sombre as we returned. He walked about the room uneasily. "Hell's brewing here all right," he said at last, stopping before me. "I can't make out just the particular brand - that's all that bothers me. We're going to have a stiff fight, that's sure. What I want to do quick is to find the Golden Girl, Doc. Haven't seen her on the wall lately, have you?" he queried, hopefully fantastic. "Laugh if you want to," he went on. "But she's our best bet. It's going to be a race between her and the O'Keefe banshee - but I put my money on her. I had a queer experience while I was in that garden, after you'd left." His voice grew solemn. "Did you ever see a leprechaun, Doc?" I shook my head again, as solemnly. "He's a little man in green," said Larry. "Oh, about as high as your knee. I saw one once - in Carntogher Woods. And as I sat there, half asleep, in Yolara's garden, the living spit of him stepped out from one of those bushes, twirling a little shillalah. "'It's a tight box ye're gettin' in, Larry avick,' said he, 'but don't ye be downhearted, lad.' "'I'm carrying on,' said I, 'but you're a long way from Ireland,' I said, or thought I did. "'Ye've a lot o' friends there,' he answered. 'An' where the heart rests the feet are swift to follow. Not that I'm sayin' I'd like to live here, Larry,' said he. "'I know where my heart is now,' I told him. 'It rests on a girl with golden eyes and the hair and swanwhite breast of Eilidh the Fair - but me feet don't seem to get me to her,' I said." The brogue thickened. "An' the little man in green nodded his head an' whirled his shillalah. "'It's what I came to tell ye,' says he. 'Don't ye fall for the BheanNimher, the serpent woman wit' the blue eyes; she's a daughter of Ivor, lad - an' don't ye do nothin' to make the brownhaired coleen ashamed o' ye, Larry O'Keefe. I knew yer great, great grandfather an' his before him, aroon,' says he, 'an' wan o' the O'Keefe failin's is to think their hearts big enough to hold all the wimmen o' the world. A heart's built to hold only wan permanently, Larry,' he says, 'an' I'm warnin' ye a nice girl don't like to move into a place all cluttered up wid another's washin' an' mendin' an' cookin' an' other things pertainin' to general wife work. Not that I think the blueeyed wan is keen for mendin' an' cookin'!' says he. "'You don't have to be comin' all this way to tell me that,' I answer. "'Well, I'm just a tellin' you,' he says. 'Ye've got some rough knocks comin', Larry. In fact, ye're in for a devil of a time. But, remember that ye're the O'Keefe,' says he. 'An' while the bhoys are all wid ye, avick, ye've got to be on the job yourself.' "'I hope,' I tell him, 'that the O'Keefe banshee can find her way here in time - that is, if it's necessary, which I hope it won't be.' "'Don't ye worry about that,' says he. 'Not that she's keen on leavin' the ould sod, Larry. The good ould soul's in quite a state o' mind about ye, aroon. I don't mind tellin' ye, lad, that she's mobilizing all the clan an' if she has to come for ye, avick, they'll be wid her an' they'll sweep this joint clean before ye go. What they'll do to it'll make the Big Wind look like a summer breeze on Lough Lene! An' that's about all, Larry. We thought a voice from the Green Isle would cheer ye. Don't fergit that ye're the O'Keefe an' I say it again - all the bhoys are wid ye. But we want t' kape bein' proud o' ye, lad!' "An' I looked again and there was only a bush waving." There wasn't a smile in my heart - or if there was it was a very tender one. "I'm going to bed," he said abruptly. "Keep an eye on the wall, Doc!" Between the seven sleeps that followed, Larry and I saw but little of each other. Yolara sought him more and more. Thrice we were called before the Council; once we were at a great feast, whose splendours and surprises I can never forget. Largely I was in the company of Rador. Together we two passed the green barriers into the dwelling - place of the ladala. They seemed provided with everything needful for life. But everywhere was an oppressiveness, a gathering together of hate, that was spiritual rather than material - as tangible as the latter and far, far more menacing! "They do not like to dance with the Shining One," was Rador's constant and only reply to my efforts to find the cause. Once I had concrete evidence of the mood. Glancing behind me, I saw a white, vengeful face peer from behind a treetrunk, a hand lift, a shining dart speed from it straight toward Rador's back. Instinctively I thrust him aside. He turned upon me angrily. I pointed to where the little missile lay, still quivering, on the ground. He gripped my hand. "That, some day I will repay!" he said. I looked again at the thing. At its end was a tiny cone covered with a glistening, gelatinous substance. Rador pulled from a tree beside us a fruit somewhat like an apple. "Look!" he said. He dropped it upon the dart - and at once, before my eyes, in less than ten seconds, the fruit had rotted away! "That's what would have happened to Rador but for you, friend!" he said. Come now between this and the prelude to the latter half of the drama whose history this narrative is - only scattering and necessarily fragmentary observations. First - the nature of the ebon opacities, blocking out the spaces between the pavilionpillars or covering their tops like roofs, These were magnetic fields, light absorbers, negativing the vibrations of radiance; literally screens of electric force which formed as impervious a barrier to light as would have screens of steel. They instantaneously made night appear in a place where no night was. But they interposed no obstacle to air or to sound. They were extremely simple in their inception - no more miraculous than is glass, which, inversely, admits the vibrations of light, but shuts out those coarser ones we call air - and, partly, those others which produce upon our auditory nerves the effects we call sound. Briefly their mechanism was this: [For the same reason that Dr. Goodwin's exposition of the mechanism of the atomic engines was deleted, his description of the lightdestroying screens has been deleted by the Executive Council. - J. B. F., President, I. A. of S.] There were two favoured classes of the ladala - the soldiers and the dreammakers. The dreammakers were the most astonishing social phenomena, I think, of all. Denied by their circumscribed environment the wider experiences of us of the outer world, the Murians had perfected an amazing system of escape through the imagination. They were, too, intensely musical. Their favourite instruments were double flutes; immensely complex pipeorgans; harps, great and small. They had another remarkable instrument made up of a double octave of small drums which gave forth percussions remarkably disturbing to the emotional centres. It was this love of music that gave rise to one of the few truly humorous incidents of our caverned life. Larry came to me - it was just after our fourth sleep, I remember. "Come on to a concert," he said. We skimmed off to one of the bridge garrisons. Rador called the twoscore guards to attention; and then, to my utter stupefaction, the whole company, O'Keefe leading them, roared out the anthem, "God Save the King." They sang - in a closer approach to the English than might have been expected scores of miles below England's level. "Send him victorious! Happy and glorious!" they bellowed. He quivered with suppressed mirth at my paralysis of surprise. "Taught 'em that for Marakinoff's benefit!" he gasped. "Wait till that Red hears it. He'll blow up. "Just wait until you hear Yolara lisp a pretty little thing I taught her," said Larry as we set back for what we now called home. There was an impish twinkle in his eyes. And I did hear. For it was not many minutes later that the priestess condescended to command me to come to her with O'Keefe. "Show Goodwin how much you have learned of our speech, O lady of the lips of honeyed flame!" murmured Larry. She hesitated; smiled at him, and then from that perfect mouth, out of the exquisite throat, in the voice that was like the chiming of little silver bells, she trilled a melody familiar to me indeed: "She's only a bird in a gilded cage, A beeyutiful sight to see - " And so on to the bitter end. "She thinks it's a lovesong," said Larry when we had left. "It's only part of a repertoire I'm teaching her. Honestly, Doc, it's the only way I can keep my mind clear when I'm with her," he went on earnestly. "She's a deviless from hell - but a wonder. Whenever I find myself going I get her to sing that, or Take Back Your Gold! or some other ancient lay, and I'm back again - pronto - with the right perspective! Pop goes all the mystery! 'Hell!' I say, 'she's only a woman!'" CHAPTER XVIII The Amphitheatre of Jet FOR HOURS the blackhaired folk had been streaming across the bridges, flowing along the promenade by scores and by hundreds, drifting down toward the gigantic seventerraced temple whose interior I had never as yet seen, and from whose towering exterior, indeed, I had always been kept far enough away - unobtrusively, but none the less decisively - to prevent any real observation. The structure, I had estimated, nevertheless, could not reach less than a thousand feet above its silvery base, and the diameter of its circular foundation was about the same. I wondered what was bringing the ladala into Lora, and where they were vanishing. All of them were flowercrowned with the luminous, lovely blooms - old and young, slender, mockingeyed girls, dwarfed youths, mothers with their babes, gnomed oldsters - on they poured, silent for the most part and sullen - a sullenness that held acid bitterness even as their subtle, halfsinister, halfgay malice seemed tempered into little keenedged flames, oddly, menacingly defiant. There were many of the greenclad soldiers along the way, and the garrison of the only bridge span I could see had certainly been doubled. Wondering still, I turned from my point of observation and made my way back to our pavilion, hoping that Larry, who had been with Yolara for the past two hours, had returned. Hardly had I reached it before Rador came hurrying up, in his manner a curious exultance mingled with what in anyone else I would have called a decided nervousness. "Come!" he commanded before I could speak. "The Council has made decision - and Larree is awaiting you." "What has been decided?" I panted as we sped along the mosaic path that led to the house of Yolara. "And why is Larry awaiting me?" And at his answer I felt my heart pause in its beat and through me race a wave of mingled panic and eagerness. "The Shining One dances!" had answered the green dwarf. "And you are to worship!" What was this dancing of the Shining One, of which so often he had spoken? Whatever my forebodings, Larry evidently had none. "Great stuff!" he cried, when we had met in the great antechamber now empty of the dwarfs. "Hope it will be worth seeing - have to be something damned good, though, to catch me, after what I've seen of shows at the front," he added. And remembering, with a little shock of apprehension, that he had no knowledge of the Dweller beyond my poor description of it - for there are no words actually to describe what that miracle of interwoven glory and horror was - I wondered what Larry O'Keefe would say and do when he did behold it! Rador began to show impatience. "Come!" he urged. "There is much to be done - and the time grows short!" He led us to a tiny fountain room in whose miniature pool the white waters were concentrated, pearllike and opalescent in their circling rim. "Bathe!" he commanded; and set the example by stripping himself and plunging within. Only a minute or two did the green dwarf allow us, and he checked us as we were about to don our clothing. Then, to my intense embarrassment, without warning, two of the blackhaired girls entered, bearing robes of a peculiar dullblue hue. At our manifest discomfort Rador's laughter roared out. He took the garments from the pair, motioned them to leave us, and, still laughing, threw one around me. Its texture was soft, but decidedly metallic - like some blue metal spun to the fineness of a spider's thread. The garment buckled tightly at the throat, was girdled at the waist, and, below this cincture, fell to the floor, its folds being held together by a halfdozen looped cords; from the shoulders a hood resembling a monk's cowl. Rador cast this over my head; it completely covered my face, but was of so transparent a texture that I could see, though somewhat mistily, through it. Finally he handed us both a pair of long gloves of the same material and high stockings, the feet of which were gloved - fivetoed. And again his laughter rang out at our manifest surprise. "The priestess of the Shining One does not altogether trust the Shining One's Voice," he said at last. "And these are to guard against any sudden - errors. And fear not, Goodwin," he went on kindly. "Not for the Shining One itself would Yolara see harm come to Larree here - nor, because of him, to you. But I would not stake much on the great white one. And for him I am sorry, for him I do like well." "Is he to be with us?" asked Larry eagerly. "He is to be where we go," replied the dwarf soberly. Grimly Larry reached down and drew from his uniform his automatic. He popped a fresh clip into the pocket fold of his girdle. The pistol he slung high up beneath his armpit. The green dwarf looked at the weapon curiously. O'Keefe tapped it. "This," said Larry, "slays quicker than the Keth - I take it so no harm shall come to the blueeyed one whose name is Olaf. If I should raise it - be you not in its way, Rador!" he added significantly. The dwarf nodded again, his eyes sparkling. He thrust a hand out to both of us. "A change comes," he said. "What it is I know not, nor how it will fall. But this remember - Rador is more friend to you than you yet can know. And now let us go!" he ended abruptly. He led us, not through the entrance, but into a sloping passage ending in a blind wall; touched a symbol graven there, and it opened, precisely as had the rosy barrier of the Moon Pool Chamber. And, just as there, but far smaller, was a passage end, a low curved wall facing a shaft not black as had been that abode of living darkness, but faintly luminescent. Rador leaned over the wall. The mechanism clicked and started; the door swung shut; the sides of the car slipped into place, and we swept swiftly down the passage; overhead the wind whistled. In a few moments the moving platform began to slow down. It stopped in a closed chamber no larger than itself. Rador drew his poniard and struck twice upon the wall with its hilt. Immediately a panel moved away, revealing a space filled with faint, misty blue radiance. And at each side of the open portal stood four of the dwarfish men, greyheaded, old, clad in flowing garments of white, each pointing toward us a short silver rod. Rador drew from his girdle a ring and held it out to the first dwarf. He examined it, handed it to the one beside him, and not until each had inspected the ring did they lower their curious weapons; containers of that terrific energy they called the Keth, I thought; and later was to know that I had been right. We stepped out; the doors closed behind us. The place was weird enough. Its pave was a greenishblue stone resembling lapis lazuli. On each side were high pedestals holding carved figures of the same material. There were perhaps a score of these, but in the mistiness I could not make out their outlines. A droning, rushing roar beat upon our ears; filled the whole cavern. "I smell the sea," said Larry suddenly. The roaring became deeptoned, clamorous, and close in front of us a rift opened. Twenty feet in width, it cut the cavern floor and vanished into the blue mist on each side. The cleft was spanned by one solid slab of rock not more than two yards wide. It had neither railing nor other protection. The four leading priests marched out upon it one by one, and we followed. In the middle of the span they knelt. Ten feet beneath us was a torrent of blue seawater racing with prodigious speed between polished walls. It gave the impression of vast depth. It roared as it sped by, and far to the right was a low arch through which it disappeared. It was so swift that its surface shone like polished blue steel, and from it came the blessed, our worldly, familiar ocean breath that strengthened my soul amazingly and made me realize how earthsick I was. Whence came the stream, I marvelled, forgetting for the moment, as we passed on again, all else. Were we closer to the surface of earth than I had thought, or was this some mighty flood falling through an opening in sea floor, Heaven alone knew how many miles above us, losing itself in deeper abysses beyond these? How near and how far this was from the truth I was to learn - and never did truth come to man in more dreadful guise! The roaring fell away, the blue haze lessened. In front of us stretched a wide flight of steps, huge as those which had led us into the courtyard of NanTauach through the ruined seagate. We scaled it; it narrowed; from above light poured through a still narrower opening. Side by side Larry and I passed out of it. We had emerged upon an enormous platform of what seemed to be glistening ivory. It stretched before us for a hundred yards or more and then shelved gently into the white waters. Opposite - not a mile away - was that prodigious web of woven rainbows Rador had called the Veil of the Shining One. There it shone in all its unearthly grandeur, on each side of the Cyclopean pillars, as though a mountain should stretch up arms raising between them a fairy banner of auroral glories. Beneath it was the curved, scimitar sweep of the pier with its clustered, gleaming temples. Before that brief, fascinated glance was done, there dropped upon my soul a sensation as of brooding weight intolerable; a spiritual oppression as though some vastness was falling, pressing, stifling me, I turned - and Larry caught me as I reeled. "Steady! Steady, old man!" he whispered. At first all that my staggering consciousness could realize was an immensity, an immeasurable uprearing that brought with it the same throatgripping vertigo as comes from gazing downward from some great height - then a blur of white faces - intolerable shinings of hundreds upon thousands of eyes. Huge, incredibly huge, a colossal amphitheatre of jet, a stupendous semicircle, held within its mighty arc the ivory platform on which I stood. It reared itself almost perpendicularly hundreds of feet up into the sparkling heavens, and thrust down on each side its ebon bulwarks - like monstrous paws. Now, the giddiness from its sheer greatness passing, I saw that it was indeed an amphitheatre sloping slightly backward tier after tier, and that the white blur of faces against its blackness, the gleaming of countless eyes were those of myriads of the people who sat silent, flowergarlanded, their gaze focused upon the rainbow curtain and sweeping over me like a torrent - tangible, appalling! Five hundred feet beyond, the smooth, high retaining wall of the amphitheatre raised itself - above it the first terrace of the seats, and above this, dividing the tiers for another half a thousand feet upward, set within them like a panel, was a deadblack surface in which shone faintly with a bluish radiance a gigantic disk; above it and around it a cluster of innumerable smaller ones. On each side of me, bordering the platform, were scores of small pillared alcoves, a low wall stretching across their fronts; delicate, fretted grills shielding them, save where in each lattice an opening stared - it came to me that they were like those stalls in ancient Gothic cathedrals wherein for centuries had kneeled paladins and people of my own race on earth's fair face. And within these alcoves were gathered, score upon score, the elfin beauties, the dwarfish men of the fairhaired folk. At my right, a few feet from the opening through which we had come, a passageway led back between the fretted stalls. Halfway between us and the massive base of the amphitheatre a dais rose. Up the platform to it a wide ramp ascended; and on ramp and dais and along the centre of the gleaming platform down to where it kissed the white waters, a broad ribbon of the radiant flowers lay like a fairy carpet. On one side of this dais, meshed in a silken web that hid no line or curve of her sweet body, white flesh gleaming through its folds, stood Yolara; and opposite her, crowned with a circlet of flashing blue stones, his mighty body stark bare, was Lugur! O'Keefe drew a long breath; Rador touched my arm and, still dazed, I let myself be drawn into the aisle and through a corridor that ran behind the alcoves. At the back of one of these the green dwarf paused, opened a door, and motioned us within. Entering, I found that we were exactly opposite where the ramp ran up to the dais - and that Yolara was not more than fifty feet away. She glanced at O'Keefe and smiled. Her eyes were ablaze with little dancing points of light; her body seemed to palpitate, the rounded delicate muscles beneath the translucent skin to run with joyful little eager waves! Larry whistled softly. "There's Marakinoff!" he said. I looked where he pointed. Opposite us sat the Russian, clothed as we were, leaning forward, his eyes eager behind his glasses; but if he saw us he gave no sign. "And there's Olaf!" said O'Keefe. Beneath the carved stall in which sat the Russian was an aperture and within it was Huldricksson. Unprotected by pillars or by grills, opening clear upon the platform, near him stretched the trail of flowers up to the great dais which Lugur and Yolara the priestess guarded. He sat alone, and my heart went out to him. O'Keefe's face softened. "Bring him here," he said to Rador. The green dwarf was looking at the Norseman, too, a shade of pity upon his mocking face. He shook his head. "Wait!" he said. "You can do nothing now - and it may be there will be no need to do anything," he added; but I could feel that there was little of conviction in his words. CHAPTER XIX The Madness of Olaf YOLARA threw her white arms high. From the mountainous tiers came a mighty sigh; a rippling ran through them. And upon the moment, before Yolara's arms fell, there issued, apparently from the air around us, a peal of sound that might have been the shouting of some playful god hurling great suns through the net of stars. It was like the deepest notes of all the organs in the world combined in one; summoning, majestic, cosmic! It held within it the thunder of the spheres rolling through the infinite, the birthsong of suns made manifest in the womb of space; echoes of creation's supernal chord! It shook the body like a pulse from the heart of the universe - pulsed - and died away. On its death came a blaring as of all the trumpets of conquering hosts since the first Pharaoh led his swarms - triumphal, compelling! Alexander's clamouring hosts, brazenthroated wolfhorns of Caesar's legions, blare of trumpets of Genghis Khan and his golden horde, clangor of the locust levies of Tamerlane, bugles of Napoleon's armies - warshout of all earth's conquerors! And it died! Fast upon it, a throbbing, muffled tumult of harp sounds, mellownesses of myriads of wood horns, the subdued sweet shrilling of multitudes of flutes, Pandean pipings - inviting, carrying with them the calling of waterfalls in the hidden places, rushing brooks and murmuring forest winds - calling, calling, languorous, lulling, dripping into the brain like the very honeyed essence of sound. And after them a silence in which the memory of the music seemed to beat, to beat ever more faintly, through every quivering nerve. From me all fear, all apprehension, had fled. In their place was nothing but joyous anticipation, a supernal freedom from even the shadow of the shadow of care or sorrow; not now did anything matter - Olaf or his haunted, hatefilled eyes; Throckmartin or his fate - nothing of pain, nothing of agony, nothing of striving nor endeavour nor despair in that wide outer world that had turned suddenly to a troubled dream. Once more the first great note pealed out! Once more it died and from the clustered spheres a kaleidoscopic blaze shot as though drawn from the majestic sound itself. The manycoloured rays darted across the white waters and sought the face of the irised Veil. As they touched, it sparkled, flamed, wavered, and shook with fountains of prismatic colour. The light increased - and in its intensity the silver air darkened. Faded into shadow that white mosaic of flowercrowned faces set in the amphitheatre of jet, and vast shadows dropped upon the highflung tiers and shrouded them. But on the skirts of the rays the fretted stalls in which we sat with the fairhaired ones blazed out, iridescent, like jewels. I was sensible of an acceleration of every pulse; a wild stimulation of every nerve. I felt myself being lifted above the world - close to the threshold of the high gods - soon their essence and their power would stream out into me! I glanced at Larry. His eyes were - wild - with life! I looked at Olaf - and in his face was none of this - only hate, and hate, and hate. The peacock waves streamed out over the waters, cleaving the seeming darkness, a rainbow path of glory. And the Veil flashed as though all the rainbows that had ever shone were burning within it. Again the mighty sound pealed. Into the centre of the Veil the light drew itself, grew into an intolerable brightness - and with a storm of tinklings, a tempest of crystalline notes, a tumult of tiny chimings, through it sped - the Shining One! Straight down that radiant path, its highflung plumes of feathery flame shimmering, its coruscating spirals whirling, its seven globes of seven colours shining above its glowing core, it raced toward us. The hurricane of bells of diamond glass were jubilant, joyous. I felt O'Keefe grip my arm; Yolara threw her white arms out in a welcoming gesture; I heard from the tier a sigh of rapture - and in it a poignant, wailing undertone of agony! Over the waters, down the light stream, to the end of the ivory pier, flew the Shining One. Through its crystal pizzicati drifted inarticulate murmurings - deadly sweet, stilling the heart and setting it leaping madly. For a moment it paused, poised itself, and then came whirling down the flower path to its priestess, slowly, ever more slowly. It hovered for a moment between the woman and the dwarf, as though contemplating them; turned to her with its storm of tinklings softened, its murmurings infinitely caressing. Bent toward it, Yolara seemed to gather within herself pulsing waves of power; she was terrifying; gloriously, maddeningly evil; and as gloriously, maddeningly heavenly! Aphrodite and the Virgin! Tanith of the Carthaginians and St. Bride of the Isles! A queen of hell and a princess of heaven - in one! Only for a moment did that which we had called the Dweller and which these named the Shining One, pause. It swept up the ramp to the dais, rested there, slowly turning, plumes and spirals lacing and unlacing, throbbing, pulsing. Now its nucleus grew plainer, stronger - human in a fashion, and all inhuman; neither man nor woman; neither god nor devil; subtly partaking of all. Nor could I doubt that whatever