his shoulders, as
though a man had the right to choose his own way of death. And
Marthe Perotti, the hunchback wife of the shoemaker, looking by
chance from her window, caught his figure moving swiftly up the
road. She had other thoughts, for she knew and believed the old traditions
of the witches and snow-beings that steal the souls of men.
She had even heard, 'twas said, the dreaded "synagogue" pass roaring
down the street at night, and now, as then, she hid her eyes.
"They've called to him ... and he must go," she murmured, making
the sign of the cross.</p>
<p>But no one sought to stop him. Hibbert recalls only a single incident
until he found himself beyond the houses, searching for her
along the fringe of forest where the moonlight met the snow in a
bewildering frieze of fantastic shadows. And the incident was simply
this—that he remembered passing the church. Catching the outline
of its tower against the stars, he was aware of a faint sense of
hesitation. A vague uneasiness came and went—jarred unpleasantly
across the flow of his excited feelings, chilling exhilaration. He
caught the instant's discord, dismissed it, and—passed on. The seduction
of the snow smothered the hint before he realised that it
had brushed the skirts of warning.</p>
<p>And then he saw her. She stood there waiting in a little clear
space of shining snow, dressed all in white, part of the moonlight
and the glistening background, her slender figure just discernible.</p>
<p>"I waited, for I knew you would come," the silvery little voice of
windy beauty floated down to him. "You <i>had</i> to come."</p>
<p>"I'm ready," he answered, "I knew it too."</p>
<p>The world of Nature caught him to its heart in those few
words—the wonder and the glory of the night and snow. Life
leaped within him. The passion of his pagan soul exulted, rose in
joy, flowed out to her. He neither reflected nor considered, but
let himself go like the veriest schoolboy in the wildness of first
love.</p>
<p>"Give me your hand," he cried, "I'm coming ...!"</p>
<p>"A little farther on, a little higher," came her delicious answer.
"Here it is too near the village—and the church."</p>
<p>And the words seemed wholly right and natural; he did not
dream of questioning them; he understood that, with this little
touch of civilisation in sight, the familiarity he suggested was impossible.
Once out upon the open mountains, 'mid the freedom of
huge slopes and towering peaks, the stars and moon to witness and
the wilderness of snow to watch, they could taste an innocence of
happy intercourse free from the dead conventions that imprison literal
minds.</p>
<p>He urged his pace, yet did not quite overtake her. The girl kept
always just a little bit ahead of his best efforts.... And soon they
left the trees behind and passed on to the enormous slopes of the
sea of snow that rolled in mountainous terror and beauty to
the stars. The wonder of the white world caught him away. Under
the steady moonlight it was more than haunting. It was a living,
white, bewildering power that deliciously confused the senses and
laid a spell of wild perplexity upon the heart. It was a personality
that cloaked, and yet revealed, itself through all this sheeted whiteness
of snow. It rose, went with him, fled before, and followed after.
Slowly it dropped lithe, gleaming arms about his neck, gathering
him in....</p>
<p>Certainly some soft persuasion coaxed his very soul, urging him
ever forwards, upwards, on towards the higher icy slopes. Judgment
and reason left their throne, it seemed, completely, as in the
madness of intoxication. The girl, slim and seductive, kept always
just ahead, so that he never quite came up with her. He saw the
white enchantment of her face and figure, something that streamed
about her neck flying like a wreath of snow in the wind, and heard
the alluring accents of her whispering voice that called from time to
time: "A little farther on, a little higher.... Then we'll run home together!"</p>
<p>Sometimes he saw her hand stretched out to find his own, but
each time, just as he came up with her, he saw her still in front, the
hand and arm withdrawn. They took a gentle angle of ascent. The
toil seemed nothing. In this crystal, wine-like air fatigue vanished.
The sishing of the ski through the powdery surface of the snow
was the only sound that broke the stillness; this, with his breathing
and the rustle of her skirts, was all he heard. Cold moonshine,
snow, and silence held the world. The sky was black, and the peaks
beyond cut into it like frosted wedges of iron and steel. Far below
the valley slept, the village long since hidden out of sight. He felt
that he could never tire.... The sound of the church clock rose
from time to time faintly through the air—more and more distant.</p>
<p>"Give me your hand. It's time now to turn back."</p>
<p>"Just one more slope," she laughed. "That ridge above us. Then
we'll make for home." And her low voice mingled pleasantly with
the purring of their ski. His own seemed harsh and ugly by comparison.</p>
<p>"But I have never come so high before. It's glorious! This world
of silent snow and moonlight—and <i>you</i>. You're a child of the snow,
I swear. Let me come up—closer—to see your face—and touch
your little hand."</p>
<p>Her laughter answered him.</p>
<p>"Come on! A little higher. Here we're quite alone together."</p>
<p>"It's magnificent," he cried. "But why did you hide away so
long? I've looked and searched for you in vain ever since we
skated—" he was going to say "ten days ago," but the accurate
memory of time had gone from him; he was not sure whether it was
days or years or minutes. His thoughts of earth were scattered and
confused.</p>
<p>"You looked for me in the wrong places," he heard her murmur
just above him. "You looked in places where I never go. Hotels and
houses kill me. I avoid them." She laughed—a fine, shrill, windy little
laugh.</p>
<p>"I loathe them too—"</p>
<p>He stopped. The girl had suddenly come quite close. A breath of
ice passed through his very soul. She had touched him.</p>
<p>"But this awful cold!" he cried out, sharply, "this freezing cold
that takes me. The wind is rising; it's a wind of ice. Come, let us
turn ...!"</p>
<p>But when he plunged forward to hold her, or at least to look, the
girl was gone again. And something in the way she stood there a
few feet beyond, and stared down into his eyes so steadfastly in silence,
made him shiver. The moonlight was behind her, but in some
odd way he could not focus sight upon her face, although so close.
The gleam of eyes he caught, but all the rest seemed white and
snowy as though he looked beyond her—out into space....</p>
<p>The sound of the church bell came up faintly from the valley far
below, and he counted the strokes—five. A sudden, curious weakness
seized him as he listened. Deep within it was, deadly yet somehow
sweet, and hard to resist. He felt like sinking down upon the
snow and lying there.... They had been climbing for five hours....
It was, of course, the warning of complete exhaustion.</p>
<p>With a great effort he fought and overcame it. It passed away as
suddenly as it came.</p>
<p>"We'll turn," he said with a decision he hardly felt. "It will be
dawn before we reach the village again. Come at once. It's time for
home."</p>
<p>The sense of exhilaration had utterly left him. An emotion that
was akin to fear swept coldly through him. But her whispering answer
turned it instantly to terror—a terror that gripped him horribly
and turned him weak and unresisting.</p>
<p>"Our home is—<i>here</i>!" A burst of wild, high laughter, loud and
shrill, accompanied the words. It was like a whistling wind. The
wind <i>had</i> risen, and clouds obscured the moon. "A little higher—where
we cannot hear the wicked bells," she cried, and for the first
time seized him deliberately by the hand. She moved, was suddenly
close against his face. Again she touched him.</p>
<p>And Hibbert tried to turn away in escape, and so trying, found
for the first time that the power of the snow—that other power
which does not exhilarate but deadens effort—was upon him. The
suffocating weakness that it brings to exhausted men, luring them
to the sleep of death in her clinging soft embrace, lulling the will
and conquering all desire for life—this was awfully upon him. His
feet were heavy and entangled. He could not turn or move.</p>
<p>The girl stood in front of him, very near; he felt her chilly breath
upon his cheeks; her hair passed blindingly across his eyes; and that
icy wind came with her. He saw her whiteness close; again, it
seemed, his sight passed through her into space as though she had
no face. Her arms were round his neck. She drew him softly downwards
to his knees. He sank; he yielded utterly; he obeyed. Her
weight was upon him, smothering, delicious. The snow was to his
waist.... She kissed him softly on the lips, the eyes, all over his
face. And then she spoke his name in that voice of love and wonder,
the voice that held the accent of two others—both taken over long
ago by Death—the voice of his mother, and of the woman he had
loved.</p>
<p>He made one more feeble effort to resist. Then, realising even
while he struggled that this soft weight about his heart was sweeter
than anything life could ever bring, he let his muscles relax, and
sank back into the soft oblivion of the covering snow. Her wintry
kisses bore him into sleep.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>VII</h3>
<p>They say that men who know the sleep of exhaustion in the snow
find no awakening on the hither side of death.... The hours passed
and the moon sank down below the white world's rim. Then, suddenly,
there came a little crash upon his breast and neck, and
Hibbert—woke.</p>
<p>He slowly turned bewildered, heavy eyes upon the desolate
mountains, stared dizzily about him, tried to rise. At first his muscles
would not act; a numbing, aching pain possessed him. He uttered
a long, thin cry for help, and heard its faintness swallowed
by the wind. And then he understood vaguely why he was only
warm—not dead. For this very wind that took his cry had built up
a sheltering mound of driven snow against his body while he slept.
Like a curving wave it ran beside him. It was the breaking of its
over-toppling edge that caused the crash, and the coldness of the
mass against his neck that woke him.</p>
<p>Dawn kissed the eastern sky; pale gleams of gold shot every peak
with splendour; but ice was in the air, and the dry and frozen snow
blew like powder from the surface of the slopes. He saw the points
of his ski projecting just below him. Then he—remembered. It
seems he had just strength enough to realise that, could he but rise
and stand, he might fly with terrific impetus towards the woods and
village far beneath. The ski would carry him. But if he failed and
fell ...!</p>
<p>How he contrived it Hibbert never knew; this fear of death
somehow called out his whole available reserve force. He rose
slowly, balanced a moment, then, taking the angle of an immense
zigzag, started down the awful slopes like an arrow from a bow.
And automatically the splendid muscles of the practised ski-er and
athlete saved and guided him, for he was hardly conscious of controlling
either speed or direction. The snow stung face and eyes like
fine steel shot; ridge after ridge flew past; the summits raced across
the sky; the valley leaped up with bounds to meet him. He scarcely
felt the ground beneath his feet as the huge slopes and distance
melted before the lightning speed of that descent from death to life.</p>
<p>He took it in four mile-long zigzags, and it was the turning at
each corner that nearly finished him, for then the strain of balancing
taxed to the verge of collapse the remnants of his strength.</p>
<p>Slopes that have taken hours to climb can be descended in a short
half-hour on ski, but Hibbert had lost all count of time. Quite other
thoughts and feelings mastered him in that wild, swift dropping
through the air that was like the flight of a bird. For ever close upon
his heels came following forms and voices with the whirling snow-dust.
He heard that little silvery voice of death and laughter at his
back. Shrill and wild, with the whistling of the wind past his ears, he
caught its pursuing tones; but in anger now, no longer soft and
coaxing. And it was accompanied; she did not follow alone. It
seemed a host of these flying figures of the snow chased madly just
behind him. He felt them furiously smite his neck and cheeks,
snatch at his hands and try to entangle his feet and ski in drifts. His
eyes they blinded, and they caught his breath away.</p>
<p>The terror of the heights and snow and winter desolation urged
him forward in the maddest race with death a human being ever
knew; and so terrific was the speed that before the gold and crimson
had left the summits to touch the ice-lips of the lower glaciers, he
saw the friendly forest far beneath swing up and welcome him.</p>
<p>And it was then, moving slowly along the edge of the woods, he
saw a light. A man was carrying it. A procession of human figures
was passing in a dark line laboriously through the snow. And—he
heard the sound of chanting.</p>
<p>Instinctively, without a second's hesitation, he changed his
course. No longer flying at an angle as before, he pointed his ski
straight down the mountain-side. The dreadful steepness did not
frighten him. He knew full well it meant a crashing tumble at the
bottom, but he also knew it meant a doubling of his speed—with
safety at the end. For, though no definite thought passed through
his mind, he understood that it was the village <i>curé</i> who carried that
little gleaming lantern in the dawn, and that he was taking the Host
to a châlet on the lower slopes—to some peasant <i>in extremis</i>. He remembered
her terror of the church and bells. She feared the holy
symbols.</p>
<p>There was one last wild cry in his ears as he started, a shriek of
the wind before his face, and a rush of stinging snow against closed
eyelids—and then he dropped through empty space. Speed took
sight from him. It seemed he flew off the surface of the world.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Indistinctly he recalls the murmur of men's voices, the touch of
strong arms that lifted him, and the shooting pains as the ski were
unfastened from the twisted ankle ... for when he opened his eyes
again to normal life he found himself lying in his bed at the post office
with the doctor at his side. But for years to come the story of
"mad Hibbert's" ski-ing at night is recounted in that mountain village.
He went, it seems, up slopes, and to a height that no man in his
senses ever tried before. The tourists were agog about it for the rest
of the season, and the very same day two of the bolder men went
over the actual ground and photographed the slopes. Later Hibbert
saw these photographs. He noticed one curious thing about them—though
he did not mention it to any one:</p>
<p>There was only a single track.</p>
<hr style='width: 65%;' />
<h2><SPAN name="Sand" id="Sand"></SPAN><i>Sand</i></h2>
<h3>I</h3>
<p>As Felix Henriot came through the streets that January night
the fog was stifling, but when he reached his little flat upon the top
floor there came a sound of wind. Wind was stirring about the
world. It blew against his windows, but at first so faintly that he
hardly noticed it. Then, with an abrupt rise and fall like a wailing
voice that sought to claim attention, it called him. He peered
through the window into the blurred darkness, listening.</p>
<p>There is no cry in the world like that of the homeless wind. A
vague excitement, scarcely to be analysed, ran through his blood.
The curtain of fog waved momentarily aside. Henriot fancied a star
peeped down at him.</p>
<p>"It will change things a bit—at last," he sighed, settling back into
his chair. "It will bring movement!"</p>
<p>Already something in himself had changed. A restlessness, as of
that wandering wind, woke in his heart—the desire to be off and
away. Other things could rouse this wildness too: falling water, the
singing of a bird, an odour of wood-fire, a glimpse of winding road.
But the cry of wind, always searching, questioning, travelling the
world's great routes, remained ever the master-touch. High longing
took his mood in hand. Mid seven millions he felt suddenly—lonely.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"I will arise and go now, for always night and day<br/></span>
<span class="i0">I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements gray,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">I hear it in the deep heart's core."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>He murmured the words over softly to himself. The emotion
that produced Innisfree passed strongly through him. He too
would be over the hills and far away. He craved movement, change,
adventure—somewhere far from shops and crowds and motor-'busses.
For a week the fog had stifled London. This wind brought
life.</p>
<p>Where should he go? Desire was long; his purse was short.</p>
<p>He glanced at his books, letters, newspapers. They had no interest
now. Instead he listened. The panorama of other journeys rolled
in colour through the little room, flying on one another's heels.
Henriot enjoyed this remembered essence of his travels more than
the travels themselves. The crying wind brought so many voices, all
of them seductive:</p>
<p>There was a soft crashing of waves upon the Black Sea shores,
where the huge Caucasus beckoned in the sky beyond; a rustling in
the umbrella pines and cactus at Marseilles, whence magic steamers
start about the world like flying dreams. He heard the plash of
fountains upon Mount Ida's slopes, and the whisper of the tamarisk
on Marathon. It was dawn once more upon the Ionian Sea, and he
smelt the perfume of the Cyclades. Blue-veiled islands melted in
the sunshine, and across the dewy lawns of Tempe, moistened by
the spray of many waterfalls, he saw—Great Heavens above!—the
dancing of white forms ... or was it only mist the sunshine painted
against Pelion?... "Methought, among the lawns together, we wandered
underneath the young grey dawn. And multitudes of dense
white fleecy clouds shepherded by the slow, unwilling wind...."</p>
<p>And then, into his stuffy room, slipped the singing perfume of a
wall-flower on a ruined tower, and with it the sweetness of hot ivy.
He heard the "yellow bees in the ivy bloom." Wind whipped over
the open hills—this very wind that laboured drearily through the
London fog.</p>
<p>And—he was caught. The darkness melted from the city. The fog
whisked off into an azure sky. The roar of traffic turned into booming
of the sea. There was a whistling among cordage, and the floor
swayed to and fro. He saw a sailor touch his cap and pocket the
two-franc piece. The syren hooted—ominous sound that had
started him on many a journey of adventure—and the roar of London
became mere insignificant clatter of a child's toy carriages.</p>
<p>He loved that syren's call; there was something deep and pitiless
in it. It drew the wanderers forth from cities everywhere: "Leave
your known world behind you, and come with me for better or for
worse! The anchor is up; it is too late to change. Only—beware!
You shall know curious things—and alone!"</p>
<p>Henriot stirred uneasily in his chair. He turned with sudden
energy to the shelf of guide-books, maps and time-tables—possessions
he most valued in the whole room. He was a happy-go-lucky,
adventure-loving soul, careless of common standards, athirst
ever for the new and strange.</p>
<p>"That's the best of having a cheap flat," he laughed, "and no ties
in the world. I can turn the key and disappear. No one cares or
knows—no one but the thieving caretaker. And he's long ago found
out that there's nothing here worth taking!"</p>
<p>There followed then no lengthy indecision. Preparation was even
shorter still. He was always ready for a move, and his sojourn in
cities was but breathing-space while he gathered pennies for further
wanderings. An enormous kit-bag—sack-shaped, very worn and
dirty—emerged speedily from the bottom of a cupboard in the wall.
It was of limitless capacity. The key and padlock rattled in its depths.
Cigarette ashes covered everything while he stuffed it full of ancient,
indescribable garments. And his voice, singing of those "yellow bees
in the ivy bloom," mingled with the crying of the rising wind about
his windows. His restlessness had disappeared by magic.</p>
<p>This time, however, there could be no haunted Pelion, nor shady
groves of Tempe, for he lived in sophisticated times when money
markets regulated movement sternly. Travelling was only for the
rich; mere wanderers must pig it. He remembered instead an opportune
invitation to the Desert. "Objective" invitation, his genial
hosts had called it, knowing his hatred of convention. And Helouan
danced into letters of brilliance upon the inner map of his mind. For
Egypt had ever held his spirit in thrall, though as yet he had tried in
vain to touch the great buried soul of her. The excavators, the Egyptologists,
the archaeologists most of all, plastered her grey ancient
face with labels like hotel advertisements on travellers' portmanteaux.
They told where she had come from last, but nothing of what
she dreamed and thought and loved. The heart of Egypt lay beneath
the sand, and the trifling robbery of little details that poked forth
from tombs and temples brought no true revelation of her stupendous
spiritual splendour. Henriot, in his youth, had searched and
dived among what material he could find, believing once—or half
believing—that the ceremonial of that ancient system veiled a
weight of symbol that was reflected from genuine supersensual
knowledge. The rituals, now taken literally, and so pityingly explained
away, had once been genuine pathways of approach. But
never yet, and least of all in his previous visits to Egypt itself, had
he discovered one single person, worthy of speech, who caught at
his idea. "Curious," they said, then turned away—to go on digging
in the sand. Sand smothered her world to-day. Excavators discovered
skeletons. Museums everywhere stored them—grinning, literal
relics that told nothing.</p>
<p>But now, while he packed and sang, these hopes of enthusiastic
younger days stirred again—because the emotion that gave them
birth was real and true in him. Through the morning mists upon the
Nile an old pyramid bowed hugely at him across London roofs:
"Come," he heard its awful whisper beneath the ceiling, "I have
things to show you, and to tell." He saw the flock of them sailing
the Desert like weird grey solemn ships that make no earthly port.
And he imagined them as one: multiple expressions of some single
unearthly portent they adumbrated in mighty form—dead symbols
of some spiritual conception long vanished from the world.</p>
<p>"I mustn't dream like this," he laughed, "or I shall get absent-minded
and pack fire-tongs instead of boots. It looks like a jumble
sale already!" And he stood on a heap of things to wedge them
down still tighter.</p>
<p>But the pictures would not cease. He saw the kites circling high
in the blue air. A couple of white vultures flapped lazily away over
shining miles. Felucca sails, like giant wings emerging from the
ground, curved towards him from the Nile. The palm-trees
dropped long shadows over Memphis. He felt the delicious,
drenching heat, and the Khamasin, that over-wind from Nubia,
brushed his very cheeks. In the little gardens the mish-mish was in
bloom.... He smelt the Desert ... grey sepulchre of cancelled cycles....
