The Secret Power by Corelli Marie 1855 1924
The Secret Power by Corelli Marie 1855 1924
The Secret Power by Corelli Marie 1855 1924
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BY MARIE CORELLI
AUTHOR OF
CHAPTER I
A cloud floated slowly above the mountain peak. Vast, fleecy and
white as the crested foam of a sea-wave, it sailed through the sky
with a divine air of majesty, seeming almost to express a
consciousness of its own grandeur. Over a spacious tract of Southern
California it extended its snowy canopy, moving from the distant
Pacific Ocean across the heights of the Sierra Madre, now and then
catching fire at its extreme edge from the sinking sun, which burned
like a red brand flung on the roof of a roughly built hut situated
on the side of a sloping hollow in one of the smaller hills. The
door of the hut stood open; there were a couple of benches on the
burnt grass outside, one serving as a table, the other as a chair.
Papers and books were neatly piled on the table,--and on the chair,
if chair it might be called, a man sat reading. His appearance was
not prepossessing at a first glance, though his actual features
could hardly be seen, so concealed were they by a heavy growth of
beard. In the way of clothing he had little to trouble him. Loose
woollen trousers, a white shirt, and a leathern belt to keep the two
garments in place, formed his complete outfit, finished off by wide
canvas shoes. A thatch of dark hair, thick and ill combed,
apparently served all his need of head covering, and he seemed
unconscious of, or else indifferent to, the hot glare of the summer
sky which was hardly tempered by the long shadow of the floating
cloud. At some moments he was absorbed in reading,--at others in
writing. Close within his reach was a small note-book in which from
time to time he jotted down certain numerals and made rapid
calculations, frowning impatiently as though the very act of writing
was too slow for the speed of his thought. There was a wonderful
silence everywhere,--a silence such as can hardly be comprehended by
anyone who has never visited wide-spreading country, over-canopied
by large stretches of open sky, and barricaded from the further
world by mountain ranges which are like huge walls built by a race
of Titans. The dwellers in such regions are few--there is no traffic
save the coming and going of occasional pack-mules across the hill
tracks--no sign of modern civilisation. Among such deep and solemn
solitudes the sight of a living human being is strange and
incongruous, yet the man seated outside his hut had an air of ease
and satisfied proprietorship not always found with wealthy owners of
mansions and park-lands. He was so thoroughly engrossed in his books
and papers that he hardly saw, and certainly did not hear, the
approach of a woman who came climbing wearily up the edge of the
sloping hill against which his cabin presented itself to the view as
a sort of fitment, and advanced towards him carrying a tin pail full
of milk. This she set down within a yard or so of him, and then,
straightening her back, she rested her hands on her hips and drew a
long breath. For a minute or two he took no notice of her. She
waited. She was a big handsome creature, sun-browned and black-
haired, with flashing dark eyes lit by a spark that was not
originally caught from heaven. Presently, becoming conscious of her
presence, he threw his book aside and looked up.
"Well! So you've come after all! Yesterday you said you wouldn't."
"I have enough for two days now," he said--"and longer. What you
brought me at the beginning of the week has turned beautifully
sour,--a 'lovely curd' as our cook at home used to say--, and with
that 'lovely curd' and plenty of fruit I'm living in luxury." Here
he felt in his pockets and took out a handful of coins. "That's
right, isn't it?"
She counted them over as he gave them to her--bit one with her
strong white teeth and nodded.
"YOU are not an invalid!" she said with a slight accent of contempt.
"That's it! You're a wise woman, Manella! That's why I'm here. Not
tubercles on the lungs,--tubercles on the brain! Oh, those
tubercles! They could never stand the Plaza!--the gaiety, the
brilliancy--the--the all-too dazzling social round!. . ." he paused,
and a gleam of even white teeth under his dark moustache gave the
suggestion of a smile--"That's why I stay up here."
"You make fun of the Plaza"--said Manella, biting her lips vexedly--
"And of me, too. I am nothing to you!"
"Often? Oh, more than often! Too often! But what does that matter?"
She obeyed, moving with the soft tread of a forest animal, and, face
to face with him, looked up. He smiled kindly into her dark fierce
eyes, and noted with artistic approval the unspoiled beauty of
natural lines in her form, and the proud poise of her handsome head
on her full throat and splendid shoulders.
"I have none!" she said--"And you know it! But you do not care!"
She pressed both hands tightly against her bosom, seeking to control
her quick, excited breathing.
"Why should you? I do not know! But _I_ care! I would be your woman!
I would be your slave! I would wait upon you and serve you
faithfully! I would obey your every wish. I am a good servant,--I
can cook and sew and wash and sweep--I can do everything in a house
and you should have no trouble. You should write and read all day,--
I would not speak a word to disturb you. I would guard you like a
dog that loves his master!"
Here he gently took her two hands away from their tightly folded
position on her bosom and held them in his own.
She drew her hands quickly from his grasp. There were tears in her
splendid dark eyes.
"You talk, you talk!" she said, with a kind of sob in her voice--"It
is all talk with you--talk which I cannot understand! I don't WANT
to understand!--I am only a poor, ignorant girl. I cannot talk--but
I can love! Ah yes, I can love! You say there is no such thing as
love! What is it then, when one prays every night and morning for a
man?--when one would work one's fingers to the bone for him?--when
one would die to keep him from sickness and harm? What do you call
it?"
He smiled.
Something sinister and cruel in his look startled her,--she made the
sign of the cross on her bosom.
"After all, I think you must be a wicked man!" she said--"You have
no heart! You are not worthy to be loved!"
"Quite true, Manella! You've hit the bull's eye in the very middle
three times! I am a wicked man,--I have no heart,--I'm not worthy to
be loved. No I'm not. I should find it a bore!"
Her big eyes opened more widely than their wont in piteous
perplexity.
"How? Why, just as you have put it,--to be prayed for night and
morning,--to be worked for and waited on till fingers turned to
bones,--to be guarded from sickness and harm,--heavens!--think of
it! No more adventures in life,--no more freedom!--just love, love,
love, which would not be love at all but the chains of a miserable
wretch in prison!"
"Who is it that would chain you?" she demanded, "Not I! You could do
as you liked with me--you know it!--and when you go away from this
place, you could leave me and forget me,--I should never trouble you
or remind you that I lived!! I should have had my happiness,--enough
for my day!"
The pathos in her voice moved him though he was not easily moved. On
a sudden impulse he put an arm about her, drew her to him and kissed
her. She trembled at his caress, while he smiled at her emotion.
He released her and put her gently away from him. Then, as he saw
her eyes still uplifted questioningly to his face, he laughed.
"An invalid?"
She obeyed.
She nodded.
"Old or young?"
"An invalid?"
"I don't think so. She looks quite well. She arrived at the Plaza
only yesterday."
She gave him one lingering glance; then, turning abruptly picked up
her empty milk pail and started down the hill at a run.
The man she left gave a sigh, deep and long of intense relief.
Evening had fallen rapidly, and the purple darkness enveloped him in
its warm, dense gloom. He sat absorbed in thought, his eyes turned
towards the east, where the last stretches of the afternoon's great
cloud trailed filmy threads of woolly black through space. His
figure seemed gradually drawn within the coming night so as almost
to become part of it, and the stillness around him had a touch of
awe in its impalpable heaviness. One would have thought that in a
place of such utter loneliness, the natural human spirit of a man
would instinctively desire movement,--action of some sort, to shake
off the insidious depression which crept through the air like a
creeping shadow, but the solitary being, seated somewhat like an
Aryan idol, hands on knees and face bent forwards, had no
inclination to stir. His brain was busy; and half unconsciously his
thoughts spoke aloud in words--
"One would think that done for effect!" he said, half aloud--"If the
moon were the goddess Cynthia beloved of Endymion, as woman and
goddess in an impulse of vanity she would certainly have done that
for effect! As it is--"
Here he paused,--an instinctive feeling warned him that some one was
looking at him, and he turned his head quickly. On the slope of the
hill where Manella had lately stood, there was a figure, white as
the white moonlight itself, outlined delicately against the dark
background. It seemed to be poised on the earth like a bird just
lightly descended; in the stirless air its garments appeared closed
about it fold on fold like the petals of an unopened magnolia
flower. As he looked, it came gliding towards him with the floating
ease of an air bubble, and the strong radiance of the large moon
showed its woman's face, pale with the moonbeam pallor, and set in a
wave of hair that swept back from the brows and fell in a loosely
twisted coil like a shining snake stealthily losing itself in folds
of misty drapery. He rose to meet the advancing phantom.
CHAPTER II
"I followed you"--she said--"I knew I should find you! What are you
doing up here? Shamming to be ill?"
They faced each other. The moon, now soaring high in clear space,
shed a luminous rain of silver over all the visible breadth of wild
country, and their two figures looked mere dark silhouettes half
drowned in the pearly glamour.
"It's worth travelling all the long miles to see!" she declared,
stretching her arms out with an enthusiastic gesture--"Oh, beautiful
big moon of California! I'm glad I came!"
He was silent.
He stood still and sombre, gazing down at the figure resting on the
ground at his feet, its white garments gathering about it as though
they were sentiently aware that they must keep the line of classic
beauty in every fold.
"Boredom is the trouble"--she went on--"No one escapes it. The very
babies of to-day are bored. We all know too much. People used to be
happy because they were ignorant--they had no sort of idea why they
were born, or what they came into the world for. Now they've learned
the horrid truth that they are only here just as the trees and
flowers are here--to breed other trees and flowers and then go out
of it--for no purpose, apparently. They are 'disillusioned.' They
say 'what's the use?' To put up with so much trouble and labour for
the folks coining after us whom we shall never see,--it seems
perfectly foolish and futile. They used to believe in another life
after this--but that hope has been knocked out of them. Besides it's
quite open to question whether any of us would care to live again.
Probably it might mean more boredom. There's really nothing left.
That's why so many of us go reckless--it's just to escape being
bored."
She looked up at him. The moonbeams set tiny frosty sparkles in her
eyes.
"I live simply,"--he said--"Bread and milk are enough for me, and I
have these."
With angry impetus he bent over her reclining figure and seized her
two hands.
He held her hands still and gripped them fiercely. She gave a little
cry.
At once he loosened his hold, and gazed moodily at her small fingers
on which two or three superb diamond circlets glittered like drops
of dew.
She was silent pouting her under-lip like a spoilt child, and
rubbing one finger where a ring had dinted her flesh.
"So you actually think I have coma here to get away from YOU?" he
went on--"Well for once your ineffable conceit is mistaken. You
think yourself a personage of importance--but you are nothing,--less
than nothing to me, I never give you a thought--I have come here to
study--to escape from the crazy noise of modern life--the hurtling
to and fro of the masses of modern humanity,--I want to work out
certain problems which may revolutionise the world and its course of
living--"
She gave a French shrug of her shoulder and waved her hands
expressively. Then she pushed back her flowing hair,--the moonbeams
trickled like water over it, making a network of silver on gold.
"To see you!" she answered smilingly--"And to tell you that I'm 'on
the war-path' as they say, taking scalps as I go. This means that
I'm travelling about,--possibly I may go to Europe--"
She laughed.
"Enough of all this!" he said--"Do you know it's nearly ten o'clock
at night?--I suppose you do know!--and the people at the Plaza--"
"I think so!" here she put her head on one side like a meditative
bird and her wonderful hair fell aslant like a golden wing--"I amuse
myself--as much as I can. I learn all that can be done with greedy,
stupid humanity for so much cash down! I would,"--here she paused,
and with a sudden feline swiftness of movement came close up to him-
-"I would have married YOU!--if you would have had me! I would have
given you all my money to play with,--you could have got everything
you want for your inventions and experiments, and I would have
helped you,--and then--then--you could have blown up the world and
me with it, so long as you gave me time to look at the magnificent
sight! And I wouldn't have married you for love, mind you!--only for
curiosity!"
The light of the moon fell full on her upturned face. It was a
wonderful face,--not beautiful according to the monotonous press-
camera type, but radiant with such a light of daring intelligence as
to make beauty itself seem cheap and meretricious in comparison with
its glowing animation. He moved away from her another step, and
shook his arm free from her touch.
"Why wouldn't you?" she reiterated softly; then with a sudden ripple
of laughter, she clasped her hands and uplifted them in an attitude
of prayer--"Why wouldn't he? Oh, big moon of California, why? Oh,
pagan gods and goddesses and fauns and fairies, tell me why? Why
wouldn't he?"
"'All the world's a stage,'" she quoted, letting her upraised arms
fall languidly at her sides--"And ours is a real comedy! Not 'As You
Like It' but 'As You Don't Like It!' Poor Shakespeare!--he never
imagined such characters as we are! Now, suppose you had satisfied
the expectations of all Washington City and married me, of course we
should have bored each other dreadfully--but with plenty of money we
could have run away from each other whenever we liked--they all do
it nowadays!"
"They don't 'love' you know!" she went on--"Love is too much of a
bore. YOU would find it so!"
And she gave a little peal of laughter, merry as the lilt of a sky-
lark in the dawn. He stared at her angrily, moved by an insensate
desire to seize her and throw her down the hill like a bundle of
rubbish.
"To kiss YOU," she said, "one would have to wear a lip-shield of
leather! As well kiss a bunch of nettles! No, no! I have quite a
nice little mouth--soft and rosy! I shouldn't like to spoil it by
scratching it against yours! It's curious how all men imagine women
LIKE to kiss them! They never grasp an idea of the frequent
unpleasantness of the operation! Now I'm going!"
"I think so," he answered--"It will save you the trouble of ever
trying to see me again, which will be a relief to me, if not to you.
Listen!--and look at yourself with MY eyes--"
"Too difficult!" she declared--"I can look at nothing with your eyes
any more than you can with mine!"
"Madam--"
She uttered a little laughing "Oh!" and put her hand to her ears.
"Not 'Madam' for heaven's sake!" she exclaimed; "It sounds as if I
were either a queen or a dressmaker!"
She looked up at the clear dark sky where the moon hung like a huge
silver air-ball.
"My God, I could shake the life out of you!" he said, fiercely--"I
wonder you are not afraid of me!"
"Why then there would be another murderer added to the general world
of murderers!" she said--"That's all! It's not worth it!"
"Empty nutshells are a very good description of men who come after a
woman for her money"--she observed, placidly--"and it's quite
natural that the woman should throw them over her shoulder. There's
nothing in them--not even a flavour! No--never fooled you,--you
fooled yourself--you are fooling yourself now, only you don't know
it. But there!--let's finish talking! I like the romance of the
situation--you in your shirt-sleeves on a hill in California, and I
in silken stuff and diamonds paying you a moonlight visit--it's
really quite novel and charming!--but it can't go on for ever! Just
now you said you wanted me to know a thing or two, and I presume you
have explained yourself. What you think or what you don't think
about women doesn't interest me. I'm one of the 'wastes on the
wind!' _I_ shall not aid in the continuation of the race,--heaven
forbid! The race is too stupid and too miserable to merit
continuance. Everything has been done for it that can be done, over
and over again, from the beginning--till now,--and now--NOW!" She
paused, and despite himself the tone of her voice sent a thrill
through his blood of something like fear.
She lifted one hand and pointed upwards. Her face in the moonbeams
looked austere and almost spectral in outline.
"Good-night!--good-bye!"
"Morgana!"
The call echoed through emptiness. She was gone. He called again,--
the long vowel in the strange name sounding like "Mor-ga-ar-na" as a
shivering note on the G string of a violin may sound at the
conclusion of a musical phrase. There was no reply. He was--as he
had desired to be,--alone.
CHAPTER III
"She left New York several weeks ago,--didn't you know it? Dear me!-
-I thought everybody was convulsed at the news!"
Mr. Sam Gwent permitted himself to smile. It was a smile that merely
stretched the corners of his mouth a little,--it had no geniality.
"Is that so? Then I'll admit you're cleverer than I am!"
"She has a great deal too much money"--he said, "and-to my thinking-
-she does NOT know how to spend it,--not in the right womanly way.
She has gone off in the midst of many duties to society at a time
when she should have stayed--"
Miss Herbert opened her brown, rather insolent eyes wide at this and
laughed.
"Does it matter?" she asked. "The old man left his pile to her
'absolutely and unconditionally'--without any orders as to society
duties. And I don't believe YOU'VE any authority over her, have you?
Or are you suddenly turning up as a trustee?"
Mr. Sam Gwent raised his eyebrows quizzically. "I guess you came out
of the Middle Ages!" he observed--"What's 'love'? Did you ever know
a woman with millions of money who got 'loved'? Not a bit of it! Her
MONEY is loved--but not herself. She's the encumbrance to the cash."
"You see," pursued Gwent, in his cold, deliberate accents, "Jack was
ruined financially. And he has all but ruined ME. Now he has taken
himself out of the way with a pistol shot, and left me to face the
music for him. Morgana Royal was his only chance. She led him on,--
she certainly led him on. He thought he had her,--then--just as he
was about to pin the butterfly to his specimen card, away it flew!"
"And I suppose this is why, as you say, Morgana has gone off 'in the
midst of many social duties'? Was Jack one of her social duties?"
Gwent gazed at her with an unrevealing placidity.
"No. Not exactly," he replied--"I give her credit for not knowing
anything of his intention to clear out. Though I don't think she
would have tried to alter his intention if she had."
"Well,--I don't feel so sorry for him now you tell me it was only
the money he was after"--she said--"I thought he was a finer
character--"
"Here endeth the first lesson!" she said. "Thanks, preacher Gwent! I
guess I'll worry through!"
"I guess you will!"--he answered, slowly. "I wish I was as certain
of anything in the world as I am of THAT!"
She was silent. The corners of her mouth twitched slightly as though
she sought to conceal a smile. She watched her companion furtively
as he took a cigar from a case in his pocket and lit it.
"I must go and fix up the funeral business"--he said, "Jack has
gone, and his remains must be disposed of. That's my affair. Just
now his mother's crying over him,--and I can't stand that sort of
thing. It gets over me."
"I suppose so. I used to have. But it isn't the heart,--that's only
a pumping muscle. I conclude it's the head."
He puffed two or three rings of smoke into the clear air.
"Morgana?"
"Yes."
"Certain!"
"You must have been in Washington when every one thought that he and
she were going to make a matrimonial tie of it"--he went on--"Why,
nothing else was talked of!"
She nodded.
"I know! I was there. But a man who has set his soul on science
doesn't want a wife."
"And what about a woman who has set her soul in the same direction?"
he asked.
"The tragedy of a lost gamble for money!" she said, with a scornful
uplift of her eyebrows.
He nodded.
"That's so! It upsets the mental balance of a man more than a lost
gamble for love!"
Lydia Herbert, left to herself, played idly with the leaves of the
vine that clambered about the high wooden columns of the verandah
where she stood, admiring the sparkle of her diamond bangle which,
like a thin circlet of dewdrops, glittered on her slim wrist. Now
and then she looked far out to the sea gleaming in the burning sun,
and allowed her thoughts to wander from herself and her elegant
clothes to some of the social incidents in which she had taken part
during the past couple of months. She recalled the magnificent ball
given by Morgana Royal at her regal home, when all the fashion and
frivolity of the noted "Four Hundred" were assembled, and when the
one whispered topic of conversation among gossips was the
possibility of the marriage of one of the richest women in the world
to a shabbily clothed scientist without a penny, save what he earned
with considerable difficulty. Morgana herself played the part of an
enigma. She laughed, shook her head, and moved her daintily attired
person through the crowd of her guests with all the gliding grace of
a fairy vision in white draperies showered with diamonds, but gave
no hint of special favour or attention to any man, not even to Roger
Seaton, the scientist in question, who stood apart from the dancing
throng, in a kind of frowning disdain, looking on, much as one might
fancy a forest animal looking at the last gambols of prey It
purposed to devour. He had taken the first convenient interval to
disappear, and as he did not return, Miss Herbert had asked her
hostess what had become of him? Morgana, her cheeks flushed prettily
by a just-finished dance, smiled in surprise at the question.
"Interested? Oh, yes! Who would not be interested in a man who says
he can destroy half the world if he wants to! He assumes to be a
sort of deity, you know!--Jove and his thunderbolts in the shape of
a man in a badly cut suit of modern clothes! Isn't it fun!" She gave
a little peal of laughter. "And every one in the room to-night
thinks I am going to marry him!"
"Can you imagine it! ME, married? Lydia, Lydia, do you take me for a
fool!" She laughed again--then grew suddenly serious. "To think of
such a thing! Fancy ME!--giving my life into the keeping of a
scientific wizard who, if he chose, could reduce me to a little heap
of dust in two minutes, and no one any the wiser! Thank you! The
sensational press has been pretty full lately of men's brutalities
to women,--and I've no intention of adding myself to the list of
victims! Men ARE brutes! They were born brutes, and brutes they will
remain!"
She was standing near an open window as she spoke, and she looked up
at the dark purple sky sprinkled with stars. She continued slowly,
and with emphasis--
Morgana smiled.
"Of course I like him! He's a human magnet,--he 'draws'! You fly
towards him as if he were a bit of rubbed sealing-wax and you a
snippet of paper! But you soon drop off! Oh, that valse! Isn't it
entrancing!"
Lydia had seen it so "let down," once, and only once, and the sight
of such a glistening rope of gold had fairly startled her.
"I--I THINK it is! It seems so! I don't believe it will come off
unless you pull VERY hard!"
Lydia had not pulled hard, but she had felt the soft rippling mass
falling from head to far below the knee, and had silently envied the
owner its possession.
"And this curious creature who talked "so very strangely," possessed
millions of money! Her father, who had arrived in the States from
the wildest north of Scotland with practically not a penny, had so
gathered and garnered every opportunity that came in his way that
every investment he touched seemed to turn to five times its first
value under his fingers. When his wife died very soon after his
wealth began to accumulate, he was beset by women of beauty and
position eager to take her place, but he was adamant against all
their blandishments and remained a widower, devoting his entire care
to the one child he had brought with him as an infant from the
Highland hills, and to whom he gave a brilliant but desultory and
uncommon education. Life seemed to swirl round him in a glittering
ring of gold of which he made himself the centre,--and when he died
suddenly "from overstrain" as the doctors said, people were almost
frightened to name the vast fortune his daughter inherited,
accustomed as they were to the counting of many millions. And now---
?"
And with a short sigh she let go her train of thought and left the
verandah,--it was time to change her costume and prepare "effects"
to dazzle and bewilder the uncertain mind of a crafty old Croesus
who, having freely enjoyed himself as a bachelor up to his present
age of seventy-four, was now looking about for a young strong woman
to manage his house and be a nurse and attendant for him in his
declining years, for which service, should she be suitable, he would
concede to her the name of "wife" in order to give stability to her
position. And Lydia Herbert herself was privately quite aware of his
views. Moreover she was entirely willing to accommodate herself to
them for the sake of riches and a luxurious life, and the
"settlement" she meant to insist upon if her plans ripened to
fulfilment. She had no great ambitions; few women of her social
class have. To be well housed, well fed and well clothed, and
enabled to do the fashionable round without hindrance--this was all
she sought, and of romance, sentiment, emotion or idealism she had
none. Now and again she caught the flash of a thought in her brain
higher than the level of material needs, but dismissed it more
quickly than it came as--"Ridiculous! Absolute nonsense! Like
Morgana!"
CHAPTER IV
Manella's eyes grew darker than ever in the effort to explain her
thought.
Morgana smiled.
"Oh, yes. Very soon! And an hour or so after it had flown, the
scarlet flower where it had rested was dead."
"If one works for a person one loves,--surely yes!" the girl
murmured as if she were speaking to herself, "The days would be too
short for all the work to be done!"