it was, within that shining nucleus was something sentient; something that had will and energy, and in some awful, supernormal fashion - intelligence! Another trumpeting - a sound of stones opening - a long, low wail of utter anguish - something moved shadowy in the river of light, and slowly at first, then ever more rapidly, shapes swam through it. There were half a score of them - girls and youths, women and men. The Shining One poised itself, regarded them. They drew closer, and in the eyes of each and in their faces was the bud of that awful intermingling of emotions, of joy and sorrow, ecstasy and terror, that I had seen in full blossom on Throckmartin's. The Thing began again its murmurings - now infinitely caressing, coaxing - like the song of a siren from some witched star! And the bellsounds rang out - compellingly, calling - calling - calling - I saw Olaf lean far out of his place; saw, halfconsciously, at Lugur's signal, three of the dwarfs creep in and take places, unnoticed, behind him. Now the first of the figures rushed upon the dais - and paused. It was the girl who had been brought before Yolara when the gnome named Songar was driven into the nothingness! With all the quickness of light a spiral of the Shining One stretched out and encircled her. At its touch there was an infinitely dreadful shrinking and, it seemed, a simultaneous hurling of herself into its radiance. As it wrapped its swirls around her, permeated her - the crystal chorus burst forth - tumultuously; through and through her the radiance pulsed. Began then that infinitely dreadful, but infinitely glorious, rhythm they called the dance of the Shining One. And as the girl swirled within its sparkling mists another and another flew into its embrace, until, at last, the dais was an incredible vision; a mad star's Witches' Sabbath; an altar of white faces and bodies gleaming through living flame; transfused with rapture insupportable and horror that was hellish - and ever, radiant plumes and spirals expanding, the core of the Shining One waxed - growing greater - as it consumed, as it drew into and through itself the lifeforce of these lost ones! So they spun, interlaced - and there began to pulse from them life, vitality, as though the very essence of nature was filling us. Dimly I recognized that what I was beholding was vampirism inconceivable! The banked tiers chanted. The mighty sounds pealed forth! It was a Saturnalia of demigods! Then, whirling, bellnotes storming, the Shining One withdrew slowly from the dais down the ramp, still embracing, still interwoven with those who had thrown themselves into its spirals. They drifted with it as though halfcarried in dreadful dance; white faces sealed - forever - into that semblance of those who held within linked God and devil - I covered my eyes! I heard a gasp from O'Keefe; opened my eyes and sought his; saw the wildness vanish from them as he strained forward. Olaf had leaned far out, and as he did so the dwarfs beside him caught him, and whether by design or through his own swift, involuntary movement, thrust him half into the Dweller's path. The Dweller paused in its gyrations - seemed to watch him. The Norseman's face was crimson, his eyes blazing. He threw himself back and, with one defiant shout, gripped one of the dwarfs about the middle and sent him hurtling through the air, straight at the radiant Thing! A whirling mass of legs and arms, the dwarf flew - then in midflight stopped as though some gigantic invisible hand had caught him, and - was dashed down upon the platform not a yard from the Shining One! Like a broken spider he moved - feebly - once, twice. From the Dweller shot a shimmering tentacle - touched him - recoiled. Its crystal tinklings changed into an angry chiming. From all about - jewelled stalls and jet peak - came a sigh of incredulous horror. Lugur leaped forward. On the instant Larry was over the low barrier between the pillars, rushing to the Norseman's side. And even as they ran there was another wild shout from Olaf, and he hurled himself out, straight at the throat of the Dweller! But before he could touch the Shining One, now motionless - and never was the thing more horrible than then, with the purely human suggestion of surprise plain in its poise - Larry had struck him aside. I tried to follow - and was held by Rador. He was trembling - but not with fear. In his face was incredulous hope, inexplicable eagerness. "Wait!" he said. "Wait!" The Shining One stretched out a slow spiral, and as it did so I saw the bravest thing man has ever witnessed. Instantly O'Keefe thrust himself between it and Olaf, pistol out. The tentacle touched him, and the dull blue of his robe flashed out into blinding, intense azure light. From the automatic in his gloved hand came three quick bursts of flame straight into the Thing. The Dweller drew back; the bellsounds swelled. Lugur paused, his hand darted up, and in it was one of the silver Keth cones. But before he could flash it upon the Norseman, Larry had unlooped his robe, thrown its fold over Olaf, and, holding him with one hand away from the Shining One, thrust with the other his pistol into the dwarf's stomach. His lips moved, but I could not hear what he said. But Lugur understood, for his hand dropped. Now Yolara was there - all this had taken barely more than five seconds. She thrust herself between the three men and the Dweller. She spoke to it - and the wild buzzing died down; the gay crystal tinklings burst forth again. The Thing murmured to her - began to whirl - faster, faster - passed down the ivory pier, out upon the waters, bearing with it, meshed in its light, the sacrifices - swept on ever more swiftly, triumphantly and turning, turning, with its ghastly crew, vanished through the Veil! Abruptly the polychromatic path snapped out. The silver light poured in upon us. From all the amphitheatre arose a clamour, a shouting. Marakinoff, his eyes staring, was leaning out, listening. Unrestrained now by Rador, I vaulted the wall and rushed forward. But not before I had heard the green dwarf murmur: "There is something stronger than the Shining One! Two things - yea - a strong heart - and hate!" Olaf, panting, eyes glazed, trembling, shrank beneath my hand. "The devil that took my Helma!" I heard him whisper. "The Shining Devil!" "Both these men," Lugur was raging, "they shall dance with the Shining one. And this one, too." He pointed at me malignantly. "This man is mine," said the priestess, and her voice was menacing. She rested her hand on Larry's shoulder. "He shall not dance. No - nor his friend. I have told you I dare not for this one!" She pointed to Olaf. "Neither this man, nor this," said Larry, "shall be harmed. This is my word, Yolara!" "Even so," she answered quietly, "my lord!" I saw Marakinoff stare at O'Keefe with a new and curiously speculative interest. Lugur's eyes grew hellish; he raised his arms as though to strike her. Larry's pistol prodded him rudely enough. "No rough stuff now, kid!" said O'Keefe in English. The red dwarf quivered, turned - caught a robe from a priest standing by, and threw it over himself. The ladala, shouting, gesticulating, fighting with the soldiers, were jostling down from the tiers of jet. "Come!" commanded Yolara - her eyes rested upon Larry. "Your heart is great, indeed - my lord!" she murmured; and her voice was very sweet. "Come!" "This man comes with us, Yolara," said O'Keefe pointing to Olaf. "Bring him," she said. "Bring him - only tell him to look no more upon me as before!" she added fiercely. Beside her the three of us passed along the stalls, where sat the fairhaired, now silent, at gaze, as though in the grip of some great doubt. Silently Olaf strode beside me. Rador had disappeared. Down the stairway, through the hall of turquoise mist, over the rushing seastream we went and stood beside the wall through which we had entered. The whiterobed ones had gone. Yolara pressed; the portal opened. We stepped upon the car; she took the lever; we raced through the faintly luminous corridor to the house of the priestess. And one thing now I knew sick at heart and soul the truth had come to me - no more need to search for Throckmartin. Behind that Veil, in the lair of the Dweller, deadalive like those we had just seen swim in its shining train was he, and Edith, Stanton and Thora and Olaf Huldricksson's wife! The car came to rest; the portal opened; Yolara leaped out lightly, beckoned and flitted up the corridor. She paused before an ebon screen. At a touch it vanished, revealing an entrance to a small blue chamber, glowing as though cut from the heart of some gigantic sapphire; bare, save that in its centre, upon a low pedestal, stood a great globe fashioned from milky rockcrystal; upon its surface were faint tracings as of seas and continents, but, if so, either of some other world or of this world in immemorial past, for in no way did they resemble the mapped coastlines of our earth. Poised upon the globe, rising from it out into space, locked in each other's arms, lips to lips, were two figures, a woman and a man, so exquisite, so lifelike, that for the moment I failed to realize that they, too, were carved of the crystal. And before this shrine - for nothing else could it be, I knew - three slender cones raised themselves: one of purest white flame, one of opalescent water, and the third of - moonlight! There was no mistaking them, the height of a tall man each stood - but how water, flame and light were held so evenly, so steadily in their spireshapes, I could not tell. Yolara bowed lowly - once, twice, thrice. She turned to O'Keefe, nor by slightest look or gesture betrayed she knew others were there than he. The blue eyes wide, searching, unfathomable, she drew close; put white hands on his shoulders, looked down into his very soul. "My lord," she murmured. "Now listen well for I, Yolara, give you three things - myself, and the Shining One, and the power that is the Shining One's - yea, and still a fourth thing that is all three - power over all upon that world from whence you came! These, my lord, ye shall have. I swear it" - she turned toward the altar - uplifted her arms - "by Siya and by Siyana, and by the flame, by the water, and by the light!"1 Her eyes grew purple dark. "Let none dare to take you from me! Nor ye go from me unbidden!" she whispered fiercely. Then swiftly, still ignoring us, she threw her arms about O'Keefe, pressed her white body to his breast, lips raised, eyes closed, seeking his. O'Keefe's arms tightened around her, his head dropped lips seeking, finding hers - passionately! From Olaf came a deep indrawn breath that was almost a groan. But not in my heart could I find blame for the Irishman! The priestess opened eyes now all misty blue, thrust him back, stood regarding him. O'Keefe, deadwhite, raised a trembling hand to his face. "And thus have I sealed my oath, O my lord!" she whispered. For the first time she seemed to recognize our presence, stared at us a moment, then through us, and turned to O'Keefe. "Go, now!" she said. "Soon Rador shall come for you. Then - well, after that let happen what will!" She smiled once more at him - so sweetly; turned toward the figures upon the great globe; sank upon her knees before them. Quietly we crept away; still silent, made our way to the little pavilion. But as we passed we heard a tumult from the green roadway; shouts of men, now and then a woman's scream. Through a rift in the garden I glimpsed a jostling crowd on one of the bridges: green dwarfs struggling with the ladala - and all about droned a humming as of a giant hive disturbed! Larry threw himself down upon one of the divans, covered his face with his hands, dropped them to catch in Olaf's eyes troubled reproach, looked at me. "I couldn't help it," he said, half defiantly - halfmiserably. "God, what a woman! I couldn't help it!" "Larry," I asked. "Why didn't you tell her you didn't love her - then?" He gazed at me - the old twinkle back in his eye. "Spoken like a scientist, Doc!" he exclaimed. "I suppose if a burning angel struck you out of nowhere and threw itself about you, you would most dignifiedly tell it you didn't want to be burned. For God's sake, don't talk nonsense, Goodwin!" he ended, almost peevishly. "Evil! Evil!" The Norseman's voice was deep, nearly a chant. "All here is of evil: Trolldom and Helvede it is, Ja! And that she djaevelsk of beauty - what is she but harlot of that shining devil they worship. I, Olaf Huldricksson, know what she meant when she held out to you power over all the world, Ja! - as if the world had not devils enough in it now!" "What?" The cry came from both O'Keefe and myself at once. Olaf made a gesture of caution, relapsed into sullen silence. There were footsteps on the path, and into sight came Rador - but a Rador changed. Gone was every vestige of his mockery; curiously solemn, he saluted O'Keefe and Olaf with that salute which, before this, I had seen given only to Yolara and to Lugur. There came a swift quickening of the tumult - died away. He shrugged mighty shoulders. "The ladala are awake!" he said. "So much for what two brave men can do!" He paused thoughtfully. "Bones and dust jostle not each other for place against the grave wall!" he added oddly. "But if bones and dust have revealed to them that they still - live - " He stopped abruptly, eyes seeking the globe that bore and sent forth speech.2 "The Afyo Maie has sent me to watch over you till she summons you," he announced clearly. "There is to be a - feast. You, Larree, you Goodwin, are to come. I remain here with - Olaf." "No harm to him!" broke in O'Keefe sharply. Rador touched his heart, his eyes. "By the Ancient Ones, and by my love for you, and by what you twain did before the Shining One - I swear it!" he whispered. Rador clapped palms; a soldier came round the path, in his grip a long flat box of polished wood. The green dwarf took it, dismissed him, threw open the lid. "Here is your apparel for the feast, Larree," he said, pointing to the contents. O'Keefe stared, reached down and drew out a white, shimmering, softly metallic, longsleeved tunic, a broad, silvery girdle, leg swathings of the same argent material, and san dals that seemed to be cut out from silver. He made a quick gesture of angry dissent. "Nay, Larree!" muttered the dwarf. "Wear them - I counsel it - I pray it - ask me not why," he went on swiftly, looking again at the globe. O'Keefe, as I, was impressed by his earnestness. The dwarf made a curiously expressive pleading gesture. O'Keefe abruptly took the garments; passed into the room of the fountain. "The Shining One dances not again?" I asked. "No," he said. "No" - he hesitate - "it is the usual feast that follows the sacrament! Lugur - and Double Tongue, who came with you, will be there," he added slowly. "Lugur - " I gasped in astonishment. "After what happened - he will be there?" "Perhaps because of what happened, Goodwin, my friend," he answered - his eyes again full of malice; "and there will be others - friends of Yolara - friends of Lugur - and perhaps another" - his voice was almost inaudible - "one whom they have not called - " He halted, halffearfully, glancing at the globe; put finger to lips and spread himself out upon one of the couches. "Strike up the band" - came O'Keefe's voice - "here comes the hero!" He strode into the room. I am bound to say that the admiration in Rador's eyes was reflected in my own, and even, if involuntarily, in Olaf's. "A son of Siyana!" whispered Rador. He knelt, took from his girdlepouch a silkwrapped something, unwound it - and, still kneeling, drew out a slender poniard of gleaming white metal, hilted with the blue stones; he thrust it into O'Keefe's girdle; then gave him again the rare salute. "Come," he ordered and took us to the head of the pathway. "Now," he said grimly, "let the Silent Ones show their power - if they still have it!" And with this strange benediction, be turned back. "For God's sake, Larry," I urged as we approached the house of the priestess, "you'll be careful!" He nodded - but I saw with a little deadly pang of apprehension in my heart a puzzled, lurking doubt within his eyes. As we ascended the serpent steps Marakinoff appeared. He gave a signal to our guards - and I wondered what influence the Russian had attained, for promptly, without question, they drew aside. At me he smiled amiably. "Have you found your friends yet?" he went on - and now I sensed something deeply sinister in him. "No! It is too bad! Well, don't give up hope." He turned to O'Keefe. "Lieutenant, I would like to speak to you - alone!" "I've no secrets from Goodwin," answered O'Keefe. "So?" queried Marakinoff, suavely. He bent, whispered to Larry. The Irishman started, eyed him with a certain shocked incredulity, then turned to me. "Just a minute, Doc!" he said, and I caught the suspicion of a wink. They drew aside, out of earshot. The Russian talked rapidly. Larry was all attention. Marakinoff's earnestness became intense; O'Keefe interrupted - appeared to question. Marakinoff glanced at me and as his gaze shifted from O'Keefe, I saw a flame of rage and horror blaze up in the latter's eyes. At last the Irishman appeared to consider gravely; nodded as though he had arrived at some decision, and Marakinoff thrust his hand to him. And only I could have noticed Larry's shrinking, his microscopic hesitation before he took it, and his involuntary movement, as though to shake off something unclean, when the clasp had ended. Marakinoff, without another look at me, turned and went quickly within. The guards took their places. I looked at Larry inquiringly. "Don't ask a thing now, Doc!" he said tensely. "Wait till we get home. But we've got to get damned busy and quick - I'll tell you that now - " [1]I have no space here even to outline the eschatology of this people, nor to catalogue their pantheon. Siya and Siyana typified worldly love. Their ritual was, however, singularly free from those degrading elements usually found in lovecults. Priests and priestesses of all cults dwelt in the immense seventerraced structure, of which the jet amphitheatre was the water side. The symbol, icon, representation, of Siya and Siyana - the globe and the upstriving figures - typified earthly love, feet bound to earth, but eyes among the stars. Hell or heaven I never heard formulated, nor their equivalents; unless that existence in the Shining One's domain could serve for either. Over all this was Thanaroa, remote; unheeding, but still maker and ruler of all - an absentee First Cause personified! Thanaroa seemed to be the one article of belief in the creed of the soldiers - Rador, with his reverence for the Ancient Ones, was an exception. Whatever there was, indeed, of high, truly religious impulse among the Murians, this far, High God had. I found this exceedingly interesting, because it had long been my theory - to put the matter in the shape of a geometrical formula - that the real attractiveness of gods to man increases uniformly according to the square of their distance - W. T. G. [2]I find that I have neglected to explain the working of these interesting mechanisms that were telephonic, dictaphonic, telegraphic in one. I must assume that my readers are familiar with the receiving apparatus of wireless telegraphy, which must be "tuned" by the operator until its own vibratory quality is in exact harmony with the vibrations - the extremely rapid impacts - of those short electric wavelengths we call Hertzian, and which carry the wireless messages. I must assume also that they are familiar with the elementary fact of physics that the vibrations of light and sound are interchangeable. The hearingtalking globes utilize both these principles, and with consummate simplicity. The light with which they shone was produced by an atomic "motor" within their base, similar to that which activated the merely illuminating globes. The composition of the phonic spheres gave their surfaces an acute sensitivity and resonance. In conjunction with its energizing power, the metal set up what is called a "field of force," which linked it with every particle of its kind no matter how distant. When vibrations of speech impinged upon the resonant surface its rhythmic lightvibrations were broken, just as a telephone transmitter breaks an electric current. Simultaneously these lightvibrations were changed into sound - on the surfaces of all spheres tuned to that particular instrument. The "crawling" colours which showed themselves at these times were literally the voice of the speaker in its spectrum equivalent. While usually the sounds produced required considerable familiarity with the apparatus to be understood quickly, they could, on occasion, be made startlingly loud and clear - as I was soon to realize - W. T. G. CHAPTER XX The Tempting of Larry WE PAUSED before thick curtains, through which came the faint murmur of many voices. They parted; out came two - ushers, I suppose, they were - in cuirasses and kilts that reminded me somewhat of chainmail - the first armour of any kind here that I had seen. They held open the folds. The chamber, on whose threshold we stood, was far larger than either anteroom or hall of audience. Not less than three hundred feet long and half that in depth, from end to end of it ran two huge semicircular tables, paralleling each other, divided by a wide aisle, and heaped with flowers, with fruits, with viands unknown to me, and glittering with crystal flagons, beakers, goblets of as many hues as the blooms. On the gaycushioned couches that flanked the tables, lounging luxuriously, were scores of the fairhaired ruling class and there rose a little buzz of admiration, oddly mixed with a halfstartled amaze, as their gaze fell upon O'Keefe in all his silvery magnificence. Everywhere the lightgiving globes sent their roseate radiance. The cuirassed dwarfs led us through the aisle. Within the arc of the inner half - circle was another glittering board, an oval. But of those seated there, facing us - I had eyes for only one - Yolara! She swayed up to greet O'Keefe - and she was like one of those white lily maids, whose beauty HoangKu, the sage, says made the Gobi first a paradise, and whose lusts later the burnedout desert that it is. She held out hands to Larry, and on her face was passion - unashamed, unhiding. She was Circe - but Circe conquered. Webs of filmiest white clung to the roseleaf body. Twisted through the cornsilk hair a threaded circlet of pale sapphires shone; but they were pale beside Yolara's eyes. O'Keefe bent, kissed her hands, something more than mere admiration flaming from him. She saw - and, smiling, drew him down beside her. It came to me that of all, only these two, Yolara and O'Keefe, were in white - and I wondered; then with a tightening of nerves ceased to wonder as there entered - Lugur! He was all in scarlet, and as he strode forward a silence fell a tense, strained silence. His gaze turned upon Yolara, rested upon O'Keefe, and instantly his face grew - dreadful - there is no other word than that for it. Marakinoff leaned forward from the centre of the table, near whose end I sat, touched and whispered to him swiftly. With appalling effort the red dwarf controlled himself; he saluted the priestess ironically, I thought; took his place at the further end of the oval. And now I noted that the figures between were the seven of that Council of which the Shining One's priestess and Voice were the heads. The tension relaxed, but did not pass - as though a stormcloud should turn away, but still lurk, threatening. My gaze ran back. This end of the room was draped with the exquisitely coloured, graceful curtains looped with gorgeous garlands. Between curtains and table, where sat Larry and the nine, a circular platform, perhaps ten yards in diameter, raised itself a few feet above the floor, its gleaming surface halfcovered with the luminous petals, fragrant, delicate. On each side below it, were low carven stools. The curtains parted and softly entered girls bearing their flutes, their harps, the curiously emotionexciting, octaved drums. They sank into their places. They touched their instruments; a faint, languorous measure throbbed through the rosy air. The stage was set! What was to be the play? Now about the tables passed other duskyhaired maids, fair bosoms bare, their scanty kirtles looped high, pouring out the wines for the feasters. My eyes sought O'Keefe. Whatever it had been that Marakinoff had said, clearly it now filled his mind - even to the exclusion of the wondrous woman beside him. His eyes were stern, cold - and now and then, as be turned them toward the Russian, filled with a curious speculation. Yolara watched him, frowned, gave a low order to the Hebe behind her. The girl disappeared, entered again with a ewer that seemed cut of amber. The priestess poured from it into Larry's glass a clear liquid that shook with tiny sparkles of light. She raised the glass to her lips, handed it to him. Half smiling, halfabstractedly, he took it, touched his own lips where hers had kissed; drained it. A nod from Yolara and the maid refilled his goblet. At once there was a swift transformation in the Irishman. His abstraction vanished; the sternness fled; his eyes sparkled. He leaned caressingly toward Yolara; whispered. Her blue eyes flashed triumphantly; her chiming laughter rang. She raised her own glass - but within it was not that clear drink that filled Larry's! And again he drained his own; and, lifting it, full once more, caught the baleful eyes of Lugur, and held it toward him mockingly. Yolara swayed close - alluring, tempting. He arose, face all reckless gaiety; rollicking deviltry. "A toast!" he cried in English, "to the Shining One - and may the hell where it belongs soon claim it!" He had used their own word for their god - all else had been in his own tongue, and so, fortunately, they did not understand. But the contempt in his action they did recognize - and a dead, a fearful silence fell upon them all. Lugur's eyes blazed, little sparks of crimson in their green. The priestess reached up, caught at O'Keefe. He seized the soft hand; caressed it; his gaze grew far away, sombre. "The Shining One." He spoke low. "An' now again I see the faces of those who dance with it. It is the Fires of Mora - come, God alone knows how - from Erin - to this place. The Fires of Mora!" He contemplated the hushed folk before him; and then from his lips came that weirdest, most haunting of the lyric legends of Erin - the Curse of Mora: The fretted fires of Mora blew o'er him in the night; He thrills no more to loving, nor weeps for past delight. For when those flames have bitten, both grief and joy take flight - " Again Yolara tried to draw him down beside her; and once more he gripped her hand. His eyes grew fixed - he crooned: "And through the sleeping silence his feet must track the tune, When the world is barred and speckled with silver of the moon - " He stood, swaying, for a moment, and then, laughing, let the priestess have her way; drained again the glass. And now my heart was cold, indeed - for what hope was there left with Larry mad, wild drunk! The silence was unbroken - elfin women and dwarfs glancing furtively at each other. But now Yolara arose, face set, eyes flashing grey. "Hear you, the Council, and you, Lugur - and all who are here!" she cried. "Now I, the priestess of the Shining One, take, as is my right, my mate. And this is he!" She pointed down upon Larry. He glanced up at her. "Can't quite make out what you say, Yolara," he muttered thickly. "But say anything - you like - I love your voice!" I turned sick with dread. Yolara's hand stole softly upon the Irishman's curls caressingly. "You know the law, Yolara." Lugur's voice was flat, deadly, "You may not mate with other than your own kind. And this man is a stranger - a barbarian - food for the Shining One!" Literally, he spat the phrase. "No, not of our kind - Lugur - higher!" Yolara answered serenely. "Lo, a son of Siya and of Siyana!" "A lie!" roared the red dwarf. "A lie!" "The Shining One revealed it to me!" said Yolara sweetly. "And if ye believe not, Lugur - go ask of the Shining One if it be not truth!" There was bitter, nameless menace in those last words - and whatever their hidden message to Lugur, it was potent. He stood, choking, face hellshadowed - Marakinoff leaned out again, whispered. The red dwarf bowed, now wholly ironically; resumed his place and his silence. And again I wondered, icyhearted, what was the power the Russian had so to sway Lugur. "What says the Council?" Yolara demanded, turning to them. Only for a moment they consulted among themselves. Then the woman, whose face was a ravaged shrine of beauty, spoke. "The will of the priestess is the will of the Council!" she answered. Defiance died from Yolara's face; she looked down at Larry tenderly. He sat swaying, crooning. "Bid the priests come," she commanded, then turned to the silent room. "By the rites of Siya and Siyana, Yolara takes their son for her mate!" And again her hand stole down possessingly, serpent soft, to the drunken head of the O'Keefe. The curtains parted widely. Through them filed, two by two, twelve hooded figures clad in flowing robes of the green one sees in forest vistas of opening buds of dawning spring. Of each pair one bore clasped to breast a globe of that milky crystal in the sapphire shrineroom; the other a harp, small, shaped somewhat like the ancient clarsach of the Druids. Two by two they stepped upon the raised platform, placed gently upon it each their globe; and two by two crouched behind them. They formed now a star of six points about the petalled dais, and, simultaneously, they drew from their faces the covering cowls. I halfrose - youths and maidens these of the fairhaired; and youths and maids more beautiful than any of those I had yet seen - for upon their faces was little of that disturbing mockery to which I have been forced so often, because of the deep impression it made upon me, to refer. The ashengold of the maiden priestesses' hair was wound about their brows in shining coronals. The pale locks of the youths were clustered within circlets of translucent, glimmering gems like moonstones. And then, crystal globe alternately before and harp alternately held by youth and maid, they began to sing. What was that song, I do not know - nor ever shall. Archaic, ancient beyond thought, it seemed - not with the ancientness of things that for uncounted ages have been but winddriven dust. Rather was it the ancientness of the golden youth of the world, love lilts of earth younglings, with light of newborn suns drenching them, chorals of young stars mating in space; murmurings of April gods and goddesses. A languor stole through me. The rosy lights upon the tripods began to die away, and as they faded the milky globes gleamed forth brighter, ever brighter. Yolara rose, stretched a hand to Larry, led him through the sextuple groups, and stood face to face with him in the centre of their circle. The roselight died; all that immense chamber was black, save for the circle of the glowing spheres. Within this their milky radiance grew brighter - brighter. The song whispered away. A throbbing arpeggio dripped from the harps, and as the notes pulsed out, up from the globes, as though striving to follow, pulsed with them tips of moonfire cones, such as I had seen before Yolara's altar. Weirdly, caressingly, compellingly the harp notes throbbed in repeated, rerepeated theme, holding within itself the same archaic golden quality I had noted in the singing. And over the moon flame pinnacles rose higher! Yolara lifted her arms; within her hands were clasped O'Keefe's. She raised them above their two heads and slowly, slowly drew him with her into a circling, graceful step, tendrillings delicate as the slow spirallings of twilight mist upon some still stream. As they swayed the rippling arpeggios grew louder, and suddenly the slender pinnacles of moon fire bent, dipped, flowed to the floor, crept in a shining ring around those two - and began to rise, a gleaming, glimmering, enchanted barrier - rising, ever rising - hiding them! With one swift movement Yolara unbound her circlet of pale sapphires, shook loose the waves of her silken hair. It fell, a rippling, wondrous cascade, veiling both her and O'Keefe to their girdles - and now the shining coils of moon fire had crept to their knees - was circling higher - higher. And ever despair grew deeper in my soul! What was that! I started to my feet, and all around me in the darkness I heard startled motion. From without came a blaring of trumpets, the sound of running men, loud murmurings. The tumult drew closer. I heard cries of "Lakla! Lakla!" Now it was at the very threshold and within it, oddly, as though - punctuating - the clamour, a deeptoned, almost abysmal, booming sound - thunderously bass and reverberant. Abruptly the harpings ceased; the moon fires shuddered, fell, and began to sweep back into the crystal globes; Yolara's swaying form grew rigid, every atom of it listening. She threw aside the veiling cloud of hair, and in the gleam of the last retreating spirals her face glared out like some old Greek mask of tragedy. The sweet lips that even at their sweetest could never lose their delicate cruelty, had no sweetness now. They were drawn into a square - inhuman as that of the Medusa; in her eyes were the fires of the pit, and her hair seemed to writhe like the serpent locks of that Gorgon whose mouth she had borrowed; all her beauty was transformed into a nameless thing - hideous, inhuman, blasting! If this was the true soul of Yolara springing to her face, then, I thought, God help us in very deed! I wrested my gaze away to O'Keefe. All drunkenness gone, himself again, he was staring down at her, and in his eyes were loathing and horror unutterable. So they stood - and the light fled. Only for a moment did the darkness hold. With lightning swiftness the blackness that was the chamber's other wall vanished. Through a portal open between grey screens, the silver sparkling radiance poured. And through the portal marched, two by two, incredible, nightmare figures - frogmen, giants, taller by nearly a yard than even tall O'Keefe! Their enormous saucer eyes were irised by wide bands of greenflecked red, in which the phosphorescence flickered. Their long muzzles, lips halfopen in monstrous grin, held rows of glistening, slender, lancet sharp fangs. Over the glaring eyes arose a horny helmet, a carapace of black and orange scales, studded with footlong lanceheaded horns. They lined themselves like soldiers on each side of the wide table aisle, and now I could see that their horny armour covered shoulders and backs, ran across the chest in a knobbed cuirass, and at wrists and heels jutted out into curved, murderous spurs. The webbed hands and feet ended in yellow, spadeshaped claws. They carried spears, ten feet, at least, in length, the heads of which were pointed cones, glistening with that same covering, from whose touch of swift decay I had so narrowly saved Rador. They were grotesque, yes - more grotesque than anything I had ever seen or dreamed, and they were - terrible! And then, quietly, through their ranks came - a girl! Behind her, enormous pouch at his throat swelling in and out menacingly, in one paw a treelike, spikestudded mace, a frogman, huger than any of the others, guarding. But of him I caught but a fleeting, involuntary impression - all my gaze was for her. For it was she who had pointed out to us the way from the peril of the Dweller's lair on NanTauach. And as I looked at her, I marvelled that ever could I have thought the priestess more beautiful. Into the eyes of O'Keefe rushed joy and an utter abasement of shame. And from all about came murmurs - edged with anger, halfincredulous, tinged with fear: "Lakla!" "Lakla!" "The handmaiden!" She halted close beside me. From firm little chin to dainty buskined feet she was swathed in the soft robes of dull, almost coppery hue. The left arm was hidden, the right free and gloved. Wound tight about it was one of the vines of the sculptured wall and of Lugur's circled signetring. Thick, a vivid green, its five tendrils ran between her fingers, stretching out five flowered heads that gleamed like blossoms cut from gigantic, glowing rubies. So she stood contemplating Yolara. Then drawn perhaps by my gaze, she dropped her eyes upon me; golden, translucent, with tiny flecks of amber in their aureate irises, the soul that looked through them was as far removed from that flaming out of the priestess as zenith is above nadir. I noted the low, broad brow, the proud little nose, the tender mouth, and the soft - sunlight - glow that seemed to transfuse the delicate skin. And suddenly in the eyes dawned a smile - sweet, friendly, a touch of roguishness, profoundly reassuring in its all humanness. I felt my heart expand as though freed from fetters, a recrudescence of confidence in the essential reality of things - as though in nightmare the struggling consciousness should glimpse some familiar face and know the terrors with which it strove were but dreams. And involuntarily I smiled back at her. She raised her head and looked again at Yolara, contempt and a certain curiosity in her gaze; at O'Keefe - and through the softened eyes drifted swiftly a shadow of sorrow, and on its fleeting wings deepest interest, and hovering over that a naive approval as reassuringly human as had been her smile. She spoke, and her voice, deeptimbred, liquid gold as was Yolara's all silver, was subtly the synthesis of all the golden glowing beauty of her. "The Silent Ones have sent me, O Yolara," she said. "And this is their command to you - that you deliver to me to bring before them three of the four strangers who have found their way here. For him there who plots with Lugur" - she pointed at Marakinoff, and I saw Yolara start - "they have no need. Into his heart the Silent Ones have looked; and Lugur and you may keep him, Yolara!" There was honeyed venom in the last words. Yolara was herself now; only the edge of shrillness on her voice revealed her wrath as she answered. "And whence have the Silent Ones gained power to command, choya?" This last, I knew, was a very vulgar word; I had heard Rador use it in a moment of anger to one of the serving maids, and it meant, approximately, "kitchen girl," "scullion." Beneath the insult and the acid disdain, the blood rushed up under Lakla's ambered ivory skin. "Yolara" - her voice was low - "of no use is it to question me. I am but the messenger of the Silent Ones. And one thing only am I bidden to ask you - do you deliver to me the three strangers?" Lugur was on his feet; eagerness, sardonic delight, sinister anticipation thrilling from him - and my same glance showed Marakinoff, crouched, biting his fingernails, glaring at the Golden Girl. "No!" Yolara spat the word. "No! Now by Thanaroa and by the Shining One, no!" Her eyes blazed, her nostrils were wide, in her fair throat a little pulse beat angrily. "You, Lakla - take you my message to the Silent Ones. Say to them that I keep this man" - she pointed to Larry - "because he is mine. Say to them that I keep the yellowhaired one and him" - she pointed to me - "because it pleases me. "Tell them that upon their mouths I place my foot, so!" - she stamped upon the dais viciously - "and that in their faces I spit!" - and her action was hideously snakelike. "And say last to them, you handmaiden, that if you they dare send to Yolara again, she will feed you to the Shining One! Now - go!" The handmaiden's face was white. "Not unforeseen by the three was this, Yolara," she replied. "And did you speak as you have spoken then was I bidden to say this to you." Her voice deepened. "Three tal have you to take counsel, Yolara. And at the end of that time these things must you have determined - either to do or not to do: first, send the strangers to the Silent Ones; second, give up, you and Lugur and all of you, that dream you have of conquest of the world without; and, third, forswear the Shining One! And if you do not one and all these things, then are you done, your cup of life broken, your wine of life spilled. Yea, Yolara, for you and the Shining One, Lugur and the Nine and all those here and their kind shall pass! This say the Silent Ones, 'Surely shall all of ye pass and be as though never had ye been!' " Now a gasp of rage and fear arose from all those around me - but the priestess threw back her head and laughed loud and long. Into the silver sweet chiming of her laughter clashed that of Lugur - and after a little the nobles took it up, till the whole chamber echoed with their mirth. O'Keefe, lips tightening, moved toward the Handmaiden, and almost imperceptibly, but peremptorily, she waved him back. "Those are great words - great words indeed, choya," shrilled Yolara at last; and again Lakla winced beneath the word. "Lo, for laya upon laya, the Shining One has been freed from the Three; and for laya upon laya they have sat helpless, rotting. Now I ask you again - whence comes their power to lay their will upon me, and whence comes their strength to wrestle with the Shining One and the beloved of the Shining One?" And again she laughed - and again Lugur and all the fairhaired joined in her laughter. Into the eyes of Lakla I saw creep a doubt, a wavering; as though deep within her the foundations of her own belief were none too firm. She hesitated, turning upon O'Keefe gaze in which rested more than suggestion of appeal! And Yolara saw, too, for she flushed with triumph, stretched a finger toward the handmaiden. "Look!" she cried. "Look! Why, even she does not believe!" Her voice grew silk of silver - merciless, cruel. "Now am I minded to send another answer to the Silent Ones. Yea! But not by you, Lakla; by these" - she pointed to the frogmen, and, swift as light, her hand darted into her bosom, bringing forth the little shining cone of death. But before she could level it the Golden Girl had released that hidden left arm and thrown over her face a fold of the metallic swathings. Swifter than Yolara, she raised the arm that held the vine - and now I knew this was no inert blossoming thing. It was alive! It writhed down her arm, and its five rubescent flower heads thrust out toward the priestess - vibrating, quivering, held in leash only by the light touch of the handmaiden at its very end. From the swelling throat pouch of the monster behind her came a succession of the reverberant boomings. The frogmen wheeled, raised their lances, levelled them at the throng. Around the reaching ruby flowers a faint red mist swiftly grew. The silver cone dropped from Yolara's rigid fingers; her eyes grew stark with horror; all her unearthly loveliness fled from her; she stood palelipped. The Handmaiden dropped the protecting veil - and now it was she who laughed. "It would seem, then, Yolara, that there is a thing of the Silent Ones ye fear!" she said. "Well - the kiss of the Yekta I promise you in return for the embrace of your Shining One." She looked at Larry, long, searchingly, and suddenly again with all that effect of sunlight bursting into dark places, her smile shone upon him. She nodded, half gaily; looked down upon me, the little merry light dancing in her eyes; waved her hand to me. She spoke to the giant frogman. He wheeled behind her as she turned, facing the priestess, club upraised, fangs glistening. His troop moved not a jot, spears held high. Lakla began to pass slowly - almost, I thought, tauntingly - and as she reached the portal Larry leaped from the dais. "Alanna!" he cried. "You'll not be leavin' me just when I've found you!" In his excitement he spoke in his own tongue, the velvet brogue appealing. Lakla turned, contemplated O'Keefe, hesitant, unquestionably longingly, irresistibly like a child making up her mind whether she dared or dared not take a delectable something offered her. "I go with you," said O'Keefe, this time in her own speech. "Come on, Doc!" He reached out a hand to me. But now Yolara spoke. Life and beauty had flowed back into her face, and in the purple eyes all her hosts of devils were gathered. "Do you forget what I promised you before Siya and Siyana? And do you think that you can leave me - me - as though I were a choya - like her." She pointed to Lakla. Do you - " "Now, listen, Yolara," Larry interrupted almost plaintively. "No promise has passed from me to you - and why would you hold me?" He passed unconsciously into English. "Be a good sport, Yolara," he urged, 'You have got a very devil of a temper, you know, and so have I; and we'd be really awfully uncomfortable together. And why don't you get rid of that devilish pet of yours, and be good!" She looked at him, puzzled, Marakinoff leaned over, translated to Lugur. The red dwarf smiled maliciously, drew near the priestess; whispered to her what was without doubt as near as he could come in the Murian to Larry's own very colloquial phrases. Yolara's lips writhed. "Hear me, Lakla!" she cried. "Now would I not let you take this man from me were I to dwell ten thousand laya in the agony of the Yekta's kiss. This I swear to you - by Thanaroa, by my heart, and by my strength - and may my strength wither, my heart rot in my breast, and Thanaroa forget me if I do!" "Listen, Yolara" - began O'Keefe again. "Be silent, you!" It was almost a shriek. And her hand again sought in her breast for the cone of rhythmic death. Lugur touched her arm, whispered again, The glint of guile shone in her eyes; she laughed softly, relaxed. "The Silent Ones, Lakla, bade you say that they - allowed - me three tal to decide," she said suavely. "Go now in peace, Lakla, and say that Yolara has heard, and that for the three tal they - allow - her she will take council." The handmaiden hesitated. "The Silent Ones have said it," she answered at last. "Stay you here, strangers" - the long lashes drooped as her eyes met O'Keefe's and a hint of blush was in her cheeks - "stay you here, strangers, till then. But, Yolara, see you on that heart and strength you have sworn by that they come to no harm - else that which you have invoked shall come upon you swiftly indeed - and that I promise you," she added. Their eyes met, clashed, burned into each other - black flame from Abaddon and golden flame from Paradise. "Remember!" said Lakla, and passed through the portal. The gigantic frogman boomed a thunderous note of command, his grotesque guards turned and slowly followed their mistress; and last of all passed out the monster with the mace. CHAPTER XXI Larry's Defiance A CLAMOUR arose from all the chambers; stilled in an instant by a motion of Yolara's hand. She stood silent, regarding O'Keefe with something other now than blind wrath; something half regretful, half beseeching. But the Irishman's control was gone. "Yolara," - his voice shook with rage, and he threw caution to the wind - "now hear me. I go where I will and when I will. Here shall we stay until the time she named is come. And then we follow her, whether you will or not. And if any should have thought to stop us - tell them of that flame that shattered the vase," he added grimly. The wistfulness died out of her eyes, leaving them cold. But no answer made she to him. "What Lakla has said, the Council must consider, and at once." The priestess was facing the nobles. "Now, friends of mine, and friends of Lugur, must all feud, all rancour, between us end." She glanced swiftly at Lugur. "The ladala are stirring, and the Silent Ones threaten. Yet fear not - for are we not strong under the Shining One? And now - leave us." Her hand dropped to the table, and she gave, evidently, a signal, for in marched a dozen or more of the green dwarfs. "Take these two to their place," she commanded, pointing to us. The green dwarfs clustered about us. Without another look at the priestess O'Keefe marched beside me, between them, from the chamber. And it was not until we had reached the pillared entrance that Larry spoke. "I hate to talk like that to a woman, Doc," he said, "and a pretty woman, at that. But first she played me with a marked deck, and then not only pinched all the chips, but drew a gun on me. What the hell!she nearly had me - married - to her. I don't know what the stuff was she gave me; but, take it from me, if I had the recipe for that brew I could sell it for a thousand dollars a jolt at Fortysecond and Broadway. "One jigger of it, and you forget there is a trouble in the world; three of them, and you forget there is a world. No excuse for it, Doc; and I don't care what you say or what Lakla may say - it wasn't my fault, and I don't hold it up against myself for a damn." "I must admit that I'm a bit uneasy about her threats," I said, ignoring all this. He stopped abruptly. "What're you afraid of?" "Mostly," I answered dryly, "I have no desire to dance with the Shining One!" "Listen to me, Goodwin," He took up his walk impatiently. "I've all the love and admiration for you in the world; but this place has got your nerve. Hereafter one Larry O'Keefe, of Ireland and the little old U. S. A., leads this party. Nix on the tremolo stop, nix on the superstition! I'm the works. Get me?" "Yes, I get you!" I exclaimed testily enough. "But to use your own phrase, kindly can the repeated references to superstition." "Why should I?" He was almost wrathful. "You scientific people build up whole philosophies on the basis of things you never saw, and you scoff at people who believe in other things that you think they never saw and that don't come under what you label scientific. You talk about paradoxes - why, your scientist, who thinks he is the most skeptical, the most materialistic aggregation of atoms ever gathered at the exact mathematical centre of Missouri, has more blind faith than a dervish, and more credulity, more superstition, than a crosseyed smoke beating it past a country graveyard in the dark of the moon!" "Larry!" I cried, dazed. "Olaf's no better," he said. "But I can make allowances for him. He's a sailor. No, sir. What this expedition needs is a man without superstition. And remember this. The leprechaun promised that I'd have full warning before anything happened. And if we do have to go out, we'll see that banshee bunch clean up before we do, and pass in a blaze of glory. And don't forget it. Hereafter - I'm - in - charge!" By this time we were before our pavilion; and neither of us in a very amiable mood I'm afraid. Rador was awaiting us with a score of his men. "Let none pass in here without authority - and let none pass out unless I accompany them," he ordered bruskly. "Summon one of the swiftest of the coria and have it wait in readiness," he added, as though by afterthought. But when we had entered and the screens were drawn together his manner changed; all eagerness he questioned us. Briefly we told him of the happenings at the feast, of Lakla's dramatic interruption, and of what had followed. "Three tal," he said musingly; "three tal the Silent Ones have allowed - and Yolara agreed." He sank back, silent and thoughtful.1 "Ja!" It was Olaf. "Ja! I told you the Shining Devil's mistress was all evil. Ja! Now I begin again that tale I started when he came" - he glanced toward the preoccupied Rador. "And tell him not what I say should he ask. For I trust none here in Trolldom, save the Jomfrau - the White Virgin! "After the oldster was adsprede" - Olaf once more used that expressive Norwegian word for the dissolving of Songar - "I knew that it was a time for cunning. I said to myself, 'If they think I have no ears to hear, they will speak; and it may be I will find a way to save my Helma and Dr. Goodwin's friends, too.' Ja, and they did speak. "The red Trolde asked the Russian how came it he was a worshipper of Thanaroa." I could not resist a swift glance of triumph toward O'Keefe. "And the Russian," rumbled Olaf, "said that all his people worshipped Thanaroa and had fought against the other nations that denied him. "And then we had come to Lugur's palace. They put me in rooms, and there came to me men who rubbed and oiled me and loosened my muscles. The next day I wrestled with a great dwarf they called Valdor. He was a mighty man, and long we struggled, and at last I broke his back. And Lugur was pleased, so that I sat with him at feast and with the Russian, too. And again, not knowing that I understood them, they talked. "The Russian had gone fast and far. They talked of Lugur as emperor of all Europe, and Marakinoff under him. They spoke of the green light that shook life from the oldster; and Lugur said that the secret of it had been the Ancient Ones' and that the Council had not too much of it. But the Russian said that among his race were many wise men who could make more once they had studied it. "And the next day I wrestled with a great dwarf named Tahola, mightier far than Valdor. Him I threw after a long, long time, and his back also I broke. Again Lugur was pleased. And again we sat at table, he and the Russian and I. This time they spoke of something these Trolde have which opens up a Svaelc - abysses into which all in its range drops up into the sky!" "What!" I exclaimed. "I know about them," said Larry. "Wait!" "Lugur had drunk much," went on Olaf. "He was boastful. The Russian pressed him to show this thing. After a while the red one went out and came back with a little golden box. He and the Russian went into the garden. I followed them. There was a lille Hoj - a mound - of stones in that garden on which grew flowers and trees. "Lugur pressed upon the box, and a spark no bigger than a sand grain leaped out and fell beside the stones. Lugur pressed again, and a blue light shot from the box and lighted on the spark. The spark that had been no bigger than a grain of sand grew and grew as the blue struck it. And then there was a sighing, a wind blew - and the stones and the flowers and the trees were not. They were forsvinde - vanished! "Then Lugur, who had been laughing, grew quickly sober; for he thrust the Russian back - far back. And soon down into the garden came tumbling the stones and the trees, but broken and shattered, and falling as though from a great height. And Lugur said that of this something they had much, for its making was a secret handed down by their own forefathers and not by the Ancient Ones. "They feared to use it, he said, for a spark thrice as large as that he had used would have sent all that garden falling upward and might have opened a way to the outside before - he said just this - 'before we are ready to go out into it!' "The Russian questioned much, but Lugur sent for more drink and grew merrier and