The stillness of her interminable reaches dropped down
upon old London....</p>
<p>The magic of the sand stole round him in its silent-footed tempest.</p>
<p>And while he struggled with that strange, capacious sack, the
piles of clothing ran into shapes of gleaming Bedouin faces; London
garments settled down with the mournful sound of camels' feet,
half dropping wind, half water flowing underground—sound that
old Time has brought over into modern life and left a moment for
our wonder and perhaps our tears.</p>
<p>He rose at length with the excitement of some deep enchantment
in his eyes. The thought of Egypt plunged ever so deeply into him,
carrying him into depths where he found it difficult to breathe, so
strangely far away it seemed, yet indefinably familiar. He lost his
way. A touch of fear came with it.</p>
<p>"A sack like that is the wonder of the world," he laughed again,
kicking the unwieldy, sausage-shaped monster into a corner of the
room, and sitting down to write the thrilling labels: "Felix Henriot,
Alexandria <i>via</i> Marseilles." But his pen blotted the letters; there was
sand in it. He rewrote the words. Then he remembered a dozen
things he had left out. Impatiently, yet with confusion somewhere,
he stuffed them in. They ran away into shifting heaps; they disappeared;
they emerged suddenly again. It was like packing hot, dry,
flowing sand. From the pockets of a coat—he had worn it last summer
down Dorset way—out trickled sand. There was sand in his
mind and thoughts.</p>
<p>And his dreams that night were full of winds, the old sad winds of
Egypt, and of moving, sifting sand. Arabs and Afreets danced amazingly
together across dunes he could never reach. For he could not
follow fast enough. Something infinitely older than these ever caught
his feet and held him back. A million tiny fingers stung and pricked
him. Something flung a veil before his eyes. Once it touched him—his
face and hands and neck. "Stay here with us," he heard a host of
muffled voices crying, but their sound was smothered, buried, rising
through the ground. A myriad throats were choked. Till, at last, with
a violent effort he turned and seized it. And then the thing he grasped
at slipped between his fingers and ran easily away. It had a grey and
yellow face, and it moved through all its parts. It flowed as water
flows, and yet was solid. It was centuries old.</p>
<p>He cried out to it. "Who are you? What is your name? I surely
know you ... but I have forgotten ...?"</p>
<p>And it stopped, turning from far away its great uncovered countenance
of nameless colouring. He caught a voice. It rolled and
boomed and whispered like the wind. And then he woke, with a curious
shaking in his heart, and a little touch of chilly perspiration on
the skin.</p>
<p>But the voice seemed in the room still—close beside him:</p>
<p>"I am the Sand," he heard, before it died away.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>And next he realised that the glitter of Paris lay behind him, and a
steamer was taking him with much unnecessary motion across a
sparkling sea towards Alexandria. Gladly he saw the Riviera fade
below the horizon, with its hard bright sunshine, treacherous
winds, and its smear of rich, conventional English. All restlessness
now had left him. True vagabond still at forty, he only felt the unrest
and discomfort of life when caught in the network of routine
and rigid streets, no chance of breaking loose. He was off again at
last, money scarce enough indeed, but the joy of wandering expressing
itself in happy emotions of release. Every warning of calculation
was stifled. He thought of the American woman who
walked out of her Long Island house one summer's day to look at a
passing sail—and was gone eight years before she walked in again.
Eight years of roving travel! He had always felt respect and admiration
for that woman.</p>
<p>For Felix Henriot, with his admixture of foreign blood, was
philosopher as well as vagabond, a strong poetic and religious strain
sometimes breaking out through fissures in his complex nature. He
had seen much life; had read many books. The passionate desire of
youth to solve the world's big riddles had given place to a resignation
filled to the brim with wonder. Anything <i>might</i> be true. Nothing
surprised him. The most outlandish beliefs, for all he knew,
might fringe truth somewhere. He had escaped that cheap cynicism
with which disappointed men soothe their vanity when they realise
that an intelligible explanation of the universe lies beyond their
powers. He no longer expected final answers.</p>
<p>For him, even the smallest journeys held the spice of some adventure;
all minutes were loaded with enticing potentialities. And they
shaped for themselves somehow a dramatic form. "It's like a story,"
his friends said when he told his travels. It always was a story.</p>
<p>But the adventure that lay waiting for him where the silent
streets of little Helouan kiss the great Desert's lips, was of a different
kind to any Henriot had yet encountered. Looking back, he has
often asked himself, "How in the world can I accept it?"</p>
<p>And, perhaps, he never yet has accepted it. It was sand that
brought it. For the Desert, the stupendous thing that mothers little
Helouan, produced it.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>II</h3>
<p>He slipped through Cairo with the same relief that he left the Riviera,
resenting its social vulgarity so close to the imperial aristocracy
of the Desert; he settled down into the peace of soft and silent little
Helouan. The hotel in which he had a room on the top floor had
been formerly a Khedivial Palace. It had the air of a palace still. He
felt himself in a country-house, with lofty ceilings, cool and airy
corridors, spacious halls. Soft-footed Arabs attended to his wants;
white walls let in light and air without a sign of heat; there was a
feeling of a large, spread tent pitched on the very sand; and the wind
that stirred the oleanders in the shady gardens also crept in to rustle
the palm leaves of his favourite corner seat. Through the large windows
where once the Khedive held high court, the sunshine blazed
upon vistaed leagues of Desert.</p>
<p>And from his bedroom windows he watched the sun dip into
gold and crimson behind the swelling Libyan sands. This side of the
pyramids he saw the Nile meander among palm groves and tilled
fields. Across his balcony railings the Egyptian stars trooped down
beside his very bed, shaping old constellations for his dreams;
while, to the south, he looked out upon the vast untamable Body of
the sands that carpeted the world for thousands of miles towards
Upper Egypt, Nubia, and the dread Sahara itself. He wondered
again why people thought it necessary to go so far afield to know
the Desert. Here, within half an hour of Cairo, it lay breathing
solemnly at his very doors.</p>
<p>For little Helouan, caught thus between the shoulders of the
Libyan and Arabian Deserts, is utterly sand-haunted. The Desert
lies all round it like a sea. Henriot felt he never could escape from it,
as he moved about the island whose coasts are washed with sand.
Down each broad and shining street the two end houses framed a
vista of its dim immensity—glimpses of shimmering blue, or flame-touched
purple. There were stretches of deep sea-green as well, far
off upon its bosom. The streets were open channels of approach,
and the eye ran down them as along the tube of a telescope laid to
catch incredible distance out of space. Through them the Desert
reached in with long, thin feelers towards the village. Its Being
flooded into Helouan, and over it. Past walls and houses, churches
and hotels, the sea of Desert pressed in silently with its myriad soft
feet of sand. It poured in everywhere, through crack and slit
and crannie. These were reminders of possession and ownership.
And every passing wind that lifted eddies of dust at the street
corners were messages from the quiet, powerful Thing that permitted
Helouan to lie and dream so peacefully in the sunshine. Mere
artificial oasis, its existence was temporary, held on lease, just for
ninety-nine centuries or so.</p>
<p>This sea idea became insistent. For, in certain lights, and especially
in the brief, bewildering dusk, the Desert rose—swaying
towards the small white houses. The waves of it ran for fifty miles
without a break. It was too deep for foam or surface agitation, yet it
knew the swell of tides. And underneath flowed resolute currents,
linking distance to the centre. These many deserts were really one.
A storm, just retreated, had tossed Helouan upon the shore and left
it there to dry; but any morning he would wake to find it had been
carried off again into the depths. Some fragment, at least, would disappear.
The grim Mokattam Hills were rollers that ever threatened
to topple down and submerge the sandy bar that men called
Helouan.</p>
<p>Being soundless, and devoid of perfume, the Desert's message
reached him through two senses only—sight and touch; chiefly, of
course, the former. Its invasion was concentrated through the eyes.
And vision, thus uncorrected, went what pace it pleased. The
Desert played with him. Sand stole into his being—through the
eyes.</p>
<p>And so obsessing was this majesty of its close presence, that
Henriot sometimes wondered how people dared their little social
activities within its very sight and hearing; how they played golf
and tennis upon reclaimed edges of its face, picnicked so blithely
hard upon its frontiers, and danced at night while this stern, unfathomable
Thing lay breathing just beyond the trumpery walls that
kept it out. The challenge of their shallow admiration seemed presumptuous,
almost provocative. Their pursuit of pleasure suggested
insolent indifference. They ran fool-hardy hazards, he felt; for there
was no worship in their vulgar hearts. With a mental shudder,
sometimes he watched the cheap tourist horde go laughing, chattering
past within view of its ancient, half-closed eyes. It was like defying
deity.</p>
<p>For, to his stirred imagination the sublimity of the Desert
dwarfed humanity. These people had been wiser to choose another
place for the flaunting of their tawdry insignificance. Any minute
this Wilderness, "huddled in grey annihilation," might awake and
notice them ...!</p>
<p>In his own hotel were several "smart," so-called "Society" people
who emphasised the protest in him to the point of definite contempt.
Overdressed, the latest worldly novel under their arms, they
strutted the narrow pavements of their tiny world, immensely
pleased with themselves. Their vacuous minds expressed themselves
in the slang of their exclusive circle—value being the element excluded.
The pettiness of their outlook hardly distressed him—he
was too familiar with it at home—but their essential vulgarity, their
innate ugliness, seemed more than usually offensive in the grandeur
of its present setting. Into the mighty sands they took the latest
London scandal, gabbling it over even among the Tombs and Temples.
And "it was to laugh," the pains they spent wondering whom
they might condescend to know, never dreaming that they themselves
were not worth knowing. Against the background of the noble
Desert their titles seemed the cap and bells of clowns.</p>
<p>And Henriot, knowing some of them personally, could not
always escape their insipid company. Yet he was the gainer. They
little guessed how their commonness heightened contrast, set mercilessly
thus beside the strange, eternal beauty of the sand.</p>
<p>Occasionally the protest in his soul betrayed itself in words,
which of course they did not understand. "He is so clever, isn't he?"
And then, having relieved his feelings, he would comfort himself
characteristically:</p>
<p>"The Desert has not noticed them. The Sand is not aware of their
existence. How should the sea take note of rubbish that lies above
its tide-line?"</p>
<p>For Henriot drew near to its great shifting altars in an attitude of
worship. The wilderness made him kneel in heart. Its shining
reaches led to the oldest Temple in the world, and every journey
that he made was like a sacrament. For him the Desert was a consecrated
place. It was sacred.</p>
<p>And his tactful hosts, knowing his peculiarities, left their house
open to him when he cared to come—they lived upon the northern
edge of the oasis—and he was as free as though he were absolutely
alone. He blessed them; he rejoiced that he had come. Little
Helouan accepted him. The Desert knew that he was there.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>From his corner of the big dining-room he could see the other
guests, but his roving eye always returned to the figure of a solitary
man who sat at an adjoining table, and whose personality stirred his
interest. While affecting to look elsewhere, he studied him as
closely as might be. There was something about the stranger that
touched his curiosity—a certain air of expectation that he wore. But
it was more than that: it was anticipation, apprehension in it somewhere.
The man was nervous, uneasy. His restless way of suddenly
looking about him proved it. Henriot tried every one else in the
room as well; but, though his thought settled on others too, he always
came back to the figure of this solitary being opposite, who
ate his dinner as if afraid of being seen, and glanced up sometimes as
if fearful of being watched. Henriot's curiosity, before he knew it,
became suspicion. There was mystery here. The table, he noticed,
was laid for two.</p>
<p>"Is he an actor, a priest of some strange religion, an enquiry
agent, or just—a crank?" was the thought that first occurred to him.
And the question suggested itself without amusement. The impression
of subterfuge and caution he conveyed left his observer unsatisfied.</p>
<p>The face was clean shaven, dark, and strong; thick hair, straight
yet bushy, was slightly unkempt; it was streaked with grey; and an
unexpected mobility when he smiled ran over the features that he
seemed to hold rigid by deliberate effort. The man was cut to no
quite common measure. Henriot jumped to an intuitive conclusion:
"He's not here for pleasure or merely sight-seeing. Something serious
has brought him out to Egypt." For the face combined too ill-assorted
qualities: an obstinate tenacity that might even mean
brutality, and was certainly repulsive, yet, with it, an undecipherable
dreaminess betrayed by lines of the mouth, but above all in the
very light blue eyes, so rarely raised. Those eyes, he felt, had looked
upon unusual things; "dreaminess" was not an adequate description;
"searching" conveyed it better. The true source of the queer
impression remained elusive. And hence, perhaps, the incongruous
marriage in the face—mobility laid upon a matter-of-fact foundation
underneath. The face showed conflict.</p>
<p>And Henriot, watching him, felt decidedly intrigued. "I'd like to
know that man, and all about him." His name, he learned later, was
Richard Vance; from Birmingham; a business man. But it was not
the Birmingham he wished to know; it was the—other: cause of the
elusive, dreamy searching. Though facing one another at so short a
distance, their eyes, however, did not meet. And this, Henriot well
knew, was a sure sign that he himself was also under observation.
Richard Vance, from Birmingham, was equally taking careful note
of Felix Henriot, from London.</p>
<p>Thus, he could wait his time. They would come together later.
An opportunity would certainly present itself. The first links in a
curious chain had already caught; soon the chain would tighten,
pull as though by chance, and bring their lives into one and the
same circle. Wondering in particular for what kind of a companion
the second cover was laid, Henriot felt certain that their eventual
coming together was inevitable. He possessed this kind of divination
from first impressions, and not uncommonly it proved correct.</p>
<p>Following instinct, therefore, he took no steps towards acquaintance,
and for several days, owing to the fact that he dined frequently
with his hosts, he saw nothing more of Richard Vance, the
business man from Birmingham. Then, one night, coming home late
from his friend's house, he had passed along the great corridor, and
was actually a step or so into his bedroom, when a drawling voice
sounded close behind him. It was an unpleasant sound. It was very
near him too—</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, but have you, by any chance, such a thing as
a compass you could lend me?"</p>
<p>The voice was so close that he started. Vance stood within touching
distance of his body. He had stolen up like a ghostly Arab, must
have followed him, too, some little distance, for further down the
passage the light of an open door—he had passed it on his way—showed
where he came from.</p>
<p>"Eh? I beg your pardon? A—compass, did you say?" He felt disconcerted
for a moment. How short the man was, now that he saw
him standing. Broad and powerful too. Henriot looked down upon
his thick head of hair. The personality and voice repelled him. Possibly
his face, caught unawares, betrayed this.</p>
<p>"Forgive my startling you," said the other apologetically, while
the softer expression danced in for a moment and disorganised the
rigid set of the face. "The soft carpet, you know. I'm afraid you
didn't hear my tread. I wondered"—he smiled again slightly at the
nature of the request—"if—by any chance—you had a pocket compass
you could lend me?"</p>
<p>"Ah, a compass, yes! Please don't apologise. I believe I have
one—if you'll wait a moment. Come in, won't you? I'll have a
look."</p>
<p>The other thanked him but waited in the passage. Henriot, it so
happened, had a compass, and produced it after a moment's search.</p>
<p>"I am greatly indebted to you—if I may return it in the morning.
You will forgive my disturbing you at such an hour. My own is
broken, and I wanted—er—to find the true north."</p>
<p>Henriot stammered some reply, and the man was gone. It was all
over in a minute. He locked his door and sat down in his chair to
think. The little incident had upset him, though for the life of him
he could not imagine why. It ought by rights to have been almost
ludicrous, yet instead it was the exact reverse—half threatening.
Why should not a man want a compass? But, again, why should he?
And at midnight? The voice, the eyes, the near presence—what did
they bring that set his nerves thus asking unusual questions? This
strange impression that something grave was happening, something
unearthly—how was it born exactly? The man's proximity came
like a shock. It had made him start. He brought—thus the idea came
unbidden to his mind—something with him that galvanised him
quite absurdly, as fear does, or delight, or great wonder. There was
a music in his voice too—a certain—well, he could only call it lilt,
that reminded him of plainsong, intoning, chanting. Drawling was
<i>not</i> the word at all.</p>
<p>He tried to dismiss it as imagination, but it would not be dismissed.
The disturbance in himself was caused by something not
imaginary, but real. And then, for the first time, he discovered that
the man had brought a faint, elusive suggestion of perfume with
him, an aromatic odour, that made him think of priests and
churches. The ghost of it still lingered in the air. Ah, here then was
the origin of the notion that his voice had chanted: it was surely the
suggestion of incense. But incense, intoning, a compass to find the
true north—at midnight in a Desert hotel!</p>
<p>A touch of uneasiness ran through the curiosity and excitement
that he felt.</p>
<p>And he undressed for bed. "Confound my old imagination," he
thought, "what tricks it plays me! It'll keep me awake!"</p>
<p>But the questions, once started in his mind, continued. He must
find explanation of one kind or another before he could lie down
and sleep, and he found it at length in—the stars. The man was an
astronomer of sorts; possibly an astrologer into the bargain! Why
not? The stars were wonderful above Helouan. Was there not an
observatory on the Mokattam Hills, too, where tourists could use
the telescopes on privileged days? He had it at last. He even stole
out on to his balcony to see if the stranger perhaps was looking
through some wonderful apparatus at the heavens. Their rooms
were on the same side. But the shuttered windows revealed no
stooping figure with eyes glued to a telescope. The stars blinked in
their many thousands down upon the silent desert. The night held
neither sound nor movement. There was a cool breeze blowing
across the Nile from the Lybian Sands. It nipped; and he stepped
back quickly into the room again. Drawing the mosquito curtains
carefully about the bed, he put the light out and turned over to
sleep.</p>
<p>And sleep came quickly, contrary to his expectations, though it
was a light and surface sleep. That last glimpse of the darkened
Desert lying beneath the Egyptian stars had touched him with some
hand of awful power that ousted the first, lesser excitement. It
calmed and soothed him in one sense, yet in another, a sense he
could not understand, it caught him in a net of deep, deep feelings
whose mesh, while infinitely delicate, was utterly stupendous. His
nerves this deeper emotion left alone: it reached instead to something
infinite in him that mere nerves could neither deal with nor
interpret. The soul awoke and whispered in him while his body
slept.</p>
<p>And the little, foolish dreams that ran to and fro across this veil
of surface sleep brought oddly tangled pictures of things quite tiny
and at the same time of others that were mighty beyond words.
With these two counters Nightmare played. They interwove. There
was the figure of this dark-faced man with the compass, measuring
the sky to find the true north, and there were hints of giant Presences
that hovered just outside some curious outline that he traced
upon the ground, copied in some nightmare fashion from the heavens.
The excitement caused by his visitor's singular request mingled
with the profounder sensations his final look at the stars and Desert
stirred. The two were somehow inter-related.</p>
<p>Some hours later, before this surface sleep passed into genuine
slumber, Henriot woke—with an appalling feeling that the Desert
had come creeping into his room and now stared down upon him
where he lay in bed. The wind was crying audibly about the walls
outside. A faint, sharp tapping came against the window panes.</p>
<p>He sprang instantly out of bed, not yet awake enough to feel actual
alarm, yet with the nightmare touch still close enough to cause
a sort of feverish, loose bewilderment. He switched the lights on. A
moment later he knew the meaning of that curious tapping, for the
rising wind was flinging tiny specks of sand against the glass. The
idea that they had summoned him belonged, of course, to dream.</p>
<p>He opened the window, and stepped out on to the balcony. The
stone was very cold under his bare feet. There was a wash of wind
all over him. He saw the sheet of glimmering, pale desert near and
far; and something stung his skin below the eyes.</p>
<p>"The sand," he whispered, "again the sand; always the sand.
Waking or sleeping, the sand is everywhere—nothing but sand,
sand, Sand...."</p>
<p>He rubbed his eyes. It was like talking in his sleep, talking to
Someone who had questioned him just before he woke. But was he
really properly awake? It seemed next day that he had dreamed it.
Something enormous, with rustling skirts of sand, had just retreated
far into the Desert. Sand went with it—flowing, trailing, smothering
the world. The wind died down.</p>
<p>And Henriot went back to sleep, caught instantly away into unconsciousness;
covered, blinded, swept over by this spreading thing
of reddish brown with the great, grey face, whose Being was colossal
yet quite tiny, and whose fingers, wings and eyes were countless
as the stars.</p>
<p>But all night long it watched and waited, rising to peer above the
little balcony, and sometimes entering the room and piling up beside
his very pillow. He dreamed of Sand.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>III</h3>
<p>For some days Henriot saw little of the man who came from Birmingham
and pushed curiosity to a climax by asking for a compass
in the middle of the night. For one thing, he was a good deal with
his friends upon the other side of Helouan, and for another, he slept
several nights in the Desert.</p>
<p>He loved the gigantic peace the Desert gave him. The world was
forgotten there; and not the world merely, but all memory of it.