Morgana glanced at her, and the flash of her eyes had the grey-blue
of lightning. Then she poured out the coffee and tasted it.
Morgana laughed.
"You quaint, handsome thing! What do you know about it? What, in
your opinion, IS my class?"
Morgana paused in the act of pouring out a second cup of coffee, and
her face dimpled with amusement.
"The man who lives in the consumption hut on the hill!" she
repeated, slowly, and with a smile--"What man is that?"
"I don't know--" and Manella's large dark eyes filled with a
strangely wistful perplexity. "He is a stranger--and he's not ill at
all. He is big and strong and healthy. But he has chosen to live in
the 'house of the dying,' as it is sometimes called--where people
from the Plaza go when there's no more hope for them. He likes to be
quite alone--he thinks and writes all day. I take him milk and
bread,--it is all he orders from the Plaza. I would be his woman. I
would work for him from morning till night. But he will not have
me."
Morgana raised her eyes, glittering with the "fey" light in them
that often bewildered and rather scared her friends.
"You would be his woman? You are in love with him?" she said.
Morgana smiled, and stretching out her small white hand, adorned
with its sparkling rings, laid it caressingly on the girl's brown
wrist.
The smile flitted away from Morgana's lips, and her expression
became almost sorrowful.
"You are like a trusting animal!" she said--"An animal all innocent
of guns and steel-traps! You poor girl! I should like you to come
with me out of these mountain solitudes into the world! What is your
name?"
"Manella."
"Manella--what?"
"Oh, yes, I have!" and Manella tossed her head airily--"Men all more
or less alike--greedy for dollars, fond of smoke and cinema women,--
I do not care for them. Some have asked me to marry, but I would
rather hang myself than be wife to one of them!"
Morgana slid off the edge of her bed and stood upright, her white
silk nightgown falling symmetrically round her small figure. With a
dexterous movement she loosened the knot into which she had twisted
her hair for the night, and it fell in a sinuous coil like a golden
snake from head to knee. Manella stepped back in amazement.
"Each one to his taste!" she said, airily--"Some like black hair--
some red--some gold--some nut-brown. But does it matter at all what
men think or care for? To me it is perfectly indifferent! And you
are quite right to prefer hanging to marriage--I do, myself!"
"No, indeed!" she answered--"I have never felt like THAT! I hope I
shall never feel like THAT! To feel like THAT is to feel like the
female beasts of the field who only wait and live to be used by the
males, giving 'all they are and all they have,' poor creatures! The
bull does not 'love' the cow--he gives her a calf. When the calf is
born and old enough to get along by itself, it forgets its mother
just as its mother forgets IT, while the sire is blissfully
indifferent to both! It's really the same thing with human animals,-
-especially nowadays--only we haven't the honesty to admit it! No,
Manella Soriso!--with your good looks you ought to be far above
'feeling like THAT!--you are a nobler creature than a cow! No wonder
men despise women who are always on the cow level!"
"Oh, are you going?" and Manella gave a little cry of pain--"I am
sorry! I do want you to stay!"
"What did I come for? Really, I hardly know! I am full of odd whims
and fancies, and I like to humour myself in my various ways. I think
I wanted to see a bit of California,--that's all!"
"Then why not see more of it?" persisted Manella.
"I DON'T like it!" declared Manella, vehemently, "I hate it! But
what am I to do? I have no home and no money. I must earn my living
somehow."
"Will you come away with me?" said Morgana--"I'll take you at once
if you like!"
"Yes!-perhaps you are!" she said--"I understand! You would not like
to leave HIM! I am sure that is so! You want to feed your big bear
regularly with bread and milk--yes, you poor deluded child! Courage!
You may still have a chance to be, as you say, 'his woman!' And when
you are I wonder how you will like it!"
She laughed, and began to brush her shining hair out in two silky
lengths on either side. Manella gazed and gazed at the glittering
splendour till she could gaze no more for sheer envy, and then she
turned slowly and left the room.
She had no luggage with her, save an adaptable suitcase which, she
declared "held everything." This she quickly packed and locked,
ready for her journey. Then she stepped to the window and waved her
hand towards the near hill and the "hut of the dying."
She took up her gloves and hand-bag and went downstairs, entering
the broad, airy flower-bordered lounge of the Plaza with a friendly
nod and smile to the book-keeper in the office where she paid her
bill. Her chauffeur, a smart Frenchman in quiet livery, was awaiting
her with an assistant groom or page beside him.
The groom hurried away to obey this order, and Morgana glancing
around her saw that she was an object of intense curiosity to some
of the hotel inmates who were in the lounge--men and women both. Her
grey-blue eyes flashed over them all carelessly and lighted on
Manella who stood shrinking aside in a corner. To her she beckoned
smilingly.
"Come and see me off!" she said--"Take a look at my car and see how
you'd like to travel in it!"
"I'd rather not!" she murmured--"It's no use looking at what one can
never have!"
Morgana laughed.
"As you please!" she said--"You are an odd girl, but you are quite
beautiful! Don't forget that! Tell the man on the mountain that I
said so!--quite beautiful! Good-bye!"
She passed through the lounge with a swift grace of movement and
entered her sumptuous limousine, lined richly in corded rose silk
and fitted with every imaginable luxury like a queen's boudoir on
wheels, while Manella craned her neck forward to see the last of
her. Her valise was quickly strapped in place, and in another minute
to the sound of a high silvery bugle note (which was the only sort
of "hooter" she would tolerate) the car glided noiselessly away down
the broad, dusty white road, its polished enamel and silver points
glittering like streaks of light vanishing into deeper light as it
disappeared.
"There goes the richest woman in America!" said the hotel clerk for
the benefit of anyone who might care to listen to the announcement,-
-"Morgana Royal!"
He was right. She was not much to look at. But she was more than
looks ever made. So, with sorrow and with envy, thought Manella, who
instinctively felt that though she herself might be something to
look at and "quite beautiful," she was nothing else. She had never
heard the word "fey." The mystic glamour of the Western Highlands
was shut away from her by the wide barrier of many seas and curtains
of cloud. And therefore she did not know that "fey" women are a race
apart from all other women in the world.
CHAPTER V
That evening at sunset Manella made her way towards the hill and the
"House of the Dying," moved by she knew not what strange impulse.
She had no excuse whatever for going; she knew that the man living
up there in whom she was so much interested had as much food for
three days as he asked for or desired, and that he was likely to be
vexed at the very sight of her. Yet she had an eager wish to tell
him something about the wonderful little creature with lightning
eyes who had left the Plaza that morning and had told her, Manella,
that she was "quite beautiful." Pride, and an innocent feminine
vanity thrilled her; "if another woman thinks so, it must be so,"--
she argued, being aware that women seldom admire each other. She
walked swiftly, with head bent,--and was brought to a startled halt
by meeting and almost running against the very individual she
sought, who in his noiseless canvas shoes and with his panther-like
tread had come upon her unawares. Checked in her progress she stood
still, her eyes quickly lifted, her lips apart. In her adoration of
the strength and magnificent physique of the stranger whom she knew
only as a stranger, she thought he looked splendid as a god
descending from the hill. Far from feeling god-like, he frowned as
he saw her.
"Where are you going?" he demanded, brusquely.
The rich colour warmed her cheeks to a rose-red that matched the
sunset.
"If you want nothing why do you come down into the valley?" she
asked. "You say you hate the Plaza!"
"A man?"
"I know!" she exclaimed--"But you will not see her! She has gone!"
"Oh, I know nothing!" and there was a sobbing note of pathos in her
voice--"But I feel HERE!"--and she pressed her hands against her
bosom--"something tells me that you have seen HER--the little
wonderful white woman, sweetly perfumed like a rose,--with her silks
and jewels and her fairy car!--and her golden hair. . . ah!--you
said you hated a woman with golden hair! Is that the woman you
hate?"
She shrank away from him. Her lips quivered, and tears welled
through her lashes.
He laughed aloud.
"Ah, but it did NOT leave you cold!" cried Manella; "Else you would
not have come down to see her to-day! You say she went 'to ferret
you out'--"
"Of course she did"--he interrupted her--"She would ferret out any
man she wanted for the moment. Forests could not hide him,--caves
could not cover him if she made up her mind to find him. I had hoped
she would not find ME--but she has--however,--you say she has gone--
"
The colour had fled from Manella's face,--she was pale and rigid.
"I hope not!" And he threw himself carelessly down on the turf to
rest--"Come and sit beside me here and tell me what she said to
you!"
But Manella was silent. Her dark, passionate eyes rested upon him
with a world of scorn and sorrow in their glowing depths.
"I think you are!" she said, coldly--"You seem to be a man, but you
have not the feelings of a man!"
"Nor did I!" and he laughed--"Nor am I. I said just now that I had
the 'Kultur' of a super-German--and a super-German means something
above every other male creature except himself. He cannot get away
from himself--nor can I! That's the trouble! Come, obey me, Manella!
Sit down here beside me!"
Very slowly and very reluctantly she did as he requested. She sat on
the grass some three or four paces off. He stretched out a hand to
touch her, but she pushed it back very decidedly. He smiled.
"I mustn't make love to you this morning, eh?" he queried. "All
right! I don't want to make love--it doesn't interest me--I only
want to put you in a good temper! You are like a rumpled pussy-cat--
your fur must be stroked the right way."
"No?"
"Oh, dire tragedy!" And he stretched himself out on the turf with
his arms above his head--"But what does it matter! Give me your
news, silly child! What did the 'little wonderful white woman' say
to you?"
"Amused?" he echoed.
"That I was not bad to look at--" and Manella, gathering sudden
boldness, lifted her dark eyes to his face--"She said I could tell
you that she thinks me quite beautiful! Yes!--quite beautiful!"
"So you are! I've told you so, often. 'There needs no ghost come
from the grave' to emphasise the fact. But she--the purring cat!--
she told you to repeat her opinion to me, because--can you guess
why?"
"No!"
Manella sprang up from the turf where she had been sitting.
"I know that!" she said, and her splendid eyes flashed proud
defiance--"I know I have been a fool to let myself care for you! I
do not know why I did--it was an illness! But I am well now!"
"You are well now? Good! O let us be joyful! Keep well, Manella!--
and be 'quite beautiful'--as you are! To be quite beautiful is a
fine thing--not so fine as it used to be in the Greek period--still,
it has its advantages! I wonder what you will do with your beauty?"
"She IS!" exclaimed Manella--"_I_ think her so!" He looked down upon
her from his superior height with a tolerant amusement.
"Really! YOU think her so! And SHE thinks you so! Quite a mutual
admiration society! And both of you obsessed by the same one man! I
pity that man! The only thing for him to do is to keep out of it!
No, Manella!--think as you like, she is not beautiful. You ARE
beautiful. But SHE is clever, You are NOT clever. You may thank God
for that! SHE is outrageously, unnaturally, cursedly clever! And her
cleverness makes her see the sham of life all through; the absurdity
of birth that ends in death--the freakishness of civilisation to no
purpose--and she's out for something else. She wants some thing
newer than sex-attraction and family life. A husband would bore her
to extinction--the care of children would send her into a lunatic
asylum!"
"I cannot understand!" she said--"A woman lives for husband and
children!"
"SOME women do!" he answered--"Not all! There are a good few who
don't want to stay on the animal level. Men try to keep them there--
but it's a losing game nowadays. ('Foxes have holes and birds of the
air have nests'--but we cannot fail to see that when Mother Fox has
reared her puppies she sends them off about their own business and
doesn't know them any more--likewise Mother Bird does the same.
Nature has no sentiment.) We have, because we cultivate artificial
feelings--we imagine we 'love,' when we only want something that
pleases us for the moment. To live, as you say, for husband and
children would make a woman a slave--a great many women are slaves--
but they are beginning to get emancipated--the woman with the gold
hair, whom you so much admire, is emancipated."
He turned from her abruptly and began the ascent that led to his
solitary retreat. Once he looked back--
"Don't let me see you for two days at least!" he called--"I've more
than enough food to keep me going."
He strode on, and Manella stood watching him, her tall handsome
figure silhouetted against the burning sky. Her dark eyes were moist
with suppressed tears of shame and suffering,--she felt herself to
be wronged and slighted undeservedly. And beneath this personal
emotion came now a smarting sense of jealousy, for in spite of all
he had said, she felt that there was some secret between him and
"the little wonderful white woman," which she could not guess and
which was probably the reason of his self-sought exile and
seclusion.
"I wish now I had gone with her!" she mused--"for if I am 'quite
beautiful,' as she said, she might have helped me in the world,--I
might have become a lady!"
She walked slowly and dejectedly back to the Plaza, knowing in her
heart that lady or no lady, her rich beauty was useless to her,
inasmuch as it made no effect on the one man she had elected to care
for, unwanted and unasked. Certain physiologists teach that the law
of natural selection is that the female should choose her mate, but
the difficulty along this line of argument is that she may choose
where her choice is unwelcome and irresponsive. Manella was a
splendid type of primitive womanhood,--healthy, warm-blooded and
full of hymeneal passion,--as a wife she would have been devoted,--
as a mother superb in her tenderness; but, measured by modern
standards of advanced and restless femininity she was a mere drudge,
without the ability to think for herself or to analyse subtleties of
emotion. Intellectuality had no part in her; most people's talk was
for her meaningless, and she had not the patience to listen to any
conversation that rose above the food and business of the day. She
was confused and bewildered by everything the strange recluse on the
hill said to her,--she could not follow him at all,--and yet, the
purely physical attraction he exercised over her nature drew her to
him like a magnet and kept her in a state of feverish craving for a
love she knew she could never win. She would have gladly been his
servant on the mere chance and hope that possibly in some moment of
abandonment he might have yielded to the importunity of her
tenderness; Adonis himself in all the freshness of his youth never
exercised a more potent spell upon enamoured Venus than this plain,
big bearded man over the lonely, untutored Californian girl with the
large loveliness of a goddess and the soul of a little child. What
was the singular fascination which like the "pull" of a magnetic
storm on telegraph wires, forced a woman's tender heart under the
careless foot of a rough creature as indifferent to it as to a
flower he trampled in his path? Nature might explain it in some
unguarded moment of self-betrayal,--but Nature is jealous of her
secrets,--they have to be coaxed out of her in the slow course of
centuries. And with all the coaxing, the subtle work of her woven
threads between the Like and the Unlike remains an unsolved mystery.
CHAPTER VI
"You must carry that complaint to the buon Dio!" he said, gaily--
"Perhaps He will condescend to spin this rolling planet a little
faster! But in my mind, time flies far too rapidly! I have worked--
we all have worked--to get this place finished for you, yet much
remains to be done--"
"For women to love in!" he said, with a sudden warmth in his dark
eyes.
"Hold that!" she said--"And while you hold it, tell me of my other
palace--the one with wings!"
He clasped her small white fingers in his own sun-browned palm and
walked beside her bare-headed.
"No!--Of course you 'did not mean' anything, Marchese! You are
naturally surprised that my 'idea' which was little more than an
idea, has resolved itself into a scientific fact--but you would have
been just as surprised if the conception had been that of a man
instead of a woman. Only you would not have said so!"
"Brave souls!" said Morgana, and now she withdrew her hand from his
grasp--"So you went up alone?"
"I did. The steering was easy--she obeyed the helm,--it was as
though she were a light yacht in a sea,--wind and tide in her
favour. But her speed outran every air-ship I have ever known--as
also the height to which she ascends."
"You are very sure of yourself"--he said, gently. "Of course one
cannot but marvel that your brain should have grasped in so short a
time what men all over the world are still trying to discover--"
"Men are slow animals!" she said, lightly. "They spend years in
talking instead of in doing. Then again, when one of them really
does something, all the rest are up in arms against him, and more
years are wasted in trying to prove him right or wrong. I, as a mere
woman, ask nobody for an opinion--I risk my own existence--spend my
own money--and have nothing to do with governments. If I succeed I
shall be sought after fast enough!--but I do not propose to either
give or sell my discovery."
She walked on, gathering a flower here and there, and he kept pace
beside her.
"Do I not know it?" And she turned her head to him, smiling, "Have I
not paid their salaries regularly?--and yours? I do not care how
they talk or where,--they have built the White Eagle, but they
cannot make her fly!--not without ME! You were as brave as I thought
you would be when you decided to fly alone, trusting to the means I
gave you and which I alone can give!"
She broke off and was silent for a moment, then laying her hand
lightly on his arm, she added--
"I thank you for your confidence in me! As I have said, you were
brave!--you must have felt that you risked your life on a chance!--
nevertheless, for once, you allowed yourself to believe in a woman!"
"Not only for once but for always would I so believe!--in SUCH a
woman--if she would permit me!" he answered in a low tone of intense
passion. She smiled.
"Ah! The old story! My dear Marchese, do not fret your intellectual
perception uselessly! Think what we have in store for us!--such
wonders as none have yet explored,--the mysteries of the high and
the low--the light and the dark--and in those far-off spaces strewn
with stars, we may even hear things that no mortal has yet heard--"
She laughed.
"And so--he may outstrip you?" And the Marchese's eyes glittered
with sudden anger--"He may claim YOUR discovery as his own?"
Morgana smiled. She was ascending the steps of the loggia, and she
paused a moment in the full glare of the Sicilian sunshine, her
wonderful gold hair shining in it with the hue of a daffodil.
One or two of the workmen who were busy polishing the rose-marble
pilasters of the loggia, here saluted her--she returned their
salutations with an enchanting smile.
"How delightful it all is!" she said--"I feel the real use of
dollars at last! This beautiful 'palazzo,' in one of the loveliest
places in the world--all the delicious flowers running down in
garlands to the very shore of the sea-and liberty to enjoy life as
one wishes to enjoy it, without hindrance or argument--without even
the hindrance and argument of--love!" She laughed, and gave a
mirthful upward glance at the Marchese's somewhat sullen
countenance. "Come and have luncheon with me! You are the major-domo
for the present--you have engaged the servants and you know the run
of the house--you must show me everything and tell me everything! I
have quite a nice chaperone--such a dear old English lady 'of title'
as they say in the 'Morning Post'--so it's all quite right and
proper--only she doesn't know a word of Italian and very little
French. But that's quite British you know!"
She passed, smiling, into the house, and he followed.
CHAPTER VII
"I guess you're pretty satisfied with your location, Miss Royal"--
said one of these, a pleasant-faced grey-haired man, who for four or
five years past had wintered in Sicily with his wife, a frail little
creature always on the verge of the next world--"It would be
difficult to match this place anywhere! You only want one thing to
complete it!"
Morgana turned her lovely eyes indolently towards him over the top
of the soft feather fan she was waving lightly to and fro.
"A husband!"
She smiled.
"Oh, yes, dear!" chimed in his fragile invalid wife, "I am sure you
have a heart!"
"Ah, yes! But I often wonder why the race should be continued at
all!" said Morgana--"The time is ripe for a new creation!"
A slow footfall sounded on the garden path, and the tall figure of a
man clad in the everyday ecclesiastical garb of the Roman Church
ascended the steps of the loggia.
"Don Aloysius!" quickly exclaimed the Marchese, and every one rose
to greet the newcomer, Morgana receiving him with a profound
reverence. He laid his hand on her head with a kindly touch of
benediction.
"So the dreamer has come to her dream!" he said, in soft accents--
"And it has not broken like an air-bubble!--it still floats and
shines!" As he spoke he courteously saluted all present by a bend of
his head,--and stood for a moment gazing at the view of the sea and
the dying sunset. He was a very striking figure of a man--tall, and
commanding in air and attitude, with a fine face which might be
called almost beautiful. The features were such as one sees in
classic marbles--the full clear eyes were set somewhat widely apart
under shelving brows that denoted a brain with intelligence to use
it, and the smile that lightened his expression as he looked from,
the sea to his fair hostess was of a benignant sweetness.
The priest smiled and after a pause took the chair which the
Marchese Rivardi offered him. The other guests in the loggia looked
at him with interest, fascinated by his grave charm of manner.
Morgana resumed her seat.
"I have not thought at all"--said Morgana, quickly, "I can always
fill it with friends. No end of people are glad to winter in
Sicily."
"But will such 'friends' care for YOU or YOUR happiness?" suggested
the Marchese, pointedly.
Morgana laughed.
"Oh, no, I do not expect that! Nowadays no one really cares for
anybody else's happiness but their own. Besides, I shall be much too
busy to want company. I'm bent on all sorts of discoveries, you
know!--I want to dive 'deeper than ever plummet sounded'!"
"You will only find deeper depths!" said Don Aloysius, slowly--"And
in the very deepest depth of all is God!"
"My child, there is no science that can upset the Source of all
science! The greatest mathematician that lives did not institute
mathematics--he only copies the existing Divine law."
There followed a silence. The group in the loggia seemed for the
moment mesmerised by the priest's suave calm voice, steady eyes and
noble expression, A bell rang slowly and sweetly--a call to prayer
in some not far distant monastery, and the first glimmer of the
stars began to sparkle faintly in the darkening heavens. A little
sigh from Morgana stirred the stillness.
"If one could always live in this sort of mood!" she suddenly
exclaimed--"This lovely peace in the glow of the sunset and the
perfume of the flowers!--and you, Don Aloysius, talking beautiful
things!--why then, one would be perpetually happy and good! But such
living would not be life!--one must go with the time--"
"As if YOU could weary anybody!" Morgana said. "You never do--only
you have an effect upon ME which is not very flattering to my self-
love!--you make me feel so small!"
She flushed, and turned her head away as she caught the Marchese
Rivardi's eyes fixed upon her.
"You should not make pretty compliments to a woman, reverend
father!" she said, lightly--"It is not your vocation!"
"But all the same, it must be dull work living shut up in a city
with nothing to do,--doomed to be young and to last for ever!"
"But I think even a soul may grow tired!" said Morgana, suddenly--
"so tired that even the Highest Good may seem hardly worth
possessing!"
The party broke up in twos and threes and left the loggia for the
garden. Rivardi remained a moment behind, obeying a slight sign from
Aloysius.
"She is not happy!" said the priest--"With all her wealth, and all
her gifts of intelligence she is not happy, nor is she satisfied. Do
you not find it so?"
"No woman is happy or satisfied till love has kissed her on the
mouth and eyes!" answered Rivardi, with a touch of passion in his
voice,--"But who will convince her of that? She is satisfied with
her beautiful surroundings,--all the work I have designed for her
has pleased her,--she has found no fault--"
The Marchese flushed hotly under the quiet gaze of the priest's
steady dark eyes.
"You may doubt that of every modern woman!" he said--"Few are really
'fitting' for marriage nowadays. They want something different--
something new!--God alone knows what they want!"
"Aye! God alone knows! And God alone will decide what to give them!"
"You seem to know that as a certainty"--he said, "How and why do you
know it?"
Aloysius raised his eyes and looked straight ahead of him with a
curious, far-off, yet searching intensity.
"I cannot tell you how or why"--he answered--"You would not believe
me if I told you that sometimes in this wonderful world of ours,
beings are born who are neither man nor woman, and who partake of a
nature that is not so much human as elemental and ethereal--or might
one not almost say, atmospheric? That is, though generated of flesh
and blood, they are not altogether flesh and blood, but possess
other untested and unproved essences mingled in their composition,
of which as yet we can form no idea. We grope in utter ignorance of
the greatest of mysteries--Life!--and with all our modern
advancement, we are utterly unable to measure or to account for
life's many and various manifestations. In the very early days of
imaginative prophecy, the 'elemental' nature of certain beings was
accepted by men accounted wise in their own time,--in the long ago
discredited assertions of the Count de Gabalis and others of his
mystic cult,--and I am not entirely sure that there does not exist
some ground for their beliefs. Life is many-sided;--humanity can
only be one facet of the diamond."