threatened him, and the Russian was silent through fear. Thereafter I listened when I could, and little more I learned, but that little enough. Ja! Lugur is hot for conquest; so Yolara and so the Council. They tire of it here and the Silent Ones make their minds not too easy, no, even though they jeer at them! And this they plan - to rule our world with their Shining Devil." The Norseman was silent for a moment; then voice deep, trembling - "Trolldom is awake; Helvede crouches at Earth Gate whining to be loosed into a world already devil ridden! And we are but three!" I felt the blood drive out of my heart. But Larry's was the fighting face of the O'Keefes of a thousand years. Rador glanced at him, arose, stepped through the curtains; returned swiftly with the Irishman's uniform. "Put it on," he said, bruskly; again fell back into his silence and whatever O'Keefe had been about to say was submerged in his wild and joyful whoop. He ripped from him glittering tunic and leg swathings. "Richard is himself again!" he shouted; and each garment as he donned it, fanned his old devilmaycare confidence to a higher flame. The last scrap of it on, he drew himself up before us. "Bow down, ye divils!" he cried. "Bang your heads on the floor and do homage to Larry the First, Emperor of Great Britain, Autocrat of all Ireland, Scotland, England, and Wales, and adjacent waters and islands! Kneel, ye scuts, kneel." "Larry," I cried, "are you going crazy?" "Not a bit of it," he said. "I'm that and more if Comrade Marakinoff is on the level. Whoop! Bring forth the royal jewels an' put a whole new bunch of golden strings in Tara's harp an' down with the Sassenach forever! Whoop!" He did a wild jig. "Lord how good the old togs feel," he grinned. "The touch of 'em has gone to my head. But it's straight stuff I'm telling you about my empire." He sobered. "Not that it's not serious enough at that. A lot that Olaf's told us I've surmised from hints dropped by Yolara. But I got the full key to it from the Red himself when he stopped me just before - before" - he reddened - "well, just before I acquired that brandnew brand of souse. "Maybe he had a hint - maybe he just surmised that I knew a lot more than I did. And he thought Yolara and I were going to be loving little turtle doves. Also he figured that Yolara had a lot more influence with the Unholy Fireworks than Lugur. Also that being a woman she could be more easily handled. All this being so, what was the logical thing for himself to do? Sure, you get me, Steve! Throw down Lugur and make an alliance with me! So he calmly offered to ditch the red dwarf if I would deliver Yolara. My reward from Russia was to be said emperorship! Can you beat it? Good Lord!" He went off into a perfect storm of laughter. But not to me in the light of what Russia has done and has proved herself capable, did this thing seem at all absurd; rather in it I sensed the dawn of catastrophe colossal. "And yet," he was quiet enough now, "I'm a bit scared. They've got the Keth ray and those gravitydestroying bombs - " "Gravitydestroying bombs!" I gasped. "Sure," he said. "The little fairy that sent the trees and stones kiting up from Lugur's garden. Marakinoff licked his lips over them. They cut off gravity, just about as the shadow screens cut off light - and consequently whatever's in their range goes shooting just naturally up to the moon - "They get my goat, why deny it?" went on Larry. "With them and the Keth and gentle invisible soldiers walking around assassinating at will - well, the worst Bolsheviki are only puling babes, eh, Doc? "I don't mind the Shining One," said O'Keefe, "one splash of a downtown New York highpressure fire hose would do for it! But the others - are the goods! Believe me!" But for once O'Keefe's confidence found no echo within me. Not lightly, as he, did I hold that dread mystery, the Dweller - and a vision passed before me, a vision of an Apocalypse undreamed by the Evangelist. A vision of the Shining One swirling into our world, a monstrous, glorious flaming pillar of incarnate, eternal Evil - of peoples passing through its radiant embrace into that hideous, unearthly lifeindeath which I had seen enfold the sacrifices - of armies trembling into dancing atoms of diamond dust beneath the green ray's rhythmic death - of cities rushing out into space upon the wings of that other demoniac force which Olaf had watched at work - of a haunted world through which the assassins of the Dweller's court stole invisible, carrying with them every passion of hell - of the rallying to the Thing of every sinister soul and of the weak and the unbalanced, mystics and carnivores of humanity alike; for well I knew that, once loosed, not any nation could hold this devilgod for long and that swiftly its blight would spread! And then a world that was all colossal reek of cruelty and terror; a welter of lusts, of hatreds and of torment; a chaos of horror in which the Dweller waxing ever stronger, the ghastly hordes of those it had consumed growing ever greater, wreaked its inhuman will! At the last a ruined planet, a cosmic plague, spinning through the shuddering heavens; its verdant plains, its murmuring forests, its meadows and its mountains manned only by a countless crew of soulless, mindless deadalive, their shells illumined with the Dweller's infernal glory - and flaming over this vampirized earth like a flare from some hell far, infinitely far, beyond the reach of man's farthest flung imagining - the Dweller! Rador jumped to his feet; walked to the whispering globe. He bent over its base; did something with its mechanism; beckoned to us. The globe swam rapidly, faster than ever I had seen it before. A low humming arose, changed into a murmur, and then from it I heard Lugur's voice clearly. "It is to be war then?" There was a chorus of assent - from the Council, I thought. "I will take the tall one named - Larree." It was the priestess's voice. "After the three tal, you may have him, Lugur, to do with as you will." "No!" it was Lugur's voice again, but with a rasp of anger. "All must die." "He shall die," again Yolara. "But I would that first he see Lakla pass - and that she know what is to happen to him." "No!" I started - for this was Marakinoff. "Now is no time, Yolara, for one's own desires. This is my counsel. At the end of the three tal Lakla will come for our answer. Your men will be in ambush and they will slay her and her escort quickly with the Keth. But not till that is done must the three be slain - and then quickly. With Lakla dead we shall go forth to the Silent Ones - and I promise you that I will find the way to destroy them!" "It is well!" It was Lugur. "It is well, Yolara." It was a woman's voice, and I knew it for that old one of ravaged beauty. "Cast from your mind whatever is in it for this stranger - either of love or hatred. In this the Council is with Lugur and the man of wisdom." There was a silence. Then came the priestess's voice, sullen but - beaten. "It is well!" "Let the three be taken now by Rador to the temple and given to the High Priest Sator" - thus Lugur - "until what we have planned comes to pass." Rador gripped the base of the globe; abruptly it ceased its spinning. He turned to us as though to speak and even as he did so its bell note sounded peremptorily and on it the colour films began to creep at their accustomed pace. "I hear," the green dwarf whispered. "They shall be taken there at once." The globe grew silent. He stepped toward us. "You have heard," he turned to us. "Not on your life, Rador," said Larry. "Nothing doing!" And then in the Murian's own tongue. "We follow Lakla, Rador. And you lead the way." He thrust the pistol close to the green dwarf's side. Rador did not move. "Of what use, Larree?" he said, quietly. "Me you can slay - but in the end you will be taken. Life is not held so dear in Muria that my men out there or those others who can come quickly will let you by - even though you slay many. And in the end they will overpower you." There was a trace of irresolution in O'Keefe's face. "And," added Rador, "if I let you go I dance with the Shining One - or worse!" O'Keefe's pistol hand dropped. "You're a good sport, Rador, and far be it from me to get you in bad," he said. "Take us to the temple - when we get there - well, your responsibility ends, doesn't it?" The green dwarf nodded; on his face a curious expression - was it relief? Or was it emotion higher than this? He turned curtly. "Follow," he said. We passed out of that gay little pavilion that had come to be home to us even in this alien place. The guards stood at attention. "You, Sattoya, stand by the globe," he ordered one of them. "Should the Afyo Maie ask, say that I am on my way with the strangers even as she has commanded." We passed through the lines to the corial standing like a great shell at the end of the runway leading into the green road. "Wait you here," he said curtly to the driver. The green dwarf ascended to his seat, sought the lever and we swept on - on and out upon the glistening obsidian. Then Rador faced us and laughed. "Larree," he cried, "I love you for that spirit of yours! And did you think that Rador would carry to the temple prison a man who would take the chances of torment upon his own shoulders to save him? Or you, Goodwin, who saved him from the rotting death? For what did I take the corial or lift the veil of silence that I might hear what threatened you - " He swept the corial to the left, away from the temple approach. "I am done with Lugur and with Yolara and the Shining One!" cried Rador. "My hand is for you three and for Lakla and those to whom she is handmaiden!" The shell leaped forward; seemed to fly. [1]A tal in Muria is the equivalent of thirty hours of earth surface time. - W. T. G. CHAPTER XXII The Casting of the Shadow NOW we were racing down toward that last span whose ancientness had set it apart from all the other soaring arches. The shell's speed slackened; we approached warily. "We pass there?" asked O'Keefe. The green dwarf nodded, pointing to the right where the bridge ended in a broad platform held high upon two gigantic piers, between which ran a spur from the glistening road. Platform and bridge were swarming with menatarms; they crowded the parapets, looking down upon us curiously but with no evidence of hostility. Rador drew a deep breath of relief. "We don't have to break our way through, then?" There was disappointment in the Irishman's voice. "No use, Larree!" Smiling, Rador stopped the corial just beneath the arch and beside one of the piers. "Now, listen well. They have had no warning, hence does Yolara still think us on the way to the temple. This is the gateway of the Portal - and the gateway is closed by the Shadow. Once I commanded here and I know its laws. This must I do - by craft persuade Serku, the keeper of the gateway, to lift the Shadow; or raise it myself. And that will be hard and it may well be that in the struggle life will be stripped of us all. Yet is it better to die fighting than to dance with the Shining One!" He swept the shell around the pier. Opened a wide plaza paved with the volcanic glass, but black as that down which we had sped from the chamber of the Moon Pool. It shone like a mirrored lakelet of jet; on each side of it arose what at first glance seemed towering bulwarks of the same ebon obsidian; at second, revealed themselves as structures hewn and set in place by men; polished faces pierced by dozens of high, narrow windows. Down each facade a stairway fell, broken by small landings on which a door opened; they dropped to a broad ledge of greyish stone edging the lip of this midnight pool and upon it also fell two wide flights from either side of the bridge platform. Along all four stairways the guards were ranged; and here and there against the ledge stood the shells - in a curiously comforting resemblance to parked motors in our own world. The sombre walls bulked high; curved and ended in two obelisked pillars from which, like a tremendous curtain, stretched a barrier of that tenebrous gloom which, though weightless as shadow itself, I now knew to be as impenetrable as the veil between life and death. In this murk, unlike all others I had seen, I sensed movement, a quivering, a tremor constant and rhythmic; not to be seen, yet caught by some subtle sense; as though through it beat a swift pulse of - black light. The green dwarf turned the corial slowly to the edge at the right; crept cautiously on toward where, not more than a hundred feet from the barrier, a low, wide entrance opened in the fort. Guarding its threshold stood two guards, armed with broadswords, doublehanded, terminating in a wide lunette mouthed with murderous fangs. These they raised in salute and through the portal strode a dwarf huge as Rador, dressed as he and carrying only the poniard that was the badge of office of Muria's captainry. The green dwarf swept the shell expertly against the ledge; leaped out. "Greeting, Serku!" he answered. "I was but looking for the coria of Lakla." "Lakla!" exclaimed Serku. "Why, the handmaiden passed with her Akka nigh a va ago!" "Passed!" The astonishment of the green dwarf was so real that half was I myself deceived. "You let her pass?" "Certainly I let her pass - " But under the green dwarf's stern gaze the truculence of the guardian faded. "Why should I not?" he asked, apprehensively. "Because Yolara commanded otherwise," answered Rador, coldly. "There came no command to me." Little beads of sweat stood out on Serku's forehead. "Serku," interrupted the green dwarf swiftly, "truly is my heart wrung for you. This is a matter of Yolara and of Lugur and the Council; yes, even of the Shining One! And the message was sent - and the fate, mayhap, of all Muria rested upon your obedience and the return of Lakla with these strangers to the Council. Now truly is my heart wrung, for there are few I would less like to see dance with the Shining One than you, Serku," he ended, softly. Livid now was the gateway's guardian, his great frame shaking. "Come with me and speak to Yolara," he pleaded. "There came no message - tell her - " "Wait, Serku!" There was a thrill as of inspiration in Rador's voice. "This corial is of the swiftest - Lakla's are of the slowest. With Lakla scarce a va ahead we can reach her before she enters the Portal. Lift you the Shadow - we will bring her back, and this will I do for you, Serku." Doubt tempered Serku's panic. "Why not go alone, Rador, leaving the strangers here with me?" he asked - and I thought not unreasonably. "Nay, then." The green dwarf was brusk. "Lakla will not return unless I carry to her these men as evidence of our good faith. Come - we will speak to Yolara and she shall judge you - " He started away - but Serku caught his arm. "No, Rador, no!" he whispered, again panicstricken. "Go you - as you will. But bring her back! Speed, Rador!" He sprang toward the entrance. "I lift the Shadow - " Into the green dwarf's poise crept a curious, almost a listening, alertness. He leaped to Serku's side. "I go with you," I heard. "Some little I can tell you - " They were gone. "Fine work!" muttered Larry. "Nominated for a citizen of Ireland when we get out of this, one Rador of - " The Shadow trembled - shuddered into nothingness; the obelisked outposts that had held it framed a ribbon of roadway, high banked with verdure, vanishing in green distances. And then from the portal sped a shriek, a death cry! It cut through the silence of the ebon pit like a whimpering arrow. Before it had died, down the stairways came pouring the guards. Those at the threshold raised their swords and peered within. Abruptly Rador was between them. One dropped his hilt and gripped him - the green dwarf's poniard flashed and was buried in his throat. Down upon Rador's head swept the second blade. A flame leaped from O'Keefe's hand and the sword seemed to fling itself from its wielder's grasp - another flash and the soldier crumpled. Rador threw himself into the shell, darted to the high seat - and straight between the pillars of the Shadow we flew! There came a crackling, a darkness of vast wings flinging down upon us. The corial's flight was checked as by a giant's hand. The shell swerved sickeningly; there was an oddly metallic splintering; it quivered; shot ahead. Dizzily I picked myself up and looked behind. The Shadow had fallen - but too late, a bare instant too late. And shrinking as we fled from it, still it seemed to strain like some fettered Afrit from Eblis, throbbing with wrath, seeking with every malign power it possessed to break its bonds and pursue. Not until long after were we to know that it had been the dying hand of Serku, groping out of oblivion, that had cast it after us as a fowler upon an escaping bird. "Snappy work, Rador!" It was Larry speaking. "But they cut the end off your bus all right!" A full quarter of the hindward whorl was gone, sliced off cleanly. Rador noted it with anxious eyes. "That is bad," he said, "but not too bad perhaps. All depends upon how closely Lugur and his men can follow us." He raised a hand to O'Keefe in salute. "But to you, Larree, I owe my life - not even the Keth could have been as swift to save me as that death flame of yours - friend!" The Irishman waved an airy hand. "Serku" - the green dwarf drew from his girdle the bloodstained poniard - "Serku I was forced to slay. Even as he raised the Shadow the globe gave the alarm. Lugur follows with twice ten times ten of his best - " He hesitated. "Though we have escaped the Shadow it has taken toll of our swiftness. May we reach the Portal before it closes upon Lakla - but if we do not - " He paused again. "Well - I know a way - but it is not one I am gay to follow - no!" He snapped open the aperture that held the ball flaming within the dark crystal; peered at it anxiously. I crept to the torn end of the corial. The edges were crumbling, disintegrated. They powdered in my fingers like dust. Mystified still, I crept back where Larry, sheer happiness pouring from him, was whistling softly and polishing up his automatic. His gaze fell upon Olaf's grim, sad face and softened. "Buck up, Olaf!" he said. "We've got a good fighting chance. Once we link up with Lakla and her crowd I'm betting that we get your wife - never doubt it! The baby - " he hesitated awkwardly. The Norseman's eyes filled; he stretched a hand to the O'Keefe. "The Yndling - she is of the de Dode," he half whispered, "of the blessed dead. For her I have no fear and for her vengeance will be given me. Ja! But my Helma - she is of the deadalive - like those we saw whirling like leaves in the light of the Shining Devil - and I would that she too were of de Dode - and at rest. I do not know how to fight the Shining Devil - no!" His bitter despair welled up in his voice. "Olaf," Larry's voice was gentle. "We'll come out on top - I know it. Remember one thing. All this stuff that seems so strange and - and, well, sort of supernatural, is just a lot of tricks we're not hep to as yet. Why, Olaf, suppose you took a Fijian when the war was on and set him suddenly down in London with autos rushing past, sirens blowing, Archies popping, a dozen enemy planes dropping bombs, and the searchlights shooting all over the sky - wouldn't he think he was among thirtythird degree devils in some exclusive circle of hell? Sure he would! And yet everything he saw would be natural - just as natural as all this is, once we get the answer to it. Not that we're Fijians, of course, but the principle is the same." The Norseman considered this; nodded gravely. "Ja!" he answered at last. "And at least we can fight. That is why I have turned to Thor of the battles, Ja! And one have I hope in for mine Helma - the white maiden. Since I have turned to the old gods it has been made clear to me that I shall slay Lugur and that the Heks, the evil witch Yolara, shall also die. But I would talk with the white maiden." "All right," said Larry, "but just don't be afraid of what you don't understand. There's another thing" - he hesitated, nervously - "there's another thing that may startle you a bit when we meet up with Lakla - her - er - frogs!" "Like the frogwoman we saw on the wall?" asked Olaf. "Yes," went on Larry, rapidly. "It's this way - I figure that the frogs grow rather large where she lives, and they're a bit different too. Well, Lakla's got a lot of 'em trained. Carry spears and clubs and all that junk - just like trained seals or monkeys or so on in the circus. Probably a custom of the place. Nothing queer about that, Olaf. Why people have all kinds of pets - armadillos and snakes and rabbits, kangaroos and elephants and tigers." Remembering how the frogwoman had stuck in Larry's mind from the outset, I wondered whether all this was not more to convince himself than Olaf. "Why, I remember a nice girl in Paris who had four pet pythons - " he went on. But I listened no more, for now I was sure of my surmise. The road had begun to thrust itself through highflung, sharply pinnacled masses and rounded outcroppings of rock on which clung patches of the amber moss. The trees had utterly vanished, and studding the mosscarpeted plains were only clumps of a willowy shrub from which hung, like grapes, clusters of white waxen blooms. The light too had changed; gone were the dancing, sparkling atoms and the silver had faded to a soft, almost ashen greyness. Ahead of us marched a rampart of coppery cliffs rising, like all these mountainous walls we had seen, into the immensities of haze. Something long drifting in my subconsciousness turned to startled realization. The speed of the shell was slackening! The aperture containing the ionizing mechanism was still open; I glanced within, The whirling ball of fire was not dimmed, but its coruscations, instead of pouring down through the cylinder, swirled and eddied and shot back as though trying to reenter their source. Rador nodded grimly. "The Shadow takes its toll," he said. We topped a rise - Larry gripped my arm. "Look!" he cried, and pointed. Far, far behind us, so far that the road was but a glistening thread, a score of shining points came speeding. "Lugur and his men," said Rador. "Can't you step on her?" asked Larry. "Step on her?" repeated the green dwarf, puzzled. "Give her more speed; push her," explained O'Keefe. Rador looked about him. The coppery ramparts were close, not more than three or four miles distant; in front of us the plain lifted in a long rolling swell, and up this the corial essayed to go - with a terrifying lessening of speed. Faintly behind us came shootings, and we knew that Lugur drew close. Nor anywhere was there sign of Lakla nor her frogmen. Now we were halfway to the crest; the shell barely crawled and from beneath it came a faint hissing; it quivered, and I knew that its base was no longer held above the glassy surface but rested on it. "One last chance!" exclaimed Rador. He pressed upon the control lever and wrenched it from its socket. Instantly the sparkling ball expanded, whirling with prodigious rapidity and sending a cascade of coruscations into the cylinder. The shell rose; leaped through the air; the dark crystal split into fragments; the fiery ball dulled; died - but upon the impetus of that last thrust we reached the crest. Poised there for a moment, I caught a glimpse of the road dropping down the side of an enormous mosscovered, bowlshaped valley whose sharply curved sides ended abruptly at the base of the towering barrier. Then down the steep, powerless to guide or to check the shell, we plunged in a meteor rush straight for the annihilating adamantine breasts of the cliffs! Now the quick thinking of Larry's air training came to our aid. As the rampart reared close he threw himself upon Rador; hurled him and himself against the side of the flying whorl. Under the shock the finely balanced machine swerved from its course. It struck the soft, low bank of the road, shot high in air, bounded on through the thick carpeting, whirled like a dervish and fell upon its side. Shot from it, we rolled for yards, but the moss saved broken bones or serious bruise. "Quick!" cried the green dwarf. He seized an arm, dragged me to my feet, began running to the cliff base not a hundred feet away. Beside us raced O'Keefe and Olaf. At our left was the black road. It stopped abruptly - was cut off by a slab of polished crimson stone a hundred feet high, and as wide, set within the coppery face of the barrier. On each side of it stood pillars, cut from the living rock and immense, almost, as those which held the rainbow veil of the Dweller. Across its face weaved unnameable carvings - but I had no time for more than a glance. The green dwarf gripped my arm again. "Quick!" he cried again. "The handmaiden has passed!" At the right of the Portal ran a low wall of shattered rock. Over this we raced like rabbits. Hidden behind it was a narrow path. Crouching, Rador in the lead, we sped along it; three hundred, four hundred yards we raced - and the path ended in a cul de sac! To our ears was borne a louder shouting. The first of the pursuing shells had swept over the lip of the great bowl, poised for a moment as we had and then began a cautious descent. Within it, scanning the slopes, I saw Lugur. "A little closer and I'll get him!" whispered Larry viciously. He raised his pistol. His hand was caught in a mighty grip; Rador, eyes blazing, stood beside him. "No!" rasped the green dwarf. He heaved a shoulder against one of the boulders that formed the pocket. It rocked aside, revealing a slit. "In!" ordered he, straining against the weight of the stone. O'Keefe slipped through. Olaf at his back, I following. With a lightning leap the dwarf was beside me, the huge rock missing him by a hair breadth as it swung into place! We were in Cimmerian darkness. I felt for my pocketflash and recalled with distress that I had left it behind with my medicine kit when we fled from the gardens. But Rador seemed to need no light. "Grip hands!" he ordered. We crept, single file, holding to each other like children, through the black. At last the green dwarf paused. "Await me here," he whispered. "Do not move. And for your lives - be silent!" And he was gone. CHAPTER XXIII Dragon Worm and Moss Death FOR a small eternity - to me at least - we waited. Then as silent as ever the green dwarf returned. "It is well," he said, some of the strain gone from his voice. "Grip hands again, and follow." "Wait a bit, Rador," this was Larry. "Does Lugur know this side entrance? If he does, why not let Olaf and me go back to the opening and pick them off as they come in? We could hold the lot - and in the meantime you and Goodwin could go after Lakla for help." "Lugur knows the secret of the Portal - if he dare use it," answered the captain, with a curious indirection. "And now that they have challenged the Silent Ones I think he will dare. Also, he will find our tracks - and it may be that he knows this hidden way." "Well, for God's sake!" O'Keefe's appalled bewilderment was almost ludicrous. "If he knows all that, and you knew all that, why didn't you let me click him when I had the chance?" "Larree," the green dwarf was oddly humble. "It seemed good to me, too - at first. And then I heard a command, heard it clearly, to stop you - that Lugur die not now, lest a greater vengeance fail!" "Command? From