Everything faded out. The soul turned inwards upon itself.</p>
<p>An Arab boy and donkey took out sleeping-bag, food and water
to the Wadi Hof, a desolate gorge about an hour eastwards. It
winds between cliffs whose summits rise some thousand feet above
the sea. It opens suddenly, cut deep into the swaying world of level
plateaux and undulating hills. It moves about too; he never found it
in the same place twice—like an arm of the Desert that shifted with
the changing lights. Here he watched dawns and sunsets, slept
through the mid-day heat, and enjoyed the unearthly colouring that
swept Day and Night across the huge horizons. In solitude the
Desert soaked down into him. At night the jackals cried in the
darkness round his cautiously-fed camp fire—small, because wood
had to be carried—and in the day-time kites circled overhead to inspect
him, and an occasional white vulture flapped across the blue.
The weird desolation of this rocky valley, he thought, was like the
scenery of the moon. He took no watch with him, and the arrival of
the donkey boy an hour after sunrise came almost from another
planet, bringing things of time and common life out of some distant
gulf where they had lain forgotten among lost ages.</p>
<p>The short hour of twilight brought, too, a bewitchment into the
silence that was a little less than comfortable. Full light or darkness
he could manage, but this time of half things made him want to shut
his eyes and hide. Its effect stepped over imagination. The mind got
lost. He could not understand it. For the cliffs and boulders of discoloured
limestone shone then with an inward glow that signalled
to the Desert with veiled lanterns. The misshappen hills, carved by
wind and rain into ominous outlines, stirred and nodded. In the
morning light they retired into themselves, asleep. But at dusk the
tide retreated. They rose from the sea, emerging naked, threatening.
They ran together and joined shoulders, the entire army of them.
And the glow of their sandy bodies, self-luminous, continued even
beneath the stars. Only the moonlight drowned it. For the moonrise
over the Mokattam Hills brought a white, grand loveliness that
drenched the entire Desert. It drew a marvellous sweetness from the
sand. It shone across a world as yet unfinished, whereon no life
might show itself for ages yet to come. He was alone then upon an
empty star, before the creation of things that breathed and moved.</p>
<p>What impressed him, however, more than everything else was
the enormous vitality that rose out of all this apparent death. There
was no hint of the melancholy that belongs commonly to flatness;
the sadness of wide, monotonous landscape was not here. The endless
repetition of sweeping vale and plateau brought infinity within
measurable comprehension. He grasped a definite meaning in the
phrase "world without end": the Desert had no end and no beginning.
It gave him a sense of eternal peace, the silent peace that star-fields
know. Instead of subduing the soul with bewilderment, it
inspired with courage, confidence, hope. Through this sand which
was the wreck of countless geological ages, rushed life that was terrific
and uplifting, too huge to include melancholy, too deep to betray
itself in movement. Here was the stillness of eternity. Behind
the spread grey masque of apparent death lay stores of accumulated
life, ready to break forth at any point. In the Desert he felt himself
absolutely royal.</p>
<p>And this contrast of Life, veiling itself in Death, was a contradiction
that somehow intoxicated. The Desert exhilaration never left
him. He was never alone. A companionship of millions went with
him, and he <i>felt</i> the Desert close, as stars are close to one another, or
grains of sand.</p>
<p>It was the Khamasin, the hot wind bringing sand, that drove him
in—with the feeling that these few days and nights had been immeasurable,
and that he had been away a thousand years. He came
back with the magic of the Desert in his blood, hotel-life tasteless
and insipid by comparison. To human impressions thus he was
fresh and vividly sensitive. His being, cleaned and sensitized by
pure grandeur, "felt" people—for a time at any rate—with an uncommon
sharpness of receptive judgment. He returned to a life
somehow mean and meagre, resuming insignificance with his dinner
jacket. Out with the sand he had been regal; now, like a slave, he
strutted self-conscious and reduced.</p>
<p>But this imperial standard of the Desert stayed a little time beside
him, its purity focussing judgment like a lens. The specks of
smaller emotions left it clear at first, and as his eye wandered
vaguely over the people assembled in the dining-room, it was arrested
with a vivid shock upon two figures at the little table facing
him.</p>
<p>He had forgotten Vance, the Birmingham man who sought the
North at midnight with a pocket compass. He now saw him again,
with an intuitive discernment entirely fresh. Before memory
brought up her clouding associations, some brilliance flashed a light
upon him. "That man," Henriot thought, "might have come with
me. He would have understood and loved it!" But the thought was
really this—a moment's reflection spread it, rather: "He belongs
somewhere to the Desert; the Desert brought him out here." And,
again, hidden swiftly behind it like a movement running below
water—"What does he want with it? What is the deeper motive he
conceals? For there is a deeper motive; and it <i>is</i> concealed."</p>
<p>But it was the woman seated next him who absorbed his attention
really, even while this thought flashed and went its way. The
empty chair was occupied at last. Unlike his first encounter with the
man, she looked straight at him. Their eyes met fully. For several
seconds there was steady mutual inspection, while her penetrating
stare, intent without being rude, passed searchingly all over his face.
It was disconcerting. Crumbling his bread, he looked equally hard
at her, unable to turn away, determined not to be the first to shift
his gaze. And when at length she lowered her eyes he felt that many
things had happened, as in a long period of intimate conversation.
Her mind had judged him through and through. Questions and answer
flashed. They were no longer strangers. For the rest of dinner,
though he was careful to avoid direct inspection, he was aware that
she felt his presence and was secretly speaking with him. She asked
questions beneath her breath. The answers rose with the quickened
pulses in his blood. Moreover, she explained Richard Vance. It was
this woman's power that shone reflected in the man. She was the
one who knew the big, unusual things. Vance merely echoed the
rush of her vital personality.</p>
<p>This was the first impression that he got—from the most striking,
curious face he had ever seen in a woman. It remained very near
him all through the meal: she had moved to his table, it seemed she
sat beside him. Their minds certainly knew contact from that moment.</p>
<p>It is never difficult to credit strangers with the qualities and
knowledge that oneself craves for, and no doubt Henriot's active
fancy went busily to work. But, none the less, this thing remained
and grew: that this woman was aware of the hidden things of Egypt
he had always longed to know. There was knowledge and guidance
she could impart. Her soul was searching among ancient things.
Her face brought the Desert back into his thoughts. And with it
came—the sand.</p>
<p>Here was the flash. The sight of her restored the peace and splendour
he had left behind him in his Desert camps. The rest, of
course, was what his imagination constructed upon this slender basis.
Only,—not all of it was imagination.</p>
<p>Now, Henriot knew little enough of women, and had no pose of
"understanding" them. His experience was of the slightest; the love
and veneration felt for his own mother had set the entire sex upon
the heights. His affairs with women, if so they may be called, had
been transient—all but those of early youth, which having never
known the devastating test of fulfilment, still remained ideal and superb.
There was unconscious humour in his attitude—from a distance;
for he regarded women with wonder and respect, as puzzles
that sweetened but complicated life, might even endanger it. He
certainly was not a marrying man! But now, as he felt the presence
of this woman so deliberately possess him, there came over him two
clear, strong messages, each vivid with certainty. One was that banal
suggestion of familiarity claimed by lovers and the like—he had often
heard of it—"I have known that woman before; I have met her
ages ago somewhere; she is strangely familiar to me"; and the other,
growing out of it almost: "Have nothing to do with her; she will
bring you trouble and confusion; avoid her, and be warned";—in
fact, a distinct presentiment.</p>
<p>Yet, although Henriot dismissed both impressions as having no
shred of evidence to justify them, the original clear judgment, as he
studied her extraordinary countenance, persisted through all denials
The familiarity, and the presentiment, remained. There also
remained this other—an enormous imaginative leap!—that she
could teach him "Egypt."</p>
<p>He watched her carefully, in a sense fascinated. He could only
describe the face as black, so dark it was with the darkness of great
age. Elderly was the obvious, natural word; but elderly described
the features only. The expression of the face wore centuries. Nor
was it merely the coal-black eyes that betrayed an ancient, age-travelled
soul behind them. The entire presentment mysteriously
conveyed it. This woman's heart knew long-forgotten things—the
thought kept beating up against him. There were cheek-bones,
oddly high, that made him think involuntarily of the well-advertised
Pharaoh, Ramases; a square, deep jaw; and an aquiline
nose that gave the final touch of power. For the power undeniably
was there, and while the general effect had grimness in it, there was
neither harshness nor any forbidding touch about it. There was an
implacable sternness in the set of lips and jaw, and, most curious of
all, the eyelids over the steady eyes of black were level as a ruler.
This level framing made the woman's stare remarkable beyond description.
Henriot thought of an idol carved in stone, stone hard
and black, with eyes that stared across the sand into a world of
things non-human, very far away, forgotten of men. The face was
finely ugly. This strange dark beauty flashed flame about it.</p>
<p>And, as the way ever was with him, Henriot next fell to constructing
the possible lives of herself and her companion, though
without much success. Imagination soon stopped dead. She was not
old enough to be Vance's mother, and assuredly she was not his
wife. His interest was more than merely piqued—it was puzzled
uncommonly. What was the contrast that made the man seem beside
her—vile? Whence came, too, the impression that she exercised
some strong authority, though never directly exercised, that held
him at her mercy? How did he guess that the man resented it,
yet did not dare oppose, and that, apparently acquiescing good-humouredly,
his will was deliberately held in abeyance, and that he
waited sulkily, biding his time? There was furtiveness in every gesture
and expression. A hidden motive lurked in him; unworthiness
somewhere; he was determined yet ashamed. He watched her ceaselessly
and with such uncanny closeness.</p>
<p>Henriot imagined he divined all this. He leaped to the guess that
his expenses were being paid. A good deal more was being paid besides.
She was a rich relation, from whom he had expectations; he
was serving his seven years, ashamed of his servitude, ever calculating
escape—but, perhaps, no ordinary escape. A faint shudder ran
over him. He drew in the reins of imagination.</p>
<p>Of course, the probabilities were that he was hopelessly astray—one
usually is on such occasions—but this time, it so happened, he
was singularly right. Before one thing only his ready invention
stopped every time. This vileness, this notion of unworthiness in
Vance, could not be negative merely. A man with that face was no
inactive weakling. The motive he was at such pains to conceal, betraying
its existence by that very fact, moved, surely, towards aggressive
action. Disguised, it never slept. Vance was sharply on the
alert. He had a plan deep out of sight. And Henriot remembered
how the man's soft approach along the carpeted corridor had made
him start. He recalled the quasi shock it gave him. He thought again
of the feeling of discomfort he had experienced.</p>
<p>Next, his eager fancy sought to plumb the business these two
had together in Egypt—in the Desert. For the Desert, he felt convinced,
had brought them out. But here, though he constructed numerous
explanations, another barrier stopped him. Because he
<i>knew</i>. This woman was in touch with that aspect of ancient Egypt
he himself had ever sought in vain; and not merely with stones the
sand had buried so deep, but with the meanings they once represented,
buried so utterly by the sands of later thought.</p>
<p>And here, being ignorant, he found no clue that could lead to
any satisfactory result, for he possessed no knowledge that might
guide him. He floundered—until Fate helped him. And the instant
Fate helped him, the warning and presentiment he had dismissed as
fanciful, became real again. He hesitated. Caution acted. He would
think twice before taking steps to form acquaintance. "Better not,"
thought whispered. "Better leave them alone, this queer couple.
They're after things that won't do you any good." This idea of mischief,
almost of danger, in their purposes was oddly insistent; for
what could possibly convey it? But, while he hesitated, Fate, who
sent the warning, pushed him at the same time into the circle of
their lives: at first tentatively—he might still have escaped; but soon
urgently—curiosity led him inexorably towards the end.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>IV</h3>
<p>It was so simple a manoeuvre by which Fate began the innocent
game. The woman left a couple of books behind her on the table
one night, and Henriot, after a moment's hesitation, took them out
after her. He knew the titles—<i>The House of the Master</i>, and <i>The
House of the Hidden Places</i>, both singular interpretations of the
Pyramids that once had held his own mind spellbound. Their ideas
had been since disproved, if he remembered rightly, yet the titles
were a clue—a clue to that imaginative part of his mind that was so
busy constructing theories and had found its stride. Loose sheets of
paper, covered with notes in a minute handwriting, lay between the
pages; but these, of course, he did not read, noticing only that they
were written round designs of various kinds—intricate designs.</p>
<p>He discovered Vance in a corner of the smoking-lounge. The
woman had disappeared.</p>
<p>Vance thanked him politely. "My aunt is so forgetful sometimes,"
he said, and took them with a covert eagerness that did not
escape the other's observation. He folded up the sheets and put
them carefully in his pocket. On one there was an ink-sketched
map, crammed with detail, that might well have referred to some
portion of the Desert. The points of the compass stood out boldly
at the bottom. There were involved geometrical designs again. Henriot
saw them. They exchanged, then, the commonplaces of conversation,
but these led to nothing further. Vance was nervous and
betrayed impatience. He presently excused himself and left the
lounge. Ten minutes later he passed through the outer hall, the
woman beside him, and the pair of them, wrapped up in cloak and
ulster, went out into the night. At the door, Vance turned and threw
a quick, investigating glance in his direction. There seemed a hint of
questioning in that glance; it might almost have been a tentative
invitation. But, also, he wanted to see if their exit had been particularly
noticed—and by whom.</p>
<p>This, briefly told, was the first manoeuvre by which Fate
introduced them. There was nothing in it. The details were so insignificant,
so slight the conversation, so meagre the pieces thus
added to Henriot's imaginative structure. Yet they somehow built it
up and made it solid; the outline in his mind began to stand
foursquare. That writing, those designs, the manner of the man,
their going out together, the final curious look—each and all betrayed
points of a hidden thing. Subconsciously he was excavating
their buried purposes. The sand was shifting. The concentration of
his mind incessantly upon them removed it grain by grain and
speck by speck. Tips of the smothered thing emerged. Presently a
subsidence would follow with a rush and light would blaze upon its
skeleton. He felt it stirring underneath his feet—this flowing movement
of light, dry, heaped-up sand. It was always—sand.</p>
<p>Then other incidents of a similar kind came about, clearing the
way to a natural acquaintanceship. Henriot watched the process
with amusement, yet with another feeling too that was only a little
less than anxiety. A keen observer, no detail escaped him; he saw the
forces of their lives draw closer. It made him think of the devices of
young people who desire to know one another, yet cannot get a
proper introduction. Fate condescended to such little tricks. They
wanted a third person, he began to feel. A third was necessary to
some plan they had on hand, and—they waited to see if he could fill
the place. This woman, with whom he had yet exchanged no single
word, seemed so familiar to him, well known for years. They
weighed and watched him, wondering if he would do.</p>
<p>None of the devices were too obviously used, but at length Henriot
picked up so many forgotten articles, and heard so many significant
phrases, casually let fall, that he began to feel like the villain in
a machine-made play, where the hero for ever drops clues his enemy
is intended to discover.</p>
<p>Introduction followed inevitably. "My aunt can tell you; she
knows Arabic perfectly." He had been discussing the meaning of
some local name or other with a neighbour after dinner, and Vance
had joined them. The neighbour moved away; these two were left
standing alone, and he accepted a cigarette from the other's case.
There was a rustle of skirts behind them. "Here she comes," said
Vance; "you will let me introduce you." He did not ask for Henriot's
name; he had already taken the trouble to find it out—another
little betrayal, and another clue.</p>
<p>It was in a secluded corner of the great hall, and Henriot turned
to see the woman's stately figure coming towards them across the
thick carpet that deadened her footsteps. She came sailing up, her
black eyes fixed upon his face. Very erect, head upright, shoulders
almost squared, she moved wonderfully well; there was dignity and
power in her walk. She was dressed in black, and her face was like
the night. He found it impossible to say what lent her this air of impressiveness
and solemnity that was almost majestic. But there <i>was</i>
this touch of darkness and of power in the way she came that made
him think of some sphinx-like figure of stone, some idol motionless
in all its parts but moving as a whole, and gliding across—sand. Beneath
those level lids her eyes stared hard at him. And a faint sensation
of distress stirred in him deep, deep down. Where had he seen
those eyes before?</p>
<p>He bowed, as she joined them, and Vance led the way to the
armchairs in a corner of the lounge. The meeting, as the talk that
followed, he felt, were all part of a preconceived plan. It had happened
before. The woman, that is, was familiar to him—to some
part of his being that had dropped stitches of old, old memory.</p>
<p>Lady Statham! At first the name had disappointed him. So many
folk wear titles, as syllables in certain tongues wear accents—without
them being mute, unnoticed, unpronounced. Nonentities,
born to names, so often claim attention for their insignificance in
this way. But this woman, had she been Jemima Jones, would have
made the name distinguished and select. She was a big and sombre
personality. Why was it, he wondered afterwards, that for a moment
something in him shrank, and that his mind, metaphorically
speaking, flung up an arm in self-protection? The instinct flashed
and passed. But it seemed to him born of an automatic feeling that
he must protect—not himself, but the woman from the man. There
was confusion in it all; links were missing. He studied her intently.
She was a woman who had none of the external feminine signals in
either dress or manner, no graces, no little womanly hesitations and
alarms, no daintiness, yet neither anything distinctly masculine.
Her charm was strong, possessing; only he kept forgetting that he
was talking to a—woman; and the thing she inspired in him included,
with respect and wonder, somewhere also this curious hint
of dread. This instinct to protect her fled as soon as it was born, for
the interest of the conversation in which she so quickly plunged
him obliterated all minor emotions whatsoever. Here, for the first
time, he drew close to Egypt, the Egypt he had sought so long. It
was not to be explained. He <i>felt</i> it.</p>
<p>Beginning with commonplaces, such as "You like Egypt? You
find here what you expected?" she led him into better regions with
"One finds here what one brings." He knew the delightful experience
of talking fluently on subjects he was at home in, and to some
one who understood. The feeling at first that to this woman he
could not say mere anythings, slipped into its opposite—that he
could say everything. Strangers ten minutes ago, they were at once
in deep and intimate talk together. He found his ideas readily followed,
agreed with up to a point—the point which permits discussion
to start from a basis of general accord towards speculation. In
the excitement of ideas he neglected the uncomfortable note that
had stirred his caution, forgot the warning too. Her mind, moreover,
seemed known to him; he was often aware of what she was
going to say before he actually heard it; the current of her thoughts
struck a familiar gait, and more than once he experienced vividly
again the odd sensation that it all had happened before. The very
sentences and phrases with which she pointed the turns of her unusual
ideas were never wholly unexpected.</p>
<p>For her ideas were decidedly unusual, in the sense that she accepted
without question speculations not commonly deemed worth
consideration at all, indeed not ordinarily even known. Henriot
knew them, because he had read in many fields. It was the strength
of her belief that fascinated him. She offered no apologies. She
knew. And while he talked, she listening with folded arms and her
black eyes fixed upon his own, Richard Vance watched with vigilant
eyes and listened too, ceaselessly alert. Vance joined in little enough,
however, gave no opinions, his attitude one of general acquiescence.
Twice, when pauses of slackening interest made it possible, Henriot
fancied he surprised another quality in this negative attitude. Interpreting
it each time differently, he yet dismissed both interpretations
with a smile. His imagination leaped so absurdly to violent
conclusions. They were not tenable: Vance was neither her keeper,
nor was he in some fashion a detective. Yet in his manner was sometimes
this suggestion of the detective order. He watched with such
deep attention, and he concealed it so clumsily with an affectation
of careless indifference.</p>
<p>There is nothing more dangerous than that impulsive intimacy
strangers sometimes adopt when an atmosphere of mutual sympathy
takes them by surprise, for it is akin to the false frankness
friends affect when telling "candidly" one another's faults. The
mood is invariably regretted later. Henriot, however, yielded to it
now with something like abandon. The pleasure of talking with this
woman was so unexpected, and so keen.</p>
<p>For Lady Statham believed apparently in some Egypt of her
dreams. Her interest was neither historical, archaeological, nor political.