His voice had a strange thrill in it, and Giulio looked at him
curiously.
CHAPTER VIII
Early dawn peered through the dark sky like the silvery light of a
pale lamp carried by an advancing watchman,--and faintly illumined
the outline of a long, high, vastly extending wooden building which,
at about a mile distant from Morgana's "palazzo" ran parallel with
the sea-shore. The star-sparkle of electric lamps within showed it
to be occupied--and the murmur of men's voices and tinkle of working
tools suggested that the occupants were busy. The scarcely visible
sea made pleasant little kissing murmurs on the lip-edges of the
sand, and Nature, drowsing in misty space, seemed no more than the
formless void of the traditional beginning of things.
Outside the building which, by its shape, though but dimly defined
among shadows, was easily recognisable as a huge aerodrome, the tall
figure of Giulio Rivardi paced slowly up and down like a sentinel on
guard. He, whose Marquisate was inherited from many noble Sicilian
houses renowned in Caesar's day, apparently found as much
satisfaction in this occupation as any warrior of a Roman Legion
might have experienced in guarding the tent of his Emperor,--and
every now and then he lifted his eyes to the sky with a sense of
impatience at the slowness of the sun's rising. In his mind he
reviewed the whole chapter of events which during the past three
years had made him the paid vassal of a rich woman's fancy--his
entire time taken up, and all the resources of his inventive and
artistic nature (which were exceptionally great) drawn upon for the
purpose of carrying out designs which at first seemed freakish and
impossible, but which later astonished him by the extraordinary
scientific acumen they displayed, as well as by their adaptability
to the forces of nature. Then, the money!--the immense sums which
this strange creature, Morgana Royal, had entrusted to him!--and
with it all, the keen, business aptitude she had displayed, knowing
to a centime how much she had spent, though there seemed no limit to
how much she yet intended to spend! He looked back to the time he
had first seen her, when on visiting Sicily apparently as an
American tourist only, she had taken a fancy to a ruined "palazzo"
once an emperor's delight, but crumbling slowly away among its
glorious gardens, and had purchased the whole thing then and there.
Her guide to the ruins at that period had been Don Aloysius, a
learned priest, famous for his archaeological knowledge--and it was
through Don Aloysius that he, the Marchese Rivardi, had obtained the
commission to restore to something of its pristine grace and beauty
the palace of ancient days. And now everything was done, or nearly
done; but much more than the "palazzo" had been undertaken and
completed, for the lady of many millions had commanded an air-ship
to be built for her own personal use and private pleasure with an
aerodrome for its safe keeping and anchorage. This airship was the
crux of the whole business, for the men employed to build it were
confident that it would never fly, and laughed with one another as
they worked to carry out a woman's idea and a woman's design. How
could it fly without an engine?--they very sensibly demanded,--for
engine there was none! However, they were paid punctually and most
royally for their labours; and when, despite their ominous
predictions, the ship was released on her trial trip, manipulated by
Giulio Rivardi, who ascended in her alone, sailing the ship with an
ease and celerity hitherto unprecedented, they were more scared than
enthusiastic. Surely some devil was in it!--for how could the thing
fly without any apparent force to propel it? How was it that its
enormous wings spread out on either side as by self-volition and
moved rhythmically like the wings of a bird in full flight? Every
man who had worked at the design was more or less mystified. They
had, according to plan and instructions received, "plumed" the
airship for electricity in a new and curious manner, but there was
no battery to generate a current. Two small boxes or chambers, made
of some mysterious metal which would not "fuse" under the strongest
heat, were fixed, one at either end of the ship;--these had been
manufactured secretly in another country and sent to Sicily by
Morgana herself,--but so far, they contained nothing. They seemed
unimportant--they were hardly as large as an ordinary petrol-can
holding a gallon. When Rivardi had made a trial ascent he had
inserted in each of these boxes a cylindrical tube made to fit an
interior socket as a candle fits into a candle-stick,--all the
workmen watched him, waiting for a revelation, but he made none. He
was only particular and precise as to the firm closing down of the
boxes when the tubes were in. And then in a few minutes the whole
machine began to palpitate noiselessly like a living thing with a
beating heart,--and to the amazement and almost fear of all who
witnessed what seemed to be a miracle, the ship sprang up like a
bird springing from the ground, and soared free and away into space,
its vast white wings cleaving the air with a steady rise and fall of
rhythmic power. Once aloft she sailed in level flight, apparently at
perfect ease--and after several rapid "runs," and circlings,
descended slowly and gracefully, landing her pilot without shock or
jar. He was at once surrounded and was asked a thousand questions
which it was evident he could not answer.
A streak of rose and silver flared through the sky flushing the
pallor of Morgana's face as she lifted it towards him, smiling.
"Never?" he queried.
The dawn was spreading in threads of gold and silver and blue all
over the heavens, and the sea flushed softly under the deepening
light, as she went towards the aerodrome, he walking slowly by her
side.
"Are you so sure?" he said--"Will you not risk your life in this
attempt?"
"My life? What is it? The life of a midge in the sun! It is no good
to me unless I do something with it! I would live for ever if I
could!--here, on this dear little ball of Earth--I do not want a
better heaven. The heaven which the clergy promise us is so
remarkably unattractive! But I run no risk of losing my life or
yours in our aerial adventures; we carry the very essence of
vitality with us. Come!--I want to see my flying palace! When I was
a small child I used to feed my fancy on the 'Arabian Nights,' and
most dearly did I love the story of Aladdin and his palace that was
transported through the air. I used to say 'I will have a flying
palace myself!' And now I have realised my dream."
"With God all things are possible!" quoted the Marchese Rivardi--
"But with man--"
"We are taught that God made man 'in His image. In the image of God
created He him.' If this is true, all things should be possible to
man"--said Morgana, quietly--"To man,--and to that second thought of
the Creator--Woman! And we mustn't forget that second thoughts are
best!" She laughed, while the man called Gaspard stared at her and
laughed also for company. "Now let me see how I shall be housed in
air!" and with very little assistance she climbed into the great
bird-shaped vessel through an entrance so deftly contrived that it
was scarcely visible,--an entrance which closed almost hermetically
when the ship was ready to start, air being obtained through other
channels.
Silently the two men obeyed her gesture and opened the small
compartment fixed at what might be called the hull end of the air-
ship. The interior was seen to be lined with the same round discs
which covered the walls of the vessel, every disc closely touching
its neighbour. With extreme caution and delicacy Morgana set one of
the tubes she held upright in the socket made to receive it, and as
she did this, fine sharp, needle like flashes of light broke from it
in a complete circle, filling the whole receptacle with vibrating
rays which instantly ran round each disc, and glittered in and out
among them like a stream of quicksilver. As soon as this
manifestation occurred, Morgana beckoned to her two assistants to
shut the compartment. They did so with scarcely an effort, yet it
closed down with a silent force and tenacity that suggested some
enormous outward pressure, yet pressure there seemed none. And now a
sudden throbbing movement pulsated through the vessel--its huge
folded wings stirred.
"Quick! Tell them below to lose no time! Open the shed and let her
rise!--when the contact is once established there will not be half a
second to spare!"
"Let her go!" cried Morgana--"Away to your place, pilot!" and she
waved a commanding hand as Rivardi sprang to the steering gear--
"Hold her fast! . . . Keep her steady! Straight towards the sun-
rise!"
"You believe me now, do you not?" she said--"We have nothing further
to do but to steer. The force we use re-creates itself as it works--
it cannot become exhausted. To slow down and descend to earth one
need only open the compartments at either end--then the vibration
grows less and less, and like a living creature the 'White Eagle'
sinks gently to rest. You see there is no cause for fear!"
While she yet spoke, the light of the newly risen sun bathed her in
its golden glory, the long dazzling beams filtering through
mysterious apertures inserted cunningly in the roof of the vessel
and mingling with the roseate hues of the silken sheathing that
covered its walls. So fired with light she looked ethereal--a very
spirit of air or of flame; and Rivardi, just able to see her from
his steering place, began to think there was some truth an the
strange words of Don Aloysius--"Sometimes in this wonderful world of
ours beings are born who are neither man nor woman and who partake
of a nature that is not so much human as elemental--or, might not
one almost say atmospheric?"
She laughed.
She called to Rivardi, and he, with the slightest turn of the wheel,
altered the direction in which the air-ship moved, so that it
travelled back again on the route by which it had commenced its
flight. Soon, very soon, the dainty plot of earth, looking no more
than a gay flower-bed, where Morgana's palazzo was situated,
appeared below--and then, acting on instructions, Gaspard opened the
compartments at either end of the vessel. The vibrating rays within
dwindled by slow degrees--their light became less and less intense--
their vibration less powerful,--till very gradually with a perfectly
beautiful motion expressing absolute grace and lightness the vessel
descended towards the aerodrome it had lately left, and all the men
who were waiting for its return gave a simultaneous shout of
astonishment and admiration, as it sank slowly towards them, folding
its wings as it came with the quiet ease of a nesting-bird flying
home. So admirably was the distance measured between itself and the
great shed of its local habitation, that it glided into place as
though it had eyes to see its exact whereabouts, and came to a
standstill within a few seconds of its arrival. Morgana descended,
and her two companions followed. The other men stood silent, visibly
inquisitive yet afraid to express their curiosity. Morgana's eyes
flashed over them all with a bright, half-laughing tolerance.
"I thank you, my friends!" she said--"You have done well the work I
entrusted you to do under the guidance of the Marchese Rivardi, and
you can now judge for yourselves the result It mystifies you I can
see! You think it is a kind of 'black magic'? Not so!--unless all
our modern science is 'black magic' as well, born of the influence
of those evil spirits who, as we are told in tradition, descended in
rebellion from heaven and lived with the daughters of men! From
these strange lovers sprang a race of giants,--symbolical I think of
the birth of the sciences, which mingle in their composition the
active elements of good and evil. You have built this airship of
mine on lines which have never before been attempted;--you have
given it wings which are plumed like the wings of a bird, not with
quills, but with channels many and minute, to carry the runlets of
the 'emanation' from the substance held in the containers at either
end of the vessel,--its easy flight therefore should not surprise
you. Briefly--we have filled a piece of mechanism with the
composition or essence of Life!--that is the only answer I can give
to your enquiring looks!--let it be enough!"
CHAPTER IX
"And now you have attained your object, what is the use of it?" said
Don Aloysius.
The priest was pacing slowly up and down the old half-ruined
cloister of an old half-ruined monastery, and beside his stately,
black-robed figure moved the small aerial form of Morgana, clad in
summer garments of pure white, her golden head uncovered to the
strong Sicilian sunshine which came piercing in sword-like rays
through the arches of the cloister, and filtered among the
clustering leaves which hung in cool twining bunches from every
crumbling grey pillar of stone.
"What is the use of it?" he repeated, his calm eyes resting gravely
on the little creature gliding sylph-like beside him. "Suppose your
invention out-reaped every limit of known possibility--suppose your
air-ship to be invulnerable, and surpassing in speed and safety
everything ever experienced,--suppose it could travel to heights
unimaginable, what then? Suppose even that you could alight on
another star--another world than this--what purpose is served?--what
peace is gained?--what happens?"
"I have not worked for peace or happiness,"--she said and there was
a thrill of sadness in her voice--"because to my mind neither peace
nor happiness exist. From all we can see, and from the little we can
learn, I think the Maker of the universe never meant us to be happy
or peaceful. All Nature is at strife with itself, incessantly
labouring for such attainment as can hardly be won,--all things seem
to be haunted by fear and sorrow. And yet it seems to me that there
are remedies for most of our evils in the very composition of the
elements--if we were not ignorant and stupid enough to discourage
our discoverers on the verge of discovery. My application of a
certain substance, known to scientists, but scarcely understood, is
an attempt to solve the problem of swift aerial motion by light and
heat--light and heat being the chiefest supports of life. To use a
force giving out light and heat continuously seemed to me the way to
create and command equally continuous movement. I have--I think and
hope--fairly succeeded, and in order to accomplish my design I have
used wealth that would not have been at the service of most
inventors,--wealth which my father left to me quite
unconditionally,--but were I able to fly with my 'White Eagle' to
the remotest parts of the Milky Way itself, I should not look to
find peace or happiness!"
"Why?"
The priest's simple query had a note of tender pity in it. Morgana
looked up at him with a little smile, but her eyes were tearful.
"Dear Don Aloysius, how can I tell 'why'? Nobody is really happy,
and I cannot expect to have what is denied to the whole world!"
Aloysius resumed his slow walk to and fro, and she kept quiet pace
with him.
"Have you ever thought what happiness is?" he asked, then--"Have you
ever felt it for a passing moment?"
He sat down, and the sunshine sent a dazzling ray on the silver
crucifix he wore, giving it the gleam of a great jewel. Morgana took
her seat beside him.
Don Aloysius turned to look at her, but said nothing. She laughed.
"Dear Father Aloysius, what a wise priest you are! Not a word falls
from those beautifully set lips of yours! If you were a fool--(so
many men are!) you would have repeated my phrase, 'the inside of a
sun-ray,' with an accent of scornful incredulity, and you would have
stared at me with all a fool's contempt! But you are not a fool,--
you know or you perceive instinctively exactly what I mean. The
inside of a sun-ray!--it was disclosed to me suddenly--a veritable
miracle! I have seen it many times since, but not with all the
wonder and ecstasy of the first revelation. I was so young, too! I
told a renowned professor at one of the American colleges just what
I saw, and he was so amazed and confounded at my description of rays
that had taken the best scientists years to discover, that he begged
to be allowed to examine my eyes! He thought there must be something
unusual about them. In fact there IS!--and after his examination he
seemed more puzzled than ever. He said something about 'an
exceptionally strong power of vision,' but frankly admitted that
power of vision alone would not account for it. Anyhow I plainly saw
all the rays within one ray--there were seven. The ray itself was--
or so I fancied--the octave of colour. I was little more than a
child when this 'interval' of happiness--PERFECT happiness!--was
granted to me--I felt as if a window had been opened for me to look
through it into heaven!"
She hesitated.
"I used to,--in those days. As I have just said I was only a child,
and heaven was a real place to me,--even the angels were real
presences--"
"They left me"--she answered--"I did not lose them. They simply
went."
She resumed--
"Why not?" and Don Aloysius returned her smile. "If old Alison has
anything to do with your happiness I should like to hear."
"Well, you see, you are a priest," went on Morgana, slowly, "and she
is a witch. Oh yes, truly!--a real witch! There is no one in all
that part of the Highlands that does not know of her, and the power
she has! She is very, very old--some folks say she is more than a
hundred. She knew my father and grandfather--she came to my father's
cottage the night I was born, and said strange things about a 'May
child'--I was born in May. We went--as I tell you--to see her, and
found her spinning. She looked up from her wheel as we entered--but
she did not seem surprised at our coming. Her eyes were very bright-
-not like the eyes of an old person. She spoke to my father at once-
-her voice was very clear and musical. 'Is it you, John Royal?' she
said--'and you have brought your fey lass along with you!' That was
the first time I ever heard the word 'fey.' I did not understand it
then."
"At what should I be displeased?" and the priest bent his eyes very
searchingly upon her--"At the fact,--which none can disprove,--that
'there are things in heaven and earth' which are beyond our
immediate knowledge? That there are women strangely endowed with
premonitory instincts land preternatural gifts? Dear child, there is
nothing in all this that can or could displease me! My faith--the
faith of my Church--is founded on the preternatural endowment of a
woman!"
She lifted her eyes to his, and a little sigh came from her lips.
"And you call THIS your second experience of happiness?" said Don
Aloysius, wonderingly--"What happiness did you gain by your
interview with this old Alison?"
There was a silence of some minutes. Morgana rose, and crossing over
to the old well, studied the crimson passion-flowers which twined
about it, with almost loving scrutiny.
"Alas, poor me!" she sighed--"I can neither give joy nor create it!"
"Not even with all my wealth!" she echoed. "Surely you--a priest--
know what a delusion wealth really is so far as happiness goes?--
mere happiness? course you can buy everything with it--and there's
the trouble! When everything is bought there's nothing left! And if
you try to help the poor they resent it--they think you are doing it
because you are afraid of them! Perhaps the worst of all things to
do is to help artists--artists of every kind!--for THEY say you want
to advertise yourself as a 'generous patron'! Oh, I've tried it all
and it's no use. I was just crazy to help all the scientists,--
once!--but they argued and quarrelled so much as to which 'society'
deserved most money that I dropped the whole offer, and started
'scientising' myself. There is one man I tried to lift out of his
brain-bog,--but he would have none of me, and he is still in his
bog!"
"Yes, good father!" And Morgana left the passion-flowers and moved
slowly back to her seat on the stone-bench--"There is one man! He
was my third and last experience of happiness. When I first met him,
my whole heart gave itself in one big pulsation--but like a wave of
the sea, the pulsation recoiled, and never again beat on the grim
rock of human egoism!" She laughed gaily, and a delicate colour
flushed her face. "But I was happy while the 'wave' lasted,--and
when it broke, I still played on the shore with its pretty foam-
bells."
"You loved this man?" and the priest's grave eyes dwelt on her
searchingly.
"I suppose so--for the moment! Yet no,--it was not love--it was just
an 'attraction'--he was--he IS--clever, and thinks he can change the
face of the world. But he is fooling with fire! I tell you I tried
to help him--for he is deadly poor. But he would have none of me nor
of what he calls my 'vulgar wealth.' This is a case in point where
wealth is useless! You see?"
He paused, abruptly.
"Then,--if you know it,--in God's name do not exercise it!" he said.
His voice shook--and with his right hand he gripped the crucifix he
wore as though it were a weapon of self-defence. Morgana looked at
him wonderingly for a moment,--then drooped her head with a strange
little air of sudden penitence. Aloysius drew a quick sharp breath
as of one in effort,--then he spoke again, unsteadily--
"I mean"--he said, smiling forcedly--"I mean that you should not--
you should not break the heart of--of--the poor Giulio for
instance!. . . it would not be kind."
"A poor service!" he said, turning his gaze away from her elfin
figure and shining hair--"Unworthy,--shameful!--marred by sin at
every moment! A priest of the Church must learn to do without
happiness such as ordinary life can give--and without love,--such as
woman may give--but--after all--the sacrifice is little."
Moving across the cloister with her light step she seemed to float
through the sunshine like a part of it, and as she disappeared a
kind of shadow fell, though no cloud obscured the sun. Don Aloysius
watched her till she had vanished,--then turned aside into a small
chapel opening out on the cloistered square--a chapel which formed
part of the monastic house to which he belonged as Superior,--and
there, within that still, incense-sweetened sanctuary, he knelt
before the noble, pictured Head of the Man of Sorrows in silent
confession and prayer.
CHAPTER X
Roger Seaton was a man of many philosophies. He had one for every
day in the week, yet none wherewith to thoroughly satisfy himself.
While still a mere lad he had taken to the study of science as a
duck takes to water,--no new discovery or even suggestion of a new
discovery missed his instant and close attention. His avidity for
learning was insatiable,--his intense and insistent curiosity on all
matters of chemistry gave a knife-like edge to the quality of his
brain, making it sharp, brilliant and incisive. To him the ordinary
social and political interests of the world were simply absurd. The
idea that the greater majority of men should be created for no
higher purpose than those of an insect, just to live, eat, breed,
and die, was to him preposterous.
Those who heard him speak in this way--(and they were few, for
Seaton seldom discussed his theories with others)--convinced
themselves that he was either a fool or a madman,--the usual verdict
given for any human being who dares break away from convention and
adopt an original line of thought and action. But they came to the
conclusion that as he was direfully poor, and nevertheless refused
various opportunities of making money, his folly or his madness
would be brought home to him sooner or later by strong necessity,
and that he would then either arrive at a sane every-day realisation
of "things as they are"--or else be put away in an asylum and
quietly forgotten. This being the sagacious opinion of those who
knew him best, there was a considerable flutter in such limited
American circles as call themselves "upper" when the wealthiest
young woman in the States, Morgana Royal, suddenly elected to know
him and to bring him into prominent notice at her parties as "the
most wonderful genius of the time"--"a man whose scientific
discoveries might change the very face of the globe"--and other
fantastically exaggerated descriptions of her own which he himself
strongly repudiated and resented. Gossip ran amok concerning the
two, and it was generally agreed that if the "madman" of science
were to become the husband of a woman multi-millionaire, he would
not have to be considered so mad after all! But the expected romance
did not materialise,--there came apparently a gradual "cooling off"
in the sentiments of both parties concerned,--and though Roger
Seaton was still occasionally seen with Morgana in her automobile,
in her opera-box, or at her receptions, his appearances were fewer,
and other men, in fact many other men, were more openly encouraged
and flattered,--Morgana herself showing as much indifference towards
him as she had at first shown interest. When, therefore, he suddenly
left the social scene of action, his acquaintances surmised that he
had got an abrupt dismissal, or as they more brusquely expressed it-
-"the game's up"!
"He's lost his chance!" they said, shaking their heads forlornly--
"And he's poorer than Job! He'll be selling newspapers in the cars
for a living by and by!"
For answer Seaton strode forward and taking the milk-pail from him
gripped him by the dirty cotton shirt and gave him a brief but
severe shaking.
The boy wriggled in his captor's clutch, and tried to squirm himself
out of it.
"SHE did--oh, Mary mother!" and the youth gave a further wriggle--
"Miss Soriso--the girl they call Manella. She told me to say she's
too busy to come herself."
It was mid-morning, and the sun blazed down upon the hill-side with
the scorching breath of a volcano. He turned into his hut,--it was a
dark, cool little dwelling, comfortable enough for a single
inhabitant. There was a camp-bed in one corner--and there were a
couple of wicker chairs made for easy transposition into full-length
couches if so required, A good sized deal table occupied the centre
of the living-room,--and on the table was a clear crystal bowl full
of what appeared at a first glance to be plain water, but which on
closer observation showed a totally different quality. Unlike water
it was never still,--some interior bubbling perpetually moved it to
sway and sparkle, throwing out tiny flashes as though the smallest
diamond cuttings were striving to escape from it--while it exhaled
around itself an atmosphere of extreme coldness and freshness like
that of ice. Seaton threw himself indolently into one of wicker
chairs by the window--a window which was broad and wide, commanding
a full view of distant mountains, and far away to the left a glimpse
of sea.
"Forgive me!" he said, in low uneven tones--"I--I did not mean it!"
She lifted her eyes to his, half proudly half appealingly.
--and actually said that "to kiss him would be like kissing a bunch
of nettles!"--SHE said that!--she who for one wild moment he had
held in his arms--bah!--he sprang up from his chair in a kind of
rage with himself, as his thoughts crowded thick and fast one on the
other--why did he think of her at all! It was as if some external
commanding force compelled him to do so. Then--she had seen Manella,
and had naturally drawn her own conclusions, based on the girl's
rich beauty which was so temptingly set within his reach. He began
to talk to himself aloud once more, picking up the thread of his
broken converse where he had left it--
The sun sank lower, its hue changing from poppy red to burning
orange--and presently a woman's figure appeared on the hill slope,
and cautiously approached the sleeper--a beautiful figure of classic
mould and line, clothed in a simple white linen garb, with a red
rose at its breast. It was Manella. She had taken extraordinary
pains with her attire, plain though it was--something dainty and
artistic in the manner of its wearing made its simplicity
picturesque,--and the red rose at her bosom was effectively
supplemented by another in her hair, showing brilliantly against its
rich blackness. She stopped when about three paces away from the
sleeping man and watched him with a wonderful tenderness. Her lips
quivered sweetly--her lovely eyes shone with a soft wistfulness,--
she looked indeed, as Morgana had said of her, "quite beautiful."