whom?" The Irishman's voice distilled out of the blackness the very essence of bewilderment. "I thought," Rador was whispering - "I thought it came from the Silent Ones!" "Superstition!" groaned O'Keefe in utter exasperation. "Always superstition! What can you do against it! "Never mind, Rador." His sense of humour came to his aid. "It's too late now, anyway. Where do we go from here, old dear?" he laughed. "We tread the path of one I am not fain to meet," answered Rador. "But if meet we must, point the death tubes at the pale shield he bears upon his throat and send the flame into the flower of cold fire that is its centre - nor look into his eyes!" Again Larry gasped, and I with him. "It's getting too deep for me, Doc," he muttered dejectedly. "Can you make head or tail of it?" "No," I answered, shortly enough, "but Rador fears something and that's his description of it." "Sure," he replied, "only it's a code I don't understand." I could feel his grin. "All right for the flower of cold fire, Rador, and I won't look into his eyes," he went on cheerfully. "But hadn't we better be moving?" "Come!" said the soldier; again hand in hand we went blindly on. O'Keefe was muttering to himself. "Flower of cold fire! Don't look into his eyes! Some joint! Damned superstition." Then he chuckled and carolled, softly: "Oh, mama, pin a cold rose on me; Two young frogmen are in love with me; Shut my eyes so I can't see." "Sh!" Rador was warning; he began whispering. "For half a va we go along a way of death. From its peril we pass into another against whose dangers I can guard you. But in part this is in view of the roadway and it may be that Lugur will see us. If so, we must fight as best we can. If we pass these two roads safely, then is the way to the Crimson Sea clear, nor need we fear Lugur nor any. And there is another thing - that Lugur does not know - when he opens the Portal the Silent Ones will hear and Lakla and the Akka will be swift to greet its opener." "Rador," I asked, "how know you all this?" "The handmaiden is my own sister's child," he answered quietly. O'Keefe drew a long breath. "Uncle," he remarked casually in English, "meet the man who's going to be your nephew!" And thereafter he never addressed the green dwarf ex cept by the avuncular title, which Rador, humorously enough, apparently conceived to be one of respectful endearment. For me a light broke. Plain now was the reason for his foreknowledge of Lakla's appearance at the feast where Larry had so narrowly escaped Yolara's spells; plain the determining factor that had cast his lot with ours, and my confidence, despite his discourse of mysterious perils, experienced a remarkable quickening. Speculation as to the marked differences in pigmentation and appearance of niece and uncle was dissipated by my consciousness that we were now moving in a dim halflight. We were in a fairly wide tunnel. Not far ahead the gleam filtered, pale yellow like sunlight sifting through the leaves of autumn poplars. And as we drove closer to its source I saw that it did indeed pass through a leafy screen hanging over the passage end. This Rador drew aside cautiously, beckoned us and we stepped through. It appeared to be a tunnel cut through soft green mould. Its base was a flat strip of pathway a yard wide from which the walls curved out in perfect cylindrical form, smoothed and evened with utmost nicety. Thirty feet wide they were at their widest, then drew toward each other with no break in their symmetry; they did not close. Above was, roughly, a tenfoot rift, ragged edged, through which poured light like that in the heart of pale amber, a buttercup light shot through with curiously evanescent bronze shadows. "Quick!" commanded Rador, uneasily, and set off at a sharp pace. Now, my eyes accustomed to the strange light, I saw that the tunnel's walls were of moss. In them I could trace fringe leaf and curly leaf, pressings of enormous bladder caps (Physcomitrium), immense splashes of what seemed to be the scarletcrested Cladonia, traceries of huge moss veils, crushings of teeth (peristome) gigantic; spore cases brown and white, saffron and ivory, hot vermilions and cerulean blues, pressed into an astounding mosaic by some titanic force. "Hurry!" It was Rador calling. I had lagged behind. He quickened the pace to a halfrun; we were climbing; panting. The amber light grew stronger; the rift above us wider. The tunnel curved; on the left a narrow cleft ap peared. The green dwarf leaped toward it, thrust us within, pushed us ahead of him up a steep rocky fissure - wellnigh, indeed, a chimney. Up and up this we scrambled until my lungs were bursting and I thought I could climb no more. The crevice ended; we crawled out and sank, even Rador, upon a little leafcarpeted clearing circled by lacy tree ferns. Gasping, legs aching, we lay prone, relaxed, drawing back strength and breath. Rador was first to rise. Thrice he bent low as in homage, then - "Give thanks to the Silent Ones - for their power has been over us!" he exclaimed. Dimly I wondered what he meant. Something about the fern leaf at which I had been staring aroused me. I leaped to my feet and ran to its base. This was no fern, no! It was fern moss! The largest of its species I had ever found in tropic jungles had not been more than two inches high, and this was - twenty feet! The scientific fire I had experienced in the tunnel returned uncontrollable. I parted the fronds, gazed out - My outlook commanded a vista of miles - and that vista! A Fata Morgana of plantdom! A land of flowered sorcery! Forests of treehigh mosses spangled over with blooms of every conceivable shape and colour; cataracts and clusters, avalanches and nets of blossoms in pastels, in dulled metallics, in gorgeous flamboyant hues; some of them phosphorescent and shining like living jewels; some sparkling as though with dust of opals, of sapphires, of rubies and topazes and emeralds; thickets of convolvuli like the trumpets of the seven archangels of Mara, king of illusion, which are shaped from the bows of splendours arching his highest heaven! And moss veils like banners of a marching host of Titans; pennons and bannerets of the sunset; gonfalons of the Jinn; webs of faery; oriflammes of elfland! Springing up through that polychromatic flood myriads of pedicles - slender and straight as spears, or soaring in spirals, or curving with undulations gracile as the white serpents of Tanit in ancient Carthaginian groves - and all surmounted by a fantasy of spore cases in shapes of minaret and turret, domes and spires and cones, caps of Phrygia and bishops' mitres, shapes grotesque and unnameable - shapes delicate and lovely! They hung high poised, nodding and swaying - like goblins hovering over Titania's court; cacophony of Cathay accenting the Flower Maiden music of "Parsifal"; bizarrerie of the angled, fantastic beings that people the Javan pantheon watching a bacchanal of houris in Mohammed's paradise! Down upon it all poured the amber light; dimmed in the distances by huge, drifting darkenings lurid as the flying mantles of the hurricane. And through the light, like showers of jewels, myriads of birds, darting, dipping, soaring, and still other myriads of gigantic, shimmering butterflies. A sound came to us, reaching out like the first faint susurrus of the incoming tide; sighing, sighing, growing stronger - now its mournful whispering quivered all about us, shook us - then passing like a Presence, died away in far distances. "The Portal!" said Rador. "Lugur has entered!" He, too, parted the fronds and peered back along our path. Peering with him we saw the barrier through which we had come stretching verdurecovered walls for miles three or more away. Like a mole burrow in a garden stretched the trail of the tunnel; here and there we could look down within the rift at its top; far off in it I thought I saw the glint of spears. "They come!" whispered Rador. "Quick! We must not meet them here!" And then - "Holy St. Brigid!" gasped Larry. From the rift in the tunnel's continuation, nigh a mile beyond the cleft through which we had fled, lifted a crown of horns - of tentacles - erect, alert, of mottled gold and crimson; lifted higher - and from a monstrous scarlet head beneath them blazed two enormous, obloid eyes, their depths wells of purplish phosphorescence; higher still - noseless, earless, chinless; a livid, worm mouth from which a slender scarlet tongue leaped like playing flames! Slowly it rose - its mighty neck cuirassed with gold and scarlet scales from whose polished surfaces the amber light glinted like flakes of fire; and under this neck shimmered something like a palely luminous silvery shield, guarding it. The head of horror mounted - and in the shield's centre, full ten feet across, glowing, flickering, shining out - coldly, was a rose of white flame, a "flower of cold fire" even as Rador had said. Now swiftly the Thing upreared, standing like a scaled tower a hundred feet above the rift, its eyes scanning that movement I had seen along the course of its lair. There was a hissing; the crown of horns fell, whipped and writhed like the tentacles of an octopus; the towering length dropped back. "Quick!" gasped Rador and through the fern moss, along the path and down the other side of the steep we raced. Behind us for an instant there was a rushing as of a torrent; a faraway, faint, agonized screaming - silence! "No fear now from those who followed," whispered the green dwarf, pausing. "Sainted St. Patrick!" O'Keefe gazed ruminatively at his automatic. "An' he expected me to kill that with this. Well, as Fergus O'Connor said when they sent him out to slaughter a wild bull with a potato knife: 'Ye'll niver rayilize how I appreciate the confidence ye show in me!' "What was it, Doc?" he asked. "The dragon worm!" Rador said. "It was Helvede Orm - the hell worm!" groaned Olaf. "There you go again - " blazed Larry; but the green dwarf was hurrying down the path and swiftly we followed, Larry muttering, Olaf mumbling, behind me. The green dwarf was signalling us for caution. He pointed through a break in a grove of fiftyfoot cedar mosses - we were skirting the glassy road! Scanning it we found no trace of Lugur and wondered whether he too had seen the worm and had fled. Quickly we passed on; drew away from the coria path. The mosses began to thin; less and less they grew, giving way to low clumps that barely offered us shelter. Unexpectedly another screen of fern moss stretched before us. Slowly Rador made his way through it and stood hesitating. The scene in front of us was oddly weird and depressing; in some indefinable way - dreadful. Why, I could not tell, but the impression was plain; I shrank from it. Then, selfanalyzing, I wondered whether it could be the uncanny resemblance the heaps of curious mossy fungi scattered about had to beast and bird - yes, and to man - that was the cause of it. Our path ran between a few of them. To the left they were thick. They were viridescent, almost metallic hued - verdantique. Curiously indeed were they like distorted images of dog and deerlike forms, of birds - of dwarfs and here and there the simulacra of the giant frogs! Spore cases, yellowish green, as large as mitres and much resembling them in shape protruded from the heaps. My repulsion grew into a distinct nausea. Rador turned to us a face whiter far than that with which he had looked upon the dragon worm. "Now for your lives," he whispered, "tread softly here as I do - and speak not at all!" He stepped forward on tiptoe, slowly with utmost caution. We crept after him; passed the heaps beside the path - and as I passed my skin crept and I shrank and saw the others shrink too with that unnameable loathing; nor did the green dwarf pause until he had reached the brow of a small hillock a hundred yards beyond. And he was trembling. "Now what are we up against?" grumbled O'Keefe. The green dwarf stretched a hand; stiffened; gazed over to the left of us beyond a lower hillock upon whose broad crest lay a file of the moss shapes. They fringed it, their mitres having a grotesque appearance of watching what lay below. The glistening road lay there - and from it came a shout. A dozen of the coria clustered, filled with Lugur's men and in one of them Lugur himself, laughing wickedly! There was a rush of soldiers and up the low hillock raced a score of them toward us. "Run!" shouted Rador. "Not much!" grunted Larry - and took swift aim at Lugur. The automatic spat: Olaf's echoed. Both bullets went wild, for Lugur, still laughing, threw himself into the protection of the body of his shell. But following the shots, from the file of moss heaps on the crest, came a series of muffled explosions. Under the pistol's concussions the mitred caps had burst and instantly all about the running soldiers grew a cloud of tiny, glistening white spores - like a little cloud of puffball dust many times magnified. Through this cloud I glimpsed their faces, stricken with agony. Some turned to fly, but before they could take a second step stood rigid. The spore cloud drifted and eddied about them; rained down on their heads and half bare breasts, covered their garments - and swiftly they began to change! Their features grew indistinct - merged! The glistening white spores that covered them turned to a pale yellow, grew greenish, spread and swelled, darkened. The eyes of one of the soldiers glinted for a moment - and then were covered by the swift growth! Where but a few moments before had been men were only grotesque heaps, swiftly melting, swiftly rounding into the the semblance of the mounds that lay behind us - and already beginning to take on their gleam of ancient viridescence! The Irishman was gripping my arm fiercely; the pain brought me back to my senses. "Olaf's right," he gasped. "This is hell! I'm sick." And he was, frankly and without restraint. Lugur and his others awakened from their nightmare; piled into the coria, wheeled, raced away. "On!" said Rador thickly. Two perils have we passed - the Silent Ones watch over us!" Soon we were again among the familiar and so unfamiliar moss giants. I knew what I had seen and this time Larry could not call me - superstitious. In the jungles of Borneo I had examined that other swiftly developing fungus which wreaks the vengeance of some of the hill tribes upon those who steal their women; gripping with its microscopic hooks into the flesh; sending quick, tiny rootlets through the skin down into the capillaries, sucking life and thriving and never to be torn away until the living thing it clings to has been sapped dry. Here was but another of the species in which the development's rate was incredibly accelerated. Some of this I tried to explain to O'Keefe as we sped along, reassuring him. "But they turned to moss before our eyes!" he said. Again I explained, patiently. But he seemed to derive no comfort at all from my assurances that the phenomena were entirely natural and, aside from their more terrifying aspect, of peculiar interest to the botanist. "I know," was all he would say. "But suppose one of those things had burst while we were going through - God!" I was wondering how I could with comparative safety study the fungus when Rador stopped; in front of us was again the road ribbon. "Now is all danger passed," he said. "The way lies open and Lugur has fled - " There was a flash from the road. It passed me like a little lariat of light. It struck Larry squarely between the eyes, spread over his face and drew itself within! "Down!" cried Rador, and hurled me to the ground. My head struck sharply; I felt myself grow faint; Olaf fell beside me; I saw the green dwarf draw down the O'Keefe; he collapsed limply, face still, eyes staring. A shout - and from the roadway poured a host of Lugur's men; I could hear Lugur bellowing. There came a rush of little feet; soft, fragrant draperies brushed my face; dimly I watched Lakla bend over the Irishman. She straightened - her arms swept out and the writhing vine, with its tendrilled heads of ruby bloom, five flames of misty incandescence, leaped into the faces of the soldiers now close upon us. It darted at their throats, striking, coiling, and striking again; coiling and uncoiling with incredible rapidity and flying from leverage points of throats, of faces, of breasts like a spring endowed with consciousness, volition and hatred - and those it struck stood rigid as stone with faces masks of inhuman fear and anguish; and those still unstricken fled. Another rush of feet - and down upon Lugur's forces poured the frogmen, their booming giant leading, thrusting with their lances, tearing and rending with talons and fangs and spurs. Against that onslaught the dwarfs could not stand. They raced for the shells; I heard Lugur shouting, menacingly - and then Lakla's voice, pealing like a golden bugle of wrath. "Go, Lugur!" she cried. "Go - that you and Yolara and your Shining One may die together! Death for you, Lugur - death for you all! Remember Lugur - death!" There was a great noise within my head - no matter, Lakla was here - Lakla here - but too late - Lugur had outplayed us; moss death nor dragon worm had frightened him away - he had crept back to trap us - Lakla had come too late - Larry was dead - Larry! But I had heard no banshee wailing - and Larry had said he could not die without that warning - no, Larry was not dead. So ran the turbulent current of my mind. A horny arm lifted me; two enormous, oddly gentle saucer eyes were staring into mine; my head rolled; I caught a glimpse of the Golden Girl kneeling beside the O'Keefe. The noise in my head grew thunderous - was carrying me away on its thunder - swept me into soft, blind darkness. CHAPTER XXIV The Crimson Sea I WAS in the heart of a rose pearl, swinging, swinging; no, I was in a rosy dawn cloud, pendulous in space. Consciousness flooded me, in reality I was in the arms of one of the man frogs, carrying me as though I were a babe, and we were passing through some place suffused with glow enough like heart of pearl or dawn cloud to justify my awakening vagaries. Just ahead walked Lakla in earnest talk with Rador, and content enough was I for a time to watch her. She had thrown off the metallic robes; her thick braids of golden brown hair with their flame glints of bronze were twined in a high coronal meshed in silken net of green; little clustering curls escaped from it, clinging to the nape of the proud white neck, shyly kissing it. From her shoulders fell a loose, sleeveless garment of shimmering green belted with a high golden girdle; skirt folds dropping barely below the knees. She had cast aside her buskins, too, and the slender, higharched feet were sandalled. Between the buckled edges of her kirtle I caught gleams of translucent ivory as exquisitely moulded, as delectably rounded, as those revealed so naively beneath the hem. Something was knocking at the doors of my consciousness - some tragic thing. What was it? Larry! Where was Larry? I remembered; raised my head abruptly; saw at my side another frogman carrying O'Keefe, and behind him, Olaf, step instinct with grief, following like some faithful, wistful dog who has lost a loved master. Upon my movement the monster bearing me halted, looked down inquiringly, uttered a deep, booming note that held the quality of interrogation. Lakla turned; the clear, golden eyes were sorrowful, the sweet mouth drooping; but her loveliness, her gentleness, that undefinable synthesis of all her tender self that seemed always to circle her with an atmosphere of lucid normality, lulled my panic. "Drink this," she commanded, holding a small vial to my lips. Its contents were aromatic, unfamiliar but astonishingly effective, for as soon as they passed my lips I felt a surge of strength; consciousness was restored. "Larry!" I cried. "Is he dead?" Lakla shook her head; her eyes were troubled. "No," she said; "but he is like one dead - and yet unlike - " "Put me down," I demanded of my bearer. He tightened his hold; round eyes upon the Golden Girl. She spoke - in sonorous, reverberating monosyllables - and I was set upon my feet; I leaped to the side of the Irishman. He lay limp, with a disquieting, abnormal sequacity, as though every muscle were utterly flaccid; the antithesis of the rigor mortis, thank God, but terrifyingly toward the other end of its arc; a syncope I had never known. The flesh was stone cold; the pulse barely perceptible, long intervalled; the respiration undiscoverable; the pupils of the eyes were enormously dilated; it was as though life had been drawn from every nerve. "A light flashed from the road. It struck his face and seemed to sink in," I said. "I saw," answered Rador; "but what it was I know not; and I thought I knew all the weapons of our rulers." He glanced at me curiously. "Some talk there has been that the stranger who came with you, Double Tongue, was making new death tools for Lugur," he ended. Marakinoff! The Russian at work already in this storehouse of devastating energies, fashioning the weapons for his plots! The Apocalyptic vision swept back upon me - "He is not dead." Lakla's voice was poignant. "He is not dead; and the Three have wondrous healing. They can restore him if they will - and they will, they will!" For a moment she was silent. "Now their gods help Lugur and Yolara," she whispered; "for come what may, whether the Silent Ones be strong or weak, if he dies, surely shall I fall upon them and I will slay those two - yea, though I, too perish!" "Yolara and Lugur shall both die." Olaf's eyes were burning. "But Lugur is mine to slay." That pity I had seen before in Lakla's eyes when she looked upon the Norseman banished the white wrath from them. She turned, half hurriedly, as though to escape his gaze. "Walk with us," she said to me, "unless you are still weak." I shook my head, gave a last look at O'Keefe; there was nothing I could do; I stepped beside her. She thrust a white arm into mine protectingly, the wonderfully moulded hand with its long, tapering fingers catching about my wrist; my heart glowed toward her. "Your medicine is potent, handmaiden," I answered. "And the touch of your hand would give me strength enough, even had I not drunk it," I added in Larry's best manner. Her eyes danced, trouble flying. "Now, that was well spoken for such a man of wisdom as Rador tells me you are," she laughed; and a little pang shot through me. Could not a lover of science present a compliment without it always seeming to be as unusual as plucking a damask rose from a cabinet of fossils? Mustering my philosophy, I smiled back at her. Again I noted that broad, classic brow, with the little tendrils of shining bronze caressing it, the tilted, delicate, nutbrown brows that gave a curious touch of innocent diablerie to the lovely face - flowerlike, pure, highbred, a touch of roguishness, subtly alluring, sparkling over the maiden Madonnaness that lay ever like a delicate, luminous suggestion beneath it; the long, black, curling lashes - the tender, rounded, bare left breast - "I have always liked you," she murmured naively, "since first I saw you in that place where the Shining One goes forth into your world. And I am glad you like my medicine as well as that you carry in the black box that you left behind," she added swiftly. "How know you of that, Lakla?" I gasped. "Oft and oft I came to him there, and to you, while you lay sleeping. How call you him?" She paused. "Larry!" I said. "Larry!" she repeated it excellently. "And you?" "Goodwin," said Rador. I bowed quite as though I were being introduced to some charming young lady met in that old life now seemingly aeons removed. "Yes - Goodwin." she said. "Oft and oft I came. Sometimes I thought you saw me. And he - did he not dream of me sometime - ?" she asked wistfully. "He did." I said, "and watched for you." Then amazement grew vocal. "But how came you?" I asked. "By a strange road," she whispered, "to see that all was well with him - and to look into his heart; for I feared Yolara and her beauty. But I saw that she was not in his heart." A blush burned over her, turning even the little bare breast rosy. "It is a strange road," she went on hurriedly. "Many times have I followed it and watched the Shining One bear back its prey to the blue pool; seen the woman he seeks" - she made a quick gesture toward Olaf - "and a babe cast from her arms in the last pang of her mother love; seen another woman throw herself into the Shining One's embrace to save a man she loved; and I could not help!" Her voice grew deep, thrilled. "The friend, it comes to me, who drew you here, Goodwin!" She was silent, walking as one who sees visions and listens to voices unheard by others, Rador made a warning gesture; I crowded back my questions, glanced about me. We were passing over a smooth strand, hard packed as some beach of longthrustback ocean. It was like crushed garnets, each grain stained deep red, faintly sparkling. On each side were distances, the floor stretching away into them bare of vegetation - stretching on and on into infinitudes of rosy mist, even as did the space above. Flanking and behind us marched the giant batrachians, fivescore of them at least, black scale and crimson scale lustrous and gleaming in the rosaceous radiance; saucer eyes shining circles of phosphorescence green, purple, red; spurs clicking as they crouched along with a gait at once grotesque and formidable. Ahead the mist deepened into a ruddier glow; through it a long, dark line began to appear - the mouth I thought of the caverned space through which we were going; it was just before us; over us - we stood bathed in a flood of rubescence! A sea stretched before us - a crimson sea, gleaming like that lost lacquer of royal coral and the Flame Dragon's blood which Fu S'cze set upon the bower he built for his stolen sun maiden - that going toward it she might think it the sun itself rising over the summer seas. Unmoved by wave or ripple, it was placid as some deep woodland pool when night rushes up over the world. It seemed molten - or as though some hand great enough to rock earth had distilled here from conflagrations of autumn sunsets their flaming essences. A fish broke through, large as a shark, bluntheaded, flashing bronze, ridged and mailed as though with serrate plates of armour. It leaped high, shaking from it a sparkling spray of rubies; dropped and shot up a geyser of fiery gems. Across my line of vision, moving stately over the sea, floated a half globe, luminous, diaphanous, its iridescence melting into turquoise, thence to amethyst, to orange, to scarlet shot with rose, to vermilion, a translucent green, thence back into the iridescence; behind it four others, and the least of them ten feet in diameter, and the largest no less than thirty. They drifted past like bubbles blown from froth of rainbows by pipes in mouths of Titans' young. Then from the base of one arose a tangle of shimmering strands, long, slender whiplashes that played about and sank slowly again beneath the crimson surface. I gasped - for the fish had been a ganoid - that ancient, armoured form that was perhaps the most intelligent of all life on our planet during the Devonian era, but which for age upon age had vanished, save for its fossils held in the embrace of the stone that once was their soft bottom beds; and the