It was religious—yet hardly of this earth at all. The conversation
turned upon the knowledge of the ancient Egyptians from an
unearthly point of view, and even while he talked he was vaguely
aware that it was <i>her</i> mind talking through his own. She drew out
his ideas and made him say them. But this he was properly aware of
only afterwards—that she had cleverly, mercilessly pumped him of
all he had ever known or read upon the subject. Moreover, what
Vance watched so intently was himself, and the reactions in himself
this remarkable woman produced. That also he realised later.</p>
<p>His first impression that these two belonged to what may be
called the "crank" order was justified by the conversation. But, at
least, it was interesting crankiness, and the belief behind it made it
even fascinating. Long before the end he surprised in her a more vital
form of his own attitude that anything <i>may</i> be true, since knowledge
has never yet found final answers to any of the biggest
questions.</p>
<p>He understood, from sentences dropped early in the talk, that
she was among those few "superstitious" folk who think that the
old Egyptians came closer to reading the eternal riddles of the
world than any others, and that their knowledge was a remnant of
that ancient Wisdom Religion which existed in the superb, dark civilization
of the sunken Atlantis, lost continent that once joined
Africa to Mexico. Eighty thousand years ago the dim sands of Poseidonis,
great island adjoining the main continent which itself had
vanished a vast period before, sank down beneath the waves, and
the entire known world to-day was descended from its survivors.</p>
<p>Hence the significant fact that all religions and "mythological" systems
begin with a story of a flood—some cataclysmic upheaval that
destroyed the world. Egypt itself was colonised by a group of Atlantean
priests who brought their curious, deep knowledge with
them. They had foreseen the cataclysm.</p>
<p>Lady Statham talked well, bringing into her great dream this
strong, insistent quality of belief and fact. She knew, from Plato to
Donelly, all that the minds of men have ever speculated upon the
gorgeous legend. The evidence for such a sunken continent—Henriot
had skimmed it too in years gone by—she made bewilderingly
complete. He had heard Baconians demolish Shakespeare
with an array of evidence equally overwhelming. It catches the
imagination though not the mind. Yet out of her facts, as she presented
them, grew a strange likelihood. The force of this woman's
personality, and her calm and quiet way of believing all she talked
about, took her listener to some extent—further than ever before,
certainly—into the great dream after her. And the dream, to say the
least, was a picturesque one, laden with wonderful possibilities. For
as she talked the spirit of old Egypt moved up, staring down upon
him out of eyes lidded so curiously level. Hitherto all had prated to
him of the Arabs, their ancient faith and customs, and the splendour
of the Bedouins, those Princes of the Desert. But what he sought,
barely confessed in words even to himself, was something older far
than this. And this strange, dark woman brought it close. Deeps in
his soul, long slumbering, awoke. He heard forgotten questions.</p>
<p>Only in this brief way could he attempt to sum up the storm she
roused in him.</p>
<p>She carried him far beyond mere outline, however, though afterwards
he recalled the details with difficulty. So much more was suggested
than actually expressed. She contrived to make the general
modern scepticism an evidence of cheap mentality. It was so easy;
the depth it affects to conceal, mere emptiness. "We have tried all
things, and found all wanting"—the mind, as measuring instrument,
merely confessed inadequate. Various shrewd judgments of this
kind increased his respect, although her acceptance went so far beyond
his own. And, while the label of credulity refused to stick to
her, her sense of imaginative wonder enabled her to escape that
dreadful compromise, a man's mind in a woman's temperament. She
fascinated him.</p>
<p>The spiritual worship of the ancient Egyptians, she held, was a
symbolical explanation of things generally alluded to as the secrets
of life and death; their knowledge was a remnant of the wisdom of
Atlantis. Material relics, equally misunderstood, still stood to-day
at Karnac, Stonehenge, and in the mysterious writings on buried
Mexican temples and cities, so significantly akin to the hieroglyphics
upon the Egyptian tombs.</p>
<p>"The one misinterpreted as literally as the other," she suggested,
"yet both fragments of an advanced knowledge that found its grave
in the sea. The Wisdom of that old spiritual system has vanished
from the world, only a degraded literalism left of its undecipherable
language. The jewel has been lost, and the casket is filled with sand,
sand, sand."</p>
<p>How keenly her black eyes searched his own as she said it, and
how oddly she made the little word resound. The syllable drew out
almost into chanting. Echoes answered from the depths within him,
carrying it on and on across some desert of forgotten belief. Veils of
sand flew everywhere about his mind. Curtains lifted. Whole hills
of sand went shifting into level surfaces whence gardens of dim outline
emerged to meet the sunlight.</p>
<p>"But the sand may be removed." It was her nephew, speaking almost
for the first time, and the interruption had an odd effect, introducing
a sharply practical element. For the tone expressed, so far
as he dared express it, disapproval. It was a baited observation, an
invitation to opinion.</p>
<p>"We are not sand-diggers, Mr. Henriot," put in Lady Statham,
before he decided to respond. "Our object is quite another one; and
I believe—I have a feeling," she added almost questioningly, "that
you might be interested enough to help us perhaps."</p>
<p>He only wondered the direct attack had not come sooner. Its
bluntness hardly surprised him. He felt himself leap forward to accept
it. A sudden subsidence had freed his feet.</p>
<p>Then the warning operated suddenly—for an instant. Henriot
<i>was</i> interested; more, he was half seduced; but, as yet, he did not
mean to be included in their purposes, whatever these might be.
That shrinking dread came back a moment, and was gone again before
he could question it. His eyes looked full at Lady Statham.
"What is it that you know?" they asked her. "Tell me the things we
once knew together, you and I. These words are merely trifling.
And why does another man now stand in my place? For the sands
heaped upon my memory are shifting, and it is <i>you</i> who are moving
them away."</p>
<p>His soul whispered it; his voice said quite another thing, although
the words he used seemed oddly chosen:</p>
<p>"There is much in the ideas of ancient Egypt that has attracted
me ever since I can remember, though I have never caught up with
anything definite enough to follow. There was majesty somewhere
in their conceptions—a large, calm majesty of spiritual dominion,
one might call it perhaps. I <i>am</i> interested."</p>
<p>Her face remained expressionless as she listened, but there was
grave conviction in the eyes that held him like a spell. He saw
through them into dim, faint pictures whose background was always
sand. He forgot that he was speaking with a woman, a woman
who half an hour ago had been a stranger to him. He followed these
faded mental pictures, though he never caught them up.... It was
like his dream in London.</p>
<p>Lady Statham was talking—he had not noticed the means by
which she effected the abrupt transition—of familiar beliefs of old
Egypt; of the Ka, or Double, by whose existence the survival of the
soul was possible, even its return into manifested, physical life; of
the astrology, or influence of the heavenly bodies upon all sublunar
activities; of terrific forms of other life, known to the ancient worship
of Atlantis, great Potencies that might be invoked by ritual and
ceremonial, and of their lesser influence as recognised in certain
lower forms, hence treated with veneration as the "Sacred Animal"
branch of this dim religion. And she spoke lightly of the modern
learning which so glibly imagined it was the animals themselves that
were looked upon as "gods"—the bull, the bird, the crocodile, the
cat. "It's there they all go so absurdly wrong," she said, "taking the
symbol for the power symbolised. Yet natural enough. The mind
to-day wears blinkers, studies only the details seen directly before
it. Had none of us experienced love, we should think the first lover
mad. Few to-day know the Powers <i>they</i> knew, hence deny them. If
the world were deaf it would stand with mockery before a hearing
group swayed by an orchestra, pitying both listeners and performers.
It would deem our admiration of a great swinging bell mere
foolish worship of form and movement. Similarly, with high Powers
that once expressed themselves in common forms—where best
they could—being themselves bodiless. The learned men classify
the forms with painstaking detail. But deity has gone out of life.
The Powers symbolised are no longer experienced."</p>
<p>"These Powers, you suggest, then—their Kas, as it were—may
still—"</p>
<p>But she waved aside the interruption. "They are satisfied, as the
common people were, with a degraded literalism," she went on.
"Nut was the Heavens, who spread herself across the earth in the
form of a woman; Shu, the vastness of space; the ibis typified
Thoth, and Hathor was the Patron of the Western Hills; Khonsu,
the moon, was personified, as was the deity of the Nile. But the
high priest of Ra, the sun, you notice, remained ever the Great One
of Visions."</p>
<p>The High Priest, the Great One of Visions!—How wonderfully
again she made the sentence sing. She put splendour into it. The pictures
shifted suddenly closer in his mind. He saw the grandeur of
Memphis and Heliopolis rise against the stars and shake the sand
of ages from their stern old temples.</p>
<p>"You think it possible, then, to get into touch with these High
Powers you speak of, Powers once manifested in common forms?"</p>
<p>Henriot asked the question with a degree of conviction and
solemnity that surprised himself. The scenery changed about him as
he listened. The spacious halls of this former khedivial Palace
melted into Desert spaces. He smelt the open wilderness, the sand
that haunted Helouan. The soft-footed Arab servants moved across
the hall in their white sheets like eddies of dust the wind stirred
from the Libyan dunes. And over these two strangers close beside
him stole a queer, indefinite alteration. Moods and emotions, nameless
as unknown stars, rose through his soul, trailing dark mists of
memory from unfathomable distances.</p>
<p>Lady Statham answered him indirectly. He found himself wishing
that those steady eyes would sometimes close.</p>
<p>"Love is known only by feeling it," she said, her voice deepening
a little. "Behind the form you feel the person loved. The process is
an evocation, pure and simple. An arduous ceremonial, involving
worship and devotional preparation, is the means. It is a difficult
ritual—the only one acknowledged by the world as still effectual.
Ritual is the passage way of the soul into the Infinite."</p>
<p>He might have said the words himself. The thought lay in him
while she uttered it. Evocation everywhere in life was as true as assimilation.
Nevertheless, he stared his companion full in the eyes
with a touch of almost rude amazement. But no further questions
prompted themselves; or, rather, he declined to ask them. He recalled,
somehow uneasily, that in ceremonial the points of the compass
have significance, standing for forces and activities that sleep
there until invoked, and a passing light fell upon that curious midnight
request in the corridor upstairs. These two were on the track
of undesirable experiments, he thought.... They wished to include
him too.</p>
<p>"You go at night sometimes into the Desert?" he heard himself
saying. It was impulsive and miscalculated. His feeling that it would
be wise to change the conversation resulted in giving it fresh impetus
instead.</p>
<p>"We saw you there—in the Wadi Hof," put in Vance, suddenly
breaking his long silence; "you too sleep out, then? It means, you
know, the Valley of Fear."</p>
<p>"We wondered—" It was Lady Statham's voice, and she leaned
forward eagerly as she said it, then abruptly left the sentence incomplete.
Henriot started; a sense of momentary acute discomfort
again ran over him. The same second she continued, though obviously
changing the phrase—"we wondered how you spent your
day there, during the heat. But you paint, don't you? You draw, I
mean?"</p>
<p>The commonplace question, he realised in every fibre of his being,
meant something <i>they</i> deemed significant. Was it his talent for
drawing that they sought to use him for? Even as he answered with
a simple affirmative, he had a flash of intuition that might be fanciful,
yet that might be true: that this extraordinary pair were intent
upon some ceremony of evocation that should summon into actual
physical expression some Power—some type of life—known long
ago to ancient worship, and that they even sought to fix its bodily
outline with the pencil—his pencil.</p>
<p>A gateway of incredible adventure opened at his feet. He balanced
on the edge of knowing unutterable things. Here was a clue
that might lead him towards the hidden Egypt he had ever craved to
know. An awful hand was beckoning. The sands were shifting. He
saw the million eyes of the Desert watching him from beneath the
level lids of centuries. Speck by speck, and grain by grain, the sand
that smothered memory lifted the countless wrappings that embalmed
it.</p>
<p>And he was willing, yet afraid. Why in the world did he hesitate
and shrink? Why was it that the presence of this silent, watching
personality in the chair beside him kept caution still alive, with
warning close behind? The pictures in his mind were gorgeously
coloured. It was Richard Vance who somehow streaked them
through with black. A thing of darkness, born of this man's
unassertive presence, flitted ever across the scenery, marring its
grandeur with something evil, petty, dreadful. He held a horrible
thought alive. His mind was thinking venal purposes.</p>
<p>In Henriot himself imagination had grown curiously heated, fed
by what had been suggested rather than actually said. Ideas of immensity
crowded his brain, yet never assumed definite shape. They
were familiar, even as this strange woman was familiar. Once, long
ago, he had known them well; had even practised them beneath
these bright Egyptian stars. Whence came this prodigious glad excitement
in his heart, this sense of mighty Powers coaxed down to
influence the very details of daily life? Behind them, for all their
vagueness, lay an archetypal splendour, fraught with forgotten
meanings. He had always been aware of it in this mysterious land,
but it had ever hitherto eluded him. It hovered everywhere. He had
felt it brooding behind the towering Colossi at Thebes, in the skeletons
of wasted temples, in the uncouth comeliness of the Sphinx,
and in the crude terror of the Pyramids even. Over the whole of
Egypt hung its invisible wings. These were but isolated fragments
of the Body that might express it. And the Desert remained its
cleanest, truest symbol. Sand knew it closest. Sand might even give
it bodily form and outline.</p>
<p>But, while it escaped description in his mind, as equally it eluded
visualisation in his soul, he felt that it combined with its vastness
something infinitely small as well. Of such wee particles is the giant
Desert born....</p>
<p>Henriot started nervously in his chair, convicted once more of
unconscionable staring; and at the same moment a group of hotel
people, returning from a dance, passed through the hall and nodded
him good-night. The scent of the women reached him; and with it
the sound of their voices discussing personalities just left behind. A
London atmosphere came with them. He caught trivial phrases, uttered
in a drawling tone, and followed by the shrill laughter of a
girl. They passed upstairs, discussing their little things, like marionettes
upon a tiny stage.</p>
<p>But their passage brought him back to things of modern life, and
to some standard of familiar measurement. The pictures that his
soul had gazed at so deep within, he realised, were a pictorial transfer
caught incompletely from this woman's vivid mind. He had seen
the Desert as the grey, enormous Tomb where hovered still the Ka
of ancient Egypt. Sand screened her visage with the veil of centuries.
But She was there, and She was living. Egypt herself had
pitched a temporary camp in him, and then moved on.</p>
<p>There was a momentary break, a sense of abruptness and dislocation.
And then he became aware that Lady Statham had been speaking
for some time before he caught her actual words, and that a
certain change had come into her voice as also into her manner.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>V</h3>
<p>She was leaning closer to him, her face suddenly glowing and alive.
Through the stone figure coursed the fires of a passion that deepened
the coal-black eyes and communicated a hint of light—of
exaltation—to her whole person. It was incredibly moving. To this
deep passion was due the power he had felt. It was her entire life;
she lived for it, she would die for it. Her calmness of manner enhanced
its effect. Hence the strength of those first impressions that
had stormed him. The woman had belief; however wild and strange,
it was sacred to her. The secret of her influence was—conviction.</p>
<p>His attitude shifted several points then. The wonder in him
passed over into awe. The things she knew were real. They were not
merely imaginative speculations.</p>
<p>"I knew I was not wrong in thinking you in sympathy with this
line of thought," she was saying in lower voice, steady with earnestness,
and as though she had read his mind. "You, too, know, though
perhaps you hardly realise that you know. It lies so deep in you that
you only get vague feelings of it—intimations of memory. Isn't that
the case?"</p>
<p>Henriot gave assent with his eyes; it was the truth.</p>
<p>"What we know instinctively," she continued, "is simply what
we are trying to remember. Knowledge is memory." She paused a
moment watching his face closely. "At least, you are free from that
cheap scepticism which labels these old beliefs as superstition." It
was not even a question.</p>
<p>"I—worship real belief—of any kind," he stammered, for her
words and the close proximity of her atmosphere caused a strange
upheaval in his heart that he could not account for. He faltered in
his speech. "It is the most vital quality in life—rarer than deity." He
was using her own phrases even. "It is creative. It constructs the
world anew—"</p>
<p>"And may reconstruct the old."</p>
<p>She said it, lifting her face above him a little, so that her eyes
looked down into his own. It grew big and somehow masculine. It
was the face of a priest, spiritual power in it. Where, oh where in the
echoing Past had he known this woman's soul? He saw her in another
setting, a forest of columns dim about her, towering above giant
aisles. Again he felt the Desert had come close. Into this
tent-like hall of the hotel came the sifting of tiny sand. It heaped
softly about the very furniture against his feet, blocking the exits of
door and window. It shrouded the little present. The wind that
brought it stirred a veil that had hung for ages motionless....</p>
<p>She had been saying many things that he had missed while his
mind went searching. "There were types of life the Atlantean system
knew it might revive—life unmanifested to-day in any bodily
form," was the sentence he caught with his return to the actual
present.</p>
<p>"A type of life?" he whispered, looking about him, as though to
see who it was had joined them; "you mean a—soul? Some kind of
soul, alien to humanity, or to—to any forms of living thing in the
world to-day?" What she had been saying reached him somehow, it
seemed, though he had not heard the words themselves. Still hesitating,
he was yet so eager to hear. Already he felt she meant to include
him in her purposes, and that in the end he must go willingly.
So strong was her persuasion on his mind.</p>
<p>And he felt as if he knew vaguely what was coming. Before she
answered his curious question—prompting it indeed—rose in his
mind that strange idea of the Group-Soul: the theory that big souls
cannot express themselves in a single individual, but need an entire
group for their full manifestation.</p>
<p>He listened intently. The reflection that this sudden intimacy was
unnatural, he rejected, for many conversations were really gathered
into one. Long watching and preparation on both sides had cleared
the way for the ripening of acquaintance into confidence—how
long he dimly wondered? But if this conception of the Group-Soul
was not new, the suggestion Lady Statham developed out of it
was both new and startling—and yet always so curiously familiar.
Its value for him lay, not in far-fetched evidence that supported it,
but in the deep belief which made it a vital asset in an honest inner
life.</p>
<p>"An individual," she said quietly, "one soul expressed completely
in a single person, I mean, is exceedingly rare. Not often is a
physical instrument found perfect enough to provide it with adequate
expression. In the lower ranges of humanity—certainly in animal
and insect life—one soul is shared by many. Behind a tribe of
savages stands one Savage. A flock of birds is a single Bird, scattered
through the consciousness of all. They wheel in mid-air, they migrate,
they obey the deep intelligence called instinct—all as one.
The life of any one lion is the life of all—the lion group-soul that
manifests itself in the entire genus. An ant-heap is a single Ant;
through the bees spreads the consciousness of a single Bee."</p>
<p>Henriot knew what she was working up to. In his eagerness to
hasten disclosure he interrupted—</p>
<p>"And there may be types of life that have no corresponding bodily
expression at all, then?" he asked as though the question were
forced out of him. "They exist as Powers—unmanifested on the
earth to-day?"</p>
<p>"Powers," she answered, watching him closely with unswerving
stare, "that need a group to provide their body—their physical expression—if
they came back."</p>
<p>"Came back!" he repeated below his breath.</p>
<p>But she heard him. "They once had expression. Egypt, Atlantis
knew them—spiritual Powers that never visit the world to-day."</p>
<p>"Bodies," he whispered softly, "actual bodies?"</p>
<p>"Their sphere of action, you see, would be their body. And it
might be physical outline. So potent a descent of spiritual life would
select materials for its body where it could find them. Our conventional
notion of a body—what is it? A single outline moving altogether
in one direction. For little human souls, or fragments, this is
sufficient. But for vaster types of soul an entire host would be required."</p>
<p>"A church?" he ventured. "Some Body of belief, you surely
mean?"</p>
<p>She bowed her head a moment in assent. She was determined he
should seize her meaning fully.</p>
<p>"A wave of spiritual awakening—a descent of spiritual life upon
a nation," she answered slowly, "forms itself a church, and the body
of true believers are its sphere of action. They are literally its bodily
expression. Each individual believer is a corpuscle in that Body. The
Power has provided itself with a vehicle of manifestation. Otherwise
we could not know it. And the more real the belief of each individual,
the more perfect the expression of the spiritual life behind
them all. A Group-soul walks the earth. Moreover, a nation naturally
devout could attract a type of soul unknown to a nation that
denies all faith. Faith brings back the gods.... But to-day belief is
dead, and Deity has left the world."</p>
<p>She talked on and on, developing this main idea that in days of
older faiths there were deific types of life upon the earth, evoked by
worship and beneficial to humanity. They had long ago withdrawn
because the worship which brought them down had died the death.
The world had grown pettier. These vast centres of Spiritual Power
found no "Body" in which they now could express themselves or
manifest.... Her thoughts and phrases poured over him like sand.
It was always sand he felt—burying the Present and uncovering the
Past....</p>
<p>He tried to steady his mind upon familiar objects, but wherever
he looked Sand stared him in the face. Outside these trivial walls the
Desert lay listening. It lay waiting too. Vance himself had dropped
out of recognition. He belonged to the world of things to-day. But
this woman and himself stood thousands of years away, beneath the
columns of a Temple in the sands. And the sands were moving. His
feet went shifting with them ... running down vistas of ageless
memory that woke terror by their sheer immensity of distance....</p>
<p>Like a muffled voice that called to him through many veils and
wrappings, he heard her describe the stupendous Powers that evocation
might coax down again among the world of men.</p>
<p>"To what useful end?" he asked at length, amazed at his own
temerity, and because he knew instinctively the answer in advance.
It rose through these layers of coiling memory in his soul.</p>
<p>"The extension of spiritual knowledge and the widening of life,"
she answered. "The link with the 'unearthly kingdom' wherein this
ancient system went forever searching, would be re-established.