Instinctively aware in slumber that he was not alone, Seaton
stirred--opened his eyes, and sprang up.
She held out a telegram. He opened and read it. It was very brief--
"Shall be with you to-morrow. Gwent."
"Is that why you are 'so busy'"? he asked, the smile still dancing
in his eyes.
"And how fine we are to-day!" he said, glancing over her with an air
of undisguised admiration--"White suits you, Manella! You should
always wear it! For what fortunate man have you dressed yourself so
prettily?"
"For you!"
"You laugh, you laugh!" she said--"But I do not care! You can laugh
at me all the time if you like. But--you cannot help looking at me!
Ah yes!--you cannot help THAT!"
She made a swift step towards him and laid a hand on his arm. Her
ardent, glowing face was next to his.
"You speak not truly!" and her voice was tremulous--"To a man it is
everything!"
Her physical fascination was magnetic, and for a moment he had some
trouble to resist its spell. Very gently he put an arm round her,--
and with a tender delicacy of touch unfastened the rose she wore at
her bosom.
He smiled.
CHAPTER XI
Mr. Sam Gwent stood in what was known as the "floral hall" of the
Plaza Hotel, so called because it was built in colonnades which
opened into various vistas of flowers and clambering vines growing
with all the luxuriance common to California. He had just arrived,
and while divesting himself of a light dust overcoat interrogated
the official at the enquiry office.
She preceded him out of the "floral hall," and across the great
gardens, now in their most brilliant bloom to a gate which she
opened, pointing with one hand towards the hill where the flat
outline of the "hut of the dying" could be seen clear against the
sky.
"Better, I suppose?"
"And is that why Mr. Seaton lives in the hut? On account of the
air?"
"I suppose so! How should I know? He is here for his health."
"Take him his food!" Sam Gwent growled out something like an oath--
"What! Can't he come and get it for himself? Is he treated like a
bear in a cage or a baby in a cradle?"
"Oh, you are rough!" she said--"He pays for whatever little trouble
he gives. Indeed it is no trouble! He lives very simply--only on new
milk and bread. I expect his health will not stand anything else--
though truly he does not look ill--"
"Such eyes as yours were never born of any blood but Spanish!" said
Gwent--"I knew that at once! That you are not married is a bit of
luck for some man--the man you WILL marry! For the moment adios! I
shall dine at the Plaza this evening, and shall very likely bring my
friend with me."
"How so?"
She turned away, back towards the Hotel, and Gwent started to ascend
the hill alone.
Half-way up the hill he paused to rest, and saw Seaton striding down
at a rapid pace to meet him.
"Hullo, Gwent!"
"Hullo!"
"Oh, yes--that's all right! But reply wires don't always clinch
business. Yours arrived last night."
Seaton laughed.
"You've heard all about it I see! But the hut on the hill is a
'dependence' of the Plaza--a sort of annex where dying men are put
away to die peaceably--"
"YOU are not a dying man!" said Gwent, very meaningly--"And I can't
make out why you pretend to be one!"
"I'm not pretending!--my dear Gwent, we're all dying men! One may
die a little faster than another, but it's all the same sort of
'rot, and rot, and thereby hangs a tale!' What's the news in
Washington?"
"Rather! She leads all men 'on'--or they think she does. She led YOU
on at one time!"
"Never! I saw through her from the first! She could never make a
fool of ME!"
"Well! Washington thought you were the favoured 'catch' and envied
your luck! Certainly she showed a great preference for you--"
Seaton made no reply, but led the way into his dwelling, offering
his visitor a chair.
He sat down. His eyes were at once attracted by the bowl of restless
fluid on the table.
"To keep the world alive? No, thank you!" And the look of dark scorn
on Seaton's face was astonishing in its almost satanic expression--
"That is precisely what I wish to avoid! The world is over-ripe and
over-rotten,--and it is over-crowded with a festering humanity that
is INhuman, and worse than bestial in its furious grappling for self
and greed. One remedy for the evil would be that no children should
be born in it for the next thirty or forty years--the relief would
be incalculable,--a monstrous burden would be lifted, and there
would be some chance of betterment,--but as this can never be, other
remedies must be sought and found. It's pure hypocrisy to talk of
love for children, when every day we read of mothers selling their
offspring for so much cash down,--lately in China during a spell of
famine parents killed their daughters like young calves, for food.
Ugly facts like these have to be looked in the face--it's no use
putting them behind one's back, and murmuring beautiful lies about
'mother-love' and such nonsense. As for the old Mosaic commandment
'Honour thy father and mother'--it's ordinary newspaper reading to
hear of boys and girls attacking and murdering their parents for the
sake of a few dollars."
"I'm not given to sentiment, but I dare say there are still a few
folks who love each other in this world,--and it's good to know of
when they do. My sister"--he paused again, as if something stuck in
his throat; "My sister loved her boy,--Jack. His death has driven
her silly for the time--doctors say she will recover--that it's only
'shock.' 'Shock' is answerable for a good many tragedies since the
European war."
His companion nodded, and he drew out his cigar-case, selecting from
it a particularly fragrant Havana.
"You don't do this sort of thing, or I'd offer you one,"--he said,--
"Pity you don't, it soothes the nerves. But I know your 'fads'; you
are too closely acquainted with the human organism to either smoke
or drink. Well--every man to his own method! Now what you want me to
do is this--to represent the force and meaning of a certain
substance which you have discovered, to the government of the United
States and induce them to purchase it. Is that so?"
"That is so!" and Roger Seaton fixed his eyes on Gwent's hard,
lantern-jawed face with a fiery intensity--"Remember, it's not
child's play! Whoever takes what I can give, holds the mastery of
the world! I offer it to the United States--but I would have
preferred to offer it to Great Britain, being as I am, an
Englishman. But the dilatory British men of science have snubbed me
once--and I do not intend them to have the chance of doing it again.
Briefly--I offer the United States the power to end wars, and all
thought or possibility of war for ever. No Treaty of Versailles or
any other treaty will ever be necessary. The only thing I ask in
reward for my discovery is the government pledge to use it. That is,
of course, should occasion arise. For my material needs, which are
small, an allowance of a sum per annum as long as I live, will
satisfy my ambition. The allowance may be as much or as little as is
found convenient. The pledge to USE my discovery is the one all-
important point--it must be a solemn, binding pledge--never to be
broken."
Sam Gwent, holding his cigar between his fingers and looking
meditatively at its glowing end, smiled shrewdly.
CHAPTER XII
Gwent was silent. With methodical care he flicked off the burnt end
of his cigar and watched it where it fell, as though it were
something rare and curious. He wanted a few minutes to think. He
gave a quick upward glance at the tall athletic figure above him,
with its magnificent head and flashing eyes,--and the words "I'll be
master of the world" gave him an unpleasant thrill. One man on the
planet with power to destroy nations seemed quite a fantastic idea--
yet science made it actually possible! He bethought himself of a
book he had lately read concerning radio-activity, in which he had
been struck by the following passage--"Radio-activity is an
explosion of great violence; the energy exerted is millions of times
more powerful than the highest explosive substance yet made in our
laboratories; one bomb loaded with such energy would be equal to
millions of bombs of the same size and energy as used in the
trenches. One's mind stands aghast at the thought of what could be
possible if such power were used for destructive purposes; a single
aeroplane could carry sufficient to annihilate a whole army, or lay
the biggest city in ruins with the death of all its inhabitants."
The writer of the book in question had stated that, so far, no means
had been found of conserving and concentrating this tremendous force
for such uses,--but Gwent, looking at Roger Seaton, said within
himself--"He's got it!" And this impression, urging itself strongly
in on his brain, was sufficiently startling to give him a touch of
what is called "nerves."
Seaton laughed heartily, pushing back with a ruffling hand the thick
hair from his broad open brow.
"All three propositions are nil to me"--he said--"I suppose it is
because I can have them for the asking! And what satisfaction is
there in any one of them? A man only needs one dinner a day, a place
to sleep in and ordinary clothes to wear--very little money is
required for the actual necessaries of life--enough can be earned by
any day-labourer. As for fame--whosoever reads the life of even one
'famous' man will never be such a fool as to wish for the capricious
plaudits of a fool-public. And love!--love does not exist--not what
_I_ call love!"
"True! And it wouldn't be a bad idea to stamp them out," here Seaton
threw back his head with the challenging gesture which was
characteristic of his temperament--"But what is called 'the liberty
of the press'(it should be called 'the license of the press') is
more of an octopus than a mosquito. Cut off one tentacle, it grows
another. It's entirely octopus in character, too,--it only lives to
fill its stomach."
"Oh, come, come!" and Gwent's little steely eyes sparkled--"It's the
'safe-guard of nations' don't you know?--it stands for honest free
speech, truth, patriotism, justice--"
"I agree!" said Gwent--"And there you have the root and cause of
war! No need to exterminate nations with your destructive stuff,--
you should get at the microbes who undermine the nations first. When
you can do THAT, you will destroy the guilty and spare the
innocent,--whereas your plan of withering a nation into a dust-heap
involves the innocent along with the guilty."
"It does. And your aim is to do away with all chance or possibility
of war for ever. Good! But you need to attack the actual root of the
evil."
Seaton, still standing erect, bent his eyes on the lean hard
features of his companion with eloquent scorn.
"Just so! The Lord Christ said it two thousand years ago, and it's
true to-day! We haven't improved!"
With an impatient movement, Seaton strode to the door of his hut and
looked out at the wide sky,--then turned back again. Gwent watched
him critically.
"After all," he said, "It isn't as if you wanted anything of
anybody. Money is no object of yours. If it were I should advise
your selling your discovery to Morgana Royal,--she'd buy it--and, I
tell you what!--SHE'D USE IT!"
The last ash of Gwent's cigar fell to the floor, and Gwent himself
rose from his chair.
"Well, I suppose we've had our talk out"--he said; "I came here
prepared to offer you a considerable sum for your discovery--but I
can't go so far as a Government pledge. So I must leave you to it.
You know"--here he hesitated--"you know a good many people would
consider you mad--"
Seaton laughed.
"Oh, that goes without saying! Did you ever hear of any scientist
possessing a secret drawn from the soul of nature that was not
called 'mad' at once by his compeers and the public? I can stand
THAT accusation! Pray Heaven I never get as mad as a Wall Street
gambler!"
"You will, if you gamble with the lives of nations!" said Gwent.
"Let the nations beware how they gamble with their own lives!"
retorted Seaton--"You say war is a method of money-making--let them
take heed how they touch money coined in human blood! I--one man
only,--but an instrument of the Supreme Intelligence,--I say and
swear there shall be no more wars!"
"I laid me down and slept; I awaked for the Lord sustained me. I
will not be afraid of ten thousands of the people that have set
themselves against me round about."
Aloud he said--"Well, you may put an end to war, but you will never
put an end to men's hatred and envy of one another, and if they
can't 'let the steam off' in fighting, they'll find some other way
which may be worse. If you come to consider it, all nature is at war
with itself,--it's a perpetual struggle to live, and it's evident
that the struggle was intended and ordained as universal law. Life
would be pretty dull without effort--and effort means war."
"What! Haven't got one! Why, how do you make your stuff?"
Seaton laughed.
"You think I'm going to tell you? Mr. Senator Gwent, you take me for
a greater fool than I am! My 'stuff' needs neither fire nor
crucible,--the formula was fairly complete before I left Washington,
but I wanted quiet and solitude to finish what I had begun. It is
finished now. That's why I sent for you to make the proposition
which you say you cannot carry through."
Gwent stood at the door of the hut and surveyed the scenery.
"Well!--perhaps not a hundred dollars a day, but pretty near it! Her
eyes are the finest I've ever seen."
"You'll come and dine with me to-night, won't you?" went on Gwent--
"You can spare me an hour or two of your company?"
And she snapped her fingers again,--then kissed them towards the
object of her adoration,--an object as unconscious and indifferent
as any senseless idol ever worshipped by blind devotees.
CHAPTER XIII
On his return to the Plaza Mr. Sam Gwent tried to get some
conversation with Manella, but found it difficult. She did not wait
on the visitors in the dining-room, and Gwent imagined he knew the
reason why. Her beauty was of too brilliant and riante a type to
escape the notice and admiration of men, whose open attentions were
likely to be embarrassing to her, and annoying to her employers. She
was therefore kept very much out of the way, serving on the upper
floors, and was only seen flitting up and down the staircase or
passing through the various corridors and balconies. However, when
evening fell and its dark, still heat made even the hotel lounge,
cooled as it was by a fountain in full play, almost unbearable,
Gwent, strolling forth into the garden, found her there standing
near a thick hedge of myrtle which exhaled a heavy scent as if every
leaf were being crushed between invisible fingers. She looked up as
she saw him approaching and smiled.
Manella gave her peculiar little uplift of the head which was one of
her many fascinating gestures.
Gwent laughed.
"Not a bit of it! He's the last man in the world to worry himself
about love!"
"Ah, perhaps you do not know!" And she waved her hands expressively.
"There was a wonderful lady came here to see him some weeks ago--she
stole up the hill at night, like a spirit--a little, little fairy
woman with golden hair--"
"Yes? Really? You don't say so! 'A little fairy woman'? Sounds like
a story!"
She raised her large dark eyes to his with perfect frankness.
Gwent was completely taken aback. Here was primitive passion with a
vengeance!--passion which admitted its own craving without
subterfuge. Manella's eyes were still uplifted in a kind of
childlike confidence.
"I am happy to love him!" she went on--"I wish only to serve him. He
does not love ME--oh, no!--he loves HER! But he hates her too--ah!"
and she gave a little shivering movement of her shoulders--"There is
no love without hate!--and when one loves and hates with the same
heart-beat, THAT is a love for life and death!" She checked herself
abruptly--then with a simplicity which was not without dignity
added--"I am saying too much, perhaps? But you are his friend--and I
think he must be very lonely up there!"
He stopped. How could this girl understand him? What would she know
of "inventors"--and "thinkers with new ideas"? A trifle embarrassed,
he looked at her. She nodded her dark head and smiled.
Sam Gwent almost jumped. A god! Oh, these women! Of what fantastic
exaggerations they are capable!
Gwent's nerves "jumped" for the second time. Roger Seaton's own
words--"I'll be master of the world" knocked repeatingly on his
brain with an uncomfortable thrill. He gathered up the straying
threads of his common sense and twisted them into a tough string.
"Thank you!" and Gwent sought for a helpful cigar which he lit--"You
have a very charming name! Yes--believe me, you think too much of
him!"
But Gwent was now nearly his normal business self again.
"Now don't you fly off in a rage at what I'm going to say,"--he
began, slowly--"You're only a child to me--so I'm just taking the
liberty of talking to you as a child. Don't give too much of your
time or your thought to the man you call a 'god.' He's no more a god
than I am. But I tell you one thing--he's a dangerous customer!"
Manella's great bright eyes opened wide like stars in the darkness.
"With ME?"
"Yes, with you! Why not? Why don't you manage it? A beautiful woman
like you could win the game in less than a week?"
"Knows what?"
"Oh, doesn't he?" Gwent was amused at her quaint way of putting it.
"Well, he's the first man I ever heard of, that didn't! That's all
bunkum, my good girl! Probably he's crying for the moon!"
"Crying for the moon? Just hankering after what can't be got. Lots
of men are afflicted that way. But they've been known to give up
crying and content themselves with something else."
"HE would never content himself!" she said--"If she--the woman that
came here, is the moon, he will always want her. Even _I_ want her!"
"Yes! I want to see her again!" A puzzled look contracted her brows.
"Since she spoke to me I have always thought of her,--I cannot get
her out of my mind! She just HOLDS me--yes!--in one of her little
white hands! There are few women like that I think!--women who hold
the souls of others as prisoners till they choose to let them go!"
Mr. Senator Gwent was fairly nonplussed. This dark-eyed Spanish
beauty with her romantic notions was almost too much for him. Had he
met her in a novel he would have derided the author of the book for
delineating such an impossible character,--but coming in contact
with her in real life, he was at a loss what to say. Especially as
he himself was quite aware of the mysterious "hold" exercised by
Morgana Royal on those whom she chose to influence either near or at
a distance. After a few seconds of deliberation he answered--
"Yes--I should say there are very few women of that rather
uncomfortable sort of habit,--the fewer the better, in my opinion.
Now Miss Manella Soriso, remember what I say to you! Don't think
about being 'held' by anybody except by a lover and husband! See?
Play the game! With such looks as God has given you, it should be
easy! Win your 'god' away from his thunderbolts before he begins
havoc with them from his miniature Olympus. If he wants the 'moon'
(and possibly he doesn't!) he won't say no to a star,--it's the next
best thing. Seriously now,"--and Gwent threw away the end of his
cigar and laid a hand gently on her arm--"be a good girl and think
over what I've said to you. Marry him if you can!--it will be the
making of him!"
"Neither has he,"--and Gwent gave a short laugh. "But he could make
a million dollars to-morrow--if he chose. Having only himself to
consider, he DOESN'T choose! If he had YOU, he'd change his opinion.
Seaton's not the man to have a wife without keeping her in comfort.
I tell you again, you can be the making of him. You can save his
life!"
She clasped her hands nervously. A little gasping sigh came from her
lips.
"Oh, he says that, does he?" and Gwent smiled--"Well, he'd be a fool
if he didn't!"
"Ah, but he does not care for beauty!" Manella went on. "He sees it
and he smiles at it, but it does not move him!"
Gwent looked at her in perplexity, not knowing quite how to deal
with the subject he himself had started. Truth to tell his nerves
had been put distinctly "on edge" by Seaton's cool, calculating and
seemingly callous assertion as to the powers he possessed to
destroy, if he chose, a nation,--and all sorts of uncomfortable
scraps of scientific information gleaned from books and treatises
suggested themselves vividly to his mind at this particular moment
when he would rather have forgotten them. As, for example--"A pound
weight of radio-active energy, if it could be extracted in as short
a time as we pleased, instead of in so many million years, could do
the work of a hundred and fifty tons of dynamite." This agreeable
fact stuck in his brain as a bone may stick in a throat, causing a
sense of congestion. Then the words of one of the "pulpit
thunderers" of New York rolled back on his ears--"This world will be
destroyed, not by the hand of God, but by the wilful and devilish
malingering of Man!" Another pleasant thought! And he felt himself
to be a poor weak fool to even try to put up a girl's beauty, a
girl's love as a barrier to the output of a destroying force
engineered by a terrific human intention,--it was like the old story
of the Scottish heroine who thrust a slender arm through the great
staple of a door to hold back the would-be murderers of a King.
She was right. Nothing was likely to move Roger Seaton from any
purpose he had once resolved upon. What to him was beauty? Merely a
"fortuitous concourse of atoms" moving for a time in one
personality. What was a girl? Just the young "female of the
species"--no more. And love? Sexual attraction, of which there was
enough and too much in Seaton's opinion. And the puzzled Gwent
wondered whether after all he would not have acted more wisely--or
diplomatically--in accepting Seaton's proposal to part with his
secret to the United States Government, even with the proviso and
State pledge that it was to be "used" should occasion arise, rather
than leave him to his own devices to do as he pleased with the
apparently terrific potentiality of which he alone had the knowledge
and the mastery. And while his thoughts thus buzzed in his head like
swarming bees, Manella stood regarding him in a kind of pitiful
questioning like a child with a broken toy who can not understand
"why" it is broken. As he did not speak at once she took up the
thread of conversation.
"You see how it is no use," she said. "No use to think of his ever
loving ME! But love for HIM--ah!--that I have, and that I will ever
keep in my heart!--and to save his life I would myself gladly die!"
"There it is! You women always run to extremes! 'Gladly die' indeed!
Poor girl, why should you 'die' for him or for any man! That's sheer
sentimental nonsense! There's not a man that ever lived, or that
ever will live, that's worth the death of a woman! That's so! Men
think too much of themselves--they've been killing women ever since
they were born--it's time they stopped a bit."
Gwent laughed.
"No,--not I, my child! I'm too old. I've done with love-making and
'sport' of all kinds. I don't even drive a golf-ball, in make-
believe that it's a woman I'm hitting as fast and far as I can. Oh,
yes!--you stare!--you are wondering why, if I have such ideas, I
should suggest love-making and marriage to YOU,--well, I don't
actually recommend it!--but I'm rather thinking more of your 'god'
than of you. You might possibly help him a bit--"
"Don't be afraid, my girl! I'm not a cad. I wouldn't give you away
for the world! I've no right to say a word about you, and I shall
not. My letter will be a merely business one--you shall read it if
you like---"
"Oh no!"--she said at once, with proud frankness; "I would not doubt
your word!"
And a vague regret for his lost youth moved him; he was a very
wealthy man, and had he been in his prime he would have tried a
matrimonial chance with this unspoilt beautiful creature,--it would
have pleased him to robe her in queenly garments and to set the
finest diamonds in her dark tresses, so that she should be the
wonder and envy of all beholders. He answered her last remark with a
kindly little nod and smile.
"Come along! Let us get in!" and Gwent caught Manella's hand--"Run!"
And like children they ran together through the garden into the
Plaza lounge, reaching it just before a second lightning flash and
peal of thunder renewed double emphasis.
"Good-night, Senor!"
CHAPTER XIV
"You will have nothing to do but just be pleasant!" Morgana had told
her, smilingly, "And enjoy your self as you like. Of course I do not
expect to be controlled or questioned,--I am an independent woman,
and go my own way, but I'm not at all 'modern.' I don't drink or
smoke or 'dope,' or crave for male society. I think you'll find
yourself all right!"
And Lady Kingswood had indeed "found herself all right." Her own
daughter had never been so thoughtful for her comfort as Morgana
was, and she became day by day more interested and fascinated by the
original turn of mind and the bewitching personality of the strange
little creature for whom the ordinary amusements of society seemed
to have no attraction. And now, installed in her own sumptuously
fitted rooms in the Palazzo d'Oro, Morgana's Sicilian paradise, she
almost forgot there was such a thing as poverty, or the sordid
business of "making both ends meet." Walking up and down the rose-
marble loggia and looking out to the exquisite blue of the sea, she
inwardly thanked God for all His mercies, and wondered at the
exceptional good luck that had brought her so much peace, combined
with comfort and luxury in the evening of her days. She was a
handsome old lady; her refined features, soft blue eyes and white
hair were a "composition" for an eighteenth-century French
miniature, and her dress combined quiet elegance with careful taste.
She was inflexibly loyal to her stated position; she neither
"questioned" nor "controlled" Morgana, or attempted to intrude an
opinion as to her actions or movements,--and if, as was only
natural, she felt a certain curiosity concerning the aims and doings
of so brilliant and witch-like a personality she showed no sign of
it. She was interested in the Marchese Rivardi, but still more so in
the priest, Don Aloysius, to whom she felt singularly attracted,
partly by his own dignified appearance and manner, and partly by the
leaning she herself had towards the Catholic Faith where "Woman" is
made sacred in the person of the Holy Virgin, and deemed worthy of
making intercession with the Divine. She knew, as we all in our
innermost souls know, that it is a symbol of the greatest truth that
can ever be taught to humanity.
At that moment Morgana came slowly up the steps cut in the grass
bordered on either side by flowers, and approached her.
"Here are some roses for you, dear 'Duchess!'" she said, "Duchess"
being the familiar or "pet" name she elected to call her by.
"Specially selected, I assure you! Are you tired?--or may I have a
talk?"
Lady Kingswood took the roses with a smile, touching Morgana's cheek
playfully with one of the paler pink buds.
"A talk by all means!" she replied--"How can I be tired, dear child?