halfglobes were Medusae, jellyfish - but of a size, luminosity, and colour unheard of. Now Lakla cupped her mouth with pink palms and sent a clarion note ringing out. The ledge on which we stood continued a few hundred feet before us, falling abruptly, though from no great height to the Crimson Sea; at right and left it extended in a long semicircle. Turning to the right whence she had sent her call, I saw rising a mile or more away, veiled lightly by the haze, a rainbow, a gigantic prismatic arch, flattened, I thought, by some quality of the strange atmosphere. It sprang from the ruddy strand, leaped the crimson tide, and dropped three miles away upon a precip itous, jagged upthrust of rock frowning black from the lacquered depths. And surmounting a higher ledge beyond this upthrust a huge dome of dull gold, Cyclopean, striking eyes and mind with something unhumanly alien, baffling; sending the mind groping, as though across the deserts of space, from some farflung star, should fall upon us linked sounds, coherent certainly, meaningful surely, vaguely familiar - yet never to be translated into any symbol or thought of our own particular planet. The sea of crimson lacquer, with its floating moons of luminous colour - this bow of prismed stone leaping to the weird isle crowned by the anomalous, aureate excrescence - the half human batrachiansthe elfland through which we had passed, with all its hidden wonders and terrors - I felt the foundations of my cherished knowledge shaking. Was this all a dream? Was this body of mine lying somewhere, fighting a fevered death, and all these but images floating through the breaking chambers of my brain? My knees shook; involuntarily I groaned. Lakla turned, looked at me anxiously, slipped a soft arm behind me, held me till the vertigo passed. "Patience," she said. "The bearers come. Soon you shall rest." I looked; down toward us from the bow's end were leaping swiftly another score of the frogmen. Some bore litters, high, handled, not unlike palanquins - "Asgard!" Olaf stood beside me, eyes burning, pointing to the arch. "Bifrost Bridge, sharp as sword edge, over which souls go to Valhalla. And she - she is a Valkyr - a sword maiden, Ja!" I gripped the Norseman's hand. It was hot, and a pang of remorse shot through me. If this place had so shaken me, how must it have shaken Olaf? It was with relief that I watched him, at Lakla's gentle command, drop into one of the litters and lie back, eyes closed, as two of the monsters raised its yoke to their scaled shoulders. Nor was it without further relief that I myself lay back on the soft velvety cushions of another. The cavalcade began to move. Lakla had ordered O'Keefe placed beside her, and she sat, knees crossed Orient fashion, leaning over the pale head on her lap, the white, tapering fingers straying fondly through his hair. Presently I saw her reach up, slowly unwind the coronal of her tresses, shake them loose, and let them fall like a veil over her and him. Her head bent low; I heard a soft sobbing - I turned away my gaze, lorn enough in my own heart, God knew! CHAPTER XXV The Three Silent Ones THE ARCH was closer - and in my awe I forgot for the moment Larry and aught else. For this was no rainbow, no thing born of light and mist, no Bifrost Bridge of myth - no! It was a flying arch of stone, stained with flares of Tyrian purples, of royal scarlets, of blues dark as the Gulf Stream's ribbon, sapphires soft as midday May skies, splashes of chromes and greens - a palette of giantry, a bridge of wizardry; a hundred, nay, a thousand, times greater than that of Utah which the Navaho call Nonnegozche and worship, as well they may, as a god, and which is itself a rainbow in eternal rock. It sprang from the ledge and winged its prodigious length in one low arc over the sea's crimson breast, as though in some ancient paroxysm of earth it had been hurled molten, crystallizing into that stupendous span and still flaming with the fires that had moulded it. Closer we came and closer, while I watched spellbound; now we were at its head, and the litterbearers swept upon it. All of five hundred feet wide it was, surface smooth as a city road, sides low walled, curving inward as though in the jettingout of its making the edges of the plastic rock had curled. On and on we sped; the high thrusting precipices upon which the bridge's far end rested, frowned close; the enigmatic, dully shining dome loomed ever greater. Now we had reached that end; were passing over a smooth plaza whose level floor was enclosed, save for a rift in front of us, by the fanged tops of the black cliff's. From this rift stretched another span, half a mile long, perhaps, widening at its centre into a broad platform, continuing straight to two massive gates set within the face of the second cliff wall like panels, and of the same dull gold as the dome rising high beyond. And this smaller arch leaped a pit, an abyss, of which the outer precipices were the rim holding back from the pit the red flood. We were rapidly approaching; now upon the platform; my bearers were striding closely along the side; I leaned far out - a giddiness seized me! I gazed down into depth upon vertiginous depth; an abyss indeed - an abyss dropping to world's base like that in which the Babylonians believed writhed Talaat, the serpent mother of Chaos; a pit that struck down into earth's heart itself, Now, what was that - distance upon unfathomable distance below? A stupendous glowing like the green fire of life itself. What was it like? I had it! It was like the corona of the sun in eclipse - that burgeoning that makes of our luminary when moon veils it an incredible blossoming of splendours in the black heavens. And strangely, strangely, it was like the Dweller's beauty when with its dazzling spirallings and writhings it raced amid its storm of crystal bell sounds! The abyss was behind us; we had paused at the golden portals; they swung inward. A wide corridor filled with soft light was before us, and on its threshold stood - bizarre, yellow gems gleaming, huge muzzle wide in what was evidently meant for a smile of welcome - the woman frog of the Moon Pool wall. Lakla raised her head; swept back the silken tent of her hair and gazed at me with eyes misty from weeping. The frogwoman crept to her side; gazed down upon Larry; spoke - spoke - to the Golden Girl in a swift stream of the sonorous, reverberant monosyllables; and Lakla answered her in kind. The webbed digits swept over O'Keefe's face, felt at his heart; she shook her head and moved ahead of us up the passage. Still borne in the litters we went on, winding, ascending until at last they were set down in a great hall carpeted with soft fragrant rushes and into which from high narrow slits streamed the crimson light from without. I jumped over to Larry, there had been no change in his condition; still the terrifying limpness, the slow, infrequent pulsation. Rador and Olaf - and the fever now seemed to be gone from him - came and stood beside me, silent. "I go to the Three," said Lakla. "Wait you here." She passed through a curtaining; then as swiftly as she had gone she returned through the hangings, tresses braided, a swathing of golden gauze about her. "Rador," she said, "bear you Larry - for into your heart the Silent Ones would look. And fear nothing," she added at the green dwarfs disconcerted, almost fearful start. Rador bowed, was thrust aside by Olaf. "No," said the Norseman; "I will carry him." He lifted Larry like a child against his broad breast. The dwarf glanced quickly at Lakla; she nodded. "Come!" she commanded, and held aside the folds. Of that journey I have few memories. I only know that we went through corridor upon corridor; successions of vast halls and chambers, some carpeted with the rushes, others with rugs into which the feet sank as into deep, soft meadows; spaces illumined by the rubrous light, and spaces in which softer lights held sway. We paused before a slab of the same crimson stone as that the green dwarf had called the portal, and upon its polished surface weaved the same unnameable symbols. The Golden Girl pressed upon its side; it slipped softly back; a torrent of opalescence gushed out of the opening - and as one in a dream I entered. We were, I knew, just under the dome; but for the moment, caught in the flood of radiance, I could see nothing. It was like being held within a fire opal - so brilliant, so flashing, was it. I closed my eyes, opened them; the lambency cascaded from the vast curves of the globular walls; in front of me was a long, narrow opening in them, through which, far away, I could see the end of the wizards' bridge and the ledged mouth of the cavern through which we had come; against the light from within beat the crimson light from without - and was checked as though by a barrier. I felt Lakla's touch; turned. A hundred paces away was a dais, its rim raised a yard above the floor. From the edge of this rim streamed upward a steady, coruscating mist of the opalescence, veined even as was that of the Dweller's shining core and shot with milky shadows like curdled moonlight; up it stretched like a wall. Over it, from it, down upon me, gazed three faces - two clearly male, one a woman's. At the first I thought them statues, and then the eyes of them gave the lie to me; for the eyes were alive, terribly, and if I could admit the word - supernaturally - alive. They were thrice the size of the human eye and triangular, the apex of the angle upward; black as jet, pupilless, filled with tiny, leaping red flames, Over them were foreheads, not as ours - high and broad and visored; their sides drawn forward into a vertical ridge, a prominence, an upright wedge, somewhat like the visored heads of a few of the great lizards - and the heads, long, narrowing at the back, were fully twice the size of mankind's! Upon the brows were caps - and with a fearful certainty I knew that they were not caps - long, thick strands of gleaming yellow, feathered scales thin as sequins! Sharp, curving noses like the beaks of the giant condors; mouths thin, austere; long, powerful, pointed chins; the - flesh - of the faces white as the whitest marble; and wreathing up to them, covering all their bodies, the shimmering, curdled, misty fires of opalescence! Olaf stood rigid; my own heart leaped wildly. What - what were these beings? I forced myself to look again - and from their gaze streamed a current of reassurance, of good will - nay, of intense spiritual strength. I saw that they were not fierce, not ruthless, not inhuman, despite their strangeness; no, they were kindly; in some unmistakable way, benign and sorrowful - so sorrowful! I straightened, gazed back at them fearlessly. Olaf drew a deep breath, gazed steadily too, the hardness, the despair wiped from his face. Now Lakla drew closer to the dais; the three pairs of eyes searched hers, the woman's with an ineffable tenderness; some message seemed to pass between the Three and the Golden Girl. She bowed low, turned to the Norseman. "Place Larry there," she said softly - "there at the feet of the Silent Ones." She pointed into the radiant mist; Olaf started, hesitated, stared from Lakla to the Three, searched for a moment their eyes - and something like a smile drifted through them. He stepped forward, lifted O'Keefe, set him squarely within the covering light. It wavered, rolled upward, swirled about the body, steadied again - and within it there was no sign of Larry! Again the mist wavered, shook, and seemed to climb higher, hiding the chins, the beaked noses, the brows of that incredible Trinity - but before it ceased to climb, I thought the yellow feathered heads bent; sensed a movement as though they lifted something. The mist fell; the eyes gleamed out again, inscrutable. And groping out of the radiance, pausing at the verge of the dais, leaping down from it, came Larry, laughing, filled with life, blinking as one who draws from darkness into sunshine. He saw Lakla, sprang to her, gripped her in his arms. "Lakla!" he cried. "Mavourneen!" She slipped from his embrace, blushing, glancing at the Three shyly, halffearfully. And again I saw the tenderness creep into the inky, flameshot orbs of the woman being; and a tenderness in the others too - as though they regarded some wellbeloved child. "You lay in the arms of Death, Larry," she said. "And the Silent Ones drew you from him. Do homage to the Silent Ones, Larry, for they are good and they are mighty!" She turned his head with one of the long, white hands - and he looked into the faces of the Three; looked long, was shaken even as had been Olaf and myself; was swept by that same wave of power and of - of - what can I call it? - holiness that streamed from them. Then for the first time I saw real awe mount into his face. Another moment he stared - and dropped upon one knee and bowed his head before them as would a worshipper before the shrine of his saint. And - I am not ashamed to tell it - I joined him; and with us knelt Lakla and Olaf and Rador. The mist of fiery opal swirled up about the Three; hid them. And with a long, deep, joyous sigh Lakla took Larry's hand, drew him to his feet, and silently we followed them out of that hall of wonder. But why, in going, did the thought come to me that from where the Three sat throned they ever watched the cavern mouth that was the door into their abode; and looked down ever into the unfathomable depth in which glowed and pulsed that mystic flower, colossal, awesome, of green flame that had seemed to me fire of life itself? CHAPTER XXVI The Wooing of Lakla I HAD SLEPT soundly and dreamlessly; I wakened quietly in the great chamber into which Rador had ushered O'Keefe and myself after that culminating experience of crowded, nerveracking hours - the facing of the Three. Now, lying gazing upward at the highvaulted ceiling, I heard Larry's voice: "They look like birds." Evidently he was thinking of the Three; a silence - then: "Yes, they look like birds - and they look, and it's meaning no disrespect to them I am at all, they look like lizards" - and another silence - "they look like some sort of gods, and, by the good swordarm of Brian Boru, they look human, too! And it's none of them they are either, so what - what the - what the sainted St. Bridget are they?" Another short silence, and then in a tone of awed and absolute conviction: "That's it, sure! That's what they are - it all hangs in - they couldn't be anything else - " He gave a whoop; a pillow shot over and caught me across the head. "Wake up!" shouted Larry. "Wake up, ye seething caldron of fossilized superstitions! Wake up, ye bogyhaunted man of scientific unwisdom!" Under pillow and insults I bounced to my feet, filled for a moment with quite real wrath; he lay back, roaring with laughter, and my anger was swept away. "Doc," he said, very seriously, after this, "I know who the Three are!" "Yes?" I queried, with studied sarcasm. "Yes?" he mimicked. "Yes! Ye - ye" He paused under the menace of my look, grinned. "Yes, I know," he continued. "They're of the Tuatha De, the old ones, the great people of Ireland, that's who they are!" I knew, of course, of the Tuatha De Danann, the tribes of the god Danu, the halflegendary, halfhistorical clan who found their home in Erin some four thousand years before the Christian era, and who have left so deep an impress upon the Celtic mind and its myths. "Yes," said Larry again, "the Tuatha De - the Ancient Ones who had spells that could compel Mananan, who is the spirit of all the seas, an' Keithor, who is the god of all green living things, an' even Hesus, the unseen god, whose pulse is the pulse of all the firmament; yes, an' Orchil too, who sits within the earth an' weaves with the shuttle of mystery and her three looms of birth an' life an' death - even Orchil would weave as they commanded!" He was silent - then: "They are of them - the mighty ones - why else would I have bent my knee to them as I would have to the spirit of my dead mother? Why else would Lakla, whose goldbrown hair is the hair of Eilidh the Fair, whose mouth is the sweet mouth of Deirdre, an' whose soul walked with mine ages agone among the fragrant green myrtle of Erin, serve them?" he whispered, eyes full of dream. "Have you any idea how they got here?" I asked, not unreasonably. "I haven't thought about that," he replied somewhat testily. "But at once, me excellent man o' wisdom, a number occur to me. One of them is that this little party of three might have stopped here on their way to Ireland, an' for good reasons of their own decided to stay a while; an' another is that they might have come here afterward, havin' got wind of what those rats out there were contemplatin', and have stayed on the job till the time was ripe to save Ireland from 'em; the rest of the world, too, of course," he added magnanimously, "but Ireland in particular. And do any of those reasons appeal to ye?" I shook my head. "Well, what do you think?" he asked wearily. "I think," I said cautiously, "that we face an evolution of highly intelligent beings from ancestral sources radically removed from those through which mankind ascended. These halfhuman, highly developed batrachians they call the Akka prove that evolution in these caverned spaces has certainly pursued one different path than on earth. The Englishman, Wells, wrote an imaginative and very entertaining book con cerning an invasion of earth by Martians, and he made his Martians enormously specialized cuttlefish. There was nothing inherently improbable in Wells' choice. Man is the ruling animal of earth today solely by reason of a series of accidents; under another series spiders or ants, or even elephants, could have become the dominant race. "I think," I said, even more cautiously, "that the race to which the Three belong never appeared on earth's surface; that their development took place here, unhindered through aeons. And if this be true, the structure of their brains, and therefore all their reactions, must be different from ours. Hence their knowledge and command of energies unfamiliar to us - and hence also the question whether they may not have an entirely different sense of values, of justice - and that is rather terrifying," I concluded. Larry shook his head. "That last sort of knocks your argument, Doc," he said. "They had sense of justice enough to help me out - and certainly they know love - for I saw the way they looked at Lakla; and sorrow - for there was no mistaking that in their faces. "No," he went on. "I hold to my own idea. They're of the Old People. The little leprechaun knew his way here, an' I'll bet it was they who sent the word. An' if the O'Keefe banshee comes here - which save the mark! - I'll bet she'll drop in on the Silent Ones for a social visit before she an' her clan get busy. Well, it'll make her feel more at home, the good old body. No, Doc, no," he concluded, "I'm right; it all fits in too well to be wrong." I made a last despairing attempt. "Is there anything anywhere in Ireland that would indicate that the Tuatha De ever looked like the Three?" I asked - and again I had spoken most unfortunately. "Is there?" he shouted. "Is there? By the kilt of Cormack MacCormack, I'm glad ye reminded me. It was worryin' me a little meself. There was Daghda, who could put on the head of a great boar an' the body of a giant fish and cleave the waves an' tear to pieces the birlins of any who came against Erin; an' there was Rinn - " How many more of the metamorphoses of the Old People I might have heard, I do not know, for the curtains parted and in walked Rador. "You have rested well," he smiled, "I can see. The hand maiden bade me call you. You are to eat with her in her garden." Down long corridors we trod and out upon a gardened terrace as beautiful as any of those of Yolara's city; bowered, blossoming, fragrant, set high upon the cliffs beside the domed castle. A table, as of milky jade, was spread at one corner, but the Golden Girl was not there. A little path ran on and up, hemmed in by the mass of verdure. I looked at it longingly; Rador saw the glance, interpreted it, and led me up the stepped sharp slope into a rock embrasure. Here I was above the foliage, and everywhere the view was clear. Below me stretched the incredible bridge, with the frog people hurrying back and forth upon it. A pinnacle at my side hid the abyss. My eyes followed the cavern ledge. Above it the rock rose bare, but at the ends of the semicircular strand a luxuriant vegetation began, stretching from the crimson shores back into far distances. Of browns and reds and yellows, like an autumn forest, was the foliage, with here and there patches of darkgreen, as of conifers. Five miles or more, on each side, the forests swept, and then were lost to sight in the haze. I turned and faced an immensity of crimson waters, unbroken, a true sea, if ever there was one. A breeze blew - the first real wind I had encountered in the hidden places; under it the surface, that had been as molten lacquer, rippled and dimpled. Little waves broke with a spray of rosepearls and rubies. The giant Medusae drifted - stately, luminous kaleidoscopic elfin moons. Far down, peeping around a jutting tower of the cliff, I saw dipping with the motion of the waves a floating garden. The flowers, too, were luminous - indeed sparkling - gleaming brilliants of scarlet and vermilions lighter than the flood on which they lay, mauves and odd shades of reddishblue. They gleamed and shone like a little lake of jewels. Rador broke in upon my musings. "Lakla comes! Let us go down." It was a shy Lakla who came slowly around the end of the path and, blushing furiously, held her hands out to Larry. And the Irishman took them, placed them over his heart, kissed them with a tenderness that had been lacking in the halfmocking, halffierce caresses he had given the priestess. She blushed deeper, holding out the tapering fingers - then pressed them to her own heart. "I like the touch of your lips, Larry," she whispered. "They warm me here" - she pressed her heart again - "and they send little sparkles of light through me." Her brows tilted perplexedly, accenting the nuance of diablerie, delicate and fascinating, that they cast upon the flower face. "Do you?" whispered the O'Keefe fervently. "Do you, Lakla?" He bent toward her. She caught the amused glance of Rador; drew herself aside halfhaughtily. "Rador," she said, "is it not time that you and the strong one, Olaf, were setting forth?" "Truly it is, handmaiden," he answered respectfully enough - yet with a current of laughter under his words. "But as you know the strong one, Olaf, wished to see his friends here before we were gone - and he comes even now," he added, glancing down the pathway, along which came striding the Norseman. As he faced us I saw that a transformation had been wrought in him. Gone was the pitiful seeking, and gone too the just as pitiful hope. The set face softened as he looked at the Golden Girl and bowed low to her. He thrust a hand to O'Keefe and to me. "There is to be battle," he said. "I go with Rador to call the armies of these frog people. As for me - Lakla has spoken. There is no hope for - for mine Helma in life, but there is hope that we destroy the Shining Devil and give mine Helma peace. And with that I am well content, ja! Well content!" He gripped our hands again. "We will fight!" he muttered. "Ja! And I will have vengeance!" The sternness returned; and with a salute Rador and he were gone. Two great tears rolled from the golden eyes of Lakla. "Not even the Silent Ones can heal those the Shining One has taken," she said. "He asked me - and it was better that I tell him. It is part of the Three's - punishment - but of that you will soon learn," she went on hurriedly. "Ask me no questions now of the Silent Ones. I thought it better for Olaf to go with Rador, to busy himself, to give his mind other than sorrow upon which to feed." Up the path came five of the frogwomen, bearing platters and ewers. Their bracelets and anklets of jewels were tinkling; their middles covered with short kirtles of woven cloth studded with the sparkling ornaments. And here let me say that if I have given the impression that the Akka are simply magnified frogs, I regret it. Froglike they are, and hence my phrase for them - but as unlike the frog, as we know it, as man is unlike the chimpanzee. Springing, I hazard, from the stegocephalia, the ancestor of the frogs, these batrachians followed a different line of evolution and acquired the upright position just as man did his from the fourfooted folk. The great staring eyes, the shape of the muzzle were froglike, but the highly developed brain had set upon the head and shape of it vital differences. The forehead, for instance, was not low, flat, and retreating - its frontal arch was well defined. The head was, in a sense, shapely, and with the females the great horny carapace that stood over it like a fantastic helmet was much modified, as were the spurs that were so formidable in the male; colouration was different also. The torso was upright; the legs a little bent, giving them their crouching gait - but I wander from my subject.1 They set their burdens down. Larry looked at them with interest. "You surely have those things well trained, Lakla," he said. "Things!" The handmaiden arose, eyes flashing with indignation. "You call my Akka things!" "Well," said Larry, a bit taken aback, "what do you call them?" "My Akka are a people," she retorted. "As much a people as your race or mine. They are good and loyal, and they have speech and arts, and they slay not, save for food or to protect themselves. And I think them beautiful, Larry, beautiful!" She stamped her foot. "And you call them - things!" Beautiful! These? Yet, after all, they were, in their grotesque fashion. And to Lakla, surrounded by them, from babyhood, they were not strange, at all. Why shouldn't she think them beautiful? The same thought must have struck O'Keefe, for he flushed guiltily. 