Complete rehabilitation might follow. Portions—little portions of
these Powers—expressed themselves naturally once in certain animal
types, instinctive life that did not deny or reject them. The worship
of sacred animals was the relic of a once gigantic system of
evocation—not of monsters," and she smiled sadly, "but of Powers
that were willing and ready to descend when worship summoned
them."</p>
<p>Again, beneath his breath, Henriot heard himself murmur—his
own voice startled him as he whispered it: "Actual bodily shape and
outline?"</p>
<p>"Material for bodies is everywhere," she answered, equally low;
"dust to which we all return; sand, if you prefer it, fine, fine sand.
Life moulds it easily enough, when that life is potent."</p>
<p>A certain confusion spread slowly through his mind as he heard
her. He lit a cigarette and smoked some minutes in silence. Lady
Statham and her nephew waited for him to speak. At length, after
some inner battling and hesitation, he put the question that he knew
they waited for. It was impossible to resist any longer.</p>
<p>"It would be interesting to know the method," he said, "and to
revive, perhaps, by experiment—"</p>
<p>Before he could complete his thought, she took him up:</p>
<p>"There are some who claim to know it," she said gravely—her
eyes a moment masterful. "A clue, thus followed, might lead to the
entire reconstruction I spoke of."</p>
<p>"And the method?" he repeated faintly.</p>
<p>"Evoke the Power by ceremonial evocation—the ritual is
obtainable—and note the form it assumes. Then establish it. This
shape or outline once secured, could then be made permanent—a
mould for its return at will—its natural physical expression here on
earth."</p>
<p>"Idol!" he exclaimed.</p>
<p>"Image," she replied at once. "Life, before we can know it, must
have a body. Our souls, in order to manifest here, need a material
vehicle."</p>
<p>"And—to obtain this form or outline?" he began; "to fix it,
rather?"</p>
<p>"Would be required the clever pencil of a fearless looker-on—some
one not engaged in the actual evocation. This form, accurately
made permanent in solid matter, say in stone, would provide a
channel always open. Experiment, properly speaking, might then
begin. The cisterns of Power behind would be accessible."</p>
<p>"An amazing proposition!" Henriot exclaimed. What surprised
him was that he felt no desire to laugh, and little even to doubt.</p>
<p>"Yet known to every religion that ever deserved the name," put
in Vance like a voice from a distance. Blackness came somehow
with his interruption—a touch of darkness. He spoke eagerly.</p>
<p>To all the talk that followed, and there was much of it, Henriot
listened with but half an ear. This one idea stormed through him
with an uproar that killed attention. Judgment was held utterly in
abeyance. He carried away from it some vague suggestion that this
woman had hinted at previous lives she half remembered, and that
every year she came to Egypt, haunting the sands and temples in the
effort to recover lost clues. And he recalled afterwards that she said,
"This all came to me as a child, just as though it was something half
remembered." There was the further suggestion that he himself was
not unknown to her; that they, too, had met before. But this, compared
to the grave certainty of the rest, was merest fantasy that did
not hold his attention. He answered, hardly knowing what he said.
His preoccupation with other thoughts deep down was so intense,
that he was probably barely polite, uttering empty phrases, with his
mind elsewhere. His one desire was to escape and be alone, and it
was with genuine relief that he presently excused himself and went
upstairs to bed. The halls, he noticed, were empty; an Arab servant
waited to put the lights out. He walked up, for the lift had long
ceased running.</p>
<p>And the magic of old Egypt stalked beside him. The studies that
had fascinated his mind in earlier youth returned with the power
that had subdued his mind in boyhood. The cult of Osiris woke in
his blood again; Horus and Nephthys stirred in their long-forgotten
centres. There revived in him, too long buried, the awful
glamour of those liturgal rites and vast body of observances, those
spells and formulae of incantation of the oldest known recension
that years ago had captured his imagination and belief—the Book of
the Dead. Trumpet voices called to his heart again across the
desert of some dim past. There were forms of life—impulses from
the Creative Power which is the Universe—other than the soul of
man. They could be known. A spiritual exaltation, roused by the
words and presence of this singular woman, shouted to him as he
went.</p>
<p>Then, as he closed his bedroom door, carefully locking it, there
stood beside him—Vance. The forgotten figure of Vance came
up close—the watching eyes, the simulated interest, the feigned
belief, the detective mental attitude, these broke through the
grandiose panorama, bringing darkness. Vance, strong personality
that hid behind assumed nonentity for some purpose of his own,
intruded with sudden violence, demanding an explanation of his
presence.</p>
<p>And, with an equal suddenness, explanation offered itself then
and there. It came unsought, its horror of certainty utterly unjustified;
and it came in this unexpected fashion:</p>
<p>Behind the interest and acquiescence of the man ran—fear: but
behind the vivid fear ran another thing that Henriot now perceived
was vile. For the first time in his life, Henriot knew it at close quarters,
actual, ready to operate. Though familiar enough in daily life
to be of common occurrence, Henriot had never realised it as he did
now, so close and terrible. In the same way he had never <i>realised</i>
that he would die—vanish from the busy world of men and women,
forgotten as though he had never existed, an eddy of wind-blown
dust. And in the man named Richard Vance this thing was close
upon blossom. Henriot could not name it to himself. Even in
thought it appalled him.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>He undressed hurriedly, almost with the child's idea of finding
safety between the sheets. His mind undressed itself as well. The
business of the day laid itself automatically aside; the will sank
down; desire grew inactive. Henriot was exhausted. But, in that
stage towards slumber when thinking stops, and only fugitive pictures
pass across the mind in shadowy dance, his brain ceased
shouting its mechanical explanations, and his soul unveiled a peering
eye. Great limbs of memory, smothered by the activities of the
Present, stirred their stiffened lengths through the sands of long
ago—sands this woman had begun to excavate from some far-off
pre-existence they had surely known together. Vagueness and certainty
ran hand in hand. Details were unrecoverable, but the emotions
in which they were embedded moved.</p>
<p>He turned restlessly in his bed, striving to seize the amazing
clues and follow them. But deliberate effort hid them instantly
again; they retired instantly into the subconsciousness. With the
brain of this body he now occupied they had nothing to do. The
brain stored memories of each life only. This ancient script was
graven in his soul. Subconsciousness alone could interpret and reveal.
And it was his subconscious memory that Lady Statham had
been so busily excavating.</p>
<p>Dimly it stirred and moved about the depths within him, never
clearly seen, indefinite, felt as a yearning after unrecoverable knowledge.
Against the darker background of Vance's fear and sinister
purpose—both of this present life, and recent—he saw the grandeur
of this woman's impossible dream, and <i>knew</i>, beyond argument or
reason, that it was true. Judgment and will asleep, he left the impossibility
aside, and took the grandeur. The Belief of Lady Statham
was not credulity and superstition; it was Memory. Still to this day,
over the sands of Egypt, hovered immense spiritual potencies, so
vast that they could only know physical expression in a group—in
many. Their sphere of bodily manifestation must be a host, each individual
unit in that host a corpuscle in the whole.</p>
<p>The wind, rising from the Lybian wastes across the Nile, swept
up against the exposed side of the hotel, and made his windows
rattle—the old, sad winds of Egypt. Henriot got out of bed to
fasten the outside shutters. He stood a moment and watched the
moon floating down behind the Sakkara Pyramids. The Pleiades
and Orion's Belt hung brilliantly; the Great Bear was close to the
horizon. In the sky above the Desert swung ten thousand stars. No
sounds rose from the streets of Helouan. The tide of sand was coming
slowly in.</p>
<p>And a flock of enormous thoughts swooped past him from fields
of this unbelievable, lost memory. The Desert, pale in the moon,
was coextensive with the night, too huge for comfort or understanding,
yet charged to the brim with infinite peace. Behind its
majesty of silence lay whispers of a vanished language that once
could call with power upon mighty spiritual Agencies. Its skirts
were folded now, but, slowly across the leagues of sand, they began
to stir and rearrange themselves. He grew suddenly aware of this
enveloping shroud of sand—as the raw material of bodily expression:
Form.</p>
<p>The sand was in his imagination and his mind. Shaking loosely
the folds of its gigantic skirts, it rose; it moved a little towards him.
He saw the eternal countenance of the Desert watching him—immobile
and unchanging behind these shifting veils the winds laid
so carefully over it. Egypt, the ancient Egypt, turned in her vast sarcophagus
of Desert, wakening from her sleep of ages at the Belief of
approaching worshippers.</p>
<p>Only in this insignificant manner could he express a letter of the
terrific language that crowded to seek expression through his soul....
He closed the shutters and carefully fastened them. He turned
to go back to bed, curiously trembling. Then, as he did so, the
whole singular delusion caught him with a shock that held him motionless.
Up rose the stupendous apparition of the entire Desert and
stood behind him on that balcony. Swift as thought, in silence, the
Desert stood on end against his very face. It towered across the sky,
hiding Orion and the moon; it dipped below the horizons. The
whole grey sheet of it rose up before his eyes and stood. Through its
unfolding skirts ran ten thousand eddies of swirling sand as the
creases of its grave-clothes smoothed themselves out in moonlight.
And a bleak, scarred countenance, huge as a planet, gazed down into
his own....</p>
<p>Through his dreamless sleep that night two things lay active and
awake ... in the subconscious part that knows no slumber. They
were incongruous. One was evil, small and human; the other unearthly
and sublime. For the memory of the fear that haunted
Vance, and the sinister cause of it, pricked at him all night long. But
behind, beyond this common, intelligible emotion, lay the crowding
wonder that caught his soul with glory:</p>
<p>The Sand was stirring, the Desert was awake. Ready to mate
with them in material form, brooded close the Ka of that colossal
Entity that once expressed itself through the myriad life of ancient
Egypt.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>VI</h3>
<p>Next day, and for several days following, Henriot kept out of the
path of Lady Statham and her nephew. The acquaintanceship had
grown too rapidly to be quite comfortable. It was easy to pretend
that he took people at their face value, but it was a pose; one liked
to know something of antecedents. It was otherwise difficult to
"place" them. And Henriot, for the life of him, could not "place"
these two. His Subconsciousness brought explanation when it
came—but the Subconsciousness is only temporarily active. When
it retired he floundered without a rudder, in confusion.</p>
<p>With the flood of morning sunshine the value of much she had
said evaporated. Her presence alone had supplied the key to the cipher.
But while the indigestible portions he rejected, there remained
a good deal he had already assimilated. The discomfort remained;
and with it the grave, unholy reality of it all. It was something more
than theory. Results would follow—if he joined them. He would
witness curious things.</p>
<p>The force with which it drew him brought hesitation. It operated
in him like a shock that numbs at first by its abrupt arrival, and
needs time to realise in the right proportions to the rest of life.
These right proportions, however, did not come readily, and his
emotions ranged between sceptical laughter and complete acceptance.
The one detail he felt certain of was this dreadful thing he had
divined in Vance. Trying hard to disbelieve it, he found he could
not. It was true. Though without a shred of real evidence to support
it, the horror of it remained. He knew it in his very bones.</p>
<p>And this, perhaps, was what drove him to seek the comforting
companionship of folk he understood and felt at home with. He
told his host and hostess about the strangers, though omitting the
actual conversation because they would merely smile in blank miscomprehension.
But the moment he described the strong black eyes
beneath the level eyelids, his hostess turned with a start, her interest
deeply roused: "Why, it's that awful Statham woman," she exclaimed,
"that must be Lady Statham, and the man she calls her
nephew."</p>
<p>"Sounds like it, certainly," her husband added. "Felix, you'd better
clear out. They'll bewitch you too."</p>
<p>And Henriot bridled, yet wondering why he did so. He drew
into his shell a little, giving the merest sketch of what had happened.
But he listened closely while these two practical old friends supplied
him with information in the gossiping way that human nature
loves. No doubt there was much embroidery, and more perversion,
exaggeration too, but the account evidently rested upon some basis
of solid foundation for all that. Smoke and fire go together always.</p>
<p>"He <i>is</i> her nephew right enough," Mansfield corrected his wife,
before proceeding to his own man's form of elaboration; "no question
about that, I believe. He's her favourite nephew, and she's as
rich as a pig. He follows her out here every year, waiting for her
empty shoes. But they <i>are</i> an unsavoury couple. I've met 'em in
various parts, all over Egypt, but they always come back to
Helouan in the end. And the stories about them are simply legion.
You remember—" he turned hesitatingly to his wife—"some people,
I heard," he changed his sentence, "were made quite ill by her."</p>
<p>"I'm sure Felix ought to know, yes," his wife boldly took him
up, "my niece, Fanny, had the most extraordinary experience." She
turned to Henriot. "Her room was next to Lady Statham in some
hotel or other at Assouan or Edfu, and one night she woke and
heard a kind of mysterious chanting or intoning next her. Hotel
doors are so dreadfully thin. There was a funny smell too, like incense
of something sickly, and a man's voice kept chiming in. It
went on for hours, while she lay terrified in bed—"</p>
<p>"Frightened, you say?" asked Henriot.</p>
<p>"Out of her skin, yes; she said it was so uncanny—made her feel
icy. She wanted to ring the bell, but was afraid to leave her bed. The
room was full of—of things, yet she could see nothing. She <i>felt</i>
them, you see. And after a bit the sound of this sing-song voice so
got on her nerves, it half dazed her—a kind of enchantment—she
felt choked and suffocated. And then—" It was her turn to hesitate.</p>
<p>"Tell it all," her husband said, quite gravely too.</p>
<p>"Well—something came in. At least, she describes it oddly,
rather; she said it made the door bulge inwards from the next room,
but not the door alone; the walls bulged or swayed as if a huge thing
pressed against them from the other side. And at the same moment
her windows—she had two big balconies, and the venetian shutters
were fastened—both her windows <i>darkened</i>—though it was two in
the morning and pitch dark outside. She said it was all <i>one</i> thing—trying
to get in; just as water, you see, would rush in through every
hole and opening it could find, and all at once. And in spite of her
terror—that's the odd part of it—she says she felt a kind of splendour
in her—a sort of elation."</p>
<p>"She saw nothing?"</p>
<p>"She says she doesn't remember. Her senses left her, I believe—though
she won't admit it."</p>
<p>"Fainted for a minute, probably," said Mansfield.</p>
<p>"So there it is," his wife concluded, after a silence. "And that's
true. It happened to my niece, didn't it, John?"</p>
<p>Stories and legendary accounts of strange things that the presence
of these two brought poured out then. They were obviously
somewhat mixed, one account borrowing picturesque details from
another, and all in disproportion, as when people tell stories in a
language they are little familiar with. But, listening with avidity, yet
also with uneasiness, somehow, Henriot put two and two together.
Truth stood behind them somewhere. These two held traffic with
the powers that ancient Egypt knew.</p>
<p>"Tell Felix, dear, about the time you met the nephew—horrid
creature—in the Valley of the Kings," he heard his wife say
presently. And Mansfield told it plainly enough, evidently glad to
get it done, though.</p>
<p>"It was some years ago now, and I didn't know who he was then,
or anything about him. I don't know much more now—except that
he's a dangerous sort of charlatan-devil, <i>I</i> think. But I came across
him one night up there by Thebes in the Valley of the Kings—you
know, where they buried all their Johnnies with so much magnificence
and processions and masses, and all the rest. It's the most
astounding, the most haunted place you ever saw, gloomy, silent,
full of gorgeous lights and shadows that seem alive—terribly impressive;
it makes you creep and shudder. You feel old Egypt
watching you."</p>
<p>"Get on, dear," said his wife.</p>
<p>"Well, I was coming home late on a blasted lazy donkey, dog-tired
into the bargain, when my donkey boy suddenly ran for his
life and left me alone. It was after sunset. The sand was red and
shining, and the big cliffs sort of fiery. And my donkey stuck its
four feet in the ground and wouldn't budge. Then, about fifty yards
away, I saw a fellow—European apparently—doing something—Heaven
knows what, for I can't describe it—among the boulders
that lie all over the ground there. Ceremony, I suppose you'd call it.
I was so interested that at first I watched. Then I saw he wasn't
alone. There were a lot of moving things round him, towering big
things, that came and went like shadows. That twilight is fearfully
bewildering; perspective changes, and distance gets all confused. It's
fearfully hard to see properly. I only remember that I got off my
donkey and went up closer, and when I was within a dozen yards of
him—well, it sounds such rot, you know, but I swear the things
suddenly rushed off and left him there alone. They went with a
roaring noise like wind; shadowy but tremendously big, they were,
and they vanished up against the fiery precipices as though they
slipped bang into the stone itself. The only thing I can think of to
describe 'em is—well, those sand-storms the Khamasin raises—the
hot winds, you know."</p>
<p>"They probably <i>were</i> sand," his wife suggested, burning to tell
another story of her own.</p>
<p>"Possibly, only there wasn't a breath of wind, and it was hot as
blazes—and—I had such extraordinary sensations—never felt anything
like it before—wild and exhilarated—drunk, I tell you,
drunk."</p>
<p>"You saw them?" asked Henriot. "You made out their shape at
all, or outline?"</p>
<p>"Sphinx," he replied at once, "for all the world like sphinxes.
You know the kind of face and head these limestone strata in the
Desert take—great visages with square Egyptian head-dresses
where the driven sand has eaten away the softer stuff beneath? You
see it everywhere—enormous idols they seem, with faces and eyes
and lips awfully like the sphinx—well, that's the nearest I can get to
it." He puffed his pipe hard. But there was no sign of levity in him.
He told the actual truth as far as in him lay, yet half ashamed of
what he told. And a good deal he left out, too.</p>
<p>"She's got a face of the same sort, that Statham horror," his wife
said with a shiver. "Reduce the size, and paint in awful black eyes,
and you've got her exactly—a living idol." And all three laughed,
yet a laughter without merriment in it.</p>
<p>"And you spoke to the man?"</p>
<p>"I did," the Englishman answered, "though I confess I'm a bit
ashamed of the way I spoke. Fact is, I was excited, thunderingly excited,
and felt a kind of anger. I wanted to kick the beggar for practising
such bally rubbish, and in such a place too. Yet all the
time—well, well, I believe it was sheer funk now," he laughed; "for
I felt uncommonly queer out there in the dusk, alone with—with
that kind of business; and I was angry with myself for feeling it.
Anyhow, I went up—I'd lost my donkey boy as well, remember—and
slated him like a dog. I can't remember what I said exactly—only
that he stood and stared at me in silence. That made it
worse—seemed twice as real then. The beggar said no single word
the whole time. He signed to me with one hand to clear out. And
then, suddenly out of nothing—she—that woman—appeared and
stood beside him. I never saw her come. She must have been behind
some boulder or other, for she simply rose out of the ground. She
stood there and stared at me too—bang in the face. She was turned
towards the sunset—what was left of it in the west—and her black
eyes shone like—ugh! I can't describe it—it was shocking."</p>
<p>"She spoke?"</p>
<p>"She said five words—and her voice—it'll make you laugh—it
was metallic like a gong: 'You are in danger here.' That's all she said.
I simply turned and cleared out as fast as ever I could. But I had to
go on foot. My donkey had followed its boy long before. I tell
you—smile as you may—my blood was all curdled for an hour afterwards."</p>
<p>Then he explained that he felt some kind of explanation or apology
was due, since the couple lodged in his own hotel, and how he
approached the man in the smoking-room after dinner. A conversation
resulted—the man was quite intelligent after all—of which
only one sentence had remained in his mind.</p>
<p>"Perhaps you can explain it, Felix. I wrote it down, as well as I
could remember. The rest confused me beyond words or memory;
though I must confess it did not seem—well, not utter rot exactly. It
was about astrology and rituals and the worship of the old Egyptians,
and I don't know what else besides. Only, he made it intelligible
and almost sensible, if only I could have got the hang of the
thing enough to remember it. You know," he added, as though believing
in spite of himself, "there <i>is</i> a lot of that wonderful old
Egyptian religious business still hanging about in the atmosphere of
this place, say what you like."</p>
<p>"But this sentence?" Henriot asked. And the other went off to
get a note-book where he had written it down.</p>
<p>"He was jawing, you see," he continued when he came back,
Henriot and his wife having kept silence meanwhile, "about direction
being of importance in religious ceremonies, West and North
symbolising certain powers, or something of the kind, why people
turn to the East and all that sort of thing, and speaking of the whole
Universe as if it had living forces tucked away in it that expressed
themselves somehow when roused up. That's how I remember it
anyhow. And then he said this thing—in answer to some fool question
probably that I put." And he read out of the note-book:</p>
<p>"'You were in danger because you came through the Gateway of
the West, and the Powers from the Gateway of the East were at that
moment rising, and therefore in direct opposition to you.'"</p>
<p>Then came the following, apparently a simile offered by way of
explanation. Mansfield read it in a shamefaced tone, evidently prepared
for laughter:</p>
<p>"'Whether I strike you on the back or in the face determines
what kind of answering force I rouse in you. Direction is significant.'