I'm a lazy old woman, doing nothing all day but enjoy myself!"
"That's right!--I'm glad!" she said. "That's what I want you to do!
It's a pretty place, this Palazzo d'Oro, don't you think?"
Morgana gave a wistful glance round her at the beautiful gardens and
blue sea beyond.
Morgana laughed.
"Oh, surely you know what I mean!" pursued Morgana--"YOU have been
married. Well, when you were first married were you very, very
happy? Did your husband love you entirely without a thought for
anybody or anything else?--and were you all in all to each other?"
"My husband and I were very fond of each other. We were the best of
friends and good companions. Of course he had his military duties to
attend to and was often absent--"
"And you call that LOVE!" said Morgana, with a passionate thrill in
her voice--"Love! 'Love that is blood within the veins of time!'
Just 'rubbing along pleasantly together!' Dear 'Duchess,' that
wouldn't suit ME!"
"But then, what WOULD suit you?" she queried--"You know you mustn't
expect the impossible!"
"My dear girl, you are too idealistic! Having a baby is not at all a
romantic business!--quite the reverse! And babies are not
interesting till they 'begin to take notice' as the nurses say. Then
when they get older and have to go to school you soon find out that
you have loved THEM far more than they have loved or ever WILL love
YOU!"
As she said this her voice trembled a little and she sighed.
Morgana lifted her eyes. The "fey" light was glittering in them.
"Yes! She thought he loved her! That's what many a woman thinks--
that 'he'--the particular 'he' loves her! But how seldom he does!
How much more often he loves himself!"
This was the usual panacea which the excellent lady offered for all
troubles, and Morgana smiled.
"You say that just now"--she said--"But I think you will alter your
mind some day! You would not like to be quite alone always--not even
in the Palazzo d'Oro."
"YOU are quite alone?"
"A very welcome little boat!" said Lady Kingswood, with feeling--"A
rescue in the nick of time!"
"Never mind that!" and Morgan waved her pretty hand expressively--
"My point is that marriage--just marriage--has not done much for
you. It is what women clamour for, and scheme for,--and nine out of
ten regret the whole business when they have had their way. There
are so many more things in life worth winning!"
"I hope you will do nothing rash!"--said Lady Kingswood, mildly; she
was very ignorant of modern discovery and invention, and all attempt
to explain anything of the kind to her would have been a hope less
business--"I understand that it is always necessary to take a pilot
and an observer in these terrible sky-machines--"
"Poets are always prophetic,--that is, REAL poets, not modern verse
mongers; and I fancy Keats must have imagined something in the far
distant future like my 'White Eagle!' For it really IS 'a beautiful
thing made new'--a beautiful natural force put to new uses--and who
knows?--I may yet surprise those 'sky-children!'"
"If you haven't read Keats, you must have read at some time or other
the 'Arabian Nights' and the story of 'Sindbad the Sailor'? Yes? You
think you have? Well, you know how poor Sindbad got into the Valley
of Diamonds and waited for an eagle to fly down and carry him off!
That's just like me! I've been dropped into a Valley of Diamonds and
often wondered how I should escape--but the Eagle has arrived!"
Morgana nodded.
"My dear child, if you are making a sort of allegory on your wealth,
you are not 'out of the valley' nor are you likely to be!"
Morgana sighed.
"What? Vulgar?"
"Oh, no, he isn't. He's eccentric, but not vulgar. He's aristocratic
to the tips of his toes--and English. That accounts for his
rudeness. Sometimes, you know--only sometimes--Englishmen can be
VERY rude! But I'd rather have them so--it's a sort of well-bred
clumsiness, like the manners of a Newfoundland dog. It's not the
'make-a-dollar' air of American men."
"You are quite English yourself, aren't you?" queried her companion.
"No--not English in any sense. I'm pure Celtic of Celt, from the
farthest Highlands of Scotland. But I hate to say I'm 'Scotch,' as
slangy people use that word for whisky! I'm just Highland-born. My
father and mother were the same, and I came to life a wild moor,
among mists and mountains and stormy seas--I'm always glad of that!
I'm glad my eyes did not look their first on a city! There's a
tradition in the part of Scotland where I was born which tells of a
history far far back in time when sailors from Phoenicia came to our
shores,--men greatly civilised when we all were but savages, and
they made love to the Highland women and had children by them,--then
when they went away back to Egypt they left many traces of Eastern
customs and habits which remain to this day. My father used always
to say that he could count his ancestry back to Egypt!--it pleased
him to think so and it did nobody any harm!"
"Dear 'Duchess' be quite easy in your mind!" she said--"I want you
very much on land, but I shall not want you in the air! You will be
quite safe and happy here in the Palazzo d'Oro"--she turned as she
saw the shadow of a man's tall figure fall on the smooth marble
pavement of the loggia--"Ah! Here is the Marchese! We were just
speaking of you!"
A soft "ting-ting tong"--rang from the olive and ilex woods below
the Palazzo,--and Morgana, listening, smiled.
"Poor Don Aloysius!" she said--"He will now go to his soup maigre--
and we to our poulet, sauce bechamel,--and he will be quite as
contented as we are!"
"I think so,--yes! He has faith in God--a great support that has
given way for most of the peoples of this world."
"Oh, you are right! You are very right!" exclaimed Morgana suddenly,
and with emphasis--"We know that when even one human being is unable
to recognise his best friend we say--'Poor man! His brain is gone!'
It's the same thing with a nation. Or a world! When it is so ailing
that it cannot recognise the Friend who brought it into being, who
feeds it, keeps it, and gives it all it has, we must say the same
thing--'Its brain is gone!'"
Rivardi was surprised at the passionate energy she threw into these
words.
Her voice thrilled on the air, and Lady Kingswood, who was crossing
the loggia, leaning on her stick, paused to look at the eloquent
speaker. She was worth looking at just then, for she seemed
inspired. Her eyes were extraordinarily brilliant, and her whole
personality expressed a singular vitality coupled with an ethereal
grace that suggested some thing almost superhuman.
CHAPTER XV
Two or three hours later the "White Eagle" was high in air above the
Palazzo d'Oro. Down below Lady Kingswood stood on the seashore by
the aerodrome, watching the wonderful ship of the sky with dazzled,
scared eyes--amazed at the lightning speed of its ascent and the
steadiness of its level flight. She had seen it spread its great
wings as by self-volition and soar out of the aerodrome with Morgana
seated inside like an elfin queen in a fairy car--she had seen the
Marchese Giulio Rivardi "take the helm" with the assistant Gaspard,
now no longer a prey to fear, beside him. Up, up and away they had
flown, waving to her till she could see their forms no longer--till
the "White Eagle" itself looked no bigger than a dove soaring in the
blue. And while she waited, even this faint dove-image vanished! She
looked in every direction, but the skies were empty. To her there
was something very terrifying in this complete disappearance of
human beings in the vast stretches of the air--they had gone so
silently, too, for the "White Eagle's" flight made no sound, and
though the afternoon was warm and balmy she felt chilled with the
cold of nervous apprehension. Yet they had all assured her there was
no cause for alarm,--they were only going on a short trial trip and
would be back to dinner.
"Yes, she has gone!" sighed Lady Kingswood--"and the Marchese with
her, and one assistant. Her 'nerve' is simply astonishing!"
"Then what will you do when you are an angel, dear lady?" queried
Aloysius, playfully--"You will have to leave terra firma then! Have
you ever thought of that?"
She smiled.
"Absolutely none!"
"I did."
"None."
A slight sigh escaped him, and Lady Kingswood looked at his fine,
composed features with deep interest.
"And surely that is best!" said Lady Kingswood, "and surely you have
found happiness, or what is nearest to happiness, in your beautiful
Faith?"
"Oh, if I could only think as you do!" she said, in a low tone--"Is
it truly the Catholic Church that teaches these things?"
"The Catholic Church is the sign and watchword of all these things!"
he answered--"Not only that, but its sacred symbols, though ancient
enough to have been adopted from Babylonia and Chaldea, are actually
the symbols of our most modern science. Catholicism itself does not
as yet recognise this. Like a blind child stumbling towards the
light it has FELT the discoveries of science long before discovery.
In our sacraments there are the hints of the transmutation of
elements,--the 'Sanctus' bell suggests wireless telegraphy or
telepathy, that is to say, communication between ourselves and the
divine Unseen,--and if we are permitted to go deeper, we shall
unravel the mystery of that 'rising from the dead' which means
renewed life. I am a 'prejudiced' priest, of course,"--and he
smiled, gravely--"but with all its mistakes, errors, crimes (if you
will) that it is answerable for since its institution, through the
sins of unworthy servants, Catholicism is the only creed with the
true seed of spiritual life within it--the only creed left standing
on a firm foundation in this shaking world!"
"There are only three things that can make a nation great,--the love
of God, the truth of man, the purity of woman. Without these three
the greatest civilisation existing must perish,--no matter how wide
its power or how vast its wealth. Ignorant or vulgar persons may
sneer at this as 'the obvious'--but it is the 'obvious' sun alone
that rules the day."
"How truly you speak!" she murmured--"And yet we live in a time when
such truths appear to have no influence with people at all. Every
one is bent on pleasure--on self--"
"As every one was in the 'Cities of the Plain,'"--he said, "and we
may well expect another rain of fire!"
Here, lifting his eyes, he saw in the soft blush rose of the
approaching sunset a small object like a white bird flying homeward
across the sea.
They stood together, gazing into the reddening west, thrilled with
expectancy,--while with a steady swiftness and accuracy of movement
the bird-like object which at the first glimpse had seemed so small
gradually loomed larger with nearer vision, its enormous wings
spreading wide and beating the air rhythmically as though the true
pulsation of life impelled their action. Neither Lady Kingswood nor
Don Aloysius exchanged a word, so absorbed were they in watching the
"White Eagle" arrive, and not till it began to descend towards the
shore did they relax their attention and turn to each other with
looks of admiration and amazement.
At that moment the "White Eagle" swooped suddenly over the gardens,
noiselessly and with an enormous spread of wing that was like a
white cloud in the sky--then gracefully swerved aside towards its
"shed" or aerodrome, folding its huge pinions as of its own will and
sliding into its quarters as easily as a hand may slide into a
loose-fitting glove. The two interested watchers of its descent and
swift "run home" had no time to exchange more than a few words of
comment before Morgana ran lightly up the terrace, calling to them
with all the gaiety of a child returning on a holiday.
"Well, I'm glad you've come back all right"--said Lady Kingswood--
"It's a great relief! I certainly was afraid---"
She slipped her arm through Lady Kingswood's and hurried her away.
Don Aloysius was puzzled by her words,--and, as Rivardi came up to
him raised his eyebrows interrogatively. The Marchese answered the
unspoken query by an impatient shrug.
Rivardi hesitated.
"Oh, MINE! I must give up all hope--she will never think of me more
than as a workman who has carried out her design. There is something
very strange about her--she seems, at certain moments, to withdraw
herself from all the interests of mere humanity. To-day, for
instance, she looked down from the air-ship on the swarming crowds
in the streets of Naples and said 'Poor little microbes! How sad it
is to see them crawling about and festering down there! What IS the
use of them! I wish I knew!' Then, when I ventured to suggest that
possibly they were more than 'microbes,'--they were human beings
that loved and worked and thought and created, she looked at me with
those wonderful eyes of hers and answered--'Microbes do the same--
only we don't take the trouble to think about them! But if we knew
their lives and intentions, I dare say we should find they are quite
as clever in their own line as we are in ours!' What is one to say
to a woman who argues in this way?"
"But she argues quite correctly after all! My son, you are like the
majority of men--they grow impatient with clever women,--they prefer
stupid ones. In fact they deliberately choose stupid ones to be the
mothers of their children--hence the ever increasing multitude of
fools!" He moved towards the open doors of the beautiful lounge-hall
of the Palazzo, Rivardi walking at his side. "But you will grant me
a measure of wisdom in the advice I gave you the other day-the
little millionairess is unlike other women--she is not capable of
loving,--not in the way loving is understood in this world,--
therefore do not seek from her what she cannot give!--As for her
'flying alone'--leave that to the fates!--I do not think she will
attempt it."
CHAPTER XVI
"I cannot forgive your putting yourself into danger," said Rivardi--
"You ran a great risk--you must pardon me if I hold your life too
valuable to be lightly lost."
"My dear!" exclaimed Lady Kingswood--"How can you say such a thing!"
"But--is not that your own fault?" suggested Don Aloysius, gently.
Morgana's eyes flashed up, then drooped under their white lids
fringed with gold.
"And many people with eyes would not see it at all,"--said Don
Aloysius--"They would go indoors, shut the shutters and play Bridge!
But those who can see it are the happiest!"
And he quoted--
"Who would not know him!" replied Aloysius--"One is not blind to the
sun!"
"But what does that matter?" returned Aloysius. "Envy and detraction
in their blackness only emphasise his brightness, just as a star
shines more brilliantly in a dark sky. One always recognises a great
spirit by the littleness of those who strive to wound it,--if it
were not great it would not be worth wounding!"
Morgana moved away from the column where she had leaned, and came
more fully into the broad moonlight.
"My dear Marchese Giulio!" she said, indulgently, "You really are a
positive child in your very optimistic look-out on the world of to-
day! Suppose I were to 'give them the chance,' as you suggest, to
learn my secret, how do you think I should be received? I might go
to the great scientific institutions of London and Paris and I might
ask to be heard--I might offer to give a 'demonstration,'" here she
began to laugh; "Oh dear!--it would never do for a woman to
'demonstrate' and terrify all the male professors, would it! No!--
well, I should probably have to wait months before being 'heard,'--
then I should probably meet with the chill repudiation dealt out to
that wonderful Hindu scientist, Jagadis Bose, by Burdon Sanderson
when the brilliant Indian savant tried to teach men what they never
knew before about the life of plants. Not only that, I should be met
with incredulity and ridicule--'a woman! a WOMAN dares to assume
knowledge superior to ours!' and so forth. No, no! Let the wise men
try their steam air-ships and spoil the skies by smoke and vapour,
so that agriculture becomes more and more difficult, and sunshine an
almost forgotten benediction!--let them go their own foolish way
till they learn wisdom of themselves--no one could ever teach them
what they refuse to learn, till they tumble into a bog or quicksand
of dilemma and have to be forcibly dragged out."
"Very often! Marja Sklodowska Curie, for example, has pulled many
scientists out of the mud, but they are not grateful enough to
acknowledge it. One of the greatest women of the age, she is allowed
to remain in comparative obscurity,--even Anatole France, though he
called her a 'genius,' had not the generosity or largeness of mind
to praise her as she deserves. Though, of course, like all really
great souls she is indifferent to praise or blame--the notice of the
decadent press, noisy and vulgar like the beating of the cheap-
jack's drum at a country fair, has no attraction for her. Nothing is
known of her private life,--not a photograph of her is obtainable--
she has the lovely dignity of complete reserve. She is one of my
heroines in this life--she does not offer herself to the cheap
journalist like a milliner's mannequin or a film face. She will not
give herself away--neither will I!"
Don Aloysius rose from his chair and put aside his emptied coffee-
cup. His tall fine figure silhouetted more densely black by the
whiteness of the moon-rays had a singularly imposing effect.
"Nothing has chanced that causes me any wonder," she said--"or that
would 'make' me accept any theory which I could not put to the test
for myself. But, out in New York while I have been away, a fellow-
student of mine--just a boy,--has found out the means of 'creating
energy from some unknown source'--that is, unknown to the scientists
of rule-and-line. They call his electric apparatus 'an atmospheric
generator.' Naturally this implies that the atmosphere has something
to 'generate' which has till now remained hidden and undeveloped. I
knew this long ago. Had I NOT known it I could not have thought out
the secret of the 'White Eagle'!"
She lifted her fair arms upward with a kind of expansive rapture,--
the moonbeams seemed to filter through the delicate tissue of her
garments adding brightness to their folds and sparkling frostily on
the diamonds in her hair,--and even Lady Kingswood's very placid
nature was conscious of an unusual thrill, half of surprise and half
of fear, at the quite "other world" appearance she thus presented.
Morgana laughed, and let her arms drop at her sides. She felt rather
than saw the admiring eyes of the two men upon her and her mood
changed.
Just then the soft slow tolling of a bell struck through the air and
Don Aloysius prepared to take his leave.
Lady Kingswood looked dubiously at her, but was too tactful to offer
any objection such as the "danger of catching cold" which the
ordinary duenna would have suggested, and which would have seemed
absurd in the warmth and softness of such a summer night. Besides,
if Morgana chose to "wander by the light of the moon "who could
prevent her? No one! She stepped off the loggia on to the velvety
turf below with an aerial grace more characteristic of flying than
walking, and glided along between the tall figures of the Marchese
and Don Aloysius like a dream-spirit of the air, and Lady Kingswood,
watching her as she descended the garden terraces and gradually
disappeared among the trees, was impressed, as she had often been
before, by a strange sense of the supernatural,--as if some being
wholly unconnected with ordinary mortal happenings were visiting the
world by a mere chance. She was a little ashamed of this "uncanny"
feeling,--and after a few minutes' hesitation she decided to retire
within the house and to her own apartments, rightly judging that
Morgana would be better pleased to find her so gone than waiting for
her return like a sentinel on guard. She gave a lingering look at
the exquisite beauty of the moonlit scene, and thought with a sigh--
And then she turned, slowly pacing across the loggia and entering
the Palazzo, where the gleam of electric lamps within rivalled the
moonbeams and drew her out of sight.
"You are so very serious, you good Padre Aloysius!" she said--"And
you, Marchese--you who are generally so charming!--to-night you are
a very morose companion! You are still in the dumps about my
steering the 'White Eagle!'--how cross of you!"
"True!" she said--"And you would save this phantom from vanishing
into air utterly?"
"You are good!--far too good!" she said--"And I am wild and wilful--
forgive me! I will say good night here--we are just at the gate.
Good night, Marchese! I promise you shall fly with me to the East--I
will not go alone. There!--be satisfied!" And she gave him a
bewitching smile--then with another markedly gentle "Good night" to
Aloysius, she turned away and left them, choosing a path back to the
house which was thickly overgrown with trees, so that her figure was
almost immediately lost to view.
"And you?"
"I? My son, I have no aim in view with regard to her! I should like
to see her happy--she has great wealth, and great gifts of intellect
and ability--but these do not make real happiness for a woman. And
yet--I doubt whether she could ever be happy in the ordinary woman's
way."
"No, because she is not an 'ordinary' woman," said Rivardi, quickly-
-"More's the pity I think--for HER!"
And there swept over her mind the memory of Manella--her rich, warm,
dark beauty--her frank abandonment to passions purely primitive,--
and she smiled, a cold little weird smile.
CHAPTER XVII
"So the man from Washington told you to bring this to me?"
"Not a bit of it!" and Roger stretched himself lazily and yawned--
"He's the friend of nobody who is poor. But he's the comrade of
everybody with plenty of cash. He's as hard as a dried old walnut,
without the shred of a heart--"
Seaton threw back his head and laughed heartily with real enjoyment.
"My dear girl, I really cannot regard Mr. Senator Gwent as a figure
to be reverenced!"--he said--"He's one of the dustiest, driest old
dollar-grabbers in the States. I gave him the chance of fresh grab--
but he was too much afraid to take it--"
He went before her into the hut, and she followed. He bade her sit
down in the chair by the window,--she obeyed, and glanced about her
shyly, yet curiously. The room was not untidy, as she expected it
would be without a woman's hand to set it in order,--on the contrary
it was the perfection of neatness and cleanliness. Her gaze was
quickly attracted by the bowl of perpetually moving fluid in the
center of the table.
"What is that?" she asked.
"A syndicate! Old humbug! He knows perfectly well that the thing
could not be run by a syndicate! It must be a State's own single
possession--a State's special secret. If I were as bent on sheer
destructiveness as he imagines me to be, I should waste no more
time, but offer it to Germany. Germany would take it at once--
Germany would require no persuasion to use it!--Germany would make
me a millionaire twice over for the monopoly of such a force!--that
is, if I wanted to be a millionaire, which I don't. But Gwent's a
fool--I must have scared him out of his wits, or he wouldn't write
all this stuff about risks to my life, advising me to marry quickly
and settle down! Good God! I?--Marry and settle down? What a tame
ending to a life's adventure! Hello, Manella!"
His eyes lighted upon her as if he had only just seen her. He rose
from his chair and went over to where she sat by the window.
"Patient girl!" he said, patting her dark head with his big sun-
browned hand--"As good as gold and quieter than a mouse! Well! You
may go now. I've read the letter and there's no answer. Nothing for
me to write, or for you to post!" She lifted her brilliant eyes to
his--what glorious eyes they were! He would not have been man had he
not been conscious of their amorous fire. He patted her head again
in quite a paternal way.
She stood upright, turning her head away from the touch of his hand.
She had never looked more attractive than at that moment,--she wore
the white gown in which he had before admired her, and a cluster of
roses which were pinned to her bodice gave rich contrast to the soft
tone of her smooth, suntanned skin, and swayed lightly with the
unquiet heaving of the beautiful bosom which might have served a
sculptor as a perfect model. A faint, quivering smile was on her
lips.
"You always don't? That sounds very droll! You will be unlike every
man in the world, then,--they all marry!"
He touched her hair gently, putting back a stray curl that had
fallen across her forehead.
She tossed her head back, and her eyes flashed almost angrily.
"Isn't there?" and putting his arm round her, he drew her close to
himself and looked full in her eyes--"Manella--there WAS!--a moment
ago!"
And she lifted her face to his--a face so lovely, so young, so warm
with her soul's inward rapture that its glowing beauty might have
made a lover of an anchorite. But with Roger Seaton the impulses of
passion were brief--the momentary flame had gone out in vapour, and
the spirit of the anchorite prevailed. He looked at the dewy red
lips, delicately parted like rose petals--but he did not kiss them,
and the clasp of his arms round her gradually relaxed.
"It is not the truth," she said, in a low voice quivering with
intense feeling--"you tell me lies to disguise yourself. But I can
see! You yourself love a woman--but you have not my courage!--you
are afraid to own it! You would give the world to hold her in your
arms as you just now held ME--but you will not admit it--not even to
yourself--and you pretend to hate when you are mad for love!--just
as you pretend to be ill when you are well! You should be ashamed to
say there is no such thing as love! What mean you then by playing so
false with yourself?--with me?--and with HER?"
She looked lovelier than ever in her anger, and he was taken by
surprise at the impetuous and instinctive guess she had made at the
complexity of his moods, which he himself scarcely understood. For a
moment he stood inert, embarrassed by her straight, half-scornful
glance--then he regained his usual mental poise and smiled with
provoking good humour and tolerance.
"You have much talk"--she said--"and no doubt you are clever. But I
think you are all wrong!"
"You do? Wise child! Now listen to my much talk a little longer!
Have you ever watched silkworms? No? They are typical examples of
humanity. A silkworm, while it is a worm, feeds to repletion,--you
can never get it as many mulberry leaves as it would like to eat--
then when it is gorged, it builds itself a beautiful house of silk
(which is taken away from it in due course) and comes out at the
door in wings!--wings it hardly uses and seems not to understand--
then, if it is a female moth, it looks about for 'love' from the
male. If the male 'loves' it, the female produces a considerable
number of eggs like pin-heads--and then?--what then? Why she
promptly dies, and there's an end of her! Her sole aim and end of
being was to produce eggs, which in their turn become worms and
repeat the same dull routine of business. Now--think me as brutal as
you like--I say a woman is very like a female silkworm,--she comes
out of her beautiful silken cocoon of maidenhood with wings which
she doesn't know how to use--she merely flutters about waiting to be
'loved'--and when this dream she calls 'love' comes to her, she
doesn't dream any longer--she wakes--to find her life finished!--
finished, Manella!--dry as a gourd with all the juice run out!"