1The Akka are viviparous. The female produces progeny at fiveyear intervals, never more than two at a time. They are monogamous, like certain of our own Ranidae. Pending my monograph upon what little I had time to learn of their interesting habits and customs, the curious will find instruction and entertainment in Brandes and Schvenichen's Brutpfleige der Schwanzlosen Bat rachier, p. 395; and Lilian V. Sampson's Unusual Modes of Breeding among Anura, Amer. Nat. xxxiv., 1900. - W. T. G. "I think them beautiful, too, Lakla," he said remorsefully. "It's my not knowing your tongue too well that traps me. Truly, I think them beautiful - I'd tell them so, if I knew their talk." Lakla dimpled, laughed - spoke to the attendants in that strange speech that was unquestionably a language; they bridled, looked at O'Keefe with fantastic coquetry, cracked and boomed softly among themselves. "They say they like you better than the men of Muria," laughed Lakla. "Did I ever think I'd be swapping compliments with lady frogs!" he murmured to me. "Buck up, Larry - keep your eyes on the captive Irish princess!" he muttered to himself. "Rador goes to meet one of the ladala who is slipping through with news," said the Golden Girl as we addressed ourselves to the food. "Then, with Nak, he and Olaf go to muster the Akka - for there will be battle, and we must prepare. Nak," she added, "is he who went before me when you were dancing with Yolara, Larry." She stole a swift, mischievous glance at him. "He is headman of all the Akka." "Just what forces can we muster against them when they come, darlin'?" said Larry. "Darlin'?" - the Golden Girl had caught the caress of the word - "what's that?" "It's a little word that means Lakla," he answered. "It does - that is, when I say it; when you say it, then it means Larry." "I like that word," mused Lakla. "You can even say Larry darlin'!" suggested O'Keefe. "Larry darlin'!" said Lakla. "When they come we shall have first of all my Akka - " "Can they fight, mavourneen?" interrupted Larry. "Can they fight! My Akka!" Again her eyes flashed. "They will fight to the last of them - with the spears that give the swift rotting, covered, as they are, with the jelly of those Saddu there - " She pointed through a rift in the foliage across which, on the surface of the sea, was floating one of the moon globes - and now I know why Rador had warned Larry against a plunge there. "With spears and clubs and with teeth and nails and spurs - they are a strong and brave people, Larry - darlin', and though they hurl the Keth at them, it is slow to work upon them, and they slay even while they are passing into the nothingness!" "And have we none of the Keth?" he asked. "No" - she shook her head - "none of their weapons have we here, although it was - it was the Ancient Ones who shaped them." "But the Three are of the Ancient Ones?" I cried. "Surely they can tell - " "No," she said slowly. "No - there is something you must know - and soon; and then the Silent Ones say you will understand. You, especially, Goodwin, who worship wisdom." "Then," said Larry, "we have the Akka; and we have the four men of us, and among us three guns and about a hundred cartridges - an' - an' the power of the Three - but what about the Shining One, Fireworks - " "I do not know." Again the indecision that had been in her eyes when Yolara had launched her defiance crept back. "The Shining One is strong - and he has his - slaves!" "Well, we'd better get busy good and quick!" the O'Keefe's voice rang. But Lakla, for some reason of her own, would pursue the matter no further. The trouble fled from her eyes - they danced. "Larry darlin'?" she murmured. "I like the touch of your lips - " "You do?" he whispered, all thought flying of anything but the beautiful, provocative face so close to his. "Then, acushla, you're goin' to get acquainted with 'em! Turn your head, Doc!" he said. And I turned it. There was quite a long silence, broken by an interested, soft outburst of gentle boomings from the serving frogmaids. I stole a glance behind me. Lakla's head lay on the Irishman's shoulder, the golden eyes misty sunpools of love and adoration; and the O'Keefe, a new look of power and strength upon his clearcut features, was gazing down into them with that look which rises only from the heart touched for the first time with that true, allpowerful love, which is the pulse of the universe itself, the real music of the spheres of which Plato dreamed, the love that is stronger than death itself, immortal as the high gods and the true soul of all that mystery we call life. Then Lakla raised her hands, pressed down Larry's head, kissed him between the eyes, drew herself with a trembling little laugh from his embrace. "The future Mrs. Larry O'Keefe, Goodwin," said Larry to me a little unsteadily. I took their hands - and Lakla kissed me! She turned to the booming - smiling - frogmaids; gave them some command, for they filed away down the path. Suddenly I felt, well, a little superfluous. "If you don't mind," I said, "I think I'll go up the path there again and look about." But they were so engrossed with each other that they did not even hear me - so I walked away, up to the embrasure where Rador had taken me. The movement of the batrachians over the bridge had ceased. Dimly at the far end I could see the cluster of the garrison. My thoughts flew back to Lakla and to Larry. What was to be the end? If we won, if we were able to pass from this place, could she live in our world? A product of these caverns with their atmosphere and light that seemed in some subtle way to be both food and drink - how would she react to the unfamiliar foods and air and light of outer earth? Further, here so far as I was able to discover, there were no malignant bacilli - what immunity could Lakla have then to those microscopic evils without, which only long ages of sickness and death have bought for us a modicum of protection? I began to be oppressed. Surely they bad been long enough by themselves. I went down the path. I heard Larry. "It's a green land, mavourneen. And the sea rocks and dimples around it - blue as the heavens, green as the isle itself, and foam horses toss their white manes, and the great clean winds blow over it, and the sun shines down on it like your eyes, acushla - " "And are you a king of Ireland, Larry darlin'?" Thus Lakla - But enough! At last we turned to go - and around the corner of the path I caught another glimpse of what I have called the lake of jewels. I pointed to it. "Those are lovely flowers, Lakla," I said. "I have never seen anything like them in the place from whence we come." She followed my pointing finger - laughed. "Come," she said, "let me show you them." She ran down an intersecting way, we following; came out of it upon a little ledge close to the brink, three feet or more I suppose about it. The Golden Girl's voice rang out in a highpitched, tremulous, throbbing call. The lake of jewels stirred as though a breeze had passed over it; stirred, shook, and then began to move swiftly, a shimmering torrent of shining flowers down upon us! She called again, the movement became more rapid; the gem blooms streamed closer - closer, wavering, shifting, winding - at our very feet. Above them hovered a little radiant mist. The Golden Girl leaned over; called softly, and up from the sparkling mass shot a green vine whose heads were five flowers of flaming ruby - shot up, flew into her hand and coiled about the white arm, its quintette of lambent blossoms - regarding us! It was the thing Lakla had called the Yekta; that with which she had threatened the priestess; the thing that carried the dreadful death - and the Golden Girl was handling it like a rose! Larry swore - I looked at the thing more closely. It was a hydroid, a development of that strange animalvegetable that, sometimes almost microscopic, waves in the sea depths like a cluster of flowers paralyzing its prey with the mysterious force that dwells in its blossom heads! 1 "Put it down, Lakla," the distress in O'Keefe's voice was deep. Lakla laughed mischievously, caught the real fear for her in his eyes; opened her hand, gave another faint call - and back it flew to its fellows. "Why, it wouldn't hurt me, Larry!" she expostulated. "They know me!" "Put it down!" he repeated hoarsely. She sighed, gave another sweet, prolonged call. The lake of gems - rubies and amethysts, mauves and scarlettinged blues - wavered and shook even as it had before - and swept swiftly back to that place whence she had drawn them! Then, with Larry and Lakla walking ahead, white arm about his brown neck; the O'Keefe still expostulating, the handmaiden laughing merrily, we passed through her bower to the domed castle. Glancing through a cleft I caught sight again of the far end of the bridge; noted among the clustered figures of its garrison of the frogmen a movement, a flashing of green fire like marshlights on spear tips; wondered idly what it was, and then, other thoughts crowding in, followed along, head bent, behind the pair who had found in what was Olaf's hell, their true paradise. [1]The Yekta of the Crimson Sea, are as extraordinary developments of hydroid forms as the giant Medusae, of which, of course, they are not too remote cousins. The closest resemblances to them in outer water forms are among the Gymnoblastic Hydroids, notably Clavetella prolifera, a most interesting ambulatory form of six tentacles. Almost every bather in Southern waters, Northern too, knows the pain that contact with certain "jelly fish" produces. The Yekta's development was prodigious and, to us, monstrous. It secretes in its five heads an almost incredibly swiftly acting poison which I suspect, for I had no chance to verify the theory, destroys the entire nervous system to the accompaniment of truly infernal agony; carrying at the same time the illusion that the torment stretches through infinities of time. Both ether and nitrous oxide gas produce in the majority this sensation of time extension, without of course the pain symptom. What Lakla called the Yekta kiss is I imagine about as close to the orthodox idea of Hell as can be conceived. The secret of her control over them I had no opportunity of learning in the rush of events that followed. Knowledge of the appalling effects of their touch came, she told me, from those few "who had been kissed so lightly" that they recovered. Certainly nothing, not even the Shining One, was dreaded by the Murians as these were - W. T. G. CHAPTER XXVII The Coming of Yolara "NEVER was there such a girl!" Thus Larry, dreamily, leaning head in hand on one of the wide divans of the chamber where Lakla had left us, pleading service to the Silent Ones. "An', by the faith and the honour of the O'Keefes, an' by my dead mother's soul may God do with me as I do by her!" he whispered fervently. He relapsed into openeyed dreaming. I walked about the room, examining it - the first opportunity I had gained to inspect carefully any of the rooms in the abode of the Three. It was octagonal, carpeted with the thick rugs that seemed almost as though woven of soft mineral wool, faintly shimmering, palest blue. I paced its diagonal; it was fifty yards; the ceiling was arched, and either of pale rose metal or metallic covering; it collected the light from the high, slitted windows, and shed it, diffused, through the room. Around the octagon ran a low gallery not two feet from the floor, balustraded with slender pillars, close set; broken at opposite curtained entrances over which hung thick, dullgold curtainings giving the same suggestion of metallic or mineral substance as the rugs. Set within each of the eight sides, above the balcony, were colossal slabs of lapis lazuli, inset with graceful but unplaceable designs in scarlet and sapphire blue. There was the great divan on which mused Larry; two smaller ones, half a dozen low seats and chairs carved apparently of ivory and of dull soft gold. Most curious were tripods, strong, pikelike legs of golden metal four feet high, holding small circles of the lapis with intaglios of one curious symbol somewhat resembling the ideographs of the Chinese. There was no dust - nowhere in these caverned spaces had I found this constant companion of ours in the world overhead. My eyes caught a sparkle from a corner. Pursuing it I found upon one of the low seats a flat, clear crystal oval, remarkably like a lens. I took it and stepped up on the balcony. Standing on tiptoe I found I commanded from the bottom of a window slit a view of the bridge approach. Scanning it I could see no trace of the garrison there, nor of the green spear flashes. I placed the crystal to my eyes - and with a disconcerting abruptness the cavern mouth leaped before me, apparently not a hundred feet away; decidedly the crystal was a very excellent lens - but where were the guards? I peered closely. Nothing! But now against the aperture I saw a score or more of tiny, dancing sparks. An optical illusion, I thought, and turned the crystal in another direction. There were no sparklings there. I turned it back again - and there they were. And what were they like? Realization came to me - they were like the little, dancing, radiant atoms that had played for a time about the emptiness where had stood Sorgar of the Lower Waters before he bad been shaken into the nothingness! And that green light I had noticed - the Keth! A cry on my lips, I turned to Larry - and the cry died as the heavy curtainings at the entrance on my right undulated, parted as though a body had slipped through, shook and parted again and again - with the dreadful passing of unseen things! "Larry!" I cried. "Here! Quick!" He leaped to his feet, gazed about wildly - and disappeared! Yes - vanished from my sight like the snuffed flame of a candle or as though something moving with the speed of light itself had snatched him away! Then from the divan came the sounds of struggle, the hissing of straining breaths, the noise of Larry cursing. I leaped over the balustrade, drawing my own pistol - was caught in a pair of mighty arms, my elbows crushed to my sides, drawn down until my face pressed close to a broad, hairy breast - and through that obstacle - formless, shadowless, transparent as air itself - I could still see the battle on the divan! Now there were two sharp reports; the struggle abruptly ceased. From a point not a foot over the great couch, as though oozing from the air itself, blood began to drop, faster and ever faster, pouring out of nothingness. And out of that same air, now a dozen feet away, leaped the face of Larry - bodyless, poised six feet above the floor, blazing with rage - floating weirdly, uncannily to a hideous degree, in vacancy. His hands flashed out - armless; they wavered, appearing, disappearing - swiftly tearing something from him. Then there, feet hidden, stiff on legs that vanished at the ankles, striking out into vision with all the dizzy abruptness with which he had been stricken from sight was the O'Keefe, a smoking pistol in hand. And ever that red stream trickled out of vacancy and spread over the couch, dripping to the floor. I made a mighty movement to escape; was held more firmly - and then close to the face of Larry, flashing out with that terrifying instantaneousness even as had his, was the head of Yolara, as devilishly mocking as I had ever seen it, the cruelty shining through it like delicate white flames from hell - and beautiful! "Stir not! Strike not - until I command!" She flung the words beyond her, addressed to the invisible ones who had accompanied her; whose presences I sensed filling the chamber. The floating, beautiful head, crowned high with cornsilk hair, darted toward the Irishman. He took a swift step backward. The eyes of the priestess deepened toward purple; sparkled with malice. "So," she said. "So, Larree - you thought you could go from me so easily!" She laughed softly. "In my hidden hand I hold the Keth cone," she murmured. "Before you can raise the death tube I can smite you - and will. And consider, Larree, if the handmaiden, the choya comes, I can vanish - so" - the mocking head disappeared, burst forth again - "and slay her with the Keth - or bid my people seize her and bear her to the Shining One!" Tiny beads of sweat stood out on O'Keefe's forehead, and I knew he was thinking not of himself, but of Lakla. "What do you want with me, Yolara?" he asked hoarsely. "Nay," came the mocking voice. "Not Yolara to you, Larree - call me by those sweet names you taught me - Honey of the Wild Beees, Net of Hearts - " Again her laughter tinkled. "What do you want with me?" his voice was strained, the lips rigid. "Ah, you are afraid, Larree." There was diabolic jubilation in the words. "What should I want but that you return with me? Why else did I creep through the lair of the dragon worm and pass the path of perils but to ask you that? And the choya guards you not well." Again she laughed. "We came to the cavern's end and, there were her Akka. And the Akka can see us - as shadows. But it was my desire to surprise you with my coming, Larree," the voice was silken. "And I feared that they would hasten to be first to bring you that message to delight in your joy. And so, Larree, I loosed the Keth upon them - and gave them peace and rest within the nothingness. And the portal below was open - almost in welcome!" Once more the malignant, silver pealing of her laughter. "What do you want with me?" There was wrath in his eyes, and plainly he strove for control. "Want!" the silver voice hissed, grew calm. "Do not Siya and Siyana grieve that the rite I pledged them is but half done - and do they not desire it finished? And am I not beautiful? More beautiful than your choya?" The fiendishness died from the eyes; they grew blue, wondrous; the veil of invisibility slipped down from the neck, the shoulders, half revealing the gleaming breasts. And weird, weird beyond all telling was that exquisite head and bust floating there in air - and beautiful, sinisterly beautiful beyond all telling, too. So even might Lilith, the serpent woman, have shown herself tempting Adam! "And perhaps," she said, "perhaps I want you because I hate you; perhaps because I love you - or perhaps for Lugur or perhaps for the Shining One." "And if I go with you?" He said it quietly. "Then shall I spare the handmaiden - and - who knows? - take back my armies that even now gather at the portal and let the Silent Ones rot in peace in their abode - from which they had no power to keep me," she added venomously. "You will swear that, Yolara; swear to go without harming the handmaiden?" he asked eagerly. The little devils danced in her eyes. I wrenched my face from the smothering contact. "Don't trust her, Larry!" I cried - and again the grip choked me. "Is that devil in front of you or behind you, old man?" he asked quietly, eyes never leaving the priestess. "If he's in front I'll take a chance and wing him - and then you scoot and warn Lakla." But I could not answer; nor, remembering Yolara's threat, would I, had I been able. "Decide quickly!" There was cold threat in her voice. The curtains toward which O'Keefe had slowly, step by step, drawn close, opened. They framed the handmaiden! The face of Yolara changed to that gorgon mask that had transformed it once before at sight of the Golden Girl. In her blind rage she forgot to cast the occulting veil. Her hand darted like a snake out of the folds; poising itself with the little silver cone aimed at Lakla. But before it was wholly poised, before the priestess could loose its force, the handmaiden was upon her. Swift as the lithe white wolf hound she leaped, and one slender hand gripped Yolara's throat, the other the wrist that lifted the quivering death; white limbs wrapped about the hidden ones, I saw the golden head bend, the hand that held the Keth swept up with a vicious jerk; saw Lakla's teeth sink into the wrist - the blood spurt forth and heard the priestess shriek. The cone fell, bounded toward me; with all my strength I wrenched free the hand that held my pistol, thrust it against the pressing breast and fired, The clasp upon me relaxed; a red rain stained me; at my feet a little pillar of blood jetted; a hand thrust itself from nothingness, clawed - and was still. Now Yolara was down, Lakla meshed in her writhings and fighting like some wild mother whose babes are serpent menaced. Over the two of them, astride, stood the O'Keefe, a pike from one of the high tripods in his hand - thrusting, parrying, beating on every side as with a broadsword against poniardclutching hands that thrust themselves out of vacancy striving to strike him; stepping here and there, always covering, protecting Lakla with his own body even as a caveman of old who does battle with his mate for their lives. The swordclub struck - and on the floor lay the half body of a dwarf, writhing with vanishments and reappearings of legs and arms. Beside him was the shattered tripod from which Larry had wrenched his weapon. I flung myself upon it, dashed it down to break loose one of the remaining supports, struck in midfall one of the unseen even as his dagger darted toward me! The seat splintered, leaving in my clutch a golden bar. I jumped to Larry's side, guarding his back, whirling it like a staff; felt it crunch once - twice - through unseen bone and muscle. At the door was a booming. Into the chamber rushed a dozen of the frogmen. While some guarded the entrances, others leaped straight to us, and forming a circle about us began to strike with talons and spurs at unseen things that screamed and sought to escape. Now here and there about the blue rugs great stains of blood appeared; heads of dwarfs, torn arms and gashed bodies, half occulted, half revealed. And at last the priestess lay silent, vanquished, white body gleaming with that uncanny - fragmentariness - from her torn robes. Then O'Keefe reached down, drew Lakla from her. Shakily, Yolara rose to her feet. The handmaiden, face still blazing with wrath, stepped before her; with difficulty she steadied her voice. "Yolara," she said, "you have defied the Silent Ones, you have desecrated their abode, you came to slay these men who are the guests of the Silent Ones and me, who am their handmaiden - why did you do these things?" "I came for him!" gasped the priestess; she pointed to O'Keefe. "Why?" asked Lakla. "Because he is pledged to me," replied Yolara, all the devils that were hers in her face. "Because he wooed me! Because he is mine!" "That is a lie!" The handmaiden's voice shook with rage. "It is a lie! But here and now he shall choose, Yolara. And if you he choose, you and he shall go forth from here unmolested - for Yolara, it is his happiness that I most desire, and if you are that happiness - you shall go together. And now, Larry, choose!" Swiftly she stepped beside the priestess; swiftly wrenched the last shreds of the hiding robes from her. There they stood - Yolara with but the filmiest net of gauze about her wonderful body; gleaming flesh shining through it; serpent woman - and wonderful, too, beyond the dreams even of Phidias - and hellfire glowing from the purple eyes. And Lakla, like a girl of the Vikings, like one of those warrior maids who stood and fought for dun and babes at the side of those old heroes of Larry's own green isle; translucent ivory lambent through the rents of her torn draperies, and in the wide, golden eyes flaming wrath, indeed - not the diabolic flames of the priestess but the righteous wrath of some soul that looking out of paradise sees vile wrong in the doing. "Lakla," the O'Keefe's voice was subdued, hurt, "there is no choice. I love you and only you - and have from the moment I saw you. It's not easy - this. God, Goodwin, I feel like an utter cad," he flashed at me. "There is no choice, Lakla," he ended, eyes steady upon hers. The priestess's face grew deadlier still. "What will you do with me?" she asked. "Keep you," I said, "as hostage." O'Keefe was silent; the Golden Girl shook her head. "Well would I like to," her face grew dreaming; "but the Silent Ones say - no; they bid me let you go, Yolara - " "The Silent Ones," the priestess laughed. "You, Lakla! You fear, perhaps, to let me tarry here too close!" Storm gathered again in the handmaiden's eyes; she forced it back. "No," she answered, the Silent Ones so command - and for their own purposes. Yet do I think, Yolara, that you will have little time to feed your wickedness - tell that to Lugur - and to your Shining One!" she added slowly. Mockery and disbelief rode high in the priestess's pose. "Am I to return alone - like this?" she asked. "Nay, Yolara, nay; you shall be accompanied," said Lakla; "and by those who will guard - and watch - you well. They are here even now." The hangings parted, and into the chamber came Olaf and Rador. The priestess met the fierce hatred and contempt in the eyes of the Norseman - and for the first time lost her bravado. "Let not him go with me," she gasped - her eyes searched the floor frantically. "He goes with you," said Lakla, and threw about Yolara a swathing that covered the exquisite, alluring body. "And you shall pass through the Portal, not skulk along the path of the worm!" She bent to Rador, whispered to him; he nodded; she had told him, I supposed, the secret of its opening. "Come," he said, and with the iceeyed giant behind her, Yolara, head bent, passed out of those hangings through which, but a little before, unseen, triumph in her grasp, she had slipped. Then Lakla came to the unhappy O'Keefe, rested her hands on his shoulders, looked deep into his eyes. "Did you woo her, even as she said?" she asked. The Irishman flushed miserably. "I did not," he said. "I was pleasant to her, of course, because I thought it would bring me quicker to you, darlin'." She looked at him doubtfully; then - "I think you must have been very - pleasant!" was all she said - and leaning, kissed him forgivingly straight on the lips. An extremely direct maiden was Lakla, with a truly sovereign contempt for anything she might consider nonessentials; and at this moment I decided she was wiser even than I had thought her. He stumbled, feet vanishing; reached down and picked up something that in the grasping turned his hand to air. "One of the invisible cloaks," he said to me. "There must be quite a lot of them about - I guess Yolara brought her full staff of murderers. They're a bit shopworn, probably - but we're considerably better off with 'em in our hands than in hers. And they may come in handy - who knows?" There was a choking rattle at my feet; half the head of a dwarf raised out of vacancy; beat twice upon the floor in death throes; fell back. Lakla shivered; gave a command. The frogmen moved about; peering here and there; lifting unseen folds revealing in stark rigidity torn form after form of the priestess's men. Lakla had been right - her Akka were thorough fighters! She called, and to her came the frogwoman who was her attendant. To her the handmaiden spoke, pointing to the batrachians who stood, paws and forearms melted beneath the robes they had gathered. She took them and passed out - more grotesque than ever, shattering into streaks of vacancies, reappearing with flickers of shining scale and yellow gems as the tattered pennants of invisibility fluttered about her. The frogmen reached down, swung each a dead dwarf in his arms, and filed, booming triumphantly away And then I remembered the cone of the Keth which had slipped from Yolara's hand; knew it had been that for which her wild eyes searched. But look as closely as we might, search in every nook and corner as we did, we could not find it. Had the dying hand of one of her men clutched it and had it been borne away with them? With the thought Larry and I raced after the scaled warriors, searched every body they carried. It was not there. Perhaps the priestess had found it, retrieved it swiftly without our seeing. Whatever was true - the cone was gone. And what a weapon that one little holder of the shaking death would have been for us! CHAPTER XXVIII In the Lair of the Dweller IT IS WITH marked hesitation that I begin this chapter, because in it I must deal with an experience so contrary to every known law of physics as to seem impossible. Until this time, barring, of course, the mystery of the Dweller, I had encountered nothing that was not susceptible of naturalistic explanation; nothing, in a word, outside the domain of science itself; nothing that I would have felt hesitancy in reciting to my colleagues of the International Association of Science. Amazing, unfamiliar - advanced - as many of the phenomena were, still they lay well within the limits