And he said it was the period called the Night of Power—time
when the Desert encroaches and spirits are close."</p>
<p>And tossing the book aside, he lit his pipe again and waited a
moment to hear what might be said. "Can you explain such gibberish?"
he asked at length, as neither of his listeners spoke. But Henriot
said he couldn't. And the wife then took up her own tale of
stories that had grown about this singular couple.</p>
<p>These were less detailed, and therefore less impressive, but all
contributed something towards the atmosphere of reality that
framed the entire picture. They belonged to the type one hears at
every dinner party in Egypt—stories of the vengeance mummies
seem to take on those who robbed them, desecrating their peace of
centuries; of a woman wearing a necklace of scarabs taken from a
princess's tomb, who felt hands about her throat to strangle her;
of little Ka figures, Pasht goddesses, amulets and the rest, that
brought curious disaster to those who kept them. They are many
and various, astonishingly circumstantial often, and vouched for by
persons the reverse of credulous. The modern superstition that
haunts the desert gullies with Afreets has nothing in common with
them. They rest upon a basis of indubitable experience; and they
remain—inexplicable. And about the personalities of Lady Statham
and her nephew they crowded like flies attracted by a dish of fruit.
The Arabs, too, were afraid of her. She had difficulty in getting
guides and dragomen.</p>
<p>"My dear chap," concluded Mansfield, "take my advice and have
nothing to do with 'em. There <i>is</i> a lot of queer business knocking
about in this old country, and people like that know ways of reviving
it somehow. It's upset you already; you looked scared, I
thought, the moment you came in." They laughed, but the Englishman
was in earnest. "I tell you what," he added, "we'll go off for a
bit of shooting together. The fields along the Delta are packed with
birds now: they're home early this year on their way to the North.
What d'ye say, eh?"</p>
<p>But Henriot did not care about the quail shooting. He felt more
inclined to be alone and think things out by himself. He had come
to his friends for comfort, and instead they had made him uneasy
and excited. His interest had suddenly doubled. Though half afraid,
he longed to know what these two were up to—to follow the adventure
to the bitter end. He disregarded the warning of his host as
well as the premonition in his own heart. The sand had caught his
feet.</p>
<p>There were moments when he laughed in utter disbelief, but
these were optimistic moods that did not last. He always returned
to the feeling that truth lurked somewhere in the whole strange
business, and that if he joined forces with them, as they seemed to
wish, he would witness—well, he hardly knew what—but it enticed
him as danger does the reckless man, or death the suicide. The sand
had caught his mind.</p>
<p>He decided to offer himself to all they wanted—his pencil too.
He would see—a shiver ran through him at the thought—what they
saw, and know some eddy of that vanished tide of power and splendour
the ancient Egyptian priesthood knew, and that perhaps was
even common experience in the far-off days of dim Atlantis. The
sand had caught his imagination too. He was utterly sand-haunted.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>VII</h3>
<p>And so he took pains, though without making definite suggestion,
to place himself in the way of this woman and her nephew—only to
find that his hints were disregarded. They left him alone, if they did
not actually avoid him. Moreover, he rarely came across them now.
Only at night, or in the queer dusk hours, he caught glimpses of
them moving hurriedly off from the hotel, and always desertwards.
And their disregard, well calculated, enflamed his desire to the
point when he almost decided to propose himself. Quite suddenly,
then, the idea flashed through him—how do they come, these odd
revelations, when the mind lies receptive like a plate sensitised by
anticipation?—that they were waiting for a certain date, and, with
the notion, came Mansfield's remark about "the Night of Power,"
believed in by the old Egyptian Calendar as a time when the supersensuous
world moves close against the minds of men with all its
troop of possibilities. And the thought, once lodged in its corner of
imagination, grew strong. He looked it up. Ten days from now, he
found, Leyel-el-Sud would be upon him, with a moon, too, at the
full. And this strange hint of guidance he accepted. In his present
mood, as he admitted, smiling to himself, he could accept anything.
It was part of it, it belonged to the adventure. But, even while he
persuaded himself that it was play, the solemn reality, of what lay
ahead increased amazingly, sketched darkly in his very soul.</p>
<p>These intervening days he spent as best he could—impatiently, a
prey to quite opposite emotions. In the blazing sunshine he thought
of it and laughed; but at night he lay often sleepless, calculating
chances of escape. He never did escape, however. The Desert that
watched little Helouan with great, unwinking eyes watched also
every turn and twist he made. Like this oasis, he basked in the sun
of older time, and dreamed beneath forgotten moons. The sand at
last had crept into his inmost heart. It sifted over him.</p>
<p>Seeking a reaction from normal, everyday things, he made tourist
trips; yet, while recognising the comedy in his attitude, he never
could lose sight of the grandeur that banked it up so hauntingly.
These two contrary emotions grafted themselves on all he did and
saw. He crossed the Nile at Bedrashein, and went again to the
Tomb-World of Sakkara; but through all the chatter of veiled and
helmeted tourists, the <i>bandar-log</i> of our modern Jungle, ran this
dark under-stream of awe their monkey methods could not turn
aside. One world lay upon another, but this modern layer was a
shallow crust that, like the phenomenon of the "desert-film," a
mere angle of falling light could instantly obliterate. Beneath the
sand, deep down, he passed along the Street of Tombs, as he had often
passed before, moved then merely by historical curiosity and
admiration, but now by emotions for which he found no name. He
saw the enormous sarcophagi of granite in their gloomy chambers
where the sacred bulls once lay, swathed and embalmed like human
beings, and, in the flickering candle light, the mood of ancient rites
surged round him, menacing his doubts and laughter. The least human
whisper in these subterraneans, dug out first four thousand
years ago, revived ominous Powers that stalked beside him, forbidding
and premonitive. He gazed at the spots where Mariette, unearthing
them forty years ago, found fresh as of yesterday the
marks of fingers and naked feet—of those who set the sixty-five ton
slabs in position. And when he came up again into the sunshine he
met the eternal questions of the pyramids, overtopping all his mental
horizons. Sand blocked all the avenues of younger emotion,
leaving the channels of something in him incalculably older, open
and clean swept.</p>
<p>He slipped homewards, uncomfortable and followed, glad to be
with a crowd—because he was otherwise alone with more than he
could dare to think about. Keeping just ahead of his companions, he
crossed the desert edge where the ghost of Memphis walks under
rustling palm trees that screen no stone left upon another of all its
mile-long populous splendours. For here was a vista his imagination
could realise; here he could know the comfort of solid ground
his feet could touch. Gigantic Ramases, lying on his back beneath
their shade and staring at the sky, similarly helped to steady his
swaying thoughts. Imagination could deal with these.</p>
<p>And daily thus he watched the busy world go to and fro to its
scale of tips and bargaining, and gladly mingled with it, trying to
laugh and study guidebooks, and listen to half-fledged explanations,
but always seeing the comedy of his poor attempts. Not all those
little donkeys, bells tinkling, beads shining, trotting beneath their
comical burdens to the tune of shouting and belabouring, could
stem this tide of deeper things the woman had let loose in the subconscious
part of him. Everywhere he saw the mysterious camels
go slouching through the sand, gurgling the water in their skinny,
extended throats. Centuries passed between the enormous knee-stroke
of their stride. And, every night, the sunsets restored the forbidding,
graver mood, with their crimson, golden splendour, their
strange green shafts of light, then—sudden twilight that brought the
Past upon him with an awful leap. Upon the stage then stepped the
figures of this pair of human beings, chanting their ancient plainsong
of incantation in the moonlit desert, and working their rites of
unholy evocation as the priests had worked them centuries before
in the sands that now buried Sakkara fathoms deep.</p>
<p>Then one morning he woke with a question in his mind, as
though it had been asked of him in sleep and he had waked just before
the answer came. "Why do I spend my time sight-seeing, instead
of going alone into the Desert as before? What has made me
change?"</p>
<p>This latest mood now asked for explanation. And the answer,
coming up automatically, startled him. It was so clear and sure—had
been lying in the background all along. One word contained it:</p>
<p>Vance.</p>
<p>The sinister intentions of this man, forgotten in the rush of other
emotions, asserted themselves again convincingly. The human horror,
so easily comprehensible, had been smothered for the time by
the hint of unearthly revelations. But it had operated all the time.
Now it took the lead. He dreaded to be alone in the Desert with
this dark picture in his mind of what Vance meant to bring there to
completion. This abomination of a selfish human will returned to
fix its terror in him. To be alone in the Desert meant to be alone
with the imaginative picture of what Vance—he knew it with such
strange certainty—hoped to bring about there.</p>
<p>There was absolutely no evidence to justify the grim suspicion. It
seemed indeed far-fetched enough, this connection between the
sand and the purpose of an evil-minded, violent man. But Henriot
saw it true. He could argue it away in a few minutes—easily. Yet the
instant thought ceased, it returned, led up by intuition. It possessed
him, filled his mind with horrible possibilities. He feared the Desert
as he might have feared the scene of some atrocious crime. And, for
the time, this dread of a merely human thing corrected the big seduction
of the other—the suggested "super-natural."</p>
<p>Side by side with it, his desire to join himself to the purposes of
the woman increased steadily. They kept out of his way apparently;
the offer seemed withdrawn; he grew restless, unable to settle to
anything for long, and once he asked the porter casually if they
were leaving the hotel. Lady Statham had been invisible for days,
and Vance was somehow never within speaking distance. He heard
with relief that they had not gone—but with dread as well. Keen excitement
worked in him underground. He slept badly. Like a
schoolboy, he waited for the summons to an important examination
that involved portentous issues, and contradictory emotions disturbed
his peace of mind abominably.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>VIII</h3>
<p>But it was not until the end of the week, when Vance approached
him with purpose in his eyes and manner, that Henriot knew his
fears unfounded, and caught himself trembling with sudden anticipation—because
the invitation, so desired yet so dreaded, was actually
at hand. Firmly determined to keep caution uppermost, yet he
went unresistingly to a secluded corner by the palms where they
could talk in privacy. For prudence is of the mind, but desire is of
the soul, and while his brain of to-day whispered wariness, voices in
his heart of long ago shouted commands that he knew he must obey
with joy.</p>
<p>It was evening and the stars were out. Helouan, with her fairy
twinkling lights, lay silent against the Desert edge. The sand was at
the flood. The period of the Encroaching of the Desert was at hand,
and the deeps were all astir with movement. But in the windless air
was a great peace. A calm of infinite stillness breathed everywhere.
The flow of Time, before it rushed away backwards, stopped somewhere
between the dust of stars and Desert. The mystery of sand
touched every street with its unutterable softness.</p>
<p>And Vance began without the smallest circumlocution. His voice
was low, in keeping with the scene, but the words dropped with a
sharp distinctness into the other's heart like grains of sand that
pricked the skin before they smothered him. Caution they smothered
instantly; resistance too.</p>
<p>"I have a message for you from my aunt," he said, as though he
brought an invitation to a picnic. Henriot sat in shadow, but his
companion's face was in a patch of light that followed them from
the windows of the central hall. There was a shining in the light
blue eyes that betrayed the excitement his quiet manner concealed.
"We are going—the day after to-morrow—to spend the night in the
Desert; she wondered if, perhaps, you would care to join us?"</p>
<p>"For your experiment?" asked Henriot bluntly.</p>
<p>Vance smiled with his lips, holding his eyes steady, though unable
to suppress the gleam that flashed in them and was gone so
swiftly. There was a hint of shrugging his shoulders.</p>
<p>"It is the Night of Power—in the old Egyptian Calendar, you
know," he answered with assumed lightness almost, "the final moment
of Leyel-el-Sud, the period of Black Nights when the Desert
was held to encroach with—with various possibilities of a supernatural
order. She wishes to revive a certain practice of the old Egyptians.
There <i>may</i> be curious results. At any rate, the occasion is a
picturesque one—better than this cheap imitation of London life."
And he indicated the lights, the signs of people in the hall dressed
for gaieties and dances, the hotel orchestra that played after dinner.</p>
<p>Henriot at the moment answered nothing, so great was the rush
of conflicting emotions that came he knew not whence. Vance went
calmly on. He spoke with a simple frankness that was meant to be
disarming. Henriot never took his eyes off him. The two men stared
steadily at one another.</p>
<p>"She wants to know if you will come and help too—in a certain
way only: not in the experiment itself precisely, but by watching
merely and—" He hesitated an instant, half lowering his eyes.</p>
<p>"Drawing the picture," Henriot helped him deliberately.</p>
<p>"Drawing what you see, yes," Vance replied, the voice turned
graver in spite of himself. "She wants—she hopes to catch the outlines
of anything that happens—"</p>
<p>"Comes."</p>
<p>"Exactly. Determine the shape of anything that comes. You may
remember your conversation of the other night with her. She is very
certain of success."</p>
<p>This was direct enough at any rate. It was as formal as an invitation
to a dinner, and as guileless. The thing he thought he wanted
lay within his reach. He had merely to say yes. He did say yes; but
first he looked about him instinctively, as for guidance. He looked
at the stars twinkling high above the distant Libyan Plateau; at the
long arms of the Desert, gleaming weirdly white in the moonlight,
and reaching towards him down every opening between the houses;
at the heavy mass of the Mokattam Hills, guarding the Arabian
Wilderness with strange, peaked barriers, their sand-carved ridges
dark and still above the Wadi Hof.</p>
<p>These questionings attracted no response. The Desert watched
him, but it did not answer. There was only the shrill whistling cry
of the lizards, and the sing-song of a white-robed Arab gliding
down the sandy street. And through these sounds he heard his own
voice answer: "I will come—yes. But how can I help? Tell me what
you propose—your plan?"</p>
<p>And the face of Vance, seen plainly in the electric glare, betrayed
his satisfaction. The opposing things in the fellow's mind of darkness
fought visibly in his eyes and skin. The sordid motive, planning
a dreadful act, leaped to his face, and with it a flash of this
other yearning that sought unearthly knowledge, perhaps believed
it too. No wonder there was conflict written on his features.</p>
<p>Then all expression vanished again; he leaned forward, lowering
his voice.</p>
<p>"You remember our conversation about there being types of life
too vast to manifest in a single body, and my aunt's belief that these
were known to certain of the older religious systems of the world?"</p>
<p>"Perfectly."</p>
<p>"Her experiment, then, is to bring one of these great Powers
back—we possess the sympathetic ritual that can rouse some among
them to activity—and win it down into the sphere of our minds,
our minds heightened, you see, by ceremonial to that stage of clairvoyant
vision which can perceive them."</p>
<p>"And then?" They might have been discussing the building of a
house, so naturally followed answer upon question. But the whole
body of meaning in the old Egyptian symbolism rushed over him
with a force that shook his heart. Memory came so marvellously
with it.</p>
<p>"If the Power floods down into our minds with sufficient
strength for actual form, to note the outline of such form, and from
your drawing model it later in permanent substance. Then we
should have means of evoking it at will, for we should have its natural
Body—the form it built itself, its signature, image, pattern. A
starting-point, you see, for more—leading, she hopes, to a complete
reconstruction."</p>
<p>"It might take actual shape—assume a bodily form visible to the
eye?" repeated Henriot, amazed as before that doubt and laughter
did not break through his mind.</p>
<p>"We are on the earth," was the reply, spoken unnecessarily low
since no living thing was within earshot, "we are in physical conditions,
are we not? Even a human soul we do not recognise unless we
see it in a body—parents provide the outline, the signature, the sigil
of the returning soul. This," and he tapped himself upon the breast,
"is the physical signature of that type of life we call a soul. Unless
there is life of a certain strength behind it, no body forms. And,
without a body, we are helpless to control or manage it—deal with
it in any way. We could not know it, though being possibly <i>aware</i>
of it."</p>
<p>"To be aware, you mean, is not sufficient?" For he noticed the
italics Vance made use of.</p>
<p>"Too vague, of no value for future use," was the reply. "But once
obtain the form, and we have the natural symbol of that particular
Power. And a symbol is more than image, it is a direct and concentrated
expression of the life it typifies—possibly terrific."</p>
<p>"It may be a body, then, this symbol you speak of."</p>
<p>"Accurate vehicle of manifestation; but 'body' seems the simplest
word."</p>
<p>Vance answered very slowly and deliberately, as though weighing
how much he would tell. His language was admirably evasive.
Few perhaps would have detected the profound significance the curious
words he next used unquestionably concealed. Henriot's mind
rejected them, but his heart accepted. For the ancient soul in him
was listening and aware.</p>
<p>"Life, using matter to express itself in bodily shape, first traces a
geometrical pattern. From the lowest form in crystals, upwards to
more complicated patterns in the higher organisations—there is always
first this geometrical pattern as skeleton. For geometry lies at
the root of all possible phenomena; and is the mind's interpretation
of a living movement towards shape that shall express it."
He brought his eyes closer to the other, lowering his voice again.
"Hence," he said softly, "the signs in all the old magical systems—skeleton
forms into which the Powers evoked descended; outlines
those Powers automatically built up when using matter to express
themselves. Such signs are material symbols of their bodiless existence.
They attract the life they represent and interpret. Obtain the
correct, true symbol, and the Power corresponding to it can
approach—once roused and made aware. It has, you see, a ready-made
mould into which it can come down."</p>
<p>"Once roused and made aware?" repeated Henriot questioningly,
while this man went stammering the letters of a language that
he himself had used too long ago to recapture fully.</p>
<p>"Because they have left the world. They sleep, unmanifested.
Their forms are no longer known to men. No forms exist on earth
to-day that could contain them. But they may be awakened," he
added darkly. "They are bound to answer to the summons, if such
summons be accurately made."</p>
<p>"Evocation?" whispered Henriot, more distressed than he cared
to admit.</p>
<p>Vance nodded. Leaning still closer, to his companion's face, he
thrust his lips forward, speaking eagerly, earnestly, yet somehow at
the same time, horribly: "And we want—my aunt would ask—your
draughtsman's skill, or at any rate your memory afterwards, to establish
the outline of anything that comes."</p>
<p>He waited for the answer, still keeping his face uncomfortably
close.</p>
<p>Henriot drew back a little. But his mind was fully made up now.
He had known from the beginning that he would consent, for the
desire in him was stronger than all the caution in the world. The
Past inexorably drew him into the circle of these other lives, and the
little human dread Vance woke in him seemed just then insignificant
by comparison. It was merely of To-day.</p>
<p>"You two," he said, trying to bring judgment into it, "engaged in
evocation, will be in a state of clairvoyant vision. Granted. But shall
I, as an outsider, observing with unexcited mind, see anything,
know anything, be aware of anything at all, let alone the drawing
of it?"</p>
<p>"Unless," the reply came instantly with decision, "the descent of
Power is strong enough to take actual material shape, the experiment
is a failure. Anybody can induce subjective vision. Such fantasies
have no value though. They are born of an overwrought
imagination." And then he added quickly, as though to clinch the
matter before caution and hesitation could take effect: "You must
watch from the heights above. We shall be in the valley—the Wadi
Hof is the place. You must not be too close—"</p>
<p>"Why not too close?" asked Henriot, springing forward like a
flash before he could prevent the sudden impulse.</p>
<p>With a quickness equal to his own, Vance answered. There was
no faintest sign that he was surprised. His self-control was perfect.
Only the glare passed darkly through his eyes and went back again
into the sombre soul that bore it.</p>
<p>"For your own safety," he answered low. "The Power, the type
of life, she would waken is stupendous. And if roused enough to be
attracted by the patterned symbol into which she would decoy it
down, it will take actual, physical expression. But how? Where is
the Body of Worshippers through whom it can manifest? There is
none. It will, therefore, press inanimate matter into the service. The
terrific impulse to form itself a means of expression will force all
loose matter at hand towards it—sand, stones, all it can compel to
yield—everything must rush into the sphere of action in which it
operates. Alone, we at the centre, and you, upon the outer fringe,
will be safe. Only—you must not come too close."</p>
<p>But Henriot was no longer listening. His soul had turned to ice.