Manella rose from her seat beside him. The warm light in her eyes
had gone--her face was pale, and as she drew herself up to her
stately height she made a picture of noble scorn.
"I am sorry for you!" she said. "If you think these things your
thoughts are quite dreadful! You are a cruel man after all! I am
sorry I spoke of the beautiful little lady who came here to see you-
-you do not love her--you cannot!--I felt sure you did--but I am
wrong!--there is no love in you except for yourself and your own
will!"
He threw out his hands with a gesture that was almost tragic, and
such an expression came into his face of savagery and tenderness
commingled that Manella retreated from him in vague terror.
The colour rushed back to her cheeks in a warm glow--her great dark
eyes were ablaze with indignation. She drew her hand quickly from
his hold.
"And I hope you will never get her!" she said, passionately--"I will
pray the Holy Virgin to save her from you! For you are wicked! She
is like an angel--and you are a devil!--yes, surely you must be, or
you could not say such horrible things! You do not want me, you say?
I know that! I am a fool to have shown you my heart--you have broken
it, but you do not care--you could have been master of my brain and
soul whenever you pleased---"
"I am going!" she answered--"But I shall come again. Oh, yes! And
yet again! and very often! I shall come even if it is only to find
you dead on this hill--killed by your own secret! Yes--I shall
come!"
She nodded vehemently. Tears were in her eyes and she turned her
head away that he might not see them.
And with a wild, sobbing cry she rushed away from him down the hill
before he could move or utter a word.
CHAPTER XVIII
"How small the world looks from the air!" said Morgana--"It's not
worth half the fuss made about it! And yet--it's such a pretty
little God's toy!"
"Good! Now let us dine!" said Morgana, opening a leather case such
as is used for provisions in motoring, set plates, glasses, wine and
food on the table--"A cold collation--but we'll have hot coffee to
finish. We could have dined in Cairo, but it would have been a bore!
Marchese, we'll stop here, suspended in mid-air, and the stars shall
be our festal lamps, vying with our own!" and she turned on a switch
which illumined the whole interior of the air-ship with a soft
bright radiance--"Whereabouts are we? Still over the Libyan desert?"
Rivardi consulted the chart which was spread open in his steering-
cabin.
"No--I think not. We have passed beyond it. We are over the Sahara.
Just now we can take no observations--the sunset is dying rapidly
and in a few minutes it will be quite dark."
"Well, now, have I not been very good?" she asked suddenly of
Rivardi--"Did I not say you should fly with me to the East, and are
you not here? I have not come alone--though that was my wish,--I
have even brought Gaspard who had no great taste for the trip!"
Morgana laughed.
"We can do that to-morrow, I dare say!" she said; "If there is
nothing to see in the whole expanse of the desert but dark
emptiness"--
"What is the use of it all!" she thought--"If one could only find
the purpose of this amazing creation! We learn a very little, only
to see how much more there is to know! We live our lives, all
hoping, searching, praying--and never an answer comes for all our
prayers! From the very beginning--not a word from the mysterious
Poet who has written the Poem! We are to breed and die--and there an
end!--it seems strange and cruel, because so purposeless! Or is it
our fault? Do we fail to discover the things we ought to know?"
So she mused, while her "White Eagle" ship sailed serenely on with a
leisurely, majestic motion through a seeming wilderness of stars.
Courageous as she was, with a veritable lion-heart beating in her
delicate little body, and firm as was her resolve to discover what
no woman had ever discovered before, to-night she was conscious of
actual fear. Something--she knew not what--crept with a compelling
influence through her blood,--she felt that some mysterious force
she had never reckoned with was insidiously surrounding her with an
invisible ring. She called to Rivardi--
"Are we not flying too high? Have you altered the course?"
"Do I not know it? You are too literal, Marchese! Of course I jest--
you could not suppose me to be in earnest! But I am sure we are
passing through the waves of a new ether--not altogether suited to
the average human being. The average human being is not made to
inhabit the higher spaces of the upper air--hark!--What was that?"
She held up a warning hand, and listened. There was a distinct and
persistent chiming of bells. Bells loud and soft,--bells mellow and
deep, clear and silvery--clanging in bass and treble shocks of
rising and falling rhythm and tune! "Do you hear?"
"Look! Look!" she exclaimed--"We have found it! The Brazen City!"
But she called in vain. Turning for response, she saw, to her
amazement and alarm, both men stretched on the floor, senseless! She
ran to them and made every effort to rouse them,--they were
breathing evenly and quietly as in profound and comfortable sleep--
but it was beyond her skill to renew their consciousness. Then it
flashed upon her that the "White Eagle" was no longer moving,--that
it was, in fact, quite stationary,--and a quick rush of energy
filled her as she realised that now she was as she had wished to be,
alone with her air-ship to do with it as she would. All fear had
left her,--her nerves were steady, and her daring spirit was fired
with resolution. Whatever the mischance which had so swiftly
overwhelmed Rivardi and Gaspard, she could not stop now to question,
or determine it,--she was satisfied that they were not dead, or
dying. She went to the steering-gear to take it in hand--but though
the mysterious mechanism of the air-ship was silently and rapidly
throbbing, the ship did not move. She grasped the propeller--it
resisted her touch with hard and absolute inflexibility. All at once
a low deep voice spoke close to her ear--
Her heart gave one wild bound,--then almost stood still from sheer
terror. She felt herself swaying into unconsciousness, and made a
violent effort to master the physical weakness that threatened her.
That voice--what voice? Surely one evoked from her own imagination!
It spoke again--this time with an intonation that was exquisitely
soothing and tender.
She raised her eyes and looked about nervously. The soft luminance
which lit the "White Eagle's" interior from end to end showed
nothing new or alarming,--her dainty, rose-lined cabin held no
strange or supernatural visitant,--all was as usual. After a pause
she rallied strength enough to question the audible but invisible
intruder.
"One from the city below,"--was the instant reply given in full
clear accents--"I am speaking on the Sound Ray."
She held her breath in mute wonder, listening. The voice went on,
equably--
"You know the use of wireless telephony--we have it as you have it,
only your methods are imperfect. We speak on Sound Rays which are
not yet discovered in your country. We need neither transmitter nor
receiver. Wherever we send our messages, no matter how great the
distance, they are always heard."
"That was kind!" she said, and smiled. Some one smiled in response--
or she thought so. Presently she spoke again--
"Then you hold me here a prisoner?"
"No. You can return the way you came, quite freely."
"Why?"
"Because you are not one of us." The Voice hesitated. "And because
you are not alone."
"Is it that force you speak of--the force which guards your city--
that has struck them down?" she asked.
"Yes."
At this every nerve in her body started quivering like harp strings
pulled by testing fingers. The unseen speaker knew her name!--and
uttered it with a soft delicacy that made it sound more than
musical. She leaned forward, extending a hand as though to touch the
invisible.
"As we all know you,"--came the answer--"Even as YOU have known the
inside of a sun-ray!"
"You are speaking to me in English. Are you all English folk in your
city?"
"No nationality?"
"None. We are one people. But we speak every language that ever has
been spoken in the past, or is spoken in the present. I speak
English to you because it is your manner of talk, though not your
manner of life."
"Because you are not happy in it. Your manner of life is ours. It
has nothing to do with nations or peoples. You are Morgana."
"And you?" she cried with sudden eagerness--"Oh, who are you that
speak to me?--man, woman, or angel? What are the dwellers in your
city, if it is in truth a city, and not a dream!"
Impelled to movement, she went to the window which she had left to
take up the steering-gear,--and from there saw again the wonderful
scene spread out below, the towers, spires, cupolas and bridges, all
lit with that mysterious golden luminance like smouldering sunset
fire.
"Can I never enter it?" she asked, appealingly--"Will you never let
me in?"
There was a silence, which seemed to her very long. Still standing
at the window of her cabin she looked down on the shining city, a
broad stretch of splendid gold luminance under the canopy of the
dark sky with its millions of stars. Then the Voice answered her--
These words sounded so close to her ear that she felt sure the
speaker must be standing beside her.
"Wait!" said the Voice--"You say this without thought. You do not
realise the meaning of your words. For--if you come, you must stay!"
"With all my soul I care to hear!" she said--"But where do you speak
from? And who are you that speak?"
Another second, and the cabin was filled with a pearly lustre like
the vapour which sweeps across the hills in an early summer dawn--
and in the center of this as in an aureole stood a nobly
proportioned figure, clad in gold-coloured garments fashioned after
the early Greek models. Presumably this personage was human,--but
never was a semblance of humanity so transfigured. The face and form
were those of a beautiful youth,--the eyes were deep and brilliant,
--and the expression of the features was one of fine serenity and
kindliness. Morgana gazed and gazed, bending herself towards her
wonderful visitor with all her soul in her eyes,--when suddenly the
vision, if so it might be called, paled and vanished. She uttered a
little cry.
"Where every being has beauty for a birthright, how should you know
me more than another!" said the Voice--"Beauty is common to all in
our city--as common as health, because we obey the Divine laws of
both."
"Do you attack and destroy all strangers so?" she asked--"Is that
your rule?"
"It is our rule to keep away the mischief of the modern world"--
replied the Voice--"As well admit a pestilence as the men and women
of to-day!"
"No, you are not,--you are a woman of the future!" and the Voice was
grave and insistent--"You are one of the new race. At the appointed
hour you will take your part with us in the new world?"
A sense of great awe swept over her, oppressive and humiliating. She
looked once more through her cabin window at the city spread out
below, and saw that some of the lights were being extinguished in
the taller buildings and on the bridges which connected streets and
avenues in a network of architectural beauty.
"We are releasing you from the barrier. You are free to depart."
She sighed.
"I have no wish to go!" she said.
"You must!" The Voice became commanding. "If you stay now, you and
your companions are doomed to perish. There is no alternative. Be
satisfied that we know you--we watch you--we shall expect you sooner
or later. Meanwhile--guide your ship!--the way is open."
"Not farewell!" came the reply, spoken softly and with tenderness--
"We shall meet again soon! I will speak to you in Sicily!"
The last syllables died away like faintly sung music--and in a few
more seconds the great air-ship was sailing steadily in a level line
and at a swift pace onward,--the last shining glimpse of the
mysterious City vanished, and the "White Eagle" soared over a sable
blackness of empty desert, through a dark space besprinkled with
stars. Filled with a new sense of power and gladness, Morgana held
the vessel in the guidance of her slight but strong hands, and it
had flown many miles before the Marchese Rivardi sprang up suddenly
from where he had lain lost in unconsciousness and stared around him
amazed and confused.
CHAPTER XIX
"Poor Gaspard!" she said--"You could not help it! You were so tired!
And you, Marchese! You were both quite worn out! I was glad to see
you sleeping--there is no shame in it! As I have often told you, I
can manage the ship alone."
"No, Madama! It could not be so! I swear we never left our own
level! What happened I cannot tell--but I felt that I was struck by
a sudden blow--and I fell without force to recover--"
"Sleep struck you that sudden blow, you poor Gaspard!" said Morgana,
"And you have not slept so long--barely an hour--just long enough
for me to hover a while above this black desert and then turn
homeward,--I want no more of the Sahara!"
She raised her lovely, mysterious eyes and looked full at him.
"You must not mind the caprices of a woman!" she said, with a smile-
-"And do please remember the 'Brazen City' is not MY idea! The
legend of this undiscovered place in the desert was related by your
friend Don Aloysius--and he was careful to say it was 'only' a
legend. Why should you think I accept it as a truth?"
"Not unless it was lit like other cities!" she said, smiling--"I
suppose if such a city existed, its inhabitants would need some sort
of illuminant--they would not grope about in the dark. In that case
it would be seen from our ship as well by night as by day."
"Then why not make a search for it while we are here?" he said--"You
evidently believe in it!"
"I have turned the 'White Eagle' homeward, and shall not turn
again"--she said--"But I do not see any reason why such a city
should not exist and be discovered some day. Explorers in tropical
forests find the remains or beginnings of a different race of men
from our own--pygmies, and such like beings--there is nothing really
against the possibility of an undiscovered City in the Great Desert.
We modern folk think we know a great deal--but our wisdom is very
superficial and our knowledge limited. We have not mastered
EVERYTHING under the sun!"
"Do so, my friend! Why not?" she said--"You are a daring airman on
many forms of airships--I knew that,--before I entrusted you with
the scheme of mine. Discover the legendary 'Brazen City' if you
can!--I promise not to be jealous!--and return to the world of
curiosity mongers--(also, if you CAN!) with a full report of its
inhabitants and their manners and customs. And so--you will become
famous! But you must not fall asleep on the way!"
"I know!" he said, curtly--"I never forget it. But money is not
everything."
"If she could, no doubt!" agreed Gaspard--"But if she could not, how
then?"
"Basta! There is no 'Brazen City'! When she heard the old tradition
she was like a child with a fairy tale--a child who, reading of
strawberries growing in the winter snow, goes out forthwith to find
them--she did not really believe in it--but it pleased her to
imagine she did. The mere sight of the arid empty desert has been
enough for her."
"In our brains! Such sounds often affect the nerves when flying for
a long while at high speed. For all our cleverness we are only
human. I have heard on the 'wireless,' sounds that do not seem of
this world at all."
The grey peep of dawn widened into a silver rift, and the silver
rift streamed into a bar of gold, and the gold broke up into long
strands of blush pink and pale blue like festal banners hanging in
heaven's bright pavilion, and the "White Eagle" flew on swiftly,
steadily, securely, among all the glories of the dawn like a winged
car for the conveyance of angels. And both Rivardi and Gaspard
thought they were not far from the realisation of an angel when
Morgana suddenly appeared at the door of her sleeping-cabin, attired
in a fleecy-wool gown of purest white, her wonderful gold hair
unbound and falling nearly to her feet.
Gaspard lifted his eyes towards her where she stood like a little
white Madonna in a shrine.
"Ah! That, for the present, remains locked up in the mystery box--
here!" and she tapped her forehead with her finger--"The world is
not ready for it. The world is a destructive savage, loving evil
rather than good, and it would work mischief more than usefulness
with such a force--if it knew! Now I will dress, and give you
breakfast in ten minutes."
"Thermos coffee!" she said, gaily--"All hot and hot! We could have
had Thermos tea, but I think coffee more inspiriting. Tea always
reminds me of an afternoon at a country vicarage where good ladies
sit round a table and talk of babies and rheumatism. Kind,--but so
dull! Come--you must take it in turns--you, Marchese, first, while
Gaspard steers--and Gaspard next--just as you did last night at what
we called dinner, before you fell asleep! Men DO fall asleep after
dinner you know!--it's quite ordinary. Married men especially!--I
think they do it to avoid conversation with their wives!"
"Ah yes!" and Morgana shook her fair head at him with mock
dolefulness--"And that will be very sad! Though nowadays it will not
bind you to a fettered existence. Marriage has ceased to be a
sacrament,--you can leave your wives as soon as you get tired of
them,--or--they can leave YOU!"
Rivardi looked at her with reproach in his handsome face and dark
eyes.
"Oh, I think not!" and Morgana smiled as she poured out a second cup
of coffee--"The Press cannot create a new universe. No--I think
human nature alone is to blame--if blame there be. Human nature is
tired."
"And you are one of 'those who see'?--" said Rivardi, incredulously.
"I do not say I am,--that would be too much self-assertion"--she
answered--"But I hope I am! I long to see the world endowed more
richly with health and happiness. See how gloriously the sun has
risen! In what splendour of light and air we are sailing! If we can
do as much as this we ought to be able to do more!"
"In time!" echoed Morgana--"What time the human race has already
taken to find out the simplest forces of nature! It is the horrible
bulk of blank stupidity that hinders knowledge--the heavy obstinate
bulk that declines to budge an inch out of its own fixity. Nowadays
we triumph in our so-called 'discoveries' of wireless telegraphy and
telephony, light-rays and other marvels--but these powers have
always been with us from the beginning of things,--it is we, we
only, who have refused to accept them as facts of the universe. Let
us talk no more about it!--Stupidity is the only thing that moves me
to despair!"
She rose from the little table, and called Gaspard to breakfast,
while Rivardi went back to the business of steering. The day was now
fully declared, and the great air-ship soared easily in a realm of
ethereal blue--blue above, blue below--its vast wings moving up and
down with perfect rhythm as if it were a living, sentient creature,
revelling in the joys of flight. For the rest of the day Morgana was
very silent, contenting herself to sit in her charming little rose-
lined nest of a room, and read,--now and then looking out on the
radiating space around her, and watching for the first slight
downward movement of the "White Eagle" towards land. She had plenty
to occupy her thoughts--and strange to say she did not consider as
anything unexpected or remarkable, her brief communication with the
"Brazen City." On the contrary it seemed quite a natural happening.
Of course it had always been there, she said to herself,--only
people were too dull and unenterprising to discover it,--besides, if
they had ever found it (certain travellers having declared they had
seen it in the distance) they would not have been allowed to
approach it. This fact was the one point that chiefly dwelt in her
mind--a secret of science which she puzzled her brain to fathom.
What could be the unseen force that guarded the city?--girding it
round with an unbreakable band from all exterior attack? A million
bombs could not penetrate it,--so had said the Voice travelling to
her ears on the mysterious Sound Ray. She thought of Shakespeare's
lines on England--
"Well steered!" said Morgana, as the ship ran into its shed with the
accuracy of a sword slipping into its sheath, and the soundless
vibration of its mysterious motive-power ceased--"Home again
safely!--and only away forty-eight hours! To the Sahara and back!--
how far we have been, and what we have seen!"
She laughed.
"IF you like! But I only steered while you slept. That is nothing!
Good night!"
She left them, running up the garden path lightly like a child
returning from a holiday, and disappeared.
CHAPTER XX
For some days after her adventurous voyage to the Great Desert and
back Morgana chose to remain in absolute seclusion. Save for Lady
Kingswood and her own household staff, she saw no one, and was not
accessible even to Don Aloysius, who called several times, moved not
only by interest, but genuine curiosity, to enquire how she fared.
Many of the residents in the vicinity of the Palazzo d'Oro had
gleaned scraps of information here and there concerning the
wonderful air-ship which they had seen careering over their heads
during its testing trials, and as a matter of course they had heard
more than scraps in regard to its wealthy owner. But nowadays keen
desire to know and to investigate has given place to a sort of civil
apathy which passes for good form--that absolute indifferentism
which is too much bored to care about other people's affairs, and
which would not disturb itself if it heard of a neighbour deciding
to cross the Atlantic in a washtub. "Nothing matters," is the
general verdict on all events and circumstances. Nevertheless, the
size, the swiftness and soundlessness of the "White Eagle" and the
secrecy observed in its making, had somewhat moved the heavy lump of
human dough called "society," and the whispered novelty of Morgana's
invention had reached Rome and Paris, nay, almost London, without
her consent or knowledge. So that she was more or less deluged with
letters; and noted scientists, both in France and Italy, though all
incredulous as to her attainment, made it a point of "business" to
learn all they could about her, which was not much more than can be
usually learned about any wealthy woman or man with a few whims to
gratify. A murderer gains access to the whole press,--his look, his
manner, his remarks, are all carefully noted and commented upon,--
but a scientist, an explorer, a man or woman whose work is that of
beneficence and use to humanity, is barely mentioned except in the
way of a sneer. So it often chances that the public know nothing of
its greatest till they have passed beyond the reach of worldly
honour.
Yet she did not neglect the graceful comforts and elegancies of the
Palazzo d'Oro, and life went on in that charming abode peacefully.
Morgana always being the kindest of patrons to Lady Kingswood, and
discoursing feminine commonplaces with her as though there were no
other subjects of conversation in the world than embroidery and
specific cures for rheumatism. She said little--indeed almost
nothing,--of her aerial voyage to the East, except that she had
enjoyed it, and that the Pyramids and the Sphinx were dwarfed into
mere insignificant dots on the land as seen from the air,--she had
apparently nothing more to describe, and Lady Kingswood was not
sufficiently interested in air-travel to press enquiry. One bright
sunny morning, after a week of her self-imposed seclusion, she
announced her intention of calling at the monastery to see Don
Aloysius.
"They do not admit women into the actual monastery"--she went on--
"Feminine frivolities are forbidden! But the ruined cloister is open
to visitors and I shall ask to see Don Aloysius there."
She lightly waved adieu and went, leaving her amiable and contented
chaperone to the soothing companionship of a strip of embroidery at
which she worked with the leisurely tranquillity which such an
occupation engenders.
The ruined cloister looked very beautiful that morning, with its
crumbling arches crowned and festooned with roses climbing every way
at their own sweet will, and Morgana's light figure gave just the
touch of human interest to the solemn peacefulness of the scene. She
waited but two or three minutes before Don Aloysius appeared--he had
seen her arrive from the window of his own private library. He
approached her slowly--there was a gravity in the expression of his
face that almost amounted to coldness, and no smile lightened it as
she met his keen, fixed glance.
"So you have come to me at last!" he said--"I have not merited your
confidence till now! Why?"
His rich voice had a ring of deep reproach in its tone--and she was
for a moment taken aback. Then her native self-possession and
perfect assurance returned.
"Dear Father Aloysius, you do not want my confidence! You know all I
can tell you!" she said--and drawing close to him she laid her hand
on his arm--"Am I not right?"
"Child, beware what you say!" and his voice had a ring of sternness
in its mellow tone--"If I know what you think I know, on what ground
do you suppose I have built my knowledge? Only on that faith which
you call 'conventional'--that faith which has never been understood
by the world's majority! That faith which teaches of the God-in-Man,
done to death by the Man WITHOUT God in him!--and who, nevertheless,
by the spiritual strength of a resurrection from the grave, proves
that there is no death but only continuous renewal of life! This is
no mere 'convention' of faith,--no imaginary or traditional tale--it
is pure scientific fact. The virginal conception of divinity in
woman, and the transfiguration of manhood, these things are true--
and the advance of scientific discovery will prove them so beyond
all denial. We have held the faith, AS IT SHOULD BE HELD, for
centuries,--and it has led us, and continues to lead us, to all we
know."
He looked at her for some moments without speaking. His tall fine
figure seemed more than ever stately and imposing--and his features
expressed a calm assurance and dignity of thought which gave them
additional charm.
Morgana moved close to him, and looked up at his grave, dark face
beseechingly.
"Then why are you here?" she asked--"If you know,--if you were ever
in the 'Brazen City' how did it happen that you left it? How could
it happen?"
"Even so! Such love as you have never dreamed of, dear soul weighted
with millions of gold! Love!--the only force that pulls heaven to
earth and binds them together!"
"If--yes! if"--she said--"If you were there, love did not hold YOU?"
"No!"
There was a silence. The sunshine burned down on the ancient grey
flagstones of the cloister, and two gorgeous butterflies danced over
the climbing roses that hung from the arches in festal wreaths of
pink and white. A luminance deeper than that of the sun seemed to
encircle the figures standing together--the one so elfin, light and
delicate,--the other invested with a kind of inward royalty
expressing itself outwardly in stateliness of look and bearing.
Something mysteriously suggestive of super-humanity environed them;
a spirit and personality higher than mortal. After some minutes
Aloysius spoke again--
"Oh, you must help me!" she cried--"You must teach me--I want to
know what YOU know!--"
She hesitated.
"And--the Brazen City?" she queried.
He smiled gravely.
"I may not speak of what I hear"--he answered. "Nor may you!"