of what we have mapped as the possible; in regions, it is true, still virgin to the mind of man, but toward which that mind is steadily advancing. But this - well, I confess that I have a theory that is naturalistic; but so abstruse, so difficult to make clear within the short confines of the space I have to give it, so dependent upon conceptions that even the highesttrained scientific brains find difficult to grasp, that I despair. I can only say that the thing occurred; that it took place in precisely the manner I am about to narrate, and that I experienced it. Yet, in justice to myself, I must open up some paths of preliminary approach toward the heart of the perplexity. And the first path is the realization that our world whatever it is, is certainly not the world as we see it! Regarding this I shall refer to a discourse upon "Gravitation and the Principle of Relativity," by the distinguished English physicist, Dr. A. S. Eddington, which I had the pleasure of hearing him deliver before the Royal Institution.1 I realize, of course, that it is not true logic to argue - "The world is not as we think it is - therefore everything we think impossible is possible in it." Even if it be different, it is governed by law. The truly impossible is that which is outside law, and as nothing can be outside law, the impossible cannot exist. The crux of the matter then becomes our determination whether what we think is impossible may or may not be possible under laws still beyond our knowledge. I hope that you will pardon me for this somewhat academic digression, but I felt it was necessary, and it has, at least, put me more at ease. And now to resume. We had watched, Larry and I, the frogmen throw the bodies of Yolara's assassins into the crimson waters. As vultures swoop down upon the dying, there came sailing swiftly to where the dead men floated, dozens of the luminous globes. Their slender, varicoloured tentacles whipped out; the giant iridescent bubbles climbed over the cadavers. And as they touched them there was the swift dissolution, the melting away into putrescence of flesh and bone that I had witnessed when the dart touched fruit that time I had saved Rador - and upon this the Medusae gorged; pulsing lambently; their wondrous colours shifting, changing, glowing stronger; elfin moons now indeed, but satellites whose glimmering beauty was fed by death; alembics of enchantment whose glorious hues were sucked from horror. Sick, I turned away - O'Keefe as pale as I; passed back into the corridor that had opened on the ledge from which we had watched; met Lakla hurrying toward us. Before she could speak there throbbed faintly about us a vast sighing. It grew into a murmur, a whispering, shook us - then passing like a presence, died away in far distance. "The Portal has opened," said the handmaiden. A fainter sighing, like an echo of the other, mourned about us. "Yolara is gone," she said, "the Portal is closed. Now must we hasten - for the Three have commanded that you, Goodwin, and Larry and I tread that strange road of which I have spoken, and which Olaf may not take lest his heart break - and we must return ere he and Rador cross the bridge." Her hand sought Larry's. "Come!" said Lakla, and we walked on; down and down through hall after hall, flight upon flight of stairways. Deep, deep indeed, we must be beneath the domed castle - Lakla paused before a curved, smooth breast of the crimson stone rounding gently into the passage. She pressed its side; it revolved; we entered; it closed behind us. The room, the - hollow - in which we stood was faceted like a diamond; and like a cut brilliant its sides glistened - though dully. Its shape was a deep oval, and our path dropped down to a circular polished base, roughly two yards in diameter. Glancing behind me I saw that in the closing of the entrance there had been left no trace of it save the steps that led from where that entrance had been - and as I looked these steps turned, leaving us isolated upon the circle, only the faceted walls about us - and in each of the gleaming faces the three of us reflected - dimly. It was as though we were within a diamond egg whose graven angles bad been turned inward. But the oval was not perfect; at my right a screen cut it - a screen that gleamed with fugitive, fleeting luminescences - stretching from the side of our standing place up to the tip of the chamber; slightly convex and crisscrossed by millions of fine lines like those upon a spectroscopic plate, but with this difference - that within each line I sensed the presence of multitudes of finer lines, dwindling into infinitude, ultramicroscopic, traced by some instrument compared to whose delicacy our finest tool would be as a crowbar to the needle of a micrometer. A foot or two from it stood something like the standee of a compass, bearing, like it a cradled dial under whose crystal ran concentric rings of prisoned, lambent vapours, faintly blue. From the edge of the dial jutted a little shelf of crystal, a keyboard, in which were cut eight small cups. Within these cups the handmaiden placed her tapering fingers. She gazed down upon the disk; pressed a digit - and the screen behind us slipped noiselessly into another angle. "Put your arm around my waist, Larry, darlin', and stand close," she murmured. "You, Goodwin, place your arm over my shoulder." Wondering, I did as she bade; she pressed other fingers upon the shelf's indentations - three of the rings of vapour spun into intense light, raced around each other; from the screen behind us grew a radiance that held within itself all spectrums - not only those seen, but those unseen by man's eyes. It waxed brilliant and ever more brilliant, all suffusing, passing through me as day streams through a window pane! The enclosing facets burst into a blaze of coruscations, and in each sparkling panel I saw our images, shaken and torn like pennants in a whirlwind. I turned to look - was stopped by the handmaiden's swift command: "Turn not - on your life!" The radiance behind me grew; was a rushing tempest of light in which I was but the shadow of a shadow. I heard, but not with my ears - nay with mind itself - a vast roaring; an ordered tumult of sound that came hurling from the outposts of space; approaching - rushing - hurricane out of the heart of the cosmos - closer, closer. It wrapped itself about us with unearthly mighty arms. And brilliant, ever more brilliant, streamed the radiance through us. The faceted walls dimmed; in front of me they melted, diaphanously, like a gelatinous wall in a blast of flame; through their vanishing, under the torrent of driving light, the unthinkable, impalpable tornado, I began to move, slowly - then ever more swiftly! Still the roaring grew; the radiance streamed - ever faster we went. Cutting down through the length, the extension of me, dropped a wall of rock, foreshortened, clenched close; I caught a glimpse of the elfin gardens; they whirled, contracted, into a thin - slice - of colour that was a part of me; another wall of rock shrinking into a thin wedge through which I flew, and that at once took its place within me like a card slipped beside those others! Flashing around me, and from Lakla and O'Keefe, were nimbuses of flickering scarlet flames. And always the steady hurling forward - appallingly mechanical. Another barrier of rock - a gleam of white waters incorporating themselves into my - drawing out - even as were the flowered moss lands, the slicing, rocky walls - still another rampart of cliff, dwindling instantly into the vertical plane of those others. Our flight checked; we seemed to hover within, then to sway onward - slowly, cautiously. A mist danced ahead of me - a mist that grew steadily thinner. We stopped, wavered - the mist cleared. I looked out into translucent, green distances; shot with swift prismatic gleamings; waves and pulsings of luminosity like midday sun glow through green, tropic waters: dancing, scintillating veils of sparkling atoms that flew, hither and yon, through depths of nebulous splendour! And Lakla and Larry and I were, I saw, like shadow shapes upon a smooth breast of stone twenty feet or more above the surface of this place - a surface spangled with tiny white blossoms gleaming wanly through creeping veils of phosphorescence like smoke of moon fire. We were shadows - and yet we had substance; we were incorporated with, a part of, the rock - and yet we were living flesh and blood; we stretched - nor will I qualify this - we stretched through mile upon mile of space that weirdly enough gave at one and the same time an absolute certainty of immense horizontal lengths and a vertical concentration that contained nothing of length, nothing of space whatever; we stood there upon the face of the stone - and still we were here within the faceted oval before the screen of radiance! "Steady!" It was Lakla's voice - and not beside me there, but at my ear close before the screen. "Steady, Goodwin! And - see!" The sparkling haze cleared. Enormous reaches stretched before me. Shimmering up through them, and as though growing in some medium thicker than air, was mass upon mass of verdure - fruiting trees and trees laden with pale blossoms, arbours and bowers of pallid blooms, like that sea fruit of oblivion - grapes of Lethe - that cling to the tideswept walls of the caverns of the Hebrides. Through them, beyond them, around and about them, drifted and eddied a horde - great as that with which Tamerlane swept down upon Rome, vast as the myriads which Genghis Khan rolled upon the califs - men and women and children - clothed in tatters, half nude and wholly naked; slanteyed Chinese, sloeeyed Malays, islanders black and brown and yellow, fiercefaced warriors of the Solomons with grizzled locks fantastically bedizened; Papuans, feline Javans, Dyaks of hill and shore; hooknosed Phoenicians, Romans, straightbrowed Greeks, and Vikings centuries beyond their lives: scores of the blackhaired Murians; white faces of our own Westerners - men and women and children - drifting, eddying - each stamped with that mingled horror and rapture, eyes filled with ecstasy and terror entwined, marked by God and devil in embrace - the seal of the Shining One - the deadalive; the lost ones! The loot of the Dweller! Soulsick, I gazed. They lifted to us visages of dread; they swept down toward us, glaring upward - a bank against which other and still other waves of faces rolled, were checked, paused; until as far as I could see, like billows piled upon an evergrowing barrier, they stretched beneath us - staring - staring! Now there was a movement - far, far away; a concentrating of the lambency; the deadalive swayed, oscillated, separated - forming a long lane against whose outskirts they crowded with avid, hungry insistence. First only a luminous cloud, then a whirling pillar of splendours through the lane came - the Shining One. As it passed, the deadalive swirled in its wake like leaves behind a whirlwind, eddying, twisting; and as the Dweller raced by them, brushing them with its spirallings and tentacles, they shone forth with unearthly, awesome gleamings - like vessels of alabaster in which wicks flare suddenly. And when it had passed they closed behind it, staring up at us once more. The Dweller paused beneath us. Out of the drifting ruck swam the body of Throckmartin! Throckmartin, my friend, to find whom I had gone to the pallid moon door; my friend whose call I had so laggardly followed. On his face was the Dweller's dreadful stamp; the lips were bloodless; the eyes were wide, lucent, something like pale, phosphorescence gleaming within them - and soulless. He stared straight up at me, unwinking, unrecognizing. Pressing against his side was a woman, young and gentle, and lovely - lovely even through the mask that lay upon her face. And her wide eyes, like Throckmartin's, glowed with the lurking, unholy fires. She pressed against him closely; though the hordes kept up the faint churning, these two kept ever together, as though bound by unseen fetters. And I knew the girl for Edith, his wife, who in vain effort to save him had cast herself into the Dweller's embrace! "Throckmartin!" I cried. "Throckmartin! I'm here!" Did he hear? I know now, of course, he could not. But then I waited - hope striving to break through the nightmare hands that gripped my heart. Their wide eyes never left me. There was another movement about them, others pushed past them; they drifted back, swaying, eddying - and still staring were lost in the awful throng. Vainly I strained my gaze to find them again, to force some sign of recognition, some awakening of the clean life we know. But they were gone. Try as I would I could not see them - nor Stanton and the northern woman named Thora who had been the first of that tragic party to be taken by the Dweller. "Throckmartin!" I cried again, despairingly. My tears blinded me. I felt Lakla's light touch. "Steady," she commanded, pitifully. "Steady, Goodwin. You cannot help them - now! Steady and - watch!" Below us the Shining One had paused - spiralling, swirling, vibrant with all its transcendent, devilish beauty; had paused and was contemplating us. Now I could see clearly that nucleus, that core shot through with flashing veins of radiance, that evershifting shape of glory through the shroudings of shimmering, misty plumes, throbbing lacy opalescences, vaporous spirallings of prismatic phantom fires. Steady over it hung the seven little moons of amethyst, of saffron, of emerald and azure and silver, of rose of life and moon white. They poised themselves like a diadem - calm, serene, immobile - and down from them into the Dweller, piercing plumes and swirls and spirals, ran countless tiny strands, radiations, finer than the finest spun thread of spider's web, gleaming filaments through which seemed to run - power - from the seven globes; like - yes, that was it - miniatures of the seven torrents of moon flame that poured through the septichromatic, high crystals in the Moon Pool's chamber roof. Swam out of the coruscating haze the - face! Both of man and of woman it was - like some ancient, androgynous deity of Etruscan fanes long dust, and yet neither woman nor man; human and unhuman, seraphic and sinister, benign and malefic - and still no more of these four than is flame, which is beautiful whether it warms or devours, or wind whether it feathers the trees or shatters them, or the wave which is wondrous whether it caresses or kills. Subtly, undefinably it was of our world and of one not ours. Its lineaments flowed from another sphere, took fleeting familiar form - and as swiftly withdrew whence they had come; something amorphous, unearthly - as of unknown unheeding, unseen gods rushing through the depths of starhung space; and still of our own earth, with the very soul of earth peering out from it, caught within it - and in some - unholy - way debased. It had eyes - eyes that were now only shadows darkening within its luminosity like veils falling, and falling, opening windows into the unknowable; deepening into softly glowing blue pools, blue as the Moon Pool itself; then flashing out, and this only when the - face - bore its most human resemblance, into twin stars large almost as the crown of little moons; and with that same baffling suggestion of peepholes into a world untrodden, alien, perilous to man! "Steady!" came Lakla's voice, her body leaned against mine. I gripped myself, my brain steadied, I looked again. And I saw that of body, at least body as we know it, the Shining One had none - nothing but the throbbing, pulsing core streaked with lightning veins of rainbows; and around this, never still, sheathing it, the swirling, glorious veilings of its hell and heaven born radiance. So the Dweller stood - and gazed. Then up toward us swept a reaching, questing spiral! Under my hand Lakla's shoulder quivered; DeadAlive and their master vanished - I danced, flickered, within the rock; felt a swift sense of shrinking, of withdrawal; slice upon slice the carded walls of stone, of silvery waters, of elfin gardens slipped from me as cards are withdrawn from a pack, one by one - slipped, wheeled, flattened, and lengthened out as I passed through them and they passed from me. Gasping, shaken, weak, I stood within the faceted oval chamber; arm still about the handmaiden's white shoulder; Larry's hand still clutching her girdle. The roaring, impalpable gale from the cosmos was retreating to the outposts of space - was still; the intense, streaming, flooding radiance lessened - died. "Now have you beheld," said Lakla, "and well you trod the road. And now shall you hear, even as the Silent Ones have commanded, what the Shining One is - and how it came to be." The steps flashed back; the doorway into the chamber opened. Larry as silent as I - we followed her through it. [1]Reprinted in full in Nature, in which those sufficiently interested may peruse it. - W. T. G. CHAPTER XXIX The Shaping of the Shining One WE REACHED what I knew to be Lakla's own boudoir, if I may so call it. Smaller than any of the other chambers of the domed castle in which we had been, its intimacy was revealed not only by its faint fragrance but by its high mirrors of polished silver and various oddly wrought articles of the feminine toilet that lay here and there; things I afterward knew to be the work of the artisans of the Akka - and no mean metal workers were they. One of the window slits dropped almost to the floor, and at its base was a wide, comfortably cushioned seat commanding a view of the bridge and of the cavern ledge. To this the handmaiden beckoned us; sank upon it, drew Larry down beside her and motioned me to sit close to him. "Now this," she said, "is what the Silent Ones have commanded me to tell you two: To you Larry, that knowing you may weigh all things in your mind and answer as your spirit bids you a question that the Three will ask - and what that is I know not," she murmured, "and I, they say, must answer, too - and it - frightens me!" The great golden eyes widened; darkened with dread; she sighed, shook her head impatiently. "Not like us, and never like us," she spoke low, wonderingly, "the Silent Ones say were they. Nor were those from which they sprang like those from which we have come. Ancient, ancient beyond thought are the Taithu, the race of the Silent Ones. Far, far below this place where now we sit, close to earth heart itself were they born; and there they dwelt for time upon time, laya upon laya upon laya - with others, not like them, some of which have vanished time upon time agone, others that still dwell - below - in their - cradle. "It is hard" - she hesitated - "hard to tell this - that slips through my mind - because I know so little that even as the Three told it to me it passed from me for lack of place to stand upon," she went on, quaintly. "Something there was of time when earth and sun were but cold mists in the - the heavens - something of these mists drawing together, whirling, whirling, faster and faster - drawing as they whirled more and more of the mists - growing larger, growing warm - forming at last into the globes they are, with others spinning around the sun - something of regions within this globe where vast fire was prisoned and bursting forth tore and rent the young orb - of one such bursting forth that sent what you call moon flying out to company us and left behind those spaces whence we now dwell - and of - of life particles that here and there below grew into the race of the Silent Ones, and those others - but not the Akka which, like you, they say came from above - and all this I do not understand - do you, Goodwin?" she appealed to me. I nodded - for what she had related so fragmentarily was in reality an excellent approach to the ChamberlainMoulton theory of a coalescing nebula contracting into the sun and its planets. Astonishing was the recognition of this theory. Even more so was the reference to the life particles, the idea of Arrhenius, the great Swede, of life starting on earth through the dropping of minute, life spores, propelled through space by the driving power of light and, encountering favourable environment here, developing through the vast ages into man and every other living thing we know.1 Nor was it incredible that in the ancient nebula that was the matrix of our solar system similar, or rather dissimilar, particles in all but the subtle essence we call life, might have become entangled and, resisting every cataclysm as they had resisted the absolute zero of outer space, found in these caverned spaces their proper environment to develop into the race of the Silent Ones and - only they could tell what else! "They say," the handmaiden's voice was surer, "they say that in their - cradle - near earth's heart they grew; grew untroubled by the turmoil and disorder which flayed the surface of this globe. And they say it was a place of light and that strength came to them from earth heart - strength greater than you and those from which you sprang ever derived from sun. "At last, ancient, ancient beyond all thought, they say again, was this time - they began to know, to - to - realize - themselves. And wisdom came ever more swiftly. Up from their cradle, because they did not wish to dwell longer with those - others - they came and found this place. "When all the face of earth was covered with waters in which lived only tiny, hungry things that knew naught save hunger and its satisfaction, they had attained wisdom that enabled them to make paths such as we have just travelled and to look out upon those waters! And laya upon laya thereafter, time upon time, they went upon the paths and watched the flood recede; saw great bare flats of steaming ooze appear on which crawled and splashed larger things which had grown from the tiny hungry ones; watched the flats rise higher and higher and green life begin to clothe them; saw mountains uplift and vanish. "Ever the green life waxed and the things which crept and crawled grew greater and took ever different forms; until at last came a time when the steaming mists lightened and the things which had begun as little more than tiny hungry mouths were huge and monstrous, so huge that the tallest of my Akka would not have reached the knee of the smallest of them. "But in none of these, in none, was there - realization - of themselves, say the Three; naught but hunger driving, always driving them to still its crying. "So for time upon time the race of the Silent Ones took the paths no more, placing aside the halfthought that they had of making their way to earth face even as they had made their way from beside earth heart. They turned wholly to the seeking of wisdom - and after other time on time they attained that which killed even the faintest shadow of the halfthought. For they crept far within the mysteries of life and death, they mastered the illusion of space, they lifted the veils of creation and of its twin destruction, and they stripped the covering from the flaming jewel of truth - but when they had crept within those mysteries they bid me tell you, Goodwin, they found ever other mysteries veiling the way; and after they had uncovered the jewel of truth they found it to be a gem of infinite facets and therefore not wholly to be read before eternity's unthinkable end! "And for this they were glad - because now throughout eternity might they and theirs pursue knowledge over ways illimitable. "They conquered light - light that sprang at their bidding from the nothingness that gives birth to all things and in which lie all things that are, have been and shall be; light that streamed through their bodies cleansing them of all dross; light that was food and drink; light that carried their vision afar or bore to them images out of space opening many windows through which they gazed down upon life on thousands upon thousands of the rushing worlds; light that was the flame of life itself and in which they bathed, ever renewing their own. They set radiant lamps within the stones, and of black light they wove the sheltering shadows and the shadows that slay. "Arose from this people those Three - the Silent Ones. They led them all in wisdom so that in the Three grew - pride. And the Three built them this place in which we sit and set the Portal in its place and withdrew from their kind to go alone into the mysteries and to map alone the facets of Truth Jewel. "Then there came the ancestors of the - Akka; not as they are now, and glowing but faintly within them the spark of - selfrealization. And the Taithu seeing this spark did not slay them. But they took the ancient, long untrodden paths and looked forth once more upon earth face. Now on the land were vast forests and a chaos of green life. On the shores things scaled and fanged, fought and devoured each other, and in the green life moved bodies great and small that slew and ran from those that would slay. "They searched for the passage through which the Akka had come and closed it. Then the Three took them and brought them here; and taught them and blew upon the spark until it burned ever stronger and in time they became much as they are now - my Akka. "The Three took counsel after this and said - 'We have strengthened life in these until it has become articulate; shall we not create life?'" Again she hesitated, her eyes rapt, dreaming. "The Three are speaking," she murmured. "They have my tongue - " And certainly, with an ease and rapidity as though she were but a voice through which minds far more facile, more powerful poured their thoughts, she spoke. "Yea," the golden voice was vibrant. "We said that what we would create should be of the spirit of life itself, speaking to us with the tongues of the farflung stars, of the winds, of the waters, and of all upon and within these. Upon that universal matrix of matter, that mother of all things that you name the ether, we laboured. Think not that her wondrous fertility is limited by what ye see on earth or what has been on earth from its beginning. Infinite, infinite are the forms the mother bears and countless are the energies that are part of her. "By our wisdom we had fashioned many windows out of our abode and through them we stared into the faces of myriads of worlds, and upon them all were the children of ether even as the worlds themselves were her children. "Watching we learned, and learning we formed that ye term the Dweller, which those without name - the Shining One. Within the Universal Mother we shaped it, to be a voice to tell us her secrets, a lamp to go before us lighting the mysteries. Out of the ether we fashioned it, giving it the soul of light that still ye know not nor perhaps ever may know, and with the essence of life that ye saw blossoming deep in the abyss and that is the pulse of earth heart we filled it. And we wrought with pain and with love, with yearning and with scorching pride and from our travail came the Shining One - our child! "There is an energy beyond and above ether, a purposeful, sentient force that laps like an ocean the furthestflung star, that transfuses all that ether bears, that sees and speaks and feels in us and in you, that is incorporate in beast and bird and reptile, in tree and grass and all living things, that sleeps in rock and stone, that finds sparkling tongue in jewel and star and in all dwe