For here, in this unguarded moment, the cloven hoof had plainly
shown itself. In that suggestion of a particular kind of danger Vance
had lifted a corner of the curtain behind which crouched his horrible
intention. Vance desired a witness of the extraordinary experiment,
but he desired this witness, not merely for the purpose of
sketching possible shapes that might present themselves to excited
vision. He desired a witness for another reason too. Why had Vance
put that idea into his mind, this idea of so peculiar danger? It might
well have lost him the very assistance he seemed so anxious to obtain.</p>
<p>Henriot could not fathom it quite. Only one thing was clear to
him. He, Henriot, was not the only one in danger.</p>
<p>They talked for long after that—far into the night. The lights
went out, and the armed patrol, pacing to and fro outside the iron
railings that kept the desert back, eyed them curiously. But the only
other thing he gathered of importance was the ledge upon the cliff-top
where he was to stand and watch; that he was expected to reach
there before sunset and wait till the moon concealed all glimmer in
the western sky, and—that the woman, who had been engaged for
days in secret preparation of soul and body for the awful rite,
would not be visible again until he saw her in the depths of the
black valley far below, busy with this man upon audacious, ancient
purposes.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>IX</h3>
<p>An hour before sunset Henriot put his rugs and food upon a donkey,
and gave the boy directions where to meet him—a considerable
distance from the appointed spot. He went himself on foot. He
slipped in the heat along the sandy street, where strings of camels
still go slouching, shuffling with their loads from the quarries that
built the pyramids, and he felt that little friendly Helouan tried to
keep him back. But desire now was far too strong for caution. The
desert tide was rising. It easily swept him down the long white
street towards the enormous deeps beyond. He felt the pull of a
thousand miles before him; and twice a thousand years drove at his
back.</p>
<p>Everything still basked in the sunshine. He passed Al Hayat, the
stately hotel that dominates the village like a palace built against the
sky; and in its pillared colonnades and terraces he saw the throngs
of people having late afternoon tea and listening to the music of a
regimental band. Men in flannels were playing tennis, parties were
climbing off donkeys after long excursions; there was laughter, talking,
a babel of many voices. The gaiety called to him; the everyday
spirit whispered to stay and join the crowd of lively human beings.
Soon there would be merry dinner-parties, dancing, voices of pretty
women, sweet white dresses, singing, and the rest. Soft eyes would
question and turn dark. He picked out several girls he knew among
the palms. But it was all many, oh so many leagues away; centuries
lay between him and this modern world. An indescriable loneliness
was in his heart. He went searching through the sands of forgotten
ages, and wandering among the ruins of a vanished time. He hurried.
Already the deeper water caught his breath.</p>
<p>He climbed the steep rise towards the plateau where the Observatory
stands, and saw two of the officials whom he knew taking
a siesta after their long day's work. He felt that his mind, too, had
dived and searched among the heavenly bodies that live in silent,
changeless peace remote from the world of men. They recognised
him, these two whose eyes also knew tremendous distance close.
They beckoned, waving the straws through which they sipped their
drinks from tall glasses. Their voices floated down to him as from
the star-fields. He saw the sun gleam upon the glasses, and heard the
clink of the ice against the sides. The stillness was amazing. He
waved an answer, and passed quickly on. He could not stop this
sliding current of the years.</p>
<p>The tide moved faster, the draw of piled-up cycles urging it. He
emerged upon the plateau, and met the cooler Desert air. His feet
went crunching on the "desert-film" that spread its curious dark
shiny carpet as far as the eye could reach; it lay everywhere,
unswept and smooth as when the feet of vanished civilizations trod
its burning surface, then dipped behind the curtains Time pins
against the stars. And here the body of the tide set all one way.
There was a greater strength of current, draught and suction. He
felt the powerful undertow. Deeper masses drew his feet sideways,
and he felt the rushing of the central body of the sand. The sands
were moving, from their foundation upwards. He went unresistingly
with them.</p>
<p>Turning a moment, he looked back at shining little Helouan in
the blaze of evening light. The voices reached him very faintly,
merged now in a general murmur. Beyond lay the strip of Delta
vivid green, the palms, the roofs of Bedrashein, the blue laughter of
the Nile with its flocks of curved felucca sails. Further still, rising
above the yellow Libyan horizon, gloomed the vast triangles of a
dozen Pyramids, cutting their wedge-shaped clefts out of a sky fast
crimsoning through a sea of gold. Seen thus, their dignity imposed
upon the entire landscape. They towered darkly, symbolic signatures
of the ancient Powers that now watched him taking these little
steps across their damaged territory.</p>
<p>He gazed a minute, then went on. He saw the big pale face of the
moon in the east. Above the ever-silent Thing these giant symbols
once interpreted, she rose, grand, effortless, half-terrible as themselves.
And, with her, she lifted up this tide of the Desert that drew
his feet across the sand to Wadi Hof. A moment later he dipped below
the ridge that buried Helouan and Nile and Pyramids from
sight. He entered the ancient waters. Time then, in an instant,
flowed back behind his footsteps, obliterating every trace. And
with it his mind went too. He stepped across the gulf of centuries,
moving into the Past. The Desert lay before him—an open tomb
wherein his soul should read presently of things long vanished.</p>
<p>The strange half-lights of sunset began to play their witchery
then upon the landscape. A purple glow came down upon the
Mokattam Hills. Perspective danced its tricks of false, incredible deception.
The soaring kites that were a mile away seemed suddenly
close, passing in a moment from the size of gnats to birds with a
fabulous stretch of wing. Ridges and cliffs rushed close without a
hint of warning, and level places sank into declivities and basins that
made him trip and stumble. That indescribable quality of the
Desert, which makes timid souls avoid the hour of dusk, emerged;
it spread everywhere, undisguised. And the bewilderment it brings
is no vain, imagined thing, for it distorts vision utterly, and the effect
upon the mind when familiar sight goes floundering is the simplest
way in the world of dragging the anchor that grips reality. At
the hour of sunset this bewilderment comes upon a man with a disconcerting
swiftness. It rose now with all this weird rapidity. Henriot
found himself enveloped at a moment's notice.</p>
<p>But, knowing well its effect, he tried to judge it and pass on. The
other matters, the object of his journey chief of all, he refused to
dwell upon with any imagination. Wisely, his mind, while never
losing sight of it, declined to admit the exaggeration that over-elaborate
thinking brings. "I'm going to witness an incredible experiment
in which two enthusiastic religious dreamers believe
firmly," he repeated to himself. "I have agreed to draw—anything I
see. There may be truth in it, or they may be merely self-suggested
vision due to an artificial exaltation of their minds. I'm interested—perhaps
against my better judgment. Yet I'll see the adventure out—because
I <i>must</i>."</p>
<p>This was the attitude he told himself to take. Whether it was the
real one, or merely adopted to warm a cooling courage, he could
not tell. The emotions were so complex and warring. His mind, automatically,
kept repeating this comforting formula. Deeper than
that he could not see to judge. For a man who knew the full content
of his thought at such a time would solve some of the oldest psychological
problems in the world. Sand had already buried judgment,
and with it all attempt to explain the adventure by the
standards acceptable to his brain of to-day. He steered subconsciously
through a world of dim, huge, half-remembered wonders.</p>
<p>The sun, with that abrupt Egyptian suddenness, was below the
horizon now. The pyramid field had swallowed it. Ra, in his golden
boat, sailed distant seas beyond the Libyan wilderness. Henriot
walked on and on, aware of utter loneliness. He was walking fields
of dream, too remote from modern life to recall companionship he
once had surely known. How dim it was, how deep and distant,
how lost in this sea of an incalculable Past! He walked into the
places that are soundless. The soundlessness of ocean, miles below
the surface, was about him. He was with One only—this unfathomable,
silent thing where nothing breathes or stirs—nothing but
sunshine, shadow and the wind-borne sand. Slowly, in front, the
moon climbed up the eastern sky, hanging above the silence—silence
that ran unbroken across the horizons to where Suez
gleamed upon the waters of a sister sea in motion. That moon was
glinting now upon the Arabian Mountains by its desolate shores.
Southwards stretched the wastes of Upper Egypt a thousand miles
to meet the Nubian wilderness. But over all these separate Deserts
stirred the soft whisper of the moving sand—deep murmuring message
that Life was on the way to unwind Death. The Ka of Egypt,
swathed in centuries of sand, hovered beneath the moon towards
her ancient tenement.</p>
<p>For the transformation of the Desert now began in earnest. It
grew apace. Before he had gone the first two miles of his hour's
journey, the twilight caught the rocky hills and twisted them into
those monstrous revelations of physiognomies they barely take the
trouble to conceal even in the daytime. And, while he well understood
the eroding agencies that have produced them, there yet rose
in his mind a deeper interpretation lurking just behind their literal
meanings. Here, through the motionless surfaces, that nameless
thing the Desert ill conceals urged outwards into embryonic form
and shape, akin, he almost felt, to those immense deific symbols of
Other Life the Egyptians knew and worshipped. Hence, from the
Desert, had first come, he felt, the unearthly life they typified in
their monstrous figures of granite, evoked in their stately temples,
and communed with in the ritual of their Mystery ceremonials.</p>
<p>This "watching" aspect of the Libyan Desert is really natural
enough; but it is just the natural, Henriot knew, that brings the
deepest revelations. The surface limestones, resisting the erosion,
block themselves ominously against the sky, while the softer sand
beneath sets them on altared pedestals that define their isolation
splendidly. Blunt and unconquerable, these masses now watched
him pass between them. The Desert surface formed them, gave
them birth. They rose, they saw, they sank down again—waves
upon a sea that carried forgotten life up from the depths below. Of
forbidding, even menacing type, they somewhere mated with genuine
grandeur. Unformed, according to any standard of human or
of animal faces, they achieved an air of giant physiognomy which
made them terrible. The unwinking stare of eyes—lidless eyes that
yet ever succeed in hiding—looked out under well-marked, level
eyebrows, suggesting a vision that included the motives and purposes
of his very heart. They looked up grandly, understood why
he was there, and then—slowly withdrew their mysterious, penetrating
gaze.</p>
<p>The strata built them so marvellously up; the heavy, threatening
brows; thick lips, curved by the ages into a semblance of cold
smiles; jowls drooping into sandy heaps that climbed against the
cheeks; protruding jaws, and the suggestion of shoulders just about
to lift the entire bodies out of the sandy beds—this host of countenances
conveyed a solemnity of expression that seemed everlasting,
implacable as Death. Of human signature they bore no trace, nor
was comparison possible between their kind and any animal life.
They peopled the Desert here. And their smiles, concealed yet just
discernible, went broadening with the darkness into a Desert laughter.
The silence bore it underground. But Henriot was aware of it.
The troop of faces slipped into that single, enormous countenance
which is the visage of the Sand. And he saw it everywhere, yet
nowhere.</p>
<p>Thus with the darkness grew his imaginative interpretation of
the Desert. Yet there was construction in it, a construction, moreover,
that was <i>not</i> entirely his own. Powers, he felt, were rising, stirring,
wakening from sleep. Behind the natural faces that he saw,
these other things peered gravely at him as he passed. They used, as
it were, materials that lay ready to their hand. Imagination furnished
these hints of outline, yet the Powers themselves were real.
There <i>was</i> this amazing movement of the sand. By no other manner
could his mind have conceived of such a thing, nor dreamed of this
simple, yet dreadful method of approach.</p>
<p>Approach! that was the word that first stood out and startled
him. There was approach; something was drawing nearer. The
Desert rose and walked beside him. For not alone these ribs of
gleaming limestone contributed towards the elemental visages, but
the entire hills, of which they were an outcrop, ran to assist in the
formation, and were a necessary part of them. He was watched and
stared at from behind, in front, on either side, and even from below.
The sand that swept him on, kept even pace with him. It turned luminous
too, with a patchwork of glimmering effect that was indescribably
weird; lanterns glowed within its substance, and by their
light he stumbled on, glad of the Arab boy he would presently meet
at the appointed place.</p>
<p>The last torch of the sunset had flickered out, melting into the
wilderness, when, suddenly opening at his feet, gaped the deep,
wide gully known as Wadi Hof. Its curve swept past him.</p>
<p>This first impression came upon him with a certain violence: that
the desolate valley rushed. He saw but a section of its curve and
sweep, but through its entire length of several miles the Wadi fled
away. The moon whitened it like snow, piling black shadows very
close against the cliffs. In the flood of moonlight it went rushing
past. It was emptying itself.</p>
<p>For a moment the stream of movement seemed to pause and
look up into his face, then instantly went on again upon its swift
career. It was like the procession of a river to the sea. The valley
emptied itself to make way for what was coming. The approach,
moreover, had already begun.</p>
<p>Conscious that he was trembling, he stood and gazed into the
depths, seeking to steady his mind by the repetition of the little formula
he had used before. He said it half aloud. But, while he did so,
his heart whispered quite other things. Thoughts the woman and
the man had sown rose up in a flock and fell upon him like a storm
of sand. Their impetus drove off all support of ordinary ideas. They
shook him where he stood, staring down into this river of strange
invisible movement that was hundreds of feet in depth and a quarter
of a mile across.</p>
<p>He sought to realise himself as he actually was to-day—mere visitor
to Helouan, tempted into this wild adventure with two
strangers. But in vain. That seemed a dream, unreal, a transient detail
picked out from the enormous Past that now engulfed him,
heart and mind and soul. <i>This</i> was the reality.</p>
<p>The shapes and faces that the hills of sand built round him were
the play of excited fancy only. By sheer force he pinned his thought
against this fact: but further he could not get. There <i>were</i> Powers at
work; they were being stirred, wakened somewhere into activity.
Evocation had already begun. That sense of their approach as he
had walked along from Helouan was not imaginary. A descent of
some type of life, vanished from the world too long for recollection,
was on the way,—so vast that it would manifest itself in a group of
forms, a troop, a host, an army. These two were near him somewhere
at this very moment, already long at work, their minds driving
beyond this little world. The valley was emptying itself—for the
descent of life their ritual invited.</p>
<p>And the movement in the sand was likewise true. He recalled the
sentences the woman had used. "My body," he reflected, "like the
bodies life makes use of everywhere, is mere upright heap of earth
and dust and—sand. Here in the Desert is the raw material, the
greatest store of it in the world."</p>
<p>And on the heels of it came sharply that other thing: that this descending
Life would press into its service all loose matter within its
reach—to form that sphere of action which would be in a literal
sense its Body.</p>
<p>In the first few seconds, as he stood there, he realised all this, and
realised it with an overwhelming conviction it was futile to deny.
The fast-emptying valley would later brim with an unaccustomed
and terrific life. Yet Death hid there too—a little, ugly, insignificant
death. With the name of Vance it flashed upon his mind and vanished,
too tiny to be thought about in this torrent of grander messages
that shook the depths within his soul. He bowed his head a
moment, hardly knowing what he did. He could have waited thus a
thousand years it seemed. He was conscious of a wild desire to run
away, to hide, to efface himself utterly, his terror, his curiosity, his
little wonder, and not be seen of anything. But it was all vain and
foolish. The Desert saw him. The Gigantic knew that he was there.
No escape was possible any longer. Caught by the sand, he stood
amid eternal things. The river of movement swept him too.</p>
<p>These hills, now motionless as statues, would presently glide forward
into the cavalcade, sway like vessels, and go past with the procession.
At present only the contents, not the frame, of the Wadi
moved. An immense soft brush of moonlight swept it empty for
what was on the way.... But presently the entire Desert would
stand up and also go.</p>
<p>Then, making a sideways movement, his feet kicked against
something soft and yielding that lay heaped upon the Desert floor,
and Henriot discovered the rugs the Arab boy had carefully set
down before he made full speed for the friendly lights of Helouan.
The sound of his departing footsteps had long since died away. He
was alone.</p>
<p>The detail restored to him his consciousness of the immediate
present, and, stooping, he gathered up the rugs and overcoat and
began to make preparations for the night. But the appointed spot,
whence he was to watch, lay upon the summit of the opposite cliffs.
He must cross the Wadi bed and climb. Slowly and with labour he
made his way down a steep cleft into the depth of the Wadi Hof,
sliding and stumbling often, till at length he stood upon the floor of
shining moonlight. It was very smooth; windless utterly; still as
space; each particle of sand lay in its ancient place asleep. The movement,
it seemed, had ceased.</p>
<p>He clambered next up the eastern side, through pitch-black
shadows, and within the hour reached the ledge upon the top
whence he could see below him, like a silvered map, the sweep of
the valley bed. The wind nipped keenly here again, coming over the
leagues of cooling sand. Loose boulders of splintered rock, started
by his climbing, crashed and boomed into the depths. He banked
the rugs behind him, wrapped himself in his overcoat, and lay down
to wait. Behind him was a two-foot crumbling wall against which
he leaned; in front a drop of several hundred feet through space. He
lay upon a platform, therefore, invisible from the Desert at his back.
Below, the curving Wadi formed a natural amphitheatre in which
each separate boulder fallen from the cliffs, and even the little <i>silla</i>
shrubs the camels eat, were plainly visible. He noted all the bigger
ones among them. He counted them over half aloud.</p>
<p>And the moving stream he had been unaware of when crossing
the bed itself, now began again. The Wadi went rushing past before
the broom of moonlight. Again, the enormous and the tiny combined
in one single strange impression. For, through this conception
of great movement, stirred also a roving, delicate touch that his
imagination felt as bird-like. Behind the solid mass of the Desert's
immobility flashed something swift and light and airy. Bizarre pictures
interpreted it to him, like rapid snap-shots of a huge flying
panorama: he thought of darting dragon-flies seen at Helouan, of
children's little dancing feet, of twinkling butterflies—of birds.
Chiefly, yes, of a flock of birds in flight, whose separate units
formed a single entity. The idea of the Group-Soul possessed his
mind once more. But it came with a sense of more than curiosity or
wonder. Veneration lay behind it, a veneration touched with awe. It
rose in his deepest thought that here was the first hint of a symbolical
representation. A symbol, sacred and inviolable, belonging to
some ancient worship that he half remembered in his soul, stirred
towards interpretation through all his being.</p>
<p>He lay there waiting, wondering vaguely where his two companions
were, yet fear all vanished because he felt attuned to a scale of
things too big to mate with definite dread. There was high anticipation
in him, but not anxiety. Of himself, as Felix Henriot, indeed, he
hardly seemed aware. He was some one else. Or, rather, he was
himself at a stage he had known once far, far away in a remote pre-existence.
He watched himself from dim summits of a Past, of
which no further details were as yet recoverable.</p>
<p>Pencil and sketching-block lay ready to his hand. The moon rose
higher, tucking the shadows ever more closely against the precipices.
The silver passed into a sheet of snowy whiteness, that made every
boulder clearly visible. Solemnity deepened everywhere into awe.
The Wadi fled silently down the stream of hours. It was almost
empty now. And then, abruptly, he was aware of change. The motion
altered somewhere. It moved more quietly; pace slackened; the
end of the procession that evacuated the depth and length of it went
trailing past and turned the distant bend.</p>
<p>"It's slowing up," he whispered, as sure of it as though he had
watched a regiment of soldiers filing by. The wind took off his voice
like a flying feather of sound.</p>
<p>And there <i>was</i> a change. It had begun. Night and the moon
stood still to watch and listen. The wind dropped utterly away. The
sand ceased its shifting movement. The Desert everywhere stopped
still, and turned.</p>
<p>Some curtain, then, that for centuries had veiled the world, drew
softly up, leaving a shaded vista down which the eyes of his soul
peered towards long-forgotten pictures. Still buried by the sands
too deep for full recovery, he yet perceived dim portions of them—things
once honoured and loved passionately. For once they had
surely been to him the whole of life, not merely a fragment for
cheap wonder to inspect. And they were curiously familiar, even as
the person of this woman who now evoked them was familiar. Henriot
made no pretence to more definite remembrance; but the
haunting certainty rushed over him, deeper than doubt or denial,
and with such force that he felt no effort to destroy it. Some lost
sweetness of spiritual ambitions, lived for with this passionate devotion,
and passionately worshipped as men to-day worship fame
and money, revived in him with a tempest of high glory. Centres of
memory stirred from an age-long sleep, so that he could have wept
at their so complete obliteration hitherto. That such majesty had
departed from the world as though it never had existed, was a
thought for desolation and for tears. And though the little fragment
he was about to witness might be crude in itself and incomplete, yet
it was part of a vast system that once explored the richest realms of
deity. The reverence in him contained a holiness of the night and of
the stars; great, gentle awe lay in it too; for he stood, aflame with
anticipation and humility, at the gateway of sacred things.</p>
<p>And this was the mood, no thrill of cheap excitement or alarm to
weaken in, in which he first became aware that two spots of darkness
he had taken all along for boulders on the snowy valley bed,
were actually something very different. They were living figures.