"The world is changed for me"--she said--"It will never be the same
again! I do not seem to belong to it--other influences surround me,-
-how I live in it?--how shall I work--what shall I do?"
"You will do as you have always done--go your own way"--he replied--
"The way which has led you to so much discovery and attainment. You
must surely know in your own soul that you have been guided in that
way--and your success is the result of allowing yourself to BE
guided. In all things you will be guided now--have no fear for
yourself! All will be well for you!"
He smiled.
"You are!" she replied--"You are more than you imagine. I begin to
realise--"
At that moment the monastery bell tolled the midday "Angelus." Don
Aloysius bent his head--Morgana instinctively did the same. Within
the building the deep voices of the brethren sounded, chanting,--
"There is! And when the other things of life give you pause to
listen, you will often hear it!"
"It is the Symbol of a great Truth which is true for all time"--she
thought, as she clasped her hands in an attitude of prayer--"And how
sad and strange it is to feel that there are thousands among its
best-intentioned worshippers and priests who have not discovered its
mystic meaning. The God in Man, born of purity in woman! Is it only
in the Golden City that they know?"
She raised her eyes in half unconscious appeal--and, as she did so,
a brilliant Ray of light flashed downward from the summit of the
Cross which surmounted the Altar, and remained extended slantwise
towards her. She saw it,--and waited expectantly. Close to her ears
a Voice spoke with extreme softness, yet very distinctly.
She rose at once from her knees, alert and ready for action--her
face was pale, her lips set, her eyes luminous.
She left the chapel and hurried home, where as soon as she reached
her own private room she wrote to the Marchese Rivardi the following
note, which was more than unpleasantly startling to him when he
received it.
"I shall need you and Gaspard for a long journey in the 'White
Eagle.' Prepare everything in the way of provisioning and other
necessary details. No time must be lost, and no expense need be
spared. We must start as quickly as possible."
CHAPTER XXI
His eyes blazed with the light of fanaticism--he was obsessed by the
force of his own ideas and schemes, and the metal case on the table
before him was, to his mind, time, life, present and future. He had
arrived at that questionable point of intellectual attainment when
man forgets that there is any existing force capable of opposing
him, and imagines that he has but to go on in his own way to grasp
all worlds and the secrets of their being. At this juncture, so
often arrived at by many, a kind of super-sureness sets in,
persuading the finite nature that it has reached the infinite. The
whole mental organisation of the man thrilled with an awful
consciousness of power. He said within himself "I hold the lives of
millions at my mercy!"
Other thoughts--other dreams had passed away for the moment--he had
forgotten life as it presents itself to the ordinary human being.
Now and again a flitting vision of Morgana vaguely troubled him,--
her intellectual capacity annoyed him, and yet he would have been
glad to discuss with her the scientific unfolding of his great
secret--she would understand it in all its bearings,--she might
advise--Advice!--no!--he did not need the advice of a woman! As for
Manella, he had not seen her since her last violent outburst of what
he called "temper"--and he had no wish for her presence. For now he
had a thing to do which was of paramount importance,--and this was,
to deposit the treasured discovery of his life in a secret hiding-
place he had found for it, till he should be ready to remove it to
safer quarters--or--TILL HE RESOLVED TO USE IT. Had he been a
religious man, of such humility as should accompany true religion,
he would have prayed that its use should never be called upon,--but
he had trained himself into an attitude of such complete
indifferentism towards life and the things of life, that to him it
seemed useless to pray for what did not matter. Sometimes the
thought, appalling in its truth, flashed across his brain that the
force he had discovered and condensed within small compass might as
easily destroy half the world as a nation! The fabled thunderbolts
of Jove were child's play compared with those plain-looking,
thimble-like cylinders which contained such terrific power! A touch
of hesitation--of pure human dread affected his nerves for the
moment,--he shivered in the sultry air as with cold, and looked
about him right and left as though suspecting some hidden witness of
his actions. There was not so much as a bird or a butterfly in
sight, and he drew a long deep breath of relief. The day was
treading in the steps of dawn with the full blazonry of burning
Californian sunlight, and away in the distance the ridges and peaks
of distant mountains stood out sharply clear against the intense
blue of the sky. There was great stillness everywhere,--a pause, as
it seemed, in the mechanism of the universe. The twitter of a bird
or the cry of some wild animal would have been a relief,--so Seaton
felt, though accustomed to deep silence.
For the next few minutes or so he hesitated. With the sudden fancy
that he had forgotten something, he turned out his pockets, looking
for he scarcely knew what. The contents were mixed and various, and
among them was a crumpled letter which he had received some days
since from Sam Gwent. He smoothed it out carefully and re-read it,
especially one passage--
"I think the States will never get involved in another war, but I am
fairly sure Germany will. If she joins up with Russia look out for
squalls. In your old country, which appears to be peopled by madmen,
there's a writing chap who spent a fortnight in Russia, not long
enough to know the ins and outs of a village, yet assuming to know
everything about the biggest territory in Europe, and the press is
puffing up his ignorance as if it were wisdom. Germany has her
finger on the spot--so perhaps your stuff will come in useful. But
don't forget that if you make up your mind to use it you will ruin
America, commercially speaking. And many other countries besides. So
think it well over,--more than a hundred times! Lydia Herbert, whom
perhaps you remember, and perhaps you don't, has caught her 'ancient
mariner'--that is to say, her millionaire,--and all fashionable New
York is going to the wedding, including yours truly. I had expected
Morgana Royal to grace the function, but I hear she is quite
engrossed with the decoration and furnishing of her Sicilian palace,
as well as with her advising artist, a very good-looking Marquis or
Marchese as he is called. It is also whispered that she has invented
a wonderful air-ship which has no engines, and creates its own
motive power as it goes! Sounds rather tall talk!--but this is an
age of wonders and we never know what next. There is a new Light Ray
just out which prospects for gold, oil and all ores and minerals,
and finds them in a fifty-mile circuit--so probably nobody need be
poor for the future. When we've all got most things we want, and
there's nothing left to work for, I wonder what the world will be
worth!"
Seaton left off reading and thrust the letter again in his pocket.
She had spoken these words with a quiet simplicity and earnestness
that impressed him at the time as being almost child-like,
considering the depth of thought into which she must have plunged,
notwithstanding her youth and her sex--and on this morning of all
others, this morning on which he had set himself a task for which he
had made long and considerable preparation, he found himself half
mechanically repeating her phrase--"Humanity dies because it will
not learn how to live."
He bent his eyes lovingly on the case of small cylinders lying open
before him;--the just risen sun brightened them to a glitter as of
cold steel,--and for a moment he fancied they flashed upon him with
an almost sinister gleam.
He went into his hut, and in a few minutes came out again clothed in
thick garments of a dark, earth colour, and carrying a stout staff,
steel-pointed at its end something after the fashion of a Swiss
alpenstock. He brought with him a small metal box into which he
placed the case of cylinders, covering it with a closely fitting
lid. Then he put the package into a basket made of rough twigs and
strips of bark, having a strong handle, to which he fastened a
leather strap, and slung the whole thing over his shoulders like a
knapsack. Then, casting another look round to make sure that there
was no one about, he started to walk towards a steeper descent of
the hill in a totally different direction from that which led to the
"Plaza" hotel. He went swiftly, at a steady swinging pace,--and
though his way took him among confused masses of rock, and fallen
boulders, he thought nothing of these obstacles, vaulting lightly
across them with the ease of a chamois, till he came to a point
where there was a declivity running sheer down to invisible depths,
from whence came the rumbling echo of falling water. In this almost
perpendicular wall of rock were a few ledges, like the precarious
rungs of a broken ladder, and down these he prepared to go. Clinging
at first to the topmost edge of the precipice, he let himself down
warily inch by inch till his figure entirely disappeared, sunken, as
it were in darkness. As he vanished there was a sudden cry--a rush
as of wings--and a woman sprang up from amid bushes where she had
lain hidden,--it was Manella. For days and nights she had stolen
away in the intervals of her work, to watch him--and nothing had
chanced to excite her alarm till now--till now, when she had seen
him emerge from his hut and pack up the mysterious box he carried,--
and when she had heard him talking strangely to himself in a way she
could not understand.
She gathered up her hair in a close coil and wound her skirts
tightly about her, looking everywhere for a footing. She saw a deep
cranny which had been hollowed out by some torrent of water--it cut
sharply through the rock like a path,--she could risk that perhaps,
she thought,--and yet her brain reeled--she felt sick and giddy--
would it not be wiser to stay where she was and wait for the return
of the reckless creature who had ventured all alone into one of the
deepest canons of the whole country? While she hesitated she caught
a sudden glimpse of him, stepping with apparent ease over huge heaps
of stones and fallen pieces of rock at the bottom of the declivity,-
-she watched his movements in breathless suspense. On he went
towards a vast aperture, shaped arch-wise like the entrance to a
cavern--he paused a moment--then entered it. This was enough for
Manella--her wild love and wilder terror gave her an almost
supernatural strength and daring,--and all heedless now of results
she sprang boldly towards the deep cutting in the rock, swinging
herself from jagged point to point till--reaching the bottom of the
declivity at last, bruised and bleeding, but undaunted,--she
stopped, checked by a rushing stream which tumbled over great
boulders and dashed its cold spray in her face. Looking about her
she saw to her dismay that the vaulted cavern wherein Seaton had
disappeared was on the other side of this stream--she stood almost
opposite to it--but how to get across? Gazing despairingly in every
direction she suddenly perceived the fallen trunk of a tree lying
half in and half out of the brawling torrent--it was green with
slippery moss and offered but a dangerous foothold,--nevertheless
she resolved to attempt it.
"I said I would die for him I" she thought--"and I will!"
Getting astride the tree, it swayed under her,--but she found she
could push one of the larger boughs forward to lengthen the
extemporary bridge,--and so, as it were, riding the waters, which
surged noisily around her, she managed by dint of super-human effort
to reach the projection of pebbly shore where the entrance to the
cavern yawned open before her, black and desolate. The sun in its
full morning glory blazed slanting down upon the darkness of the
canon, and as she stood shivering, wet through and utterly
exhausted, wondering what next she should do, she caught sight of a
form moving within the cave like a moving shadow, and ascending a
steep natural stairway of columnar rocks piled one on top of the
other. Affrighted as she was by the tomb-like aspect of the deep
vault, she had not ventured so far that she should now shrink from
further dangers or fail in her quest;--the cherished object of her
constant watchful care was within that subterranean blackness,--for
what purpose?--she did not dare to think! But there was an
instinctive sense of dread foreknowledge upon her,--a warning of
impending evil,--and had she not sworn to him--"If God struck you
down to hell I would be there!" The entrance to the cavern looked
like the mouth of hell itself, as she had seen it depicted in one of
her Catholic early lesson books. There were serpents and dragons in
the picture ready to devour the impenitent sinner,--there might be
serpents and dragons in this cave, for all she knew! But what
matter? If the man she loved were actually in hell she "would be
there"--as she had said!--and would surely find it Heaven! And so,--
seeing the mere outline of his form moving ghost-like in the gloom,
it was to her a guiding presence,--a light amid darkness,--and
when,--after a minute or two--her straining eyes perceived him
climbing steadily up the steep and perilous rocks, seeming about to
disappear altogether,--she mastered the tremor of her nerves and
crept cautiously step by step into the sombre vault, blindly feeling
her way through the damp, thick murkiness, reckless of all danger,
and only bent on following him.
CHAPTER XXII
Here the organ poured the rich strains of a soft and solemn prelude
through the crowded church--the "sacred" part of the ceremony was
over, and bride and bridegroom made their way to the vestry, there
to sign the register in the presence of a selected group of friends.
Sam Gwent was one of these,--and though he had attended many such
functions before, he was more curiously impressed than usual by the
unctuous and barefaced hypocrisy of the whole thing--the smiling
humbug of the officiating clergy,--the affected delight of the
"society" toadies fluttering like wasps round bride and bride-groom
as though they were sweet dishes specially for stinging insects to
feed upon, and in his mind he seemed to hear the warm, passionate
voice of Manella in frank admission of her love for Seaton.
"It is good to love him!" she had said--"I am happy to love him. I
wish only to serve him!"
"The kindest thing to think of him is that he's not quite sane,"--
Gwent mused--"He has been obsessed by the horrible carnage of the
Great War, and disgusted by the utter inefficiency of Governments
since the armistice, and this appalling invention of his is the
result."
The crashing chords of the Bridal March from "Lohengrin" put an end
to his thoughts for the moment,--people began to crush and push out
of church, or stand back on each other's toes to stare at the
bride's diamonds as she moved very slowly and gracefully down the
aisle on the arm of her elderly husband. She certainly looked very
well,--and her smile suggested entire satisfaction with herself and
the world. Press-camera men clambered about wherever they could find
a footing, to catch and perpetuate that smile, which when enlarged
and reproduced in newspapers would depict the grinning dental
display so much associated with Woodrow Wilson and the Prince of
Wales,--though more suggestive of a skull than anything else. Skulls
invariably show their teeth, we know--but it has been left to the
modern press-camera man to insist on the death-grin in faces that
yet live. The crowd outside the church was far denser than the crowd
within, and the fighting and scrambling for points of view became
terrific, especially when the wedding guests' motor-cars began to
make their way, with sundry hoots and snorts, through the densely
packed mob. Women screamed,--some fainted--but none thought of
giving way to others, or retiring from the wild scene of contest.
Gwent judged it wisest to remain within the church portal till the
crowd should clear, and there, safely ensconced, he watched the
maddened mass of foolish sight-seers, all of whom had plainly left
their daily avocations merely to stare at a man and woman wedded,
with whom, personally, they had nothing whatever to do.
Here a sudden ugly rush of the crowd, dangerous to both life and
limb, pushed him back against the church portal with the force of a
tidal wave,--it was not concerned with the bridal pair who had
already driven away in their automobile, nor with the wedding guests
who were following them to the great hotel where the bride's
reception was held--it was caused by the wild dash of half a dozen
or so of unkempt men and boys who tore a passage for themselves
through the swaying mob of sightseers, waving newspapers aloft and
shouting loudly with voices deep and shrill, clear and hoarse--
Sam Gwent stepped out from the church portal, elbowing his way
through the confusion,--the yells of the news vendors rang sharply
in his ears and yet for the moment he scarcely grasped their
meaning; "California" was the one word that caught him, as it were,
with a hammer stroke,--then "Thousands dead!" Finding at last an
open passage through the dispersing crowd, he went at something of a
run after one of the newsboys, and snatched the last paper he had to
sell out of his hand.
CHAPTER XXIII
Struck by the hand of God! So men say when, after denying God's
existence ail their lives, the seeming solid earth heaves up like a
ship on a storm-billow, dragging down in its deep recoil their lives
and habitations. An earthquake! Its irresistible rise and fall makes
human beings more powerless than insects,--their houses and
possessions have less stability than the spider's web which swings
its frail threads across broken columns in greater safety than any
man-made bridge of stone,--and terror, mad, hopeless, helpless
terror, possesses every creature brought face to face with the dire
cruelty of natural forces, which from the very beginning have played
havoc with struggling mankind. Struck by the hand of God!--and with
a merciless blow! All the sunny plains and undulating hills of the
beautiful stretch of land in Southern California, in the centre of
which the "Plaza" hotel and sanatorium had stood, were now
unrecognisable,--the earth was torn asunder and thrown into vast
heaps--great rocks and boulders were tumbled over each other pell-
mell in appalling heights of confusion, and, for miles around,
towns, camps and houses were laid in ruins. The scene was one of
absolute horror,--there was no language to express or describe it--
no word of hope or comfort that could be fitly used to lighten the
blackness of despair and loss. Gangs of men were at relief work as
soon as they could be summoned, and these busied themselves in
extricating the dead, and rescuing the dying whose agonised cries
and moans reproached the Power that made them for such an end,--and
perhaps as terrible as any other sound was the savage roar and rush
of a loosened torrent which came tearing furiously down from the
cleft hills to the lower land, through the great canon beyond the
site where the Plaza had stood,--a canon which had become enormously
widened by the riving and the rending of the rocks, thus giving free
passage to wild waters that had before been imprisoned in a narrow
gorge. The persistent rush of the flood filled every inch of space
with sound of an awful, even threatening character, suggesting
further devastation and death. The men engaged in their dreadful
task of lifting crushed corpses from under the stones that had
fallen upon them, were almost overcome and rendered incapable of
work by the appalling clamour, which was sufficient to torture the
nerves of the strongest; and some of them, sickened at the frightful
mutilation of the bodies they found gave up altogether and dropped
from sheer fatigue and exhaustion into unconsciousness, despite the
heroic encouragement of their director, a man well used to great
emergencies. Late afternoon found him still organising and
administering aid, with the assistance of two or three Catholic
priests who went about seeking to comfort and sustain those who were
passing "the line between." All the energetic helpers were prepared
to work all night, delving into the vast suddenly made grave wherein
were tumbled the living with the dead,--and it was verging towards
sunset when one of the priests, chancing to raise his eyes from the
chaos of earth around him to the clear and quiet sky, saw what at
first he took to be a great eagle with outspread wings soaring
slowly above the scene of devastation. It moved with singular
lightness and ease,--now and then appearing to pause as though
seeking some spot whereon to descend,--and after watching it for a
minute or two he called the attention of some of the men around him
to its appearance. They looked up wearily from their gruesome task
of excavating the dead.
The priest crossed his hands upon his breast and said a prayer--then
again looked up to where the air-ship floated in the darkening blue.
It was now directly over the canon,--immediately above the huge rift
made by the earthquake, through which the clamorous rush of water
poured. While he watched it, it suddenly stood still, then dived
slowly as though bent on descending into the very depths of the
gully. He could not forbear uttering an exclamation, which made all
the men about him look in the direction where his own gaze was
fixed.
They all stared amazed--but the dreadful work on which they were
engaged left them no time for consideration of any other matter. The
priest watched a few minutes longer, more or less held spell-bound
with a kind of terror, for he saw that without doubt the great
vessel was either purposely descending or being drawn into the vast
abyss yawning black beneath it, and that falling thus it must be
inevitably doomed to destruction. Whoever piloted it must surely be
determined to invite this frightful end to its voyage, for nothing
was ever steadier or more resolute than its downward movement
towards the whirling waters that rushed through the canon. All
suddenly it disappeared, whelmed as it seemed in darkness and the
roaring flood, and the watching priest made the sign of the cross in
air murmuring--
"Let her down very gently inch by inch!" she cried; "It must be here
that we should seek!"
"Come! Come!"
He staggered back from her in terror at her looks, which gave her a
supernatural beauty and authority. The "fey" woman was "fey"
indeed!--and the powers with which superstition endows the fairy
folk seemed now to invest her with irresistible influence.
"That's a true noble!" she exclaimed--"I knew your courage would not
fail! Believe me, no harm shall come to you!"
"I have done your bidding because it was you who bade,"--he said,
his voice shaking with the tremor and excitement of his daring
effort--"And it was not so very difficult. But it is a vain rescue!
They are past recall."
"Here, Madama!"
She smiled.
"So many 'ifs' Gaspard? Have I not told you it CANNOT lose balance?
And are not my words proved true? Now we have finished our rescue
work we may go--we can start at once--"
He looked at her.
CHAPTER XXIV
"It is now time for further aid than mine. The girl will recover--
but the man--the man is still in the darkness!"
And her eyes grew heavy with a cloud of sorrow and regret which
softened her delicate beauty and made it more than ever unearthly.
"My friend, there was a time when I should have considered that
question an impertinence from you!" she said, tranquilly--"But yours
is the great share of the rescue--and your magnificent bravery wins
you my pardon,--for many things!" And she smiled as she saw him
flush under her quiet gaze--"What is this man to me, you ask? Why
nothing!--not now! Once he was everything,--though he never knew it.
Some quality in him struck the keynote of the scale of life for me,-
-he was the great delusion of a dream! The delusion is ended--the
dream is over! But for that he WAS to me, though only in my own
thoughts, I have tried to save his life--not for myself, but for the
woman who loves him."
She bent her head in assent. Rivardi's eyes dwelt on her with
greater tenderness than he had ever felt before,--she looked so
frail and fairy-like, and withal so solitary. He took her little
hand and gently kissed it with courteous reverence.
"My good Giulio, I DO despise most heartily what the world generally
understands as love"--she replied; "There is no baser or more
selfish sentiment!--a sentiment made up half of animal desire and
half of a personal seeking for admiration, appreciation and self-
gratification! Yes, Giulio!--it is so, and I despise it for all
these attributes--in truth it is not what I understand or accept as
love at all--"
"Not what you can ever give, Giulio!" she said--"Love--to my mind--
is the spiritual part of our being--it should be the complete union
of two souls that move as one,--like the two wings of a bird making
the body subservient to the highest flights, even as far as heaven!
The physical mating of man and woman is seldom higher than the
physical mating of any other animals under the sun,--the animals
know nothing beyond--but we--we ought to know something!" She
paused, then went on--"There is sometimes a great loftiness even in
the physical way of so-called 'love'--such passion as the woman we
have rescued has for the man she was ready to die with,--a primitive
passion of primitive woman at her best. Such feeling is out of date
in these days--we have passed that boundary line--and a great
unexplored world lies open before us--who can say what we may find
there! Perhaps we shall discover what all women have sought for from
the beginning of things--"
"You cannot, Giulio! I am not made for any man--as men go!"
She left him puzzled and uneasy. Somehow she always managed to evade
his efforts to become more intimate in his relations with her.
Generous and kind-hearted as she was, she held him at a distance,
and maintained her own aloof position inexorably. A less intelligent
man than Rivardi would have adopted the cynic's attitude and averred
that her rejection of love and marriage arose from her own
unlovableness and unmarriageableness, but he knew better than that.
He was wise enough to perceive the rareness and delicacy of her
physical and mental organisation and temperament,--a temperament so
finely strung as to make all other women seem gross and material
beside her. He felt and knew her to be both his moral and
intellectual superior,--and this very fact rendered it impossible
that he could ever master her mind and tame it down to the
subservience of married life. That dauntless spirit of hers would
never bend to an inferior,--not even love (if she could feel it)
would move her thus far. And the man she had adventured across ocean
to rescue--what was he? She confessed that she had loved him, though
that love was past. And now she had set herself to watch night and
day by his dead body (for dead he surely was in Rivardi's opinion)
sparing no pains to recover what seemed beyond recovery; while one
of the greatest mysteries of the whole mysterious affair was just
this--How had she known the man's life was in danger?
She smiled.
She led the way and Professor Ardini followed, marvelling at her
ethereal grace and beauty, and more than interested in the "case" on
which his opinion was sought. Entering a beautiful room glowing with
light and warmth and colour, he saw, lying on a bed and slightly
propped up by pillows, a lovely girl, pale as ivory, with dark hair
loosely braided on either side of her head. Her eyes were closed,
and the long black lashes swept the cheeks in a curved fringe,--the
lips were faintly red, and the breath parted them slowly and
reluctantly. The Professor bent over her and listened,--her heart
beat slowly but regularly,--he felt her pulse.
"Yes."
"You have no nurses?"
"No. I and my house people are sufficient." Her tone became slightly
peremptory. "There is no need for outside interference. Whatever
your orders are, they shall be carried out."
He looked at her. His face was a somewhat severe one, furrowed with
thought and care,--but when he smiled, a wonderful benevolence gave
it an almost handsome effect. And he smiled now.
Almost as if the uttered wish had touched some recess of her stunned
brain, Manella's eyelids quivered and lifted,--the great dark glory
of the stars of her soul shone forth for an instant, giving sudden
radiance to the pallor of her features--then they closed again as in
utter weariness.
"Dead?"