They moved. It was not the shadows slowly following the moonlight,
but the stir of human beings who all these hours had been
motionless as stone. He must have passed them unnoticed within a
dozen yards when he crossed the Wadi bed, and a hundred times
from this very ledge his eyes had surely rested on them without
recognition. Their minds, he knew full well, had not been inactive
as their bodies. The important part of the ancient ritual lay, he remembered,
in the powers of the evoking mind.</p>
<p>Here, indeed, was no effective nor theatrical approach of the
principal figures. It had nothing in common with the cheap external
ceremonial of modern days. In forgotten powers of the soul its
grandeur lay, potent, splendid, true. Long before he came, perhaps
all through the day, these two had laboured with their arduous
preparations. They were there, part of the Desert, when hours ago
he had crossed the plateau in the twilight. To them—to this
woman's potent working of old ceremonial—had been due that singular
rush of imagination he had felt. He had interpreted the Desert
as alive. Here was the explanation. It <i>was</i> alive. Life was on the way.
Long latent, her intense desire summoned it back to physical expression;
and the effect upon him had steadily increased as he drew
nearer to the centre where she would focus its revival and return.
Those singular impressions of being watched and accompanied
were explained. A priest of this old-world worship performed
a genuine evocation; a Great One of Vision revived the cosmic
Powers.</p>
<p>Henriot watched the small figures far below him with a sense of
dramatic splendour that only this association of far-off Memory
could account for. It was their rising now, and the lifting of their
arms to form a slow revolving outline, that marked the abrupt cessation
of the larger river of movement; for the sweeping of the Wadi
sank into sudden stillness, and these two, with motions not unlike
some dance of deliberate solemnity, passed slowly through the
moonlight to and fro. His attention fixed upon them both. All other
movement ceased. They fastened the flow of Time against the
Desert's body.</p>
<p>What happened then? How could his mind interpret an experience
so long denied that the power of expression, as of comprehension,
has ceased to exist? How translate this symbolical
representation, small detail though it was, of a transcendent worship
entombed for most so utterly beyond recovery? Its splendour
could never lodge in minds that conceive Deity perched upon a
cloud within telephoning distance of fashionable churches. How
should he phrase it even to himself, whose memory drew up
pictures from so dim a past that the language fit to frame them lay
unreachable and lost?</p>
<p>Henriot did not know. Perhaps he never yet has known. Certainly,
at the time, he did not even try to think. His sensations
remain his own—untranslatable; and even that instinctive description
the mind gropes for automatically, floundered, halted, and
stopped dead. Yet there rose within him somewhere, from depths
long drowned in slumber, a reviving power by which he saw, divined
and recollected—remembered seemed too literal a word—these
elements of a worship he once had personally known. He,
too, had worshipped thus. His soul had moved amid similar evocations
in some aeonian past, whence now the sand was being cleared
away. Symbols of stupendous meaning flashed and went their way
across the lifting mists. He hardly caught their meaning, so long it
was since, he had known them; yet they were familiar as the faces
seen in dreams, and some hint of their spiritual significance left faint
traces in his heart by means of which their grandeur reached towards
interpretation. And all were symbols of a cosmic, deific nature;
of Powers that only symbols can express—prayer-books and
sacraments used in the Wisdom Religion of an older time, but to-day
known only in the decrepit, literal shell which is their degradation.</p>
<p>Grandly the figures moved across the valley bed. The powers of
the heavenly bodies once more joined them. They moved to the
measure of a cosmic dance, whose rhythm was creative. The Universe
partnered them.</p>
<p>There was this transfiguration of all common, external things.
He realised that appearances were visible letters of a soundless language,
a language he once had known. The powers of night and
moon and desert sand married with points in the fluid stream of his
inmost spiritual being that knew and welcomed them. He understood.</p>
<p>Old Egypt herself stooped down from her uncovered throne.
The stars sent messengers. There was commotion in the secret,
sandy places of the desert. For the Desert had grown Temple.
Columns reared against the sky. There rose, from leagues away, the
chanting of the sand.</p>
<p>The temples, where once this came to pass, were gone, their ruin
questioned by alien hearts that knew not their spiritual meaning.
But here the entire Desert swept in to form a shrine, and the
Majesty that once was Egypt stepped grandly back across ages of
denial and neglect. The sand was altar, and the stars were altar
lights. The moon lit up the vast recesses of the ceiling, and the wind
from a thousand miles brought in the perfume of her incense. For
with that faith which shifts mountains from their sandy bed, two
passionate, believing souls invoked the Ka of Egypt.</p>
<p>And the motions that they made, he saw, were definite harmonious
patterns their dark figures traced upon the shining valley
floor. Like the points of compasses, with stems invisible, and directed
from the sky, their movements marked the outlines of great
signatures of power—the sigils of the type of life they would evoke.
It would come as a Procession. No individual outline could contain
it. It needed for its visible expression—many. The descent of a
group-soul, known to the worship of this mighty system, rose from
its lair of centuries and moved hugely down upon them. The Ka,
answering to the summons, would mate with sand. The Desert was
its Body.</p>
<p>Yet it was not this that he had come to fix with block and pencil.
Not yet was the moment when his skill might be of use. He waited,
watched, and listened, while this river of half-remembered things
went past him. The patterns grew beneath his eyes like music. Too
intricate and prolonged to remember with accuracy later, he understood
that they were forms of that root-geometry which lies behind
all manifested life. The mould was being traced in outline. Life
would presently inform it. And a singing rose from the maze of
lines whose beauty was like the beauty of the constellations.</p>
<p>This sound was very faint at first, but grew steadily in volume.
Although no echoes, properly speaking, were possible, these
precipices caught stray notes that trooped in from the further sandy
reaches. The figures certainly were chanting, but their chanting was
not all he heard. Other sounds came to his ears from far away, running
past him through the air from every side, and from incredible
distances, all flocking down into the Wadi bed to join the parent
note that summoned them. The Desert was giving voice. And memory,
lifting her hood yet higher, showed more of her grey, mysterious
face that searched his soul with questions. Had he so soon
forgotten that strange union of form and sound which once was
known to the evocative rituals of olden days?</p>
<p>Henriot tried patiently to disentangle this desert-music that their
intoning voices woke, from the humming of the blood in his own
veins. But he succeeded only in part. Sand was already in the air.
There was reverberation, rhythm, measure; there was almost the
breaking of the stream into great syllables. But was it due, this
strange reverberation, to the countless particles of sand meeting in
mid-air about him, or—to larger bodies, whose surfaces caught this
friction of the sand and threw it back against his ears? The wind,
now rising, brought particles that stung his face and hands, and
filled his eyes with a minute fine dust that partially veiled the
moonlight. But was not something larger, vaster these particles
composed now also on the way?</p>
<p>Movement and sound and flying sand thus merged themselves
more and more in a single, whirling torrent. But Henriot sought no
commonplace explanation of what he witnessed; and here was the
proof that all happened in some vestibule of inner experience where
the strain of question and answer had no business. One sitting beside
him need not have seen anything at all. His host, for instance,
from Helouan, need not have been aware. Night screened it;
Helouan, as the whole of modern experience, stood in front of the
screen. This thing took place behind it. He crouched motionless,
watching in some reconstructed ante-chamber of the soul's pre-existence,
while the torrent grew into a veritable tempest.</p>
<p>Yet Night remained unshaken; the veil of moonlight did not
quiver; the stars dropped their slender golden pillars unobstructed.
Calmness reigned everywhere as before. The stupendous representation
passed on behind it all.</p>
<p>But the dignity of the little human movements that he watched
had become now indescribable. The gestures of the arms and bodies
invested themselves with consummate grandeur, as these two strode
into the caverns behind manifested life and drew forth symbols that
represented vanished Powers. The sound of their chanting voices
broke in cadenced fragments against the shores of language. The
words Henriot never actually caught, if words they were; yet he understood
their purport—these Names of Power to which the type
of returning life gave answer as they approached. He remembered
fumbling for his drawing materials, with such violence, however,
that the pencil snapped in two between his fingers as he touched it.
For now, even here, upon the outer fringe of the ceremonial
ground, there was a stir of forces that set the very muscles working
in him before he had become aware of it....</p>
<p>Then came the moment when his heart leaped against his ribs
with a sudden violence that was almost pain, standing a second later
still as death. The lines upon the valley floor ceased their maze-like
dance. All movement stopped. Sound died away. In the midst of
this profound and dreadful silence the sigils lay empty there below
him. They waited to be in-formed. For the moment of entrance had
come at last. Life was close.</p>
<p>And he understood why this return of life had all along suggested
a Procession and could be no mere momentary flash of vision.
From such appalling distance did it sweep down towards the
present.</p>
<p>Upon this network, then, of splendid lines, at length held rigid,
the entire Desert reared itself with walls of curtained sand, that
dwarfed the cliffs, the shouldering hills, the very sky. The Desert
stood on end. As once before he had dreamed it from his balcony
windows, it rose upright, towering, and close against his face. It
built sudden ramparts to the stars that chambered the thing he witnessed
behind walls no centuries could ever bring down crumbling
into dust.</p>
<p>He himself, in some curious fashion, lay just outside, viewing it
apart. As from a pinnacle, he peered within—peered down with
straining eyes into the vast picture-gallery Memory threw abruptly
open. And the picture spaced its noble outline thus against the very
stars. He gazed between columns, that supported the sky itself, like
pillars of sand that swept across the field of vanished years. Sand
poured and streamed aside, laying bare the Past.</p>
<p>For down the enormous vista into which he gazed, as into an avenue
running a million miles towards a tiny point, he saw this moving
Thing that came towards him, shaking loose the countless veils
of sand the ages had swathed about it. The Ka of buried Egypt wakened
out of sleep. She had heard the potent summons of her old,
time-honoured ritual. She came. She stretched forth an arm towards
the worshippers who evoked her. Out of the Desert, out of the
leagues of sand, out of the immeasurable wilderness which was her
mummied Form and Body, she rose and came. And this fragment of
her he would actually see—this little portion that was obedient to
the stammered and broken ceremonial. The partial revelation he
would witness—yet so vast, even this little bit of it, that it came as a
Procession and a host.</p>
<p>For a moment there was nothing. And then the voice of the
woman rose in a resounding cry that filled the Wadi to its furthest
precipices, before it died away again to silence. That a human voice
could produce such volume, accent, depth, seemed half incredible.
The walls of towering sand swallowed it instantly. But the Procession
of life, needing a group, a host, an army for its physical expression,
reached at that moment the nearer end of the huge avenue. It
touched the Present; it entered the world of men.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h3>X</h3>
<p>The entire range of Henriot's experience, read, imagined, dreamed,
then fainted into unreality before the sheer wonder of what he saw.
In the brief interval it takes to snap the fingers the climax was thus
so hurriedly upon him. And, through it all, he was clearly aware of
the pair of little human figures, man and woman, standing erect and
commanding at the centre—knew, too, that she directed and controlled,
while he in some secondary fashion supported her—and
ever watched. But both were dim, dropped somewhere into a lesser
scale. It was the knowledge of their presence, however, that alone
enabled him to keep his powers in hand at all. But for these two <i>human</i>
beings there within possible reach, he must have closed his
eyes and swooned.</p>
<p>For a tempest that seemed to toss loose stars about the sky swept
round about him, pouring up the pillared avenue in front of the
procession. A blast of giant energy, of liberty, came through. Forwards
and backwards, circling spirally about him like a whirlwind,
came this revival of Life that sought to dip itself once more in matter
and in form. It came to the accurate out-line of its form they had
traced for it. He held his mind steady enough to realise that it was
akin to what men call a "descent" of some "spiritual movement"
that wakens a body of believers into faith—a race, an entire nation;
only that he experienced it in this brief, concentrated form before it
has scattered down into ten thousand hearts. Here he knew its
source and essence, behind the veil. Crudely, unmanageable as yet,
he felt it, rushing loose behind appearances. There was this amazing
impact of a twisting, swinging force that stormed down as though it
would bend and coil the very ribs of the old stubborn hills. It
sought to warm them with the stress of its own irresistible life-stream,
to beat them into shape, and make pliable their obstinate resistance.
Through all things the impulse poured and spread, like fire
at white heat.</p>
<p>Yet nothing visible came as yet, no alteration in the actual landscape,
no sign of change in things familiar to his eyes, while impetus
thus fought against inertia. He perceived nothing form-al. Calm and
untouched himself, he lay outside the circle of evocation, watching,
waiting, scarcely daring to breathe, yet well aware that any minute
the scene would transfer itself from memory that was subjective to
matter that was objective.</p>
<p>And then, in a flash, the bridge was built, and the transfer was
accomplished. How or where he did not see, he could not tell. It
was there before he knew it—there before his normal, earthly sight.
He saw it, as he saw the hands he was holding stupidly up to shield
his face. For this terrific release of force long held back, long stored
up, latent for centuries, came pouring down the empty Wadi bed
prepared for its reception. Through stones and sand and boulders it
came in an impetuous hurricane of power. The liberation of its life
appalled him. All that was free, untied, responded instantly like
chaff; loose objects fled towards it; there was a yielding in the hills
and precipices; and even in the mass of Desert which provided their
foundation. The hinges of the Sand went creaking in the night. It
shaped for itself a bodily outline.</p>
<p>Yet, most strangely, nothing definitely moved. How could he express
the violent contradiction? For the immobility was apparent
only—a sham, a counterfeit; while behind it the essential <i>being</i> of
these things did rush and shift and alter. He saw the two things side
by side: the outer immobility the senses commonly agree upon, <i>and</i>
this amazing flying-out of their inner, invisible substance towards
the vortex of attracting life that sucked them in. For stubborn matter
turned docile before the stress of this returning life, taught
somewhere to be plastic. It was being moulded into an approach to
bodily outline. A mobile elasticity invaded rigid substance. The two
officiating human beings, safe at the stationary centre, and himself,
just outside the circle of operation, alone remained untouched and
unaffected. But a few feet in any direction, for any one of them,
meant—instantaneous death. They would be absorbed into the vortex,
mere corpuscles pressed into the service of this sphere of action
of a mighty Body....</p>
<p>How these perceptions reached him with such conviction, Henriot
could never say. He knew it, because he <i>felt</i> it. Something fell
about him from the sky that already paled towards the dawn. The
stars themselves, it seemed, contributed some part of the terrific,
flowing impulse that conquered matter and shaped itself this physical
expression.</p>
<p>Then, before he was able to fashion any preconceived idea of
what visible form this potent life might assume, he was aware of
further change. It came at the briefest possible interval after the beginning—this
certainty that, to and fro about him, as yet however
indeterminate, passed Magnitudes that were stupendous as the
desert. There was beauty in them too, though a terrible beauty
hardly of this earth at all. A fragment of old Egypt had returned—a
little portion of that vast Body of Belief that once was Egypt.
Evoked by the worship of one human heart, passionately sincere,
the Ka of Egypt stepped back to visit the material it once
informed—the Sand.</p>
<p>Yet only a portion came. Henriot clearly realised that. It
stretched forth an arm. Finding no mass of worshippers through
whom it might express itself completely, it pressed inanimate matter
thus into its service.</p>
<p>Here was the beginning the woman had spoken of—little opening
clue. Entire reconstruction lay perhaps beyond.</p>
<p>And Henriot next realised that these Magnitudes in which this
group-energy sought to clothe itself as visible form, were curiously
familiar. It was not a new thing that he would see. Booming softly
as they dropped downwards through the sky, with a motion the
size of them rendered delusive, they trooped up the Avenue towards
the central point that summoned them. He realised the giant
flock of them—descent of fearful beauty—outlining a type of life
denied to the world for ages, countless as this sand that blew against
his skin. Careering over the waste of Desert moved the army of
dark Splendours, that dwarfed any organic structure called a body
men have ever known. He recognised them, cold in him of death,
though the outlines reared higher than the pyramids, and towered
up to hide whole groups of stars. Yes, he recognised them in their
partial revelation, though he never saw the monstrous host complete.
But, one of them, he realised, posing its eternal riddle to the
sands, had of old been glimpsed sufficiently to seize its form
in stone,—yet poorly seized, as a doll may stand for the dignity
of a human being or a child's toy represent an engine that draws
trains....</p>
<p>And he knelt there on his narrow ledge, the world of men forgotten.
The power that caught him was too great a thing for wonder
or for fear; he even felt no awe. Sensation of any kind that can be
named or realised left him utterly. He forgot himself. He merely
watched. The glory numbed him. Block and pencil, as the reason of
his presence there at all, no longer existed....</p>
<p>Yet one small link remained that held him to some kind of consciousness
of earthly things: he never lost sight of this—that, being
just outside the circle of evocation, he was safe, and that the man
and woman, being stationary in its untouched centre, were also safe.
But—that a movement of six inches in any direction meant for any
one of them instant death.</p>
<p>What was it, then, that suddenly strengthened this solitary link
so that the chain tautened and he felt the pull of it? Henriot could
not say. He came back with the rush of a descending drop to the
realisation—dimly, vaguely, as from great distance—that he was
with these two, now at this moment, in the Wadi Hof, and that the
cold of dawn was in the air about him. The chill breath of the
Desert made him shiver.</p>
<p>But at first, so deeply had his soul been dipped in this fragment
of ancient worship, he could remember nothing more. Somewhere
lay a little spot of streets and houses; its name escaped him. He had
once been there; there were many people, but insignificant people.
Who were they? And what had he to do with them? All recent
memories had been drowned in the tide that flooded him from an
immeasurable Past.</p>
<p>And who were they—these two beings, standing on the white
floor of sand below him? For a long time he could not recover their
names. Yet he remembered them; and, thus robbed of association
that names bring, he saw them for an instant naked, and knew that
one of them was evil. One of them was vile. Blackness touched the
picture there. The man, his name still out of reach, was sinister, impure
and dark at the heart. And for this reason the evocation had
been partial only. The admixture of an evil motive was the flaw that
marred complete success.</p>
<p>The names then flashed upon him—Lady Statham—Richard
Vance.</p>
<p>Vance! With a horrid drop from splendour into something mean
and sordid, Henriot felt the pain of it. The motive of the man was
so insignificant, his purpose so atrocious. More and more, with the
name, came back—his first repugnance, fear, suspicion. And human
terror caught him. He shrieked. But, as in nightmare, no sound escaped
his lips. He tried to move; a wild desire to interfere, to protect,
to prevent, flung him forward—close to the dizzy edge of the
gulf below. But his muscles refused obedience to the will. The
paralysis of common fear rooted him to the rocks.</p>
<p>But the sudden change of focus instantly destroyed the picture;
and so vehement was the fall from glory into meanness, that it dislocated
the machinery of clairvoyant vision. The inner perception
clouded and grew dark. Outer and inner mingled in violent, inextricable
confusion. The wrench seemed almost physical. It happened
all at once, retreat and continuation for a moment somehow combined.
And, if he did not definitely see the awful thing, at least he
was aware that it had come to pass. He knew it as positively as
though his eye were glued against a magnifying lens in the stillness
of some laboratory. He witnessed it.</p>
<p>The supreme moment of evocation was close. Life, through that
awful sandy vortex, whirled and raged. Loose particles showered
and pelted, caught by the draught of vehement life that moulded the
substance of the Desert into imperial outline—when, suddenly, shot
the little evil thing across that marred and blasted it.</p>
<p>Into the whirlpool flew forward a particle of material that was a
human being. And the Group-Soul caught and used it.</p>
<p>The actual accomplishment Henriot did not claim to see. He was
a witness, but a witness who could give no evidence. Whether the
woman was pushed of set intention, or whether some detail of
sound and pattern was falsely used to effect the terrible result, he
was helpless to determine. He pretends no itemised account. She
went. In one second, with appalling swiftness, she disappeared,
swallowed out of space and time within that awful maw—one little
corpuscle among a million through which the Life, now stalking the
Desert wastes, moulded itself a troop-like Body. Sand took her.</p>
<p>There followed emptiness—a hush of unutterable silence, stillness,
peace. Movement and sound instantly retired whence they
came. The avenues of Memory closed; the Splendours all went
down into their sandy tombs....</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The moon had sunk into the Libyan wilderness; the eastern sky was
red. The dawn drew out that wondrous sweetness of the Desert,
which is as sister to the sweetness that the moonlight brings. The
Desert settled back to sleep, huge, unfathomable, charged to the
brim with life that watches, waits, and yet conceals itself behind
the ruins of apparent desolation. And the Wadi, empty at his feet,
filled slowly with the gentle little winds that bring the sunrise.</p>
<p>Then, across the pale glimmering of sand, Henriot saw a figure
moving. It came quickly towards him, yet unsteadily, and with a
hurry that was ugly. Vance was on the way to fetch him. And the
horror of the man's approach struck him like a hammer in the face.
He closed his eyes, sinking back to hide.</p>
<p>But, before he swooned, there reached him the clatter of the
murderer's tread as he began to climb over the splintered rocks, and
the faint echo of his voice, calling him by name—falsely and in
pretence—for help.<br/><br/></p>
<h3>THE END<br/><br/></h3>
<p>[<i>Transcriber's Note: In chapter IX of the story Sand, "indescriable" was corrected to "indescribable."</i>]</p>
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