"Oh, give him life!" she whispered--"Give him life for the sake of
the woman who loves him more than life!"
"You?"
"Are you quite sure of this?" Morgana asked--"Can any of us, however
wise, be quite sure of anything?"
His frown relaxed and his whole features softened. He took her hand
and patted it kindly.
"Signora, you know as well as I do, that the universe and all within
it represents law and order. A man is a little universe in himself--
and if the guiding law of his system is destroyed, there is chaos
and darkness. We scientists can say 'Let there be light,' but the
fulfilled result 'and there was light' comes from God alone!"
"And you will do it!" interrupted Morgana eagerly, "You will use
your best skill and knowledge--everything you wish shall be at your
service--name whatever fee your merit claims--"
"Money does not count with me, Signora!" he said--"Nor with you. The
point with both of us in all our work is--success! Is it not so?
Yes! And it is because I do not see a true success in this case that
I hesitate; true success would mean the complete restoration of this
man to life and intelligence,--but life without intelligence is no
triumph for science. I can do all that science will allow--"
"It shall be as you wish, Signora! I must stay here two or three
days--"
She left the room then, with one backward glance at the inert stiff
figure on the bed,--and went to arrange matters with her household
that the Professor's instructions should be strictly carried out.
Lady Kingswood, deeply interested, heard her giving certain orders
and asked--
She watched the man-servant whom she had chosen to wait on Ardini
depart on his errand--she saw him open the door of the room where
Seaton lay, and shut it--then there was a silence. Oppressed by a
sudden heaviness of heart she thought of Manella, and entered her
apartment softly to see how she fared. The girl's beautiful dark
eyes were wide open and full of the light of life and consciousness.
She smiled and stretched out her arms.
Swiftly and silently Morgana went to her side, and taking her
outstretched arms put them round her own neck.
The great loving eyes rested on her with glowing warmth and
pleasure.
"I must go!" she cried--"He is calling me! I must follow him--yes,
even if he kills me for it--he is in danger!"
"Oh, no, it is not possible!" and the girl's eyes grew wild with
terror--"He cannot be safe!--he is destroying himself! I have
followed him every step of the way--I have watched him,--oh!--so
long!--and he came out of the hut this morning--I was hidden among
the trees--he could not see me--" she broke off, and a violent
trembling shook her whole body. Morgana tried to calm her into
silence, but she went on rambling incoherently. "There was something
he carried as though it was precious to him--something that
glittered like gold,--and he went away quickly--quickly to the
canyon,--I followed him like a dog, crawling through the brushwood--
I followed him across the deep water--to the cave where it was all
dark--black as midnight!" She paused--then suddenly flung her arms
round Morgana crying--"Oh, hold me!--hold me!--I am in this darkness
trying to find him!--there!--there!--he turns and sees me by the
light of a lamp he carries; he knows I have followed him, and he is
angry! Oh, dear God, he is angry--he raises his arm to strike me!"
She uttered a smothered shriek, and clung to Morgana in a kind of
frenzy. "No mercy, no pity! That thing that glitters in his hand--it
frightens me--what is it? I kneel to him on the cold stones--I pray
him to forgive me--to come with me--but his arm is still raised to
strike--he does not care--!"
Here a pale horror blanched her features--she drew herself away from
Morgana's hold and put out her hands with the instinctive gesture of
one who tries to escape falling from some great height. Morgana,
alarmed at her looks, caught her again in her arms and held her
tenderly, whereat a faint smile hovered on her lips and her
distraught movements ceased.
"What is this?"--she asked--then murmured--"My little white lady,
how did you come here? How could you cross the flood?--unless on
wings? Ah!--you are a fairy and you can do all you wish to do--but
you cannot save HIM!--it is too late! He will not save himself--and
he does not care,--he does not care--neither for me nor you!"
She drooped her head against Morgana's shoulder and her eyes closed
in utter exhaustion. Morgana laid her back gently on her pillows,
and pouring a few drops of the cordial she had used before, and of
which she had the sole secret, into a wineglassful of water, held it
to her lips. She drank it obediently, evidently conscious now that
she was being cared for. But she was still restless, and presently
she sat up in a listening attitude, one hand uplifted.
She lay down again passively and was silent for a long time. The
hours passed and the day grew into late afternoon, and Morgana,
patiently watchful, thought she slept. All suddenly she sprang up,
wide-eyed and alert.
CHAPTER XXV
Morgana shuddered as with cold, shading her eyes from the radiant
sunshine.
Morgana lifted her sea-blue eyes and looked with grave appeal into
the severely intellectual, half-frowning face of the great
Professor.
Ardini took a few paces up and down the loggia and then halted,
facing her in the attitude of a teacher preparing to instruct a
pupil.
"A great love is always on the woman's side,"--he said--"Men are too
selfish to love perfectly. In this case, of course, there is no
emotion, no sentiment of any sort left in the mere hulk of man. But
still I will continue my work and do my best."
He left her then,--and she stood for a while alone, gazing far out
to the blue sea and sunlight, scarcely seeing them for the half-
unconscious tears that blinded her eyes. Suddenly a Ray, not of the
sun, shot athwart the loggia and touched her with a deep gold
radiance. She saw it and looked up, listening.
"Morgana!"
The Voice quivered along the Ray like the touched string of an
aeolian harp. She answered it in almost a whisper--
"I hear!"
"You grieve for sorrows not your own," said the Voice--"And we love
you for it. But you must not waste your tears on the errors of
others. Each individual Spirit makes its own destiny, and no other
but Itself can help Itself. You are one of the Chosen and Beloved!--
You must fulfil the happiness you have created for your own soul!
Come to us soon!" A thrill of exquisite joy ran through her.
The golden Ray decreased in length and brilliancy, and finally died
away in a fine haze mingling with the air. She watched it till it
vanished,--then with a sense of relief from her former sadness, she
went into the house to see Manella. The girl had risen from her bed,
and with the assistance of Lady Kingswood, who tended her with
motherly care, had been arrayed in a loose white woollen gown,
which, carelessly gathered round her, intensified by contrast the
striking beauty of her dark eyes and hair, and ivory pale skin. As
Morgana entered the room she smiled, her small even teeth gleaming
like tiny pearls in the faint rose of her pretty mouth, and
stretched out her hand.
Her unselfish joy in the idea that the man she loved would soon
recognise the woman he preferred to herself, was profoundly
touching, and Morgana kissed the hand she held.
"I?" and Manella's eyes dilated with brilliant eagerness; "I will
give my life for his! What can I do?"
"He will be my care!" she said--"The good God has heard my prayers
and given him to me to be all mine!" She clasped her hands in a kind
of ecstasy, "My life is for him and him alone! He will be my little
child!--this big, strong, poor broken man!--and I will nurse him
back to himself,--I will watch for every little sign of hope!--he
shall learn to see through my eyes--to hear through my ears--to
remember all that he has forgotten!. . ." Her voice broke in a half
sob. Morgana put an arm about her.
"Oh, I understand!" and Manella shook back her dark hair with the
little proud, decisive gesture characteristic of her temperament--
"Yes!--and I wish to be so imprisoned! If we had not been rescued by
you, we should have died together!--now you will help us to live
together! Will you not? You are a little white angel--a fairy!--
yes!--to me you are!--your heart is full of unspent love! You will
let me stay with him always--always?--As his nurse?--his servant?--
his slave?"
"Ah? I know what you would say!" she exclaimed, "That I might bring
shame to him by my companionship--always--yes!--that is possible!--
wicked people would talk of him and judge him wrongly--"
"Dear girl, he never loved me!" she said, gently--"He has always
loved himself. Yes!--you know that as well as I do! Once--I fancied
I loved HIM--but now I know my way of love is not his. Let us say no
more of it! You wish to be his wife? Do you think what that means?
He will never know he is your husband--never recognise you,--your
life will be sacrificed to a helpless creature whose brain is gone--
who will be unconscious of your care and utterly irresponsive. Oh,
sweet, TOO loving Manella!--you must not pledge the best years of
your youth and beauty to such a destiny!"
"I must--I must!" she said--"It is the work God gives me to do! Do
you not see how it is with me? It is my one love--the best of my
heart!--the pulse of my life! Youth and beauty!--what are they
without him? Ill or well, he is all I care for, and if I may not
care for him I will die! It is quite easy to die--to make an end!--
but if there is any youth or beauty to spend, it will be better to
spend it on love than in death! My white angel, listen and be
patient with me! You ARE patient but still be more so!--you know
there will be none in the world to care for him!--ah!--when he was
well and strong he said that love would weary him--he did not think
he would ever be helpless and ill!--ah, no!--but a broken brain is
put away--out of sight--to be forgotten like a broken toy! He was at
work on some wonderful invention--some great secret!--it will never
be known now--not a soul will ever ask what has become of it or of
him! The world does not care what becomes of anyone--it has no
sympathy. Only those who love greatly have any pity!"
Then she broke down and wept softly till the pent-up passion of her
heart was relieved, and Morgana, mastering her own emotion, had
soothed her into quietude. Leaning back from her arm-chair where she
had rested since rising from her bed, she looked up with an anxious
appeal in her lovely eyes.
"Ah, yes! But you should know the truth! It was NOT an earthquake!"
she persisted--"It was not God's doing! It was HIS work!"
And she indicated by a gesture the next room where Roger Seaton lay.
"I know it was his work!" she said--"I was warned by a friend of his
who came to 'la Plaza' that he was working at something which might
lose him his life. And so I watched. I told you how I followed him
that morning--how I saw him looking at a box full of shining things
that glittered like the points of swords,--how he put this box in a
case and then in a basket, and slung the basket over his shoulder,
and went down into the canon, and then to the cave where I found
him. I called him--he heard, and held up a miner's lamp and saw me!-
-then--then, oh, dear God!--then he cursed me for following him,--he
raised his arm to strike me, and in his furious haste to reach me he
slipped on the wet, mossy stones. Something fell from his hand with
a great crash like thunder--and there was a sudden glare of fire!--
oh, the awfulness of that sound and that flame!--and the rocks rose
up and split asunder--the ground shook and broke under me--and I
remember no more--no more till I found myself here!--here with you!"
"Do not think of it any more!" she said in a low sad voice--"Try to
forget it all. Yes, dear!--try to forget all the mad selfishness and
cruelty of the man you love! Poor, besotted soul!--he has a bitter
punishment!"
She could say no more then,--stooping, she kissed the girl on the
white forehead between the rippling waves of dark hair, and strove
to meet the searching eyes with a smile.
"I will!"
And with a sign to Lady Kingswood to come nearer and sit by the girl
as she lay among her pillows more or less exhausted, she herself
left the room. As she opened the door on her way out, the strong
voice of Roger Seaton rang out with singularly horrible harshness--
"There shall be no more wars! There can be none! I say it! My great
secret! I am master of the world!"
Shuddering as she heard, she pressed her hands over her ears and
hurried along the corridor. Her thoughts paraphrased the saying of
Madame Roland on Liberty--"Oh, Science! what crimes are committed in
thy name!" She was anxious to see and speak with Professor Ardini,
but came upon the Marchese Rivardi instead, who met her at the door
of the library and caught her by both hands.
"Nothing, Giulio!" and she smiled kindly--"I grieve for the griefs
of others--quite uselessly!--but I cannot help it!"
"She will!"
"Yes! To me!"
She looked at him and smiled. That smile gave such a dreamy,
spiritlike sweetness to her whole personality that for the moment
she seemed to float before him like an aerial vision rather than a
woman of flesh and blood, and the bold desire which possessed him to
seize and clasp her in his arms was checked by a sense of something
like fear. Her eyes rested on his with a full clear frankness.
She left him then and went out. He saw her small, elfin figure pass
among the chains of roses which at this season seemed to tie up the
garden in brilliant knots of colour, and then go down the terraces,
one by one, towards the monastic retreat half buried among pine and
olive, where Don Aloysius governed his little group of religious
brethren.
"She will tell him all"--he thought--"And with his strange semi-
religious, semi-scientific notions, it will be easy for her to
persuade him to marry the girl to this demented creature who fills
the house with his shouting 'There shall be no more wars!' I should
never have thought her capable of tolerating such a crime!"
"Altro! If she has made up her mind, heaven itself will not move
her! It will be a sublime sacrifice of one life for another,--what
would you? Such sacrifices are common, though the world does not
hear of them. In this instance there is no one to prevent it."
CHAPTER XXVI
Don Aloysius sat in his private library,--a room little larger than
a monastic cell, and at his feet knelt Morgana like a child at
prayer. The rose and purple glow of the sunset fell aslant through a
high oriel window of painted glass, shedding an aureole round her
golden head, and intensified the fine, dark intellectual outline of
the priest's features as he listened with fixed attention to the
soft pure voice, vibrating with tenderness and pity as she told him
of the love that sought to sacrifice itself for love's sake only.
"Not for her!" Morgana replied--"She has set her soul to try if God
will help her to restore him,--she will surround him with the
constant influence of a perfectly devoted love. Dare we say there
shall be no healing power in such an influence?--we who know so much
of which the world is ignorant!"
She raised her eyes to his. A light of heaven's own radiance shone
in those blue orbs--an angelic peace beyond all expression.
"Not with such love as hers!" replied Morgana. "Each moment, each
hour will be filled with hope and prayer and constant vigilance.
Love makes all things easy! It is useless to contend with a fate
which both the man and woman have made for themselves. He is--I
should say he was a scientist, who discovered the means of
annihilating any section of humanity at his own wish and will--he
played with the fires of God and brought annihilation on himself. MY
discovery--the force that moves my air-ship--the force that is the
vital element of all who live in the Golden City--is the same as
his!--but _I_ use it for health and movement, progress and power--
not for the destruction of any living soul! By one single false step
he has caused the death and misery of hundreds of helpless human
creatures--and this terror has recoiled on his own head. The girl
Manella has no evil thought in her--she simply loves!--her love is
ill placed, but she also has brought her own destiny on herself. You
have worked--and so have I--WITH the universal force, not as the
world does, AGAINST it,--and we have made OURSELVES what we are and
what we SHALL BE. There is no other way either forward or backward,-
-you know there is not!" Here she rose from her knees and confronted
him, a light aerial creature of glowing radiance and elfin
loveliness--"And you must fulfil her wish--and mine!"
"So be it!" he said--"I will carry out all your commands to the
letter! May I just say that your generosity to Giulio Rivardi seems
almost unnecessary? To endow him with a fortune for life is surely
too indulgent! Does he merit such bounty at your hands?"
She smiled.
"Dear Father Aloysius, Giulio has lost his heart to me!" she said--
"Or what he calls his heart! He should have some recompense for the
loss! He wants to restore his old Roman villa--and when I am gone he
will have nothing to distract him from this artistic work,--I leave
him the means to do it! I hope he will marry--it is the best thing
for him!"
"To-morrow!"
The next morning, all radiant with sunshine, saw the strangest of
nuptial ceremonies,--one that surely had seldom, if ever, been
witnessed before in all the strange happenings of human chance.
Manella Soriso, pale as a white arum lily, her rich dark hair
adorned with a single spray of orange-blossom gathered from the
garden, stood trembling beside the bed where lay stretched out the
immobile form of the once active, world-defiant Roger Seaton. His
eyes, wide open and staring into vacancy, were, like dull pebbles,
fixed in his head,--his face was set and rigid as a mask of clay--
only his regular breathing gave evidence of life. Manella's pitiful
gazing on this ruin of the man to whom she had devoted her heart and
soul, her tender sorrow, her yearning beauty, might have almost
moved a stone image to a thrill of response,--but not a flicker of
expression appeared on the frozen features of that terrible fallen
pillar of human self-sufficiency. Standing beside the bed with
Manella was Marco Ardini, intensely watchful and eager to note even
a quiver of the flesh or the tremor of a muscle,--and near him was
Lady Kingswood, terrified yet enthralled by the scene, and anxious
on behalf of Morgana, who looked statuesque and pensive like a small
attendant angel close to Don Aloysius. He, in his priestly robes,
read the marriage service with soft and impressive intonation,
himself speaking the responses for the bride-groom,--and taking
Manella's hand he placed it on Seaton's, clasping the two together,
the one so yielding and warm, the other stiff as marble, and setting
the golden marriage ring which Morgana had given, on the bride's
finger. As he made the sign of the cross and uttered the final
blessing, Manella sank on her knees and covered her face. There
followed a tense silence--Aloysius laid his hand on her bent head--
"God help and bless you!" he said, solemnly--"Only the Divine Power
can give you strength to bear the burden you have taken on
yourself!"
But at his words she sprang up, her eyes glowing with a great joy.
She looked regally beautiful, her face flushed with the pride and
love of her soul,--and in her newly gained privilege as a wife she
bent down and kissed the pallid face that lay like the face of a
corpse on the pillow before her.
"Dear, do not think of that!" she said--"For the present you will
stay here--I am going on a journey very soon, and you and Lady
Kingswood will take care of my house till I return. Be quite
satisfied!--You will have all you want for him and for yourself.
Professor Ardini will talk to you now and tell you everything--come
away--"
But Manella was gazing intently at the figure on the bed--she saw
its grey lips move. With startling suddenness a harsh voice smote
the air--
She shrank and shivered, and a faint sobbing cry escaped her.
"Come!" said Morgana again,--and gently led her away. The spray of
orange-blossom fell from her hair as she moved, and Don Aloyslus,
stooping, picked it up. Marco Ardini saw his action.
"No,--" and Don Aloysius touched the white fragrant flower with his
crucifix--"I will lay it as a votive offering on the altar of the
Eternal Virgin!"
* * * * * *
About a fortnight later life at the Palazzo d'Oro had settled into
organised lines of method and routine. Professor Ardini had selected
two competent men attendants, skilled in surgery and medicine to
watch Seaton's case with all the care trained nursing could give,
and himself had undertaken to visit the patient regularly and report
his condition. Seaton's marriage to Manella Soriso had been briefly
announced in the European papers and cabled to the American Press,
Senator Gwent being one of the first who saw it thus chronicled,
much to his amazement.
"Have you seen that Roger Seaton is married?" was the question asked
of him by every one he knew, especially by the flashing society
butterfly once Lydia Herbert, who in these early days of her
marriage was getting everything she could out of her millionaire--
"And NOT to Morgana! Just think! What a disappointment for her!--I'm
sure she was in love with him!"
"No, one never does!" laughed the fair Lydia--"Poor Morgana! Left on
the stalk! But she's so rich it won't matter. She can marry anybody
she likes."
"Marriage isn't everything," said Gwent--"To some it may be heaven,-
-but to others--"
They might have had more than ordinary cause to "wonder" had they
been able to form even a guess as to the manner and intentions of
life held by the strange half spiritual creature whom they imagined
to be but an ordinary mortal moved by the same ephemeral aims and
desires as the rest of the grosser world. Who,--even among
scientists, accustomed as they are to study the evolution of grubs
into lovely rainbow-winged shapes, and the transformation of
ordinary weeds into exquisite flowers of perfect form and glorious
colour, goes far enough or deep enough to realise similar capability
of transformation in a human organism self-trained to so evolve and
develop itself? Who, at this time of day,--even with the hourly
vivid flashes kindled by the research lamps of science, reverts to
former theories of men like De Gabalis, who held that beings in
process of finer evolution and formation, and known as "elementals,"
nourishing their own growth into exquisite existence, through the
radio-force of air and fire, may be among us, all unrecognised, yet
working their way out of lowness to highness, indifferent to worldly
loves, pleasures and opinions, and only bent on the attainment of
immortal life? Such beliefs serve only as material for the scoffer
and iconoclast,--nevertheless they may be true for all that, and may
in the end confound the mockery of materialism which in itself is
nothing but the deep shadow cast by a great light.
And she meant it, having no predominant idea in her mind save that
of making her elect beloved happy.
Meanwhile Morgana announced her intention of taking another aerial
voyage in the "White Eagle"--much to the joy of Giulio Rivardi.
Receiving his orders to prepare the wonderful air-ship for a long
flight, he and Gaspard worked energetically to perfect every detail.
Where he had previously felt a certain sense of fear as to the
capabilities of the great vessel, controlled by a force of which
Morgana alone had the secret, he was now full of certainty and
confidence, and told her so.
"I am glad"--he said--"that you are leaving this place where you
have installed people who to me seem quite out of keeping with it.
That terrible man who shouts 'I am master of the world'!--ah, cara
Madonna!--I did not work at your fairy Palazzo d'Oro for such an
occupant!"
"You were right! And love inhabits it--love of the purest, most
unselfish nature--"
"Very pretty of you!" and she withdrew her hand from his too fervent
clasp,--"I feel sorry for myself that I cannot rightly appreciate so
charming a compliment!"
"You are what some people call 'a good fellow,' Giulio!" she said--
"And you deserve to be very happy. I hope you will be so! I want you
to prosper so that you may restore your grand old villa to its
former beauty,--I also want you to marry--and bring up a big
family"--here she laughed a little--"A family of sons and daughters
who will be grateful to you, and not waste every penny you give
them--though that is the modern way of sons and daughters."
She paused, smiling at his moody expression. "And you say everything
is ready?--the 'White Eagle' is prepared for flight?"
With that she left him. And he betook himself to the air-shed where
the superb "White Eagle" rested all a-quiver for departure,
palpitating, or so it seemed to him, with a strange eagerness for
movement which struck him as unusual and "uncanny" in a mere piece
of mechanism.
Gone! The shed was empty! No air-ship was there, poised trembling on
its own balance all prepared for flight,--the wonderful "White
Eagle" had unfurled its wings and fled! Whither? Like a madman he
rushed up and down, shouting and calling in vain--it was after
midnight and there was no one about to hear him. He started to run
to the Palazzo d'Oro to give the alarm--but was held back--held by
an indescribable force which he was powerless to resist. He
struggled with all his might,--uselessly.
Running down to the edge of the sea he gazed across it and up to the
wonderful sky through which the moon rolled lazily like a silver
ball. Was there nothing to be seen there save that moon and the
moon-dimmed stars? With eager straining eyes he searched every
quarter of the visible space--stay! Was that a white dove soaring
eastwards?--or a cloud sinking to its rest?
Even as he spoke the dove-like shape was lost to sight beyond the
shining of the evening star.
L'Envoi
Several months ago the ruin of a great air-ship was found on the
outskirts of the Great Desert so battered and broken as to make its
mechanism unrecognisable. No one could trace its origin,--no one
could discover the method of its design. There was no remnant of any
engine, and its wings were cut to ribbons. The travellers who came
upon its fragments half buried in the sand left it where they found
it, deciding that a terrible catastrophe had overtaken the
unfortunate aviators who had piloted it thus far. They spoke of it
when they returned to Europe, but came upon no one who could offer a
clue to its possible origin. These same travellers were those who a
short time since filled a certain section of the sensational press
with tales of a "Brazen City" seen from the desert in the distance,
with towers and cupolas that shone like brass or like "the city of
pure gold," revealed to St. John the Divine, where "in the midst of
the street of it" is the Tree of Life. Such tales were and are
received with scorn by the world's majority, for whom food and money
constitute the chief interest of existence,--nevertheless tradition
sometimes proves to be true, and dreams become realities. However
this may be, Morgana lives,--and can make her voice heard when she
will along the "Sound Ray"--that wonderful "wireless" which is soon
to be declared to the world. For there is no distance that is not
bridged by light,--and no separation of sounds that cannot be again
brought into unison and harmony. "There are more things in heaven
and earth than are dreamed of in our philosophy,"--and the "Golden
City" is one of those things! "Masters of the world" are poor
creatures at best,--but the secret Makers of the New Race are the
gods of the Future!
The End
End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of The Secret Power, by Marie Corelli